This is part 6 of a 7 part series under the title of, "Why Christians Disagree -Scripture,
History, and the Loss of Memory." Part 5 can be found at: British-Israelism and Prophetic Nationalism
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We have already seen that many restorationist movements of the nineteenth century were driven by the conviction that something important had been lost. Some sought to restore the structure of the apostolic church. Others focused on holiness, spiritual gifts, or forgotten prophetic truths. Underlying all these efforts was a common assumption: previous generations had misunderstood some essential aspect of Christianity, and a fresh reading of Scripture could recover it.
From this conviction, it is not difficult to see how another question would arise:
What if the church had misunderstood prophecy for centuries?
Once that question took hold, many Christians began searching for new prophetic frameworks. This was not merely a search for answers to difficult passages. It was a search for an entirely new way of understanding prophecy itself.
That distinction is critical.
The rise of futurism was not simply the arrival of new conclusions. It represented the emergence of a new interpretive framework through which biblical prophecy would be read. The consequences of that shift continue to shape much of modern Christianity.
Historically, many biblical prophecies had been understood within the context in which they were originally given. The prophets addressed Israel and Judah. They spoke to covenant faithfulness and covenant unfaithfulness. They warned of judgment, exile, restoration, and the consequences of breaking God's covenant. In the New Testament, many Christians understood significant prophetic themes as culminating in the ministry of Christ, the establishment of His kingdom, and the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70.
This did not mean that Christians denied the future return of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, or the final judgment. These remained central Christian doctrines. Rather, many prophetic passages were understood within the historical and covenantal settings in which they had first been spoken.
Nineteenth-century futurism increasingly moved those prophecies into a different setting.
Passages once connected to ancient Israel were relocated into the distant future. Prophecies originally associated with covenant judgment were transformed into predictions of modern geopolitical events. The focus shifted from historical context to end-times speculation.
In short, prophecy was relocated. This relocation forms the heart of the futurist system.
The significance of this change cannot be overstated. Once prophecy is detached from its original audience and historical setting, it can be applied almost anywhere one might choose. Events separated by thousands of years can be presented as connected. Ancient warnings can be transformed into modern forecasts. The prophets cease speaking primarily to their own generation and become commentators on ours.
The question is no longer, "What did this prophecy mean to those who first received it?"
Instead, the question becomes, "How does this prophecy relate to events taking place today?"
This shift laid the foundation for an entirely new approach to biblical interpretation.
No figure is more closely associated with this development than John Nelson Darby.
Darby is often portrayed as though he appeared suddenly and single-handedly transformed Christian prophecy. The reality is more complex. Darby did not emerge in a vacuum. He was very much a product of his age.
He lived in a period shaped by restorationist thinking, prophetic excitement, political instability, and widespread dissatisfaction with traditional interpretations. The aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars had shaken Europe. Revolutionary movements had challenged long-standing institutions. British-Israel ideas circulated widely in the culture. Prophecy conferences attracted growing interest. Many Christians were convinced that they were living near the end of history.
Darby entered a world already primed for new prophetic ideas.
His contribution was not simply to offer a new interpretation of a few passages. He developed a comprehensive system that reorganized the biblical story itself. At the center of that system stood a distinction that would become foundational to futurism: the separation of Israel and the Church.
Historically, most Christians had understood Scripture as describing one people of God united through faith. While distinctions existed between Jews and Gentiles, the New Testament emphasized their unity in Christ. The promises of God were understood as finding their fulfillment in Him. The covenant story reached its goal in Christ and extended to all who belonged to Him.
Darby rejected this understanding; instead he went on to develop his system that required a different approach. Israel and the Church became distinct peoples with distinct purposes in God's plan. Israel, he said, possessed earthly promises while the Church possessed heavenly promises. Israel and the Church followed different prophetic programs and ultimately different destinies.
This distinction became the engine that drove the entire system. Without it, much of futurism collapses.
If Israel and the Church are fundamentally one people of God, many prophetic passages naturally find their fulfillment in Christ and His kingdom. If Israel and the Church are permanently distinct, those same prophecies must be relocated into a future era in which God resumes His dealings with national Israel. The relocation of prophecy and the separation of Israel and the Church became mutually dependent ideas. The effect this had can be seen across a wide range of biblical texts.
- The Olivet Discourse in Matthew 24, long understood by many Christians as speaking substantially of the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of the Old Covenant age, was increasingly moved into the distant future.
- Prophecies in Daniel became detailed forecasts of modern end-times events.
- Ezekiel's visions were reinterpreted through the lens of future geopolitical developments.
- Zechariah's prophecies were relocated into a future millennial kingdom.
- The book of Revelation became a roadmap of future world events rather than a prophecy rooted primarily in the struggles and circumstances of the first-century church.
The cumulative effect was dramatic. Prophecy was no longer primarily understood within its covenantal and historical setting. It was made to become a blueprint for the future.
At this point some an important question must be asked.
By what principle do we decide which prophecies remain future and which have already been fulfilled?
- Why should some judgments spoken against ancient Israel, Judah, Edom, Babylon, or Jerusalem be regarded as fulfilled, while others are projected thousands of years beyond their original setting?
- What objective principle determines when a prophecy belongs to its own generation and when it belongs to ours?
This question lies at the center of the debate.
Without a clear answer, the relocation of prophecy can become largely arbitrary, allowing interpreters to move passages into the future without any scriptural authority to do so and whenever a particular system requires it.
The influence of futurism expanded dramatically in the decades that followed. One of the most significant figures in this process was C. I. Scofield.
Scofield's lasting contribution was not merely the promotion of dispensational theology. It was the placement of that theology directly into the pages of Scripture through the notes of the Scofield Reference Bible.
For many readers, the distinction between the biblical text and the interpretive notes gradually became blurred. Explanations, prophetic frameworks, and theological conclusions appeared alongside the inspired text itself. The effect was profound. Millions encountered dispensational interpretations not as one possible reading among many, but as the obvious meaning of Scripture.
In an ironic twist, a movement that claimed allegiance to Scripture alone increasingly relied upon interpretive systems embedded within the pages of Scripture itself. The notes were not Scripture, yet they often shaped how Scripture was understood.
The consequences of futurism extended far beyond Darby and
Scofield.
Prophecy conferences multiplied. End-times speculation became a recurring feature of evangelical culture. Christian Zionism gained influence. Newspapers were increasingly read alongside biblical prophecy. Wars, political alliances, economic developments, and international crises were interpreted as signs of approaching prophetic fulfillment.
Modern prophecy culture was born.
Yet these developments were not the primary change. They were the consequences. The real change had occurred earlier.
The real change was the relocation of prophecy itself.
Once prophecy had been detached from its original covenant setting and relocated into an ever-receding future, the focus of many Christians gradually shifted. The kingdom proclaimed by Jesus became secondary to the prophetic systems developed by later interpreters. Increasingly, Christians came to read the Bible not as the story of God's kingdom revealed in Christ, but as a codebook for future geopolitical events.
It is to that shift—and its consequences—that we now turn.
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Part 7, the final post in this series, "How the Kingdom Became Lost" is next.