Saturday, June 27, 2026

Futurism and the Relocation of Prophecy

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. 
Watch for it. 

 

Friday, June 26, 2026

British-Israelism and Prophetic Nationalism

This is part 5 of a 7 part series under the title of, "Why Christians Disagree -Scripture, History, and the Loss of Memory."  Part 4 can be found at: Restorationism and the Reinvention of Christianity 
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What happens when restorationism becomes attached to national identity?

The previous chapter explored the rise of restorationist movements during the nineteenth century. Despite their many differences, these movements shared a common conviction: something essential had been lost and needed to be recovered. Some believed the church had lost its original structure. Others sought to restore holiness, spiritual gifts, or forgotten prophetic truths. Yet all were united by the belief that a return to Scripture would enable Christians to recover what previous generations had overlooked or abandoned.

British-Israelism emerged from this same restorationist environment, but it asked a different set of questions. The question was no longer simply, What has the church lost? Instead, attention turned to two new questions:

Who is Israel?
    And,
What role does Israel play in God's plan for history?

These questions would prove enormously influential, not only for British-Israelism itself but for later movements that continue to shape modern Christianity.

As has already been noted, during the nineteenth century, interest in biblical prophecy increased dramatically. The Second Great Awakening had encouraged many believers to return directly to Scripture in search of forgotten truths. At the same time, rapid social change, political upheaval, and expanding global empires convinced many that they were living in an age of prophetic significance. As Christians searched the Scriptures—particularly the prophetic books of the Old Testament—many became increasingly preoccupied with the identity of Israel and the role they believed Israel would play in the fulfillment of biblical prophecy.

For centuries, most Christians had understood Israel's story through the lens of Christ and the church. The promises made to Abraham, David, and Israel were viewed as finding their fulfillment in Christ and extending to all who belonged to Him by faith. The New Testament's emphasis upon one people of God, united in Christ, shaped the way many believers understood the covenant story.

British-Israelism proposed a very different answer.

Its central claim was that the Anglo-Saxon peoples of Britain were descendants of the so-called Lost Ten Tribes of Israel. According to this theory, the northern tribes, exiled by Assyria centuries before Christ, had migrated through Europe and eventually emerged as the British people.

The implications were profound. Britain was no longer merely a Christian nation. Britain, they proposed, was Israel.

The extraordinary success of the British Empire was no longer explained primarily by history, geography, economics, or politics. Instead, it became evidence of covenant blessing. National greatness became proof of divine election, and Britain's global influence was interpreted as the fulfillment of biblical prophecy.

This transformed the way many people read Scripture.

Passages originally addressed to ancient Israel could now be applied directly to Britain. Prophecies concerning Israel's future could be understood as predictions concerning the British Empire. Biblical promises became increasingly attached to national identity.

The appeal of such ideas is not difficult to understand.

The nineteenth century was the age of empire. Britain stood at the center of a vast global network. Its navy dominated the seas. Its colonies stretched across continents. Its influence touched nearly every corner of the world. To many observers, it seemed improbable that such extraordinary success was merely the product of historical circumstances.
·         British-Israelism offered a theological explanation.
·         Britain was prosperous because Britain was Israel.
·         The empire became evidence of covenant election.
·         National success became proof of prophetic destiny.

It was here that restorationism merged with nationalism.

This development marked an important turning point. Up to this point, restorationist movements had focused primarily on the church. Their concern was recovering lost doctrines, neglected practices, forgotten spiritual truths, or apostolic patterns of worship and government. British-Israelism shifted attention away from the church and toward nations, ethnic identities, and political destinies.

The focus moved from asking, What is God doing through Christ and His kingdom? to asking, What is God doing through our nation? That shift would have far-reaching consequences.

Historically, Christians had understood God's covenant promises through Christ, the church, and the Kingdom of God. British-Israelism increasingly redirected attention toward race, ethnicity, nationhood, and empire. The covenant story became nationalized.

To be fair, many advocates of British-Israelism were sincere Christians who genuinely believed they were uncovering important biblical truths. Their motives were often patriotic as well as religious. They viewed Britain's influence as an opportunity to spread Christianity, civilization, and moral order throughout the world.

Yet sincerity alone does not guarantee correctness.

The movement introduced a principle that would prove increasingly problematic: covenant identity became linked to ethnic identity.

Once covenant blessing becomes attached to ancestry, race, or national origin, Christianity begins moving away from the New Testament emphasis on faith, union with Christ, and the unity of God's people. The focus gradually shifts from Christ to bloodlines, from the church to nations, and from the kingdom of God to political destiny.

This was not merely a theological adjustment. It represented a significant change in how many people understood the biblical story itself.

The influence of British-Israelism extended well beyond those who formally embraced its teachings. Although the movement eventually declined in popularity, many of its underlying assumptions survived. The belief that particular nations possess a unique covenant status before God, that national greatness reflects divine election, that political events can be interpreted through covenant categories, and that modern nations occupy a special place in redemptive history continued to influence Christian thought long after British-Israelism itself faded from prominence.

These assumptions continue to appear, in various forms, within modern expressions of Christian nationalism.

Not everyone who embraces Christian nationalism is a British-Israelite, nor do all forms of Christian nationalism share the same beliefs. Nevertheless, British-Israelism helped establish patterns of thought that remain influential. It encouraged Christians to read national history through the lens of biblical prophecy and to view political destiny as an extension of covenant theology.

In this sense, British-Israelism was more than an unusual nineteenth-century theory. It represented an important stage in the development of modern prophetic thinking.

It also prepared the way for another significant shift.

British-Israelism helped create an environment in which national identity, ethnic descent, and prophetic fulfillment became increasingly interconnected. Though there is no scriptural basis or instruction to do so, once that framework existed, it became easier to relocate biblical prophecies from their original historical and covenantal settings into the modern world.

Gradually the question changed. Instead of asking, Is Britain Israel? many Christians began asking, Is modern Israel the center of biblical prophecy?

That transition would prove enormously significant. As prophetic speculation continued to grow, attention increasingly shifted from Britain to the Middle East, from imperial destiny to geopolitical fulfillment, and from restorationist theories concerning the Lost Tribes to new interpretations of biblical prophecy.

Those developments would become some of the defining features of modern futurist theology.

It is to that relocation of prophecy—and the rise of futurism—that we now turn.
____________________________________
 
Watch for it. 
 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Restorationism and the Reinvention of Christianity

This is part 4 of a 7 part series under the title of, "Why Christians Disagree -Scripture, History, and the Loss of Memory."  Part 3 can be found at: The Second Great Awakening and the Democratization of Interpretation
- Part 5 will follow shortly.
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The Second Great Awakening transformed more than church attendance and religious enthusiasm. It changed how many Christians understood the relationship between Scripture, history, and the church itself.

As confidence in established traditions declined and confidence in personal interpretation increased, a new question emerged: If the Bible alone is sufficient, and if centuries of church tradition have introduced errors, why not return directly to the New Testament and rebuild Christianity from its original foundations?

For many believers, this seemed not only reasonable but necessary.

This conviction gave rise to one of the most influential religious impulses of the nineteenth century: Restorationism.

Restorationism, sometimes called Christian Primitivism, is the belief that the original faith and practice of the apostolic church was lost, corrupted, or obscured over time and therefore must be restored. Unlike reform movements, which seek to correct errors while maintaining continuity with the historic church, restorationist movements generally assume that the corruption runs much deeper. The goal is not merely reform but recovery. The church must return to its original form.

The desire itself was understandable and, in many respects, admirable. Who would not want to recover the purity of apostolic Christianity? Who would not want to strip away human traditions and rediscover the teachings of Jesus and the apostles?

Yet this desire contained an assumption that would prove highly influential: that Christianity had drifted so far from its original foundations that existing churches could no longer be trusted to preserve the faith accurately.

Once that assumption was accepted, the logical next step was clear. The Bible would become the blueprint for reconstruction. A major difficulty, however, was that different groups reconstructed Christianity in different ways.

The remarkable feature of the nineteenth century was not simply that Christians desired reform. Christians had desired reform many times before. The remarkable feature was that numerous groups simultaneously concluded that authentic Christianity had been lost and that they had recovered it. Each appealed to Scripture. Each claimed to be restoring apostolic Christianity. Each believed previous generations had missed something important. Yet they often arrived at radically different conclusions.

Some concluded that the church had lost its proper structure and government. Others believed it had lost its understanding of holiness. Still others argued that the church had misunderstood prophecy, spiritual gifts, Israel, the kingdom, or the second coming of Christ.

The result was not one restoration but a type of fragmentation with many competing restorations.

The Stone-Campbell Movement sought to restore New Testament Christianity by rejecting denominational labels and emphasizing Christian unity through a return to biblical practices. The Plymouth Brethren sought to recover what they believed was the simplicity of apostolic Christianity. The Latter-day Saint movement argued that priesthood authority itself had been lost and required restoration through new revelation. Adventist movements became convinced that prophetic truths neglected for centuries had finally been rediscovered. Early Pentecostal groups believed that the supernatural gifts of the Spirit described in the New Testament had largely disappeared from the church and were now being restored in preparation for Christ's return.

In each of these movements notice the emerging pattern:

       Lost church order

       Lost holiness

       Lost prophecy

       Lost gifts

       Lost authority

Although these movements differed dramatically, they shared a common conviction: something essential had been lost, and they had found it.

This pattern extended beyond church structure and doctrine. It also influenced the understanding of Christian living itself.

One of the most influential streams emerging from the revival culture of the nineteenth century was the Holiness Movement. Like other restorationist movements, it began with the belief that something important had been neglected. Its concern, however, was not primarily church structure or prophecy. Its focus was the Christian life.

Advocates of the movement believed that many churches had become content with a faith that emphasized forgiveness while paying insufficient attention to transformation. Conversion was celebrated, but sanctification seemed neglected. Salvation was proclaimed, but victory over sin appeared increasingly absent.

Drawing heavily from the teachings of John Wesley and the Methodist tradition, Holiness teachers emphasized the possibility of deeper spiritual renewal and greater conformity to Christ. Revival meetings frequently stressed personal holiness, disciplined Christian living, and complete devotion to God.

At the center of the movement stood the doctrine often called "entire sanctification" or the "second blessing." Many believers became convinced that a distinct work of grace following conversion could enable a life of victorious obedience and freedom from conscious sin. Whether one agrees with all of its theological conclusions or not, the Holiness Movement reflected the same restorationist impulse visible elsewhere in the nineteenth century. Its adherents believed that the church had lost sight of a vital biblical truth and that Scripture provided the means to recover it.

In many respects, the movement made valuable contributions. It challenged nominal Christianity and called believers to pursue practical discipleship, moral integrity, prayer, and personal devotion. Yet it also illustrates an important feature of the restorationist mindset. Once Christians become convinced that previous generations have overlooked essential truths, there is often little agreement regarding which truths have actually been lost.

For some, the answer was holiness.

For others, it was prophecy.

And prophecy would soon become one of the most powerful forces shaping nineteenth-century Christianity.

Alongside the emphasis on holiness emerged an intense fascination with biblical prophecy. Interest in the second coming of Christ was certainly not new. Christians had anticipated Christ's return since the first century. Throughout church history various individuals and movements had attempted to predict its timing. What distinguished the nineteenth century was not the existence of prophetic speculation but its scale.

The atmosphere created by the Second Great Awakening proved especially fertile soil for prophetic excitement. Political revolutions, social upheaval, rapid technological change, and widespread revivalism convinced many that they were living in extraordinary times. Increasingly, Christians searched the books of Daniel and Revelation for clues regarding contemporary events and the timing of Christ's return.

Out of this environment emerged Adventism.

The Adventist movement traces its origins primarily to the preaching of William Miller, a Baptist lay preacher who became convinced that careful study of biblical prophecy revealed the approximate timing of Christ's return. Miller concluded that Christ would return during the early 1840s and eventually settled upon October 22, 1844.

The prediction failed. The event later became known as the Great Disappointment.

One might reasonably assume that a failed prophecy would end the movement. Instead, it fragmented. Some followers abandoned the movement altogether. Others returned to their former churches. Still others concluded that the date had been correct but that the event itself had been misunderstood. Various groups emerged, each attempting to explain the disappointment while preserving portions of Miller's prophetic framework.

Out of this environment arose several Adventist organizations, including the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the Advent Christian Church. Other groups would later develop theological connections to Adventist ideas even while departing from them in significant ways.

The significance of Adventism extends beyond its own denominational history. Like many restorationist movements, Adventism was built upon the conviction that the church had misunderstood an important biblical truth for centuries. Through renewed study of Scripture, forgotten prophetic knowledge had supposedly been recovered.

By this point a pattern should be emerging:

       The restoration of church structure.

       The restoration of holiness.

       The restoration of prophetic truth.

Each represented a different answer to the same question: What had Christianity lost?

The irony is difficult to miss. Many restorationist movements sought to overcome division. Their stated goal was often Christian unity through a return to biblical foundations. Yet because different groups reached different conclusions regarding what needed to be restored, the result was frequently greater fragmentation rather than less.

The same Bible that inspired the restorationist impulse also produced multiple and competing restorations.

This does not mean the desire for reform was wrong. The church has always required renewal and correction. Nor does it mean that every restorationist insight was mistaken. Many movements identified genuine problems and called attention to neglected biblical themes.

The lesson is not that reform should be avoided.

The lesson is that reform should be pursued with humility.

History is not the enemy of biblical faithfulness. It is often one of its greatest allies. Before concluding that a forgotten truth has finally been rediscovered, it is worth asking whether previous generations have already wrestled with the same questions and learned lessons we have forgotten.

The nineteenth century witnessed an extraordinary number of attempts to restore authentic Christianity. Yet among all the competing restorations, some would prove far more influential than others. In particular, the restoration of prophetic truth would soon merge with new ideas about Israel, national destiny, and biblical prophecy.

It is to those developments that we now turn.
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Part 5  "British-Israelism and Prophetic Nationalism" is next. 
Watch for it.
 

 

Sunday, June 21, 2026

The Second Great Awakening and the Democratization of Interpretation

This is part 3 of a 7 part series under the title of, "Why Christians Disagree -Scripture, History, and the Loss of Memory."  Part 2 can be found at: Sola Scriptura and the Problem of Authority

 - Part 4 will follow shortly.
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By the beginning of the nineteenth century, profound changes were taking place throughout the English-speaking world. Political revolutions had challenged long-established institutions. Democratic ideals were spreading rapidly. Literacy rates were increasing. Printing technology made books and pamphlets more accessible than ever before, and affordable Bibles were finding their way into countless homes.

These developments produced many positive results. More people could read for themselves. More people had access to Scripture. More people were able to participate in religious discussions that had once been limited largely to clergy and scholars.

At the same time, these changes also transformed how religious authority was understood.

For centuries, Christians had interpreted Scripture within communities shaped by creeds, confessions, traditions, and established theological frameworks. The Protestant Reformation had challenged certain aspects of ecclesiastical authority, but the Reformers themselves remained deeply rooted in the historic church. They appealed to the early church fathers, respected the ancient creeds, and understood themselves to be recovering rather than reinventing Christianity.

The generations that followed increasingly moved in a different direction.

As confidence in inherited traditions declined, confidence in personal interpretation increased. More and more Christians became convinced that authentic Christianity could be recovered simply by setting aside centuries of theological development and returning directly to the Bible. The desire was understandable. If Scripture was God's Word, why not read it for oneself? Why not strip away later traditions and recover the faith of the apostles?

This impulse would become one of the defining characteristics of the Second Great Awakening.

The Second Great Awakening is often remembered primarily as a period of revival. That description is accurate as far as it goes. Across North America and parts of Britain, large gatherings drew thousands of attendees. Passionate preaching emphasized personal conversion, repentance, and commitment to Christ. Churches grew rapidly, missionary activity expanded, and many social reform movements found inspiration in the revival spirit of the age.

Yet the Second Great Awakening was more than a revival movement.

It was also a revolution in religious authority.

Increasingly, ordinary Christians became convinced that they could set aside centuries of theological reflection, read the Bible for themselves, and recover the original faith of the apostles. The desire was often sincere and admirable. Yet when thousands of individuals and movements attempted this task independently, the result was not a single restoration of primitive Christianity but a remarkable proliferation of competing restorations. Each claimed biblical support. Each claimed to have recovered truths lost by previous generations. Each appealed to Scripture. Yet they often arrived at radically different conclusions.

This phenomenon raises an important question. If all these groups were reading the same Bible, why were they reaching such different conclusions?

The answer is not that Scripture had changed. Nor is it that the participants were insincere. Rather, it illustrates a principle discussed in the previous chapter: every reader approaches Scripture through a particular interpretive framework. When traditional frameworks are rejected, new frameworks inevitably emerge. The individual does not cease interpreting; he simply interprets differently.

The nineteenth century provided fertile ground for this process.

Many revivalists believed that denominational traditions had corrupted authentic Christianity. The solution, they argued, was to return directly to the Bible and reconstruct the church from the ground up. This restorationist impulse became one of the most powerful religious forces of the age.

The results were dramatic.

Some movements sought to restore what they believed to be New Testament church government. Others attempted to restore apostolic worship practices. Still others focused on recovering forgotten prophetic truths. Each movement believed it had rediscovered an important piece of biblical Christianity that previous generations had overlooked or abandoned.

The Stone-Campbell Movement sought to restore primitive Christianity by rejecting denominational labels and returning to the practices of the New Testament church. The Millerite movement became convinced that careful study of biblical prophecy revealed the timing of Christ's return. New restorationist groups emerged throughout North America, each claiming a fresh understanding of Scripture and a renewed connection to apostolic Christianity.

Not all of these movements remained within the boundaries of historic Christian orthodoxy.

The nineteenth century also witnessed the rise of Mormonism, Christian Science, and movements that would later contribute to the development of Jehovah's Witnesses. While these groups differed significantly from one another, they shared a common conviction that long-established Christian traditions had failed and that biblical truth needed to be recovered through fresh interpretation.

This remarkable proliferation of movements has few parallels in earlier Christian history.

The Middle Ages certainly witnessed theological controversies, dissenting groups, and reform movements. Various challenges emerged, including the Cathars, Waldensians, Lollards, Hussites, and other movements that questioned aspects of the established church. Earlier centuries had faced their own crises, including Arianism, Pelagianism, Donatism, Nestorianism, and numerous other controversies.

Yet the scale was different.

Most medieval controversies occurred within a culture that still recognized the authority of the broader church, even when particular leaders or practices were challenged. New movements certainly arose, but they did not multiply at anything approaching the rate seen during the nineteenth century.

By contrast, the decades surrounding the Second Great Awakening produced an extraordinary number of denominations, restorationist movements, prophetic systems, sects, and cultic groups. Entirely new theological systems emerged. New interpretations of prophecy appeared. New understandings of Israel, the church, the kingdom, and the end times gained widespread acceptance.

The difference was not merely theological. It reflected a profound shift in how authority itself was understood.

Increasingly, the individual reader became the primary interpreter of Scripture. Appeals to church history carried less weight. Creeds were viewed with suspicion. The wisdom of previous generations was often regarded as a barrier rather than a resource. What mattered most was not what Christians had believed historically but what an individual believed he could discover directly from the biblical text.

This shift did not necessarily begin with hostility toward tradition. In many cases it began with a sincere desire to recover biblical truth. Yet the unintended consequence was fragmentation.

When hundreds of groups simultaneously attempt to restore original Christianity while rejecting the interpretive conclusions of previous generations, the result is not necessarily unity. More often, it is multiplication. Each movement thinks they have discovered something different. Each emphasizes different passages. Each develops distinct theological priorities. Each becomes convinced that it has found what others have missed.

The irony is striking.

Many of these movements were motivated by a desire to overcome division. They sought to return to a pure and original Christianity that existed before denominations and theological disputes. Yet the very process of independent restoration often produced additional divisions and new denominations.

The result was a religious landscape unlike anything the Christian world had previously experienced. The nineteenth century saw more denominational innovation than the previous thousand years of Western Christianity combined.

By the end of the nineteenth century, Protestant Christianity had become increasingly fragmented. Alongside traditional denominations stood restorationist movements, Adventist groups, holiness movements, Pentecostal precursors, prophetic conferences, and a growing number of organizations devoted to recovering what they believed were neglected biblical truths.

Many of the ideas that continue to shape modern evangelicalism emerged from this environment. Restorationism, futurism, dispensationalism, British-Israelism, prophetic speculation, and various forms of Christian nationalism all developed within a culture increasingly convinced that inherited interpretations could be discarded and replaced by fresh readings of Scripture.

This does not mean that every movement arising from the period was equally mistaken, nor does it mean that every new insight was false. History demonstrates that the church has often benefited from reform and correction. The question is not whether reform is necessary. The question is how reform should occur and what role history, tradition, and the broader Christian community should play in the process.

The Second Great Awakening therefore deserves to be remembered not only as a revival movement but also as a turning point in the history of biblical interpretation. It marked a moment when the democratization of religious authority accelerated dramatically and when confidence in individual interpretation reached unprecedented levels.

The democratization of interpretation produced both opportunities and dangers. Scripture became accessible to ordinary believers on an unprecedented scale. Yet access to Scripture did not always bring access to the historical context in which Scripture had been interpreted. Many readers possessed a Bible but little familiarity with the theological debates that had shaped Christian doctrine over the previous eighteen centuries. As a result, ideas long discussed or rejected sometimes reappeared in new forms, often presented as forgotten truths recovered directly from Scripture.

The effects of that shift continue to shape Christianity today.

To understand many of the theological systems that dominate the modern religious landscape, we must first understand the environment that produced them. It is to one of those movements—restorationism and the attempt to recover primitive Christianity—that we now turn our attention.
_______________________________________

Part 4  "Restorationism and the Reinvention of Christianity" is next. 
Watch for it.
 

 

 


Thursday, June 18, 2026

Sola Scriptura and the Problem of Authority

This is part 2 of a 7 part series under the title of, "Why Christians Disagree -Scripture, History, and the Loss of Memory."  Part 1 can be found at: The Challenge of Understanding Scripture - Part 1
- Part 3 will follow shortly.
____________________________________


The question addressed in this section is not whether Scripture is true, authoritative, or inspired. Christians from a wide variety of traditions affirm those things. The question is how Scripture should be understood and interpreted.
If sincere Christians all possess the same Bible, why do they often reach different conclusions?

That question lies at the heart of many of the divisions, controversies, and theological movements that have shaped the Christian world over the last five hundred years. Christians have disagreed over baptism, church government, spiritual gifts, prophecy, salvation, Israel and the Church, the Kingdom of God, and countless other subjects. The existence of these disagreements does not prove that Scripture is unclear or unreliable. It does, however, remind us that interpretation is unavoidable. Every reader approaches the text with assumptions, experiences, traditions, and methods of interpretation. Whether we realize it or not, we are all interpreters.

This brings us to one of the most influential principles to emerge from the Protestant Reformation: Sola Scriptura.

The phrase is often translated as "Scripture alone," but before considering its meaning, it is important to recognize that the doctrine itself has a history.

If by Sola Scriptura we mean the specific claim that Scripture alone is the Church's only infallible rule of faith and practice, then the doctrine as formally articulated is largely a product of the Reformation. Prior to the sixteenth century, Christians certainly spoke of the authority of Scripture, but they did not typically formulate that authority in the precise way the Reformers later would.

This observation should not be misunderstood. The early church held an extraordinarily high view of Scripture. Christians consistently regarded the biblical writings as inspired by God and authoritative for doctrine and practice. When confronting false teachings, early Christian leaders repeatedly appealed to Scripture as the final standard by which truth claims were tested.

Irenaeus appealed to Scripture against the Gnostic movements of his day. Athanasius described Scripture as sufficient for teaching the truth. Augustine repeatedly affirmed the supremacy of Scripture over bishops and councils whenever human authorities appeared to conflict with the biblical text.

For this reason, many Protestants argue that the early church effectively taught Sola Scriptura long before the Reformation. Yet the historical picture is more complicated.

The same church fathers who elevated Scripture also appealed to apostolic tradition, the rule of faith, church councils, episcopal authority, and the consensus of the churches. They did not treat these authorities as equal to Scripture, but neither did they regard them as irrelevant. Scripture occupied the highest position, yet it was read within the life of the church and within a framework inherited from previous generations.

Many historians therefore describe the dominant patristic view as something closer to Prima Scriptura—"Scripture first"—rather than Sola Scriptura as later defined.

Under such an approach, Scripture remains the highest authority, but tradition possesses real authority. Councils possess authority. The church possesses authority. Creeds possess authority. None of these are considered infallible in themselves, yet all serve important roles in preserving and transmitting the faith. Their authority is subordinate to Scripture, but it is not nonexistent.

A helpful example can be seen in the Arian controversy of the fourth century. Both Arius and his opponents appealed to Scripture in support of their positions. The question was not whether Scripture was authoritative. The question was how Scripture should be understood.

The controversy was not settled through private interpretation alone. Instead, the church gathered in council, debated the relevant passages, appealed to the inherited faith of previous generations, and eventually articulated its conclusions at Nicaea in AD 325. Scripture remained the ultimate authority, but the church did not assume that every individual reader was equally equipped to determine its meaning in isolation.

The history of the church is not merely a record of what Christians believed. It is also a record of the questions they asked, the errors they confronted, and the conclusions they reached after generations of debate. Creeds and confessions did not arise in a vacuum. They were forged in response to real theological controversies and often represent the collective effort of the church to understand and defend the faith once delivered to the saints.

When historical memory weakens, old ideas often return under new names.  Concepts previously examined and rejected may be rediscovered by later generations who are unaware of earlier debates. In this way, ignorance of history can create the illusion of theological innovation. What appears to be a new insight is sometimes the revival of an old error, while what is presented as a forgotten truth may simply be a question the church has already wrestled with and resolved.

This historical background helps explain what the Reformers were—and were not—attempting to accomplish.

The Reformers were not seeking to abandon the church's history. They did not reject the ancient creeds, nor did they believe Christianity began in the sixteenth century. Martin Luther and John Calvin quoted the church fathers extensively. They appealed to the ancient councils and frequently argued that their teachings represented a recovery of early Christianity rather than an innovation.

Their concern was authority.

When conflicts arose between Scripture and church tradition, which should have the final word? Could councils err? Could church leaders be mistaken? Could traditions become corrupted? The Reformers answered yes.

Their argument was not that history, creeds, confessions, and tradition were useless. Their argument was that none of these possessed the same authority as Scripture. Councils could err. Traditions could err. Popes could err. Scripture alone was infallible.

This distinction is crucial because it highlights the difference between what later came to be known as Sola Scriptura and what many have called Solo Scriptura.

The Reformers envisioned Scripture as the highest authority within the believing community. Modern individualism often transformed that principle into Scripture isolated from the believing community.

Under Sola Scriptura, the Christian reads Scripture alongside the wisdom of the church. Under Solo Scriptura, the Christian stands alone with Bible in hand. The difference is profound.

Once history becomes irrelevant, once creeds become optional, and once every generation assumes it can begin from scratch, the possibility of endless reinterpretation increases dramatically.

At this point it is worth returning to the contract illustration discussed earlier. (See Part 1 https://cblform.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-challenge-of-understanding.html)

When attempting to understand a disputed clause in a contract, experienced negotiators do not merely examine the words themselves. They ask why the clause was included. They examine the circumstances that produced it. They investigate the concerns it was intended to address and the audience for whom it was written. The meaning of the text is inseparable from the context in which it was created.

Yet Christians sometimes approach Scripture differently. Rather than asking what a passage meant to its original audience, we often begin by asking what it means to us. Rather than examining the historical circumstances surrounding a text, we sometimes jump immediately to contemporary applications. Rather than understanding a passage within the covenant context that produced it, we may read modern assumptions into ancient words.

The result is that biblical texts become detached from their historical setting. Warnings addressed to specific audiences are transformed into predictions for distant generations. Covenant judgments become modern political forecasts. Symbolic language is treated as newspaper prophecy. Passages written to first-century believers are reinterpreted primarily through the lens of modern events.

Once a text is separated from its original context, the range of possible interpretations expands dramatically.

This observation does not mean that Scripture lacks relevance for later generations. On the contrary, Christians have always believed that Scripture speaks powerfully to every age. But Scripture speaks most clearly when it is first understood in the setting in which it was given. Application should follow interpretation, not replace it.

The Reformers themselves understood this principle. They worked diligently to recover the historical and grammatical meaning of Scripture. They sought to understand what the biblical authors intended to communicate before asking how those teachings applied to their own day. Ironically, some later generations who claimed allegiance to the Reformation would become less interested in recovering the original context of Scripture and more interested in finding hidden prophetic meanings, speculative timelines, and entirely new theological systems.

This development was not immediate. Nor was it caused by any single doctrine. Yet certain historical trends gradually combined to produce significant changes within Protestant Christianity. The printing press made Bibles widely available. Literacy rates increased. Traditional authorities were increasingly questioned. Political revolutions encouraged democratic ideals. Individual judgment came to be valued more highly than history and inherited tradition.

These developments brought many benefits. They enabled ordinary people to read Scripture for themselves and encouraged greater engagement with the biblical text. Yet they also produced unintended consequences. As confidence in traditional authorities declined, confidence in personal interpretation increased. More and more people became convinced that they could reconstruct authentic Christianity simply by reading the Bible apart from the interpretive frameworks that had guided previous generations.

The result was an explosion of competing interpretations.

New movements emerged claiming to have rediscovered truths lost for centuries. New prophetic systems appeared. Long-established doctrines were challenged. Churches divided. Denominations multiplied. In some cases, entirely new religions emerged, each claiming biblical support for its teachings.

None of this happened because people rejected the Bible. Quite the opposite. Most of these movements claimed to be returning to the Bible. The issue was not whether Scripture was authoritative. The issue was how Scripture should be interpreted and who possessed the authority to determine its meaning.

By the beginning of the nineteenth century, these trends had created fertile soil for dramatic religious change. Millions of people possessed Bibles. Literacy was increasing. Confidence in established traditions was weakening. Many had become convinced that authentic Christianity could be recovered simply by setting aside history and reading the Bible afresh.

The consequences would reshape the religious landscape of the English-speaking world and give rise to movements that continue to influence Christianity to this day.

To understand how this happened, we must now turn our attention to one of the most significant religious movements in modern history: the Second Great Awakening.
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Part 3  "The Second Great Awakening and the Democratization of Interpretation" is next. Watch for it.


 

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

The Challenge of Understanding Scripture - Part 1

This is part 1 of a 7 part series under the title of, "Why Christians Disagree -Scripture, History, and the Loss of Memory."  
Part 2 will follow shortly.

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Before proceeding, I should make one thing clear. Nothing that follows should be understood as a criticism of Scripture itself. I affirm without hesitation the words of the Apostle Paul:

"All Scripture is inspired by God and beneficial for teaching, for rebuke, for correction, and for training in righteousness" 
(2 Timothy 3:16, NASB).

The question addressed in these essays is not whether Scripture is true, authoritative, or inspired. Christians from a wide variety of traditions affirm those things. The question is how Scripture should be understood and interpreted.

History demonstrates that sincere believers, all claiming loyalty to the same Bible, have often reached very different conclusions. Some of those differences have been minor; others have produced entirely new denominations, movements, and theological systems. The issue, therefore, is not whether Scripture possesses authority. The issue is how that authority is understood, applied, and interpreted.

With that in mind, consider the following illustration.


Why Interpretation Matters

During a period of my career, I was involved in negotiating collective agreements. Even after both parties had reached agreement in principle on every major issue, many additional hours were spent carefully crafting the language of the contract. The goal was simple: to express as precisely as possible what had been agreed upon so that misunderstandings could be avoided later.

Once the contract was finalized and all parties had written copies in hand, one might assume that its meaning would be clear and that disputes would be rare. Experience taught otherwise.

Another part of my work involved dispute resolution and contract interpretation, often through the grievance process. Why was this necessary? Was one side always acting in bad faith? Not at all. In many cases, both parties sincerely believed they were interpreting the agreement correctly. Despite everyone's best efforts to produce clear language, differences in interpretation still arose. Those differences sometimes led to misunderstandings, strained communication, and formal grievances.

What makes this especially interesting is that these disputes occurred only months—or at most a few years—after the contract had been written. The original negotiators were often still available to explain their intent. The historical context was known, the language was contemporary, and the events that shaped the agreement were still fresh in memory.

Yet even when the wording of a contract appears straightforward, experienced negotiators know that understanding the text alone is often not enough. To interpret a disputed clause correctly, one must often ask additional questions:

       Why was this provision included in the agreement?
       Which concerns was it intended to address?
       What circumstances led to its adoption?
       Who was it written for, and what problem was it designed to solve?

Without that background, it is easy to assign meanings to the words that seem reasonable on the surface but fail to reflect the intent of those who drafted them. In practice, understanding the history behind the agreement is often just as important as understanding the words on the page.

Now consider the challenge of interpreting documents written thousands of years ago in cultures vastly different from our own. Add to that the fact that we are separated from the original authors by language, geography, history, and worldview. Then imagine attempting to settle interpretive disputes while paying little attention to the historical setting in which those documents were written.

This, I believe, helps explain some of the challenges we face when interpreting Scripture. If misunderstandings can arise over modern documents written in our own language and within living memory, it should not surprise us that Christians sometimes reach different conclusions about texts written in the ancient world. The question, therefore, is not whether interpretation matters, but whether we are willing to do the hard work of understanding Scripture within the historical and covenantal context in which it was first given.

If interpretation is difficult even when dealing with modern documents, it should not surprise us that Christians have sometimes disagreed about the meaning of Scripture. The more difficult question is how such disagreements should be resolved.

       Is every reader equally qualified to determine the meaning of the text?
       Does history matter?
       Does the understanding of previous generations have any value? Or should every generation begin again with nothing but the Bible in hand?

I believe each of the above questions must be seriously considered. These questions lie at the heart of one of the most influential ideas to emerge from the Reformation: Sola Scriptura.
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Part 2  "Sola Scriptura and the Problem of Authority" is next.  

 

 

 

Futurism and the Relocation of Prophecy

This is part 6 of a 7 part series under the title of, " Why Christians Disagree - Scripture, History, and the Loss of Memory."   ...