August 13, 2010

Examining The Scripture CXXIV: The Seventy Sevens

--+Disclaimer+--
Yes, I am flirting with disaster here and possibly soliciting "friction" with those that hold future prophecy as essential to their salvation. I will say right in the beginning of this post that in the past I sat on the fence when it came to Amillinnial and Premillennial but now lean heavily towards Premillinnial. In addition to this I was raised in a dispensational household as a child so it often "colors" my take on current and future events. In relation to the tribulation: As described in the Bible I consider myself pretrib/pretribulation. As John MacArthur (i.e.: Johnny Mac) has once said of himself: I am a leaky dispensationalist. I will close this post with additional thoughts along these lines.


I've used Clarence Larkin's illustration as it is the most artistic and uncluttered. Also, it was in my parents library and frankly, I like the chart ;). If you are not dispensational or do not know what that means just ignore the word in the chart. The chart will still work for our purposes.

Interpretations of Daniel 9:24-27. This passage is likely one of the most disputed prophetic texts in the OT. Due to the difficulty of this passage I wanted the most literal English translation so I have used the NASB.

Daniel 9:24-27 and the seventy sevens were decreed to the people to finish transgression, put an end to sin, to atone for wickedness, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to anoint the most holy.

(1) From the issuing of the decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem until the Anointed One, the ruler, comes, there will be seven 'sevens,' and sixty-two 'sevens.'

(2) It will be rebuilt with streets and a trench, but in times of trouble. After the sixty-two 'sevens,' the Anointed One will be cut off and will have nothing.

(3) The people of the ruler who will come will destroy the city and the sanctuary. The end will come like a flood: War will continue until the end, and desolation has been decreed.

(4) He will confirm a covenant with many for one 'seven.'
(4a) In the middle of the 'seven' he will put an end to sacrifice and offering.
(4b) On a wing of the temple he will set up an abomination that causes desolation, until the end that is decreed is poured out on him.

What we as readers are fairly certain of in this small passage is that it is a passage about six objectives that need completing (Longman, Garland 169).

(1) To “Finish Transgression”. A generalized understanding of this is rebellion against God based on a brief perusal of text.
(2) To put an end to sin
(3) To atone for wickedness
(4) To bring everlasting righteousness
(5) Seal up the vision and Prophecy
(6) Anoint the most holy

The the seventy sevens are weeks although unstated in the NASB passage. That being said there have been a lot of attempts at explanation of this prophecy. They usually divide into two camps Messianic (Christological) or Non-Messianic (Non-Christological). Conservative scholars such as Edward Young have ended up with no reasonably good explanation of this. So I guess that is the first interpretation: No interpretation. I will do the remainder in outline form and embellish.

The Messianic approach is to be fulfilled in the life and ministry of Jesus the Messiah (Christological). The other is the “Antiochene” approach which makes this passage pertain to only to known Hebrew history of the Babylonian captivity, restoration of Jerusalem and persecution by Antiochus Epiphanes. This approach emphasizes a lack of a Messianic figure or a Non-Messianic (Non-Christological) view.

Of course I will dwell mainly on the Messianic interpretation because it is along my beliefs and it has a long history of being interpreted this way in the Church. It is also encompasses the amillennial and premillennial views most prevalent (Longman, Garland 168-175)

(1) The weeks are actually viewed as years (amillenialists may not agree due to timescale).
(1a) The word “sevens” is in a masculine plural rather than feminine to indicate its oddity of use
(1b) The fact that there were 70 years of captivity would imply years/year.
(1c) Up to this point the context of Daniel’s writing has been in years
(1d) We often think of things in unit of tens today, in Daniels time that unit was sevens or groups of sevens(heptads).

(2) Seventy Sevens would equate to 490 years and are understood literally.
(2a) 490 years extend from the command to rebuild Jerusalem after Babylonian exile to the second advent of Jesus the Messiah or the second coming at the end of human history.
(2b) The command to rebuild is understood to be under Artaxerxes I (Ezra/Nehemiah)
(2c) The end of the 1st set of seven weeks or 49 years coincides with completion of of restoring Jerusalem
(2d) The 2nd set of sevens or 62 sevens or 434 years extends in a line from the end of the set of sevens until the first advent of Jesus Christ (baptism of triumphant entry around 25 AD.

Here we have further divergence of interpretation, this time it is between the Preterist, Amillennialist and the Premillenialist. The exact dividing line between these camps I have not yet determined. For some the final week of years or 70th week is fulfilled in the Jewish War (67-73AD) when Roman General Titus sacked Jerusalem and destroyed the Temple “mid-week” in 70AD. For still others like the Premillennialists the final week is associated to the events of the End Times and the second coming of Christ. That means there is a great swath of time between the 69th and 70th week. Depending on the believer’s point of view this could be the Great Tribulation (or not). Therefore the final or 70th week will conclude with the second coming of Christ thereby bringing about the deliverance of modern-day Jews, destruction of the Antichrist and the beginning of the Kingdom in its entirety rather the “now and not yet”.


As for my own views, they lean towards Premillennial. For me post is too optimistic in light of the last few centuries and I cannot reconcile Revelation 20 and the Amillennial view at this point in my walk. Although this is an important topic to others (and myself), I do not believe it is a salvational issue as much as it is a future prophetic event. Regardless of whether it is Amill or Premill millennium

Addendum:

I would like to add a note about this post's topic. It was and is quite difficult to explain this scenario satisfactorily for a few different reasons. There are different ways to interpret and view these oracles, visions and prophecies. If they were clear-cut they would be no differences and consternation in the Church over their meanings. Such is not the case.

If you are decisive and pin down the angle that you want to hammer away to get an answer from the text you only open a can of worms somewhere else. The visions were often metaphorical or used imagery to parlay an idea and how you interpret whether it be literal or figurative directly affects what you come out of the text with.

What I found as I dug into this was that I am currently taking neutral positions on some and this has always been a pet peeve of mine, people not saying what they mean and meaning what they say. I use to be a lot more dogmatic in situations like this but I am finding now that I go where the spirit leads. This tact has brought me back to school to pursue my Master's in Theology. I need to resolve some of these topics and will more than likely end up taking specific classes to address my...hmmmm...indecisiveness.

What I am decisive about and sure of is that the Bible is inerrant. That being said some day the exact dates will be known and the truth of the oracles and visions will be also and we’ll all sit there and say, “Whhooooaaaa, I get it, that was a great plan God! I’d have never thought of that!”

3 comments:

Mark M. said...

Nice work on this Andy. You have some very good comments and you sound a lot like I was. I've studied this topic for 30+ years since I was in grade school and have looked at Revelation and other texts from every angle and belief system. What was constantly confusing to me is that many teachings do not make sense with the whole rest of scripture. Even the interpretation of Dan 9 can be non-sensical really and inconsistent in that actual years of time are used to interpret the first part of the prophesy and then indiscriminate thousands of possible years are often used to describe then last part even though the scripture passage itself does not indicate that. Yet these unclear passages are often used in higher priority to "explain" end times scenarios rather than looking at the clear passages in scripture. As the bible is inerrant (I totally agree) then no one passage of scripture should be used in such a way as to trump or make it conflict with what is clearly taught elsewhere in scripture. A really good book for you to read is David Chilton's "the days of Vengeance" another easier read is Chilton's "The Great Tribulation". Read this if only to see exactly what scripture says about itself without adding some layer of assumptions that many have taught. The OT is clearly a key that unlocks the code of Revelation. The book itself is called "Revelation" not "Concealment"...as such, it is meant to be understood. The bible is 66 books written by many people but one single author and that Author does not contradict himself or confuse His people. Modern day eschatology teaching fails in that its focus is on the future when the Bible clearly teaches that history is HIS-story. It centers on Jesus Christ in every book from Genesis to the book of the "Revelation of Jesus Christ". Not the "Revelation of the end of the world" and not the revelation of a really powerful satan. It is about dominion and proof that Jesus work on the cross and the resurrection was central to all of history and His plan of redemption from beginning to end. Jesus last words were "It is Finished". You have an open mind and the right foundation, I can tell from the way you write. I encourage you to turn your focus of eschatology to what John and Jesus actually say rather than being pulled into man made opinions about spaces between the years, or between verses. Once you do, the rest will become very clear to you. These books will help you. You seem to know and study scripture so you do not seem to be a person who will be taken by surprise or gullible. I believe you will have an "Aha" moment like I did. I am also a theology major. I studied under one of the most outspoken pre-tribulationists as well as under a highly published ammillenialist. So I can relate. Also spend some time studying Deut 28, and the book of Hebrews too. I applaud your search for truth and pray God will use you in many wonderful ways.

Andy Pierson said...

Thanks Mark. A wise and discretionary exegete cannot arrive a hasty and clean-cut interpretation of these Scriptures. If they have, they probably didn't sharpen their pencil enough and study the passages thoroughly nor correctly. There is a lot we can glean from the text but there is a lot that cannot be. Those that will attempt to impose a rigid dogmatic interpretation on this are usually in error and attempting to impose their own meaning on it to fit their own ends (eisigesis). Usually Dispensationalism and Preteristism

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