14-3 The Millennium
Isaiah 65
The only spanner in these works may be Is. 65:20: "The sinner being an
hundred years old shall be accursed". Firstly, how can this be reconciled
with a punishment of the wicked by fire? And most importantly, Is. 65:17-25
is describing the state of the mortal people during the Millennium. The
passage makes no reference to the state of the saints. The people are
described as being obedient, blessed and righteous. But the fact that
some will be rejected at the second judgement at the end of the Millennium
shows that not all will be like this; even during the Millennium the sinner
will not receive the blessings of long life, and will be "accursed". Thus
there will be a more public divide between the seeds of the woman and
serpent, as there was in early times (so Genesis and the nature of the
discussion in the book of Job implies).
Is. 66:24 concludes that the rejected "shall be an abhorring to all flesh"-
the Hebrew text of Dan. 12:2 concerning the punishment of the responsible
at judgement suggests some allusion to this: "some to shame and everlasting
contempt".
Thus we have Biblical justification for seeing the Angel-controlled punishment
of the "sinners in Zion" in Hezekiah's time as pointing forward to the
punishment of the unworthy by the Angels at Jerusalem. With the unworthy
out of Jerusalem, the Kingdom starts to be established. Seeing that there
will still be mortal Jews in Jerusalem, it is worth
speculating whether the judgement will take place in the old city of David
("Zion")- where Christ will sit on David's throne. The Arab invasions
prior to the Lord's return of Zech. 14 will have wiped out a fair proportion
of the natural Jews in the area, so the problem of there being many mortals
in the vicinity is not significant.
There is much evidence that the Kingdom starts initially in Jerusalem
and then spreads worldwide slowly. Many of the prophecies concerning it
are addressed to "Jerusalem" and "Mount Zion". The stone of Daniel 2 hits
the earth and grows from there to cover the earth. It is logical if it
hits the earth at Jerusalem, where all the kingdoms of men represented
by the metals will be present, gathered together against Jerusalem. It
appears that the unworthy having been destroyed, a colony of saints is
established around Jerusalem, living in Kingdom conditions. They live
in "the land of unwalled villages. . dwelling safely all of them. . .
without walls, and having neither bars nor gates" (v. 11)- Kingdom language.
The Angels give Gog the "evil thought" of invading the "land of unwalled
villages", apparently after the invasions of the land as a whole. The
people living there are "gathered out of the nations"- capable of reference
to the saints (Mt. 25:31-34) who have just been gathered from all nations.
The great wealth which attracts Gog must be due to the Kingdom conditions
there- the Arab invasions of Zech. 14 (which must be before the second
coming, seeing that Jerusalem is ransacked) will have devastated the land
of its present wealth. The sudden prosperity reported around Jerusalem
will no doubt intrigue the world, and prove a fatal attraction. "The desolate
places that are now inhabited" (v. 12) probably refers specifically
to the temple area/old city of Jerusalem which will have been the scene
of much bitter Israeli/Arab fighting.
Thus the final onslaught of Gog and his followers occurs, this time with
Christ and the redeemed in Jerusalem, thus fulfilling Psalm 2: "The
kings of the earth (cp. Is. 24:21) set themselves. . . against the
Lord, and against His anointed (Christ). . . yet have I set My King
upon My holy hill of Zion". Any who find it hard to imagine Christ
and the saints temporarily giving ground to Gog and allowing themselves
to be besieged in Jerusalem by him should reflect that an almost
identical situation will occur at the end of the
Millennium, when another (how different?) Gog and Magog will push
the saints back into Jerusalem with Christ, until He breaks out
upon them again.
|