
                  The Interpretation 
                    of Prophecy 
                    An Exercise in Imagination or 
                    the Application of Plain Sense?
                    by Dr. David R. Reagan 
                  
 
 
                  
                When I was about 12 years 
                  old, I stumbled across Zechariah 14. It was an amazing discovery. 
                  You see, I grew up in a church where we were told over and over 
                  that "there is not one verse in the Bible that even implies 
                  that Jesus will ever set His feet on this earth again." 
                   
                
 
                  
                    Simple Language 
                  
                Well, Zechariah 14 not only 
                  implies that the Lord is coming back to this earth again, it 
                  says so point- blank! It says that the Lord will return to this 
                  earth at a time when the Jews are back in the land of Israel 
                  and their capital city, Jerusalem, is under siege. Just as the 
                  city is about to fall, the Lord will return to the Mount of 
                  Olives.  
                
When His feet touch the ground, 
                  the mount will split in half. The remnant of Jews left in the 
                  city will take refuge in the cleavage of the mountain. The Lord 
                  will then speak a supernatural word, and the armies surrounding 
                  Jerusalem will be destroyed in an instant.  
                
Verse 9 declares that on 
                  that day "the Lord will be king over all the earth." 
                   
                
 
                  
                    Muddled Interpretations 
                  
                When I first discovered this 
                  passage, I took it to my minister and asked him what it meant. 
                  I will never forget his response. He thought for a moment, and 
                  then He said, "Son I don't know what it means, but I'll 
                  guarantee you one thing: it doesn't mean what it says!" 
                   
                
For years after that, I would 
                  show Zechariah 14 to every visiting evangelist who came preaching 
                  that Jesus would never return to this earth. I always received 
                  the same response: "It doesn't mean what it says." 
                  I couldn't buy that answer.  
                
Finally, I ran across a minister 
                  who was a seminary graduate, and he gave me the answer I could 
                  live with. "Nothing in Zechariah means what it says," 
                  he explained, "because the whole book is apocalyptic." 
                   
                
Now, I didn't have the slightest 
                  idea what "apocalyptic" meant. I didn't know if it 
                  was a disease or a philosophy. But it sounded sophisticated, 
                  and, after all, the fellow was a seminary graduate, so he should 
                  know.  
                
 
                  
                    A Discovery Experience 
                  
                When I began to preach, I 
                  parroted what I had heard from the pulpit all my life. When 
                  I spoke on prophecy, I would always make the point that Jesus 
                  will never return to this earth. Occasionally, people would 
                  come up after the sermon and ask, "What about Zechariah 
                  14?" I would snap back at them with one word: "APOCALYPTIC!" 
                  They would usually run for the door in fright. They didn't know 
                  what I was talking about (and neither did I).  
                
Then one day I sat down and 
                  read the whole book of Zechariah. And guess what? My entire 
                  argument went down the drain!  
                
I discovered that the book 
                  contains many prophecies about the First Coming of Jesus, and 
                  I discovered that all those prophecies meant what they said. 
                  It suddenly occurred to me that if Zechariah's First Coming 
                  prophecies meant what they said, then why shouldn't his Second 
                  Coming promises mean what they say?  
                
 
                  
                    The Plain Sense Rule 
                  
                That was the day that I stopped 
                  playing games with God's Prophetic Word. I started accepting 
                  it for its plain sense meaning. I decided that if the plain 
                  sense makes sense, I would look for no other sense, lest I end 
                  up with nonsense.  
                
A good example of the nonsense 
                  approach is one I found several years ago in a book on the Millennium. 
                  The author spiritualized all of Zechariah 14. He argued that 
                  the Mount of Olives is symbolic of the human heart surrounded 
                  by evil. When a person accepts Jesus as Savior, Jesus comes 
                  into the person's life and stands on his "Mount of Olives" 
                  (his heart). The person's heart breaks in contrition (the cleaving 
                  of the mountain), and Jesus then defeats the enemy forces in 
                  the person's life.  
                
Hard to believe, isn't it? 
                  When people insist on spiritualizing the Scriptures like this, 
                  the Scriptures end up meaning whatever they want them to mean. 
                   
                
 
                  
                    Keys to Understanding 
                  
                I believe God knows how to 
                  communicate. I believe He says what He means and means what 
                  He says. I don't believe you have to have a doctorate in hermeneutics 
                  to understand the Bible. The essentials, instead, are an honest 
                  heart and the filling of God's Spirit (1 Corinthians 2:10-16). 
                   
                
One crucial key is to approach 
                  the Scriptures with childlike faith. Dr. Henry Morris addresses 
                  this issue in his great commentary on Revelation, called The 
                  Revelation Record. He says, "Revelation is not difficult 
                  to understand. It is difficult to believe. If you will believe 
                  it, you will understand it."  
                
For example, in Revelation 
                  7 it says that at the start of the Tribulation God is going 
                  to seal a great host of Jews to serve as His special "bond-servants." 
                  The text specifies that the number will be 144,000, and that 
                  12,000 will be selected from each of 12 specified tribes.  
                
Now, I ask you: What would 
                  God have to do to convince us that He intends to set aside 144,000 
                  Jews for special service during the Tribulation? The text is 
                  crystal clear. Yet, hundreds of commentators have denied the 
                  clear meaning and have spiritualized the passage to make it 
                  refer to the Church! This is reckless handling of God's Word, 
                  and it produces nothing but confusion.  
                
 
                  
                    The Meaning of Symbols 
                  
                "But what about symbols?" 
                  some ask. Another crucial key is to keep in mind that a symbol 
                  stands for something, otherwise it would not be a symbol. There 
                  is always a literal reality or plain sense meaning behind every 
                  symbol.  
                
Jesus is called "the 
                  rose of Sharon." He is not referred to as "the tumbleweed 
                  of Texas." The image that a rose conjures up is something 
                  beautiful; a tumbleweed is ugly.  
                
The Bible is its own best 
                  interpreter as to the meaning of the symbols which it uses. 
                  Sometimes the symbols are clearly explained, as when God reveals 
                  to Ezekiel the meaning of the symbols in his vision of the valley 
                  of dry bones (Ezekiel 37:11-14). In like manner, the apostle 
                  John was told the meaning of certain symbols which he saw in 
                  his Patmos vision of the glorified Lord (Revelation 1:20).  
                
At other times, a simple 
                  search of the Scriptures will reveal the meaning of a symbol. 
                  Consider the statement in Revelation 12:14 where it says that 
                  the Jewish remnant will escape from the Antichrist into the 
                  wilderness "on the two wings of the great eagle." 
                   
                
Is this a literal eagle? 
                  Is it an air lift provided by the U.S.A. whose national symbol 
                  is an eagle?  
                
A concordance search will 
                  show that the same symbolism is used in Exodus 19:4 to describe 
                  the flight of the children of Israel as they escaped from Egypt. 
                  The symbol, as Exodus 19 makes clear, is a poetic reference 
                  to the loving care of God.  
                
 
                  
                    The Importance of Context 
                  
                Another key to understanding 
                  prophecy is one that applies to the interpretation of all Scripture. 
                  It is the principle that the meaning of words is determined 
                  by their context.  
                
I ran across a good example 
                  of this problem recently in a book in which the author was trying 
                  to prove that Jesus is never coming back to reign upon this 
                  earth. Such a position, of course, required him to spiritualize 
                  Revelation chapter 20 where it says six times that there will 
                  be a reign of the Lord that will last one thousand years.  
                
In this author's desperate 
                  attempt to explain away the thousand years, he referred to Psalm 
                  50:10 where it says that God owns "the cattle on a thousand 
                  hills." He then asked, "Are there only one thousand 
                  hills in the world?" He answered his question, "Of 
                  course not!" He then proceeded to explain that the term 
                  is used figuratively. But then he made a quantum leap in logic 
                  by proclaiming, "therefore, the term, 'one thousand,' is 
                  always used symbolically."  
                
Not so. It depends on context. 
                  In Psalm 50 the term is clearly symbolic. But in Revelation 
                  20, it is not so. Again, the thousand years is mentioned six 
                  times. What would the Lord have to do to convince us that He 
                  means a thousand years? Put it in the sky in neon lights? Pay 
                  attention to context!  
                
 
                  
                    Reconciling Passages 
                  
                An additional key to understanding 
                  prophecy is one that applies to all Scripture. It is the principle 
                  of searching out everything that the Bible has to say on a particular 
                  point.  
                
Avoid hanging a doctrine 
                  on one isolated verse. All verses on a particular topic must 
                  be searched out, compared, and then reconciled.  
                
Let me give you a prophetic 
                  example. Second Peter 3:10 says that when the Lord returns, 
                  "the heavens will pass away with a roar . . . and the earth 
                  and its works will be burned up." Now, if this were the 
                  only verse in the Bible about the Second Coming, we could confidently 
                  conclude that the heavens and earth will be burned up on the 
                  day that Jesus returns.  
                
But, there are many 
                  other verses in both the Old and New Testaments, which make 
                  it abundantly clear that the Lord will reign over all the earth 
                  before it is consumed with fire. Those verses must be considered 
                  together with the passage in 2 Peter 3 in order to get the correct 
                  overall view.  
                
 
                  
                    Special Problems 
                  
                There are some special problems 
                  related to prophetic interpretation. One is that prophecy is 
                  often prefilled in symbolic type before it is completely fulfilled. 
                   
                
In this regard, I feel certain 
                  that the Jewish people must have felt that Antiochus Epiphanes 
                  fulfilled Daniel's prophecies about a tyrannical leader who 
                  would severely persecute the Jews. But 200 years after Antiochus, 
                  Jesus took those prophecies of Daniel and told His disciples 
                  they were yet to be fulfilled.  
                
Another example is the sign 
                  which Isaiah gave to King Ahaz to assure him that the city of 
                  Jerusalem would not fall to the Syrians who had it under siege. 
                  The sign was that a young woman would give birth to a son whose 
                  name would be called Immanuel (Isaiah 7:1-19). The passage certainly 
                  implies that such a boy was born at that time.  
                
But hundreds of years later, 
                  Matthew, by inspiration of the Holy Spirit, reached back to 
                  Isaiah's prophecy and proclaimed that its ultimate fulfillment 
                  was to be found in the virgin birth of Jesus (Matthew 1:22-23). 
                   
                
 
                  
                    Compressed Time 
                  
                Another peculiar feature 
                  of prophetic literature is called "telescoping." This 
                  occurs when a prophet compresses the time interval between two 
                  prophetic events. This phenomenon is very common.  
                
The reason for it has to 
                  do with the perspective of the prophet. As he looks into the 
                  future and sees a series of prophetic events, they appear to 
                  him as if they are in immediate sequence.  
                
It is like looking down a 
                  mountain range and viewing three peaks, one behind the other, 
                  each sequentially higher than the one in front of it. The peaks 
                  look like they are right up against each other because the person 
                  viewing them cannot see the valleys that separate them.  
                
In Zechariah 9:9-10 there 
                  is a passage with three prophecies which are compressed into 
                  two verses but are widely separated in time. Verse 9 says the 
                  Messiah will come humbly on a donkey. The first part of verse 
                  10 says the Jewish people will be set aside. The second part 
                  of verse 10 says the Messiah will reign over all the nations. 
                   
                
These three events  
                  the First Coming, the setting aside of Israel, and the reign 
                  of Christ  appear to occur in quick succession, but in 
                  reality, there were 40 years between the first two events, and 
                  there have been over 1,900 years thus far between the second 
                  and third events.  
                
Another way of viewing the 
                  phenomenon of telescoping is to focus on what are called "prophetic 
                  gaps." These are the time periods between the mountain 
                  peak prophetic events.  
                
Because the Old Testament 
                  rabbis could not see the gap between the first and second comings 
                  of the Messiah, some theorized that there would be two Messiahs 
                   a "Messiah ben Joseph" who would suffer and 
                  a "Messiah ben David who would conquer. From our New Testament 
                  perspective we can see that the Old Testament prophets were 
                  speaking of one Messiah who would come twice. We can see the 
                  gap between the two comings.  
                
 
                  
                    A Challenge 
                  
                I ask you: How do you treat 
                  Zechariah 14  as fact or fiction? Are you guilty of playing 
                  games with God's Word in order to justify sacred traditions 
                  and doctrines of men?  
                
I challenge you to interpret 
                  God's Word  all of it  for its plain sense meaning. 
                  As you do so, you are very likely to find yourself challenged 
                  to discard old doctrines and to adopt new ones. This will be 
                  a painful process, but it will be a fruitful one, for you will 
                  be blessed with the truth of God's Word.  
                
"If you abide in My 
                  word, then you are truly disciples of Mine; and you shall know 
                  the truth, and the truth shall make you free."  John 
                  8:31-32.