Answering
the "Replacement Theology" Critics (Part
3)
• Part
1 • Part
2 • Part
4
by Gary
DeMar
Now that we’ve gotten some preliminaries out of the way, what
is the truth behind the charge that non-dispensationalists believe in “replacement
theology,” that the Church replaces ethnic Israel and her promises
and that God is through with Israel forever? As I will show, the Gospels
and Acts demonstrate that the first New Covenant believers were Jews
who were defined as the Church by Jesus and Stephen. The use of the word
Church in a Jewish context demonstrates the truth that the Church is
not a “mystery parenthesis.”
One of the arguments that dispensationalists use to prove
the pre-rib rapture is that after Revelation 3, the word “church” no
longer appears.1 This must mean,
according to a basic tenet of dispensationalism, that the church will
be “raptured” so God once again can deal covenantally with
ethnic Israel. The age of the church parenthesis is over when the rapture
occurs. Dispensational logic is clear: The presence of the word “church” means
the church is a present reality, while the absence of the word “church” means
the church is absent from the earth.
Dispensationalists
believe the church is a parenthesis in God’s plan with Israel because
she rejected Jesus’ offer of the kingdom. The majority of classic
dispensationalists are “Acts 2 Dispensationalists.” They
believe the church began at Pentecost. Other dispensationalists believe
the church started when Paul is told to “bear [Jesus’] name
to the Gentiles” (Acts 9:15), when Paul started his mission to
the Gentiles (13:2), or with Israel’s rejection of the kingdom
of God and the sending of God’s salvation to the Gentiles (28:26–28),
a view made popular by E. W. Bullinger (1837–1913). Some also see
the transition from Israel to the Church taking place in Acts 8 or 11.
For our discussion, it’s only important to know that all the dispensational
systems claim the Church does not begin until after the death, resurrection,
and ascension of Jesus.
Any
mention of the church prior to Pentecost would destroy the entire parenthesis
argument. Jesus tells His disciples that He will build His church “on
this rock” (Matt. 16:18). If the Church is a “mystery,” and
the supposed parenthesis does not begin until at least Acts 2, then why
is there this mention of the “Church” when Jesus is dealing
almost exclusively with the “house of Israel” (Matt. 15:24)?
The dispensationalist will argue that Jesus is describing the future: “I will build
My church.” But if the Church is a mystery that does not come into
being until Pentecost, then why didn’t Peter ask, “What is
the church?”
The Church is mentioned again in Matthew’s gospel: “And
if he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if he refuses
to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax-gatherer” (18:18).
This church discipline discussion takes place within a Jewish context.
Notice that Jesus quotes Deuteronomy 19:15 and the requirement of two
witnesses (Matt. 18:16). “Tell it to the church” is the Greek
way of saying “tell it to the congregation,” that is, the
assembly of Israelites. If the person in this context is to be treated
as a “Gentile and a tax-gatherer,” it’s obvious that
he is being treated as a non-Jew, excommunicated from the Jewish assembly.
These two references in Matthew, the most Jewish of the gospels, are
a clear refutation of the claim that the Church does not begin until
Acts 2 or later.
The Church is as old as covenantal believers. This is
why Stephen could describe Israel as the “church in the wilderness” (Acts
7:38). The New American Standard Version obscures this fact by translating
the Greek word ekklesia as “congregation” instead of “church.” The
translators do offer a marginal note that reads, “Or, church (Gr.,
ekklesia).” The Greek translation of the Old Testament, the Septuagint,
often abbreviated as LXX, uses the word ekklesia 73 times (e.g.,
Deut. 9:10; 18:16). To say that the church is a post-Pentecost “mystery” unknown
by the writers of the Old Testament is a myth that ignores the New Testament
evidence found in Matthew and Acts based on word usage alone. If for
the dispensationalist the absence of the word church in Revelation means
the church has been raptured, then the presence of the word church in
the gospels means the church is a Jewish reality.
The
first NT believers were Jews. They continued the legacy of the Old Covenant
assembly of believers, what the NT defines as the church. Nothing was
postponed. All was fulfilled. As we will see, Gentiles were grafted into
an already-existing Jewish church.
Read Part
Four of this article...
1. Actually, “the church” as
a universal body of earthly believers does not appear anywhere in Revelation,
not even in chapters 2 and 3. It’s always “the church in” (2:1,
8, 12, 18; 3:1, 7, 14). These are seven local churches that existed in
the first century. The word “churches” is used in the same
way (1:4, 11, 20; 2:7, 11, 17, 23, 29; 3:6, 13, 22; 22:16).
Gary DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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