The
Real End of the World
by Gary
DeMar
When Christians
hear the phrase the “end of the world,” they
assume it’s a reference to a great end-time prophetic event like
Armageddon, the Second Coming of Christ, or the inauguration of the New
Heavens and New Earth. Actually, the phrase “end of the world,” as
in the end of the physical world, is not found in the Bible. There is
Psalm 19:4, but in context “end of the world” is a geographical
description: “Their line has gone out through all the earth,
and their utterances to the end of the world.” The same
is true of its use in the New Testament (Acts 13:47; Rom. 10:18).
The “end of the world” appears
a number of times in the King James Version. The Greek word kosmos,
the word we would expect to find for the translation of “world,” is not used.
Modern translations render the phrase as the “end of the age” because
the Greek word aion, not kosmos, is used. The New King
James Version remedies the translation error of the original KJV by translating aion as “age” and
not “world” (Matt. 13:39, 40, 49; 24:3; 28:20; Heb. 9:26). Aion refers
to a period of time, not the physical world (1 Cor. 10:11; Heb. 9:261).
Peter writes from
the vantage point of his day that “the end of
all things is at hand” (1 Peter. 4:7). This can hardly be a declaration
that the end of the physical universe was about to take place. “At
hand” tells us that whatever this end is, it was near for Peter
and to those whom he addressed his letter. Jay E. Adams offers a helpful
commentary on the passage, taking into account its historical and theological
context:
[First] Peter
was written before A.D. 70 (when the destruction of Jerusalem took
place)….
The persecution (and martyrdom) that these (largely) Jewish Christians
had been experiencing up until now stemmed principally from unconverted
Jews (indeed, his readers had found refuge among Gentiles as
resident aliens)…. [H]e refers to the severe trials that came
upon Christians who had fled Palestine under attack from their unconverted
fellow Jews. The end of all things (that had brought
this exile about) was near.
In six or seven
years from the time of writing, the overthrow of Jerusalem, with
all its tragic stories, as foretold in the Book of Revelation and
in the Olivet Discourse upon which that part is based, would take
place. Titus and Vespasian would wipe out the old order once and
for all. All those forces that led to the persecution and exile of
these Christians in Asia Minor—the temple ceremonies (outdated by Christ’s
death), Pharisaism (with its distortion of O.T. law into a system of
works-righteousness) and the political stance of Palestinian Jewry toward
Rome—would be erased. The Roman armies would wipe Jewish opposition
from the face of the land. Those who survived the holocaust of A.D. 70
would themselves be dispersed around the Mediterranean world. “So,” says
Peter, “hold on; the end is near.” The full end of
the O.T. order (already made defunct by the cross and the empty tomb)
was about to occur.2
Similar
language is used by the writer to the Hebrews where he describes his
own day as “the consummation of the ages,” a time when
Jesus had been “manifested to put away sin by the sacrifice of
Himself” (Heb. 9:26). Jesus’ appearance on earth as “the
lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world” (John 1:29) coincides
with the consummation of the ages, a first-century reality. In fact,
the writer to the Hebrews opens his epistle with the claim that he was
living in “these last days” because of the presence of Jesus
in the world (Heb. 1:2; cf. 1 Peter 1:20). Paul says something similar
when he tells his Corinthian audience that “the ends of the ages have
come” upon them (1 Cor. 10:11).
The
end of the age was the real end of the world, the world of old covenant
Judaism and the inauguration of a new era where God no longer speaks
in types and shadows but “in His Son” (Heb. 1:2). There was
such a dramatic transference from one age to the next that Peter described
it as “the end of all things.” This end-time language is “typical
Jewish imagery for events within the present order that are felt and
perceived as ‘cosmic’ or, as we should say, as ‘earth-shattering’.
More particularly, they are regular Jewish imagery for events that
bring the story of Israel to its appointed climax. The days of Jerusalem’s
destruction would be looked upon as days of cosmic catastrophe. The known
world would go into convulsions: power struggles and coups d’état would
be the order of the day; the pax Romana, the presupposition
of ‘civilized’ life throughout the then Mediterranean world,
would collapse into chaos. In the midst of that chaos Jerusalem would
fall.”3
1. Kosmos is
used in Hebrews 9:26 and is translated as the “foundation of
the world,” that
is, the physical world. It seems odd that the translators of
the KJV would have translated two different Greek words in the same verse
as “world.”
2. Jay E. Adams, Trust and Obey:
A Practical Commentary on First Peter (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian
and Reformed, 1978), 129–130.
3. N.T. Wright, Jesus and the
Victory of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), 362
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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