The pre-Advent judgment: Fact or fiction?

Underpinnings of the unique Seventh-day Adventist belief in the "investigative judgment"

Gerhard Pfandl, Ph.D., is an associate director of the Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Silver Spring, Maryland.

Of all the doctrines of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the doctrine of the pre-Advent judgment beginning in heaven in 1844 has been questioned more than any other. This questioning has come from scholars and others both outside and inside the church.

From outside the church, Walter R. Martin in his book The Kingdom of the Cults has writ ten, "Adventists, in the opinion of conservative Biblical scholars, not to mention the liberal wing of Protestantism, are only speculating with their sanctuary and investigative judgment theories. Actually, most are agreed that they have created doctrines to compensate for errors in prophetic interpretation."1

Within the church, the most thorough negative inquiry was initiated in recent times by my former mentor Dr. Desmond Ford. In 1980 he presented a 991-page document to more than 100 church leaders and theologians gathered at Glacier View. In his study he contended that the judgment in Daniel 7 is not a pre-Advent judgment, that apocalyptic prophecy is also conditional, that according to the apotelesmatic principle a prophecy can have multiple fulfillments, and that the antitypical day of atonement began in A.D. 31 rather than in 1844.2

At Glacier View, Ford's views were rejected. However, the questions he raised were deemed sufficiently important to merit a 1981 action by the Executive Committee of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which asked that the General Conference Biblical Research Institute form a special committee to restudy the books of Daniel and Revelation.

During the 11 years of its existence, the Daniel and Revelation Committee produced seven volumes3 that address many of the issues raised during the Glacier View meetings. In its final report the committee stated that "far from being a museum piece of pioneer theology, the biblical teaching of the pre-Advent, investigative phase of the final judgment is of vital importance to the Christian today. It is a concluding portion of the overall salvation process and is an integral component of the three angels' messages."4

Apocalyptic prophecy and historicism

It is generally agreed that there is a difference between classical prophecy, in which the prophet was God's spokesperson to His people in Old and New Testament times, and apocalyptic prophecy with its focus on the end of the world and the coming of the kingdom of God.

The fulfillment of the promises in classical prophecy was dependent on the response of the people 0er. 18:7-10). "Classical prophets tied God's activities to events in human history."5

On the other hand, apocalyptic prophecy presents God's cosmic timetable for the final supernatural appearance of the kingdom of God. Hence it is not conditional. In other words, it is not dependent on the human response, e.g., Christ's first coming was not dependent on Israel's or Judah's obedience. He came, "when the fullness of the time [out lined in Dan. 9:24-27] had come" (Gal. 4:4, NKJV), even though the Jews were not ready to receive Him.

Similarly, the time prophecies in Daniel and Revelation which point towards the time of the end and the Second Coming are independent of any human response. In apocalyptic prophecy we become "spectators to events on a world stage; we are seeing the divine foreknowledge unfold the course of the future."6

Apocalyptic prophecies explain what God has foreseen and what He has determined should happen. The 2,300 "evenings and mornings" and the "three and a half times" in Daniel 7 and 8, therefore, are not conditional. They cannot be repeatedly applied to different ages as the interpreter sees fit. In the sweep of history they can only have one fulfillment, just as the 70-week prophecy in Daniel 9 only had one fulfillment.

Throughout most of church history these apocalyptic time prophecies were interpreted according to the historicist method of interpretation. Only in the last two hundred years have other systems, such as preterism and futurism, replaced historicism. And, as all students of prophecy know, the backbone of historicism is the year-day principle.

The year-day principle

It is ironic that one of the best summaries of the year-day principle, based on the works of T. R. Birks7 and H. G. Guinness, 8 is found in Dr. Ford's first commentary on Daniel.9 This, of course, Dr. Ford rejected 18 years later, because he contends that it can not be biblically justified. 10

Contrary to this position, Seventh-day Adventists believe that the year-day principle is a Bible based principle. The main points in support of it can be summarized as follows: 11

1. Since the visions in Daniel 7 and 8 are largely symbolic, with a number of different beasts representing important historical empires (7:3-7; 8:3-5, 20-21), the time periods (7:25; 8:14) should also be seen as symbolic.

2. The fact that the visions deal with the rise and fall of known empires in history which existed for hundreds of years, indicates that the prophetic time periods must also cover long time periods.

3. The peculiar, distinctive, even metaphoric way in which the time periods are expressed indicates that they should not be taken literally. If the "time, times and half a time" in Daniel 7:25, stands for three and a half literal years, why didn't God say "three years and six months"? In Luke 4:25 and James 5:17, where three and a half literal years are referred to, each time the phrase is "three years and six months." Similarly, Paul remained in Corinth "a year and six months" (Acts 18:11, NKJV), and David reigned in Hebron "seven years and six months" (2 Sam. 2:11, NKJV).

4. In Daniel 7 the four beasts which together account for a reign of at least one thousand years, are fol lowed by the little-horn power. This four-beast reign is the focus of the vision since it is most directly in opposition to God. Three and a half years for the struggle between the little horn and the Most High would be out of proportion to the comprehensive scope of salvation history portrayed in this vision.

The same applies to Revelation 12:6 and 14 where the 1,260 days or three and a half times, cover much of the history between the First and Second Advents.

5. According to the context, the expressions "time, times and half a time" (Dan. 7:25; 12:7; Rev. 12:14, NKJV), "forty-two months" (Rev. 11:2; 13:5, NKJV), and "one thousand two hundred and sixty days" (Rev. 11:3; 12:6, NKJV), all apply to the same time period. But the natural expression "three years and six months" is not used once.

"The Holy Spirit seems, in a manner, to exhaust all the phrases by which the interval could be expressed, excluding always that one form, which would be used of course in ordinary writing, and is used invariably in Scripture on other occasions, to denote the literal period. This variation is most significant, if we accept the year-day system, but quite inexplicable on the other view." 12

6. The prophecies in Daniel 7, 8, 10, and 12 lead up to the "time of the end" (8:17; 11:35, 40; 12:4, 9) which is followed by the Resurrection (12:2) and the setting up of God's everlasting kingdom (7:27).

"In the sweep of history described in these prophecies that extends from the prophet in the sixth century B.C. to our time and beyond, literal time periods of only 32 to 62 years are not capable of reaching anywhere near this final end time. Therefore, these prophetic time periods should be seen as symbolic and standing for considerably longer periods of actual historical time extending to the end time." 13

7. The only commonly used measure of time not used in the prophecies of Daniel and Revelation is the year. Days, weeks, and months, are referred to, but not the time unit "year." The most obvious explanation is that the "year" is the unit employed to symbolize throughout these prophecies.

8. There are a number of texts in the historical narratives of the Old Testament in which "days" stands for "years" (Exod. 13:10; 1 Sam. 2:19; 20:6; Judg. 11:40; etc.). Also in the poetic portions of the Old Testament "days" at times stands in parallel to the word for "year" (Job 10:5; 32:7; 36:11; Ps. 77:5; 90:9, 10; etc.). "Both of these usages provide a ready back ground for the kind of thought that could be extended to the more specific quantitative application of this relationship in apocalyptic." 14

9. In Numbers 14 and Ezekiel 4 God deliberately used the day for a year principle as a teaching device. "According to the number of the days in which you spied out the land, forty days, for each day you shall bear your guilt one year, namely forty years, and you shall know My rejection" (Num. 14:34, NKJV). And in an acted out parable the prophet Ezekiel was told to lie 390 days on his left side and 40 days on his right side, "I have laid on you a day for each year" (Ezek. 4:6, NKJV).

10. In Daniel 9:24-27 the 70-week time prophecy met its fulfillment at the exact time, if we use the year-day principle to interpret it. Many interpreters, who in other apocalyptic texts do not use the year-day principle, recognize that the 70 weeks are in fact "weeks of years" reaching from the Persian period to the time of Christ. Thus the pragmatic test in Daniel 9 confirms the validity of the year-day principle.

References to the year-day principle can be found in intertestamental times in Qumran as well as in other Jewish writings of that period. 15 Thus the historicist method of interpretation is not a Johnny-come-lately arrival on the theological scene, rather it rests on a solid biblical and historical foundation. And in spite of what some may claim, it is not an outdated method belonging to the past but a valid principle of interpreting apocalyptic prophecies today.

When the year-day principle is applied to the time prophecies in Daniel 7 and 8, a pre-Advent judgment beginning in 1844 emerges from the text.

In the concluding article (which will appear in the upcoming February 2004 issue of Ministry) we will specifically look at the judgment scene in Daniel 7.

1 Walter R. Martin, Kingdom of the Cults (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1965), 407.

2 D. Ford subsequently published his Glacier View document as Daniel 8:14: The Day of Atonement and the Investigative Judgment (Casselberry, Fl.: Euangelion Press, 1980).

3 The set of seven volumes is available from the Biblical Research Institute of the General Conference as well as from any Adventist Book
Center.

4 W. R. Lesher and Frank B. Holbrook, "Daniel and Revelation Committee: Final Report" in Symposium on Revelation, Book 2, DARCOM, edited by Frank B. Holbrook, 7 vols. (Silver Spring, Md.: Biblical Research Institute, 1992), 7:455.

5 Dewey M. Beegle, Prophecy and Predictions (Ann Arbor: Pryor Pettengill, 1978), 90

6 William G. Johnsson, "Conditionally in Biblical Prophecy with Particular Reference to Apocalyptic" in 70 Weeks, Leviticus, Nature of Prophecy, DARCOM, edited by Frank B. Holbrook, 7 vols. (Washington, D.C.: Biblical Research Institute, 1986), 3:278.

7 Thomas R. Birks, first Elements of Sacred Prophecy (London: William E. Painter, 1843).

8 H. G. Guinness, The Approaching End of the Age, Viewed in the Light of History, Prophecy, and Science.8th ed. (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1882).

9 Desmond Ford, Daniel (Nashville, Tenn.: Southern Pub. Assn., 1978), 300-305.

10 In his latest Daniel commentary he denies that the 70 weeks are cut off from the 2,300 years of Daniel 8 and adds, "Neither do I consider that the year-day principle should be applied in the study of the prophecies of Daniel, though I recognize it as a
providential aid over long centuries of Christ's delay." (D. Ford, Daniel and the Coming King [Newcastle, Calif.: Desmond Ford Publications, 1996J, 298).

11 See Ford, Daniel, 300-305 and William H. Shea, Selected Studies on Prophetic Interpretation, revised edition, DARCOM, 7 vols. (Silver Spring, Md.: Biblical Research Institute, 1992), 1:67-104.

12 Birks, 352.

13 Shea, 73.

14 Ibid,, 103.

15 See Shea, 106-110.

 

 


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Gerhard Pfandl, Ph.D., is an associate director of the Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Silver Spring, Maryland.

December 2003

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