The Consummation
& Sonship

Review of Article 9 & 10

18 May 2024

DC Yang, SR Mang

Consummation

  • From frustration (G3153)
    and bondage to decay (G5356)
    to reconciliation (G2643).
  • Consummation (G4930) equated to
    a new heaven and a new earth.
  • Human beings as special objects
    of God's reconciling work in Christ.

OT promise

  • God's promise to Abram back in Genesis 12
    is both particular and universal.
  • OT focuses on the particular.
  • Because of the promise, OT becomes intertwined with
    Israel's persistent unfaithfulness
    vs God's persistent faithfulness.
    • Had it not been for the promise,
      Israel would have met its end long ago.
  • OT ends on the note of renewed hope for God's final fulfillment of his promises
    (consummation)
  • As the story resumes in the NT,
    Israel seems to remember only the particular dimension of the promise...

NT fulfillment

  • 'Yes' in Christ — Early Christians rejoiced
    as God fulfilled so many of the OT promises.
    • Coming of Christ
    • Pouring out of the Spirit
  • Typological and spiritual reenactment
    of the exodus
    • liberation from the ultimate enemy:
      sin and death
  • Redefinition of God's people
    by faith in Christ (Jews and Gentiles together)

* typology = historical trajectory

NT eschatology

  • "Inaugurated eschatology":
    • Marked by a tension between
      already and not yet.
    • Jesus' exorcisms vs prayer
    • Paul's teaching of adoption to sonship
      vs redemption of our bodies
  • NT uses παρουσία (G3952) in particular
    to refer to Christ's second coming.
    • Paul speaks of the day of the Lord
      both as the "blessed hope" and judgment upon the rebels.

Christ's return

  • Presented in NT as imminent.
  • Exact day or hour of consummation
    is not known to any human.
  • Believers are to watch for it
    by conforming their lives to Christ's image.
  • Believers will meet the Lord in the air
    with their earthly bodies transformed.
  • Condemnation awaits the unbelievers.
    They will experience unending punishment
    or destruction (undoing).

Timing of final events

  • A millennium of believers' reign until
    the resurrection of unbelievers.
    • pre-* = Christ returns before
    • post-* = Christ returns at the end of
    • a-* = no such term of reign
  • Final period of intense tribulation
    before the rapture
    • pre-* = believers removed before
    • post-* = believers left to experience

Fate of humans

  • Israel's future separate from or joined with
    the rest of the world under the covenant.
  • What is relevant to us as adopted Gentiles
    is that the OT promise of the land is universalized.
  • New heaven & new earth
    • a thorough renovation of the present universe
      which frees it to be as God first intended
    • The image of the New Jerusalem points to
      a focus on intimate eternal fellowship with God.

Sonship

  • Metaphorical reference of sonship in the Bible
    leads to a rich and diverse range of ideas.
  • In the ancient world when most sons inherited their father's vocations, sonship implied
    close imitation or following of conduct.
    • of God the supreme peacemaker
    • of Abraham the faithful
    • of the devil the liar

Range of interpretation

  • Examples shown in biblical translation
    • identity: son of a murderer = murderer
    • containment: son of a bow = arrow
    • character: son of might = fighter
    • resemblance:
      sons of wise men = wise counselors
    • inheritance: "will inherit all this" (Rev 21)
  • Understand "sons of God" in light of the above.

Son(s) of God

  • Adam the typological son of God
    (biological birth hadn't happened yet)
  • A faithful king in the line of David
    is declared to be God's son.
  • Angels and Nephilim
  • God's covenant people
    • Identification goes both ways:
      believers as children, God as Father.
    • They will experience God's presence and companionship.

Jesus the Son of God

  • The True Israel
    • calling out of Egypt
    • testing and tempting for 40 years vs 40 days
      in the wilderness
  • The True Davidic King
    • a king "on David's throne"
    • good shepherd
    • identified explicitly as Messiah (multiple times)
      in the Gospel of Mark
    • culmination of Kings (Heb 1:5)

Jesus the Son of God

  • The Unique Son, One with the Father
    • made distinct from adopted sons, the believers
      (as told in Paul's letters)
    • as the Word of God, created everything
    • giver of life to those chosen
    • to be honored whenever the Father is
    • radiance of God's glory
    • exact representation of God's being
  • Intertwinings
    • mutually dependent trajectories (typologies)
      followed by different labels (titles)
    • eg. new Israel + beloved son
    • eg. ultimate Davidic king + one with Father
    • cross-pollination of symbolism

Questions for discussion

  • Does our notion of *-millennialism and
    *-tribulationism have empirical biases?
  • What has influenced our identification as sons
    (of anything, not just our biological fathers)?
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