I don't know how many dispensationalists are aware of the Gap Theory, popularized in the Scofield Study Bible.
This Gap theory proposes that God created the world for angels. This world was ruled by angels, and included dinosaur life. The angels rebelled, and a cosmic war against God ensued. The angels lost their dominion due to their rebellion.
This pre-Adamic creation lasted for millions of years.
This scenario makes it easier to defend the older earth dating that science claims. I believe it was some creative exegesis on the behalf of Scofield and others to accomodate science's claims with Christianity's claims.
I was amused this morning thinking about this. Dispensationalists are well-known for inserting gaps into Scripture. I had forgotten that Scofield promoted the Gap theory, too, in order to reconcile his ideas with Scripture.
For instance, they claim that the "prophetic clock" stopped ticking when Israel refused Jesus as Messiah, and as a result, Gentiles now have an opportunity for salvation during the "parenthesis period" between Jesus' resurrection and the alleged rapture of the Church seven years before Christ returns.
This causes a problem because Jesus and the apostles, in the Gospels and the epistles, do not seem to be aware of a long gap between the last day and the eternal state, like dispensationalism claims. Instead, when he returns, he ushers in the eternal state, and death is defeated (see 1 Cor 15).
The only basis for their claims is related to their reading of Revelation, and particularly Revelation 20.
However, I'd like to discuss this topic...does the Gap Theory have any validity? Was their a long, preAdamic gap between the creation of the earth and the heavens, and the creation of Adam? If so, do you think it is credible that the earth was built for angelic habitation, and that man was only plan B?
I don't think it is credible. The reason I don't think it is credible relates to God's foreknowledge. Surely God isn't a dolt that fails in his objectives, like open theists and process theology people teach.
Anyways, for some basic info on the Gap Theory, I will provide this:
https://www.gotquestions.org/gap-theory.html
I will also add that I don't think dispensationalism is credible due to their penchant for modifying Scripture by claiming gaps where they don't have a license to do so. While they accuse others of "spiritualizing" or "allegorizing" when they recognize typology within Scripture, they have a penchant for conjecturing about such things.
And, Scofield's promotion of the Gap Theory is only one example of this.
This Gap theory proposes that God created the world for angels. This world was ruled by angels, and included dinosaur life. The angels rebelled, and a cosmic war against God ensued. The angels lost their dominion due to their rebellion.
This pre-Adamic creation lasted for millions of years.
This scenario makes it easier to defend the older earth dating that science claims. I believe it was some creative exegesis on the behalf of Scofield and others to accomodate science's claims with Christianity's claims.
I was amused this morning thinking about this. Dispensationalists are well-known for inserting gaps into Scripture. I had forgotten that Scofield promoted the Gap theory, too, in order to reconcile his ideas with Scripture.
For instance, they claim that the "prophetic clock" stopped ticking when Israel refused Jesus as Messiah, and as a result, Gentiles now have an opportunity for salvation during the "parenthesis period" between Jesus' resurrection and the alleged rapture of the Church seven years before Christ returns.
This causes a problem because Jesus and the apostles, in the Gospels and the epistles, do not seem to be aware of a long gap between the last day and the eternal state, like dispensationalism claims. Instead, when he returns, he ushers in the eternal state, and death is defeated (see 1 Cor 15).
The only basis for their claims is related to their reading of Revelation, and particularly Revelation 20.
However, I'd like to discuss this topic...does the Gap Theory have any validity? Was their a long, preAdamic gap between the creation of the earth and the heavens, and the creation of Adam? If so, do you think it is credible that the earth was built for angelic habitation, and that man was only plan B?
I don't think it is credible. The reason I don't think it is credible relates to God's foreknowledge. Surely God isn't a dolt that fails in his objectives, like open theists and process theology people teach.
Anyways, for some basic info on the Gap Theory, I will provide this:
https://www.gotquestions.org/gap-theory.html
I will also add that I don't think dispensationalism is credible due to their penchant for modifying Scripture by claiming gaps where they don't have a license to do so. While they accuse others of "spiritualizing" or "allegorizing" when they recognize typology within Scripture, they have a penchant for conjecturing about such things.
And, Scofield's promotion of the Gap Theory is only one example of this.
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