James,
Thanks for taking the time to read my book and putting forth your
review of it. Let me address a few of the concerns and criticisms you
have in the review.
You wrote:
“I do not think that premillennialism necessarily entails love for
enemies, whereas postmillennialism and amillennialism have to entail
hatred for enemies. My impression is that there is a desire for divine
punishment in some of the works that O’Kane would identify as
premillennial (i.e., the Book of Revelation), and there are beautiful
things about love for enemies in works that, according to O’Kane,
contain a problematic eschatology (i.e., Augustine).”
O’Kane:
To some extent, you’re right about that. Lanctantius would be one of
the primary examples of a premillennialist who put forth such a document
in his On the Deaths of the Persecutors, although, as my book
indicated, he also stands as one of the points in the transition from
pre to post. But let’s face the facts, outside of Lanctantius who likely
supported Constantine’s civil wars, you would be hard pressed to come
up with any premills who engaged in or supported Christians engaging in
atrocities or starting wars. It was the postmills who altered history in
that way. And it is not that Augustine never professed love for
enemies, it’s that he advocated the use of force in relation to this
love in order to coerce them to change their position and thus save
their souls from hell. It’s interesting that Augustine believed that the
Donatists were going to hell just because they believed that lapsed
Christians needed to be re-baptized.
James: “Futuristic
premillennialism can influence people not to care about doing anything
to address the problems of their world, since Jesus will come back and
fix things anyway. Postmillennialism, on the other hand, can encourage a
concern about social justice. . . . . O’Kane would have done well,
however, to have included a larger discussion of this issue.”
O’Kane:
Once again, you’re right about a larger discussion. I had thought about
including a discussion of the place a Christian has in relation to
politics and the state by incorporating a treatise and critique
of Reinhold Niebuhr ‘s Christ and Culture. However, I felt the
book was getting too long for the popular marketplace and perhaps it
could be included in a possible second book. I had originally intended
to include a number of other events in history, such as the Spanish
Inquisition, which some historians trace back to Augustine’s theology,
and the Great Schism in relation to the Hundred Years War and leading up
to Joan of Arc. There is some evidence that Joan had in mind to lead a
crusade to retake Jerusalem to establish the French king as the last
world emperor after she finished with the English. But again, the book
was getting too long. Concerning social justice: it should be noted
that, since the 1980’s most evangelicals that have become involved with
the religious right would probably classify themselves as futurist
premills, having come in by way of the abortion issue under Ronald
Reagan. I, myself, was a onetime follower of Dietrich Bonheoffer’s
liberation theology as outlined in his Ethics, but I pulled
back from that position as a result of realizing, upon further study,
that Bonhoeffer’s theology was grounded more in the Enlightenment
thinking than in apostolic, New Testament theology.
O’Kane:
My desire to support Irenaeus was not as a result of believing that his
writings were infallible or that he was correct in all things he
believed. There are a number of issues that he writes on that he seems
to be wrong about: the age of Jesus when he died, for example. But I was
less concerned with discussing the Antichrist’s nationality than in
discussing the beast’s theology, and in showing the thematic connections
between the Revelation, The gospel of John, and 1 John. When you
compare these writings with what Irenaeus said about them, as I outlined
them in my book, it’s apparent that the church father was right-on.
When you compare the passage concerning the tribe of Dan that
is inferred to by Irenaeus and other church fathers to come to the
conclusion that the Antichrist will be Israelite, its much more
ambiguous, in my opinion. But perhaps you’re right, an endnote in
discussion of this might have been in order, or perhaps a future blog
post dealing with this issue or an inclusion in the future book. I feel
the Roman Empire issue you bring up is a little bit of a red-herring. I
don’t think Irenaeus believing the Roman Empire was the final empire
Daniel talks about nullifies all of his eschatology any more than, if
Hal Lindsey’s belief that a revived Roman Empire turns out to be false,
then it nullifies everything he believes. John himself probably believed
that the empire would give rise to the Antichrist, but as I indicated
in my book, the environment that John wrote in is destined to re-emerge,
not necessarily as a specific revived Roman Empire, but one that mimics
certain aspects of it. As I wrote in chapter 21:
“In
the midst of the visions on the island of Patmos, John witnessed the
corrupt condition of human nature. The following of the Antichrist as
described in the Revelation is something history has witnessed time and
time again. From the faith that ancient Romans put in some of the
emperors to the following of despots, such as Napoleon, Adolph Hitler,
Joseph Stalin, Mao Tse Tung, or various last world emperors, mankind,
whether religious or secular, has embraced the spirit of the Antichrist
in believing that humanity can create its own utopia… These
tyrants witness to the reality of the future Antichrist but never
accomplish his role completely. Someday the Holy Spirit will remove his
hand from holding back the full force of evil, and the Antichrist will
come forward and fulfill the entire role of what the Revelation claims.”
James: “and
asking if a prominent Catholic bishop’s acceptance of homosexuality is
leading the Catholic church to a libertine attitude towards sexuality,
like that of the Nicolaitans)”
O’Kane:
Actually, I think you might have missed my point here. It’s not the
mere existence of a bishop who accepts homosexuality that I wonder
about, it’s the fact that he was promoted by Francis, something that I
don’t believe ever would have take place under Benedict and John Paul
II. As I indicated in my book, there are those who believe that the Pope
will fundamentally change the church’s position on the nature of Christ
and in its position on human sexuality. That cannot happen unless it
occurs through a ecumenical council where it would have to be voted on
by the majority. I don’t think it’s invalid to ask the question or
whether this might be that beginning. Having said that, as I indicated
in the book, Catholicism in its current state has nothing to do with the
theology of the Antichrist, as Irenaeus and the NT outlined it, and I
personally doubt that it ever will.
Once
again, thanks for taking the time to read the book and write the
review. By the way, I do have a blog which can be accessed at
kevintimothyokane.com. I have mostly written on subjects of Islamic
prophecy as they relate to my book.
Regards,
Kevin Timothy O’Kane