“Behold, I Come Quickly”: The Reformed, Biblical Truth of the End

9  lectures and 2 sermons on 11 CDs or DVDs

(2016 BRF Family Conference)

(1) Disorderliness and the Second Coming of Christ – Rev. M. McGeown
(2) The Hope of Creation for Christ’s Coming – Prof. D. Engelsma
(3) The Renaissance and the Reformation – Mr. Pete Adams
(4) Methuselah – Rev. A. Lanning
(5) The Second and Quick Coming of Jesus Christ – Prof. D. Engelsma
(6) The Reformed Belief Concerning Rapture and Antichrist – Rev. A. Lanning
(7) The Coming World-Conquest of the Beast from the Sea – Prof. D. Engelsma
(8) Jesus’ Coming as a Thief in View of Abounding Lawlessness and Great Apostasy – Rev. A. Lanning
(9) Dispensationalism, J. N. Darby and Powerscourt – Rev. A. Stewart
(10) The Two Witnesses of Revelation 11 – Prof. D. Engelsma
(11) Called to Live in the Expectation of a Final Judgment and in the Hope of Life Eternal – Rev. A. Lanning




1,000 Years and 1,260 Days in Revelation

12 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XXXVII) on CD in an attractive box set

What are the various millennial positions and which one is true? What does the book of Revelation teach regarding the 1,000 years (ch. 20) and the 1,260 days (ch. 11-13)?

(1) The Major Millennial Schools (Titus 2)
(2) Millennialism, the Two Ages and the Last Days (Luke 20:27-40)
(3) The Millennium and the Structure of the Book of Revelation (Titus 1)
(4) Revelation 6-19 and the Millennium (Rev. 6)
(5) The Millennium’s Beginning and End (Rev. 20)
(6) The Binding of Satan: What? (Rev. 20)
(7) The Binding of Satan: Regarding What? (Rev. 20)
(8) Are the 1,000 Years Literal? (Rev. 20)
(9) The Meaning of Revelation 20:4-6 (Rev. 20)
(10) 1,000 Years and 1,260 Days—Date Setting! (Rev. 11:1-10)
(11) When Do the 1,260 Days Begin and End? (Rev. 12)
(12) What Happens During the 1,260 Days? (Rev. 13)




A Study in Eschatology

Eschatology or the doctrine of the last things has always held fascination for the child of God. As the end draws nearer, a study of these things becomes even more important. This short book considers various subjects regarding the last times in a clear and simple style. As Rev. Kortering states in chapter 1 on “Try the Spirits,”

When the stormy billows of false doctrine and immorality crash about us, what is our calling? Shall we close the hatch and sink deeply beneath the turbulent surface and find security in isolation? Shall we try to run away from it all and nurse our wounded spirits in the bowels of past glories? No, my friend; that may seem appealing, but that is not the calling of the faithful church. Rather, the church of Jesus Christ is to enter into the storm as a battleship that is anchored firmly to the Rock of Ages, our Lord Jesus Christ as He has revealed Himself to us in His Word. Only then can we oppose the enemies of the truth, and sound forth in clear and certain words the pure preaching of the Gospel and not be dashed to pieces on the rocks of unbelief. When we do this we can be certain that our eye will be focused upon the beacon light of God that directs us safely to the haven of rest.

Chapter 1: Try the Spirits
Chapter 2: Our Life After Death
Chapter 3: Evidence of Our Lord’s Return
Chapter 4: The Four Horsemen
Chapter 5: The Sealing of the 144,000
Chapter 6: The Locusts Out of the Abyss
Chapter 7: The Eating of the Little Book

This book can also be read on-line.

To read this book in Italian, click here.




Antichrist: Body, Soul and Miracles

Will Antichrist be the (literal) incarnation of the devil, as the early A. W. Pink claimed? And will he be the (literal) reincarnation of Judas Iscariot? What can (and can’t) we say from Scripture about his parentage, nature, conception, birth, gender, physical appearance and early life? Will the man of sin perform genuine or spurious miracles? If the former, what form will his miracles take? What about the son of perdition’s will and what will he resolutely desire? What about his intellect? Will he be a genius in all areas or just some (and which ones)? What about the Antichrist’s public speaking ability? Will he be greater in the area of eloquence or rhetoric?

8 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XLVII) on CD in an attractive box set

(1) Antichrist: Incarnation of Satan and Reincarnation of Judas?
(2) Antichrist’s Parentage, Conception, Birth and Early Life
(3) Antichrist’s Physical Appearance
(4) Antichrist’s Nature and Gender
(5) Antichrist’s Miracles: Real or Fake?
(6) What Miracles Will Antichrist Perform?
(7) Antichrist’s Miracles and Will
(8) Antichrist’s Intellect and Speech




Antichrist: Introduction and Origins

These audio classes introduce Antichrist in Christian theology and Western culture. What are the scriptural and non-scriptural sources on the man of sin? What do the Reformed confessions teach on this subject? What are the various names, types and views of the son of perdition? What is his role in eschatology? What is the origin of the idea of the Antichrist in the context of various biblical books, and what are their geographical settings? From what part of the world will the man of sin arise? Will he be Jewish? And if so, will he be from the tribe of Dan? What about the category and number of the Antichrist?

7 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XLVI) on CD in an attractive box set

(1) Antichrist: Sources, Eschatological Connections and Names
(2) Wide Interest in Antichrist; His Contextual Origin
(3) Antichrist: Types, Confessions and Views
(4) Antichrist’s Geographical Origin
(5) Antichrist’s Religious Origin: Jewish?
(6) Will Antichrist Be From the Tribe of Dan?
(7) Antichrist: Category and Number 




Antichrist: Sins, Purpose, Politics and Doom

What are the “seven deadly sins”? And which one is central in Antichrist? What are the purposes of the man of sin regarding God, the world and the church? And how are these purposes related? Will the son of perdition be a military genius? And will be need skills like an Alexander the Great or a Napoleon? Is the Antichrist more of a political figure or more of an ecclesiastical figure? And how are these two related in him? What about the beast of Revelation 17? How will we know when the man of sin has come? What are the different views of his doom and which does Scripture teach?

8 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XLVIII) on CD in an attractive box set

(1) Will Antichrist Be a Military Genius?
(2) How Will We Know When Antichrist Has Come?
(3) Antichrist and the “Seven Deadly Sins”
(4) What Is Antichrist’s Main Purpose?
(5) Will Antichrist Be a Political Figure or an Ecclesiastical Figure?
(6) What Is the Relationship Between the Political and the Religious in Antichrist?
(7) The Beast of Revelation 17
(8) The Doom of Antichrist




Babylonian Cultural Assimilation and the Metallic Colossus

7 sermons on Daniel 1-2 on CD or DVD in an attractive box set

How are we to act when the Babylon of this world seeks to mould us? What is the meaning of Nebuchadnezzar’s dream of the statue of four metals and its destruction?

(1) Babylonian Cultural Assimilation (1:1-8)
(2) Four Wise Teenagers in Babylon (1:8-21)
(3) Nebuchadnezzar’s Troubling Dream (2:1-13)
(4) The Godly Reaction of Daniel and His Friends (2:14-18)
(5) The God Who Reveals Secrets (2:19-30)
(6) Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream of the Great Image (2:31-45)
(7) Nebuchadnezzar’s Response to the Interpretation of His Dream (2:46-49)


“Thank you so much for the sermons on Daniel 1-2. They have been so challenging and so very edifying, therefore yesterday evening I started to listen to them again!” – England




Behold He Cometh!

Herman Hoeksema preached often on Revelation, even preaching through the entire book more than once—not to mention the numerous Bible studies he led on it. Behold He Cometh is thus the fruit of several decades of teaching. This essay-style commentary on the book of Revelation is written from the Reformed, amillennial viewpoint. In clear, concise language, the author sets forth rich biblical teaching concerning the end times.


Dr. William Hendriksen (renowned expositor of the Book of Revelation and minister in the Christian Reformed Church): “The treatment of the text is definitely Reformed in character in that it always ascribes all the glory to God and traces his way in history … I warmly recommend the book” (The Banner).

“We highly recommend this volume … Every pastor should own a copy, and it would serve as an excellent text for Seminary, Bible School or Bible class study groups” (The Gospel Witness).

“A new and solid commentary has been added to the list of the Reformed expositions of the last book of the Bible” (Calvinist Contact).

“A refreshing feature … was that the author showed great insight into the Scriptures” (Australian Baptist).

“… anyone who wishes to make a thorough study of Revelation owes it to himself to work through Hoeksema’s Behold He Cometh” (Wisconsin Lutheran Journal).

“It is the kind of book I would like to see in every library and in every home. I heartily recommend it” (Westminster Theological Journal).

“It is the best work on Revelation known to this reviewer (bearing in mind the excellent works of Hengstenberg, Durham and Hendriksen, to name no others) … Its lucid, simple style is admirably calculated to demonstrate just how perfectly the message of this final book of the canon accords with everything else in Holy Scripture … Hoeksema’s treatment of the Final Judgment of the ungodly and the blessedness of the New Jerusalem is a joy to read. May this superb work goad us to long, pray and work for the second coming of our Saviour, when the cosmic conflict shall end, when Christ shall yield up the kingdom to His Father, and God shall be all and in all” (Peace and Truth).

Rev. Jerome Julien (United Reformed Churches in North America): “Rev. Hoeksema preached through the Book of Revelation twice in his ministry, once soon after World War I and the second time during World War II, the latter time to very large crowds of hearers. The series of messages in this volume—fifty-three in number—thoroughly expounds the comforting truth in this last book of the Bible … A student of the Book of Revelation can hardly do better than this! … by all means get a copy of it” (The Outlook).

Joel R. Beeke: “Where should you begin [the study of eschatology]? Read the book of Revelation again. While doing so, consult Herman Hoeksema’s Behold He Cometh” (in Joel R. Beeke and Sinclair B. Ferguson [eds.], Reformed Confessions Harmonized [Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1999], p. 271).

Rev. Charles Roberts: “Rev. Hoeksema’s exposition of Revelation is a priceless tome of pastoral insight and scholarly wisdom. A superb, user friendly, amillennial analysis of one of the most important books in the canon of scripture.” – South Carolina, USA

“[My wife’s mother] was blessed to read Herman Hoeksema’s Reformed Dogmatics and Behold He Cometh. She has particularly found the latter very edifying in recent times and has revisited it often.” W. Yorkshire

“Thank you very much for the book by Herman Hoeksema, Behold He Cometh! This is a wonderful and very useful book. Herman Hoeksema is superb in his writings! … Out of all the interpretations of the book of Revelation his is the most comprehensive and beautiful, and also tactful, without direct negative pointing to any particular group or denomination” – Kazakhstan

“I have almost finished reading Behold He Cometh, a wonderful and helpful read. Most illuminating and relevant; I had puzzled long about Rev. 17:9-13, Herman Hoeksema has clarified much for me. I find myself in total agreement with him in his methods and interpretation of the prophetic and apocalyptic literature of the Bible in the context of all of Holy Scripture. He is obviously familiar with the interpretative methods of others … and shows up their interpretation for what they are. Since the book was first written, events in the church and the world confirm Hoeksema’s understanding.” – Wolverhampton, England

“I’m reading a wonderful book I got from [the CPRC], Behold He Cometh, a commentary on Revelation. This has been a real help, although I only can work about 20 minutes a day on it [because of my serious health problems]. I have found it a real blessing.” – Co. Antrim, N. Ireland

“I was speaking to a believer on Saturday and during our conversation he mentioned Hoeksema’s Behold He Cometh and what a wonderful book he had found it.  So today I have had a look on the internet and begun reading it on line. The world is growing worse and worse. It’s so easy to become caught up in things and to begin to get fearful. How good it will be to be given an understanding of our great God and Saviour’s sovereign purpose in all the things He is bringing to pass before He comes back to judge the world in righteousness.” – Berkshire, England

“The commentary on Revelation is easily the best I’ve come across and Herman Hoeksema’s interpretation is so accurate, looking at the events that are developing in the world today.” – Essex, England

Click here to read a review of this book by one of our readers!
Click here to read a review of this book in the Standard Bearer.

Click here to read a review of this book in Korean.

Some chapters of this book have been translated into Polish.
Excerpts from the book on “The Binding of Satan”  and on Revelation 14:4-5 can be read on-line in Portuguese.
Chapter 7, “The Church With a Mystic Tendency” can be read on-line in Spanish.




Behold, I Come Quickly

CONTENTS

Foreword

PART 1
1. The Second and Quick Coming of Christ: The Signs
2. The Reformed Belief Concerning the Rapture and the Antichrist
3. The Coming World-Conquest of the Beast From the Sea
4. Jesus’ Coming as a Thief in View of Great Apostasy and Abounding Lawlessness
5. The Two Witnesses of Revelation 11
6. The Final Judgment

PART 2
7. Methuselah
8. The Hope of Creation for Christ’s Coming

PART 3
9. Disorderliness and the Second Coming of Christ
10. Dispensationalism, J. N. Darby and Powerscourt

APPENDIX
About the British Reformed Fellowship


Foreword

Cosmic or general eschatology, also known as the study of the end times or the last things, is a magnificent, comforting and challenging truth. It centres on the glorious return of our Lord Jesus Christ, which is preceded by the signs in creation, the world and the church, and which ushers in the general resurrection, the final judgment and the eternal states of the new heavens and the new earth, and the lake of fire.

It was prophesied before the flood (Jude 14-15) and typified by that worldwide deluge (Matt. 24:37-39; II Pet. 3). It was sung by the psalmists (e.g., Ps. 50; 98) and proclaimed by the Old Testament prophets (Acts 3:21). It is the subject of Christ’s Olivet Discourse (Matt. 24-25; Mark 13; Luke 21), the unifying theme of I and II Thessalonians, and the focus of Revelation, the last book of the Bible. Many other chapters treat aspects of the last things (e.g., I Cor. 15; I Tim. 4; II Tim. 3) and, rightly understood, the whole of Scripture, especially the New Testament, is eschatological, calling us to the vital theological virtue of hope.

Heinrich Quistorp accurately describes the attitude of the Reformers—and their true successors—regarding eschatology:

For the reformers the doctrine of the end is primarily a Gospel, a teaching about the joyful Day of Judgment (Luther) or about the day of our salvation and blessed resurrection (Calvin). For them too it is of course a day of judgment, but of the judgment of Jesus Christ and His grace … Hope in the future determines the present life of the Christian and of the church … It is the orientation of the Christian life towards the coming of Jesus Christ and thus towards the future generally.

Hope is the orientation of this book too. As the following chapters expose end-times errors and develop eschatological doctrine, such as apostasy and the Antichrist, and issue practical warnings against lawlessness, disorderliness and earthly-mindedness, the call is always “lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth nigh” (Luke 21:28)!

The genesis of this work on the last things was the 14th British Reformed Fellowship (BRF) Family Conference in Castlewellan Castle, County Down, Northern Ireland (16-23 July, 2016), which the Lord blessed with lively speeches, warm fellowship and sunny weather! It was the resolute desire of the attendees that these lectures be written up as a book (with the same title as the conference): Behold, I Come Quickly: The Reformed, Biblical Truth of the End.

The two main authors of this book are both living in West Michigan, USA: Prof. David J. Engelsma, emeritus Professor of Dogmatics and Old Testament in the Protestant Reformed Seminary, and Rev. Andrew Lanning, pastor of Byron Center Protestant Reformed Church, though he was serving as the minister-on-loan in the Covenant Evangelical Reformed Church in Singapore, when he delivered the speeches which became his four chapters in this work. These two men are responsible for both Part 1 and Part 2 of this book, consisting of the six main lectures and the two Sunday sermons, respectively.

Part 3 begins with the introductory speech at the 2016 BRF Conference by Rev. Martyn McGeown, editor of the British Reformed Journal (BRJ) and missionary-pastor of the Limerick Reformed Fellowship (LRF) in the Republic of Ireland. It concludes with a historical lecture on the origins of dispensationalism with J. N. Darby and the stately mansion of Powerscourt, located south of Dublin, by Rev. Angus Stewart, the minister of the Covenant Protestant Reformed Church (CPRC) in Ballymena, Northern Ireland.

Behold, I Come Quickly is the seventh BRF book. The first six were co-authored by Profs. Herman Hanko and David J. Engelsma: Keeping God’s Covenant (2006), The Five Points of Calvinism (2008), The Work of the Holy Spirit (2010), The Reformed Worldview (2012), Ye Are My Witnesses (2014) and Be Ye Holy (2016).

Holy Scripture presents us with this beautiful and entirely fitting, eschatological truth: Christ “shall come to be glorified in his saints, and to be admired in all them that believe” (II Thess. 1:10). Let us also glorify and admire our crucified and returning Saviour now! He tells us often that He is coming quickly (Rev. 3:11; 22:7, 12, 20). May the Lord strengthen your faith and hope, and deepen your worship as you read this soul-stirring book.

Rev. Angus Stewart
BRF Chairman

This book can also be read on-line in PDF.
The chapter on “Dispensationalism, J. N. Darby and Powerscourt” can be read on-line on a separate webpage.


“A great book … no nonsense, straight talking and to the point.” – Co. Armagh, N. Ireland

“I have been incredibly blessed in reading Behold, I Come Quickly.” – Kenya

“Must read! Excellent interpretation.” – Singapore

“I’m reading Behold, I Come Quickly. This is a great book because it destroys dispensationalism and post-millennialism and defends amillennialism which is the Reformed position.” – England




Called to Watch for Christ’s Return

On the Mount of Olives outside Jerusalem, a few days before He gave his life on the cross, Jesus Christ gave us detailed teaching on the subject of eschatology or the doctrine of the last things. He did so in response to his disciples’ two-part question: “Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?” (Matt. 24:3). What follows in Matthew 24-25 is the Olivet Discourse.

This subject is of great interest to the child of God, not only for the disciples of that day but also for the Christian in every age. All around us “men’s hearts [are] failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the earth” (Luke 21:26). Opportunistic teachers write lurid accounts of an apocalyptic future, hoping to sell their speculative version of science fiction “prophecy” to the masses. In the midst of it all, we need to understand the signs of Christ’s coming for our own comfort, for the coming of Jesus Christ is our hope. We look for “that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ” (Titus 2:13).

Called to Watch for Christ’s Return gives the sober, distinctly Reformed and Amillennial exposition of Christ’s teaching, avoiding the murky waters of both Postmillennial Preterism, which sees almost everything in these chapters as fulfilled in AD 70, and Premillennial Dispensationalism, which promises a future temple in a restored Jerusalem after a secret rapture of the church.

Christ had two concerns in the Olivet Discourse. First, His disciples, both then and now, must know the signs of His coming, which are those events in creation, in the church and among the nations which indicate that Christ is on His way. These signs are footsteps, which those who have an ear to hear can recognize as the approach of the Lord. But Christ is not satisfied with that because mere “sign-gazing” can lead to speculative, idle, foolish living. Christ did not give us these signs to satisfy our curiosity, but so that we might be ready for Him when He comes. Therefore, Christ’s second concern was the readiness of his disciples, which is expressed in his urgent and repeated warnings to watch for His coming in light of the signs. That, too, is the twofold concern of this exposition of the Olivet Discourse. Watch, pray, and serve the Lord with an eye to these signs.

Rev. Martyn McGeown grew up in Co. Tyrone, N. Ireland, graduated from the Protestant Reformed Theological School in Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA, in June 2010, and has been the missionary-pastor of the Limerick Reformed Fellowship in the Republic of Ireland, since July 2010.


“I am at page 92 of Rev McGeown book [after buying it just 24 hours ago]. It is a really good book; worth double the price … [A week later,] I have read my copy and am starting my second go.” – Co. Antrim

“This is a great book. It is very easy to read and uses common-sense exegesis.” – N. Ireland

“I am greatly enjoying the book by Pastor McGeown. Its chapter on “The Abomination of Desolation” which deals with Daniel’s 70 weeks makes so much more sense than the view of the dispensationalists. As I read it I was struck with sadness at the amount of time I have wasted within this system of eschatology.” – Belfast

“This is a really easy and straightforward read that makes sense as you read it!” – N. Ireland

“My thanks to Rev. McGeown for the lovely, precious Called to Watch for Christ’s Return. I’ve nearly finished part 1 and it has been a great blessing!” – England

“I have just finished rereading the first part of Called to Watch for Christ’s Return. It is such a wonderful book and so very encouraging.” – England

“Love Called to Watch for Christ’s Return … This afternoon I have been reading the super exposition in Rev. McGeown’s book on the parable of the talents, it made me think about what area of service the Lord has given to me.” – England

“The high commendation was right. An excellent work!” – London

“I enjoyed the book by Martyn McGeown Called to Watch for Christ’s Return.” – Cambridge

“Concisely written book dealing with Reformed Christian Eschatology, Amillennialism. Bravo, Rev. McGeown.” – Rep. of Ireland

“… a fine example of good exegesis and sermonizing, combined into a commentary. I am teaching eschatology this semester and have actually added [the] book to the REQUIRED READING section of my syllabus. Students will be required to read the book in connection with our discussion of the signs of the times.” – USA

“I’m just now reading Rev. McGeown’s book and love it.” –  Minnesota, USA

“Just wanted  you to know I really enjoyed [the] book, Called to Watch for Christ’s Return. I read it last week and was very much impressed by the good way you criticized pre- and postmillennialism … We also told our church librarian that we really enjoyed you writing.” – Hudsonville, Michigan, USA

“Very well written and easy to understand.” – Illinois, USA

“I am halfway through [the book]. The chapter on ‘The Great Tribulation’ pricked me. Here’s one of the ponder-worthy words: ‘We must be faithful in small things, watching and praying that we will be faithful in that day. But we must not fear. Christ will provide sufficient grace to endure the persecution when it comes’ (p. 126).” – Philippines

“Thoroughly enjoyed this clear and edifying exposition of Scripture.” – Alberta, Canada

“I have begun reading … Called to Watch for Christ’s Return, and am enjoying it immensely.” – Australia


REVIEW 1

Turn off the TV, the computer, the tablet and the smartphone, and watch. “Watch what?” you ask. Watch for Christ’s return—that is, know the signs of Christ’s return and be ready for his coming.

Knowing the signs of Christ coming and growing in readiness for his return is the important subject of a new RFPA publication I was happy to find in my church mailbox on a recent Sunday. The author is Rev. Martyn McGeown, member of the Covenant Protestant Reformed Church in Ballymena, Northern Ireland and missionary pastor of the Limerick Reformed Fellowship in the Republic of Ireland.

The contents of this book arise from a series of sermons on Matthew 24 and 25 that Rev. McGeown preached in Limerick between August of 2011 and January of 2012, barely a year after his graduation from the Theological School of the Protestant Reformed Churches in the summer of 2010. Read this book and you will find that Rev. McGeown is gifted beyond his years in both preaching and writing. The RFPA has found an able author and I hope that this is the first of many books to come from the pen of Rev. McGeown, Lord willing.

Throughout this book, Rev. McGeown makes the difficult understandable and practical for the believer. Matthew 24 and 25 are difficult passages, not only because they can be hard to understand but, more importantly, because they vividly set forth the lot of the believer in this life. The way of the believer in this life is the way of suffering and persecution that grows in intensity as the end draws near. A Reformed amillennialist, Rev. McGeown does not sugar coat this reality, but shows how this suffering “serves the coming of Christ and the end of all things” (p. 46).

Throughout this book, the author makes the material very practical for the reader. He doesn’t beat around the bush or blunt the sharp edges of the reality of persecution for the believer. One example, from the many available in the book, serves to prove this point. In Chapter 4 (“The Church Hated By All Nations”), Rev. McGeown writes,

Matthew 24 does not specify who will deliver the Christians up to be afflicted, but Mark and Luke add that it will be in some cases former friends and even family members. Jesus had already warned about this: he had not come to bring peace, but to bring a sword (Matt. 10:34). The result would be opposition and enmity among friends and even families. Now he underlines it again: you will be handed over to the authorities to be afflicted and to be killed. Your friends will do it! Your parents will do it! Your brothers and sisters will do it! Your sons and daughters will do it! “Now the brother shall betray the brother to death, and the father the son; and children shall rise up against their parents, and shall cause them to be put to death” (Mark 13:12). “And ye shall be betrayed both by parents, and brethren, and kinsfolk, and friends; and some of you shall they cause to be put to death” (Luke 21:16).

What a bitter pill that will be to swallow! Surely it is bad enough to be arrested; bad enough to be treated as a criminal; bad enough to be thrown into prison, to be tortured, to be put to death. But to watch as your own family do it! To hear your nearest and dearest say, “Take him. He is a Christian. We hate him. We are not on his side.” How dreadful! (p. 51)

So … turn off the TV, phone and computer … and live in reality … and watch! Know the signs of Christ’s imminent return and grow in your readiness for his return. Read this excellent book!

Aaron Cleveland (Grand Rapids, MI, USA)


REVIEW 2

Called to Watch for Christ’s Return began as a series of sermons preached by the author on the Olivet Discourse, a speech in which “Jesus proclaims his second coming, an event with which history will come to a dramatic and sudden close” (ix). These sermons covered Matthew 24:1-31, dealing with the signs of Christ’s coming—deceivers, the preaching of the gospel, the great tribulation, and more. These sermons also dealt with Matthew 24:32-25:46, treating the subject of watching for Christ’s return—the unknown time of his return, Christ’s coming as in the days of Noah, parables associated with his coming, and more. These sermons comprise the content of the book. We are thankful that these fine sermons have reached a wider audience through their publication in book form.

The main strength of Called to Watch for Christ’s Return is its exegetical precision and richness. The material is always mined from the text. Concepts are carefully defined and developed, and difficult passages are lucidly explained. Especially does this clarity of exegesis become important in passages that deal with such matters as the abomination of desolation (Matthew 24:15-20) and the unknown time of Christ’s return (Matthew 24:36). Such passages are often misinterpreted, leading to a host of errors. Thus, proper, sober interpretation is critical in these kinds of difficult passages. McGeown’s work is a needed and timely contribution to the study of eschatology (the end times), for two reasons. First, there are so many today teaching unbiblical ideas about the end of the world. Called to Watch for Christ’s Return interacts with these systems of thought, dismantles them, and plainly sets forth the biblical, Reformed, amillennial position. Second, we live in the last days, and that alone makes this book important. We must know what to expect in these last and evil days, we must be admonished to watch for the coming of our Lord, and we must be comforted.

McGeown’s work is necessarily polemical. That is, it is a work which exposes and refutes the errors. Advocates of both postmillennialism and premillennial dispensationalism seek to find evidence for their views in Matthew 24 and 25. Postmillennialism teaches that the Olivet Discourse—at least some of it, if not all of it—is a reference exclusively to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. This interpretation is fundamental to the postmillennial position, lest the events of which Jesus speaks interfere with postmillennialism’s future golden age. In contrast, premillennial dispensationalists claim that the Olivet Discourse refers exclusively to the future—not to AD 70, but to a future Jerusalem and a future temple. Negatively, the author exposes these errors, and demonstrates how a sober interpretation of Jesus’ teaching pulls the rug out from under these millennial systems. Positively, McGeown sees Matthew 24 and 25 as a blending of the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, on the one hand, and Jesus’ second coming, on the other hand. The destruction of Jerusalem is a type or picture of Jesus’ second coming. This view, the amillennial view, and this view alone, does justice to Jesus’ words.

In a book on watching for Christ’s return, one would expect not only polemics, but also pointed instruction and warning for believers. After all, we are all prone to spiritual slumber instead of watching for Christ’s return. The command of scripture to watch for our Lord’s coming is a weighty command, and the author conveys it well: “Watch! Christ is coming. Let us not be found sleeping when he returns, but looking for his return. Let that watchfulness begin today if it has not been our habit before, so whether he comes on the clouds or calls us in death, we will be ready to meet him” (214). Called to Watch for Christ’s Return is a stirring call to stay vigilant in these last and evil days.

The book is also comforting and warm, an approach that arises from the author’s pastoral heart for God’s people who live in the perilous days prior to Jesus’ coming. This warm tone characterizes the entirety of the book, and climaxes in the last chapter; any reader’s heart will thrill in reading this last chapter, which explains, in part, the glories of the new heavens and the new earth. Read and meditate upon this breathtaking description of heaven: “Death, sin, and the curse will be absent—forever banished from the new creation. We will enjoy spiritual joy and satisfaction in abundance, for we will enter into the fullness of our inheritance. Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit! That is life, eternal life, life that lasts forever and has no end. Life with Christ. Life in the presence of God, fellowshipping with him. That is blessedness and joy! That is worth waiting for! Do not fear the judgment day. Do not be weary with watching and waiting. But pray, even for that great day” (280).

Our Lord is coming. Watch. Watch—by reading. Called to Watch for Christ’s Return, as a faithful exposition of Jesus’ words, will instruct you, arm you against the errors, comfort you, and quicken your hope. Come, Lord Jesus, yea, come quickly.

Rev. Ryan Barnhill




Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom

The subject of the book is eschatology, the biblical doctrine of the last things.

“We amillennialists,” writes Engelsma, “proclaim a gospel that declares the little flock of Christ, that will always have tribulation in the world and whose members are killed all the day long, to be not merely conquerors but ‘more than conquerors’ (Luke 12:32; John 16:33; Rom. 8:36-37). See, this is not pessimism. This is optimism. This is the hugest optimism. This is optimism without any hint of pessimism.”

Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom includes fine exegesis of Revelation 20, Matthew 24 and Isaiah 65:17-25, and refutes “Jewish Dreams” and preterism.

Originally this book was a series of editorials in the Standard Bearer magazine.


“[Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom] breathes of the comfort and hope that the return of Christ brings to the believer … It is well-written and timely in its refutation of the views of Christian Reconstructionism” (British Church Newspaper).

“I was very blessed by Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom by Prof. Engelsma. I devoured it within the first week of its arrival.” – Norway

“Thank you for the book, Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom by Prof. David Engelsma. God willing, I plan to post that book on to the Kenyan pastors because this book is a wonderful defence of Reformed amillennialism and is a good bulwark against premillennialism and dispensationalism. This book is very timely and very useful and deserves to be widely read.” – England

What a wonderful book in times like these, even in Namibia! … It is one of my library books that I give to members of the congregation.” – Namibia

I found Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom by Professor David Engelsma very helpful and would heartily recommend it.” – England
 
Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom saved me from a heresy. I thought theonomy was a good way of enforcing Christian morality in the world but in the end it’s what Professor Engelsma said. It leads you to hope for this world, not the Lord’s second coming. Besides, it’s theologically wrong to require the civil laws of the covenant with Moses, which was abolished, in the New Testament world.” – Brazil

This book was reviewed in the Protestant Reformed Theological Journal.  To read the review, click here.

To watch the video of the author interview concerning this book, click here. The author interview is also available in Spanish.

To order in N. America, please contact Hope Protestant Reformed Church, Redlands, California.


To read this book in Portuguese, click here.
To read chapters of this book in Polish, click here.




Eschatological Signs in Creation; Wars, False Christs and Persecution

10 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XLII) on CD in an attractive box set

These 10 classes on the end times treat 9 signs of Christ’s return, involving the earthly and heavenly creations, wars between nations and pseudo-Christs, with a special focus on the often omitted subject of persecution!

(1) Famines, Pestilences, Earthquakes and Birth Pangs (Matt. 24:1-14)
(2) Birth Pangs, the Book of Revelation and Earthquakes (II Pet. 3)
(3) The Eschatological Signs in the Heavens (Luke 21:7-28)
(4) Wars and Rumours of Wars (Rev. 6)
(5) False Christs (Matt. 24:3-8, 23-31)
(6) Various Signs and Persecutions (Mark 13:1-20)
(7) Ungodly Motivations for Persecution (I Thess. 2)
(8) Forms of Persecution (Heb. 11:32-40)
(9) Modern Persecution (Rev. 13:1-10)
(10) Painful Effects of Persecution (Matt. 24:1-14)




Ezekiel 40-48 in Eschatology

7 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XXXIX) on CD in an attractive box set

Many dispensationalists and premillennialists claim that Ezekiel 40-48 is a powerful argument for a literal future 1,000-year period of bliss (for resurrected Jews, regenerated people and unbelievers), alleging that its holy temple, Zadokite priesthood, bloody animal sacrifices, ceremonial laws, godly prince, amazing river, tribal land divisions, etc., are all to be taken literally. These audios survey the contents and eschatological significance of Ezekiel 40-48, and present 7 solid arguments against understanding it literalistically. The positive teaching of Ezekiel’s last 9 chapters involves startling changes to the OT law, a “better” state for God’s people, and Scripture’s own teaching on the time and manner of its fulfilment, as well as the hope of OT and NT saints.

(1) Introducing Ezekiel 40-48
(2) Land Divisions, Sacred Reserve, Temple Compound and Healing River
(3) Three Arguments Against Literalism in Ezekiel 40-48
(4) Seven Massive Problems With a Literal Ezekiel 40-48
(5) Changes in OT Law in Ezekiel 40-48
(6) Ezekiel 40-48 as “Better”
(7) The Fulfilment of Ezekiel 40-48


Herman Bavinck: “Ezekiel’s realistic picture of the future contains elements that require a symbolic interpretation: the equal shares assigned to all the tribes, though in numbers [of tribal members] they vary widely; the precisely measured strips of land intended for priests, Levites, and the king: the separation of the temple from the city; the high location of the temple on a mountain and the brook that streams out from under the threshold of the east door of the temple toward the Dead Sea; and finally the artificial way things are put together and the impossibility of implementing them practically—all these features resist a so-called realistic interpretation” (Reformed Dogmatics, vol. 4 [Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2008], p. 660)




Ezekiel, Daniel and the Pentateuch on the Last Days

8 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XXXVI) on CD in an attractive box set

End times teaching by Jacob, Balaam, Moses, Ezekiel, Daniel, Peter and John, including Shiloh and the Star out of Jacob, Nebuchadnezzar’s dream of the great image and the king of the north (Antichrist), Satan’s little season, and Gog and Magog!

(1) Ezekiel and the Last Days (Eze. 38)
(2) Gog and Magog in the Last Days (Eze. 39)
(3) Gog and Magog in Ezekiel and Revelation (Rev. 20)
(4) Daniel on the Last Days (Dan. 2:27-45)
(5) Jacob on the Last Days (Gen. 49:1-18)
(6) Balaam’s Latter Days Prophecy (Num. 24:1-25)
(7) Deuteronomy on the Last Days (Deut. 4:20-34)
(8) The Big Picture on the Last Days (Acts 2:1-21)




Ezekiel’s Vision of the Future

5 sermons on Ezekiel 37-39 on CD or DVD plus a bonus disk: “What About Israel?”

David J. Engelsma: “The New Testament instructs us to interpret Old Testament prophecy spiritually. In the earthly figures familiar to the prophets and their hearers, the Holy Spirit of Christ foretold the spiritual glories of Jesus Christ, His church and His new creation. Those earthly features of prophecy … are not the reality of the prophecy. They never were the reality of the prophecy. They were not the reality of the prophecy for the spiritual Israelite at that time. He or she saw through them and beyond them to better and higher prospects …” (Christ’s Spiritual Kingdom, pp. 105-106).

(1) The Valley of Dry Bones (Eze. 37:1-14)
(2) The Union of the Two Sticks (Eze. 37:15-20)
(3) The Restoration of the Davidic Kingdom (Eze. 37:21-28)
(4) The Attack of Gog and Magog (Eze. 38)
(5) The Destruction of Gog and Magog (Eze. 39)
Bonus Lecture on CD: “What About Israel?”


“We praise God for your sermons on Ezekiel 37-39. It is a joy to hear someone discoursing intelligently and with good sense and sound biblical understanding on the theme of the millennium and the spiritual kingdom of God in Christ and exposing the errors of all carnal worldly might and power kingdoms, be they pre-mil, post-mil, dispensationalist or Jewish. You do not know how much we thank God for encouraging us through your sermons … May the Lord continue to establish you in His grace and truth. We pray that you will continue to love the truth and to speak the truth in love.” – Australia

We are enjoying the series in Ezekiel 37-39. We are glad you are giving the lie to premillennial teachings by preaching the truth. Most churches today are Arminian, dispensational and premillennial. The new Christian becomes steeped in these doctrines and then finds it difficult to get his mind washed from them. Its even more difficult if you throw in Pentecostalism as well. You have to continually listen and hearken to the truth to straighten the mind out. Of course, one has to want the truth in the first place!” – South Wales




Isaiah, Micah, Hosea & Jeremiah on the Last Days

6 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XXXV) on CD in an attractive box set plus handouts.

What did the prophets of the Southern and Northern Kingdoms predict regarding the latter or last days (the period between Christ’s first and second comings)? What about Messianic prophecy and the calling of the Gentiles, true and false teachers, blessing and judgment? How do the last days predictions help us to grasp biblical eschatology and understand our own times?

(1) The Last Days in Isaiah 2: Millennialism
(2) The Last Days in Isaiah 2 and Acts 2
(3) Messianic Prophecy and the Last Days in Isaiah
(4) The Last Days in Micah and Isaiah
(5) Hosea on the Last Days
(6) The Last Days in Jeremiah


“Thank you for the Belgic Confession classes on ‘Isaiah, Micah, Hosea and Jeremiah on the Last Days’. I have listened to three and have found them such very good and clear teaching. The handouts with them are such a great help and I have made notes on them.” – England




Nebuchadnezzar’s Golden Image and Boanthropy

8 sermons on Daniel 3-4 on CD or DVD in an attractive box set

Daniel 3-4 contains powerful narratives of Nebuchadnezzar’s idolatry and boanthropy. Here we have the golden image, the fiery furnace, the great tree and the mad emperor. Marvel at the faithful witness of three friends and Nebuchadnezzar’s two theodicies.

(1) The Image Erected by Nebuchadnezzar (Dan. 3:1)
(2) The Dedication of Nebuchadnezzar’s Golden Image (Dan. 3:2-7)
(3) The Trial of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego (Dan. 3:8-18)
(4) The Three Friends and the Fiery Furnace (Dan. 3:19-27)
(5) Nebuchadnezzar’s Second Theodicy (Dan. 3:28-30)
(6) Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream of the Great Tree (Dan. 4:4-12, 20-22)
(7) Nebuchadnezzar’s Boanthropy (Dan. 4:13-19; 23-33)
(8) Nebuchadnezzar’s Confession That the Most High Rules (Dan. 4:1-3, 34-37)




The 70 Weeks of Daniel 9

7 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. XL) on CD

Daniel 9:24-27 predicts people and events within a framework of 70 weeks, broken down into 7 weeks, 62 weeks and 1 week. Dispensationalism claims that this passage is the key to the end times and brings in its peculiar views: the great parenthesis, the great tribulation and a literal Jewish millennium. But what are Daniel 9’s 70 weeks really about? Far greater things than dispensationalism’s novelties!

(1) Presenting the Dispensationalist View of Daniel 9
(2) Critiquing Dispensationalism’s Literalist View of Daniel 9
(3) The 7 Weeks and the 62 Weeks
(4) Refuting Dispensationalism’s Interpretation of the 70th Week
(5) Christ and His Cross in Daniel 9
(6) Covenant and Chronology in Daniel 9
(7) The Coming, Counsel and Comfort of Daniel 9




The Departure of Jehovah’s Glory

5 sermons on Ezekiel 8-11 on CD or DVD in an attractive box set

While in his house in Babylonia, Ezekiel sees a vision of Jerusalem involving a guided tour of 4 temple abominations, 1 scribal angel and 6 slaughtering angels, Jehovah’s awesome chariot and the immediate death of a city leader, as well as Christ as a man of fire, a mark on the foreheads of grieving believers, the glory of the God of Israel, a divine throne of lapis lazuli, 4 cherubs (each with 4 faces and 4 wings) and 4 giant wheels full of eyes. The 5th and final sermon on these 4 amazing chapters treats the spiritual heart transplant that God gives His elect to whom He is a “little sanctuary.”

(1) Ezekiel’s Guided Tour of the Temple Abominations (Eze. 8)
(2) Seven Angels and the Slaughter in Jerusalem (Eze. 9)
(3) God’s Chariot Leaves the Temple (Eze. 10)
(4) The Caldron and the Flesh (Eze. 11:1-13)
(5) A Gracious Heart Transplant (Eze. 11:14-25)




The General Resurrection

 

10 classes on Belgic Confession 37 (Vol. LI) on CD in an attractive box set

(1) The General Resurrection: Importance, Denials, Number and Timing  (John 6:37-54)
(2) The General Resurrection in Its Theological Relationships  (II Cor. 4)
(3) The Old Testament and the General Resurrection  (Matt. 22:23-37)
(4) The General Resurrection and (General) Revelation  (Rom. 1:18-32)
(5) Introducing I Corinthians 15 on the General Resurrection  (I Cor. 15:11-35)
(6) Material or Immaterial Resurrection Bodies?  (I Cor. 15:42-58)
(7) Our Resurrected Bodies: Continuity and Discontinuity  (I Cor. 15:35-49)
(8) Our Resurrected Bodies: Four Adjectives, Regeneration and Significance  (I Cor. 15:42-58)
(9) The Resurrection and Biblical Anthropology  (I Cor. 15:42-53)
(10) Practical Issues Regarding our Resurrected Bodies  (Luke 20:27-40)