The Israel/Church
Distinction is the Sine Qua Non of Dispensationalism
As Dispensationalists cannot agree upon a unified agreement as to what
“literal interpretation” is, Progressive Dispensationalists have proposed a
returned to the first sine qua non (i.e.
the distinction between Israel 
Blaising,
a progressive dispensationalist, observes that “among contemporary
dispensationalists a general consensus exists that a distinction between Israel Israel 
The recognition of
the Israel/Church distinction as the sine
qua non of Dispensational theology is consistent with the observations of
Non-dispensationalists. For example, Poythress perceives that this distinction
is more fundamental than a literal hermeneutics. He writes, “Their [the
Dispensationalists’] approaches toward strict literalness seem to be
subordinated to the more fundamental principle of dual destinations for Israel 
Mathison, a
Non-dispensationalist, likewise reaches the following conclusion:
“The only one of Ryrie’s three distinctives of dispensationalism that
has always been acknowledged as true is the distinction between Israel Israel 
Coming from a
historical-theological approach, it is notable that Clarence Bass identifies
the Israel/Church distinction as a novel theological innovation within
Christendom:
“It is not that exegetes prior to his [John N. Darby’s] time did not
see a covenant between God and Israel, or a future relation of Israel to the
millennial reign, but they always viewed the church as a continuation of God’s
single program of redemption begun in Israel. It is dispensationalism’s rigid
insistence on a distinct cleavage between Israel 
As a previous
Dispensationalist himself, Bass agrees that the distinctive of
Dispensationalism is, indeed, the dichotomy between Israel 
Likewise, Charles
Ryrie makes the following observations:
“The essence of
dispensationalism, then, is the distinction between Israel and the Church.
This grows out of the dispensationalist’s consistent employment of normal or
plain or historical-grammatical interpretation, and it reflects an
understanding of the basic purpose of God in all His dealings with mankind as
that of glorifying Himself through salvation and other purposes as well.”[6]
In this definition
of Dispensationalism, Ryrie is making three assertions. First and foremost, the essence of Dispensationalism is the
distinction between Israel 
Robert Lightner, a
Professor of Systematic Theology at Dallas Theological Seminary, reinforces the
fact that a Dispensationalist is not merely one who adheres to a certain number
of “distinguishable economies.” He further reaffirms that premillennialism
cannot be equated with dispensationalism. Lightner writes:
“Granted, there are differences among
dispensationalists over the number of dispensations and, as already stated,
over the time when the church began. The question then becomes, What is the
least common denominator? What must one believe to be classified legitimately
as a dispensationalist? It certainly is not the number of distinguishable
economies one holds to. “It is not the fact that Scofield taught seven
dispensations and Hodge only four that makes the former a dispensationalist and
the latter not.” Since some committed premillennialists reject
dispensationalism, premillennialism is not determinative either. One must look
elsewhere for the sine qua non of dispensationalism.”[8]
Lightner
subsequently concludes that the “all-determinative” sine qua non of Dispensationalism is the distinction between Israel 
“Friends and foes of dispensationalism must agree that the all-determinative conviction without
which one cannot be a dispensationalist is
the distinction between God’s program for Israel 
Bateman, in his
concluding essay in Three Central Issues in Contemporary
Dispensationalism: A Comparison of Traditional and Progressive Views, documents the general
consensus amongst Dispensationalists. This consensus, that “Israel 
“What, then, unites one dispensationalist to another? Simply put, the
basic unifying issue for all dispensationalists is that Israel Israel 
In this section,
we have seen that it has been unanimously agreed upon that the sine qua non of Dispensationalism is,
indeed, the Israel/Church distinction. We can logically deduce that a
Dispensationalist is inevitably one who embraces the sine qua non of
Dispensationalism, i.e. the distinction between Israel 
We saw in earlier blog posts that Khoo, the Academic Dean of Far Eastern Bible College, agrees that “God
has two programmes in His salvation plan: one for Israel, and another for the
Church.”[11]
He also admits that Far Eastern Bible College embraces the sine qua non of Dispensationalism.[12]
Despite his
adherence to a Reformed soteriology i.e. the five points of Calvinism, famous
pastor-teacher - John F. MacArthur Jr. - rightly describes himself as a
Dispensationalist. In the following transcript from Bible Questions and
Answers, MacArthur says:
“Here’s my dispensationalism - I’ll give it to you in one sentence: there’s
a difference between the church and Israel 
Although MacArthur
rejects antinomianism and accepts Reformed soteriology, he does not call
himself a Reformed theologian. He perceives that he is a Dispensationalist simply
because he adopts the sine qua non of
Dispensationalism.
Blaising,
a Progressive Dispensationalist, similarly emphasizes that progressive
dispensationalists are dispensational because they “clearly articulate (1) a
future for ethnic Israel  and
(2) distinguish between the Church and Israel 
It becomes
apparent that Bible Presbyterians may need to redefine their
theological-hermeneutical grid, or perhaps even simpler, to rename their
theological appellation. Since they embrace the sine qua non of Dispensationalism, is there, therefore, a need to
drop the label “Reformed?” Otherwise, one would have to redefine the sine qua non of Dispensationalism, so
as to preserve the “Reformed” designation.
Various Degrees
of Distinction between Israel 
It is generally agreed
that Dispensationalists of different varieties hold to various degrees of
distinction or dichotomy between Israel and the Church. These range from a
radical dichotomy adhered to by Classical Dispensationalists, to a more
moderate Israel/Church distinction held by Progressive Dispensationalists.
Classical Dispensationalism
By the term “Classical
Dispensationalist,” I refer to theologians like Cyrus I. Scofield, Lewis Sperry
Chafer, A. C. Gaebelein, and Clarence Larkin. Classic Dispensationalists
maintain a metaphysical distinction between Israel Israel Israel Israel 
Toussaint
explains:
“In the original form of Darby’s dispensationalism, the line drawn
between Israel Israel 
Burns elucidates
that according to Classical Dispensationalism, “the underlying premise was that
national Israel 
Hence, in the
classical form of Dispensationalism, we see a radical dichotomy between Israel 
Revised/Normative Dispensationalism
As
Dispensationalism developed, “the New
Scofield Reference Bible, Ryrie’s Dispensationalism
Today, and other dispensationalists in the mid-twentieth century modified
the heavenly/earthly dualistic language, diminished future distinctions between
the peoples of God, and debated about how the new covenant should be applied in
the present age.”[17]
Revised
Dispensationalists include John F. Walvoord, Charles C. Ryrie, J. Dwight
Pentecost and Alva J. McClain. These Dispensationalists jettisoned the eternal
metaphysical distinction between Israel 
Campbell,
a Dispensationalist and Professor of Bible Exposition at Dallas Theological
Seminary, elaborates:
“The distinction between Israel Israel Zion 
Revised Dispensationalists
perceive two groups of God’s redeemed humanity existing in and confined to redemptive
history. The Church exists with its own principles and purposes differing from
those of national Israel Campbell 
“The church 
 of Jesus Christ 
Blaising
summarizes the differences between the Classical and Revised/Normative
varieties of Dispensationalism:
“It is amazing that in the writings of Walvoord, Pentecost, Ryrie, and
McClain published in the 1950s and 1960s, the heavenly/earthly dualistic
language is gone. A distinction between Israel Israel 
Progressive Dispensationalism
Recent
decades saw the rise of a new variety of Dispensationalism which has moved in a
more covenantal direction, while maintaining the Israel/Church distinction,
premillennialism, and emended dispensational distinctives. As will be discussed
later, Progressive Dispensationalists allow an inaugurated phase of the
Kingdom, while maintaining that the ultimate fulfillment of the Davidic
covenant lies in the earthly millennium. Revised Dispensationalists, on the
other hand, insist that the Kingdom is still in the future.
Progressives
also see Christ as sitting on
the throne of David at this present age, albeit in a spiritual sense. Revised Dispensationalists dispute this view, saying that
Jesus is currently exalted at the
right hand of the Father, but not sitting on David’s throne in any sense. Unlike
Progressives, Revised Dispensationalists do not accept the proposition that
Christ’s messianic kingdom reign has begun.
Burns
writes:
“A more moderate dispensational position has arisen in recent years. On
the basis of the New Testament’s use of crucial Old Testament texts,
progressive dispensationalists acknowledge degrees of Old Testament content in the
church, though complete fulfillment of Israel ’s
promises awaits the Millennium as an intermediate kingdom that exists with Israel Israel   
Progressive
dispensationalists are “progressive” in the sense that they view each
successive dispensation as building upon and developing the principles of the
preceding economy. This allows the progression of the one plan of God for His
one redeemed people, rather than distinguishing two separate plans and peoples.
However, Progressives maintain that the one divine purpose for redeemed
humanity will only be ultimately realized in the earthly, Davidic Kingdom. The
millennial phase of God’s redemptive-historical plan is necessary so as to
fulfill the Old Testament prophecies for national Israel 
Progressive
Dispensationalists, of all varieties of Dispensationalism, see the least
radical dichotomy or distinction between Israel Israel , while distinguishing between the Church
and Israel 
Craig A. Blaising,
Darrell L. Bock, and Robert L. Saucy are all considered to be Progressive
Dispensationalists.
References
[1] Blaising,
“Development of Dispensationalism by Contemporary Dispensationalists,” 273.
[2] Robert L. Saucy, The Case for Progressive Dispensationalism (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing
House, 1993), 221. Saucy is also a Progressive Dispensationalist.
[3] Poythress, Understanding Dispensationalists, 78.
[4] Mathison, Dispensationalism, 8, emphasis mine.
[5] Clarence Bass, Backgrounds to Dispensationalism: Its Historical Genesis and
Ecclesiastical Implications (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Co, 1960; reprint, Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2005), 27.
[6] Ryrie, Dispensationalism,
41, emphasis mine.
[7] This is what Mathison observes. See Mathison,
Dispensationalism, 5.
[8] Robert P. Lightner, “Theological
Perspectives on Theonomy,” Bibliotheca Sacra 143 (1986): 34, quoting Ryrie, Dispensationalism Today,
44.
[9] Ibid., emphasis mine.
[10] Herbert W. Bateman IV, “Dispensationalism
Tomorrow,” in Three Central Issues in Contemporary Dispensationalism: A
Comparison of Traditional and Progressive Views, ed. Herbert
W. Bateman IV (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel, 1999), 308-309, quoting Ryrie, Dispensationalism, 39.
[11] Khoo, Dispensationalism and Covenant
Theology, 32.
[12] See Khoo, Dispensationalism Examined, 11; idem, Dispensationalism and
Covenant Theology, 46.
[13] John MacArthur, Jr., Bible Questions and Answers (Panorama City, CA: Word of Grace,
1994), sound cassette GC 70-15. Transcribed by Tony Capoccia, Bible Bulletin Board [article on-line];
available from http://www.biblebb.com/files/macqa/70-15-12.htm;
Internet; accessed 14 October 2005, emphasis mine.
[14] Blaising, “Why I Am
a Dispensationalist with a Small ‘d,’” 390.
[15] Toussaint, “Israel 
[16] J. Lanier Burns, “Israel 
[17] Ibid., 273.
[18] Campbell, “The Church in God’s Prophetic
Program,” 149-150, quoting Ryrie, Dispensationalism
Today, 154, emphasis mine.
[19] Ibid., 161.
[20] Blaising,
“Development of Dispensationalism by Contemporary Dispensationalists,” 276.
[21] Burns, “Israel 
[22] Also see Ryrie, Dispensationalism, 131-135 for a
succinct discussion of the Israel/Church distinction of Progressive
Dispensationalists.
[23] See Blaising, “Why
I Am a Dispensationalist with a Small ‘d,’” 390.

 
 
 
 
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