LEARNING ACTIVITY #35
A New Heaven and a New Earth
Part One
If your experience in "hanging out" with other Christians has been
anything like mine, you probably have been taught that everything we see in the material
third dimensional world is going to be totally destroyed when it is burned up in
the grand finale of what is called the "end times." After the destruction
of the present heaven and earth (which is not biblically supported - see Learning
Activity #26), a new heaven and a new earth will be put into place and Jesus will
sit on a physical third dimensional throne of government on earth for one thousand
years thereafter.
1. Read 2 Peter 3:10–13.
The concept of heaven and
earth being destroyed and a new heaven and earth replacing it has its roots in the
above passage. The key to understanding what Peter is writing about may be determined
by permitting the Bible to interpret itself. This key is found in a word that appears
twice in the above passage and that word is "elements" or the Greek
word "stoicheia," and the meaning of the phrase "heaven
and earth."
Using your Bible, look up the following verses and write
them in the space provided. As you proceed answer the questions as they appear in
this document.
2. Matthew 5:18 _________________________________________________________________________
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3.
In the verse above, what does Jesus say is the relationship between heaven and earth,
and the law? _________________________________________________________________________
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What
Jesus said about heaven and earth and the law will help us to understand what Peter
has said in his passage. What Jesus has stated in this verse is most important! Coupled
with the prior verse seventeen, Jesus stated that one of the things He came to earth
to do as Jesus of Nazareth was to fulfill the law and that not one speck of the law
would pass until He accomplished it. In addition, not one speck of the law would
pass until heaven and earth passed away! If the Bible at some place tells us that
the law has been fulfilled by Christ, then it is obvious that heaven and earth must
have passed away! If the law is found to be fulfilled, then heaven and earth had
to also have passed away or else Jesus is in error in making this statement!
4.
Matthew 5:17 __________________________________________________________
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5.
Ephesians 2:15 _________________________________________________________
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6.
Colossians 2:14 _________________________________________________________
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7.
Romans 6:14 ___________________________________________________________
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8.
Galatians 5:18 __________________________________________________________
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9.
After studying the five verses above, what can you conclude about the law? _______
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Since
the law is fulfilled, heaven and earth had to have passed away! Since the physical
third dimension heaven and earth did not pass away, we must conclude that the expression
"heaven and earth" in the 2 Peter passage means something other than what
we would normally think it to be.
The Koine Greek word for "elements"
(stoicheia) used in the 2 Peter 3:10–13 passage is used seven times in the New
Testament. The primary meaning of the word is given by Bauer, Arndt and Gingrich,
A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament, as "elements (of learning),
fundamental principles or even letters of the alphabet, ABC's, the very elements
of the truth of God." From this definition we can see that the primary use of
the word means elements of religious training, or the ceremonial precepts that are
common to the worship of the Jews or, in effect, their entire religious system!
There
are Christians who believe the physical elements of the earth and in the atmosphere
are going to melt away or be burned up as our passage under consideration seems to
literally say. This belief results in a secondary meaning for the word "stoicheia"
which supports their doctrine of the annihilation of the earth at some future
time. Perhaps a search of the specific occurrences of "stoicheia" in
the Bible may help us to make sense out of these two differing views.
10.
Galatians 4:3 __________________________________________________________
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11.
Galatians 4:9 __________________________________________________________
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12.
What do you think Paul is talking about when he uses the word "elements"
in the two verses above? ________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
Paul
has used the word "stoicheia" twice in these two verses. The context
of both verses becomes clear when we read verses one through seven which indicates
this to be an exposition on the relationship of the Jew to the law of Moses. Paul
is exhorting the Christians not to return to the bondage of the law because the law
was a tutor to bring them to Christ that they might be justified by faith (Gal.3:23–24).
No Jew (or Christian for that matter) could keep the law perfectly (which was
the requirement). Both Jew and Gentile had been in bondage to the "stoicheia"
of the world. I think you can see that "stoicheia" is not here
referring to atoms or physical matter in respect to the world or the universe. These
Galatians had been idolators (verse eight), but they abandoned all of that for Christianity,
and yet wanted to bring in the "stoicheia" or the rites and ceremonies
of Judaism into the church.
13. Colossians 2:8 _________________________________________________________
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14.
Colossians 2:20 ________________________________________________________
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In
the two verses above, the KJV does a much better job of translating the word "stoicheia"
by using the word "rudiments." In these verses, Paul is pleading
with those in Colosse not to allow anyone to deceive them with worldly philosophy,
or with the traditions of men according to the rudiments (some translators use elements)
of the world. Once again, the use of the word "stoicheia" has nothing
to do with the material, physical third dimensional world.
The writer of the
book of Hebrews uses "stoicheia" in the following verse:
15.
Hebrews 5:12 _________________________________________________________
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16.
The word "principles" in the verse above is "stoicheia."
What is it that this verse is saying about the Jewish Christians? ________________________________________________________________________
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Once
again, we see from the above use of "stoicheia" that the word is
not referring to the physical universe in any way!
The theme of fire
being used to consume is also used by Jesus Himself. "I am come to send fire
on the earth; and what will I, if it be already kindled?" (Luke 12:49).
This "fire" that Jesus was speaking of was not to be literal fire,
but the fire of His wrath and justice to take place with the change of religious
systems (the phasing out of the Old Covenant and the bringing in of the New Covenant-
see Learning Activities #23, #24, #27 and #28). This use of "fire" to
communicate judgment, wrath and justice is not foreign to the Bible, even appearing
in the following scripture. "He hath cut off in his fierce anger all the
horn of Israel: he hath drawn back his right hand from before his enemy; and burned
against Jacob like a flaming fire, which devoureth round about" (Lamentations
2:3). The earliest use of fire being used to depict judgment in the Scriptures may
be found in Deuteronomy 32:22 where the foolishness and vanity of the Israelites
in the Exodus wilderness provoke God to say, "For a fire is kindled in mine
anger, and shall burn unto the lowest hell, and shall consume the earth with her
increase, and set on fire the foundations of the mountains."
In the
preceding passages we have seen five uses of "stoicheia" where the
word has absolutely nothing to do with atoms, molecules or the physical universe.
We must therefore ask: Why do the translators chose to use the word in an entirely
different manner in 2 Peter 3:10–13? I can only conclude that what most translators
do in their translation of "stoicheia" in 2 Peter 3:10–13 is to
bring the scripture into harmony with their personal doctrine rather than letting
the Bible determine their doctrine.
This topic will be continued in the next
Learning Activity.
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