Confessional Lutheran Dogmatics
Volume XIII
Eschatology
By John R. Stevenson
Contents
General Introduction
Preface
Abbreviations
Part One: Introduction
1. General Apostasy: The Sign of Our Time
2. What Is Eschatology?
3. Realized and Inaugurated Eschatology in Holy Scripture
Part Two: The End of Man the Microcosm
4. Temporal Death
5. The Immortality of the Soul
6. The Intermediate State of Souls
Part Three: The End of the World (Macrocosmic
Eschatology)
7. The Signs of Our Lord's Coming
8. The Parousia and Its Concomitants
9. The Consummation of the Law in the Finally Impenitent: Hell and
Eternal Damnation
10. The Consummation of the Gospel in the Heavenly Life of the
Blessed
Bibliography
Indexes
From the Book
"The signs of the end times listed by our Lord in the 'little
apocalypses' of the synoptic gospels (Matthew 24, mark 13, Luke 21) have
known some measure of fulfillment in every age of Christendom, so that
the fathers from the New Testament onwards have confidently looked for
the imminent consummation of all things at Christ's return in glory.
While emphasizing the 'generic' quality of the pointers to the end, a
recent writer in this field observes a marked 'intensification' of the
signs in our own day. This phenomenon can be discerned most readily in
the swelling apostasy within Christendom itself from 'the faith which
was once for all delivered to the saints' (Jude 3). We live in the
throes of a tragic intra-ecclesial defection from Christ which currently
poses a massive threat to the integrity of His church as she subsists in
a multiplicity of confessions and denominations." (p. 3)
"Dogmatic discussion of eschatology fitly ends by encouraging and
praising the labors of the pastors of the church who are called to
refresh the often weary pilgrim people of God . . . The testimony of
St. Augustine fifteen and one-half centuries ago comes from the pen of a
theologian who was never for a moment disengaged from the rigorous
demands of pastoral life. The four activities of the unnumbered company
of the saved highlighted in the celebrated closing words of The City
of God recapitulate themes central to Biblical eschatology.
'Stillness' describes the perfect repose in God of those who in earthly
time were justified by grace, for Christ's sake, through faith. 'Vision'
denotes the fulfillment of human intellect in its beholding the Truth
which is God Himself. 'Love' as it wells up from God to saturate His
people and flow back to Him satisfies the heart and will of men and
women made for personal communion with their Maker and with each other.
'Praise' is both the creaturely response to the divine mercy which
gladly gives God His due and also the voice of Christ in calling out to
the Father. Held before the struggling church of Christ on earth is the
sure hope of the endless end of enjoying Almighty God forever. The
ancient witness of the fifth-century bishop of Hippo remains unwrinkled
to this day, since the mystery of God in Christ is and will remain an
ever-fresh fountain of life:
There we shall be still and see; we shall see and we shall love;
we shall love and
we shall praise. Behold what will be in the end, without end!
For what is our end
but to reach that kingdom which has no end? [City of God,
22.30] (p. 133).
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