A Comparison/Contrast of Older Premillennialism to Dispensationalism


Older Premillennialism

Dispensationalism

Teaches that the church was in the fore-vision of the Old Testament prophecy

Teaches that the church is hardly, if at all, in the Old Testament prophets.

Teaches that the great burden of Old Testament prophecy was the coming of Christ to die (at the First Advent) and the kingdom age (at the Second Advent).

Teaches that the great burden of Old Testament prophecy is the kingdom of the Jews.

Teaches that the First Advent was the specific time for Christ to die for man's sin

Teaches that the kingdom (earthly) should have been set up at the First Advent for that was the predicted time of its coming.

Teaches that the present age of grace was designed by God and predicted in the Old Testament

Teaches that the present age was unforeseen in the Old Testament and thus is a “great parenthesis” introduced because the Jews rejected the kingdom.

Teaches that one may divide time in any way desirable so long as one allows for a millennium after the Second Advent

Teaches that the only allowable way to divide time is in seven dispensations. The present age is the sixth such dispensation; the last one will be the millennial age after the Second Advent. It is from this division of time that Dispensationalism gets its name.

Teaches that the Second Advent was to be one event.

Teaches that the Second Advent will be in two sections— “the Rapture” and “the Revelation.” Between these two events they put the (to them) unfulfilled seventieth week (seven years) of Daniel 9:23-27, which they call “the Great Tribulation.”

Teaches that certain signs must precede the Second Advent.

Teaches that no sign precedes the “rapture-stage” of the Second Advent, which may occur “at any moment.” However, there are signs that precede the “revelation-stage” of the Second Advent. The “Rapture” could occur “at any moment,” but the “Revelation” must take place after the seven years of the Great Tribulation. The first stage is undated and unannounced; the second stage is dated and announced.

Has two resurrections-the righteous before the Millennium; the unrighteous after the Millennium.

Introduced a third resurrection—“tribulation-saints” at the “revelation-stage” of the Second Advent.

Usually held what is called the “historical symbolic” view of the book of Revelation. This view makes Revelation a picture in symbolic form of the main events in the present age.

Holds generally to the “futurist” view of the book of Revelation, which view makes almost the whole book (especially chapters 4 to 19) a literal description of events to take place during “the Great Tribulation” or Daniel's seventieth week, which Dispensationalism considers as yet unfulfilled.

The general attitude of older premillennialism was on the whole mild and reverent in its approach to Scripture. There have been some outstanding scholars who have been persuaded that the premillennial is the correct view.

Dispensationalism has assumed a far more dogmatic attitude. It has introduced a number of novelties in prophetic interpretation that the church never heard of until about a century ago.