Watching the Horizon: Prophecy, History, and the Humility of Faith
As we put our faith and trust in God and in his word, the Bible. There is a peculiar temptation that seems to accompany every generation of believers.
WATCHING THE HORIZON:
PROPHECY, HISTORY, AND THE HUMILITY OF FAITH
As we put our faith and trust in God and in his word, the Bible. There is a peculiar temptation that seems to accompany every generation of believers.
As we put our faith and trust in God and in his ... moreWatching the Horizon: Prophecy, History, and the Humility of Faith
As we put our faith and trust in God and in his word, the Bible. There is a peculiar temptation that seems to accompany every generation of believers.
WATCHING THE HORIZON:
PROPHECY, HISTORY, AND THE HUMILITY OF FAITH
As we put our faith and trust in God and in his word, the Bible. There is a peculiar temptation that seems to accompany every generation of believers.
As we put our faith and trust in God and in his word, the Bible. There is a peculiar temptation that seems to accompany every generation of believers.
We long to know what lies just beyond the horizon. We examine the movements of nations, the rise and fall of rulers, the shifting alliances of the world, and we ask, "Is this what the prophets saw?"
This is, after all, a very reasonable question.
Indeed, our Lord Jesus Christ instructed His disciples to remain awake, to watch, and to discern the times. However, there is a profound difference between watching the horizon and declaring with certainty what lies beyond it.
The first is an act of faith.
The second can become an act of presumption.
History has repeatedly demonstrated the difference!
When the Messiah first appeared, Israel possessed centuries of prophecy describing His coming. Yet those who knew the Scriptures best often failed to recognize Him. They expected a conquering king, but instead they encountered a suffering servant.
It was only after Christ death and resurrection that his disciples fully understood what had been written concerning Him. Jesus Himself opened the Scriptures to them, and suddenly passages they had read for years became brilliantly clear.
The prophecies had NOT changed, but their understanding did.
We find this same pattern appearing throughout the Scriptures.
Daniel received visions whose full meaning was withheld even from him. Peter tells us that the prophets searched diligently concerning matters they themselves did not fully understand. The lesson is both comforting and sobering:
‘God often reveals the meaning of prophecy through the unfolding of history rather than by satisfying human curiosity beforehand.’
This principle should be foremost in our mind when we approach our prophetic studies.
Never should we ask… "Can I identify every prophetic symbol with certainty?"
Instead, we need to ask a much simpler question:
What does the text actually say? This question alone eliminates much unnecessary speculation.
Let’s consider Nebuchadnezzar's great image in Daniel chapter two.
Daniel leaves little doubt concerning its basic structure.
- The head of gold is explicitly identified as Babylon.
- Then follows another kingdom.
- Then another, a fourth kingdom, strong as iron.
- And finally, the image ends with feet composed of iron mixed with clay.
One feature which deserves careful attention.
Daniel repeatedly speaks of kingdoms.
- He does not explain successive races.
- He does not describe changing civilizations.
- He does not identify social classes.
- He does NOT tell us that the clay represents democracy, the common people, capitalism, socialism, immigration, or any modern political philosophy. Daniel simply speaks of kingdoms.
Again and again those, Daniel’s inspired explanation remains political in nature:
"Another kingdom..."
"A third kingdom..."
"The fourth kingdom..."
"The kingdom shall be divided..."
This may seem almost as a mere trivial observation until one compares it with many modern prophetic systems.
Throughout Christian history, interpreters have often supplied details the text itself never supplies. Some have identified specific modern governments. Others have assigned symbolic meanings to the clay, the toes, or the iron with great confidence.
Perhaps some of these interpretations are correct. Perhaps others are not.
The point is not that prophecy is uncertain. God's Word is never uncertain.
Rather, it is that our confidence in a particular interpretation can sometimes exceed the evidence Scripture itself provides.
There is an important difference between saying, "This appears to fit what Daniel described," and declaring, "This is unquestionably the fulfillment."
The former is an observation. The latter is a conclusion.
When Scripture has not explicitly drawn that conclusion, wisdom counsels humility. Such restraint does not weaken prophecy. Quite the opposite.
It preserves the integrity of God's Word by refusing to place our certainty where God has chosen not to speak with certainty. In doing so, we honor both the authority of Scripture and the limitations of our own understanding.
The Scriptures deserve to speak with their own voice BEFORE ours is added.
Yet, observing history is not contrary to faith. It is quite the opposite. And
Daniel's prophecies invite us to watch.
Since the beginning of the twentieth century, the world has undergone transformations unlike anything previously experienced.
The First World War shattered centuries-old empires and reordered the political landscape.
The Second World War accelerated the emergence of two dominant geopolitical blocs whose governing philosophies stood in sharp contrast.
On one side stood the democratic and capitalist nations led principally by Britain and later the United States.
On the other stood the communist powers centered first in the Soviet Union and later increasingly influenced by China.
These rival systems competed militarily, economically, technologically, and ideologically. Yet the relationship was never one of complete separation.
They traded. They negotiated. They signed treaties. They armed their selves one against one another while simultaneously having dependence upon one another in economic and other various ways.
The Cold War was marked not merely by opposition but by a strange and often uneasy interdependence.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, many imagined that ideological conflict had reached its conclusion. History though, proved otherwise.
China emerged as an economic giant while retaining a political philosophy fundamentally different from that of much of the Western world. On the other hand Western nations increasingly depended upon Chinese manufacturing and Chinese markets.
China, in turn, benefited enormously from Western capital, technology, and consumer demand. Economic cooperation expanded alongside growing military competition.
Trade flourished while distrust deepened.
Supply chains became international even as strategic rivalries intensified.
Political alliances shifted. Economic interests frequently outweighed ideological consistency. Former adversaries became trading partners. Partners became competitors. Competitors occasionally became temporary allies.
Within many nations themselves, internal divisions became increasingly visible. Political polarization deepened. Public confidence in institutions weakened. Governments often appeared simultaneously powerful and fragile.
Meanwhile, the world became more interconnected than ever before while seeming, paradoxically, less cohesive.
Whether these developments ultimately prove to be the fulfillment of Daniel's vision is not ours to declare; but it would be very difficult to deny that they certainly do bear a striking resemblance to the characteristics Daniel described: strength existing alongside weakness, political power accompanied by internal instability, kingdoms that possess immense influence while lacking lasting cohesion.
We find a similar observation arises too, from Daniel chapter eleven.
In Daniel chapter eleven we encounter an extended conflict between the King of the North and the King of the South.
For centuries these titles have invited interpretation. Many identifications have been proposed. Some have later required revision. Yet one feature remains remarkably consistent throughout the chapter.
The struggle never truly ends. Power shifts. Alliances change. One side advances. The other responds. Neither though, secures permanent supremacy.
Whether the modern geopolitical order ultimately corresponds to that pattern remains to be seen. However, the existence of enduring rivalry among competing centers of power is certainly more consistent with Daniel's description than with any expectation of lasting human political unity. Here though, it is imperative that humility restrain certainty.
To observe similarity is not to declare fulfillment. Scripture itself teaches that distinction. One of the greatest safeguards against error is Paul's counsel not to "go beyond what is written." That principle has often been neglected by those most eager to explain prophecy.
When conclusions become articles of certainty DESPITE the absence of explicit Biblical support, interpretation begins to replace revelation.
History reminds us how dangerous this can become. Every generation has produced confident prophetic systems. Many required revisions. Some required abandonment altogether. God's Word NEVER failed, but human certainty most certainly did fail.
Perhaps that is precisely why prophecy was given. Not so that believers could predict every event in advance, but so that when God's purposes unfold, faith would recognize His hand with unmistakable clarity.
Watching is NOT speculation. Watching is attentiveness. It is measuring every headline against Scripture rather than measuring Scripture against every headline. It is resisting both sensationalism and indifference. It is allowing the inspired text to define the boundaries of our conclusions.
For in the end, Daniel's greatest message is not the identity of every earthly kingdom. It is the destiny of all these earthly kingdoms.
- Every empire, however magnificent, passes away.
- Every political philosophy eventually yields to history.
- Every alliance proves temporary.
- Every human government, whether ancient or modern, ultimately demonstrates its inability to establish lasting righteousness, justice, or peace.
Only one kingdom is different. The stone cut without human hands does not merely succeed the kingdoms of men. It replaces them. It alone grows into a mountain that fills the whole earth.
That is where prophecy ultimately directs our attention—not to endless fascination with the kingdoms that perish, but to confident hope in the Kingdom that cannot. Until that day arrives, is it not the wisest course to neither make dogmatic predictions nor be carelessly neglectful.
- It is to study diligently.
- To observe carefully.
- To reason honestly.
- To speak cautiously.
And above all, to remain watchful, remembering that the Author of history has never once failed to accomplish exactly what He has spoken, even when His people understood His purposes only AFTER they had come to pass.