It seems clear to me that God speaks in language that is symbolic to make it more accessible to believers and less accessible to unbelievers. He does not "throw pearls to the swine."
We understand this clearly when Jesus talked about his use of parables, to not allow unbelievers to stir up confusion over simple stories, but to allow those with right hearts to hear the simple truths about God's righteousness. But do we see how the use of symbolism in Bible Prophecy is used in just the same way?
When we read, for example, in Ezekiel of Gog's army coming down on horses, should we think God is speaking of literal horses, or symbolically of an endtime military mobilization? I think the latter. I think unbelievers will write this prophecy off as outdated and impossible, and will not see the dangers of divine judgment against a pagan mobilization.
The same is true, I believe, of Eze 40-48, where Ezekiel uses the symbolism of an OT temple to express the Jewish Hope at the end of the age. Is God trying to say temple worship will literally be restored in the endtimes, that Jewish temple worship will actually be done again?
I don't think so. This was a vision, and prophetic visions sometimes use parables or symbolic language to depict things that speak to believers, but not to unbelievers, who find cause for dismissing the message.
Ezekiel was speaking to people of his own time, who had failed under the temple system and under the Law of Moses. And so, they were given a vision as to how the OT temple *should* operate and will find fulfillment in the Jewish Hope.
It will not be a literal OT temple, but rather, the thing that the OT temple redemption symbolized, namely the redemption of Christ. But it will result in a real restoration of Israel, along with the many other Christian nations God promised to Abraham. The promises are literal, but the language is symbolic, to be hidden from unbelief, but revealed to faith.
We understand this clearly when Jesus talked about his use of parables, to not allow unbelievers to stir up confusion over simple stories, but to allow those with right hearts to hear the simple truths about God's righteousness. But do we see how the use of symbolism in Bible Prophecy is used in just the same way?
When we read, for example, in Ezekiel of Gog's army coming down on horses, should we think God is speaking of literal horses, or symbolically of an endtime military mobilization? I think the latter. I think unbelievers will write this prophecy off as outdated and impossible, and will not see the dangers of divine judgment against a pagan mobilization.
The same is true, I believe, of Eze 40-48, where Ezekiel uses the symbolism of an OT temple to express the Jewish Hope at the end of the age. Is God trying to say temple worship will literally be restored in the endtimes, that Jewish temple worship will actually be done again?
I don't think so. This was a vision, and prophetic visions sometimes use parables or symbolic language to depict things that speak to believers, but not to unbelievers, who find cause for dismissing the message.
Ezekiel was speaking to people of his own time, who had failed under the temple system and under the Law of Moses. And so, they were given a vision as to how the OT temple *should* operate and will find fulfillment in the Jewish Hope.
It will not be a literal OT temple, but rather, the thing that the OT temple redemption symbolized, namely the redemption of Christ. But it will result in a real restoration of Israel, along with the many other Christian nations God promised to Abraham. The promises are literal, but the language is symbolic, to be hidden from unbelief, but revealed to faith.