This is not an official Response to the supposed "debate" between
Simmons and me. I stopped that. But, I will not stop writing about
what has come about recently. I want to make some points that should
clarify the issues involved even further.
1. Simmons first claimed that it was the corporate body view that
"necessarily leads" to Universalism. He wrote, "This debate is to
decide whether Max King's "covenant eschatology," including his
"corporate body view" of the resurrection, necessarily lead to
Universalism. By "necessary" we mean only that Universalism is a
logical consequence of
King's views." Now, he wrote to Larry Siegle, "The corporate aspect of
King's system is not the central issue. It is his spiritualization of
the resurrection and his premise that the law had to be removed for man
to be redeemed that is the source of so much error." This was written
after the first
statement was. I originally set out to show that the corporate view, in
and of itself, does not lead to Universalism. Simmons has now offended
all Reformed Preterists in that he denies that Adam ever was a Federal
Head of the human race, and that there was
no corporate dimension in
Paul's argument in Romans
5. He has brought into the picture the "age of accountability",
"freewill" and other aspects that would be entirely at odds with
Reformed theology. In Simmons' view, Jesus didn't die for anyone. He
merely makes it possible
for anyone to be saved if and only if they exercise their "freewill."
Clearly, this issue is not
about Max King and Kurt Simmons. The reason why so many Reformed
Preterists have borrowed from King is that a "corporate" theology was
already at work within Reformed theology.
2. The above statement also reflects another belief of Simmons. The
resurrection is not spiritual. It is when you physically die.
Therefore, no one is entirely "saved" until then. This has been a long
time issue within Preterist theology. It is something that must be
considered when pondering Simmons'
overall view.
3. Simmons continues to "dodge" the points raised in my second
article. He stated that "not one" translation agreed with me.
We produced two. His response is telling:
Your
[Jason Bradfield] charges are frivolous and unworthy the dignity of
response. You act as if because one or two translations can be found out
of the thousands and thousand made over the centuries that Sam's whole
position is wondrously validated. let there be a hundred
translations produced! They would still be a tiny minority and
still have no bearing upon the question at hand. The issue here is
not Sam's idea and the translation it causes him to produce is valid,
but whether King's covenant eschatology leads to Universalism. The
whole question of translation has nothing to say about the issue in
debate at all."
Let's see. "Not one" and now, "Let there be a hundred." Simmons' logic
here is again deplorable. Anyone ever hear of arguing from the
majority? Remember those anti-Preterist arguments that said, "over the
last two thousand years no one has ever believed that Jesus returned in
A.D 70?" Remember your response?
Argumentum ad populum! But, here, Simmons uses this
argument. And here I thought flip flops were shoes we wore in
Florida.
4. Simmons quotes from no Greek source, mind you. I can quote from
every Greek grammar I have on the subject. This is "Greek according to
Simmons" and "Greek according to known authorities quoted by Frost."
That's the argument. But, aside from this. Let's look at
Romans 5 from a purely
translational perspective. Verse 15 has "the offence" in the KJV and
virtually every other translation. The Greek has the article, too. In
verse 16 "the judgment" is found. In Greek the article is found. In
fact, to save space, go through your NIV, ESV, RSV or KJV and find how
many times "the" occurs from 5.12-21. Question: "the" occurs before
"sin" and "death", too, so why is the article
not translated in front of
those nouns, but is in front of the others? Even more telling, when
Paul wrote, "for if by the offence
of the one man..."
Notice that the article here is clearly, clearly addressing the
single offence committed by
the single man, Adam. That's "the Sin" or "the offence" or "the
transgression." Simmons entirely misses the boat here and cannot bring
himself to admit it. Basically, Simmons argument is based on English
translations that are supposed to tell us the correct Greek! Since
English translations leave out "the", then "the" is not important in
Greek. Talk about having the rabbit ahead of the carrot!
5. Simmons' logic has been questioned and here he fudges. There is a
bit of trickery on his part, too. First, the most amazing thing is that
Simmons admits that his
"form" logically speaking is off. But, he says, his
substance is correct! Let
me quote to you a definition of a
valid argument: "When an argument is valid, its premises are
said to entail its conclusions" (Wilfred Hodges,
Logic, Penguin, p. 55).
Simmons says that I am being "technical" here. He admits that his
"forms" are invalid. But that is
the very definition of a valid argument. If an argument is invalid, it
is not an argument. It is nothing.
He tries to salvage this by using trickery:
Syllogism No. 1
Major
Premise: The power of sin and death over mankind resided in the Mosaic
law.
Minor
Premise: The Mosaic law was done away for all men for all time in A.D.
70. Therefore,
Conclusion: All men are freed from the power of sin and death.
This is not the syllogism of Simmons I used in my example. I used this
one:
Major
Premise: The reign of sin and death over man (A) was determined by the
Mosaic law (B)
Minor
Premise: The Mosaic law (B) was annulled at the eschaton, losing all men
of its power (A); therefore
Conclusion: Men are universally reconciled (C) to God.
"Universally reconciled to God" is more than just one word! It is an
entire doctrine! A doctrine not
contained in the two premises at all. It is an
implication but not a
necessary correlate of the
premises. Simmons can cry about this until he is blue in the face, but
the fact of the matter is that his argument is
illogical by any standard
and he admits this but
wants to get away with saying that the
substance is true! Can you
imagine any student saying this to his logic professor? Secondly,
he used a different syllogism in his
response other than the one I used! Does this not tell you
that he is not paying attention to the true issues? He just rams home
his points and hopes no one will "technically" analyze them. It's not
so amazing that people do this, but that
people listen to it and
say, "wow! Great argument, man! It's false and invalid, but entirely
right on the money!" Simmons wrote, "he has faulted my ability to
express King's position in perfect logic as taught at the University
level." And then, "If this [syllogism] is not in proper "form" it is
nonetheless of perfect "substance" and represents the basis for King's
Universalism." Therefore, Simmons version of "perfect logic" as taught
in the University allows for invalid forms to make valid arguments! Mr.
Simmons, Postmodernism is calling...it wants its shirt back.
6. Aside from the Greek errors and the Logic errors, both of which are
devastating, Simmons makes an exegetical blunder of such ramifications
that I do not need to deal with hardly anything else.
It is
the conclusion
of what is really and always the issue for me: the definition of "the
Death." King and myself define "the death" in pretty
much the same terms. One can decide for themselves if that is an
accurate definition. But, I wrote in my second paper that Simmons
must deal with
Isaiah 25.8 and I listed 5
Exegetical considerations, none of which he really dealt with on any
level.
However, he does attempt to define "death." This is where
his view necessarily leads.
After one reads this, it should be clear that Simmons' alternative to my
approach is to be utterly abandoned. First off, if one cannot see the
clear allusion to which every commentary mentions between
Revelation 21.4 and
Isaiah 25.8, then one is
blind. Simmons never
makes the comparison. Both verses, including the use of the phrase,
"the death" (in Hebrew and Greek), use the exact same words. Therefore,
what John pictured here is what Isaiah saw there.
Isaiah 25.8 is
fulfilled in
Revelation 21.4.
Simmons
wrote "Only Hadean death was destroyed in A.D. 70. This is
confirmed by the very context of the passage (Rev. 20:11-15), which
shows death and Hades cast into the lake of fire together. Paul is to
the same effect: "The shall be brought to pass the saving that is
written. Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting.
O Hades, where is thy victory?" (I Cor 15:54, 55) It
was Hadean death that was destroyed at the eschaton, and none else.
Anything else will produce Universalism."
This is the very crux of the issue as he has noted.
He cannot have "the death" mean anything else except the destruction of
Hades. "The Death" is the same thing as "the Hades." Based upon his
own view, then, Isaiah
25.8 is predicting the destruction
of Hades. Let's read
Isaiah 25.6-10:
On this mountain the LORD of hosts will
make for all peoples a feast of rich food, a feast of well-aged wine, of
rich food full of marrow, of aged wine well refined. 7 And he will
swallow up on this mountain the covering that is cast over all peoples,
the veil that is spread over all nations. 8 He will swallow up death
forever, adn the Lord GOD will wipe away tears from all faces, adn the
reproach of his people he will take away from all the earth, for the
LORD has spoken. 9 It will be said on that day, "Behold, thi sis our
God: we have waited for him, tha the might save us. This is the LORD; we
have waited for him; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation.
(ESV)
Now, according to Simmons, this is only swallowing up of Hades.
Judicial death remains and the other three deaths he has defined (he has
five overall). However, one can see from the
context that this
swallowing up of "the death" means "His Salvation" has arrived.
Therefore, "salvation" is the "swallowing up" of Hades, in Simmons'
view! But, everyone
("all peoples") are in Hades (Sheol, Hebrew). And "all peoples" are set
free from Sheol! Therefore, all
peoples are saved because the swallowing up of Hades means that His
Salvation has come! If it does not mean this, then Simmons
himself must conclude that a
universal event does not mean
universal salvation! This
is what I have argued!
Let me state this again. All peoples are in Hades. Hades is swallowed
up for "all peoples" so that "all peoples" are released from Hades. The
swallowing up of Hades is the coming of "His Salvation." Conclusion:
all peoples are saved. But, we know that Simmons would not conclude
this, nor would I. Notice here that "Hades" is not even mentioned in
Isaiah 25.8. Notice
that the connection between the swallowing up of "the death" and the
"removal of the reproach" of
Israel is in view
here. Notice, too, that the swallowing up of the death and His
Salvation are simultaneous events.
Simmons has the Parousia
occurring in A.D. 70 when the Death is swallowed up, yet wants no
connection to the annulment of the Law of Moses to this event, even
though this event was future
to the cross. This was "His Salvation" coming into its
fullness for
His People. Simmons has a
mess on his hands here.
Israel is saved at the
parousia of her Messiah
and Bridegroom to be. The rich banquet is set for all peoples on Mount
Zion, the New Jerusalem. The
reproach of the death
is what is removed, and it is this same "the death" identified in Paul
as having come through the "one man" and the "one transgression."
Simmons states that Jesus did not remove Adam's curse. "No amount of
magic can do this" he wrote. Therefore, in his view, we are all still
under the Reproach, the Sin and the Condemnation while alive here on
earth. However, we have good news: Hades is gone!
Folks, I am appealing to your senses here. How can Simmons have Hades
removed, but not "the reproach" and "the veil"? By Hebrew parallelism
(see any commentary here, for I am afraid Simmons will accuse me of not
knowing Hebrew, either), "the covering", "the veil", "the death", and
"the reproach" are all speaking of the same thing. For Simmons, this is
Hades! Let's use some logic here: if the Hades contained "all men" and
the Hades is "the reproach", then the swallowing up of the Hades means
the swallowing up of "the reproach" for all peoples. And, since the
Hades, in Simmons view (and all Preterists agree here) is gone
for everyone (since no
wicked person goes to Hades when he dies), then
the reproach is removed for all
peoples! It's ironic:
Simmons equation of "death" as "hades"
means the removal of the reproach for all peoples since the Hades exists
no more for no man! Result: Simmons' exegesis leads to
Universalism!
I am not done. Simmons wrote, "When Revelation says there will be no
more death, this should not
be taken in an absolute sense. This is clear from the fact that it also
says there will be no more sorrow, crying, or pain. Since these are
still a very real and permanent part of human existence this side of
eternity, it seems clear that the statement is intended to be understood
in a relative sense. "
In Simmons' exegesis Revelation
21.4 is not in
reference to Isaiah
25.8! Folks, SEE THE CONFUSION HERE!
Revelation 21.4 cannot, for
Simmons, be Isaiah
25.8, because in the above quote, Simmons quotes
I Co 15.54 WHICH QUOTES
ISAIAH 25.8!!!!! But, THERE, he says Paul is talking about the removal
of HADEAN DEATH. But, in
Revelation 21.4 WHICH IS A DIRECT ALLUSION TO ISAIAH 25.8,
Simmons FLIP FLOPS AGAIN saying that "the death" that is no more is NOT
HADEAN DEATH!!!!! However, as the context shows, "the death" that is
thrown into the
Lake of
Fire
is the same "the death" that is no more AS A RESULT OF BEING CAST INTO
THE LAKE OF FIRE!!!! How boneheaded does one have to be not to see the
OBVIOUS run around we get here when we press the details of Simmons'
exegesis! What Simmons must do is this:
Revelation 20.11-15 speaks
of "the death" (Greek) as being thrown into the
Lake
of Fire. For Simmons, this is ONLY hadean death. Just four verses
down, "the death" (Greek) is said to be "no more." But, THIS IS NOT THE
SAME "THE DEATH" MENTIONED JUST OVER 30 WORDS BEFORE IN THE CONTEXT for
Simmons!!!! This is a different "the death" than "the death" thrown
into the Lake of
Fire!!!!
Someone help me...I am going mad!!!! (lol). 
Conclusion:
It should be quite apparent now that Simmons' alternative leads to
Universalism if in fact "the death" is defined as merely "hades." We
have PROVEN that this is not the correct definiton, and Simmons has a
hard mountain to climb to prove otherwise. Our exegesis, following
many, many commentaries and Greek and Hebrew grammars as described in
the Grammars, is sound. I am appealing to every reader to honestly look
at what Simmons is doing in order to "make his point." I do not dislike
Mr. Simmons. He's a brother. I abhor his methodology and exegesis.
It's poor. It clearly runs into massive problems. This last example
should show to any objective reader that Simmons has a serious, serious
exegetical problems. If a view cannot undergo rigorous exegetical
scrutiny, then it cannot pass the test as being "the best in Preterism."