Dispensationalism teaches that when the Jews rejected Christ
as Messiah then the supposed 'clock' in Daniel 9 stopped as we entered the
Church Age. The Church Age according to Dispensationalism was a previously
unrevealed alternate plan, a parenthesis.
About one thousand nine hundred years later in 1948... based
on a terrible allegorical read of the Fig Tree parable... the 'clock' is ready
to re-start and the Roman Beast of Daniel has to be once more on the scene...
hence, a 'revived' Roman Empire.
Based on their reading the Revived Roman Empire would be
comprised of ten nations represented by the ten toes.
This became a problem when the proto-EU moved beyond ten
nations.
Since then some Dispensationalists have scrambled trying to reinterpret
the EU into ten conglomerations or some argue that in the future it will be
once again reduced (somehow) to ten nations.
I find it very interesting that in the geopolitics of the
present it's not Europe that is in focus but the Middle East. And instead of a
Warsaw Pact type Antichrist and Communism as a global government...now it's Islam.
Maybe it wasn't the Roman Empire after all... now there's a
new 'literal' take on the passage, that's just as erroneous.
Awhile back I recall seeing a couple of different books
suggesting the Antichrist would be Muslim, but I was really shocked to see the
'Ten Toes' are now being interpreted by some as a kind of Islamic Confederation
or reborn Caliphate.
Of course all of this is mistaken. Daniel 9 isn't about the
Jews. It was about Christ, his death on the cross and the time of transition
when Judaism would end and the new age would begin. It was already fulfilled
2000 years ago. The Church isn't some kind of Plan B parenthetical period that
once Raptured will allow the world to return to the Plan A of Mosaic-Levitical
Judaism.
The Roman Empire in Daniel was just that...the Roman Empire.
But in Revelation the Romans are revealed to be an emulation
of an older proto-type of the Beast-Empire, Babylon. And it is the Mesopotamian
empire which serves as a prototype for all Empires during the Last Days...the
era spanning the First and Second Comings of Christ.
The New Testament writers considered themselves to be in the
Last Days.
The idea of the Last Days is not something relegated to the
time 'just before' Christ returns. Christ can return at any point. We didn't
have to wait until 1948 before that could occur.
More than once this prompted one of our old friends to
ask...
"But are
we in the 'last' Last Days?"
We always had a good laugh over that.
The Futuristic reading of Revelation combined with
Hyper-Literalism always falls into these 'current events' traps.
It's actually much simpler once we realize the book of
Revelation was written for the Church in the 1st Century, the 11th
Century, the 21st Century and every century hereafter until Christ
comes.
It is an Idealized symbolic rendering that tells the story
over and over again of the Last Days, the period between the 1st and
2nd Comings, i.e. the Church Age.
Reading it Christocentrically helps us to understand that
it's not giving specifics that are applicable to any year or period. It's all
true, all the time and the story always ends with the Throne of Judgment and
Christ's victory.
The Ten Toes are the visionary parallel to the Ten Horns.
They represent the nations of the world that are empowered by the Beast. The
number ten is symbolic. In Scripture it seems to reference an idea of comprehensiveness
or completeness.
Just as Three and Seven are numbers related to the Divine
and to perfection, the number Six represents failure and shortcoming, a
counterfeit attempt.
Four symbolizes a number of the world and of trial... the
time of completeness (10) is multiplied by four and equals the well known forty,
as in forty days etc...
Interestingly the Exile being a type of the Kingdom or
Church age is 7x10.
Or some might even argue 3+4x10... you can't be dogmatic
about this, and I don't believe the symbols are that rigid.
In Scripture whenever we see things tripled it indicates the
superlative. It's a Hebraism, related to the Holy, Holy, Holy that is attributed
only to God Himself. It's a way of expressing the ultimate emphatic. In English
it's like underlining and putting exclamation points.
If ten signifies completeness, to express this in the
superlative would be 10x10x10 or 1,000.
Amillennialists believing the Kingdom or Millennial Reign of
Christ is Spiritual believe the 1,000 year era in Revelation 20 signifies the
time of the Spiritual Kingdom between the 1st and 2nd
Coming. Then Christ rescues us with the Second Coming followed by the Judgment,
the New Heavens and New Earth.
In light of the number 1,000 consider how 12 represents the
Covenant people and when looked at in terms of both Old and New Covenants could
be thought of in terms of 12x12=144 and then multiplied by 10x10x10.... the
144,000 is the symbolic number which represents the complete people of God in
all ages. It is the True Israel, the Body of Christ.
While we cannot be dogmatic about the exact meaning of each
numerical symbol, reading the Bible in terms of thematic structure, recurring
symbols, the Apostolic witness and understanding it as a theological story... lends itself toward this type of
interpretation.
The numbers aren't codes to be deciphered in terms of
geo-politics or some kind of date or numbering of dynastic successions. It's
nothing that specific.
In the case of the toes or horns...horns symbolizing
power... it's a reference to the complete number of Beast nations. In no way
does it have to be limited to ten. Focusing on the exact number ten is to miss
the point of the symbol.
The Beast and his heads and horns...or Gog and Magog if you
will, are a concept applicable to any age of the Church. It wasn't meant to be
a futuristic concept manifested only at the time just before Christ's Kingdom.
From the Ascension to the present we have lived in the Last
Days and Gog the roaring lion, the Beast, the earthly manifestation of the
Serpent-Dragon seeks to destroy those who are united to the Seed of the Woman.