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Author: Neil Baulch.
How to Read the “End Times (Literal Approach)” Chart — And Turn It into a Study Workflow
Purpose: Explain how to read the End Times (Literal Approach) chart, how each component fits together, and how to convert the visual into a reproducible, text-first study plan. This page follows a grammatical-historical method (ESV), keeps the Israel/Church distinction clear, and avoids speculative timelines that outrun the text.
1) What This Chart Is (and Is Not)
What it is: a single-page map of eschatology that lays out, in order, the major biblical events as read with a literal hermeneutic: Church age → catching up of the Church (often called the rapture) → Daniel’s seventieth week (the Tribulation) → the Day of the Lord judgments → the Second Coming → millennial reign → final judgment → new heavens and new earth. It also shows how Israel’s promises relate to the Church and how OT prophecy threads into the NT.
What it is not: a date-setting device or a political map. It is a study tool that keeps texts in their covenantal and literary contexts, foregrounding what Scripture says while allowing for intramural differences on sequence details.
2) The Big Picture: Four Rings with a Storyline Rail
Most readers grasp the chart best by viewing four concentric rings laid over a left-to-right timeline.
Ring 1 (Centre): Hermeneutic & Covental Frame
- Literal-grammatical reading as the default sense unless context signals figure.
- Covenants: Abrahamic (Gen 12; 15; 17), Davidic (2 Sam 7; Ps 89), New Covenant (Jer 31:31–34; Ezek 36–37).
- Israel / Church distinction: Israel retains national promises; the Church shares spiritual blessings in Christ without absorbing Israel (Rom 11).
Reading cue: This ring anchors how you read everything else. Do not skip it.
Ring 2: Major Program Segments
- Present Church Age (Acts 2 → now)
- Daniel’s 70th Week (Dan 9:24–27)—the Tribulation period
- Messiah’s Return & Kingdom (Rev 19–20; Isa 2; 11)
- Eternal State (Rev 21–22; Isa 65–66)
Reading cue: Each segment has entry and exit gates marked by key events (e.g., catching up before the Week; Second Coming ends it).
Ring 3: Event Nodes in Sequence
Common nodes on a literal-approach chart:
- Catching up of the Church (1 Thess 4:13–18; 1 Cor 15:51–52)
- Rise of the Man of Lawlessness / covenant with many (Dan 9:27; 2 Thess 2)
- Seals–Trumpets–Bowls (Rev 6–16) under the Day of the Lord theme (Isa 13; Joel 2; 1 Thess 5)
- Abomination of Desolation (mid-week marker; Dan 9:27; 11:31; 12:11; Matt 24:15)
- Armageddon cluster (Rev 16:12–16; 19:11–21; Zech 12–14)
- Satan bound; Millennium (Rev 20:1–6; Isa 2; 11; 65)
- Final Rebellion & Great White Throne (Rev 20:7–15)
- New Heavens & New Earth (Rev 21–22; Isa 65–66; 2 Pet 3)
Reading cue: Solid arrows trace textual derivation; dashed arrows show cross-links (e.g., OT oracle → NT echo).
Ring 4: People Groups & Judgments
- Israel (national, remnant, restoration promises)
- Church (from Pentecost to catching up; return with Christ, Rev 19)
- Nations (sheep/goats judgment, Matt 25:31–46; survivors into kingdom)
- Resurrections (order markers; 1 Cor 15; Rev 20)
Reading cue: Side-panels often summarize judgment types (seals/trumpets/bowls; throne scenes) and resurrection timing checkpoints.
Storyline rail: Church Age → 70th Week → Return → Kingdom → Final Judgment → New Creation. Use it to place any node in time.
3) Legend—Colours, Lines, and Markers
- Colours = category
Blue: Church-age items;
Gold: Israel/prophecy fulfilment;
Red: judgments;
Purple: Second Coming & kingdom;
Green: eternal state. - Solid arrows = textual/chronological progression in the literal reading.
- Dashed arrows = theological cross-links (e.g., covenant promises ↔ kingdom features).
- Numbers may provide a suggested study order for new readers.
- Superscripts often mark primary passages vs. supporting texts.
Read the legend first; it prevents category mistakes (e.g., mixing Church-age promises with Israel’s national covenants).
4) A 25-Minute Reading Plan (First Pass)
- Start at the Hermeneutic panel. Note: literal-grammatical method; Israel/Church distinction; covenant throughline.
- Move to the Church-Age box. Read Matt 28:18–20 and Acts 1:6–8 for mission scope; note Rom 11 for Israel’s partial hardening, not replacement.
- Follow the arrow to the Catching Up (1 Thess 4:13–18; 1 Cor 15:51–52). The chart may present a pre-70th-week catching up; toggles (see §7) note mid- or post-trib alternatives without disrupting the literal framework.
- Enter Daniel’s 70th Week. Place Dan 9:24–27 as the frame; then read Matt 24 alongside Rev 6–16 (Seals→Trumpets→Bowls).
- Mark the mid-point: abomination of desolation (Matt 24:15; Dan 9:27; 12:11).
- Track Day-of-the-Lord judgments to Rev 19 (Second Coming).
- Read the Millennium panel: Rev 20:1–6 with Isa 2; 11; 65.
- Finish at the Eternal State (Rev 21–22; 2 Pet 3).
5) Worked Examples (Three “How-To” Runs)
A) Daniel’s 70th Week as the Tribulation Frame
- Exegesis:
- Dan 9:24–27 sets a final “week” (seven) with sacrifice/abomination markers.
- Matt 24:15–31 references Daniel; Rev 6–16 expands judgments.
- Chart use: Open the 70th Week panel; use solid arrows to connect mid-point and judgment series.
- Theological analysis: Literal approach reads specific intervals/signs; keeps Israel’s purging/restoration in view (Zech 12–14; Rom 11:26–27).
- Application: Teach watchfulness and holiness, not date-setting; warn against supersessionism.
B) Rapture / Catching Up: Where It Sits
- Exegesis:
- 1 Thess 4:13–18—the harpazō (“caught up”) event; 1 Cor 15:51–52—“in a moment… the last trumpet” (note context).
- 1 Thess 5—Day of the Lord arrives suddenly; comfort/sobriety exhortations.
- Chart use: The Catching Up node sits before the 70th Week on a pre-trib view; toggles note other placements (see §7).
- Theological analysis: Dispensational readings emphasise imminence and distinction of Church and Israel programs.
- Application: Live ready; comfort believers with resurrection hope.
C) Millennium & Covenants
- Exegesis:
- Rev 20:1–6—Satan bound, first resurrection, they reigned… a thousand years.
- Isa 2; 11; 65—earthly righteousness, knowledge of the LORD, transformed conditions.
- Jer 31; Ezek 36–37—New Covenant renewal with Israel.
- Chart use: Follow solid arrows from Second Coming to Millennial reign; see dashed links to Abrahamic/Davidic/New Covenant promises being displayed.
- Theological analysis: Literal fulfilment honours the plain sense of kingdom texts; the Church shares blessings in Christ without canceling Israel’s national role.
- Application: Preach hope grounded in God’s covenant faithfulness (Rom 11:29).
6) Exegesis Layer (How the Chart Keeps You in the Text)
Original-Language Anchors (examples; keep contextual)
- “Abomination of desolation” (Heb/Aram shiqquts shōmēm; Dan 9:27; 11:31; 12:11)
- “Caught up” (Gk harpazō, 1 Thess 4:17)
- “Parousia” (coming/presence; Matt 24:3, 27; 1 Thess 4:15)
- “Chilia etē” (thousand years; Rev 20:2–7)
Grammar & Syntax Cues
- Matt 24 discourse structure (birth pains → mid-point → great tribulation → parousia).
- Rev 6–16 serial vision cycles; literal approach reads judgments as progressing toward climax.
- Rev 20 uses chronological connectors (“then…”) and repeated “thousand years”.
Textual-Variant Note
No widely recognized variant in these loci overturns the macro-sequence; interpretation turns on genre handling and OT/NT integration, not on unstable readings.
7) Theological Analysis (with Dispensational Emphasis and Clear Toggles)
- Arminian/Provisionist & Dispensational synthesis:
- Real human responsibility in the face of coming judgment (Acts 17:30–31).
- Israel’s election and irrevocable calling remain (Rom 11:25–29).
- Literal fulfilment of land/kingship/renewal promises during the kingdom; the Church participates in resurrection glory and co-reigns with Christ (Rev 20:4–6).
- Toggles acknowledged (without derailing the chart):
- Rapture timing: pre-, mid-, pre-wrath, post-trib. The chart’s default is pre-week (imminence / program distinction), with side tabs noting alternatives for comparison.
- Kingdom nature: literal millennium vs. idealist/amillennial readings; the chart holds to literal earthly reign.
- Calvinist/Reformed contrast (for clarity): stronger emphasis in some streams on one people of God and less on Israel/Church distinction; amillennial/postmillennial options often treat Rev 20 symbolically. The chart preserves the literal millennium while affirming soteriological unity in Christ.
8) Historical Context (Why the Chart Looks the Way It Does)
- Second Temple expectations: restoration of Israel, Davidic king, day-of-the-LORD judgment, nations streaming to Zion.
- Apostolic preaching: warns of coming judgment and proclaims resurrection and kingdom (Acts 3:19–21; 17:31).
- Apocalyptic genre: Revelation alludes constantly to OT; a literal approach treats images as real events expressed pictorially, not as mere metaphors detached from history.
9) Scholarly Insight (Conservative/Evangelical; no direct quotations reproduced here)
- Arnold G. Fruchtenbaum, Footsteps of the Messiah (San Antonio: Ariel Press, 2003).
- John F. Walvoord, The Millennial Kingdom (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1959).
- Charles C. Ryrie, Basic Theology (Chicago: Moody, 1986), eschatology sections.
- Leon Morris, Revelation (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1987).
- George Eldon Ladd, A Commentary on the Revelation of John (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1972)—useful for already/not-yet kingdom, even where millennial views differ.
- Robert E. Picirilli, Grace, Faith, Free Will (Nashville: Randall House, 2002)—for responsibility and appeal under divine sovereignty.
(Add page-exact citations if you later insert direct quotations.)
10) Practical Application (What to Do with This Chart)
- Preach and teach watchfulness, not timelines. Emphasize holiness, mission, endurance (Matt 24–25; 1 Thess 5:6–8).
- Pray for Israel and the nations. Maintain humility (Rom 11:17–22) and mission urgency (Matt 28:18–20).
- Shepherd wisely around debate points. Show the toggle tabs and keep the Church united around core hopes: Christ returns bodily; He judges; He reigns; He renews all things.
11) FAQs (Search-Oriented)
Q1: Why a literal millennium?
Because Rev 20 repeatedly states “a thousand years” with chronological markers, and OT kingdom prophecies (e.g., Isa 2; 11; 65) read naturally as earthly conditions under Messiah’s reign.
Q2: Does the Church replace Israel?
No. Rom 11 teaches a partial, temporary hardening and a future turning; Gentiles are grafted in but do not cancel Israel’s irrevocable calling.
Q3: Must the catching up be pre-trib?
Not strictly; believers differ. The chart’s default placement is before the 70th Week on program-distinction and imminence grounds, with alternatives shown so you can test them by Scripture.
Q4: Is Revelation symbolic, so why read it literally?
Symbols can depict real sequences and events. A literal approach asks first, “What real event does this symbol signify in context and in the OT allusions?”
Q5: What should ordinary believers take away?
Live holy and hopeful; endure hardship; hold fast to Christ; work while it is day; the King is coming.
12) Representative Scripture Index (ESV)
- Hermeneutic/Covenants: Gen 12; 15; 17; 2 Sam 7; Jer 31:31–34; Ezek 36–37; Rom 11
- Church Age: Matt 28:18–20; Acts 1:6–8; Rev 2–3
- Catching Up: 1 Thess 4:13–18; 1 Cor 15:51–52; John 14:1–3
- 70th Week / Tribulation: Dan 9:24–27; Matt 24; Rev 6–16
- Abomination of Desolation: Dan 9:27; 11:31; 12:11; Matt 24:15
- Second Coming / Armageddon: Zech 12–14; Rev 16:12–16; 19:11–21
- Millennial Reign: Rev 20:1–6; Isa 2; 11; 65–66
- Final Judgment: Rev 20:7–15; Matt 25:31–46
- Eternal State: Rev 21–22; 2 Pet 3:10–13
13) A Repeatable Study Loop (Print This)
- Pick a node (e.g., Abomination of Desolation).
- Read the pericopes (Dan 9; Matt 24) and note OT–NT links.
- Place the node on the timeline rail (before/after which events?).
- Check covenant connections (how does this event serve God’s promises?).
- Write one doctrinal sentence and three applications (holiness, mission, hope).

