Resurrection, Apocalypse, and the Kingdom of Christ. Stanley S. MacLean
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СКАЧАТЬ by which he fulfills this mission. This is the church on earth and in history. Here Torrance describes the church as the “visible incarnation of Christ on earth in lieu of his very Self”77—although later, during the 1950s, he will inveigh against the “Catholic” idea that the church is a Christus prolongatus, or extension of the incarnation.

      Here we have a genuine theology of the cross. Christ has risen in triumph, power, and victory; he has ascended in glory to the throne of God, where he is now God’s “Right Hand,” Christ the King. However, the church and individual believers cannot yet know Christ as this glorious King. Until his coming again, they can only know him as the Crucified One, as their Lord and Savior through faith.

      Christ’s visible absence from the world is not a sign he has abandoned the world, that he no longer loves it. On the contrary, he ascended for the sake of the church and the world, so that he could reach the whole world through the church with the message of the gospel.

      8. The Second Advent

      We have finally come to a traditional topic in eschatology. However, Torrance did not leave us with much to reflect on—just three pages. Still, we get to the heart of his eschatology, since eschatology (like theology in general) has to be centered on Christ and his actions. It is mainly about the Eschatos (Last One), not the eschata (last things).

      One can find grounds in the bible (Mark 13 and par.; 2 Pet 3) for a catastrophic end to the world, but this notion that it will be the consequence of eternity entering time is Torrance’s own extrapolation. His argument is based on his earlier assertion that the key fact about the incarnation is the movement of eternity into time. The ascension does not abrogate this new connection made between eternity and time; it only reaffirms that time is real for eternity, not an illusion.