Podcast Episode
Nazis With Jewish Dreams: Dispensationalism and the Revival of a Christ-less End-Times
Episode Description
Did the early church teach dispensationalism? Or are modern claims engaging in historical and theological equivocation?
In this episode, Charles Wiese dismantles the popular narrative that dispensational eschatology was suppressed by antisemitism. We examine what early Christian millennialists actually believed—showing the absence of any rapture doctrine, secret return of Christ, or land promises granted to unbelieving Jews. We demonstrate that the early church rejected millennial speculation for Christological reasons, not racial ones—because it echoed the hermeneutic of Jews who denied Christ, contradicting the kingdom interpretation of Jesus and the apostles.
We then trace the tragic irony of history: the Nazis revived the same Christ-less, ethnocentric interpretive method the Church once labeled “Jewish dreams,” using it to construct their own racial pseudo-millennium. Luther’s warnings about Christ-absent prophecy and flesh-centered kingdoms prove disturbingly prophetic.
A theological, historical, and logical confrontation with modern dispensational myths—and a warning for every generation: any millennium dreamed without Christ becomes a false kingdom.
Topics include:
Early church eschatology, Jewish hermeneutics vs. apostolic interpretation, Luther and the Reformers on “Jewish dreams,” dispensational land theology, rapture origins, Nazi millennial ideology, and the dangers of Christ-less prophecy.