Does The Bible Support The
Year-day Principle As Used In SDA Prophecy Interpretations?
George Desnoyers
Limited Acceptance of Year-Day Principle Among Christian Churches
The Year-Day Principle is
supported only by Seventh-Day Adventists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and the
Worldwide Church of God. Most textbooks in Biblical hermeneutics do not even
mention the possibility of a Year-Day Principle.
Daniel’s Seventy Weeks – Why "Days" Equal "Years" in This Unique Case
While Scripture doesn't support the use of a Year-Day Principle in interpreting the Bible, nearly all Christian Bible scholars agree that there is one predictive prophecy in the Bible in which "days" do represent "years." It is the prophecy of the seventy weeks found in Chapter 9 of the Book of Daniel.
Why are the seventy weeks (literally seventy "sevens") correctly interpreted as seventy weeks of years, i.e. 70 times 7 years, or 490 years? It is because of the following three important ideas with which Daniel's audience would be very familiar.
The first idea is that the Babylonian captivity was a punishment (Jeremiah 25:4-11). The second is the concept of an original punishment being multiplied by seven ( Leviticus 26:14-39, especially verses 18, 21, 23-24, and 27-28). The third concept is that of weeks of years, i.e. years in groups of sevens (Leviticus 25:1-8). There is a fourth idea that is also important in correctly interpreting the seventy weeks. It is the idea that Daniel employs figurative language. Daniel 2:39, for example, uses hyperbole when it says that the third kingdom will rule all over the world. This has never been true of any historical empire. Daniel also uses numbers symbolically. Most Bible scholars feel that the number "seven" is used symbolically in Daniel 3:19; 4:16,23,25, 32, and quite likely in chapter 9 as well. So, while the first three ideas lead nearly all commentators to agree that seventy weeks of years is meant, idea number four tells us that we should not necessarily look for exactness in either the total number of years (490), or in the breakdown into groups of seven weeks (49 years), sixty-two weeks (434 years), and one week (7 years). These are not necessarily exact periods of time any more than the furnace was heated exactly seven times hotter than normal.
Despite the special case of the seventy weeks, where, for the reasons given (ideas 1-3), days may be said to represent years, there is absolutely no Scriptural support for a Year-Day Principle. Here is important information everyone should have if they are exposed to the Year-Day theory for interpreting predictive prophecy.
Statement of the Year-Day Principle
The Principle is often
stated this way: "In predictive prophecy, where a number of days is given,
that number of years is meant." In other words, when a predictive prophecy
is given, and a number of days is stated, you arrive at the true meaning of the
prophecy by substituting the word "years" in place of
"days." This statement of the Principle is nearly exactly the wording
Dr. Dwight Nelson used in last year's Next Millennium Seminars. Some SDA's add
that the Principle should only be applied in apocalyptic predictive prophecies.
Does the Bible Support a Year-Day Principle?
While most SDA's readily acknowledge that there is no explicit statement of the Year-Day Principle in Scripture, they usually go on to say, "We get it from Numbers 14:34 and Ezekiel 4:4-6.
First, lets look at Numbers 14:34. If you have accepted, or are on the verge of accepting, the Year-Day Principle, you may do yourself a big favor by spending a few moments thoroughly examining this verse.
"According to the number of days which you spied out the land, forty days, for every day you shall bear your guilt a year, even forty years, and you shall know my opposition." (NAS)
The following things are true about this Numbers 14:34:
(1) "Days" means "days."
(2) "Day" means "day."
(3) "Years" means "years."
(4) "Year" means "year."
(5) The words "days" and "day" are not even involved in the predictive prophecy part of the verse. What is explicitly predicted is not forty days, but forty years, of suffering in the wilderness. That's what is meant. And that's what it says – forty years.
(6) If you substituted "years" in place of "days" in this verse, all you would get is a lie. It would then say that the Israelites spied out the land forty years, which, of course, they didn't do.
(7) This is clearly not a case of one word being used to mean another. What is said equals what is meant. This is simply a case of correspondence: the number of years of suffering in the wilderness is going to correspond to the number of days the spies were observing Canaan.
What about the other text used to justify the Year-Day Principle? Ezekiel 4:4-6 is another case of correspondence, just like Numbers 14:34. It is definitely not a case where the word "days" means "years." In Ezekiel 4:4-6 Ezekiel is to lie down on one side for 390 days, and on the other side for forty days. That is exactly what was meant. You cannot change those days to years. Those days merely correspond to the number of years over which Israel and Judah are going to bear (the punishment for) their iniquity.
Application of the Year-Day Principle in Interpretation of Scripture
The Principle is very unevenly applied. According to the SDA Bible Commentary, it is applicable to Daniel 8:14 (2300 days), Daniel 7:25, 12:7, and Revelation 12:14 (time and times and half a time), Revelation 11:2 and 13:5 (forty-two months), Revelation 11:3 and 12:6 (1260 days), Daniel 12:11 (1290 days), and Daniel 12:12 (1335 days). However, there are many places where a predictive prophecy is given, and a number of days stated, where the Principle is not applied. In some cases where the Principle is not applied, the predictive prophecies are not in apocalyptic sections. These include:
Matthew 26:2 - Jesus predicted he would be arrested in 2 days;
Matthew 12:40 - Jesus predicted he would be buried for three days;
Matthew 27:63, Mark 8:31, John 2:19-22 - Jesus predicted His resurrection after three days;
Jonah 3:4 - Jonah's prediction of the overturning of Nineveh in forty days; (This was a conditional prophecy. However, from the reaction of the people of Nineveh, and Jonah, it's clear that Nineveh was not being given forty years instead of the stated forty days.)
2 Kings 20:5 - Hezekiah is to be healed in three days.
In three cases where predictive prophecies occur in sections often thought to be apocalyptic, it seems that SDA's are divided as to whether the Year-Day Principle should be applied:
Revelation 2:10 - Smyrna is to suffer tribulation ten days; (Some people may apply the Year-Day Principle here, but I noticed it isn't applied in the SDA Bible Commentary.)
Revelation 11:9,11 - The two witnesses are to lie unburied three and one-half days; (In a previous discussion it was pointed out that some SDA's interpret this as referring to a three and one-half year period when religion was outlawed during the French Revolution.)
Finally, those who believe in the Year-Day Principle usually do not apply it in their interpretation of the "thousand years" of Revelation 20:2-7. This important time period is not stated in days, but neither is the forty-two months of Revelation 11:2 and 13:5, nor the three and one-half years of Daniel 7:25, 12:7 and Revelation 12:14, and advocates for the Year-Day Principle do apply it in interpreting those texts.
Applying the Year-Day Principle: Two Pragmatic Rules
Examining places in Scripture where advocates for the Year-Day Principle do, and do not, apply it reveals a pattern indicative of two pragmatic rules regarding use of the Principle:
(1) When a predictive prophecy includes a stated number of days, and application of the Year-Day Principle would appear plausible to a significant percentage of people, the Principle is applied.
(2) When a predictive prophecy includes a stated number of days, but application of the Principle would be viewed as silly, the Principle is not applied. This is the situation, for example, with the prophecies in which Jesus predicts his arrest, burial, and resurrection.
Why is the Principle not applied to the thousand years of Revelation 20:2-7 while it is applied to the three and one-half years of Daniel 7:25, Daniel 12:7, and Revelation 12:14? Applying it to the thousand years would appear silly to most people because it is difficult to conceive of a prophecy covering a span of 360,000 years. It is too foreign to our experience.
The Year-Day Principle - Summary and Conclusions
The Year-Day Principle is
not taught anywhere in the Bible. And, with the exception of the seventy weeks
of Daniel 9, there are no clear examples of "days" meaning
"years" in predictive prophecies. Supporters of the Principle wrongly
assert that "we get it from Numbers 14:34 and Ezekiel 4:4-6." It is
held only by some SDA's, Jehovah's Witnesses, and the Worldwide Church of God.
The great majority of textbooks in hermeneutics don't even mention the
possibility of a Year-Day Principle. Those who believe in the Principle often
fail to apply it consistently and uniformly. They sometimes apply it to times
not stated in days, e.g. three and a half years, and forty-two months. And they
do not apply the Principle in several cases where a number of days is stated in
a predictive prophecy.