This book is hard to rate. As exegetically-based theology meant to clarify an eschatological position it is ZERO stars. BUT as a work of post-modern fiction (like the volume of theology a Thomas Pynchon character would be working on in between bouts of singing and drinking) it's six stars.
First, has ANYONE read beyond page 60 in this book? And if you did so, and gave this five stars, have you ever read the Bible? I'm being perfectly serious, albeit rude. The "hermeneutical principles" this book espouses are utterly (and ironically) abandoned by the author by chapter 8 (if not a little before that). How so? Well, Pentecost begins with excoriating anyone who holds to any other millennial position other than dispensationalism by claiming that they don't "take the Bible literally" and they are always "spiritualizing" the "plain words" of scripture. And, as you can imagine, the church fathers (and everything they did) is utterly dismissed because Augustine was a tad too allegorical at times. Additionally, the tone of the work is wholly unbefitting serious scholarship as pentecost will quite literally describe alternative interpretations of Biblical text as "allegations" essentially labeling any other theologian's reading of a text as being "criminal." Pentecost cannot seem to figure out whether he is writing a polemic or biblical theology. As it turns out, he has crafted neither.
At one point (starting on page 137) Pentecost literally ADDS to scripture by inserting M Dashes into verses not because the context of the original manuscripts suggests that such typography is suggested or warranted but because it makes a better case for his own eschatological argument:
"There are many places in Scripture in which this passing over of the present Dispensation is very plainly evident...if we fail to do this, if we fail to notice these so-called "gaps," we cannot possibly understand the Scriptures which we read. We give a few by way of example, placing this (--) mark to indicate the parenthesis of this present Dispensation, which comes between the previous Dispensation of Law and the next Dispensation of Judgement which is to follow this Present Dispensation of Grace..Isa ix. 6 'For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: (--) and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.' "
Do you see what he did there??? He literally takes his own dispensational presuppositions and ADDS TO THE TEXT OF SCRIPTURE. Can you imagine a Master's Thesis on Hamlet which adds slash marks within the Prince of Denmark's most famous soliloquy and arguing that the Bard simply didn't lineate his own text properly? Or that your interpretation of "to be or not to be" only works if you read it as "to be/or not/to be?" Yet Pentecost is advocating the position that when Isaiah predicts the birth and Lordship of Jesus there MUST be a temporal gap between the messiah's birth and his authority and therefor adding a dash is perfectly acceptable!
But there is even a further issue here because Pentecost's work is NOT his own and that absurd "adding dashes" to scripture idea was something he merely lifted from another writer in a block quote. Speaking of which, I have never before encountered a work of non-fiction (theology, systematic theology, philosophy, political science, popular science, history, et cetera) that has so little of the author's own thoughts, ideas, or claims. Almost every page is simply a gargantuan block quote from one of Pentecost's friends or mortal enemies but Pentecost himself is there merely to arrange, edit, and promote (or condemn) the ideas of others. He, himself, engages in almost no "exegesis." But when he does, Pentecost is quite possibly the worst exegete I have EVER encountered. Once again, Pentecost is "dedicated" to a "literal hermeneutic of scripture" so much so that he (or actually, one of his friends) takes an amillennial scholar to task for having a primitive and un-nuanced understanding of the κοινε definite article "Ὁ" (really, disputing a definite article is the kill shot?) yet he is the CHIEF allegorizer and literalist! For instance, did you know that the letters to the seven churches aren't actually letters to actual churches (which followed the exact postal-route from Πατμος throughout Αντολια) which the LORD charged John with composing? No, they are ACTUALLY SYMBOLS OF THE SEVEN "CHURCH AGES" THROUGHOUT HISTORY! Talk about being literal! I "literally" thought these letters were sent to these seven churches which the Lord determined needed correction, direction, judgement, and praise AT THE TIME THEY WERE WRITTEN! In turns out these letters weren't letters at all, or if they were, they had NO RELEVANCE TO THE PEOPLE THEY WERE ADDRESSED TO.
Now, I'm not here to simply bang the drum for a preterite, or semi-preterite position (and I will try to read a serious work on historical premillennialism) but there comes a point where you cannot simply declare something is "futurist" and print a whole chart "proving so" if you haven't actually engaged in any exegesis. But, interestingly enough, before Pentecost shares the most absurdly "literal" interpretations of Matthew's "Kingdom of Heaven" parables (chapter 13) he tells his audience that "It is not possible nor necessary to give a detailed exposition of these parables at this point." Remember, this is the guy who claimed someone's entire argument was wrong because they didn't understand a definite article! Yet he gives himself a pass on expository exegesis! And what does he come up with? What is his "literal" interpretation?
"The Mustard Seed (Matt. 13:31-32). As the age progresses several facts are to be observed. (1) The age is characterized by an abnormal grown. That which was to be an herb has become a tree–it has developed into a monstrosity." (p. 147, hardcover edition)
I won't quote further because it simply get's worse. But here you were, thinking the Kingdom of Heaven was a Good thing! That it starts small but grows and that all the birds of the air (all of the world) will find comfort, peace, and truth by resting on its branches! SILLY YOU! The Kingdom of Heaven is DESTINED for corruption! Pentecost makes the same claim about the leaven which leavens the whole loaf and even the hidden treasure! He asserts, for instance, that since the birds in the "Sower and the Seeds" were negative (eating up the seed that did not sprout but laid on the earth) then they "MUST BY NECESSITY" be seen as wicked in the Mustard Seed! Of course, he gives us no reason to make this connection, at all, and I've not met or read anyone who made such an absurd, utterly counter-intuitive interpretation before (as it's obvious that all of the Birds of the World resting in the Tree is a GOOD THING) but for Pentecost, he simply has to say it and we simply have to accept it. Without any actual interpretative support or apparatus, Pentecost proclaims these highly novel (and utterly blasphemous) interpretations of the Lord's parables about the Kingdom without any expository support. He in no way bothers to exegete but eisegetes his own presuppositions onto the text and then projects this very same practice on his critics! Yet, I've now read two short volumes on post millennialism (Doug Wilson's "Heaven Misplaced" and his commentary on Revelation) and both of those books had more than five times as much expository exegesis than this 600+ page behemoth does.
So what, ultimately, is the issue? Pentecost displays dispensational eschatology as that which does not confess Jesus as Lord. When Jesus says that all power "on heaven and earth" has been given to him folks like Pentecost add "but not NOW and not over EVERYONE." When Jesus proclaims the GOOD NEWS of the Βασιλεια του Θεου/Ουρανου Pentecost hears BAD NEWS. The Gospel will NOT triumph, our Lord's words are NOT clear (and require someone with special "knowledge" to tell us what they "really mean" without explanation), and God really ISN'T in control of his own creation (subjected as he is to the whims of these man-centered "ages").
Additionally, Pentecost is profoundly dishonest in other ways. For one, you could read this entire book and not actually know that Jerusalem fell (and that the Second Temple was destroyed) in 70 AD. Apparently Jesus, nor the apostles, had ANYTHING to say about it or any PREDICTIONS regarding such a monumental event. Thus, Pentecost seems to think that Jerusalem's fall holds almost no spiritual or theological significance and simply references "70 AD" here and there. Lastly, Pentecost is incredibly dishonest with his deployment of scripture. If one turns to the scripture index in the back of his tome one will discover a list of verses that would rival those found in whole systematic theologies! But as one reads it becomes utterly clear that Pentecost is using verses like bird shot, loading and spraying them without any care or consistency. While it IS acceptable to occasionally reference a chapter and verse parenthetically without direct quotation, Pentecost will simply add strings of these references signaling to the reader that "all of these verses support MY reading!" However, if you actually go to the verses he cites, you will find that more often than not they are NOT so obviously supporting his interpretation. But, he figures you won't do that, so he can just paste them about as he pleases.
Please, please, please, read your Bible. Read other perspectives. Use this for a paperweight.