The Thread
A manuscript study of 1 Enoch 45 and 91, Acts 3:21, Isaiah 65:17, Revelation 21, and the single most contested textual variant in this whole conversation — 2 Peter 3:10 — read honestly, with the debate named rather than resolved.
Gathering-Up of All Things (Pillars IV and X) already opened this question once — once for apokatastasis, the astronomer's word for a cosmos coming home to its starting position, and once for 1 Enoch's own transformation-of-creation hope, with its honest manuscript split preserved. This study goes back into that second question and stays there, adding the two witnesses that matter most and have not yet been placed side by side: Isaiah's Hebrew "create" language, and — at the center of the whole debate — a New Testament textual variant so genuinely difficult that the modern critical edition keeps a reading most translators cannot fully explain.
The question this study exists to hold open, honestly, is simple to state and genuinely unresolved by the manuscripts themselves: when the Bible says heaven and earth will be made new, is that renewal — this creation, transfigured — or replacement — this creation, ended, and a different one begun? Both readings have real manuscript and lexical support. Neither should be forced past what the texts actually say.
Findings
1 Enoch 45:4–5 — Transform, Not Discard
As already established in the Gathering-Up study (Pillar X, this collection), this verse's own verb choice is decisive for its own emphasis: God does not say he will end heaven and earth, but that he will transform (Nickelsburg's rendering of the underlying sense) them into blessing. This sits in the same conceptual family as Ezekiel 37:27's hope of God dwelling with his people in a renewed land, not a replaced one. This study does not re-argue that point; it holds it as settled ground and turns to what sits beside it in the same book.
1 Enoch 91:16 — the First Heaven Passes, and 4Q212
This verse sits inside the Apocalypse of Weeks (1 Enoch 93:1–10 + 91:11–17, a distinct literary unit within the larger book), and its language leans a different direction from 45:4–5: the first heaven does not merely get transfigured — it departs and passes away (Ge'ez, consistently rendered this way across Charles, Nickelsburg, and other standard translations), and a new heaven appears in its place.
The manuscript anchor that matters most here. Unlike the Son-of-Man material in the Parables (chapters 37–71 — see the companion study, The Son of Man Before the Stars, Pillar VI, and the manuscript study The Watchers, this collection), the Apocalypse of Weeks belongs to the section of 1 Enoch that is attested at Qumran in Aramaic — specifically the fragment catalogued as 4Q212, published by J. T. Milik (1976) and confirmed in subsequent critical editions. This means the "new heaven will appear" hope of 91:16 is not resting solely on the medieval Ge'ez manuscript tradition (as the Son-of-Man material must) — it has a physical, datable, pre-Christian Jewish manuscript witness underneath it. That is a genuinely stronger evidentiary footing than most of the material this whole conversation has touched, and it deserves to be named as such.
The honest tension with 45:4–5. 45:4 says transform; 91:16 says the first heaven departs and passes away, and a new one appears. These are not identical emphases inside the same book, and this study does not flatten them into agreement. The Gathering-Up study already named this directly (Pillar X): "whether Enoch means renewal of the present cosmos or its passing-away-and-replacement is itself contested — 45:4 uses transformation language, 91:16 leans to passing-away. The traditions are not univocal." This study affirms that finding and carries it forward as the seed of everything below.
Acts 3:21 — the Restoration, Read for This Question Specifically
The Gathering-Up study (Pillar IV, this collection) already established the full lexical case for apokatastasis as a precise first-century technical term meaning return to an original state — attested in astronomy (a planet's return to its starting point), medicine (a limb set back into place), and law (exiles and property restored to their original condition). This study adds one observation specific to the heaven-and-earth question: the noun's underlying sense is restorative, not innovative — a return to an original, prior condition, not the introduction of a wholly novel one. If Peter's language in Acts 3:21 is read with full weight given to that first-century technical sense, it leans the whole New Testament witness toward renewal of the original rather than replacement with something new-in-kind — a genuine point of tension with Revelation's insistence (Pillar V, below) on kainos, "new," language for the same event. This study names that tension rather than resolving it; both texts are in the canon, and both use their words carefully.
Isaiah 65:17 — "I Create," and What Bara Is Doing Here
The verb is bore (participle of בָּרָא, bara) — the identical Hebrew root Genesis 1:1 uses for the original creation of the heavens and the earth. This is the only place in the entire Hebrew Bible where "new heavens and a new earth" appears as a phrase (it recurs once more, in the same book, at 66:22).
The genuine scholarly divide. One line of scholarship (see, for example, Daniel Bediako's 2008 study in the Journal of Asia Adventist Seminary, and Watts's commentary) reads Isaiah 65:17 as hyperbolic, this-worldly language — a vivid, maximal way of describing the historical restoration of Judah after the Babylonian exile, continuous with Isaiah's repeated "new things" language elsewhere in the book (41:22; 42:9; 43:19; 48:6) that clearly refers to historical acts of deliverance, not cosmic replacement. On this reading, bara is a strong verb chosen for rhetorical intensity, not a signal of literal ex nihilo re-creation — the same root, after all, is used elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible (Psalm 51:10, "create in me a clean heart") for something plainly short of cosmic re-creation. A second line of scholarship (represented across the historical tradition by figures like Thomas Aquinas, who cited Isaiah 65:17 alongside Revelation 21:1 as evidence of a genuine future renewal of the physical universe) reads the phrase as pointing to a real, future, cosmic transformation — later picked up and intensified by 2 Peter 3:13 and Revelation 21:1, which explicitly borrow Isaiah's own phrase.
What is not in dispute. Both camps agree the verb bara is a strong, deliberate word-choice, echoing Genesis 1:1 on purpose. What divides them is whether Isaiah's own historical horizon (restoration after exile) is the phrase's full referent, or whether Isaiah is reaching, in language his own century could not fully cash out, toward something the New Testament writers would later apply cosmically. This study states both positions at their genuine strength and does not adjudicate between them.
Revelation 21:1–5 — Kainos, Not Neos
(21:5): ἰδοὺ καινὰ ποιῶ πάντα — idou kaina poiō panta — "Behold, I am making all things new."
The lexical point that carries real weight. Greek has two ordinary words for "new," and they do not mean the same thing. Neos means new in time — recently arrived, young, the newest instance of an existing kind (a neos wine is simply this year's wine, the same kind of thing as last year's). Kainos means new in quality or kind — unprecedented, of a different order than what came before, not merely the latest copy of the same thing. This distinction is standard in Greek lexicography (LSJ; and it is the subject of an entire classic treatment in R. C. Trench's Synonyms of the New Testament) and is not a distinction this study is imposing on the text — it is a real feature of the Greek vocabulary available to the author.
Revelation's choice is total and consistent. Every single occurrence of "new" applied to the heaven, the earth, and "all things" in this passage uses kainos — never neos. The author had neos available and did not use it, not once, in a passage precisely about newness. Read at the strength the vocabulary actually supports, this favors renewal-in-kind — a heaven and earth transformed into something qualitatively different — over a purely temporal claim that this is simply "the next one, chronologically." It does not, by itself, settle whether the prōtos ("first") heaven and earth that "passed away" (apēlthan, aorist) means their annihilation or their transfiguration — kainos tells you the character of what results, not the mechanism by which the old relates to the new.
Revelation 21:3 — the tabernacle echo. "Behold, the dwelling place (skēnē) of God is with man, and he will dwell (skēnōsei) with them." This is the same skēnē/skēnoō word-family John's Gospel already used at 1:14 (see the companion study, Gloria: kavod and doxa, Pillar V, this collection) — and behind both stands Ezekiel 37:27's "my dwelling place shall be with them" and Exodus 40:34's kavod filling the tent. Revelation's climax is written in the same tabernacle-vocabulary that runs through the entire Scriptorium's glory thread — this is not incidental; it is the same word family doing the same kind of work at the very end of the canon that it did at the tabernacle's dedication.
2 Peter 3:10 — the Manuscript Problem at the Center of the Whole Debate
This is the strongest, most concrete manuscript evidence in this entire study, and it cuts directly against easy certainty on either side.
The reading with the best manuscript support: εὑρεθήσεται — heurethēsetai, "will be found." Attested by Codex Sinaiticus (א), Codex Vaticanus (B), Codex Mosquensis (Kʰ), Codex Porphyrianus (P), and — critically — the third-century papyrus P72, our earliest Greek witness to 2 Peter, which reads heurethēsetai with an added participle, luomena ("will be found dissolved"). Origen attests the same reading in the third century. Every major modern critical edition since Tischendorf (1872) and Westcott-Hort (1881) — including Nestle-Aland 27/28, the current scholarly standard — retains heurethēsetai as the earliest recoverable reading.
The reading behind most older English translations: κατακαήσεται — katakaēsetai, "will be burned up" — the reading of the Textus Receptus, behind the King James Version's "the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up." This reading is attested by Codex Alexandrinus and the Byzantine majority tradition, but is judged by the standard textual-critical literature (Metzger's Textual Commentary; Bruce Metzger himself) to be a later, sense-clarifying substitution for the harder, earlier heurethēsetai — not the original wording.
Why this is genuinely, admittedly difficult. Heurethēsetai — "will be found" — does not obviously make sense in a sentence describing a cosmic conflagration in which "the heavens will pass away with a roar, and the heavenly bodies will be burned up and dissolved." How can the earth be found in a passage about things being burned and dissolved? Bruce Metzger himself called the reading "devoid of meaning" in its context. The manuscript record shows scribes visibly struggling with exactly this problem in real time: the Sahidic Coptic version and one Syriac manuscript insert a negative ("will not be found"); P72 tries adding "dissolved" to it; Codex C simply substitutes a different verb, "will disappear" (aphanisthēsontai); and the Byzantine tradition resolves it entirely by switching to "will be burned up." Four different Greek readings survive across the five earliest witnesses to this single clause — a genuinely unusual density of variation, itself evidence of how hard early copyists found this sentence to preserve as written.
How serious scholarship has tried to resolve it. Richard Bauckham's influential commentary argues that heurethēsetai should be kept as the best-attested reading and understood to mean something like "will be laid bare, disclosed, exposed" before God's judgment — the earth and its works found out, morally exposed, rather than physically consumed. Other scholars (Tischendorf and Westcott-Hort themselves, among later editors) have proposed the reading is a very early corruption of something else entirely, offering various conjectural emendations that NA27 lists but that remain unproven guesses, not manuscript-attested alternatives. As of the most recent editorial work by the Institute for New Testament Textual Research (INTF), some editors now favor an emended reading, "will not be found" (adding the negative attested in the Coptic and Syriac tradition) as the best resolution — itself an acknowledgment that the bare Greek text as transmitted is genuinely, unusually hard to construe.
Why this matters for the whole renewal-vs-replacement question. If the earliest and best-attested reading really does mean something like "will be laid bare / exposed" rather than "will be burned up and annihilated," then 2 Peter 3:10 — long read as the New Testament's strongest single verse for cosmic destruction — may not actually be making that claim as forcefully as the King James Version's "burned up" has led generations of readers to assume. This does not settle the debate in favor of pure renewal; 2 Peter 3:12 still speaks of "the heavens being set on fire and dissolved" in language that is hard to read as anything but real cosmic upheaval. But it means the single most quoted "replacement" proof-text sits on a manuscript foundation that is, by the field's own best scholarship, genuinely uncertain at exactly its most quoted word.
Renewal vs. Replacement — Naming Both Readings Fairly
Having laid out the individual pillars, here is the debate itself, named plainly rather than resolved by force:
The renewal reading (associated in contemporary scholarship with N. T. Wright and others) reads apokatastasis (Acts 3:21) at full lexical strength as restoration of the original, reads 1 Enoch 45:4's "transform" as governing the tradition's emphasis, reads Isaiah 65:17 as continuous with Isaiah's historical-restoration language elsewhere, reads Revelation's kainos as "renewed in quality" rather than "different in substance," and reads 2 Peter 3:10's heurethēsetai as "exposed/laid bare" rather than "annihilated" — building a consistent picture of this creation transfigured, not discarded.
The replacement (or discontinuity) reading, historically the more common popular reading and reflected in translations following the Textus Receptus tradition (like the KJV's "burned up"), reads 1 Enoch 91:16's "the first heaven shall pass away" as governing, reads 2 Peter 3:10–12's fire language (on the katakaēsetai textual tradition, or even on heurethēsetai read plainly) as real cosmic dissolution, and reads Revelation 21:1's "the first heaven and the first earth had passed away" as describing a genuine ending, with the "new" heaven and earth being, in substance, a different creation replacing what ended.
What this study will not do. It will not declare one of these the "true" biblical position. Every pillar above shows real manuscript and lexical evidence pulling in each direction, sometimes within the very same book (1 Enoch 45 vs. 91) or the very same word choice being read two defensible ways (kainos narrows but does not resolve the question; heurethēsetai undercuts the strongest replacement proof-text without proving the opposite). Readers deserve the debate stated at its real difficulty, not flattened into a false certainty in either direction.
The Picture That Holds — and Where It Deliberately Does Not
Read only these words, in these languages, the honest picture is this:
The oldest layer of the promise (1 Enoch 45) says transform.
A pre-Christian, Qumran-attested layer of the very same book (1 Enoch 91:16, secured by 4Q212) says the first heaven will pass away.
Isaiah uses the strongest possible verb — the Genesis 1:1 verb — for a "new heavens and earth" whose ultimate scope even careful modern scholars cannot agree on.
Peter's word for "restoration" (Acts 3:21) leans toward the original being restored.
John's Revelation insists, in a lexical choice that cannot be explained away, that whatever comes is new in kind (kainos) — while the mechanism connecting the old to the new is left, deliberately or not, underdetermined by that word alone.
And the New Testament's single strongest-sounding verse for outright cosmic destruction (2 Peter 3:10) turns out, in its best-attested Greek, to say something so hard to construe that a century and a half of the world's best textual critics have not fully agreed on what it means.
That is not an evasion. It is what close, honest reading of these specific texts, in their own languages, actually yields. Some questions the manuscripts leave open are left open because the manuscripts themselves are still speaking in more than one voice.
A Word to the Reader
It would be easy to pick a side here and make the evidence sound more settled than it is — plenty of writing on this subject does exactly that, in both directions. What this study offers instead is the harder, truer thing: every pillar above is real, checkable, and points somewhere. Taken together, they do not resolve into a single verdict, and pretending they do would cost the study its honesty for the sake of a cleaner ending. What is not in question, on any reading, is the direction of the hope itself — every single text surveyed here, without exception, describes something better than what exists now: blessing instead of curse, light instead of shadow, God dwelling with rather than distant from. Whether that better thing is this world transfigured or a new one altogether, every voice in this study agrees it is coming, and agrees it is good. That agreement, underneath the genuine disagreement about mechanism, may be the more important finding.
Sources & Contested Points
| Pillar | Sources |
|---|---|
| I · 1 Enoch 45:4–5 | Cross-referenced to The Gathering-Up of All Things, Pillar X (this collection); Nickelsburg & VanderKam, 1 Enoch 1 (Hermeneia, Fortress, 2001) |
| II · 1 Enoch 91:16 / 4Q212 | J. T. Milik, The Books of Enoch (Aramaic fragments incl. 4Q212, Oxford, 1976); Nickelsburg, 1 Enoch 1 (Hermeneia, 2001) on the Apocalypse of Weeks; R. H. Charles (1912) |
| III · Acts 3:21 | Cross-referenced to The Gathering-Up of All Things, Pillar IV (this collection); Ilaria Ramelli, The Christian Doctrine of Apokatastasis (Brill, 2013) |
| IV · Isaiah 65:17 | Masoretic Text; D. K. Bediako, "Isaiah's New Heaven and New Earth (Isa 65:17; 66:22)," Journal of the Asia Adventist Seminary 11.1 (2008); J. Watts, Isaiah (WBC); Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae (on the renewal-of-creation reading) |
| V · Revelation 21 | NA28 Greek text; LSJ on κανός/νέος; R. C. Trench, Synonyms of the New Testament; G. K. Beale, The Book of Revelation (NIGTC), on the tabernacle/skēnē echo |
| VI · 2 Peter 3:10 | B. M. Metzger, A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament (2nd ed.); R. Bauckham, 2 Peter, Jude (WBC); NET Bible translators' notes on 2 Peter 3:10; A. Wolters, "Worldview and Textual Criticism in 2 Peter 3:10," Westminster Theological Journal 49.2 (1987); NA27/28 critical apparatus |
| VII · The debate itself | N. T. Wright, Surprised by Hope (renewal reading, contemporary representative); the Textus Receptus / KJV tradition (representative of the historic replacement/discontinuity reading) |
The manuscripts themselves: Qumran 4Q212 (Aramaic, Apocalypse of Weeks); complete Ge'ez witnesses to 1 Enoch (see the companion study, The Ge'ez Witness, this collection); Papyrus 72 (P72, 3rd century, earliest Greek witness to 2 Peter); Codex Sinaiticus (א) and Codex Vaticanus (B), 4th century; Codex Alexandrinus (A), 5th century; the Masoretic Text of Isaiah; NA28/UBS5 for the Greek New Testament throughout.
- 1 Enoch's own internal tension (45:4 transform vs. 91:16 pass-away) is real and is not resolved by this study or, as far as the evidence shows, by the ancient text itself.
- Isaiah 65:17's referent — historical restoration of Judah, hyperbolically expressed, versus genuine cosmic renewal later picked up by the New Testament — is a live, serious scholarly division, not a fringe disagreement.
- 2 Peter 3:10's actual meaning, even once the best-attested Greek reading is settled, remains genuinely debated among the field's best textual critics — this study reports Bauckham's "laid bare" resolution as the leading proposal, not as a settled consensus verdict.
- Whether Revelation's exclusive use of kainos settles the renewal-vs-replacement question. It narrows the question (ruling out a purely temporal "next-in-line" reading) without resolving the deeper question of continuity versus discontinuity between the "first" and the "new."
- The overall renewal-vs-replacement debate itself. Stated in Pillar VII as two genuinely defensible readings, each built from real texts read at real strength — this study takes no side, by design, because the manuscripts themselves do not speak with one voice on this point.
A manuscript study built for the Scriptorium, as a deepener alongside The Gathering-Up of All Things and The Son of Man Before the Stars — letting the oldest texts speak in their own languages, and letting a genuine disagreement between them stay genuinely disagreed.