CadyandZoe
Well-Known Member
How does it matter to You?It does matter. Please answer. Why would i ask?
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How does it matter to You?It does matter. Please answer. Why would i ask?
How does it matter to You?
How does it matter to You?
And once again your response is pointless. You failed to address the Scriptures presented. This is how Amil avoid God's Word as given.Once again, you avoid every point and the biblical evidence. This is a typical Premil response. I refer you back.
Why do you keep negatively attacking posters? When you can seriously address the points, instead of steamrolling the narrative, you may notice the actual words of Scripture instead of your own private bias.Not so. You arbitrarily force text after text into your so-called future millennium regardless of the wording of the inspired text, context and consistent meaning. Rev 20 is a dumping ground for all types of events and texts that are totally unrelated. Your failure to corroborate any Premil tenet in Zech 14 is damning.
I explained it to you before. Perhaps you forgot. The animal sacrifices are among the commandments of God; During the millennial period, Israel will be keeping the commandments of God. Therefore, there will be animal sacrifices in the millennial kingdom.Bro, I am trying to understand where you are coming from. It is that simple. No need to be defensive.
I do not see animal sacrifices in any of your proof-texts, thus the question. I am trying to ascertain where you are getting that.
Why are you avoiding such a simple question? It is a yes or no question. Are you scared of something? Remember, you give me your word you would answer that question if i answered your question. I did. The ball is now in your court: whether you will keep your word of not.
The essential and highest purpose of the Millennial kingdom is to bring about the sanctification of God's name on earth. In order to understand the form of that period, we must first understand the problem.
To begin, let's review Paul's argument in Romans chapter 2, where he brings the Jews under condemnation of sin. In chapter one, he brings the entire world under sin, but Paul knows the opinion of his fellow Jews, especially those who teach the people. Such men wrongly believe that teaching the Bible is impressive to God and worthy of his favor. Paul will argue against that perspective, that teaching the Bible does not give anyone special favor with God.
But, without explaining the entire chapter I want to focus on this section, particularly the last verse.
Romans 2:17-24
But if you bear the name “Jew” and rely upon the Law and boast in God, and know His will and approve the things that are essential, being instructed out of the Law, and are confident that you yourself are a guide to the blind, a light to those who are in darkness, a corrector of the foolish, a teacher of the immature, having in the Law the embodiment of knowledge and of the truth, you, therefore, who teach another, do you not teach yourself? You who preach that one shall not steal, do you steal? You who say that one should not commit adultery, do you commit adultery? You who abhor idols, do you rob temples? You who boast in the Law, through your breaking the Law, do you dishonor God? For “the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you,” just as it is written.How was God's name blasphemed among the Gentiles? Paul asserts that one can find this doctrine in the prophets somewhere. Here are two examples. I want to focus on Ezekiel.
Isaiah 52:5
Ezekiel 36:20-38
Ezekiel briefly recounts Israel's history and why her exile is the basis for Gentile blaspheme. And to this end, I want to focus on the first half of that argument here.
Ezekiel 36:16-21
Then the word of the Lord came to me saying, “Son of man, when the house of Israel was living in their own land, they defiled it by their ways and their deeds; their way before Me was like the uncleanness of a woman in her impurity. Therefore I poured out My wrath on them for the blood which they had shed on the land, because they had defiled it with their idols. Also I scattered them among the nations and they were dispersed throughout the lands. According to their ways and their deeds I judged them. When they came to the nations where they went, they profaned My holy name, because it was said of them, ‘These are the people of the Lord; yet they have come out of His land.’ But I had concern for My holy name, which the house of Israel had profaned among the nations where they went.
From the Lord's point of view, he exiled his people for the cause of disobedience and especially for idolatry. He scattered his people among the nations on purpose. But from the Gentile's point of view, God was weak and ineffective as a leader and unable to keep a people for himself. Other Gods conquered Yahweh, defeated him and took his people away from him. As they say, "These are the people of the Lord; yet they have come out of His land."
The ancient peoples did not believe in a monotheistic, single God. They were polytheists, believing that many gods exist and that the gods fight with each other for supremacy. The victor was known as "god almighty." According to the ancients, the god who ruled supreme was "god almighty," the god who ruled over all the others.
But no one god ruled the entire world. Each god had his own area of influence; each god had his own land. The first god may fight with a second god and take the people of the second god has spoil. From this perspective, the ancient peoples concluded that Yahweh, who had control over "his land", defeated the gods of Egypt and took a people for himself and brought them to his land. But later, another god defeated Yahweh and took them away from his land to other lands. In the mind of the Gentiles, this was proof that Yahweh was not god almighty. He can be defeated.
The Lord tells Ezekiel that he allowed his people to be taken. It wasn't that another, stronger god defeated Yahweh and took his people away. He allowed the other nations to take his people away because they defiled his land. He sent them into exile because of disobedience and idolatry.
But the nations where they went understood history quite differently. They believed that another, stronger god defeated Yahweh, who was not able to keep a people, not able to protect a people, not able to teach a people, not able to provide a place where people can live peacefully in service to Yahweh.
While this was NOT true, this blaspheme was always left unchallenged. This lie persists because God has not yet proven otherwise. And this lie will remain unchallenged until God proves himself. It isn't enough to destroy the earth with a big whoosh and bring about the NHNE, because the lie must be proved in history while this world still exists.
Jesus taught his disciples to pray "Our father, make your name holy . . ." As Christians, We await the day when Yahweh proves himself among the nations. And he will offer proof while history is running its course.
The Lord tells Ezekiel that he intends to prove himself among the nations, demonstrating the truth and giving evidence, by experience, that Yahweh is truly God Almighty. In order to prove himself among the nations, he will bring his people back from exile, circumcise their hearts, have them keep and obey his commandments, and protect them from their enemies. And that last part is very important. In order to sanctify his name, vindicate himself from the charge that he is weak and ineffective against the other gods, he will bring the chief of all the so-called gods, Satan, against his people one last time, and this time Yahweh will defeat him.
Since disobedience of his commandments was one of two reasons why God allowed his people to be taken, then obedience of his commandments will mark the time when God is proving himself among the nations. Not only will his people keep all of his commandments, they will do so willingly because he has circumcised their hearts.
I explained it to you before. Perhaps you forgot. The animal sacrifices are among the commandments of God; During the millennial period, Israel will be keeping the commandments of God. Therefore, there will be animal sacrifices in the millennial kingdom.
In my view, during the Millennial kingdom they will make atonement sacrifices as commanded by Moses. You argue that atonement sacrifices are not necessary anymore, which is a problem for my view, in your opinion.
To that, I made two arguments. First, as Paul said (and we both agreed) it was never possible for atonement sacrifices to take away sins. It wasn't possible then, and so it won't be possible in the future. Therefore, any future atonement sacrifices will not be insulting to the cross or Jesus Christ. Second, while the original purpose of the atonement sacrifices was reconciliation with God, the atonement sacrifices will serve a different purpose in the millennial kingdom.
I haven't read through all of your 22 points, but I agree with your premise entirely.(19) Premil has an unhealthy obsessive focus on natural Israel, wrongly believing her to be God’s chosen people today under the new covenant. As a result, they have a mistaken fixation with natural Jerusalem in the Middle East, as if it is the epicenter of God’s workings with mankind on this earth and the place of His unconditional favor. This is wrong! They ignore much Scripture that shows that the fig tree has been cut down, the kingdom of God has been removed from Israel. Ancient Jerusalem and the temple therein were merely Old Testament imperfect shadows of the heavenly reality that was revealed at the first advent. The New Testament repeatedly teaches that we have become one with spiritual believing Israel in the OT. It makes clear; there is only one elect people. There is only one good olive tree, not two; one body, not two; one bride, not two; one spiritual temple, not two; one people of God, not two; one household of faith, not two; one fold, not two; one new man, not “twain,” and one elect of God throughout time!
(20) General unqualified phrases like “all,” “all nations,” “the quick (or living) and the dead,” “every man,” “every eye,” “every one,” “men,” “man,” “all men everywhere,” “the flesh of all men both free and bond, both small and great,” “all that dwell upon the earth … whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world ,” “they that dwell on the earth … whose names were not written in the book of life from the foundation of the world,” “the world,” “the whole world” and “all the world,” that objective and impartial Bible students acknowledge embrace the whole human race (or the full amount of all the wicked) are redefined and explained away to let Premil fit. If one was to take a precise straightforward interpretation of these phrases, one could only come to conclusion that there are no exclusions here. This shows that the Premil boast that they are literalists is inaccurate.
(21) Premil takes common linguistic terms that are easily understood by the unindoctrinated observer in any language to mean the opposite to what they actually say. For example, Premil does not believe that "first" means first and "last" means last. The English words “first” and “last” are taken from the Greek words protos and eschatos and are widely accepted by all unbiased theologians to denote exactly what they say. The word protos means first, as in the foremost in time, place, order or importance. The word eschatos on the other hand means end, last, farthest and final. It is explicitly clear from their usage, meaning and context in the New Testament that these words are the exact antithesis of each other.
(22) Premil does not believe that “the end” refers to the end. The New Testament word from which we get our phrase “the end” is the Greek word telos which refers to the point aimed at as a limit, i.e. the conclusion of an act or state. It is the termination point of a thing. When Scripture simply talks about “the beginning” without any other additional words or contextual reason to identify it with a specific event, then most sane theologians agree it is talking about “the beginning” of creation. Whilst all sound theologians agree on this many are inconsistent when it comes to “the end.” The reason I believe is because it cuts across a lot of their end-time theology they have been taught. But I believe we should treat both sayings similarly. Unless Scripture specifically identifies “the end” with a particular event or matter like “the end of barley harvest” (Ruth 2:23) “the end of the sabbath” (Matt 28:1), “the end of the year” (2 Chron 24:23), “the end of the rod” (1 Sam 14:27), or “the end of the commandment” (1 Tim 1:5), etc, etc, then we should understand it as the end of the world (which is the end of the age).
Yeah. I agree about the false doctrines. And it seems to be getting worse the closer we get to the pretribulation rapture. Thankfully we can escape all these things that will come to pass and stand before the Lord at His throne in heaven.I haven't read through all of your 22 points, but I agree with your premise entirely.
I believe Rev. 20 is a highly symbolic re-telling of 1 Corinthians 15:21-27.
When viewed from that lens, all the other eschatological (end-times) passages coincide with it perfectly. When all those well-known passages are compared to the Pre-Mil interpretation of Rev. 20, they don't align at all.
And, as you alluded to, you cannot create an entire doctrine around just one verse, passage or chapter in Scripture. It simply must coincide with the Bible as a whole. The Pre-Mil doctrine does not at all. I believe it is intended as a desperately needed, and fiercely defended, supporting structure for other false doctrines.
I don't find any evidence to support a Pre-Trib rapture in Scripture and I don't believe Christians escape the Tribulation(s) that will come prior to Jesus' return on the Last Day.Yeah. I agree about the false doctrines. And it seems to be getting worse the closer we get to the pretribulation rapture. Thankfully we can escape all these things that will come to pass and stand before the Lord at His throne in heaven.
I haven't read through all of your 22 points, but I agree with your premise entirely.
I believe Rev. 20 is a highly symbolic re-telling of 1 Corinthians 15:21-27.
When viewed from that lens, all the other eschatological (end-times) passages coincide with it perfectly. When all those well-known passages are compared to the Pre-Mil interpretation of Rev. 20, they don't align at all.
And, as you alluded to, you cannot create an entire doctrine around just one verse, passage or chapter in Scripture. It simply must coincide with the Bible as a whole. The Pre-Mil doctrine does not at all. I believe it is intended as a desperately needed, and fiercely defended, supporting structure for other false doctrines.
Not all people will be separated as sheep and goats. In fact that would contradict your own Amil position that all are consumed by fire at the Second Coming. You have 2 distinct "all" points, that are contradicting each other.This is exactly what is portrayed in Matthew 25:31-46. Jesus talked about what will happen when He returns with His angels. All people will be separated into two groups which He figuratively referred to as sheep and goats. The sheep represent believers and they will inherit "eternal life" in "the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world" (Matt 25:34,46). Meanwhile the goats, representing unbelievers, will inherit "eternal punishment" in "the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels" at that time (Matt 25:41,46).
This makes nonsense. If you claim it is full of sin when Christ is reigning, then you demand that a sacrificial system is necessary yourself, in this made up nonsensical argument you have with yourself. As you are the only one making all the nonsensical points.The penalty for sin has been paid in full! There are no more sacrifices for sin. The Scriptures are your greatest enemy here. No wonder you abhor corroboration.
Anyway, your "next age" is saturated with sin and sinners.
This makes nonsense. If you claim it is full of sin when Christ is reigning, then you demand that a sacrificial system is necessary yourself, in this made up nonsensical argument you have with yourself. As you are the only one making all the nonsensical points.
Where is all this nonsense of yours found in Revelation 20 that you foist upon the text?
The only point found is that when a rebellion happens after the 1,000 years it is instigated by Satan, not by the lack of or inspite of a temple. Rebellion is the result of Satan, not because some are claimed to be sinners. Still waiting for proof, those in the Millennium are identified as sinners.
This makes nonsense. If you claim it is full of sin when Christ is reigning, then you demand that a sacrificial system is necessary yourself, in this made up nonsensical argument you have with yourself. As you are the only one making all the nonsensical points.
Where is all this nonsense of yours found in Revelation 20 that you foist upon the text?
The only point found is that when a rebellion happens after the 1,000 years it is instigated by Satan, not by the lack of or inspite of a temple. Rebellion is the result of Satan, not because some are claimed to be sinners. Still waiting for proof, those in the Millennium are identified as sinners.
I don't find any evidence to support a Pre-Trib rapture in Scripture
and I don't believe Christians escape the Tribulation(s) that will come prior to Jesus' return on the Last Day.
ETA: I'm also not convinced the Tribulations haven't already begun.
The Temple will not be built until after the Second Coming. How the Temple is used comes directly from Christ who is the Word of God. You seem dogmatic and your mind is made up. Revelation 11 declares a temple. Unless it is in heaven, and lost people are allowed in heaven to visit it, your point at proving a temple cannot be built falls flat.No, you see that. I see God asking "where is the house that ye build unto me"? How does that equate to some temple being built in the future? You're making a lot of assumptions here.
Don't tell me I believe in some "preterist reformed eschatology" when I only agree with a small part of what they believe. I don't agree with their view that passages like Matthew 24:29-31 and Revelation 19:11-21 occurred in 70 AD. So, don't lump me in with them just because I recognize that scripture prophesied the destruction of the temple buildings standing back then.
Where does any of this indicate that there would be a physical temple built on earth some time after the year 2022?
You see where we've been talking about the importance of scripture interpreting scripture, so what scripture do you have to support your understanding of Isaiah 66:1-4?
Yet we have an OP with 22 personal opinions about God's Word. The majority of them twisting Scripture and coming from a personal bias.Some people here just blatantly twist scripture to fit their doctrine. Do these people not have a conscience? Do they think that God can't see what they're doing? It's unbelievable.