No, the point is Satan is bound literally, not symbolically. How he is bound is not the point at all. You say he can still influence humanity. I say he cannot. You defer to pointless arguments about literal Satan and literal chains.
That is your point, not mine. We obviously differ in our understanding of his binding. We've known that for a long time. Clearly, that is not a point that needs to be made as if we didn't already know that. My argument is not pointless. It would be pointless if I made it to anyone else since everyone else but you seems to understand the difference between literal and symbolic text.
I point out Satan is bound after a battle. You say, there was no battle so Satan was never defeated. You claim the power of the Holy Spirit has kept Satan in check.
Now you may claim John was symbolic in his timing and words. Since you don't think "as written" means there was a literal anything having to do with the Second Coming.
I explained my understanding of what "as written" means. If you disagree, so be it. I don't care. You apparently think it has to mean something is literal. But, not all scripture is literal, so it makes no sense to make an argument about accepting something "as written" as if there is no other option but to interpret it literally.
Of course, if you make everything symbolic, you can make Scripture say anything you want it to, especially to fit your eschatology.
Why do you resort to nonsense like this? That is a serious question. I would love to know why you do this? You know that I do not "make everything symbolic". I absolutely do not do that and you know it. Do I interpret more of the book of Revelation symbolicaly than you do? Sure. But, do I interpret all of it symbolically? No. I've never said that. Not once. So, why do you act as if I do that? Give me an honest answer to this question.
Kind of hard to change things around if you accept God's Word as literal.
Is all of God's Word literal? No. So, what does this statement even mean? If I take something that's clearly symbolic such as the beast with seven heads and ten horns and don't interpret it as a literal beast with seven literal heads and ten literal horns, am I changing things around to make it fit my doctrine? Should I be taking that literally instead? Of course not, right? So, again, what do you even mean when you make statements like this?
You have to accept some parts of Scripture even if they don't make sense.
LOL. I could say the same to you. You can't make sense of Satan being bound for the past almost 2,000 years, but you should accept it, anyway. Right? You said yourself that you have to accept some parts of Scripture even if they don't make sense. So, there you go. You need to start taking your own advice and start accepting Amillennialism even if it doesn't make sense to you.
God's Word was not written to cater to human sensibility. Nor was it written to prove a certain modern eschatology.
No, the point is not to prove if some Scripture is symbolic or some is literal. The point is to figure out why "as written" should be one or the other, not both.
That's what I have been saying all along, you silly goose. I'm saying we need to discern whether any given text is written symbolically or literally. That's what taking it "as written" means to me.
If Revelation makes sense as chapter 20 happening at the same time as chapter 19, why would your defense be, it is too symbolic?
I don't understand your question. How can something be too symbolic? There is nothing wrong with symbolism. It symbolizes real things, so what does it matter if the real things are depicted literally or symbolically?
Why do we need to come up with a better interpretation than the words John wrote?
What kind of question is this? Should we assume that John wrote about a literal beast with seven literal heads and ten literal horns? Is it your view that taking it another way than literally is "a better interpretation than the words John wrote"?
You're the one who thinks it does not make sense as written.
When you say "as written", you mean literally. Can you just say literally instead of "as written"? Some things are written symbolically and we can take them "as written", which is symbolically. So, you just create confusion by talking about things "as written" since not everything is written literally.
But your reasoning is that it should be interpreted as symbolic, so we can make it say something totally different. There are enough points made about literal beings, places, and actions to make sense. Satan is literal, a soul is literal, being beheaded is literal. Even a thousand years can be a literal period of time, even if you disagree. It has been 1993 years since 30AD. There have been almost 2 literal thousand years, since the Cross.
Again, I never said that all of it is symbolic. There is a mix of symbolic and literal text throughout the book. The key is to be able to differentiate which is which. I obviously think you do a poor job of that and you think that of me (and I couldn't care less about that). So be it.