Naomi25
Well-Known Member
- Aug 10, 2016
- 3,199
- 1,802
- 113
- Faith
- Christian
- Country
- Australia
Oh, come on, nothing... by the following type of statement you made (below), you try to plant the idea of Biblical imagery, symbology to suggest the 1,000 years may only be symbolic...
You said:
"Okay...so...given that Revelation is often not chronological, and is often symbolic in its use of imagry, most biblical scholars will tell you that the clear rule of thumb for interpreting less clear passages is to go to passages that are more clear. This is something that most scholars agree on, regardless of which school of thought they come from."
The "less clear passages", with your indirectly pointing to Rev.20, is YOUR OWN theory. Many scholars would debate that suggested idea that the Rev.20 Scripture is not clear. And you only planted that idea so you could try and use Scripture 'outside'... the Rev.20 chapter in attempting to prove your point.
Perhaps you could take a Poll? How many people out there consider the rest of the NT "clearer" in general than Revelation?
But, as far as me "planting an image"...I think that's a shaky accusation. Even if we say that Revelation is crystal clear, we have one spot, Chapter 20, where the 1000 years is mentioned...all within a 7 verse passage. As "biblical proofs" go, to build a doctrine, I'd like a bit more. I'm not saying that one mention alone isn't enough to make something so, because its God's word! But in determining what, how, when...that sort of thing, it's just common sense to seek out as many references within scripture as you can find to this "kingdom". To the time, to the people, to the reason, to the order. By nailing as much as you can down, you can flesh out a much better idea for what scripture is really talking about.
Thus, I added 13 extra NT passages that talked about it. In point of fact I could have added more, especially when considering the fact that the bible only speaks of "this age" and "the age to come", in regards to the time frames we can expect. When seen in conjunction with the "Kingdom in upon you" verses, and the "Christ reigns now" verses and the "all enemies are under his feet" verses and the "I bound him to plunder his house" verses....quite frankly I think any other arguments come off rather weak.
Especially ones that hinge upon pointing fingers at naughty people who look at "other scriptures" to make a point.