Premils are quick to throw the Gnostic slur at Amils. But, it may shock Premillennialists to know that many of the views they hold and promote today were sourced and spread in antiquity chiefly among heretics. When we look for the originators and formulators of modern-day Premillennialism we actually arrive at four shadowy early figures. The first two operated at the very infancy of early Church history – Cerinthus of Asia Minor (AD 50-100) and Marcion of Sinope, Asia Minor (Born: AD 85, Died: AD 160). Both of these were viewed as arch-heretics and were strongly resisted by the early Church fathers for their corrupt perversion of Christianity. They invented a dual-covenant concept of two parallel yet coexisting peoples of God, under two different agreements, serving two different gods, with two different time-tables and two different ultimate outcomes. This was seasoned throughout with Gnostic elements.
The later advocates of ancient Premillennialism who ran with, and widely promoted, it were Porphyry [or Porphyrius] of Tyre (AD 232- 305) and Apollinarius of Laodicea, Asia Minor (died AD 382). They took up the baton were Cerinthus and Marcion left off. Not surprisingly, these two unorthodox writers were condemned by the ancient orthodox fathers as heretics and blasphemers.
They all strongly believed God has two distinct peoples, with distinct purposes for each. Even those who reject Christ were considered as the “people of God.” They believed that the Church operates under new covenant promises and natural ethnic Israel operates under a covenant promises. They held that the Mosaic covenant remains valid for the Jews while the new covenant only applies to the New Testament Church. They considered Israel to be God’s earthly people, and the New Testament Church to be God’s heavenly people.
Like the Pharisees, the early Premillennialism heretics had a hyper-literal earthly expectation of a coming earthly kingdom, believing that the Old Testament kingdom promises would be fulfilled by ethnic Israel coming to prominence there. They repudiating a spiritual interpretation of many passages. They believed Israel’s old covenant theocracy would return and she would be restored to her ancient land boundaries. They rejected a heavenly hope for Israel. They promoted the rebuilding of the old abolished covenant infrastructure, including the recommencement of the old covenant priests, customs, rituals and blood sacrifices.
What set these 4 men apart from the orthodox Chiliasts was not their opinion of a future millennial earth, no, it was their elevation of the nation Israel in a future millennium, their two-peoples-of-God-theory (including a clear discontinuity between Israel and the Church), their belief that Christ-rejecting Jews were still God’s chosen people, that Israel would be restored to her ancient boundaries, their advocacy for the renewal of all the old covenant feasts and festivals, a return of blood sin offerings in a future temple (whether real or memorial) and their support for the restarting of the old covenant priesthood on a future millennial earth.
While these are beliefs that are widely held within Premillennialist circles today, they were unknown to the early orthodox Church Chiliasts. Along with the reintroduction of all the bondage of corruption on a future earth (including sin, death and decay) and the rising up of Satan after 1000 to influence billions of millennial inhabitants against Christ and the glorified saints, this advocacy for the return of all the old covenant apparatus is probably the most unsavory aspect of modern Premillennialism.
Notably: none of the ancient Chiliasts supported the idea of Israel rising again to a place of racial superiority in a future millennial kingdom. They all looked upon the New Testament Church as fulfilment of true Israel today. They rejected any idea of God blessing any aspect of the redundant Jewish ceremonial arrangement. They strongly opposed any validity for, or efficacy in, any coexisting dual covenant theory. They believed that the fulfillment of Israel's promises are found in Christ alone. They held that believers (both Jews and Gentiles) possess spiritual territory in Christ today.
They resisted any advancement of the fanciful idea of any type of reintroduction of the old abolished covenant system, including the rebuilding of the Jewish temple and the performing of multiple additional sin offerings to atone for the sins of man for a thousand years in the future. Such a thought was anathema to them. For the 1st 240 years after the cross there was no classic Dispensational or “Historic” Premil beliefs in the early Church. The new earth they envisioned was more akin to the Amil new earth - it was perfect and pristine. It was sin-free, sinners-free, Satan-free, corruption-free and death- free.
The early heretical apostates found the natural carnal sensual expectations of the Jewish millennial teaching attractive to their thinking. However, there was no mention of people joining in marriage and enjoying sexual relations, and producing offspring amongst the early Orthodox writers until Commodianus an African writer who wrote between AD 251 and 258. There is no mention of the ungodly or wickedness blighting a future millennium until until Victorinus in 270 AD. There are no previous orthodox Christian writings advocating the continuation of earthly carnal pleasures (including excessive feasting, continued marriage, ongoing sexual passion and procreation) and materialistic prosperity after the resurrection. This thinking was thought to belong to the Gnostic camp.
Premillennialist Chris Gousmett even concedes: “This emphasis on material and fleshly delights was seen to be typical of ‘Jewish’ understandings of the prophetic promises, and thus a close connection between Gnosticism and Judaism was postulated” (Shall the Body Strive and not be Crowned? Unitary and Instrumentalist Anthropological Models as keys to Interpreting the Structure of Patristic Eschatology).
Finally, none the early orthodox Chiliasts expected a future binding/unbinding of Satan or the uprising of Gog and Magog to surround Christ and the saints 1,000 years after the second coming. They all seem to have believed that Satan will be taken out of the game on the actual day of Christ’s appearing.
The later advocates of ancient Premillennialism who ran with, and widely promoted, it were Porphyry [or Porphyrius] of Tyre (AD 232- 305) and Apollinarius of Laodicea, Asia Minor (died AD 382). They took up the baton were Cerinthus and Marcion left off. Not surprisingly, these two unorthodox writers were condemned by the ancient orthodox fathers as heretics and blasphemers.
They all strongly believed God has two distinct peoples, with distinct purposes for each. Even those who reject Christ were considered as the “people of God.” They believed that the Church operates under new covenant promises and natural ethnic Israel operates under a covenant promises. They held that the Mosaic covenant remains valid for the Jews while the new covenant only applies to the New Testament Church. They considered Israel to be God’s earthly people, and the New Testament Church to be God’s heavenly people.
Like the Pharisees, the early Premillennialism heretics had a hyper-literal earthly expectation of a coming earthly kingdom, believing that the Old Testament kingdom promises would be fulfilled by ethnic Israel coming to prominence there. They repudiating a spiritual interpretation of many passages. They believed Israel’s old covenant theocracy would return and she would be restored to her ancient land boundaries. They rejected a heavenly hope for Israel. They promoted the rebuilding of the old abolished covenant infrastructure, including the recommencement of the old covenant priests, customs, rituals and blood sacrifices.
What set these 4 men apart from the orthodox Chiliasts was not their opinion of a future millennial earth, no, it was their elevation of the nation Israel in a future millennium, their two-peoples-of-God-theory (including a clear discontinuity between Israel and the Church), their belief that Christ-rejecting Jews were still God’s chosen people, that Israel would be restored to her ancient boundaries, their advocacy for the renewal of all the old covenant feasts and festivals, a return of blood sin offerings in a future temple (whether real or memorial) and their support for the restarting of the old covenant priesthood on a future millennial earth.
While these are beliefs that are widely held within Premillennialist circles today, they were unknown to the early orthodox Church Chiliasts. Along with the reintroduction of all the bondage of corruption on a future earth (including sin, death and decay) and the rising up of Satan after 1000 to influence billions of millennial inhabitants against Christ and the glorified saints, this advocacy for the return of all the old covenant apparatus is probably the most unsavory aspect of modern Premillennialism.
Notably: none of the ancient Chiliasts supported the idea of Israel rising again to a place of racial superiority in a future millennial kingdom. They all looked upon the New Testament Church as fulfilment of true Israel today. They rejected any idea of God blessing any aspect of the redundant Jewish ceremonial arrangement. They strongly opposed any validity for, or efficacy in, any coexisting dual covenant theory. They believed that the fulfillment of Israel's promises are found in Christ alone. They held that believers (both Jews and Gentiles) possess spiritual territory in Christ today.
They resisted any advancement of the fanciful idea of any type of reintroduction of the old abolished covenant system, including the rebuilding of the Jewish temple and the performing of multiple additional sin offerings to atone for the sins of man for a thousand years in the future. Such a thought was anathema to them. For the 1st 240 years after the cross there was no classic Dispensational or “Historic” Premil beliefs in the early Church. The new earth they envisioned was more akin to the Amil new earth - it was perfect and pristine. It was sin-free, sinners-free, Satan-free, corruption-free and death- free.
The early heretical apostates found the natural carnal sensual expectations of the Jewish millennial teaching attractive to their thinking. However, there was no mention of people joining in marriage and enjoying sexual relations, and producing offspring amongst the early Orthodox writers until Commodianus an African writer who wrote between AD 251 and 258. There is no mention of the ungodly or wickedness blighting a future millennium until until Victorinus in 270 AD. There are no previous orthodox Christian writings advocating the continuation of earthly carnal pleasures (including excessive feasting, continued marriage, ongoing sexual passion and procreation) and materialistic prosperity after the resurrection. This thinking was thought to belong to the Gnostic camp.
Premillennialist Chris Gousmett even concedes: “This emphasis on material and fleshly delights was seen to be typical of ‘Jewish’ understandings of the prophetic promises, and thus a close connection between Gnosticism and Judaism was postulated” (Shall the Body Strive and not be Crowned? Unitary and Instrumentalist Anthropological Models as keys to Interpreting the Structure of Patristic Eschatology).
Finally, none the early orthodox Chiliasts expected a future binding/unbinding of Satan or the uprising of Gog and Magog to surround Christ and the saints 1,000 years after the second coming. They all seem to have believed that Satan will be taken out of the game on the actual day of Christ’s appearing.
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