Any other preterists want to chime in on this stuff? Or is Dee Dee our lone crop circle hold out?
That is a completely flawed line of thinking! I am shocked I even read it! Totally illogical! The Great Tribulation was described as an event without equal.... there is no reason to think otherwise. There is no logical reason that after the event was over another event like it would never happen again for an eternity.Originally posted by Dee Dee Warren
Dear Knight -
Okay, you had objected that Jesus said that the Tribulation of those days was to be the worst of what had already happened and what would happen in the future. Notice, that this very statement makes it impossible to be an event that happens at the end of history for there would have been no reason for Jesus to say ?nor shall ever be.? This is obviously an event in the stream of normal history.
Jesus was speaking in the prophetic ?language? of the OT prophet. Hyperbole and dramatic emphasis were stock and trade of that ?language.? Jesus? language is nearly identical to Ezekiel 5:9-
Would be noticed by more than a handful of preterists.Revelation 9:18 By these three plagues a third of mankind was killed' by the fire and the smoke and the brimstone which came out of their mouths.
Originally posted by Dee Dee Warren
Knight, that one is in my pile to get to somewhat soon.... it will not take much time. But by all means, I would love to hear the opinions of other preterists on that.
Originally posted by Knight
People will travel so far to purchase a lemon. And when they do.... they scream and argue that it really isn't a lemon. Generally people feel so bad that they bought the lemon in the first place they spend the rest of their life attempting to convince everyone else to buy a lemon just like theirs.
You can answer these two points....Originally posted by Faramir
Knight:
While I have a little time let me make sure what question you want answered. I assume that you want an explanation of how something that sounds as devastating as the Great Trib. could be the simple destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70.
If I don't hear otherwise from you, I will assume this is the issue to be discussed.
Thanks,
Faramir
Fellow Steward of Christ
Isn't odd that every preterist claims to be a former "dispensationalist"? Yet not a single preterist I have run into even knows what dispensationalism is really all about? (no offense Dee Dee but its painfully obvious)Originally posted by Faramir
Former Dipensationalist,
Faramir
Originally posted by Knight
Isn't odd that every preterist claims to be a former "dispensationalist"?
Not really, considering the strangehold that dispensationalism has on popular literature -- fiction and non-fiction alike. Er, if the latter can truly be said to exist for that point of view...at any rate it's bound to be the view people hear first and believe first as a whole.
JP
Oh goody another super informative post from Mr. Holding.Originally posted by jpholding
Tut tut. Knight asked for more preterists to stop in and make his day? Oh dear. Did I just hear a can opener?
I shall return in the morning once I have read back through this exchange...meanwhile one may peruse
weblinks deleted....
There goes Knight again, reading a hyperbolic ancient text like a modern literal news report... :doh:
JP
Further proving my point that preterists haven't a clue as to what dispensationalism is all about. Thanks for the demonstration JP!Originally posted by jpholding
Originally posted by Knight
Isn't odd that every preterist claims to be a former "dispensationalist"?
Not really, considering the strangehold that dispensationalism has on popular literature -- fiction and non-fiction alike. Er, if the latter can truly be said to exist for that point of view...at any rate it's bound to be the view people hear first and believe first as a whole.
JP
Originally posted by jpholding
Tut tut. Knight asked for more preterists to stop in and make his day? Oh dear. Did I just hear a can opener?
I shall return in the morning once I have read back through this exchange...meanwhile one may peruse
links deleted
There goes Knight again, reading a hyperbolic ancient text like a modern literal news report... :doh:
JP
Originally posted by Knight
You can answer these two points....
When did the following events occur:
"By these three plagues a third of mankind was killed "
"And he (the beast) exerciseth all the power of the first beast before him,and caused the earth and them who dwelleth on it to worship the first beast,whose deadly wound was healed.And he doeth great wonders,so that he maketh fire come down from heaven on the earth in the sight of men.And deceiveth them that dwell on earth by the means of those miracles...and he causeth all,both small and great,rich and poor,free and enslaved,to receive a mark on their right hand,or in their foreheads,and that no man might buy or sell,except he that had the mark,or the name of the beast,or the number of his name"
Oh and just so you know.... when your done spiritualizing the above two passages I have about 8 thousand other reasons why The Great Tribulation has not already occurred. Happy hunting!
Jesus was speaking in the prophetic “language” of the OT prophet. Hyperbole and dramatic emphasis were stock and trade of that “language.” Jesus’ language is nearly identical to Ezekiel 5:9-
Therefore thus says the Lord GOD: ‘Indeed I, even I, am against you and will execute judgments in your midst in the sight of the nations. 9 And I will do among you what I have never done, and the like of which I will never do again, because of all your abominations.
That is describing a PAST event. If we are going to be woodenly literal here a large contradiction has just been unearthed in Scripture. Now the context of this passage is the Jews and Jerusalem. But even the futurists believe that the future Great Tribulation will be worse than that. This is explained through prophetic hyperbole and proverbial. This same language is used in Exodus 11:6 - even the futurists believe that there will be a greater anguish and cry in Egypt in the Great Tribulation.
Josephus also describes the loss of Jerusalem in similar language (proving it is common first century idiom) – “The war which the Jews made with the Romans hath been he greatest of all those, not only that have been in our times, but, in a manner, of those that ever were heard of.”
Originally posted by Lion
I find it interesting how the preterists are strictly and woodenly, word for word, literalist on some issues (the ones they have to read into them to make their points), and yet vastly liberal with spiritualizing others, that don’t go along with their theology?