Hi Eclipse,
Reason #: If everything did happen in the first century and the messages are only to be used as inspiration, then what is there to say about the last two thousand years of Christian history? Did Christ not have anything to say to the Trinitarians when the Arians applied for state-sponsored religion? Did Christ not have anything to say when the Pope struck a deal with Charlemagne to upset the Eastern Empire in making him the Western Emperor in exchange for freedoms and protection? Did Christ not have anything to say to the Church regarding their treatment of the Waldenses as they were being killed for possessing their own Bibles and selling their possessions to give money to the poor? And did Christ not have anything to say when Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the church doors at Wittenberg accusing the Papacy of remaining silent on the abuse of indulgences? All of these things were major moments in Church history that I think Jesus would have been interested enough to speak his mind on to Christians of those times.
It was God's choice to inspire John to write Revelation to prepare John's generation for the coming suffering. It's more than just a 'timetable' of the suffering to come, but a lesson for
all generations of Christians using the suffering of John's generation as a lesson. God was writing the gospel into that generation; using apocalyptic literature they were comfortable with. Jesus also warns us that there will be persecution, that they would hate the disciples as well because they first hated the Lord. But John takes that language and spells it out in terms they were familiar with. He does NOT start writing about stuff that was to happen 2000 years later!
As to all the other theological crisis you mention, why is anything else needed? We have the bible, which is enough. 2 Timothy 3:16.
16 All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, 17 so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.
Not a little bit equipped; not partially equipped, not 'still relying on fresh visions from God'; but
thoroughly equipped. It's a doctrine called Sola Scriptura and I'm proud to hold it. Our Protestant heritage has a history of martyrs burnt at the stake for daring to hold to Sola Sriptura, and I'm not about to abandon it now.
Sola scriptura - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Why did God end the bible where He did, and not continue writing new words of advice for us till this day? Because Jesus was God's WORD, the point and purpose and means of the gospel being fulfilled. After Jesus, the disciples were just so busy preaching this gospel that they only stopped to write it down decades later when they realised the original eyewitnesses were starting to die off! Why no new word of God since then? Because, as Jesus said dying on the cross, it is finished!
Reason #2:If everything did happen in the first century, why has Christ not come back by now? And what can you use to support your answer?
The only reason you are asking this question is because you're still reading Revelation as a timetable. Break out of that. John writes a highly structured set of events in the 4 main themes I mentioned above, and seems to pick and choose between a bunch of events; some of which might have already been under way depending on when you think Revelation was written. John writes to compassionately warn his generation of Christians to be prepared, and to explain that the Messiah has not failed. And he reminds them of the gospel; that one day Jesus will return.
When the historical background to all these events is unpacked I doubt that it will work in a chronological order. These are THEMES John is writing about, and how Christians are to respond.
7 Seals depicting TYRANNY; Rev 6-7
7 trumpets depicting CHAOS IN CREATION 8-11
7 signs depicting PERSECUTION OF BELIEVERS 12-14
7 plagues depicting DESTRUCTION OF THE EARTH 15-16
John may have been drawing from Nero's persecutions, various terrible earthquakes at the time, tyrant governments, and even Mount Vesivius exploding. But he did so in a stylised manner. They're not a future timetable but a sermon analogy! That's why I'm so disturbed by people trying to ring a future timetable out of Revelation; it wasn't even a timetable for John's own day! It was a general warning, a sounding of the alarm, that persecution was imminent, natural disasters were imminent, tyrants would abound, and the earth would be laid waste.
But hold fast Christian, because the gospel is still true. The Lord will return! Revelation is just the gospel in Manga-word form.
Reason #3:If everything did happen in the first century, please show me where the seventh seal, the following seven trumpets, and the seven final plagues were fulfilled. If everything was to happen to bring about the end of the Roman Empire, or at least the supremacy of Christ over Rome, then Jesus would have come back by now. This was what led many to believe that Jesus’ return would be spiritual, even though Scripture explicitly states that Jesus’ return would be literal and physical.
See my previous post. It outlines the book of Revelation in more detail. This is apocalyptic language using Jewish number symbolism to preach a last gospel sermon to John's generation. After we understand some of the symbolism (and some particulars might be lost, while the overall vibe is still intact) we can apply Revelation to our generation in much the same way as we might apply Galations, or Ephesians, or Corinthians, or any other book written to a specific church or a specific context of the people of God.
According to the preterist, what was the star that poisoned the waters, or 200 million horsemen that killed 1/3 of the world with fire, smoke, and brimstone in one hour? What was the great battle of Armageddon and when did 100lb hailstones fall on men? When did the return of Christ happen?
First of all I'd love you to address the particulars of Revelation 1 before I have to address the meaning of every particular symbol in Revelation. "soon" and "the time is near" are the key words you need to address.
But, as a general comment, I'd say they happened, it's just that we have trouble with the symbolism! EG: Are there REALLY 7 eyes and horns on Jesus head? Are there REALLY only 144 thousand people in heaven? No! Those numbers and symbols ARE OBVIOUSLY symbolic! Horns = power, and Jesus has God's PERFECT amount of power. (7 = perfection). Eyes = omniscience and knowledge, and Jesus has God's PERFECT amount of knowledge. It's all knowledgeable. 144 thousand people = 12 tribes times 12 Apostles times 1000, the FULL number. It's the
perfect amount of God's old covenant people and the
perfect amount of God's new covenant people times the
fullness of God. Not one will be lost. That is the message.
The hail? First of all let's remember that Chapter 16 is the beginning of the "end of the physical world" stuff, the end of the old creation which must pass before the new heavens and new earth of later chapters. But it's not a timetable, and picks various events to add to the theme of physical destruction.
As Dr Barnett says: "John draws extensively on Genesis 1 and Exodus 7-11. Sores, blood, darkness and hailstones were directed towards the people of Egypt as now they will be towards the people of the world."
It's picture language for terrible things happening that remind us the world is ending, the old seats of power are being uprooted, there is no 'eternal city' like Rome / Babylon, and only God's kingdom will remain intact at the end. It's picture language from the Exodus, and so when picture language upon picture language is quoted; we are to take the
meaning clearly without getting hung up on the symbols. The world will 'end' in judgement and the Lord will return.
While the final judgement day is still to come the 'hail' itself may have already happened. I can't find the specific quote just now, and have wasted 30 minutes trying to find it, but I specifically remember Paul Barnett (a theologian and respected professional historian who taught at our local university) saying there was a Roman battle against a Jewish outpost where the Romans mined a local marble quarry for their catapults. They hurled beautiful marble shot at the Jews. It rained giant 'hail'. It
happened. It's a historical example of the kind of imagery John wants to bring to mind to mean 'big, bad things' and chaos and death and the end of everything you know. Until.
Until the Lord builds it again.
It's the gospel, as I said.
Reason #4: If everything was fulfilled in the first century, what were the ten horns of the beast? What were the seven heads? What was the mortal wound that was healed, and what was the second beast of Revelation 13? These are only a few examples of why I can’t bring myself to embrace preterism.
1. If this is all yet to happen, then aren't you really still a futurist?
2. The 10 horns are in the middle of the 12-14 'gospel history' that John pauses to write. Go back and look at 12. It's Jesus being born, and King Herod trying to kill him, and Jesus fleeing, and ... "Finally, to bring them up to date, John describes how persecution has now spread from Judaea to the place for which his book is being written, proconsular Asia. Our author has written a mini-history of early Christianity covering a historical span of 100 years".
See it? It's placed it in the
context of John's generation yet again, with 12
clearly anchoring this section in the birth of Jesus. And yet again, it is all about the gospel. When Jesus died and rose again, we get 12:10
Revelation 12:10
New International Version (NIV)
10 Then I heard a loud voice in heaven say:
“Now have come the salvation and the power
and the kingdom of our God,
and the authority of his Messiah.
For the accuser of our brothers and sisters,
who accuses them before our God day and night,
has been hurled down.
That is, we are saved. We are God's kingdom on earth.
Now, to the 10 horns. We know horns are symbolic of power, as we saw in Daniel's visions, especially the boastful horn. Jesus had 7 horns. When we see that John was writing about what was to happen SOON, because the time was NEAR, and then John anchors 12-14 as a mini-history of the
gospel generation and the
gospel itself, the sea-best and horns are obvious. They are a power in competition with God, Rome!! It comes up out of the sea, much like the Roman Galleons would land soldiers and attack Rome's enemies.
Domition the Roman Emperor had the empire declare him to be "Lord and God!" and so the SEVEN HEADS (remember Jesus 7 eyes and 7 horns) and 10 horns are pretensions to divinity. (10 horns? It's pretending to have more power than Jesus?!) Nero had an unsuccessful suicide attempt, and there were even rumours that Nero would come back from death to haunt his enemies. John is playing on this to refer to Nero as a false-Christ, complete with 7 heads, more horns than Jesus (but crowned, showing preoccupation with worldly power and bling rather than true servant hood power of Jesus) AND even a fake death & resurrection!
The sea-beast is Rome, but because this is to ALL churches of ALL ages, it also represents
any 'beast government' who persecutes the people of God. The imagery and specific examples are for John's age, but the application is to all ages.
About Reason 1:
The premise is wrong so I don't need to critique the details. You haven't proved John was writing about things that were to happen centuries later, it was SOON, it was not lifetimes away, but the time was NEAR.
About Reason 2:
Incorrect premise again! There is no theological reason why the Lord could not have returned sometime
after the gospel reached Rome. That was pretty much the 'ends of the earth' from a Jewish perspective. In Acts 1:8 Jesus predicts the Holy Spirit will give them power to take the gospel through Jerusalem (home), Samaria (people they don't like very much) and the
ends of the earth... Rome. From the spiritual capital of the ancient world, Jerusalem, the birthplace of Christianity, to the spiritual end of the world, Rome. I think Acts 1:8 is probably the last prophecy that had to be fulfilled before the Lord could return. The Christians at Corinth certainly expected him to return, so much so that Paul rebuked them for being lazy and not working hard enough! They thought they didn't have to work, because the Lord was due back any day!
About Reason 3:
Why can't we trust in God's word that Jesus hears our prayers and loves and saves us if we keep trusting in him and stay faithful to the end? Why can't we trust these things based on other CLEARER parts of the New Testament that tell us exactly that? Why are these things attached particularly to your eschatology? The irony here is that only a truly Amil Preterist position CLEARLY shows Revelation teaching all these things to all ages of the church. Your position breaks Revelation up into chunks that apply and do not apply to us yet. So why bother with it? It's all too hard, and one person's timeline is as good as any other. Why should I believe yours? Laodicea, when most of the world's Christians are poor? Really?