Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
The problem with calling it spiritual is the fact that Paul also called it going from one body to another body. Now the soul cannot do that at will, even though Paul said it would be preferable. Paul said it happened to him. He said it does happen at death.@Spiritual Jew just showed you Paul teaching the Ephesians about a spiritual resurrection.
Why stay in the ball park of a 1600 year old apostate church? Only the Holy Spirit can be in a person. One's own spirit was a covering. John called it a robe of white.All those verses are talking about the Holy Spirit. That is your theory, and you are welcome to it. But the church in general would disagree. Why are your theories so often different than most other believers?
Only one is talking about the Holy Spirit: in Eph. 3 I copied "his Spirit in the inner man;" to show that our "inner man" is the real us. All the rest of the verses are talking about the HUMAN spirit.
Take this verse for an example:
1 Corinthians 2:11
For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him?
Why would ANYONE imagine this is speaking of the Holy Spirit?
I am sorry to say, but your thinking is clear out of the ball park.
I already did. I'm confused as to why you ask me questions about things that I've already explained.Therefore, I will agree, Paul does not mention an earthquake. But when we match scripture with scripture, I think it will be so. Can you prove with scripture that his sudden destruction cannot be an earthquake?
Technically this translation does not say there is a new earth. It say it is laid bare. What a forest fire does, except trees, buildings, any structure will not be left as standing reminders. Nothing will be standing and nothing to build with. In the 6th seal, men have to go back to living in caves.2 Peter 3:10 But the day of the Lord will come like a thief. The heavens will disappear with a roar; the elements will be destroyed by fire, and the earth and everything done in it will be laid bare.
As for no interaction between the souls John saw and what's going on in Satan's little season, that's because the souls are in heaven while Satan's little season occurs on earth.
Imagine? No. The context gives no indication whatsoever that the destruction that will come down on the day of the Lord, which is the day Christ returns, will take longer than a 24 hour day. It will probably be pretty quick if the amount of time it takes our bodies to change is any indication of how quickly things will happen on that day.I can see no reason at all to not directly relate that to this: I agree. Both Paul and Peter speak of the very same Day of the Lord. Are you forgetting something here? Many people forget TIME. Do you imagine the Day of the Lord comes and ends in a flash - a second or less? Maybe you imagine it is a 24 hour day like all other "days."
Where do Paul or Peter even hint at such a thing? Nowhere that I can see. All I see in 1 Thess 4:13-5:6 and 2 Peter 3:3-13 are things that will occur on the very 24 hour day that Christ returns. We can derive from those 2 passages that just before the heavens and earth are destroyed by fire, the dead in Christ will be raised from the dead at the coming of the Lord and we will then be caught up with them to meet the Lord in the air. Once all believers are safely out of the way and have had their bodies changed to be immortal (1 Cor 15:50-54) then the fire comes down upon the unbelievers on the earth and destroys them.The truth is, the Day of the Lord is a long, extended period of time when God bring judgment first, then eternity.
For what reason would there be any delay (beyond the changing of bodies to be immortal and catching up of believers to the Lord) in the burning up of the earth when Jesus comes? I'm sorry, but I'm just not seeing your point here.Let's examine Peter's statement: Yes, He agrees with Paul, the DAY of the Lord will come as a thief. Peter probably read Paul's letter. Comparing scripture with scripture, this will happen at the 6th seal where John tells us the Day begins.
Next, Peter tells us "the heaven's will disappear with a roar." Where else do we read this? At the 6th seal John wrote, " the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled together..." So this event would be in the first second or seconds of the Day of the Lord.
Next, Peter tells us, "the elements will be destroyed by fire..." Would this have to come in the first seconds, or could it come later in the Day? The way Peter wrote it, it could come later. It could be at the end of the Day. All we can prove from what Peter said is that sometime during this Day of the Lord, the elements will burn. Where else do we read about this?
1 Corinthians 3:13 Every man's work shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man's work of what sort it is.
Notice the time here: "THE DAY shall declare it." It is Day of the Lord timing. Where do we find "fire" that might give us timing information?
2 Thes. 1: 7 And to you who are troubled rest with us, when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, 8 In flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ:
So it seems the fire that tries the works of man, the fire that comes from elements burning may well come when Jesus comes. It is a coming for vengeance.
Why do so many people try to act as if two passages can't be related together if they don't contain the same details? I don't get it. Do you think Matt 24:29-31 doesn't relate to Rev 19 since Rev 19 doesn't mention the gathering of the elect? If not, then what basis is there for thinking 1 Thess 4:13-17 can't be related to 2 Thess 1:7-10?Do we see any hint of vengeance in His coming in 1 Thes. 4 - a coming FOR His saints? No, we see vengeance in His coming as shown in Rev. 19, His coming to Armageddon. It is at this coming that the armies of heaven are mentioned.
You're right. I don't believe it. Why would it say that the time of the wrath of the Lamb has come if it doesn't actually come down until 7 years later? Pretrib is so illogical that it boggles my mind.Therefore, I conclude that this phrase from Peter is not at the START of the Day of the Lord, but after some TIME has passed. You may not believe it, but from the 6th seal to the coming in Rev. 19 is going to be over 7 years of time.
The 70th week has already been fulfilled by the prince (Jesus) who established the new covenant long ago. This is a topic better left for its own thread, so I'm not going to say any more about it here.The 6th seal is opened just before the 70th week, and Jesus coming to Armageddon is some unknown time after the week. This is still in agreement with Peter. The DAY is still ongoing at Armegeddon.
Goodness. If you can't align 1 Thess 5:1-6 directly with 2 Peter 3:10-13 then no 2 passages can align together. Both say that the day of the Lord will come like a thief and that it will bring about destruction that people can't escape from. But, they don't align? Ugh. I'm just completely baffled by the way you look at scripture.Paul did not specify what causes the destruction, but Peter did. It said it will be by fire. Now you are trying to align two scriptures that will not fit together.
Why is Paul's sudden and Peter's is not? How selective. I believe that only doctrinal bias could lead you to such a conclusion.Paul's destruction is RIGHT THEN, at the same moment that those alive and in Christ are caught up, those left behind suffer the sudden destruction - at the START of the DAY.
We will find the cows with Iamlamad on one of the “thousand hills.” (Psalm 50:10)My friend, I don't allow myself any kind of offense. We are good - we just disagree on many points! ;-) You can deny a millennial reign "till the cows come home." But when it comes, look me up!
He didn't use the word rapture either, so I guess that means the rapture won't ever happen?Sorry, but Paul did not use that word.

Is Eph 2:1-6 not scripture? Now I'm convinced that you're just messing with me by asking me questions that I've already answered. You can't fool me anymore with this game you're playing!My goodness. After all I said, this is your response?
Yes, I am only asking for scripture!

By YOUR definition. I don't interpret scripture by your definitions. Resurrection means to go from death to life which is what happens when we go from being dead in sins to spiritually alive in Christ.By definition "resurrection" means physically dead coming alive.
Again, I showed you Eph 2:1-6. Do you not think that passage is about being born again? It says when we are saved/born again God raises us up with Christ in the heavenly realms (in a spiritual sense). How can God spiritually RAISING US UP not be a resurrection?You have appropriated this word and applied to the born again experience. All I ask is you show us where any writer in the bible uses this word for one being born again. Or now are you showing us that you believe something that cannot be proven with scripture?
To go from DEAD in sins to LIFE in Christ doesn't fit the concept of a resurrection? Wow. This is the one of the most ridiculous arguments I've ever been part of. If we can use your kind of logic (the word resurrection is there, so it can't be a resurrection) then we can say that Paul does not teach about a rapture since he never uses that word. Can you see how ridiculous that logic is?What else do you call going from being spiritual dead in trespasses and sins to being spiritually alive in Christ? I call it being born again - what God called it.
How about the phrase "raised up". Is that close enough? What you are showing me is there is no scripture where "resurrection" is used for the born again experience. Ephesians says we have been "raised" to sit at the right hand of God, but "resurrection" does not fit that either.
Webster's
I didn't know Webster's could dictate to us how we should understand scripture. Can you show me the scripture that says we should rely on Webster's for understanding?1 a: the rising of Christ from the dead
1.b: the rising again to life of all the human dead before the final judgment
1.c: the state of one risen from the dead
" from Late Latin resurrection-, resurrectio act of rising from the dead, from resurgere to rise from the dead, from Latin, to rise again...
Are you really so hyper-literal that unless a passage contains the word "resurrection" it can't be speaking of a resurrection?
Again (and hopefully for the last time), using this kind of logic couldn't we say that using the word "rapture" changes the biblical meaning since the word isn't used in scripture? I'm not buying your line of reasoning here at all. Going from being dead in sins to alive in Christ is a resurrection because all resurrection means is to go from death to life (and it doesn't have to only mean bodily).I just know that no writer of the bible used that word, "resurrection" to refer to anything but a physical resurrection of someone dead to becoming alive. Why then should we change the biblical meaning? To fit some theory?
By the way, I can see in my notifications that you replied to several of my posts, so I guess we're not done discussing these things, after all.
Let's be honest. We don't know each other personally at all. Apart from discussion on serious topics like this, I like to joke around and laugh a lot. But, I don't think it would be appropriate to joke around a lot when we're discussing God's Holy Word. The last thing I want to do is make light of holy scripture. But, it's nice to throw a joke in once in awhile to remind you that I'm human and not some bot that auto-responds to your posts.Now you are being funny again! It is true, there are things I just could not let pass.
It's called a new earth in verse 13, not verse 7 (the verse I quoted in that post that you responded to here). In verse 7 it is referred to as the present earth.Technically this translation does not say there is a new earth. It say it is laid bare. What a forest fire does, except trees, buildings, any structure will not be left as standing reminders. Nothing will be standing and nothing to build with. In the 6th seal, men have to go back to living in caves.
Jesus very specifically said that one cannot see and enter the kingdom of God without being born again. And he made it clear that the only way to obtain eternal life was by believing in Him (John 3:16). He made no mention of that not being the case at some point in the future. So, the onus is on you to show where scripture teaches that what Jesus taught in John 3 will no longer be true at some point in the future. Can you do that?such as saying that no one would be saved/born again during a 1007 year period on the future. Why ask a question about something not written? If you can find a verse proving people are born again even during the 70th week, by all means SHOW it, and I will immediately change my thinking. I cannot find such a verse. But then, how COULD you show me such a verse when you deny the 1000 years?
My point: the born again experience MAY be only for the church age. Can you prove or disprove this statement by scripture?
I have said so many times, right? I haven't changed my mind on that. So, yes, you're right.You and I have already agreed that the blood of animals really cannot take away sins. At best God allowed animal blood to COVER sins. Yet God used the words "atone" for the sacrifices under the law. We both agree they were only POINTING ahead to Jesus' Sacrifice. Right?
Yes, I'm tracking with you so far, but I'm sure you are going to go off the rails at some point here since I know where you're heading with this.In other words, their sins were not really "removed" or place into the sea of God's forgetfullness until Jesus died. Still agree?
Sure. I can sense you getting to your main point any time now.Yet by the very language we find describing those animal sacrifices, made it SEEM that animal blood was indeed removing their sins. Still agree?
You don't have to say please. The answer is obviously no. Only Christ's blood of the new covenant can permanently remove the sins of any person who has ever lived. He died for the sins of all people throughout history.Then you also believe that animal sacrifices will be reinstituted as sin offerings to atone for people's sins. I did not SAY that. You only inferred it. Did Moses have sin offerings back then? Did they really REMOVE sins?
Were any sins and the guilt thereof really REMOVED under the Old Covenant? Please answer.
It specifically says, as I showed, that they would be sin offerings for the atonement of the sins of the Israelite people.
Yes. So, what is your point? With all that in mind why would animal sacrifices be necessary in the future? Remember...Isn't that exactly what Leviticus said they were for under Moses law?
Exodus 29:36 And thou shalt offer every day a bullock for a sin offering for atonement:
Compare with:
Hebrews 10:4
For it is not possible that the blood of bulls and of goats should take away sins.
In other words, the bullock in verse 36 was only a temporary fix: it could not remove their sins, neither the guilt of their sins. They had to wait until Jesus death to get their sins GONE. AGree?
I don't know if you saw, but I said basically the same thing as well. I can't remember when or if it was in this thread, though. The only difference is I said the beast is mentioned 35 times in the book, so that must mean it's literal. If 6 times means something's literal then the beast must be very literal. What a scary sight it will be.The following is an argument used by Premils a lot, and has been used in this thread as well, since I recall seeing this argument in this thread.
Even though I myself agree that the thousand years are a literal thousand years, this argument, that because it is repeated 6 times in that same passage, it therefore proves the thousand years are literal, is a weak and unconvincing argument. That might be like the dragon being repeated 6 times in the same passage, and then someone arguing, well, since the dragon is mentioned 6 different times in this passage, one must conclude a literal dragon is meant, then.
I don't find this to be a particularly strong argument, either. Those other references aren't contained within a highly symbolic book like the "thousand years".A better argument would be, since every single place a cardinal number is followed by years in the Bible, the amount of years specified are literally meaning that amount, it then stands to reason, that when thousand is followed by years, so must it literally mean the amount specified here as well.
To me, that proves that time periods mentioned within highly symbolic books should not be assumed to be literal.As to something like weeks, for example, it can mean a literal 7 day week, or can mean a week of years, such as in Daniel 9. There is no set pattern where a week always has to mean a literal 7 day week every single time.
I find your argument to be unreasonable. For some reason you're fine with a week (normally 7 days) being 7 years, but you can't accept that a thousand years can be anything but a thousand years. No, I don't find that to be reasonable at all.But as to cardinal numbers being followed by years, there is a set pattern, and that is that it literally means the amount specified every single time. And for this set pattern to not also apply to a thousand when it is followed by years, I find that to be unreasonable.
Again (and hopefully for the last time), using this kind of logic couldn't we say that using the word "rapture" changes the biblical meaning since the word isn't used in scripture? I'm not buying your line of reasoning here at all. Going from being dead in sins to alive in Christ is a resurrection because all resurrection means is to go from death to life (and it doesn't have to only mean bodily).
David, I have explained my understanding of Rev 20 to you MANY times including several times recently. And you still don't know how I interpret it? Why? Anyway, I'll do it one more time.Just out of curiosity, why do you then argue that no one in Revelation 20:4 lives again, meaning as of the first resurrection? How can a resurrection possibly not involve living again, regardless what sense it might be meaning in? Who could actually argue, then be expected to be taken seriously, that a resurrection doesn't involve living again, even though that is the very definition of a resurrection?
Can you PLEASE show this in scripture. I have never heard of such a thing.Why stay in the ball park of a 1600 year old apostate church? Only the Holy Spirit can be in a person. One's own spirit was a covering. John called it a robe of white.
Now when Moses came down from the mount, his face shown so bright, they had to cover it. Was Moses given his spirit in order to communicate directly with God? Are you saying it went back inside of him? Moses is the exception, not the rule. Jesus did the same thing on the mount of transfiguration. Was he letting his spirit out, or did their eyes see what normal eyes cannot? Notice Moses was also there....
The six times is confirmation that is is REAL, not imagined. First it was "thousand years. Then it was THE thousand years. In fact, depending on which Greek manuscript, ever subsequent mention is THE thousand years, pointing to the first mention.I don't know if you saw, but I said basically the same thing as well. I can't remember when or if it was in this thread, though. The only difference is I said the beast is mentioned 35 times in the book, so that must mean it's literal. If 6 times means something's literal then the beast must be very literal. What a scary sight it will be.
Of course "thousand" CAN be symbolic. The only way to determine is the CONTEXT. I find the context very convincing that it is a real 1000 years. Can you point to a word or words in those verses of context that would show the reader it SHOULD be symbolic?I find your argument to be unreasonable. For some reason you're fine with a week (normally 7 days) being 7 years, but you can't accept that a thousand years can be anything but a thousand years. No, I don't find that to be reasonable at all.
