- Sep 26, 2016
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We are not allowed on this forum to answer "yes" to this question, but...
As I wrote above, the heavens being "no more" is interpreted in scripture as...
It could be meaning the following, though. And maybe you even agree?
Matthew 24:35 Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.
Which I do not take to mean go completely out of existence, since I agree that that is impossible. You might argue since you are a Preterist, heaven and earth already passed away in the first century and that it is connected with 70 AD. And if so, I definitely disagree with that. Per this portion of the Discourse, Jesus is no longer focusing on things pertaining to the first century, He is focusing on things involving His bodily return in the end of this age. You obviously disagree. But since that is the way the text reads to me, I can never agree with how the same text is reading to you if it differs as to how it's reading to me.
What I find interesting about you and @claninja in particular, both of you are trying to find a solution as to how Daniel 12:2 might make sense if being applied to the first century rather than in the end of this age, and that you think the solution involved a bodily resurrection, and that @claninja thinks it involves souls that were relocated from hades to heaven. Both of you are wrong, IMO.
Yet, between both of you, you at least acknowledge that the fulfilling of that passage involves a bodily resurrection in order to fulfill it. Except you are proposing a resurrection event during a period of time history knows nothing about. If saints bodily rose from the dead in 70 AD or so, where is that recorded in ancient history? Obviously, 70 AD is recorded in ancient history. Where then does ancient history record a bodily resurrection of the dead at the time? Did Josephus record that in any of his writings at the time? If yes, why isn't @claninja arguing from that perspective as well?
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