Well said GW in regards to Jeff. I would just add a fairly obvious fact that the rate of population growth far exceeds the rate of conversions. Most of this population growth is occuring in places that have never heard of the Gospel. If every tribe must hear, then we're going in the wrong direction. And if God is waiting on and being patient with people to come to Him before He returns, He's actually doing more damage by doing this seeing that with the exponential population growth, he is allowing more people to be born who will never hear of Jesus than those who are accepting him every second.
I think you see many of the inconsistancies with holding the common futurist position where everything is still yet to be fulfilled. And I commend you for providing another option as opposed to the apostles erred. However, I think you can see that you are making the same case as you would make for the many other verses, especially by Jesus, that describe the events of AD 70. My point here is that this particular passage in 1 Thess. does not fit this idea. You're trying to make a sqaure fit in a round hole. The context of the chapter does not lend itself to interpreting this passage as OT apocolyptical and judgemental language. This points you bring up about the dead could be valid dispite this however. But you still fail to address how he can say that "we will not all die". You also fail to address how that after the dead (that you discuss are OT believers) are raised from the dead to go to heaven, "we who are alive shall join them". I'm certain that the early Christians did not go to Heaven at the destruction of the temple. So your failure to address these points (because I don't think you have a good answer) indicates the shortcomings of your noble attempt to harmonize these issues. Perhaps the answer for me is still out there, but as you can see from how I am processing this issue...after much study, I can't get away from that first conclusion that is feared, but seems to make the most sense...that I can't see how they did not err.
I think you see many of the inconsistancies with holding the common futurist position where everything is still yet to be fulfilled. And I commend you for providing another option as opposed to the apostles erred. However, I think you can see that you are making the same case as you would make for the many other verses, especially by Jesus, that describe the events of AD 70. My point here is that this particular passage in 1 Thess. does not fit this idea. You're trying to make a sqaure fit in a round hole. The context of the chapter does not lend itself to interpreting this passage as OT apocolyptical and judgemental language. This points you bring up about the dead could be valid dispite this however. But you still fail to address how he can say that "we will not all die". You also fail to address how that after the dead (that you discuss are OT believers) are raised from the dead to go to heaven, "we who are alive shall join them". I'm certain that the early Christians did not go to Heaven at the destruction of the temple. So your failure to address these points (because I don't think you have a good answer) indicates the shortcomings of your noble attempt to harmonize these issues. Perhaps the answer for me is still out there, but as you can see from how I am processing this issue...after much study, I can't get away from that first conclusion that is feared, but seems to make the most sense...that I can't see how they did not err.
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