"I believe ... in Jesus Christ, His only begotten Son, our Lord ... who ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father Almighty, from whence He comes to judge the living and the dead. I believe ... in the resurrection of the body and life everlasting. Amen." - from the Apostles' Creed
That would be what I believe in a nutshell, eschatologically speaking. A more expansive explanation would be:
I believe that at a time no one but God knows the Lord Jesus will return, which we call the Second Coming, the Second Advent, or Parousia. At His coming the dead will rise, and the Lord will judge all, the Final Judgment. God will make all things new, a new heavens and a new earth, a glorified and restored creation, and ever shall we be with God who has made all things right.
Whether or not there will be a future Antichrist, I don't know. Though there very well may be one; but who he is or what he will do or how long he'll be in charge (and in charge of what exactly) is, I think, a matter of pure speculation. I don't believe in what is often called "the rapture", I confess that the dead will rise and we will greet the Lord when He comes, but we aren't being zapped up into heaven--instead we are greeting and meeting the coming and returning Lord who has come to judge the living and the dead and whose kingdom will have no end. I interpret the Millennium to be figurative in nature, rather than literal. I regard the Tribulation to be the ongoing tribulation which the Church has faced for two thousand years, especially in the pre-Constantinian Roman period. I also believe that, as per St. Peter's words in Acts 2 we've been living in the Last Days for two thousand years.
Suffice to say that I don't tend to concern myself too much with too many details. Christ is coming, the dead will rise, there will be a Final Judgment, God will set all things right and heaven and earth will be glorified and made new.
-CryptoLutheran