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Originally posted by Mike Beidler
Amos 7:2 -- "When they [the locusts] had completely consumed the earth's vegetation
Originally posted by Mike Beidler
If so, what about those passages in the Olivet Discourse and other places where the "earth" is mentioned in the context of the spreading of the Gospel or the mourning of the tribes of the earth?[/B]
Originally posted by npetreley
It would be more accurate to translate this as "the grass of the land." The Hebrew word is more often used as "land" than "earth." The same word is used in Amos 8:8 and 9:5.
Originally posted by npetreley
You can't make a direct word-for-word comparison because it's Hebrew vs. Greek. The root word used in Luke 21:35, where Jesus wraps up the prophecy by saying it will be a snare for the whole earth, is "ge." It's the same root for "Gaia," or "mother earth" to the Greeks. This alone wouldn't force it to mean the whole earth. But Luke 21:35 precedes the word with "pas" which means "all." So it would be exceedingly hard to argue that this does not mean the whole earth.
Originally posted by davo
I think there isn't too much difference between your Amos scriptures and Luke 21:35 they both contain:
pas indeed means "all" -as you have 'Pan-American' i.e., all-American etc. So Luke IS simply saying the whole Land.
davo
"Earth" is one of the consistent terms for the entire realm of rebellion. Even in the introduction (1:7), all the tribes of "the earth" will wail at the appearance of Jesus. "Earth" is the dwelling place of Satan (12:9), and "all the earth" follows the Beast with wonder (13:3). The "earth" worships the Beast (13:12). The saints are those redeemed "from the earth" (14:3). The wrath of God is poured out into "the earth" (16:1). The Harlot corrupted "the earth" with her fornication (19:2). "Earth" flees from the presence of the One who sits upon the throne (20:11). From these examples it is clear that "earth" represents the realm of the rebellious order.
"Those who dwell upon the earth" is a constant phrase for the citizenship of Fallen Babylon. The martyrs were slain by "those who dwell upon the earth" (6:10); the woes are directed to "those who dwell upon the earth" (8:13); "those who dwell upon the earth" rejoice at the death of God's two witnesses (11:10); "those who dwell upon the earth" worship the Beast, and in a parallel statement are identified as those whose names have not been written in the Lamb's Book of Life (13:4); the gospel is proclaimed to "those who dwell upon the earth" (14:6), implying that they are not part of the redeemed order in Christ; "those who dwell upon the earth" have become drunk with the wine of th Harlot's fornication (17:2).
This is a glimpse of the dynamics that lie behind John's description of Jesus as the "ruler of the kings of the earth," a preview of the magnitude of the victory that God has achieved in Jesus' death and resurrection. (Revelation: Holy Living in an Unholy World, pp. 72-73)
I never thought I'd say this, but I can see why this board gave up on preterists and booted them out of the eschatology forum. I give up, too.
Originally posted by Acts6:5
Mike, I think I need a smack; I've been pronouncing your name incorrectly.
Originally posted by Acts6:5
Whew - thanks for the leniency. Although, as a Marine, I don't think I'd allow a squid or a flyboy to lay the smackdown on me...regardless what kind of jedi powers you think you have.
In Christ,
Acts6:5
Originally posted by Mike Beidler
As I continue to read through the Bible in a year, I've come to the prophet Amos. Interesting things here, from a preterist perspective.
Amos 1:2 -- "Amos said: 'The LORD comes roaring out of Zion; from Jerusalem he comes bellowing! The shepherds' pastures wilt; the summit of Carmel withers.'"
In context, the LORD is coming in judgment against Damascus, Gaza, Tyre, Edom, Ammon, Moab, and ultimately Judah and Israel. Interestingly enough, all of the judgments contained in Amos 1-2 were fulfilled in the past. Of this there is no dispute between eschatological camps.
But here's the kicker: the LORD is said to "come" and his "coming" results in pastures wilting and the mountaintop withering. Is there any historical record of these things actually happening, or are we to assume that the language is exaggerative and metaphorical? What are we to think of this "coming" language? Can we apply the same hermenuetical principle to Christ's description of His own coming, which uses similar language?
(Remember, hermenuetical principles should not have to change when going to and from the Old and New Testaments. The same culture, which was extremely familiar with eschatological language, is involved here.)
Originally posted by davo
One thing is for sure, when prophecy is reefed and ripped out of its biblical time frame and context and crassly applied according to our world view and time in history, then indeed it can and does [look at all the evidence] mean anything. In the days of Oliver Cromwell they were living, as they believed and interpreted, in the "Fifth Monarchy" of Daniel.
davo
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