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When Will Christ Return?

What year range do you believe Jesus Christ will return in?

  • 2010 - 2020

  • 2020 - 2030

  • 2030 - 2040

  • Beyond 2040

  • I don't know


Results are only viewable after voting.
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suzybeezy

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MOD HAT ON

Folks let's remember some netiquette and let everyone participate in the discussion (iows don't monopolize the discussion) - and please keep your responses focused on the subject of the thread rather than discussing other members in open forum - that's just not nice.

MOD HAT OFF
 
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Ronald

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So, what year range do you think Jesus Christ will return?

The world is ripe for an apocalypse. In one year, many Islamic nations have been dethroned and Iran is about to attack Israel soon. If this does not ignite a major war this year, then maybe it won't happen for awhile. I think the trumpets are about to blow and that means Jesus will appear at the last trumpet, meaning well have to go throught the first six. Hold onto your faith, distress is coming soon. It may be just a few years away.
 
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Achilles6129

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The world is ripe for an apocalypse. In one year, many Islamic nations have been dethroned and Iran is about to attack Israel soon. If this does not ignite a major war this year, then maybe it won't happen for awhile. I think the trumpets are about to blow and that means Jesus will appear at the last trumpet, meaning well have to go throught the first six. Hold onto your faith, distress is coming soon. It may be just a few years away.

Right, the only problem is that these things have been going on for a very long time. However, I have discovered a new piece of information which may allow us to refine Christ's second coming with much greater accuracy. I still believe it to be in the 2030s (as I voted). More on this later, perhaps I'll start a new thread to specifically discuss it.
 
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Right, the only problem is that these things have been going on for a very long time. However, I have discovered a new piece of information which may allow us to refine Christ's second coming with much greater accuracy. I still believe it to be in the 2030s (as I voted). More on this later, perhaps I'll start a new thread to specifically discuss it.
i am still praying always for a revival of our faith in this country, and across the globe, soas the Lord may spare some, give us more time to bring the lost to the Good Shepherd.
2030s would be grand soas we could reach more of the lost. My vote was for 2019/2020/2026/2027. Can't recall exactly how those dates come together, but once upon a time I FELT them.:prayer:

Looking forward to that. Your thread and our Beloved's Most Glorious Coming.
Praise and exalt Him above all forever!
 
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eclipsenow

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Right, the only problem is that these things have been going on for a very long time. However, I have discovered a new piece of information which may allow us to refine Christ's second coming with much greater accuracy. I still believe it to be in the 2030s (as I voted). More on this later, perhaps I'll start a new thread to specifically discuss it.

Futurists are so funny. "Yes, this time it's the real deal! I truly wooly think I've cracked it this time!"
 
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Achilles6129 said in post #404:

I am nearly positive (99%, I would say) that this is describing a Christmas celebration.

Note that what's being celebrated in Revelation 11:10 isn't Christmas, but the death of the two witnesses. People "shall send gifts one to another; because these two prophets tormented them".

Christ returns directly after the two witnesses' death (see the remainder of the chapter) . . .

Some people feel that the seventh trumpet of the tribulation (Revelation 11:15-19), which will be the last trumpet to sound during the tribulation, must also be the resurrection "last trump" of 1 Corinthians 15:52. But the resurrection "last trump" won't sound until after the entire tribulation of Revelation chapters 6-18 is over, at the second coming of Jesus (Matthew 24:29-31), which doesn't occur until Revelation 19, and which is when the church will be resurrected (1 Corinthians 15:21-23,51-54, 1 Thessalonians 4:15-16, Revelation 19:7-20:6).

Some people feel that Revelation 11:15-19 means the second coming will occur immediately after the sounding of the seventh trumpet and the declaration of the replacement of the Antichrist's (the beast's) 1,260-day worldwide reign (Revelation 13:5-8, Revelation 12:6) with the reign of Jesus (Revelation 11:15). But a "time" (Revelation 11:18) can last awhile (cf. Revelation 12:14). The only part of Revelation 11:18 that will happen immediately after the seventh trumpet sounds is "thy wrath is come" (Revelation 11:18), for the plagues of the vials of God's wrath (Revelation 16), the final stage of the tribulation, will come out of the heavenly temple opening of the seventh trumpet (Revelation 11:19, Revelation 15:5-16:1).

The vials of God's wrath could then last for 75 days, for they could begin immediately after the 1,260 days of the Antichrist's worldwide reign, which 1,260 days could begin at the setting up of the abomination of desolation (Matthew 24:15, Daniel 11:31,36); and Jesus could return on the 1,335th day after the setting up of the abomination of desolation: See the "Daniel 12:11-12" part of post #403.

Also, regarding Jesus' second coming, he won't return and take de facto, physical possession of the earth until after the seventh vial of the tribulation has occurred (Revelation 16:17,19, Revelation 19:2-20:3). An analogy for the possible 75-day vials delay between Jesus taking legal possession of the earth (Revelation 11:15) and his return to take de facto, physical possession of it (Revelation chapters 19-20) would be someone in New York legally inheriting a house in California 75 days before he moves to California to live in that house.

At Jesus' return, he will resurrect and judge only the church (1 Corinthians 15:21-23, Psalms 50:3-5, cf. Mark 13:27), and then he will marry it (Revelation 19:7). Immediately after that, Revelation 19:11-21 will occur. So both the resurrection and the rewarding of the church spoken of in Revelation 11:18, as well as the destroying of the destroyers of the earth spoken of in Revelation 11:18, could occur 75 days after the sounding of the seventh trumpet. And because a "time" can last awhile, this would still be well within the "time" referred to in Revelation 11:18.

Everyone not resurrected and judged at Jesus' return won't be resurrected and judged until Revelation 20:11-15, which won't occur until sometime after the returned Jesus and the resurrected church have reigned on the earth for 1,000 years (Revelation 20:4-6). Both resurrections and judgments can still occur within the "time" of Revelation 11:18, because the original Greek word (kairos, G2540) translated there as "time" can refer to even quite a long period. For example, the same Greek word is used in 2 Corinthians 6:2 to refer to the "time" of people getting saved, which has been going on for thousands of years.
 
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eclipsenow said in post #405:

unless of course Revelation is entirely symbolic of theological themes not future events.

Revelation chapters 6-22 are about (to us) still-future events, "things which must be hereafter" (Revelation 4:1). For just as the glorious return of Jesus in Revelation 19 has never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled almost entirely literally in our future, so the highly-detailed events of the preceding tribulation in Revelation chapters 6-18 have never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled almost entirely literally in our future.

Also, Revelation 1:1b doesn't mean that Jesus in Revelation chapters 6-18 is expressing the events of the future tribulation through only symbolic images, instead of indicating those events almost entirely literally. For just as the original Greek word (deiknuo: G1166) translated as "show" in Revelation 1:1a doesn't have to refer to something being shown through symbolic images, but can refer to something being shown literally (e.g. Matthew 8:4), so also the original Greek word (semaino: G4591) translated as "signified" in Revelation 1:1b doesn't have to refer to something being indicated through symbolic images, but can refer to something being indicated literally (e.g. Acts 25:27).

Revelation is an unsealed book (Revelation 22:10), meaning that it shouldn't be difficult for Christians to understand it if they simply read it as it's written: chronologically and almost entirely literally. The few parts of it that are symbolic are almost always explained afterward (e.g. Revelation 1:20, Revelation 17:9-12), and the few symbols in Revelation that aren't explained afterward (e.g. Revelation 13:2) are usually explained elsewhere in the Bible (e.g. Daniel 7:4-7,17).

-

Revelation chapters 6-21 are chronological, insofar as the future tribulation of Revelation chapters 6-18/Matthew 24 will begin with the events of the second through sixth seals, occurring in the order shown in Revelation 6:3-14. After the events of the sixth seal, Revelation 7 will occur. Then the seventh seal will be unsealed and out of it will come the seven trumpets of the tribulation (Revelation 8:1-6).

Then the events of the first six trumpets in Revelation 8:7-9:21 will occur in the order shown there. Then Revelation 10 will occur. Then the literal 3.5-year time period of the worldwide reign of the Antichrist will occur. This time period is shown from four different angles in Revelation chapters 11-14 (Revelation 13:5,7, Revelation 11:2b-3, Revelation 12:6,14, Revelation 14:9-13). Then the seventh trumpet will sound, announcing the legal end of the Antichrist's 3.5-year worldwide reign (Revelation 11:15).

Out of the heavenly temple opening of the seventh trumpet will come the seven plagues of the seven vials (or bowls) of the tribulation (Revelation 11:19, Revelation 15:5-16:1). Then the seven vials of the tribulation (its final stage) will occur (Revelation 16). Then Jesus will return immediately after the tribulation (Matthew 24:29-31) and defeat the Antichrist and reign on the earth with the just-resurrected church for 1,000 years (Revelation 19:7-20:6). Then the events of Revelation chapters 20:7-21:8 will occur in the order shown there.
 
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eclipsenow

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Revelation chapters 6-22 are about (to us) still-future events, "things which must be hereafter" (Revelation 4:1). For just as the glorious return of Jesus in Revelation 19 has never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled almost entirely literally in our future, so the highly-detailed events of the preceding tribulation in Revelation chapters 6-18 have never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled almost entirely literally in our future.

Also, Revelation 1:1b doesn't mean that Jesus in Revelation chapters 6-18 is expressing the events of the future tribulation through only symbolic images, instead of indicating those events almost entirely literally. For just as the original Greek word (deiknuo: G1166) translated as "show" in Revelation 1:1a doesn't have to refer to something being shown through symbolic images, but can refer to something being shown literally (e.g. Matthew 8:4), so also the original Greek word (semaino: G4591) translated as "signified" in Revelation 1:1b doesn't have to refer to something being indicated through symbolic images, but can refer to something being indicated literally (e.g. Acts 25:27).

That's all fine and good, but it isn't a word study of these particular words that tells us how to read the book. It is the context of the whole bible, the images we see scattered across the whole bible, what we know of Jewish number system through our consistent hermeneutic of the whole bible, and how Revelation fits into the gospel Biblical Theology of the whole bible that unpacks it. Not what we think a Newspaper headline means on a whim.

Revelation is an unsealed book (Revelation 22:10), meaning that it shouldn't be difficult for Christians to understand it if they simply read it as it's written: chronologically and almost entirely literally. The few parts of it that are symbolic are almost always explained afterward (e.g. Revelation 1:20, Revelation 17:9-12), and the few symbols in Revelation that aren't explained afterward (e.g. Revelation 13:2) are usually explained elsewhere in the Bible (e.g. Daniel 7:4-7,17).

No, it's the mystery of the ages unsealed, unveiled. Paul elsewhere explains that mystery is the GOSPEL ITSELF! The mystery of the ages is that God would use his Messiah to bless the whole world through his glorious gospel!

Revelation chapters 6-21 are chronological, insofar as the future tribulation of Revelation chapters 6-18/Matthew 24 will begin with the events of the second through sixth seals, occurring in the order shown in Revelation 6:3-14. After the events of the sixth seal, Revelation 7 will occur. Then the seventh seal will be unsealed and out of it will come the seven trumpets of the tribulation (Revelation 8:1-6).
No, they are themes!
These 4 themes do not describe particular events, and are not a 'future timetable' to be guessed. (Otherwise, what good has this part of Scripture even been for the church for the last 2000 years?) Instead, they are generally descriptive, rather than being specifically prescriptive. They describe, they don't order. This is big picture language, not details.

The 4 themes that will keep repeating throughout the 2000 years (and counting) of the 'Last Days':7 Seals depicting TYRANNY; Rev 6-7
7 trumpets depicting CHAOS IN CREATION 8-11
7 signs depicting PERSECUTION OF BELIEVERS 12-14
7 plagues depicting DESTRUCTION OF THE EARTH 15-16

Note the symbolism in the structure and pattern. Each theme is framed with 7 descriptions which finish with 'end of the world' language. This is universal language to describe the ‘Last Days’ we have lived in for 2000 years. Try not to think of these events as having a 'clock' or date. They are a waltz, not a timetable, expressionistic rather than photographic. It’s the cosmic battle of the gospel itself restated in Japanese Manga rather than a future timetable.

It is as universal and generally descriptive as the way John addressed this letter to 7 specific churches. While there were 7 actual, specific churches, John was writing warnings and encouragement to the universal church.

So while there might be actual examples of Roman persecution of these believers, including the legendary 'anti-Christ' of Nero, all Christians in all times will face opposition and persecution. This is a series of universal descriptions and encouragement's.

I've told you before, I'm not going to debate the particulars of your own end times table until you've proved that the book of Revelation is meant to be read as such.

Regards
 
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Achilles6129

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We shall see. I believe that Rev. 11 is in fact describing a Christmas celebration that coincides with the death of the two witnesses. I will be working on a post that speculates on the exact year (and approximate day) of Jesus Christ's return. I'll submit my evidence. See what you think :cool:
 
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eclipsenow

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We shall see. I believe that Rev. 11 is in fact describing a Christmas celebration that coincides with the death of the two witnesses. I will be working on a post that speculates on the exact year (and approximate day) of Jesus Christ's return. I'll submit my evidence. See what you think :cool:

This time he's really cracked it. No really! ;) :thumbsup:
Problem is, you haven't even justified reading Revelation as predicting specific future events in the first place. So many of you futurists seem to think that Revelation is a mysterious book that can only be understood in your particular set of applications of verses to today's events.

What that in effect says is that the vast majority of Revelation has been utterly incomprehensible and useless to most Christians for the last 2000 years. Only this year, with these geopolitics and this technology, can we finally understand it!

What hogwash! John was writing to his generation of Christians about things that were going to happen 'soon' for 'the time was near'. He was writing a sermon about persecution.
 
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Achilles6129

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This time he's really cracked it. No really! ;) :thumbsup:
Problem is, you haven't even justified reading Revelation as predicting specific future events in the first place. So many of you futurists seem to think that Revelation is a mysterious book that can only be understood in your particular set of applications of verses to today's events.

What that in effect says is that the vast majority of Revelation has been utterly incomprehensible and useless to most Christians for the last 2000 years. Only this year, with these geopolitics and this technology, can we finally understand it!

What hogwash! John was writing to his generation of Christians about things that were going to happen 'soon' for 'the time was near'. He was writing a sermon about persecution.

We'll see about that :) Wait till you see my evidence, if I get the time to start a new thread speculating on the year of Christ's return :)
 
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eclipsenow

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We'll see about that :) Wait till you see my evidence, if I get the time to start a new thread speculating on the year of Christ's return :)

You're not getting it are you? I'm not going to treat your 'evidence' as anything other than pure speculative fiction, just like another dime-a-dozen Tim LaHaye novel, until you've answered my question.

Why do you think Revelation is about the future? What presuppositions are you carrying around in your head that force you to read it like that?

Until you can answer these questions I doubt I'll even bother reading your article. It would bore me to tears. It's all just so profoundly silly, an exercise in introspective navel gazing and creative writing based on today's newspapers. It reminds me of a creative writing class. Grab a dozen headlines, add a beast and the number 666 and a mark, and see what story you can come up with. It's probably helpful if you have a glass of port first. ;)

Hmmm, port. I have to go now. Time to relax and forget this thread ever happened so I can actually sleep tonight, and not get all worried about the State of theology today. :doh:
 
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eclipsenow said in post #428

That's all fine and good, but it isn't a word study of these particular words that tells us how to read the book.

How do you feel a word study refutes futurism?

It is the context of the whole bible, the images we see scattered across the whole bible, what we know of Jewish number system through our consistent hermeneutic of the whole bible, and how Revelation fits into the gospel Biblical Theology of the whole bible that unpacks it.

How do you feel the whole Bible or the gospel refutes futurism?

Not what we think a Newspaper headline means on a whim.

Nothing has been said on a whim. But Christians do need to compare the never-fulfilled prophecies of Rev. chs. 6-22 with current events in order to see if any current event has or hasn't fulfilled one of those prophecies. For if Christians never find out via the news (i.e. through a newspaper or any other source of news) what's happening out in the world, how can they possibly ever know whether or not the never-fulfilled prophecies of Rev. chs. 6-22 are now being fulfilled in the world? What good would it do for them to have knowledge of Biblical prophecies (Mk. 13:23, Rev. 1:1, 22:16) if they for no good reason refuse to determine from the news where in the sequence of prophesied events the world currently is? Also, preterism employs its own form of newspaper theology, in that preterism desperately searches the equivalent of ancient newspapers, ancient accounts of at-that-time relatively recent events (for example, the reporting by Josephus of "The Jewish War"), hoping to find any event around 50-70 AD which preterism can try to claim was the fulfillment of a tribulation event foretold in Rev. chs. 6-18 or Mt. 24.

Paul elsewhere explains that mystery is the GOSPEL ITSELF!

Rev. chs. 6-22 aren't referring to a mystery, or to the gospel, but to literal, future events, "things which must be hereafter" (Rev. 4:1).

No, they are themes!

Rev. isn't a about general themes, but is a very specific timetable. That's why it's so highly detailed and so long in Rev. chs. 6-22. To reduce all of it to general themes renders all of the myriad and amazing details in Rev. chs. 6-22 utterly useless. It's like throwing Rev. chs. 6-22 into the trash, just to be done with them.

Otherwise, what good has this part of Scripture even been for the church for the last 2000 years?

Just as the glorious return of Jesus in Rev. 19:7-20:3 has always been relevant to Christians (because all scripture is profitable: 2 Tim. 3:16) despite the fact that it has never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled (and almost entirely literally) in our future, so the highly-detailed events of the preceding tribulation in Rev. chs. 6-18 have always been relevant to Christians, despite the fact that they've never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled (and almost entirely literally) in our future. Also, Christians don't have to experience every literal event in scripture, whether past literal events (e.g. Gen. chs. 1-11) or future literal events (e.g. Rev. chs. 6-18) in order for every scripture to be profitable to Christians (2 Tim. 3:16).

The 4 themes that will keep repeating throughout the 2000 years (and counting) of the 'Last Days':7 Seals depicting TYRANNY; Rev 6-7
7 trumpets depicting CHAOS IN CREATION 8-11
7 signs depicting PERSECUTION OF BELIEVERS 12-14
7 plagues depicting DESTRUCTION OF THE EARTH 15-16

Please indicate how you feel each of the details of Rev. chs. 6-7 depicts tyranny generally over the last 2,000 years, and how each of the details of Rev. chs. 8-11 depicts chaos in creation generally over the last 2,000 years, and how each of the details of Rev. chs. 12-14 depicts persecution of believers generally over the last 2,000 years, and how each of the details of Rev. chs. 15-16 depicts the destruction of the earth generally over the llast 2,000 years.

Note the symbolism in the structure and pattern.

Rev.'s structure/pattern don't change the fact that's it's almost entirely literal (see the "Revelation 1:1b" part of post #427).

Each theme is framed with 7 descriptions which finish with 'end of the world' language.

By the "end of the world", do you mean the 2nd coming? If so, nothing at the end of the 7 seals or 7 trumpets of Rev. requires that the 2nd coming will happen at that time.

This is universal language to describe the ‘Last Days’ we have lived in for 2000 years.

Rev. isn't universal language, but we have been living in the last "days" for the last 2,000 years, for they began in the 1st century with Jesus' 1st coming (Heb. 1:2) and the Holy Spirit's coming at the Pentecost in Acts 2 (Acts 2:16-17). The last "days" are the last 3 roughly 1,000-year "days" (2 Pet. 3:8) of the 7 roughly 1,000-year "days" from the creation of Adam in roughly 4,000 BC to the future end of the present earth and the creation of the new earth (Rev. 21:1) in roughly 3,000 AD. So the last "days" are the roughly 3,000 years from Jesus' 1st coming to sometime after the future millennium (Rev. 20:4-6), which will be during the last roughly 1,000-year "day".

Try not to think of these events as having a 'clock' or date.

Why not?

They are a waltz, not a timetable, expressionistic rather than photographic.

They are a timetable, though not entirely photographic.

It’s the cosmic battle of the gospel itself restated in Japanese Manga rather than a future timetable.

Rev. chs. 6-22 are a future timetable. Please indicate how you feel each of their details is the gospel restated in Japanese Manga.

It is as universal and generally descriptive as the way John addressed this letter to 7 specific churches.

Everything in the 7 epistles to 7 churches in Rev. chs. 2-3 isn't universal or generally descriptive, but applied to 7 literal, 1st-century local church congregations in 7 cities in the Roman province of "Asia" (Rev. 1:11b).

So while there might be actual examples of Roman persecution of these believers, including the legendary 'anti-Christ' of Nero . . .

Nero didn't fulfill the detailed references to the Antichrist (the individual-man aspect of the beast) in Rev. 13:4-18, 16:2-16, 19:19-21. Also, Nero didn't fulfill other detailed Antichrist scriptures (e.g. 2 Thes. 2:3-9, Dan. 11:31,36, Mt. 24:15). And John didn't see the detailed prophecies of Rev. until decades after the time of Nero. Irenaeus (born c. 140 AD) said: "We will not, however, incur the risk of pronouncing positively as to the name of Antichrist; for if it were necessary that his name should be distinctly revealed in this present time, it would have been announced by him [John] who beheld the apocalyptic vision [Rev.]. For that was seen no very long time since, but almost in our day, towards the end of Domitian's reign" (Against Heresies 5:30:3c). The end of Domitian's reign was 96 AD. Nero's reign was 54-68 AD. The detailed prophecies regarding the Antichrist haven't yet been fulfilled.

I'm not going to debate the particulars of your own end times table until you've proved that the book of Revelation is meant to be read as such.

How do you feel that hasn't been proved?

---

eclipsenow said in post #430:

So many of you futurists seem to think that Revelation is a mysterious book . . .

Just the opposite: Rev. is an unsealed book (see the "unsealed book" part of post #427).

Only this year, with these geopolitics and this technology, can we finally understand it!

What hogwash!

Futurists look at today's geopolitics only to help them consider different ways for how the never-fulfilled, yet still understandable, geopolitical prophecies in Rev. chs. 6-18 might be fulfilled in our future.

John was writing to his generation of Christians about things that were going to happen 'soon' for 'the time was near'.

From the viewpoint of men, part of what Rev. chs. 2-3 foretold could have begun unfolding "shortly" (Rev. 1:1,3). For the letters to the 7 literal, 1st-century local church congregations (Rev. chs. 2-3) in the Roman province of "Asia" (Rev. 1:11) could have foretold a 1st-century persecution (Rev. 2:10, Rev. 3:10) under the Roman Emperor Domitian which happened shortly after John saw his vision around 95 AD, near the end of Domitian's reign (Irenaeus, Against Heresies 5:30:3c). But even all the (to us) still-future events of the coming tribulation and the subsequent 2nd coming (Rev. chs. 6-19) will unfold "shortly" (Rev. 1:1,3) or "quickly" (Rev. 22:20) after John saw his vision. For from the viewpoint of God, even the passing of some 2,000 years is like the passing of only 2 days (2 Pet. 3:8). Christians should look at the future fulfillment of Rev. chs. 6-19 from the viewpoint of God, not men, for whom the passing of some 2,000 years seems like a long delay for its fulfillment (2 Pet. 3:9).
 
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Achilles6129 said in post #429:

I believe that Rev. 11 is in fact describing a Christmas celebration that coincides with the death of the two witnesses.

What's being celebrated in Rev. 11:10 isn't Christmas, but only the death of the 2 witnesses. People "shall send gifts one to another; because these two prophets tormented them", not because it's Christmas.

I will be working on a post that speculates on the exact year (and approximate day) of Jesus Christ's return.

That's good, for it is possible for believers to know when Jesus will return (see the 2nd part of post #401).
 
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Achilles6129

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What's being celebrated in Rev. 11:10 isn't Christmas, but only the death of the 2 witnesses. People "shall send gifts one to another; because these two prophets tormented them", not because it's Christmas.

I believe that the sending of gifts coincides with Christmas. The death of the two witnesses will give them extra incentive to enjoy the holiday.

That's good, for it is possible for believers to know when Jesus will return (see the 2nd part of post #401).

Indeed, we should always be speculating about the Lord's return.
 
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eclipsenow

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Nothing has been said on a whim. But Christians do need to compare the never-fulfilled prophecies of Rev. chs. 6-22 with current events in order to see if any current event has or hasn't fulfilled one of those prophecies. For if Christians never find out via the news (i.e. through a newspaper or any other source of news) what's happening out in the world, how can they possibly ever know whether or not the never-fulfilled prophecies of Rev. chs. 6-22 are now being fulfilled in the world?
So your assumption dictates your reading. How convenient! ;)
1. Assume it's about future events, not highly detailed symbols so we can... read the rest of the bible and understand the clear theological story it is telling us. No, this can't be theology! It's highly detailed! There's nothing detailed about theology! ;) Theology is just wishy washy good intentions, anything detailed just has to be a future event! :thumbsup:

Can you hear what you are implying? Just because John casts his symbols into interesting and detailed configurations is not in and of itself evidence that these are literal events or predictions of particular future events. Not at all!

Jesus had many highly detailed parables that were not predictions of literal events. But some were. Many described his death and resurrection in highly symbolic language. It's a good way to describe the gospel. So when John introduces us to his letter and describes it as the gospel of the Lord Jesus, and then writes all about Jesus death and resurrection in symbolic picture language, we should be quickly cued in that this is GOSPEL THEOLOGY!

Your arguments to the contrary are sounding increasingly strained, weak, and frantic.

What good would it do for them to have knowledge of Biblical prophecies (Mk. 13:23, Rev. 1:1, 22:16) if they for no good reason refuse to determine from the news where in the sequence of prophesied events the world currently is?
Mark 13 about the abomination was fulfilled in AD70. But that is only on one level. It, again, is a highly symbolic passage dealing both with the end of the world and how God is going to deal with sin on the way to the New Heavens and New Earth. It's by Jesus death and resurrection. It's by the gospel! But right now is not about Mark 13, which is a very complex passage.

Also, preterism employs its own form of newspaper theology, in that preterism desperately searches the equivalent of ancient newspapers, ancient accounts of at-that-time relatively recent events (for example, the reporting by Josephus of "The Jewish War"), hoping to find any event around 50-70 AD which preterism can try to claim was the fulfillment of a tribulation event foretold in Rev. chs. 6-18 or Mt. 24.
Well, I'm a symbolist not a preterist, but I would say that I have more sympathy for a Preterist reading than yours. Basically, believe it or not, John was writing to and about and for an audience of people 2000 years ago! But through his theology we get hints of what to expect life generally to be like until the Lord returns on Judgement Day to raise the dead and judge between good and evil, friends and enemies, banish death forever, and usher in the New Heavens and New Earth.

Rev. chs. 6-22 aren't referring to a mystery, or to the gospel, but to literal, future events, "things which must be hereafter" (Rev. 4:1).
Once again, if we can ONLY understand them with TODAY's HEADLINES, then the book is incomprehensible and irrelevant and unhelpful to everyone prior to us. In your rush to make Revelation all about your assumptions about us and our generation you just didn't stop to consider what you were doing to every previous generation of Christians, did you? Well, did you?


Rev. isn't a about general themes, but is a very specific timetable.
Just keep saying that to yourself. Make sure you click your ruby slippers together and say it 3 times.


That's why it's so highly detailed and so long in Rev. chs. 6-22.
That's right, the Parable of the Good Samaritan was highly detailed and just HAD to be a future event! A literal, actual Samaritan! Also the same with the 4 soils. The Kingdom of God is really, literally, all about dirt. Did you plant your seeds and water your 4 soils out the back today? It's important. It's literally about it!

To reduce all of it to general themes renders all of the myriad and amazing details in Rev. chs. 6-22 utterly useless.
Only if you don't know your Old Testament and the symbols used there, or how to use Jewish number symbolism. But if you're looking for the intricate theological story John is telling in Revelation then there's a whole world of meaning and comfort and theology that has been applicable to the whole church for the last 2000 years. And it still will be applicable for the next 10,000 years if the Lord gives us that much time!

It's like throwing Rev. chs. 6-22 into the trash, just to be done with them.
Says someone who has NEVER thought about the implications of making Revelation about TODAY's NEWSPAPERS so that NO PRIOR CHRISTIAN could understand them, and that THEY may as well have thrown it in the trash! But hey, we'll just forget all that will we? Had a bit of a blind spot did we?

Just as the glorious return of Jesus in Rev. 19:7-20:3 has always been relevant to Christians (because all scripture is profitable: 2 Tim. 3:16) despite the fact that it has never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled (and almost entirely literally) in our future,
Yes, even a highly symbolic presentation of the gospel would include the good news of Jesus return. Well done! You spotted that symbolism can actually discuss already known literal events. But you don't then get to turn around and apply a literal reading to the whole of Revelation because of this ONE literal event (that still uses highly symbolic writing to describe it!) any more than you get to say Jesus has 7 eyes and 7 horns. Literally.


so the highly-detailed events of the preceding tribulation in Rev. chs. 6-18 have always been relevant to Christians,
The word so is out of place here. There is no so. There is no connection between your wild assumptions about how to read Revelation through TODAY'S newspapers and any connection or relevance whatsoever to the vast majority of Christians over the vast majority of history. None of them would 'get it'. There's nothing to get until we all buy a pair of your special 'lenses'. The book becomes invisible, incomprehensible, until we all wear your own particular brand of headlines. It's not just you, but all your futurist buddies two. You've all made the book invisible to all prior Christians!


Also, Christians don't have to experience every literal event in scripture, whether past literal events (e.g. Gen. chs. 1-11) or future literal events (e.g. Rev. chs. 6-18) in order for every scripture to be profitable to Christians (2 Tim. 3:16).
I agree. We don't have to experience Jesus death and resurrection to trust in it. But we do have to 'hear it' to understand it. The way you read Revelation, no prior Christians could understand it at all. There's nothing to comprehend. Nothing to benefit from. It's all incomprehensible gobbledegook until your special headlines come along.

Please indicate how you feel each of the details of Rev. chs. 6-7 depicts tyranny generally over the last 2,000 years, and how each of the details of Rev. chs. 8-11 depicts chaos in creation generally over the last 2,000 years, and how each of the details of Rev. chs. 12-14 depicts persecution of believers generally over the last 2,000 years, and how each of the details of Rev. chs. 15-16 depicts the destruction of the earth generally over the llast 2,000 years.
I've already got a day job, and don't have to play this game. You don't get to pretend that your unprovable assertions about Revelation are reality when you can't answer the questions above. Just because you CANNOT answer the questions above does not mean you get to hit me with a bunch of questions I don't have TIME to answer! That's just irrational and unfair.

I already copied and pasted an article I wrote on a chapter of Rev that I think is a gospel recap. It's in another thread. Read it there.

Rev.'s structure/pattern don't change the fact that's it's almost entirely literal (see the "Revelation 1:1b" part of post #427).
Mere assertion and repetition does not win an argument. But a clear reading of scripture that sits well with the rest of the bible, proves to be understandable to all Christians (especially John's generation), sits the highly symbolic reading of Revelation within the clearer guidelines of the more literal parts of the New Testament, and rings true to the purposes of John's writing the gospel to his generation, now that's a real winner! ;)
 
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Achilles6129 said in post #435:

I believe that the sending of gifts coincides with Christmas.

Why?

The death of the two witnesses will give them extra incentive to enjoy the holiday.

On what scripture is the "extra" or "the holiday" part based? Why can't the death of the two witnesses be the only incentive for them to be sending gifts?

"And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoice over them, and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another; because these two prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth" (Revelation 11:10) (i.e. not also because it's Christmas, or for any other reason).

Indeed, we should always be speculating about the Lord's return.

The scriptures could give us all the info we need (see the "Daniel 12:11-12" part of post #403, and the "Matthew 24:36" part of post #401), so that we don't have to merely speculate, in the sense of just making a guess with no basis in scripture.

--

Achilles6129 said in post #437:

Just wanted to say that I enjoy Bible2's posts. Keep up the good work!

Thanks for the encouragement.

I should be posting my thread speculating on the exact date of the return of Christ shortly (maybe this weekend if I have time). Hope to see you there.

Why not post your idea of the possible exact date here in this thread?
 
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eclipsenow said in post #436:

So your assumption dictates your reading. How convenient!

It's not just convenient, but rational to assume that the future (i.e. "things which must be hereafter" Rev. 4:1), highly-detailed, almost entirely literal, and chronological events of Rev. chs. 6-22 have never been fulfilled, when no history book shows them being fulfilled.

If you feel they've been fulfilled, simply quote the historical sources which prove that to be the case.

1. Assume it's about future events, not highly detailed symbols so we can... read the rest of the bible and understand the clear theological story it is telling us. No, this can't be theology! It's highly detailed! There's nothing detailed about theology! Theology is just wishy washy good intentions, anything detailed just has to be a future event!

Please indicate what highly-detailed and "clear theological story" you feel all the details in Rev. chs. 6-22 symbolize.

Can you hear what you are implying? Just because John casts his symbols into interesting and detailed configurations is not in and of itself evidence that these are literal events or predictions of particular future events. Not at all!

What's the evidence that Rev. chs. 6-22 aren't almost entirely literal events or predictions of particular future events (i.e. "things which must be hereafter" Rev. 4:1), especially when they're so highly detailed and in chronological order? See the "Revelation chapters 6-21 are chronological" part of post #427.

Jesus had many highly detailed parables that were not predictions of literal events.

That's right. But the Bible makes clear they were parables, by calling them "parables", and/or by using in them words such as "like" and "as", and by presenting them as things which had already happened. But nothing in Rev. chs. 6-22 requires that they're a parable, instead of them being almost entirely literal (see the "symbolic" part of post #427). Also nothing in Rev. chs. 6-22 requires that they're things which already happened, instead of "things which must be hereafter" (Rev. 4:1).

What in Rev. has given you the idea that the details in Rev. chs. 6-22 aren't predictions of literal events?

But some were. Many described his death and resurrection in highly symbolic language. It's a good way to describe the gospel. So when John introduces us to his letter and describes it as the gospel of the Lord Jesus, and then writes all about Jesus death and resurrection in symbolic picture language, we should be quickly cued in that this is GOSPEL THEOLOGY!

What specific verses in Rev. are you referring to?

Your arguments to the contrary are sounding increasingly strained, weak, and frantic.

How?

Mark 13 about the abomination was fulfilled in AD70.

Mark 13:14 wasn't fulfilled in 70 AD, for it's referring back to Dan. 11:31.

The abomination of desolation (AOD) in Dan. 11:31 was typically fulfilled by the AOD in 1 Maccabees 1:54, which occurred in the holy place of the 2nd temple building at the time of Antiochus IV. But per Mt. 24:15, the church will see the AOD in Dan. 11:31 fulfilled (antitypically) in the future, when the church will see the AOD "stand" "in" the holy place of the temple building (which will exist in the future). This future AOD could be a standing, android image of the Antichrist (the AC) (Rev. 13:15) which his followers ("they") will put in the holy place of the temple (Dan. 11:31) to be worshipped (Rev. 13:15), after "they" have stopped the daily Mosaic animal sacrifices which the ultra-Orthodox Jews in Israel will have restarted in front of the temple (Dan. 11:31). This image will "pollute" the holy place of the temple (Dan. 11:31). The AC will then fulfill Dan. 11:36/2 Thes. 2:4 by sitting himself in the temple and proclaiming himself God. By the power of Satan (the dragon), the AC (the individual-man aspect of the beast) will then rule and be worshipped by all the nations of the earth for 3.5 literal years (Rev. 13:4-8), and will physically overcome Biblical Christians in every nation (Rev. 13:7-10, 14:12-13, 20:4, Mt. 24:9-13).

Also, from the day on which (antitypically) "the daily sacrifice shall be taken away, and the abomination that maketh desolate set up, there shall be a thousand two hundred and ninety days. Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days" (Dan. 12:11-12, Rev. 16:15). Also, because the AC will fulfill Dan. 11:31 antitypically and will fulfill Dan. 11:36 for the 1st (and only) time, then he'll also fulfill all of Dan. 11:21-45 (the 1st part of it antitypically, and the rest for the 1st and only time) when he arises on the world stage, for that passage refers to the career of the same man. And since the AC will fulfill all of Dan. 11:21-45 when he arises on the world stage, then just preceding his arising on the world stage, Dan. 11:13-19 could be antitypically fulfilled by an Iraqi Baathist General defeating and occupying Israel and Egypt with a huge Iraqi Army (Dan. 11:15-17; in verse 17, the original Hebrew word translated as "daughter" is "bath").

But that is only on one level. It, again, is a highly symbolic passage dealing both with the end of the world and how God is going to deal with sin on the way to the New Heavens and New Earth. It's by Jesus death and resurrection. It's by the gospel! But right now is not about Mark 13, which is a very complex passage.

Why can't Mark 13 be almost entirely literal, just as Rev. chs. 6-22 are almost entirely literal?

Also, what "gospel" verses in Mark 13 are you referring to, and why do you feel it's a "very complex" passage?

Well, I'm a symbolist not a preterist, but I would say that I have more sympathy for a Preterist reading than yours.

Do you mean a partial preterist reading? If so, why does partial preterism believe in a future 2nd coming but not a future tribulation, when:

1. The 2nd coming & rapture (the gathering together/catching up together of the church: 2 Thes. 2:1, 1 Thes. 4:15-17) must occur immediately after the trib of Mt. 24/Rev. chs. 6-18 (Mt. 24:29-31, Rev. 19:7-20:6);

2. The 2nd coming & rapture can't occur until sometime after the man of sin (commonly called the Antichrist, also called the beast) sits in a 3rd Jewish temple in Jerusalem during the trib and declares himself God (2 Thes. 2:1-4, Dan. 11:31,36, Mt. 24:15-31, Rev. 11:1-2, 13:4-8); and

3. At Jesus' 2nd coming to rapture and marry the church he'll destroy the Antichrist (2 Thes. 2:1,8, Rev. 19:7,20)?

-

Partial preterism might reply: "It's obvious the rapture hasn't happened yet".

That's right. But full preterism nonetheless still (mistakenly) claims the 2nd coming, resurrection, & rapture described in 1 Thes. 4:15-17 (and in 2 Thes. 2:1, Mt. 24:29-31, 1 Cor. 15:22-23,52-54, & Rev. 19:7-20:6) have already happened, for full preterism employs the same "it's only allegorical, not literal" argument that partial preterism uses to (mistakenly) claim that all the highly-detailed, myriad different events of the trib of Rev. chs. 6-18 have already happened. If partial preterism has no problem accepting that the 2nd coming, resurrection, & rapture haven't yet occurred, for nowhere in history do we find the events of 1 Thes. 4:15-17 (which are the same events as 2 Thes. 2:1, Mt. 24:29-31, 1 Cor. 15:22-23,52-54, & Rev. 19:7-20:6), then why does partial preterism have a problem accepting that the events of Rev. chs. 6-18 haven't yet occurred, for nowhere in history do we find these events?

Basically, believe it or not, John was writing to and about and for an audience of people 2000 years ago!

That's right, and all the time since then. See the "relevant" part of post #433, and the "soon" part of post #433.

But through his theology we get hints of what to expect life generally to be like until the Lord returns on Judgement Day to raise the dead and judge between good and evil, friends and enemies, banish death forever, and usher in the New Heavens and New Earth.

On what Rev. verses is the "generally" part based?

Also, on what Rev. verses is the idea based of Jesus ushering in the New Heavens and New Earth immediately at his return?

Or, are you thinking of 2 Pet. 3:10-13?

If so, re: 2 Pet. 3:10-13, in the day of the Lord (DOTL) will occur the destruction of heaven (the 1st heaven: the sky, the atmosphere) and the earth (the surface of the earth) at the great white throne judgment (Rev. 20:11, 21:1), and this will be followed by the creation of a new atmosphere and a new surface for the earth (2 Pet. 3:13, Rev. 21:1) onto which New Jerusalem, the Father's house (Jn. 14:2, Rev. 21:2-3), will descend from the 3rd heaven (Rev. 21:2-3). But the DOTL won't immediately bring the destruction of the current atmosphere and surface of the earth, for the DOTL will begin at Jesus' 2nd coming (1 Cor. 1:7-8) as a thief (2 Pet. 3:10a, Rev. 16:15), after which he'll establish his kingdom physically on the earth with the bodily resurrected church for 1,000 years (Rev. 19:7-20:6, 5:10, 2:26-29).

After the 1,000 years are over, the Gog/Magog rebellion will occur (Rev. 20:7-10, Ezek. chs. 38-39), and after the defeat of the Gog/Magog rebellion at least 7 more years will occur on the earth (Ezek. 39:9b) before its atmosphere and surface are destroyed at the white throne judgment (Rev. 20:11). All these events, from Jesus' 2nd coming to the white throne judgment, will be part of the DOTL, because it's not a 24-hour day, but to God is like a 1,000-year "day" (2 Pet. 3:8).
 
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eclipsenow said in post #436:

Once again, if we can ONLY understand them with TODAY's HEADLINES, then the book is incomprehensible and irrelevant and unhelpful to everyone prior to us.

Who's said we can only understand them with today's headlines? See the "Revelation is an unsealed book" part of post #427.

In your rush to make Revelation all about your assumptions about us and our generation you just didn't stop to consider what you were doing to every previous generation of Christians, did you? Well, did you?

On what do you base the assumption that Rev. chs. 6-18 aren't about us and our generation? And how does them being about us (if we as individuals are still alive when they begin) do anything averse to previous generations?

Just keep saying that to yourself. Make sure you click your ruby slippers together and say it 3 times.

"That" isn't based on any wish (for who would wish to go through the horrors of Rev. chs. 6-18?), but on the future (i.e. "things which must be hereafter" Rev. 4:1), highly-detailed, almost entirely literal, and chronological nature of Rev. chs. 6-22.

That's right, the Parable of the Good Samaritan was highly detailed and just HAD to be a future event!

What requires Lk. 10:30-35 was a parable, and not something that literally happened?

Also, who's said that any things highly detailed have to be future when they're presented as things that happened in the past, rather than presented as "things which must be hereafter" (Rev. 4:1)?

Also, why do you feel Rev. chs. 6-22 must be entirely symbolic rather than almost entirely literal?

A literal, actual Samaritan!

Yes. They existed (Lk. 17:16).

Also the same with the 4 soils.

No, for Matthew 13:18 says it's a "parable".

The Kingdom of God is really, literally, all about dirt.

Not when it's a "parable".

Did you plant your seeds and water your 4 soils out the back today? It's important. It's literally about it!

Based on what?

Only if you don't know your Old Testament and the symbols used there, or how to use Jewish number symbolism. But if you're looking for the intricate theological story John is telling in Revelation then there's a whole world of meaning and comfort and theology that has been applicable to the whole church for the last 2000 years. And it still will be applicable for the next 10,000 years if the Lord gives us that much time!

Please indicate how you feel each detail in Rev. chs. 6-22 is a Jewish theological symbol explained in the OT, and how you feel each detail in Rev. chs. 6-22 is part of an intricate "theological" story.

Says someone who has NEVER thought about the implications of making Revelation about TODAY's NEWSPAPERS so that NO PRIOR CHRISTIAN could understand them, and that THEY may as well have thrown it in the trash! But hey, we'll just forget all that will we? Had a bit of a blind spot did we?

No, for, again, who's said we can only understand Rev. chs. 6-22 with today's headlines? See the "Revelation is an unsealed book" part of post #427.

Yes, even a highly symbolic presentation of the gospel would include the good news of Jesus return.

Please indicate how you feel each detail in Rev. chs. 6-22 is a highly symbolic presentation of the gospel.

Well done! You spotted that symbolism can actually discuss already known literal events.

Please indicate how you feel each detail in Rev. chs. 6-22 is an already known literal event.

But you don't then get to turn around and apply a literal reading to the whole of Revelation because of this ONE literal event (that still uses highly symbolic writing to describe it!) any more than you get to say Jesus has 7 eyes and 7 horns. Literally.

Who's said the whole of Rev. is literal?

Also, what do you feel is "highly symbolic writing" in Rev.'s description of the 2nd coming?

Re: Rev. 5:6, parts of that verse are literal (the throne of God in heaven, the 4 beasts, the 24 elders, Jesus having been slain, the 7 Spirits of God, the earth) and parts of Rev. 5:6 are symbolic (Jesus being a Lamb, Jesus having 7 horns, Jesus having 7 eyes).

The word so is out of place here. There is no so. There is no connection between your wild assumptions about how to read Revelation through TODAY'S newspapers and any connection or relevance whatsoever to the vast majority of Christians over the vast majority of history. None of them would 'get it'. There's nothing to get until we all buy a pair of your special 'lenses'. The book becomes invisible, incomprehensible, until we all wear your own particular brand of headlines. It's not just you, but all your futurist buddies two. You've all made the book invisible to all prior Christians!

I agree. We don't have to experience Jesus death and resurrection to trust in it. But we do have to 'hear it' to understand it. The way you read Revelation, no prior Christians could understand it at all. There's nothing to comprehend. Nothing to benefit from. It's all incomprehensible gobbledegook until your special headlines come along.

Again, who's said we can only understand Rev. chs. 6-22 with today's headlines? See the "Revelation is an unsealed book" part of post #427.

I've already got a day job, and don't have to play this game.

It's not a game.

You don't get to pretend that your unprovable assertions about Revelation are reality when you can't answer the questions above.

What assertions do you feel haven't been proven? Also, how do you feel they've been disproven, or that you're assertions have been proven?

Also, what question do you feel hasn't been answered? And how have you answered the requests made of you?

Just because you CANNOT answer the questions above does not mean you get to hit me with a bunch of questions I don't have TIME to answer!

If you don't have the time, then we can focus on just 1 chapter at a time, or even just 1 verse at a time. E.g. we can 1st focus on just Rev. 13.

If you feel Rev. 13 is entirely symbolic, then what do you feel each detail in Rev. 13 represents?

That's just irrational and unfair.

How?

I already copied and pasted an article I wrote on a chapter of Rev that I think is a gospel recap. It's in another thread. Read it there.

Where?

Mere assertion and repetition does not win an argument.

What repeated assertions do you feel haven't been proven? Also, how do you feel they've been disproven, or that you're repeated assertions have been proven?

But a clear reading of scripture that sits well with the rest of the bible, proves to be understandable to all Christians (especially John's generation), sits the highly symbolic reading of Revelation within the clearer guidelines of the more literal parts of the New Testament, and rings true to the purposes of John's writing the gospel to his generation, now that's a real winner!

Please indicate how you feel each detail in Rev. chs. 6-22 is symbolic of something explained in another, literal and gospel-related part of the New Testament.
 
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