Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
eclipsenow said in post 837:
So, based on the fact that Revelation mentioned (drum roll please) the GOSPEL promise that Jesus will RETURN one day, do we add 2000 years to the phrase 'after this'?
eclipsenow said in post 837:
4 After this I looked,
Cool, so that makes it 2000 years right?
eclipsenow said in post 837:
And then, I guess, to be consistent, we must add another 2000 years in Chapter 7.
7 After this I saw four angels
eclipsenow said in post 837:
Don't forget chapter 19: After this
eclipsenow said in post 837:
Now run along, you've got some more bible to invent as you come up with an excuse for why 'after this' just doesn't mean the next symbolic sequence in John's sermon, which is the way all the scholars I bother with read it.
eclipsenow said in post 837:
Now run along, you've got some more bible to invent as you come up with an excuse for why 'after this' just doesn't mean the next symbolic sequence in John's sermon, which is the way all the scholars I bother with read it.
eclipsenow said in post 837:
Or, why does it mean 'after this' in ONLY chapter 4!
eclipsenow said in post 838:
The reality is most of these verses are actually irrelevant to this conversation, which is all about your assumptions when you open this book and just decide, totally randomly that Revelation is about the future. It's not.
eclipsenow said in post 838:
What you have just done, by saying there's this EXTRA bad bit of tribulation coming, is patronise generations and generations of suffering Christians.
eclipsenow said in post 838:
(Your silly 'android antichrist' idea really requires medication, you know that don't you?) (Wink)
eclipsenow said in post 838:
The very first paragraph states: "What must soon take place"... "because the time is near".
eclipsenow said in post 838:
It's not only soon, but it is a message to be obeyed.
Revelation 1:3 says:
"Blessed is the one who reads aloud the words of this prophecy, and blessed are those who hear it and take to heart what is written in it, because the time is near."
eclipsenow said in post 838:
(Again, this makes the book entirely irrelevant to John's generation and just does not square with an honest reading of John's stated intentions in Chapter 1!)
eclipsenow said in post 838:
Futurists see it as utterly dependent on today's headlines, and therefore inaccessible to everyone before this generation.
eclipsenow said in post 838:
Does Jesus have 7 horns and 7 eyes or not?
eclipsenow said in post 839:
This is judgement day. Verse 18 shows this to be the universal human race, from our Leaders to our Military heroes to the great and small: everyone. Judged.
eclipsenow said in post 839:
Verse 18 shows this to be the universal human race, from our Leaders to our Military heroes to the great and small: everyone.
eclipsenow said in post 839:
The beast (all governments against God's people across time) and false prophecy and all those who worshipped money instead of God? Judged.
eclipsenow said in post 839:
There's simply no people left by the end of Rev 19. Everyone's been judged and slaughtered. It says so. "The rest..."
eclipsenow said in post 840:
Scripture is NOT only literal.
eclipsenow said in post 840:
Scripture WAS written by human beings to other human beings in human languages, and a variety of forms of linguistic styles.
eclipsenow said in post 840:
With the vast consensus of biblical scholars AGREEING that this is all apocalyptic symbolism, with the repeating, almost self-contradicting nature of the book with all it's 'flash forwards' and 'flash backs', suggesting it is LITERAL is not just ignorant, it is DEFIANT and absurd.
eclipsenow said in post 840:
With the vast consensus of biblical scholars AGREEING that this is all apocalyptic symbolism, with the repeating, almost self-contradicting nature of the book with all it's 'flash forwards' and 'flash backs', suggesting it is LITERAL is not just ignorant, it is DEFIANT and absurd.
eclipsenow said in post 840:
EVERYTHING in the language itself screams out that it is symbolic, because the language constitutes the words and symbols used and we read them and understand them to be ENTIRELY symbolic from the REPEATED USE and RECOMBINATION of past biblical symbols.
RisingSpirit said in post 841:
Jesus came 5+ times in the Old Testament. He can return anytime He likes.
So in order to interpret correctly you DO add 2000 years to the text, even though you DON'T because that would be naughty!Regarding "do we add 2000 years to the phrase 'after this'?", no, just as we must not insert the words "two thousand years" before, for example, the word "hereafter" in the actual text of Revelation 4:1b, for we must not add any words to the actual text of Revelation (Revelation 22:18). But in order to interpret Revelation correctly, just as there is a requirement to insert some two thousand years between the time that Revelation was written and the fulfillment of Jesus' future second coming in Revelation 19:7 to 20:3, so there is a requirement to insert some two thousand years between the time that Revelation was written and the fulfillment of the preceding, never-fulfilled tribulation of Revelation chapters 6 to 18.
Oh, there I was thinking this was a literal, detailed timeline? Now it's something you just do what you want with but minus the laws of understanding the actual symbolism at work?No, for "After this I looked" (Revelation 4:1) refers to an action already completed by John in the past, after he had been told what to write in the seven letters in Revelation chapters 2-3.
You're just making this up as you go along. The term is the same in each chapter, and yet you're trying to make it belong to previous instances so that you don't have to add another 2000 years! That's a JOKE! I could just respond that, at whatever instance you CHOOSE to add 2000 years, that you can't do that because it actually belongs to the things that came before in Chapter 1 where John INSISTS it is all about stuff that was 'soon', for 'the time was near'!No, for "And after these things I saw" (Revelation 7:1) refers to an action already completed by John in the past, after he had seen a vision of the first six seals in Revelation 6, which have not been fulfilled yet.
Revelation chapters 6 to 22 are future because they are about "things which must be hereafter" (Revelation 4:1b). And just as Jesus' second coming in Revelation 19:7 to 20:3 has never been fulfilled, for nowhere in history books do we find its fulfillment, so the highly-detailed events of the preceding tribulation in Revelation chapters 6 to 18 have never been fulfilled, for nowhere in history books do we find their fulfillment.
Oh yeah, that's a HUGE distinction there and really saves your work from the looney bin!No reference has been made to an android Antichrist, but only to a possibly android image of the Antichrist. See the "image" part of post 835.
FAIL! Historical sources tell us that there were at least 10 major churches in that specific region, so John's use of Seven is symbolic, as it is so often in the bible. Did you know that the very first verse of the bible only has seven Hebrew words, and that the next verse has 14 words (a multiple of 7), and that there are all manner of other multiples of the number 7? How many candles are on a Jewish candelabra? How many horns and eyes did the slain lamb of God have? How many times do you have to be told this is SYMBOLIC!From the viewpoint of men, part of what Revelation chapters 2-3 foretold could have begun unfolding "shortly" (Revelation 1:1,3) after John saw his Revelation vision. For the letters to the seven literal, first century AD local church congregations (Revelation chapters 2-3) in seven cities in the Roman province of "Asia" (Revelation 1:11b)
That is correct.But even all the (to us) still-future events of the tribulation and subsequent second coming of Revelation chapters 6 to 19 will unfold "shortly" (Revelation 1:1,3) or "quickly" (Revelation 22:20) after John saw his vision.
That is completely irrelevant: John tells us HE wrote his WHOLE MESSAGE for his generation to hear and obey!For from the viewpoint of God, even the passing of some two thousand years is like the passing of only two days (2 Peter 3:8).
The viewpoint of God described in Revelation is not a literal timeline or bunch of 'future telling' but the eternal safety of the saints in heaven. That is the gospel hope we are to hold on to. Your insisting this stuff is a literal timeline is just plain wrong.Christians should look at the future fulfillment of Revelation chapters 6 to 19 from the viewpoint of God, not men,
Do you realise how COMPLETELY you've just contradicted yourself here mate? To be 'literal' means to be absolutely confined to truth telling in the driest, most sensible, rational possible narrative, following ALL the rules of normal language. Then you go and insist that "it is not bound by any man-made ideas regarding any made-made categories for writings in general". But being literal is to be the MOST 'bound by man-made categories for writing in general'. It is to communicate with the strictest truth telling prose possible.Also, Revelation can be almost entirely literal because, as scripture, it is not bound by any man-made ideas regarding any made-made categories for writings in general. And nothing about Revelation's language in itself requires that it cannot be almost entirely literal.
I've shown it. Go back and read my posts for once.Regarding "the repeating, almost self-contradicting nature of the book with all it's 'flash forwards' and 'flash backs'", how has that been shown?
eclipsenow said in post 845:
So in order to interpret correctly you DO add 2000 years to the text, even though you DON'T because that would be naughty!
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Oh, there I was thinking this was a literal, detailed timeline?
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Oh, there I was thinking this was a literal, detailed timeline?
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Oh, there I was thinking this was a literal, detailed timeline?
eclipsenow said in post 845:
The verse just says:
Rev 4
4 After this I looked, and there in front of me was a door standing open in heaven. I heard the voice I had heard before. It sounded like a trumpet. The voice said, “Come up here. I will show you what must happen after this.”
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Rev 7
After this I saw four angels.
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Rev 7:9
After this I looked
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Rev 15:5
After this I looked
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Rev 18
After these things I saw another angel
eclipsenow said in post 845:
Rev 19
After these things I heard a roar in heaven.
eclipsenow said in post 845:
It just means the NEXT BIT IN THE STORY!
eclipsenow said in post 845:
So, you're the champion of reading all of this literally: why don't you explain how you 'literally' add 2000 years to the text at ONE point, but not at another?
eclipsenow said in post 845:
I could just respond that, at whatever instance you CHOOSE to add 2000 years, that you can't do that because it actually belongs to the things that came before in Chapter 1 where John INSISTS it is all about stuff that was 'soon', for 'the time was near'!
eclipsenow said in post 845:
So... why is Chapter 6's use of 'after this' any different to all the other chapters I've listed above?
eclipsenow said in post 846:
Oh yeah, that's a HUGE distinction there and really saves your work from the looney bin! (Wink)
eclipsenow said in post 846:
Historical sources tell us that there were at least 10 major churches in that specific region, so John's use of Seven is symbolic, as it is so often in the bible.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
Did you know that the very first verse of the bible only has seven Hebrew words, and that the next verse has 14 words (a multiple of 7), and that there are all manner of other multiples of the number 7? How many candles are on a Jewish candelabra? How many horns and eyes did the slain lamb of God have? How many times do you have to be told this is SYMBOLIC!
eclipsenow said in post 846:
John tells us HE wrote his WHOLE MESSAGE for his generation to hear and obey!
eclipsenow said in post 846:
John tells us HE wrote his WHOLE MESSAGE for his generation to hear and obey!
Rev 22
18I am warning everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book. If you add anything to them, God will add to you the plagues told about in this book.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
Prophecy does NOT have to entail future-telling, as many Old Testament prophets called people back to the existing law and word of God at the time.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
"These things" is the same phrase Jesus used to describe the abomination that caused the desolation of Israel, the terrible slaughter of 1.1 million Jews, destruction of the temple and their spiritual way of life the sacrificial system, and the very end of the nation of Israel.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
"These things" is the same phrase Jesus used to describe the abomination that caused the desolation of Israel, the terrible slaughter of 1.1 million Jews, destruction of the temple and their spiritual way of life the sacrificial system, and the very end of the nation of Israel.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
"These things" is the same phrase Jesus used to describe the abomination that caused the desolation of Israel, the terrible slaughter of 1.1 million Jews, destruction of the temple and their spiritual way of life the sacrificial system, and the very end of the nation of Israel.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
"These things" is the same phrase Jesus used to describe the abomination that caused the desolation of Israel, the terrible slaughter of 1.1 million Jews, destruction of the temple and their spiritual way of life the sacrificial system, and the very end of the nation of Israel.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
"These things" describes the REST OF THE BOOK, the terrible tribulation that Christians have endured for 2000 years (and that you continue to patronise because you insist they've had nothing compared to the even worse tribulation in the future!)
eclipsenow said in post 846:
The FACT of Jesus eventual return is described in a number of completely conflicting images and symbols that CANNOT be literally true at the same time.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
But being literal is to be the MOST 'bound by man-made categories for writing in general'.
eclipsenow said in post 846:
What kind of writing is it?
eclipsenow said in post 846:
WHO SAID that Scripture is not bound by any man-made ideas regarding any made-made categories for writings in general?
eclipsenow said in post 846:
It seems to go against the very commands of God through Paul in 1 Corinthians 14.
Regarding "detailed", Revelation chapters 6 to 22 are a highly-detailed, almost entirely literal future timeline. For they contain such a huge number of details, which are so varied, so specific, so chronological, and so long, that to reduce all of them to merely a general description of life at anytime renders them utterly useless. For what person who has ever lived needs a general description of life? It's like throwing Revelation chapters 6 to 22 in the trash, just to be done with them.
The 'hereafter' is just a version of the English that you are quoting.The "hereafter" at the end of Revelation 4:1 is different from the "After this" at the start of Revelation 4:1, not in the Greek, but in what they are referring to. For the "hereafter" at the end of Revelation 4:1 refers to events that must actually "be", in the sense of actually being performed, sometime in the future, that is, all the never-fulfilled events of Revelation chapters 6 to 22; whereas the "After this I looked" at the start of Revelation 4:1 refers to an action already completed by John in the past, after he had been told what to write in the seven letters in Revelation chapters 2-3.
Except android antichrists, aliens, and anything else that grabs your fancy from science fiction. Other than that, it's all biblical. Honest!Nothing has been added to the text itself at any point.
You know what? How about I just get a copy and paste answer system like yours and EVERY time you post your verbatim answer I'll just repost mine, and we'll see who dies of old age first? That would be a great conversation!But in order to interpret Revelation correctly, just as there is a requirement to insert some two thousand years between the time that Revelation was written and the fulfillment of Jesus' future second coming in Revelation 19:7 to 20:3, so there is a requirement to insert some two thousand years between the time that Revelation was written and the fulfillment of the preceding, never-fulfilled tribulation of Revelation chapters 6 to 18.
Because I thought you were suggesting that this was something the early church could understand and obey.How has the idea of a possibly android image of the Antichrist been shown to be looney?
Dr Paul Barnett taught history at Macquarie University, Sydney for many years, and was also a Bishop of North Sydney and ran historical tours of the bible lands. He wrote Revelation: Apocalypse Now and Then. ON page 9 he says:What were the other three churches?
Also, the seven can be literal because they could refer to only those seven who sent messengers to John on Patmos.One last comment. There were more than seven churches in Roman Asia at the time John wrote his 'letter book'. Seven is the numerical symbol for God and also for 'completeness'. In writing to 'seven' churches John is writing to all the churches, the church of Jesus Christ we might say, wherever that church gathers. In other words, Christ gave John a series of visions to be recorded and sent to the churches everywhere and for all time. This is a measure of the importance of John's 'book'. To each rchuch Jesus said, 'Let anyone who has an ear listen to what the Spirit is saying to the churches'. (2:7, 11,29; 3:6, 13, 22).
You know what? How about I just get a copy and paste answer system like yours and EVERY time you post your verbatim answer I'll just repost mine, and we'll see who dies of old age first? That would be a great conversation!so, the original Greek word ("tereo", G5083) translated as "keep" in Revelation 1:3 can be used in the sense of obeying commandments (John 14:15). But almost all of Revelation does not consist of commandments, but of prophecies of future events
Each chapter has a point of encouragement or rebuke or warning or discipline for Christian believers. I don't have time to go into the specific message of each chapter, but I've read fantastic applications that are heart-warming and very encouraging from EVERY chapter of the book of Revelation! This book is ALIVE, and is written directly to you and I and every Christian who has ever lived. It's our marching orders. It's exciting, and frightening, and bold.(Revelation 1:1,3, Revelation 22:7) which are not things to be "obeyed". For example, how would believers "obey" the prophecy regarding the weird locust-like beings (Revelation 9:3-11)?
Why are we to keep it as precious if it's not to me or about me or helpful to me in my walk? Yes Jesus will return one day, I get that from other bits of the bible. But why do I need to know all the train-timetable-details? It doesn't help me because no futurist can ever agree on when what is going to happen, and which order, and who is who!Instead, "tereo"/"keep" in Revelation 1:3 and Revelation 22:7 is used in the sense of holding onto something precious (John 12:7, John 2:10b, John 17:11,12,15, Ephesians 4:3) instead of casting it away as worthless. We are to "keep"/hold onto all of Revelation as being the precious truth, from Jesus to the church (Revelation 1:1, Revelation 22:16), just as we are to "keep"/hold onto Christian faith itself (2 Timothy 4:7b), even during the worst time for the church during the future tribulation of Revelation chapters 6 to 18/Matthew 24 (Revelation 13:7-10, Revelation 14:12-13, Revelation 20:4-6, Matthew 24:9-13).
You know what? How about I just get a copy and paste answer system like yours and EVERY time you post your verbatim answer I'll just repost mine, and we'll see who dies of old age first? That would be a great conversation!The prophecies of Revelation do entail future-telling, for Revelation chapters 6 to 22 are about "things which must be hereafter" (Revelation 4:1b). And just as Jesus' second coming in Revelation 19:7 to 20:3 has never been fulfilled, for nowhere in history books do we find its fulfillment, so the highly-detailed events of the preceding tribulation in Revelation chapters 6 to 18 have never been fulfilled, for nowhere in history books do we find their fulfillment.
The Olivet discourse is tricky because it discusses a number of things, and I even think when Jesus mentions the temple being destroyed we are to remember what he wrote earlier on about his BODY being the temple. The gospel itself is in the background here.If so, Matthew 24:34 refers to the fulfillment of "all these things", all the events of the tribulation and Jesus' second coming and gathering together (rapture) of the church immediately after the tribulation (Mt. 24:29-31; cf. 2 Thes. 2:1-8, 1 Thes. 4:15-17), which events Jesus had just finished describing in Matthew 24:2-31, and which he would later show in great detail in Revelation chapters 6 to 19. Matthew 24:34 didn't mean that the tribulation, second coming, and rapture would be fulfilled during the temporal generation alive at the time of Jesus' first coming, for none of those things was fulfilled during that temporal generation.
You have an almost autistic focus on the retaining wall OUTSIDE and AWAY from the temple buildings themselves, which WERE destroyed in AD70 as 1.1 million Jews were slaughtered and the sacrifice was laid desolate and the nation was split up!If so, the end of Herod's temple building (also called the second temple building) in 70 AD didn't fulfill Mt. 24:2, for the stones of the second temple complex's Western Wall (also called the Wailing Wall) still stand today one on top of the other, just as they did when Jesus spoke that prophecy.
Don't twist the greek! Read Luke 21 again. The word in Luke says TEMPLE, doesn't it!Mt. 24:2 included the Wailing Wall
Yeah, just clip your ruby slippers together 3 times and maybe it will be so.Also, Matthew 24:2's "here" can include not just the entire second temple complex,
OK, now you're geniunely weirding me out! YOU said it! And I quote:Who said that it is?eclipsenow said in post 846:
WHO SAID that Scripture is not bound by any man-made ideas regarding any made-made categories for writings in general?
Also, Revelation can be almost entirely literal because, as scripture, it is not bound by any man-made ideas regarding any made-made categories for writings in general. And nothing about Revelation's language in itself requires that it cannot be almost entirely literal.
eclipsenow said in post 849:
No, YOU'VE thrown it in the trash for all generations prior to the generation the book is actually ABOUT and TO!
eclipsenow said in post 849:
I've been saying that each vision-sequence is chock full of biblical symbols that preach a sermon to all Christians in all ages!
eclipsenow said in post 849:
For instance, those insect like things you think are aliens could possibly be Roman soldiers in head-dress.
eclipsenow said in post 849:
The 'hereafter' is just a version of the English that you are quoting.
There is nothing different about it, and no reason to add 2000 years.
eclipsenow said in post 849:
There is nothing different about it, and no reason to add 2000 years.
eclipsenow said in post 849:
There is nothing different about it, and no reason to add 2000 years.
eclipsenow said in post 849:
Except android antichrists, aliens, and anything else that grabs your fancy from science fiction. Other than that, it's all biblical. Honest!
eclipsenow said in post 849:
Except android antichrists, aliens, and anything else that grabs your fancy from science fiction. Other than that, it's all biblical. Honest!
eclipsenow said in post 849:
I've asked you this before: show me where an early church father actually uses the word android and understands what one was?
eclipsenow quoted Barnett in post 850:
There were more than seven churches in Roman Asia at the time John wrote his 'letter book'.
eclipsenow said in post 850:
It's as if you're saying "Revelation is LITERAL, I tell you, so we're just going to ignore the word 'obey' here because otherwise ... it ... might ... not ... be a series of future timetables, but an actual sermon."
eclipsenow said in post 850:
But why do I need to know all the train-timetable-details?
eclipsenow said in post 850:
It doesn't help me because no futurist can ever agree on when what is going to happen, and which order, and who is who!
eclipsenow said in post 850:
It doesn't help me because no futurist can ever agree on when what is going to happen, and which order, and who is who!
eclipsenow said in post 850:
It doesn't help me because no futurist can ever agree on when what is going to happen, and which order, and who is who!
eclipsenow said in post 850:
It doesn't help me because no futurist can ever agree on when what is going to happen, and which order, and who is who!
eclipsenow said in post 850:
The Olivet discourse is tricky because it discusses a number of things, and I even think when Jesus mentions the temple being destroyed we are to remember what he wrote earlier on about his BODY being the temple.
eclipsenow said in post 850:
In verse 2 Jesus says "These things" describing the destruction of the temple in AD70. It's the same phrase he uses in verse 33. "So also, when you see all *these things*, you know that he is near, at the very gates. 34 Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place.
eclipsenow said in post 850:
But the end of the world? 'That day'? Instead of being like AD70, like Titus, predictable, local, escapable… that day is unpredictable, unknowable, and utterly inescapable.
36 “But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only. 37 For as were the days of Noah, so will be the coming of the Son of Man. 38 For as in those days before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day when Noah entered the ark, 39 and they were unaware until the flood came and swept them all away, so will be the coming of the Son of Man. 40 Then two men will be in the field; one will be taken and one left. 41 Two women will be grinding at the mill; one will be taken and one left. 42 Therefore, stay awake, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming. 43 But know this, that if the master of the house had known in what part of the night the thief was coming, he would have stayed awake and would not have let his house be broken into. 44 Therefore you also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not expect.
eclipsenow said in post 850:
Read Luke 21 again. The word in Luke says TEMPLE, doesn't it!
eclipsenow said in post 850:
OK, now you're geniunely weirding me out! YOU said it!
eclipsenow said in post 850:
But being literal is to be the MOST 'bound by man-made categories for writing in general'.
eclipsenow said in post 850:
It seems to go against the very commands of God through Paul in 1 Corinthians 14.
Futurism has not thrown Revelation chapters 6 to 22 in the trash for any generation. For just as Jesus' second coming in Revelation 19:7 to 20:3 has always been relevant to Christians (for all scripture is profitable: 2 Timothy 3:16) despite the fact that it has never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled almost entirely literally in our future, so the highly-detailed and chronological events of the preceding tribulation in Revelation chapters 6 to 18, and the subsequent millennium and other events in Revelation chapters 20 to 22, have always been relevant to Christians, despite the fact that they have never been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled almost entirely literally in our future.
Also, Christians do not have to experience every literal event in scripture, whether past literal events (for example, Genesis chapters 1-11) or future literal events (for example, Revelation chapters 6 to 18) for every scripture to be profitable to Christians (2 Timothy 3:16).
None uses the word android, nor did they have to understand what one was. But Christians at any time in the past could understand that Revelation 13:14-15 refers to a literal image (Greek: "eikon", something made in the likeness) of the Antichrist, which will appear to be alive, which will speak, and which people will have to worship or be killed. Christians in the past could understand this without having to know, for example, whether the image will be two-dimensional or three-dimensional (or both), or what it will be made of, or how it will be made to speak and appear to be alive. All futurism does is consider these things. And one possibility is that it could be an android.
I quoted Dr Paul Barnett, a very godly bible scholar and professional historian. I doubt you have an ounce of his credentials, so you can cut your petty interrogation method. I've met him and know his family. They're all great and godly people. So cut the rubbish and just accept something a scholar says for once. If you really need to, go read a history of the early church or something!How many more? And in what cities were they located?
Except that the words turn into sentences and paragraphs and become immediately recognisable as a GENRE of literature. So how do we recognise GENRE's, hey dude?The original Greek word sometimes translated as obey has not been ignored, but discussed in detail. And the Greek word in no way requires that Revelation cannot be almost entirely literal, for the reasons given in the "obey" part of post 848.
No, it DOESN'T spell out a bunch of details totally irrelevant to thousands of years of church history except some last generation! That's whacko.The Bible gives believers clear warning ahead of time about everything they're going to have to face during the future tribulation (Mk. 13:23, Rev. chs. 6-18, 1:3, 22:16),
Give me a break! Life blindsides us all the time if we let it. Talking on this FORUM blindsides me when I find out how low biblical preaching has become across the world, and especially in America. (Like Android images of the Antichrist: give me a break! )so they can be better prepared mentally not to be blindsided (1 Pet. 4:12-13)
Oh yeah, got a decade or even year in mind? Hmmmmm?or deceived by anything that's coming (Mt. 24:4-5,23-25, Rev. 13:13-18, 19:20), and so they can be better prepared mentally to endure the future tribulation with patience and faith to the end (Mt. 24:9-13, Rev. 13:7-10, 14:12-13, 20:4-6).
It's like saying you FUTURISTS are notoriously disagreed on this book, and us Covenant Amils are much more aligned.That's like an unbeliever saying that the Bible can't help him because believers can't agree on what it means.
Nah, that's the church, god's REAL kingdom now!Regarding "when what is going to happen", Matthew 24:34 could mean that the temporal generation which would see the 1948 AD re-establishment of Israel, which could be symbolized by the rebudding of the fig tree (Mt. 24:32-34, Hos. 9:10, Joel 1:6-7, Lk. 13:6-9, Mt. 21:19,43),
Nah, the AoD happened in AD70, retaining wall or no retaining wall. Wailing Wall Sschmailing schmall.won't pass, that is, won't die off completely, until the future tribulation and second coming of Matthew 24/Revelation chapters 6 to 19 are fulfilled. A temporal generation may not pass until seventy or eighty years (Ps. 90:10), or a hundred and twenty years (Gen. 6:3).
God did. God made the world and made us in his image, about to think, to relate, to use words. God brought his animals before Adam to see what he would name them. God spoke to Abram, God's son is called "The Word" as he is incarnate into this world (John 1). God speaks. He is not silent. God's word goes out into all generations and does not return empty. Speaking and writing God's message means using language forms in an understandable way. See 1 Corinthians 14. It is NOT berrgle whoompy dompty, but disciplined communication in recognisable words that Paul admires. Everything is to be done in order, not flergleybootkins."Who said that it is?" was who said that scripture is bound by man-made ideas regarding made-made categories for writings in general?
eclipsenow said in post 853:
Just quoting 2 Timothy 3:16 at me does not demonstrate HOW a futurist-Revelation is relevant to me! It simply ISN'T!
eclipsenow said in post 853:
I know you need to repeat 'almost entirely literally' at me as many times as you need to, because you're so insecure about it actually being SYMBOLIC . . .
eclipsenow said in post 853:
So, basically, dude, if you want to prove to me how Rev 6-22 actually helps me, why don't you actually answer the question instead of shoving 2 Tim 3:16 down my throat as if that means you've proved your lazy and ignorant literalistic hermeneutic is actually the right one!
eclipsenow said in post 853:
It's really ignorant because you stubbornly insist on clinging to a literal reading of Revelation when the vast majority of serious evangelical reformed bible scholars recognise the biblical symbolism and gospel sermon that it really is.
eclipsenow said in post 853:
The past events are there for our instruction, for explaining how the most important event in history, the gospel of Jesus Christ, unfolds. MY reading of Revelation makes sense in the context of that gospel! Your reading of Revelation COMPETES FOR ATTENTION! It says, "Don't look so much at what Jesus did back on the cross, why not focus on ALL THESE THOUSANDS OF DETAILS about android antichrists and blah blah!"
eclipsenow said in post 853:
What do the beasts horns mean? Are they literal horns?
eclipsenow said in post 853:
What do the beasts horns mean? Are they literal horns?
eclipsenow said in post 854:
So cut the rubbish and just accept something a scholar says for once.
eclipsenow said in post 854:
If you really need to, go read a history of the early church or something!
eclipsenow said in post 854:
Except that the words turn into sentences and paragraphs and become immediately recognisable as a GENRE of literature.
eclipsenow said in post 854:
No, it DOESN'T spell out a bunch of details totally irrelevant to thousands of years of church history except some last generation!
eclipsenow said in post 854:
(Like Android images of the Antichrist: give me a break! )
eclipsenow said in post 854:
Oh yeah, got a decade or even year in mind?
eclipsenow said in post 854:
It's like saying you FUTURISTS are notoriously disagreed on this book, and us Covenant Amils are much more aligned.
eclipsenow said in post 854:
Nah, that's the church, god's REAL kingdom now!
eclipsenow said in post 854:
Nah, that's the church, god's REAL kingdom now!
eclipsenow said in post 854:
Nah, the AoD happened in AD70, retaining wall or no retaining wall.
eclipsenow said in post 854:
God did.
eclipsenow said in post 854:
Speaking and writing God's message means using language forms in an understandable way. See 1 Corinthians 14.
Why not?
You've quoted a lot of verses here to try and look like you know something, but none of these verses support your argument. Sorry. You're just wrong. Try again.Also, the future fulfillment of Revelation chapters 6 to 18 should be especially relevant to every Christian alive today. For the main reason that the Bible gives us clear warning ahead of time about everything that Christians alive at that time will have to face (Mark 13:23, Revelation chapters 6 to 18, Revelation 1:3, Revelation 22:16), is so that they can be better prepared mentally not to be blindsided (1 Peter 4:12-13) or deceived by anything that's coming (Matthew 24:4-5,23-25, Revelation 13:13-18, Revelation 19:20), and so they can be better prepared mentally to endure the future tribulation with patience and faith to the end (Matthew 24:9-13, Revelation 13:7-10, Revelation 14:12-13, Revelation 20:4-6), and not commit apostasy during the tribulation (Isaiah 8:21-22, Matthew 24:9-13, Matthew 13:21), to the ultimate loss of their salvation (Hebrews 6:4-8, John 15:6; 2 Timothy 2:12).
You're just too obtuse to bother with sometimes.How has it been shown to be symbolic, in the sense of it being entirely symbolic?
You're insecure about your entire APPROACH to reading Genesis being wrong. Then you might have to drop androids and aliens and all your dogmatic, arrogant, crystal ball gazing schemes for the future. And, to a hardened futurist like you, where's the fun in that? Where's the fun in just having the GOSPEL to proclaim? You want something more exciting, more today, more prophetic to tell people.Also, why would anyone be insecure about a mere symbol, rather than being insecure about something that's real and literal?
You cannot know any such thing because your post 851 makes no new points whatsoever, repeats the same trite misunderstandings and ignorance of BASIC hermeneutic principles, and shows you to be completely ignorant of where to even start with the book. Other than those little details, we're all completely convinced!Also, we can know that Revelation is almost entirely literal because of the reasons given in the "Revelation is in fact almost entirely literal" part of post 851.
Because you seem completely unaware what a vast number of evangelical, reformed theologians say about the basic hermeneutic principles for Revelation are. It's like trying to be an art critic without ever going to art school, or trying to conduct an orchestra without reading music. Every time you say it's literal it's like you've put a teapot on your head and announced, "I like smearing peanut butter all over my walls and couch, don't you?"How has the literalistic hermeneutic been shown to be lazy or ignorant?
Dr Paul Barnett covers why Revelation is mostly symbolic. So does Richardson.Regarding the scholars you're referring to, you will need to provide their specific arguments based on the scriptures themselves (compare Isaiah 8:20b), and not on any man-made ideas (compare 1 Corinthians 1:20).
They do for the reasons I cited above in this post.All the details of Revelation in no way compete with the gospel of Jesus Christ, just as, for example, all the (much more numerous) details of the Old Testament in no way compete with the gospel of Jesus Christ.
That's a semantic game. I of course agree that this is Revelation's testimony about itself, but what does Revelation reveal? You don't get to claim this verse to justify reading Revelation literally, as it doesn't actually tell us HOW to read it. The book itself does as we encounter paragraph after paragraph of biblical symbols.Indeed, all the details in Revelation are a revelation from Jesus Christ himself (Revelation 1:1); they are all the testimony of his angel to the church (Revelation 22:16).
Oh, wait a minute! I thought you said the book was literal apart from a few instances with Jesus near the beginning. OK, now the horns are not literal... but the android bit is? Tell us the truth: you just make this up as you go along, don't you?The horns aren't literal, but they are specific to certain, individual people who will be on the world stage in our future.
Or he could represent ALL false doctrines from false prophets, and speak heresies. And the first beast may just represent ALL beastly governments that persecute God's people. When they get together and give each other more power, the State drawing down on some heretic doctrine for added 'moral' authority, they both get even more power. For there will be true believers in these systems. Like Stalin's Communism, or Mao's little red book, and the pain these governments AND systems, or 'beasts' and 'false prophets', can inflict on God's people is immense.For the beast which comes up out of the earth (Rev. 13:11-16) represents the individual man who will become the Antichrist's False Prophet (Rev. 19:20, 16:13). He could be a (secretly apostate) pope who will begin his tenure by making a great push for peace and unity between Christianity and Islam.
'He' could say something like this in one contest, or 'Religion is poison, a seductive drug to pacify the proletariat so they do not rise up and throw out the bourgeoisie.'He could say something like: "Why do we fight each other? Are we not all the spiritual children of Abraham and of his God, the one God? Can't we lay aside our foolish, man-made differences of theology, which have done us no good at all, but only brought us hatred and violence, and unite into one religion of Abraham, one religion of peace, based on love for the one God and love for our fellow man? What's more important than this?"
Blah blah blah, there you go proving the sheer COMMITMENT you have to filling in details that Revelation just doesn't spell out. You read this literally, don't you? Well HOW DO YOU JUSTIFY ADDING SO MUCH DETAIL TO THE BIBLE!?He could be so skillful in elucidating what the moderate Muslims could call "the true, peaceful, loving nature of Islam", that he could be hailed by them worldwide as (in their words) "A Great Imam, come to rescue our beloved Islam from the bad reputation falsely given to it by the terrorists". In this way, a pope could come to hold high positions of power in two religions at the same time, which could be symbolized by the two horns of the False Prophet lamb (Rev. 13:11). This would be similar to how the seven horns of the true-Jesus lamb in Rev. 5:6 could represent the true Jesus holding seven positions of power at the same time (cf. Jesus wearing many crowns at the same time in Rev. 19:12). The False Prophet could even say that he is Jesus. (But he won't say that he's Christ, for the False Prophet and the Antichrist will deny that Jesus is the Christ and will deny that Christ is in the flesh: 1 Jn. 2:22, 2 Jn. 1:7.)
(Sighs and shakes head in frustration). Did Jesus have 7 horns on his head? What does the horn mean in the bible in the way JOHN uses it? Sure Daniel might have used it one way, but what does JOHN do when he applies the horn to Jesus, hey? Jesus 7 horns show he has God's perfect power. The 10 horns here show the state to appear to have much more power, but it's the wrong number: 10, not seven. That means, symbolically, that it is sheer brute force, not guided by God's characteristics in perfect power. It's human, not God, false-Messiah, not Messiah, false-prophet, not the Christ.The 10 horns/kings of the beast in its Antichrist's-empire aspect (Rev. 13:1, 17:3,12) could be 10 men whom the Antichrist will appoint as kings over 10 major nations, which could be the 10 horns in Dan. 7:24.
Yes, but as I said above, how did JOHN just use horns when describing Jesus, hey? We interpret Revelation by first asking how JOHN uses these symbols.For Dan. 7's first three beasts (Dan. 7:3-6) represent the ancient empires of Babylon (lion), Medo-Persia (bear), and Greece (leopard). And Dan. 7's fourth beast,
There you go again, adding FAR more details to Revelation than are actually there. And you have the EFFRONTERY and ARROGANCE to claim you read it literally? That's amazing, truly amazing, when you add all this junk in.or fourth "king"/"kingdom" (Dan. 7:17,23), represents the ancient Roman Empire. And the ten horns/kings which come out of it (Dan. 7:7,24) could represent ten major kingdoms/nations today which came out the former territory of the Roman Empire, which consisted not only of Western Europe, but also the Middle East and North Africa. These ten nations could be Germany, the U.K., France, Italy, Spain, Turkey, Egypt, Iraq, Algeria, and Syria. The ten part-iron/part-clay toes of Dan. 2:42 could represent the same thing as the ten horns of Dan. 7:7. The Europeans could be the iron, and the Arabs and Turks could be the clay. In Dan. 2:43, the inability of the iron to mix with the clay could represent how, for example, there are many Turks living in Germany, but they remain separated in ghettoes within German cities. Similarly, there are many Algerians living in France, but they remain separated in ghettoes within French cities.
Write to either Paul Barnett or a professor of New Testament history. They may be able to help you. As far as I quoted above, Paul Barnett does not say. But that's no reason to try and imply he is a liar by asking those questions in the tone you use.How have the questions asked been shown to be rubbish?
Why can't there simply be an answer to the simple question of how many more (than seven) churches were there in Roman "Asia"? And in what cities were they located?
Well, unless you're calling Paul Barnett a liar, he just did. But you seem to want more than that.Which specific history of the early church will answer the questions asked?
Much more! There might be a few differences here or there, but generally, yes, much more.Are the adherents of Covenant Amillennialism really "much more aligned" on what each part of Revelation is supposed to symbolize?
That question is just rude: I do NOT have time to digest dozens of commentaries for you. If you want a good sample of some of the unity and a little of the diversity, try these 2 books.If so, what is the general consensus regarding what each detail in Revelation is supposed to represent?
Well, good. I'm glad you see that. Can we also call "Covenant Premillennialism" Historic Premillennialism, because many of the early church fathers believed this.Also, remember that (symbolicist) Covenant Amillennialism isn't the only Covenant theology, for there is also (literalist) Covenant Premillennialism, which also (correctly) refutes the mistaken ideas of Dispensationalism.
Just copying and pasting the same paragraph about 30 times at me is really quite rude, or shows you to be a little autistic? If that's the case, I'm sorry, and maybe I shouldn't even be discussing this with you.Regarding "that's the church", instead of referring to the church, the rebudding of the fig tree (Matthew 24:32) can refer to the 1948 re-establishment of Israel,
eclipsenow said in post 857:
Reading Genesis is totally different. That traces the unfolding plan of God which was fulfilled in Christ.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
Revelation, read your futuristic way, is just a distraction from the gospel.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
It's all these silly bits and pieces and nations and personalities and it takes so much STUDY to try and play Nostradamus with Revelation that way, so much WORK to fit all the bits in and come up with the silly contradicting schemes you futurists all come up with.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
It doesn't unpack the gospel, doesn't bring glory to Jesus, and doesn't build the church.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
You've quoted a lot of verses here to try and look like you know something, but none of these verses support your argument.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
You're insecure about your entire APPROACH to reading Genesis being wrong.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
But what if God doesn't share your enthusiasm for all these details?
eclipsenow said in post 857:
What if Revelation is mainly symbolic and these symbols add up to amazing sermons?
eclipsenow said in post 857:
You cannot know any such thing because your post 851 makes no new points whatsoever, repeats the same trite misunderstandings and ignorance of BASIC hermeneutic principles, and shows you to be completely ignorant of where to even start with the book.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
Because you seem completely unaware what a vast number of evangelical, reformed theologians say about the basic hermeneutic principles for Revelation are.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
The book itself does as we encounter paragraph after paragraph of biblical symbols.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
I thought you said the book was literal apart from a few instances with Jesus near the beginning. OK, now the horns are not literal... but the android bit is?
eclipsenow said in post 857:
The symbolic language in Revelation applies as a warning to ALL Christians in all ages, as it is written almost in a generic biblical symbolism that we find in the parables.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
Well HOW DO YOU JUSTIFY ADDING SO MUCH DETAIL TO THE BIBLE!?
eclipsenow said in post 857:
That's why I skip past your 'dream sequences' when you go into a million miles of detail, because I flat out KNOW that this is just your imagination at work.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
It's based on the wrong presuppositions about Revelation.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
Yes, but as I said above, how did JOHN just use horns when describing Jesus, hey?
eclipsenow said in post 857:
We interpret Revelation by first asking how JOHN uses these symbols.
eclipsenow said in post 857:
That's amazing, truly amazing, when you add all this junk in.
eclipsenow said in post 858:
But that's no reason to try and imply he is a liar by asking those questions in the tone you use.
eclipsenow said in post 858:
While we are on it, did you ever notice the Chiastic structure in the letters to the churches? Does that not tell you it is not literal, but highly arranged, even poetic?
eclipsenow said in post 858:
There might be a few differences here or there, but generally, yes, much more.
eclipsenow said in post 858:
If you want a good sample of some of the unity and a little of the diversity, try these 2 books.
eclipsenow said in post 858:
Well, good. I'm glad you see that. Can we also call "Covenant Premillennialism" Historic Premillennialism, because many of the early church fathers believed this.
I'm actually very glad to agree with you on this, and quite relieved that we have some small measure of agreement on the problems with Dispensationalism. But seriously, why do you go and WRECK this with 7 Holy Spirits, android antichrists, etc etc etc?
eclipsenow said in post 858:
. . . [you] merely shrug and question any new data I ever provide.
eclipsenow said in post 858:
Maybe you can't HELP building weird patterns into a book like Revelation when you read it?
If it's clear, and warns us, when it is going to happen? You get 300 words MAX. Write in point form, not your longer verbal free-association melange of boring details.So does Revelation trace the unfolding plan of God. For Revelation chapters 6 to 22 show what God (and others) will do in the future. For those chapters are about "things which must be hereafter" (Revelation 4:1b). And just as Jesus' second coming in Revelation 19:7 to 20:3 has never been fulfilled, for nowhere in history books do we find its fulfillment, so the highly-detailed events of the preceding tribulation in Revelation chapters 6 to 18 have never been fulfilled, for nowhere in history books do we find their fulfillment.