I have never understood that word 'delay' to mean the time set was put off, but that only it must have seemed like a delay to those who wait. No one knows the time, so then how would the servant say 'delay' with an understanding that the time was actually delayed?
Jesus did not know the timing of the end while he was on earth as a Man. However, Jesus is God the Father in the flesh and I believe he knows the exact time now in heaven.
Again, there is no delay, for there was no set time. The word delay is because people are waiting and wanting to give up believing the Lord will come.
Do you mean the 1st coming as when Jesus came as a Man, or when the temple was destroyed? If you mean when the temple was destroyed, then why can't Peter have meant then?
Could you explain more what you mean? What exactly do you mean by DofJ? What do you mean Paul did beforehand?
Just because someone is tired of waiting and giving up faith does not mean there is a delay.
The preterist I studied with before said that we will never receive flesh bodies again, and that the resurrection of our bodies is actually spirits given to us, and those spirits going to heaven is the resurrection. This preterist also said that this world will never end, and that the new world is symbolic of the new order of things.
It sounds as if preterists can have different beliefs from each other.
I believe that we must have our flesh bodies redeemed when Jesus comes back, but you do not believe that, so then how do you reconcile the scriptures with your beliefs about Jesus coming back and resurrecting us with new bodies?
re seemed like a delay.
The transition between Mt24A & B is 'immediately after.' So we either have to move all of Mt24A to the future with B and imagine there to be a whole set of events in the middle east, or B has been delayed.
You may have noticed that Lk21 allows no delay. Luke was chronicling Paul and his teachings a lot, and Paul is the most certain of a very quick end of the world in many places. There's your expectation of a quick end; the delay would be if that end was postponed. A was not postponed. B was.
re Jesus knowing
So the Godhead decided not to make it definite for human knowledge. If the Son did not know when B was taking place for sure, most listeners at that time would probably think a delay would take place.
re the comings
Peter is speaking about 'the coming' and means neither of your options. Do you have reasons for either? I don't see it. I don't think he meant the suffering atonement. He meant and described the end of the world. I don't think he meant the DofJ (destruction of Jerusalem). Because he describes nothing that is Judaic or Judean based. He meant the end of the world. Ie Mt24B.
Preterist writers like 'Tetelestai' here keep saying that the 'elements' in 2 Pet 3 must mean what 'elements of the world' meant in Gal 4 and Col 2. But Paul means Judaism, or a neo-Judaism there. 2 Pet 3 is ordinary meaning--molecular, building block elements. If it is an extended figure of speech then so is Peter's remarks about the flood.
btw, yes there are many kinds and I'm a historian first, theologian second.
re Paul "didn't beforehand".
I've lost the drift of thought and can't see it in this window. I'll respond later.
re bodies
I don't know that preterist doctrine. It may have to do something with the belief that the NHNE is now. They would get that from making 2 Pet 3 figurative, and maybe from 2 Cor 5 about Christ the New Creation (the phrase is actually about Christ, not individuals). So then, the world would go on indefinitely like Eph 3 says (world without end), and nothing of earth goes forward after death.
I don't think that doctrine has much traction because "I know my redeemer lives and in my flesh shall I see God on the last day" and Jesus' own body resurrected.