It is a future event.
I agree!
It is a future event.
I agree!
Yeah, but then he has the Body in that Earthly kingdom.
All these years supposedly "Mid-Acts" and the poor guy still doesn't understand why the mystery to begin with...
Yeah, but then he has the Body in that Earthly kingdom.
All these years supposedly "Mid-Acts" and the poor guy still doesn't understand why the mystery to begin with...
There was never a large harvest that happened on a large mass of land after Jerusalem was destroyed in 70 AD.
Partial Preterism - it was all written to, for, and about only that part of "the world," all of it already happened, and only... in that part of "the world" - for God so loved only that part of "the world..."
That's because you are clearly attempting to reason an answer into, rather than through, the passages.
In Daniel 2:44 where it says God will set up a Kingdom. Has this been fulfilled? Or do you see this as a future event?
I'm simply agreeing that the prophecied Davidic Messianic Kingdom is yet future as opposed to the amillennial/preterist position that GOD suddenly changes and speaks metaphorically when it comes to Kingdom prophecy.
Thanks. Still learning. Any site you recommend on this topic?Yes on Mt 13. Jesus said the harvest field was ripe. Mt 21:33-44 is a parable about Jesus' first coming being in regard to collecting the harvest.
I agree with Mr. T on his assessment of the end of the age.
I would throw in 1 Cor 10:11 where Paul says he was living at the end of the age.
Some here have suggested Paul thought he was living at the end of the age, but he was mistaken.
You're not very bright.
That's a good distinction.
When the text "does not appear to make any sense" as written, that is a good indicator we do not yet have information from the whole that might allow the eyes of our understanding to see from said whole through the passage that is not making sense to us, what, at some point turns out was there all along.
The passages are the lens through which we begin to get a glimpse of what perspective the writer was writing from.
But what often happens; and this is often readily obvious from a concluding party's assertion, no matter what said assertion might be, in such instances, that they ended up reading into whatever text it is they are asserting what they are asserting about it. Including a conclusion such as "doesn't make sense to me..."
Such a faulty approach reading right past the condition Mark 1:15implies will need to be met, for example, when its portrait is viewed from a distance just a bit further back; that more of the whole be allowed its important contribution.
Mark 1's implied condition in bold:
14. Now after that John was put in prison, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God,
15. And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.
This, from a guy who claims the Spirit reveals himself to him outside His Word.
STAY...
in...
THE...
Book...
There was never a harvest that even extended to the area which Paul said that the Gospel was bearing fruit. All you want to do is to make the meaning of the Greek word kosmos just mean the land of Israel.
But if that was the meaning the Lord Jesus wanted to place at Matthew 13 He would not have used the word kosmos. But He did. We can also see that signs will be seen in the sky AFTER the great tribulation is over:
"Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken" (Mt.24:29).
And the following passage describes men reacting to those signs in the sky and being in fear of things which will be coming on a much larger area than Israel, and which will take place after the great tribulation is over:
"And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring; Men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the earth (oikoumene)" (Lk.21:25-26).
We can also see that there will be a world wide judgment at the end of the age because He compares that with the world wide flood:
"But as the days of Noah were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark, And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be" (Mt.24:37-39).
That judgment was not limited to just a part of the world but instead to the whole earth. And that is why the Lord Jesus compares His coming to the Noah's flood.
Thanks. Still learning. Any site you recommend on this topic?
I can just as easily make the claim that you are reading a condition into that verse.
Correct me if I missed it but I don't recall you commenting on the conditional mood of Matthew 24's "this generation" passage, or the particle an found therein. Tet simply denies it because he can't get it to compute. Would you mind? If you did reply to it, please point me to the post. Thank you...
The reason people like me believe that the BOC will return to the earth with the Lord Jesus when He sets up His kingdom is because what is said here:
"For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord" (1 Thess.4:16-17).
This passage is speaking of being in the "presence" of the Lord Jesus when those in the BOC meets Him in the air and therefore when it speaks of those in the BOC being with Him for ever it is His "presence" which is in view.
But according to your view those in the BOC will no longer be in His presence when He returns to the earth to set up His earthly kingdom.
You talk big about your knowledge of the mystery but you never say what part of the mystery says that those in the BOC will NOT be in the presence of the Lord from the time of the rapture onward.
You just make things up out of thin air in your failed attempt to discredit me.
"UNDER no circumstances should you be finishing the cities of Israel till the Son of Mankind may be coming" (Matt.10:23b).
"Verily I am saying to you that there are some of those standing here who under no circumstances should be tasting death till they should be perceiving the Son of Mankind coming in His kingdom" (Matt.16:28; cp Luke 9:27).
"Verily I am saying to you that by no means may this generation be passing by till all these things should be occurring" (Matt.24:34; cp Mark 13:30; Luke 21:32).
"For still how very little, He Who is coming will be arriving and not delaying" (Heb.10:37).
"Little children, it is the last hour, and, according as you hear that the antichrist is coming, now also there have come to be many antichrists, whence we know that it is the last hour" (1 John 2:18).
These and similar passages are often appealed to by unbelievers to show the exceedingly unreliable nature--indeed the sheer falsehood--of Jesus' words and teaching, since the event which they predict, the "second coming" of Christ, did not occur within the specified time and has not yet occurred over 1,900 years later. Much is made of the supposed absurdity of "Christianity" at its very core, its claims being founded upon the word of such a manifest delusionist as Jesus of Nazareth.
After all, they reason, the sun was not darkened and the moon did not fail to give her beams, and the stars did not fall from heaven, nor were the powers of the heavens shaken; the sign of the Son of Mankind in heaven did not appear, all the tribes of the land did not grieve, nor did they see the Son of Mankind coming on the clouds of heaven with power and much glory (Matt.24:29,30). Every eye did not see Him (Rev.1:7), much less did the kingdoms of this world become those of the Lord God and His Christ (Rev.11:15); decidedly, the nations did not beat their swords into plowshares, nor their spears into pruninghooks, so as not to learn war any more (Isa.2:4).
Remarkably, however, certain believers, termed "Preterists" since they claim a fulfilled or past second coming of Christ, have appealed to these very same passages in order to show the exceedingly reliable nature--indeed the utter truthfulness--of Jesus' words. According to their claims, the "second coming" of Christ did occur within the specified time, all related prophecies being fulfilled accordingly.
Preterists, however, must explain all prophecy concerning Christ's advent and kingdom in highly allegorical or even mystical terms, contrary to the plain sense of the passages themselves. Nonetheless, these believers have convinced themselves of the legitimacy of their interpretations, since, according to them, either Christ's second coming did occur within a generation of the time in which He made these prophecies, or He is a deceiver and a false prophet. Since no believer will affirm that Christ is either of these, and since, according to Preterists, the only alternative is to accept their claims as to a first-century second coming, they imagine that they have proved the correctness of their position...
The judgement was upon ALL Jews throughout the known world - not just those living in Jerusalem. Does that end your critique that I think kosmos only meant Israel?
What things would they be fearing that were yet to come, if these signs occur at the end of the great tribulation?
So you think the stars will literally fall from heaven? Or perhaps that is cataclysmic language to describe something devastating since stars can't literally fall from heaven.
Actually, Jesus is quite explicit as to why he compares his coming to the flood of Noah - and it is not because he is making a point about the scope of the judgement. Jesus says that just as in the days of Noah, people will be going about their normal routine lives, oblivious to any impending judgement, and then it will come suddenly upon them. That is the only explicit similarity drawn.
Tell me, will people be going about their lives in a routine way during the great tribulation and the tumultuous times that will just precede Jesus' coming?