Revelation: A Cyclical View

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
14,742
5,319
113
62
Okay. I guess that settles it then.
It doesn't. The NT is chocked full of the imminency of the return of Christ. Don't give up so easily. Just because believers would not have it overtake them as a thief in the night doesn't mean the near return didn't happen.
 

Chaps

Active member
Apr 3, 2024
173
68
28
California
It doesn't. The NT is chocked full of the imminency of the return of Christ. Don't give up so easily. Just because believers would not have it overtake them as a thief in the night doesn't mean the near return didn't happen.
I was being a bit sarcastic…but honestly, I am not really interested in responding to these kinds of comments. The moment someone says, “You‘re wrong, the Bible says so!”, the conversation is pretty much over. It’s not a conversation anymore, but an argument and I’m not interested in arguing. If people want to discuss their views and why they feel the Bible supports it more than another view, I will do that. I’m not going to engage in “im right, your wrong” banter. It’s not edifying for anyone and only serves to create division and hard feelings.
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
10,220
1,981
113
It doesn't. The NT is chocked full of the imminency of the return of Christ. Don't give up so easily. Just because believers would not have it overtake them as a thief in the night doesn't mean the near return didn't happen.
Per Scripture itself, the "IT" in your sentence (referencing that which will not over take believers "as a thief in the night"--1Th5's context) is not "the return of Christ" (as many suppose--or in any form one would prefer to surmise [as in your view--the 70ad events])...

... but rather, as the text itself speaks to, "the arrival of the day of the Lord" (which is an earthly-located TIME-PERIOD consisting, in part, of "judgments" unfolding upon the earth [including "the man of sin" and ALL he is slated to DO over the course of SOME TIME])...

... which time-period Paul also says in this context will arrive "exactly like [hosper]" the initial "birth pang [singular]" that comes upon a woman in labor--"suddenly" as the text also states (not after the "birth pangs [plural]" Jesus spoke of are COMPLETED--as others like to suggest, who say this ["the DOTL"] commences at Christ's Second Coming to the earth Rev19).








Additionally, the "SEQUENCE ISSUES" of the Olivet Discourse have the 70ad events taking place "BEFORE ALL THESE [before all these beginning of birth pangs, just listed in vv.8-11 of Lk21--parallel Mt24:4-8 & Mk13:5-8--'the beginning of birth pangs']";
whereas Matt24 STARTS OUT with those and then proceeds to unfold what follows on from those "BEGINNING of birth pangs" (i.e. further birth pangs that follow on from the "beginning" of them), which further events include the "AOD" in v.15 which Jesus had drawn from Daniel 12:11 ("AOD SET UP")...

... and which passage in Daniel has Daniel (after he will "rest" in death) being raised to "STAND IN THY LOT at the END of the DAYS" (the end of the "days" being referenced specifically in that chpt)--Daniel was not bodily resurrected at any time following the 70ad events, which is what one would have to believe (unless one completely brushes aside all timing clues in these various texts) in order to come to the conclusion that the 70ad events were what was being [solely] referred to (outside of 12 or so verses in Lk21--vv.12-24a,b--the only ones which do) in His Olivet Discourse.




I myself am not willing to disregard all of the timing indicators provided meticulously in His Word. I know many have no problem with doing so (for example, the "Amill-teachings" and the "Preterist-teachings" and the "Historicist-teachings" and others...); but disregarding these very important aspects of His word sets one off on the wrong track (note: I am NOT suggesting that one's salvation is in jeopardy if they don't grasp the timing clues provided in scripture... as some want to pin on pre-tribbers as believing :) )

= )


Just my offering...
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
24,500
12,954
113
It doesn't. The NT is chocked full of the imminency of the return of Christ. Don't give up so easily. Just because believers would not have it overtake them as a thief in the night doesn't mean the near return didn't happen.
When you speak of "imminency" you need to be clear that that pertains to the Resurrection/Rapture,
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
10,220
1,981
113
So you are suggesting Darby was not the first one to come up with Dispensationalism and the secret rapture of the church?
[for now, as I'm short on time...] As to the second part (the part I bolded in your post above), here's what I have as to quotes:



D. MacPherson [himself] writes:


"In 1880 William Reid, in his book on Brethrenism, stated that 'Edward Irving contributed the notion of . . . the secret rapture of the saints.'"

[underline mine]



[but note T. Ice says of that...] "but he [MacPherson] doesn't actually reference any pre-tribbers when he makes these statements."


(note: I'm not sure of the exact quote by Ice as to whether he used the actual term "pre-tribbers" or pretribulation adherents or something similar)






R. A. Huebner, in his PreTribulation Rapture Recovered, writes:


"... erroneous notions are the result of the myth that the Irvingites held a pretribulation rapture and also results from trying to link J. N. D. with this falsified Irvingism."

[and]

"... the Secret Rapture as used at that point in time [early 1800's] did not refer to the pretribulation rapture."



[underline mine]


[end quoting]





____________


Again, E Irving was an Historicist... not a pre-trib-rapture adherent. He believed the rapture occurs at Christ's Second Coming (not at a distinct time-slot, as "pre-tribbers" do)
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
24,500
12,954
113
The moment someone says, “You‘re wrong, the Bible says so!”, the conversation is pretty much over.
Why would the conversation be over? If the Bible refutes your position, then you should be willing to accept that and admit it. Not persist in your errors. The problem is that too many prefer to persist in their errors rather than allow the Bible to correct them.
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
14,742
5,319
113
62
Per Scripture itself, the "IT" in your sentence (referencing that which will not over take believers "as a thief in the night"--1Th5's context) is not "the return of Christ" (as many suppose--or in any form one would prefer to surmise [as in your view--the 70ad events])...

... but rather, as the text itself speaks to, "the arrival of the day of the Lord" (which is an earthly-located TIME-PERIOD consisting, in part, of "judgments" unfolding upon the earth [including "the man of sin" and ALL he is slated to DO over the course of SOME TIME])...

... which time-period Paul also says in this context will arrive "exactly like [hosper]" the initial "birth pang [singular]" that comes upon a woman in labor--"suddenly" as the text also states (not after the "birth pangs [plural]" Jesus spoke of are COMPLETED--as others like to suggest, who say this ["the DOTL"] commences at Christ's Second Coming to the earth Rev19).








Additionally, the "SEQUENCE ISSUES" of the Olivet Discourse have the 70ad events taking place "BEFORE ALL THESE [before all these beginning of birth pangs, just listed in vv.8-11 of Lk21--parallel Mt24:4-8 & Mk13:5-8--'the beginning of birth pangs']";
whereas Matt24 STARTS OUT with those and then proceeds to unfold what follows on from those "BEGINNING of birth pangs" (i.e. further birth pangs that follow on from the "beginning" of them), which further events include the "AOD" in v.15 which Jesus had drawn from Daniel 12:11 ("AOD SET UP")...

... and which passage in Daniel has Daniel (after he will "rest" in death) being raised to "STAND IN THY LOT at the END of the DAYS" (the end of the "days" being referenced specifically in that chpt)--Daniel was not bodily resurrected at any time following the 70ad events, which is what one would have to believe (unless one completely brushes aside all timing clues in these various texts) in order to come to the conclusion that the 70ad events were what was being [solely] referred to (outside of 12 or so verses in Lk21--vv.12-24a,b--the only ones which do) in His Olivet Discourse.




I myself am not willing to disregard all of the timing indicators provided meticulously in His Word. I know many have no problem with doing so (for example, the "Amill-teachings" and the "Preterist-teachings" and the "Historicist-teachings" and others...); but disregarding these very important aspects of His word sets one off on the wrong track (note: I am NOT suggesting that one's salvation is in jeopardy if they don't grasp the timing clues provided in scripture... as some want to pin on pre-tribbers as believing :) )

= )


Just my offering...
I appreciate your offering. I disagree with it. But if you would care to break down the book of Revelation into an outline, I'll be glad to discuss it with you, because the overwhelming portion of Revelation deals with the nation Israel in the time of Christ and shortly thereafter. It deals specifically with the end of one covenant with its stipulations and consequences for not complying of the terms of that covenant, and the institution of a new covenant moving forward.
I appreciate that you have devoted a great deal of time to the subject, but if you missed what I just shared, you missed the purpose of the book.
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
10,220
1,981
113
When you speak of "imminency" you need to be clear that that pertains to the Resurrection/Rapture,
From my understanding (and if memory serves:unsure: ), Cameron143 believes it referred to the events surrounding 70ad (including a type of "return of Christ" that wasn't necessarily visible [as to His Person] in nature).
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
14,742
5,319
113
62
When you speak of "imminency" you need to be clear that that pertains to the Resurrection/Rapture,
It refers to the destruction of Israel, the end of a covenant, and the institution of a new covenant.
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
24,500
12,954
113
So you are suggesting Darby was not the first one to come up with Dispensationalism and the secret rapture of the church
Darby was probably THE LAST one to recognize the "secret Rapture" (if secret applies to non-disclosure to the unbelieving world). Christ was the FIRST ONE to present the doctrine of the Rapture in John 14:1-3. All the apostles and apostolic churches expected the Rapture in their time. Some of the Early Church Fathers also expected the same. Then a Jesuit priest -- of all people -- presented a detailed position on the imminent Rapture.

Darby simply recognized what the rest of Christendom was ignoring at that time. But Dispensationalism originated with him. However, the Bible already speaks of dispensations, so once again he simply recognized what other had ignored. Amillennialism was dominant at that time, so he did everyone a favor. There is indeed a literal Millennium.
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
14,742
5,319
113
62
Which is all TOTAL NONSENSE Cameron.
Because you don't understand why the book of Revelation was written. You and others have been taught that it is all about the future. When you search the scripture, somehow like the Pharisees you don't understand that they speak of Jesus.
All the promises of God are fulfilled in Him. He isn't showing John some unknown distant history. He is showing him things that are at hand, which will come to pass shortly, and will be viewed by those who pierced Him.
 

Chaps

Active member
Apr 3, 2024
173
68
28
California
Why would the conversation be over? If the Bible refutes your position, then you should be willing to accept that and admit it. Not persist in your errors. The problem is that too many prefer to persist in their errors rather than allow the Bible to correct them.
No, the Bible refutes your position. Stop persisting in your errors. See, we are getting a lot of progress here.
 

Chaps

Active member
Apr 3, 2024
173
68
28
California
[for now, as I'm short on time...] As to the second part (the part I bolded in your post above), here's what I have as to quotes:



D. MacPherson [himself] writes:


"In 1880 William Reid, in his book on Brethrenism, stated that 'Edward Irving contributed the notion of . . . the secret rapture of the saints.'"

[underline mine]



[but note T. Ice says of that...] "but he [MacPherson] doesn't actually reference any pre-tribbers when he makes these statements."


(note: I'm not sure of the exact quote by Ice as to whether he used the actual term "pre-tribbers" or pretribulation adherents or something similar)






R. A. Huebner, in his PreTribulation Rapture Recovered, writes:


"... erroneous notions are the result of the myth that the Irvingites held a pretribulation rapture and also results from trying to link J. N. D. with this falsified Irvingism."

[and]

"... the Secret Rapture as used at that point in time [early 1800's] did not refer to the pretribulation rapture."



[underline mine]


[end quoting]





____________


Again, E Irving was an Historicist... not a pre-trib-rapture adherent. He believed the rapture occurs at Christ's Second Coming (not at a distinct time-slot, as "pre-tribbers" do)
First, I’d like to thank you for your thoughtful replies. It seems you are the only one who actually understands the questions I am asking and is willing to provide a meaningful response backed with some documentation. Interesting quote, but I’d like to see some of his actual writings on the topic to see if what he is describing is similar to the “secret rapture” notion that is popular in Dispensational theology today.

But again, I do think a lot of this discussion is losing sight of my original point. My original point was that these ideas that God needed to remove the Church to focus on national Israel or that the (first) Second Coming (parousia) of Jesus would be invisible event that was unseen by much of the world was entirely foreign to the Church and how scholars viewed revelation for well over a thousand years. I think a lot of these efforts to try to tie in some obscure quote or vague commentary that “might” make it sound like someone could have possibly thought something similar is usually more of an anachronistic rendering of their work.

So to be clear, I am not saying the secret rapture and Dispensational theology CAN‘T be true (although I have SERIOUS concerns about the theology behind it beyond the questionable interpretive methods) because it wasn’t even considered by Christian theologians until very recent history. However, I am saying that I find it shocking that so many on here have never really even considered another view or see any other view on the book as OBVIOUSLY wrong and even accuse people with other views of false teaching. It is just bewildering to me that people can so quickly dismiss any other view and even chastise other positions when no Christian thought as they did until about two seconds ago…lol
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
5,950
1,697
113
It is just bewildering to me that people can so quickly dismiss any other view and even chastise other positions when no Christian thought as they did until about two seconds ago…lol
This phenomenon is attributed as a 'loyalty to a fault.'
 

Chaps

Active member
Apr 3, 2024
173
68
28
California
Darby was probably THE LAST one to recognize the "secret Rapture" (if secret applies to non-disclosure to the unbelieving world). Christ was the FIRST ONE to present the doctrine of the Rapture in John 14:1-3. All the apostles and apostolic churches expected the Rapture in their time. Some of the Early Church Fathers also expected the same. Then a Jesuit priest -- of all people -- presented a detailed position on the imminent Rapture.

Darby simply recognized what the rest of Christendom was ignoring at that time. But Dispensationalism originated with him. However, the Bible already speaks of dispensations, so once again he simply recognized what other had ignored. Amillennialism was dominant at that time, so he did everyone a favor. There is indeed a literal Millennium.
Have you read church history? Cause I assure you I have read a LOT of the church fathers and early church writings about a host of topics…including Revelation and their views on the return of Christ, and NONE of them thought anything remotely close to what Darby taught. There’s a reason EVERY SCHOLAR who has written anything about prophetic interpretation distinguishes Dispensationalism from interpretive views that came before.

It seems clear to me that your primary issue is that you do not understand what other people are saying with the theological terms they are using. So you are conflating ideas because when scholars and theologians use a term like “dispensation” or “secret rapture” or so forth, they are referring to a very specific theological idea that fits in a theological framework. You can’t pull ideas about the “rapture” from 2nd century Historic Premillennialists and say that they were saying the same thing Darby said as it relates to their understanding of Revelation. Well, I mean, I guess you COULD…but it would only display that you have no idea what you’re talking about.

So let me just encourage you to take some time reading about Historic Premillenialism and the early Christians beliefs about the Second Coming and then read some literature about Dispensational Premillenialism and those beliefs about timelines and the rapture. I think you will see that while some of the same words are used….what is being described are TOTALLY different ideas about what is taking place.
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
10,220
1,981
113
This phenomenon is attributed as a 'loyalty to a fault.'
Well, I can say this :) ... I DISAGREE with how Darby defines the Greek phrase "he apostasia" in 2 Thessalonians 2:3
(and likely a number of other of his notions too, lol).


But in whatever points I DO happen to agree with any writer / teacher / speaker / etc, I don't mind mentioning where I do.
I personally own somewhere around 6000-7000 books in my personal library (many of them on the subject of "eschatology" OF ALL STRIPES)--besides reading abundant online material--and I don't hesitate to express where I do or do not agree with whomever, on such subject, and why... always endeavoring to supply the biblical reasoning behind my viewpoint. = )
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
10,220
1,981
113
I think you need to do more research on Darby’s Dispensational Premillennial view.
May I ask, who are you quoting in your Quote Box of your Post #116... you didn't say... where you'd put:

When God is ready to restart his postponed program for the Jews, he will begin the countdown for the second coming of Jesus in a very dramatic way. This could happen at literally any moment, since there are no special conditions that must precede it. What is this dramatic, any-moment event? It is the secret rapture of all Christians out of the earth. This coincides with Christ’s first second coming (second coming #1), which itself will be secret and invisible from the standpoint of earth’s normal activities. This event is called the parousia, the coming or presence of Christ. All at once, in some unexpected moment, all living Christians will suddenly disappear (evaporate, in a sense) from this world and will instantly receive their glorified bodies. They will then join all previously dead Christians, who have just been raised from the dead in their new bodies in what is called the first resurrection; then all will be taken up together to meet their Savior, who has returned for them to take them up to heaven. All Christians, now glorified, will then stand before the judgment seat of Christ (2 Cor 5:10) for the assignment of their rewards. Then as the bride of Christ they will join their Bridegroom for a seven-year wedding feast (Rev 19:7–9), which takes place in heaven.
What is the purpose of this secret rapture? Why does God suddenly remove all Christians from this world? There are two reasons. First, God has no more use for the church upon the earth. It has served its purpose; the halftime events are over. God is now ready to resume the real game, where the main players are the Jews (physical Israel). Second, the next seven years of earth’s history are about to be filled with some of the greatest suffering the world has ever witnessed, most of it the result of Satan’s attacks on the people of God. In an act of untold mercy God removes the church from the world just so it will not have to go through the “great tribulation.” Thus this view is called pretribulational premillennialism.

... is this Darby himself writing this?


Just asking. = )
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
10,220
1,981
113
^ P.S. where that QUOTE (by whomever) said this:

Then as the bride of Christ they will join their Bridegroom for a seven-year wedding feast (Rev 19:7–9), which takes place in heaven.
... as a "pre-tribber, [pre-trib Rapture]" I completely DISAGREE that "the wedding FEAST / SUPPER" takes place UP THERE (upon "our Rapture"); but believe rather that it takes place ON THE EARTH, and IS "the promised and prophesied EARTHLY Millennial Kingdom" (at least its inauguration) commencing upon His "RETURN" to the earth Rev19.








[Lk12:36-37,38,40-42 (and its parallel) - "when he will RETURN FROM the wedding" (i.e. as an ALREADY-WED "Bridegroom")... THEN "the meal [G347--see this word used also in Mt8:11 and its parallel--speaking of the MK age]"]
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
24,500
12,954
113
Have you read church history? Cause I assure you I have read a LOT of the church fathers and early church writings about a host of topics…including Revelation and their views on the return of Christ, and NONE of them thought anything remotely close to what Darby taught.
Did I say that? Read my post carefully again. I said that some of the Early Church Fathers believed in an imminent Rapture. So did Darby, but he said many other things. And so do millions of Christians today. That is exactly what the Bible reveals.