Some who are standing here will not taste death until they see the kingdom of God

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SIMON55

Active member
Feb 15, 2019
538
193
43
MO,OK,AR
I dig the big rigs, but I don’t think I could handle the shifting that would drive me nuts, hehe.
Shifting becomes thoughtless second nature that works off your ear and rpm. But they got automatics now for steering wheel holders little old ladies driving automatics.
 

SIMON55

Active member
Feb 15, 2019
538
193
43
MO,OK,AR
Dont need all that high stick stuff its just a ft and a half extra getting in your way just to look cool....and makes the gear splitter operation more awkward its nutty.
 
K

KnowMe

Guest
Dont need all that high stick stuff its just a ft and a half extra getting in your way just to look cool....and makes the gear splitter operation more awkward its nutty.
Looks like it, though I have no idea about driving a rig or the lingo other than from convoy or smokey and the bandit, lol.
 
K

KnowMe

Guest
when I was around 10 when I saw some of those truck movies per say I did want to be a truck driver though a dream I didn’t see.
 

Noblemen

Senior Member
Jan 14, 2018
498
149
43
Then you have missed the point! Because everything that I post is Christ centered. It is after all, His word that I am contending for. There is no room to entertain the idea that Jesus has already returned to end the age. There has been no fulfillment of Matt.24:30-31. These are false teachings, period! This wishy washy attitude is the problem within Christianity today.

Therefore, it is not "I'm right, their wrong" but what God's word says, which is what I am conveying.

Prophecy = There be some standing here who will not taste of death until they see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom

Fulfillment = About eight days after Jesus had said these things, He took with Him Peter, John, and James, and went up on a mountain to pray. And as He was praying, the appearance of His face changed, and His clothes became radiantly white.
You seem some what frustrated with the religious deal
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
113
We have one camp saying the others habe missed the point and the other camp saying everyone posting has missed the resurrection. So apparently Jesus came back again and everyone living here and posting right this minute should go home, shows over since he came back in 70 ad and not ever returning to earth again.

The kingdom is here, but is invisible. The kingdom is future and will be visible. How about its both wont that be blow peoples minds.
 

Ahwatukee

Senior Member
Mar 12, 2015
11,159
2,376
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You seem some what frustrated with the religious deal
Hello Noblemen,

I am zealous for Christ and the word of God. But I am very frustrated with false teachers and their teachings. I posted this thread because I am tired of seeing those who distort the scripture with the same name of this thread, as well as those who believe that "this generation" as referring to the generation that Jesus was speaking from. They are just going to have to find out first hand. I wonder if they will even admit their error then.

To believe and teach that Matt.24:30-31 has already taken place, is just ridiculous to say the least. It also demonstrates that they have no idea of what is to take place after Christ returns, which is the end of the age.
 

Hevosmies

Well-known member
Sep 8, 2018
3,612
2,633
113
Can you even walk outside in Arizona for extended periods of time? Isnt it like SCORCHING heat constantly? Sweating and drying up?

@Ahwatukee How do you understand "this generation shall not pass"? Is it talking about the generation that sees all the signs, thats the usual explanation ive heard!
 

Ahwatukee

Senior Member
Mar 12, 2015
11,159
2,376
113
Can you even walk outside in Arizona for extended periods of time? Isnt it like SCORCHING heat constantly? Sweating and drying up?

@Ahwatukee How do you understand "this generation shall not pass"? Is it talking about the generation that sees all the signs, thats the usual explanation ive heard!
Let's look at that scripture:

========================================

Now learn this lesson from the fig tree: As soon as its branches become tender and sprout leaves, you know that summer is near. 33So also, when you see all these things, you will know that He is near,d right at the door. 34Truly I tell you, this generation will not pass away until all these things have happened. "

=======================================

In the scripture above, a comparison is being made:

Blossoming of the trees = Summer is near

When you see all these things (Signs) = The end of the age is near

Then Jesus says "this generation will not pass away until all these things (signs) have happened.

Therefore, the generation that Jesus is talking about is the one where those signs begin to take place and not the generation that He was living in. Those signs would include the setting up of the abomination, which has also not yet taken place.

Furthermore, scripture is clear that the wrath of God, the day of the Lord, must take place prior to Jesus return to the earth, which will be accomplished via the seals, trumpets and bowl judgments and which also have not begun. As an example, the first seal is that rider on the white horse, which is representing the antichrist, who has not yet been revealed. He and his kingdom must be revealed prior to Christ returning to the earth to end the age. Those who are here will know him when he makes his seven year agreement with Israel. And we know that it is Israel for one, because after he makes his covenant, in the middle of the seven years he causes the sacrifices and offerings to cease, which means that they would have had to have already been going on in order to put a stop them.

Like I said before, there are way too many events that must take place before the Lord returns to the earth to end the age. The destruction of the temple was a single event that Jesus told would happen, but has nothing to do with the very end of the age. For it has been 1900 years since that event and none of the other signs marking the end of the age have taken place.

People think that they are going to Christianize the world in preparation for Christ's return, but that is not what scripture teaches. What it does teach is that the world will become more and more wicked, the Holy Spirit along with the church will be taken out of the way and God's wrath and the beasts kingdom will follow. Then, after the completion of God's wrath the Lord will return to end the age.
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
113
This generation paassing away...meaning this generation will end. What is a generation its like a lineage. Ok Jesus illustrated this with a fig tree right? You know family trees? He was referring to that. He wants the trees to bear fruit.

Have you ever done your family tree...it has branches, it keeps growing. One generation isnt an entire tree, its the branches. You know how trees grow, they branch out and keep putting out branches and leaves and them fruit. If you are familiar with gardening or how trees grow you can understsnd this.
 

Noblemen

Senior Member
Jan 14, 2018
498
149
43
Hello Noblemen,

I am zealous for Christ and the word of God. But I am very frustrated with false teachers and their teachings. I posted this thread because I am tired of seeing those who distort the scripture with the same name of this thread, as well as those who believe that "this generation" as referring to the generation that Jesus was speaking from. They are just going to have to find out first hand. I wonder if they will even admit their error then.

To believe and teach that Matt.24:30-31 has already taken place, is just ridiculous to say the least. It also demonstrates that they have no idea of what is to take place after Christ returns, which is the end of the age.
Sure we all are but that is not our business, stay with what you do, the lord will take care of His own. The time for preaching Christ is now, truth prevails. Let fire and brimstone rest it doesn't work.
There is a message that has been going around for some years, it is spirit stuff, no man gets it on their own but it is given to them by their Father, trust and believe, be patient to seek God. It is found in the Apostle Paul's epistles, in the form of Christ in you, wait before the Lord dear brother, ask for a revelation of the indwelling Christ that has been in you from the moment you believed, bless you
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
22,993
8,367
113
Mt. 24 was fulfilled.
Those alive saw the end of the theocracy, the Kingdom started.
Quite impossible. Daniel Ch 9 and the 70 weeks does not fit into the time frame of the Crucifixion. Preterism fails on every level, and most critically it fails on the level of fulfilled and unfulfilled prophecy.
 
Jul 23, 2018
12,199
2,775
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I'm posting this for the benefit of those who really want to know the truth about this scripture, which is continually being misinterpreted.

The Preterists/Amillennialis would have the rest of us believe that by Jesus saying "some who are standing here will not taste of death before they see the kingdom of God," that He is saying that some who were standing would still be alive when Jesus returned to end the age, using it as a proof that He had to have already returned.

The error in their interpretation, (besides being stubborn and not willing to listen to the truth), is two fold.

1). The identity of "some who are standing here."

2). The kingdom of God (Number 2 is stated three different ways, which I am listing below

Matt.16:28 - Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death until they see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom.
Mark 9:1 - Truly I tell you, there are some standing here who will not taste death until they see the kingdom of God arrive with power.
Luke 9:27 - But I tell you truthfully, some who are standing here will not taste death until they see the kingdom of God.”

As previously stated, the preterists/amills interpret that which is highlighted in red above to mean that Jesus was talking about when He returns to the earth to end the age. So, let's look at another scripture which uses the same wording:

"But if I drive out demons by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God has come upon you. (Matt.12:8)

Jesus said the above when the Pharisees had said that He was casting out demons by the prince of demons. Notice that the phrase "the kingdom of God has come upon you" was referring to Jesus casting out the demon by the power of Holy Spirit and was not referring to His return to end of the age. The meaning is the same in Matthew, Mark and Luke.

Now, let's look at the scripture. I am listing Luke because it is the most fluent:

================================================================================

27But I tell you truthfully, some who are standing here will not taste death until they see the kingdom of God.”

28About eight days after Jesus had said these things, He took with Him Peter, John, and James, and went up on a mountain to pray. 29And as He was praying, the appearance of His face changed, and His clothes became radiantly white. 30Suddenly two men, Moses and Elijah, began talking with Jesus. 31They appeared in glory and spoke about His departure, which He was about to accomplish at Jerusalem.

================================================================================

So, v.27 says "I tell you truthfully, some who are standing here will not taste of death until they see the kingdom of God."

Then in the beginning of v.28 it says, "about eight days after Jesus said these things" which links what Jesus said in V.27 with the following information found in V.28-31, which is also the fulfillment of what He said in v.27.

"He took with them Peter, John, and James and went upon a high mountain to pray." Peter, John and James is the identity of those Jesus was referring to when He said, "some who are standing here will not taste of death."

Then in v.29 it states that while Jesus was praying, the appearance of His face changed (brighter than the sun) and His clothes became radiantly white. This change in His appearance then is the fulfillment of some standing there (Peter, John and James) seeing the kingdom of God, i.e. seeing Jesus in His glorified state.

Therefore, the words, "seeing the kingdom of God" or "seeing the Son of Man coming in His kingdom" has nothing to do with Jesus returning at the end of the age before those standing there had died. What it does have to do with, is Peter, John and James seeing Jesus in His glorified state, which is referring to the kingdom of God coming with power.

So, you have Jesus giving the prophecy in V.27 and about a week later we have fulfillment of said prophecy in V.28-31


It just takes an open mind and a desire to know the truth of God's word, opposed to just adopting the teachings of men and then fighting tooth and nail to protect said false teaching.

The end of the age, i.e. when Jesus returns to the earth and sends out of His angels (Matt.24:30-31, Rev.1:7, 19:11-21) is still to come, but can only take place until after the church has been removed and God's wrath has been poured out via the seals, trumpets and bowl judgments.
I think maybe you gave what you percieve to be the explanation,not an uncontestable truth.

The problem is,it says " coming in his kingdom"
In the transfiguration,he is standing in his glory,not "coming in his kingdom"

A more plausable answers might be 1) the ascention
2) John the revelator saw him coming in his kingdom in his vision.

Be we do know he was definately "coming in his kingdom" when he went up and sat on his throne. They saw it,and were standing there.

I believe either one of those are more plausable than the transfiguration.
 
Jul 23, 2018
12,199
2,775
113
Quite impossible. Daniel Ch 9 and the 70 weeks does not fit into the time frame of the Crucifixion. Preterism fails on every level, and most critically it fails on the level of fulfilled and unfulfilled prophecy.
Yes.
Further more,the earth is not redeemed until revelation 5.
Later it is declared " the kingdoms of the world have become the kingdoms of our God"

God himself makes men and the devil give it back,through the kinsman redeemer.
God RECLAIMS it in rev 5.
"..no MAN was found in heaven or earth WITH THE RIGHT to open the seals."
The kinsman redeemer is Jesus.
God uses his own law to trump the devil.
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
22,993
8,367
113
I think maybe you gave what you percieve to be the explanation,not an uncontestable truth.

The problem is,it says " coming in his kingdom"
In the transfiguration,he is standing in his glory,not "coming in his kingdom"

A more plausable answers might be 1) the ascention
2) John the revelator saw him coming in his kingdom in his vision.

Be we do know he was definately "coming in his kingdom" when he went up and sat on his throne. They saw it,and were standing there.

I believe either one of those are more plausable than the transfiguration.
Interesting and certainly plausible.
 
Jul 23, 2018
12,199
2,775
113
Sure we all are but that is not our business, stay with what you do, the lord will take care of His own. The time for preaching Christ is now, truth prevails. Let fire and brimstone rest it doesn't work.
There is a message that has been going around for some years, it is spirit stuff, no man gets it on their own but it is given to them by their Father, trust and believe, be patient to seek God. It is found in the Apostle Paul's epistles, in the form of Christ in you, wait before the Lord dear brother, ask for a revelation of the indwelling Christ that has been in you from the moment you believed, bless you
I love paul. I read those epistles.
But no more than the Gospels.
Peter,john,revelation,the Gospels and the ot,all Gods word.
1&2 Samuel is Gods heartbeat.

The Lord himself is bigger than a message.
 
Feb 27, 2019
45
9
8
Therefore, the words, "seeing the kingdom of God" or "seeing the Son of Man coming in His kingdom" has nothing to do with Jesus returning at the end of the age before those standing there had died. What it does have to do with, is Peter, John and James seeing Jesus in His glorified state, which is referring to the kingdom of God coming with power.
Hi, Ahwatukee -

I assume by the name you live in Arizona. If you do, please know that I live about 30 minutes from Ahwatukee.

There are three main issues with your position that I’d like to point out:
  • Things missing
  • Things written
  • Things backfired
Things Missing
Jesus associated the following with His coming in Matthew 16:
  • angels present
  • Son of Man giving rewards to each, according to their works
None of the items listed above were present with Jesus when He was transfigured on the mountain. Therefore, there are some things missing in the account on the mountain that show that the transfiguration event was not a fulfillment of what Jesus had mentioned earlier.

Things Written
Peter wrote a letter (2 Peter) in which he retold seeing the transfiguration. In 2 Peter 1:16, Peter states that he and and the other disciples with him were “eyewitnesses of His majesty”, not His coming. Later on in 2 Peter 3:4-12, Peter describes Jesus’ coming as still yet future. So, to equate Peter, James, and John seeing Jesus transfigured on the mountain as being the fulfillment of Jesus prophecy that they would see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom is problematic.

Things Backfired
Even if you were correct here about the connection between the transfiguration and Jesus’ prophecy about His coming, wouldn’t you be supporting the preterist position? Aren’t you still saying that Jesus’ coming was in the past - it happened or at least began at the transfiguration?

The main difference is that you are saying that the Lord’s coming began around AD 32 (around the time of the transfiguration) when the preterists claim that it happened at AD 70.

I look forward to your response.
 

Ahwatukee

Senior Member
Mar 12, 2015
11,159
2,376
113
Hi, Ahwatukee -

I assume by the name you live in Arizona. If you do, please know that I live about 30 minutes from Ahwatukee.

There are three main issues with your position that I’d like to point out:
  • Things missing
  • Things written
  • Things backfired
Things Missing
Jesus associated the following with His coming in Matthew 16:
  • angels present
  • Son of Man giving rewards to each, according to their works

None of the items listed above were present with Jesus when He was transfigured on the mountain. Therefore, there are some things missing in the account on the mountain that show that the transfiguration event was not a fulfillment of what Jesus had mentioned earlier.

Things Written
Peter wrote a letter (2 Peter) in which he retold seeing the transfiguration. In 2 Peter 1:16, Peter states that he and and the other disciples with him were “eyewitnesses of His majesty”, not His coming.
Later on in 2 Peter 3:4-12, Peter describes Jesus’ coming as still yet future. So, to equate Peter, James, and John seeing Jesus transfigured on the mountain as being the fulfillment of Jesus prophecy that they would see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom is problematic.

Things Backfired
Even if you were correct here about the connection between the transfiguration and Jesus’ prophecy about His coming, wouldn’t you be supporting the preterist position? Aren’t you still saying that Jesus’ coming was in the past - it happened or at least began at the transfiguration?

The main difference is that you are saying that the Lord’s coming began around AD 32 (around the time of the transfiguration) when the preterists claim that it happened at AD 70.

I look forward to your response.[/QUOTE]

Hello and yes, I did live in Ahwatukee. However, I sold my home about seven months ago and am now living in Lake Havasu City.

Regarding your post, I would suggest going back and rereading post #1. Because, your claims are supporting the same thing that I believe. And some things that you claimed I said, such as "The main difference is that you are saying that the Lord’s coming began around AD 32," I never said at all. And that because I wrote the original post to debunk the teaching that when Jesus said, "I tell you the truth, some who are standing here will not taste of death until they see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom," that He was not referring to the end of the age. I'm sayin that those standing there who would not taste of death, were Peter, John and James. And the reference was not to the end of the age, but to them seeing Jesus when He was transfigured in His glorified state. A sneak preview if you will.

If you go back and read the original post, it should clear things up. Below is a summary of my position:

Some who are standing here will not taste of death = Peter, John and James

The Son of Man coming in His kingdom = Jesus transfiguration into His glorified state

This prophecy has nothing to do with Jesus returning to end the age, but is referring to His being transfigured into His glorified state (the Son of Man coming in His glory), with Peter, John and James witnessing it before they died.