Interesting that so far nothing found in the gospels or the letters written by Paul, Peter or James on such an important topic.
There are many different brands of millennialism. Millennial theories are a dime a dozen and have always existed in a constant state of constant evolution. The one consistent feature of millennialism is that it is always is a state of change. Millennial theories are as varied as the individuals within the organizations they represent and are as equally contradictory of one another. There are Evangelical Fundamentalists who comprise the majority of the ecumenical groups and are represented by both premillennial and postmillennial advocates. There is also Seventh Day Adventist millennialism, and Watchtower millennialism. Even the Catholic Church once held to a form of millennial eschatology. Their position as of now is that premillennial views “cannot safely be taught,” although they do not dogmatically defend this view. As a hermeneutic, millennialism is a particularly literalistic approach to the reading of scripture, especially in the areas of prophesy. Millennialism is an abuse of revealed representations and robs revealed symbols of their spiritual significance. As an eschatology, it is a collection of theoretical events that surround the second coming of Jesus. These events are created out of a literalization of highly figurative language and the misapplication of OT prophesies.
A member here on CC who goes by HeRoseFromTheDead once made a rather astute observation that I thought was very good. He said, "Preterism actually promotes historical understanding against which prophecies can be examined. Futurism promotes fanciful projections of prophecy into the future that can't be examined against anything. One is based on historical witness; the other is based on imagination as if prophecy is self-defining."
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