"I ask then why do people say Israel must go through the Tribulation?" Jeremiah 30.6. paraphrased.

  • 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.

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
36,691
13,135
113
#81
better reads:

https://www.soh.church/when-was-revelation-written/
https://theendtimespodium.wordpress.com/2017/07/27/2456/
https://godeeperbiblestudy.com/when-was-revelation-written-and-why-is-it-important/

(each chosen from an internet search)

Disclaimer: It is not my intent to endorse or promote these sites or any 'preterist' leanings that may exist on these sites - I am only interested in truth represented in 'fact' and 'what makes sense' from a biblical and historical point-of-view. I chose these as "random samples" that discuss various reasons that support a pre-70AD date for the writing of Revelation.
laughable.

"mount Zion" in Hebrews must be a quote from Revelation??

wow
 

Komentaja

Active member
Jul 29, 2022
428
225
43
#82
All those things easily explained by a first century coming. You are simply predisposed to see it otherwise. You have been taught a certain way and you are comfortable with that.
Jesus returned already? How did everyone miss it?
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
15,058
5,416
113
62
#83
Jesus returned already? How did everyone miss it?
No one missed it. Jerusalem was basically leveled. God sent His servants and then His Son. They killed them all. What do you think was their end?
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
3,944
1,569
113
#84
there's no evidence for that i know of, but abundant evidence that it was written around 95-96 AD

The early date for this book is chosen in order to make a certain interpretation fit, not because it is so.
The internal evidence for the book of Revelation being written before 70 AD is compelling, along with the external evidence. To study this to its fullest would take a great deal of time.

The late date setting is actually the one which was required to make the creation of the state of secular Israel prophetic along with selling books and making movies which has been very profitable.
Remember when a generation was 40 years and the start of the last generation was 1948?
That didn't work so then the new date was 1967
That didn't work either.
So here we are waiting for this temple to built so there is no stone is left on top of another.
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
24,601
13,017
113
#85
The internal evidence for the book of Revelation being written before 70 AD is compelling, along with the external evidence.
I am not sure where you got this information but it is incorrect.

JOHN GILL'S COMMENTARY
Some think it was written in the times of Claudius Caesar (h), before the destruction of Jerusalem. In the title of the Syriac version, this revelation is said to be made to John in the isle of Patmos, into which he was cast by Nero Caesar. But the more commonly received opinion is, that he had this vision there, at the latter end of Domitian's reign (i) by whom he was there banished, about the year 95, or 96.

Just about any commentator whom I have read agrees with this.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
83
#86
Sometimes our eyes just pass over massive statements of doctrine in the bible. Jeremiah 30 makes it startlingly clear who will and who will not go through the Great Tribulation.
Jeremiah. 30.4-6
These are the words which the Lord spoke concerning Israel and Judah
"thus says the Lord
we have heard a cry of panic, of terror and not peace, ask now and see, can a man bear a child?
why then do I see every man with his hand on his loins like a woman in labour? Why has every face turned pale? ....

7 .... Alas for that day is so great, there is none like it, it is even the time of Jacob's trouble BUT

BUT he shall be saved out of it."

Israel according to the flesh is God's firstborn son, spiritual Israel, the church, is the Bride. Both have promises made to them. To the one promises related to the earth, the land. To the other promises relating to heaven.

Here we see it is the woman, the Spouse who must endure the birth pangs The great tribulation. The church is impregnated and must give birth to the new creation, Israel according to the flesh must be converted.
What happens if anyone person of the scattered church of the house of Isreal don't make it back to Isreal


The Message



Mark 13:14-23


Run for the Hills
14-18 “But be ready to run for it when you see the monster of desecration set up where it should never be. You who can read, make sure you understand what I’m talking about. If you’re living in Judea at the time, run for the hills; if you’re working in the yard, don’t go back to the house to get anything; if you’re out in the field, don’t go back to get your coat. Pregnant and nursing mothers will have it especially hard. Hope and pray this won’t happen in the middle of winter.
 

Komentaja

Active member
Jul 29, 2022
428
225
43
#87
No one missed it. Jerusalem was basically leveled. God sent His servants and then His Son. They killed them all. What do you think was their end?
I get that, and I agree. But Matthew 24:30 says the Lord comes and people will see Him coming and then He will gather His elect.
Where was that AD70?
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
36,691
13,135
113
#88
The internal evidence for the book of Revelation being written before 70 AD is compelling, along with the external evidence. To study this to its fullest would take a great deal of time.

The late date setting is actually the one which was required to make the creation of the state of secular Israel prophetic along with selling books and making movies which has been very profitable.
Remember when a generation was 40 years and the start of the last generation was 1948?
That didn't work so then the new date was 1967
That didn't work either.
So here we are waiting for this temple to built so there is no stone is left on top of another.
i think you have that backwards.
The evidence for an early date of Revelation is not compelling at all: it consists of basically 3 things - the argument that Nero is the Antichrist, the argument that John's Greek is 'less fluid' here than in his gospel (as though he hadn't quite learned to speak Greek yet??), and the mention of a temple in chapter 11.

all these are spurious and unconvincing. no antinicene fathers wrote about Nero being Antichrist, in fact they all still looked for a future one. John is recording a prophetic vision in highly symbolic terms here: of course the language is different than narrative history. and the temple in ch. 11 is said to be that in heaven, not on earth, in the same section of the book - moreover Ezekiel also measures a temple that did not exist in a vision.


also, the futurist view does not in any way at all depend on the dating of the book of Revelation, but it is the preterist view which is utterly destroyed by the actual late date - supported explicitly by a half dozen or more writings from the early church fathers.

The preterist view does not appear until the 1600s, historically, when a Jesuit priest came up with it in order to oppose the then-common view that the beast and Babylon system spoken of in the book were indicative of the papacy. it is at that time and only that time that mid 60AD dates for Revelation began to be proposed, AFAIK - because it was necessary in order for an anti-Protestant interpretation to be plausible, which did not implicate the RCC
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
15,058
5,416
113
62
#89
I get that, and I agree. But Matthew 24:30 says the Lord comes and people will see Him coming and then He will gather His elect.
Where was that AD70?
I believe the majority of what was prophesied in Revelation occurred in the first century. I recognize that this isn't the prevailing view of our time. I think we forget sometimes that the Bible , though timeless, had an original intended audience and the simple and plain reading of scripture is generally the most accurate.
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
3,944
1,569
113
#90
i think you have that backwards.
The evidence for an early date of Revelation is not compelling at all: it consists of basically 3 things - the argument that Nero is the Antichrist, the argument that John's Greek is 'less fluid' here than in his gospel (as though he hadn't quite learned to speak Greek yet??), and the mention of a temple in chapter 11.

all these are spurious and unconvincing. no antinicene fathers wrote about Nero being Antichrist, in fact they all still looked for a future one. John is recording a prophetic vision in highly symbolic terms here: of course the language is different than narrative history. and the temple in ch. 11 is said to be that in heaven, not on earth, in the same section of the book - moreover Ezekiel also measures a temple that did not exist in a vision.


also, the futurist view does not in any way at all depend on the dating of the book of Revelation, but it is the preterist view which is utterly destroyed by the actual late date - supported explicitly by a half dozen or more writings from the early church fathers.

The preterist view does not appear until the 1600s, historically, when a Jesuit priest came up with it in order to oppose the then-common view that the beast and Babylon system spoken of in the book were indicative of the papacy. it is at that time and only that time that mid 60AD dates for Revelation began to be proposed, AFAIK - because it was necessary in order for an anti-Protestant interpretation to be plausible, which did not implicate the RCC
Internal evidence states otherwise.

The fact that their Temple is still up and functioning (see Rev. 11) suggests that revelation was written before the destruction of this temple in 70 AD. It is the temple here on earth. Heaven is not a material place.

According to Revelation 1:4, John was writing this letter to seven Churches in Asia.
“…to show to His bond-servants the things which must shortly take place.” (Rev. 22:6)

The statements by Ireneaus have been misinterpreted to promote a futurist view of eschatology.

Nero sent John to Patmos, John was about 62.

In the late 90's John was frail and barely able to talk, this is verified by the Jerome who met John before he died, he died a natural death in Ephesus in 100 AD

The Syriac History of John, the Son of Zebedee makes reference to John’s banishment under Nero, who reigned from 54 to 68 AD. It states:

“After these things, when the Gospel was increasing by the hands of the Apostles, Nero, the unclean and impure and wicked king, heard all that had happened at Ephesus. And he sent and took all that the procurator had and imprisoned him; and laid hold of St. John and drove him into exile; and passed sentence on the city that it should be laid waste.”

https://www.nasscal.com/e-clavis-christian-apocrypha/history-of-john-syriac/
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
3,944
1,569
113
#91
I am not sure where you got this information but it is incorrect.

JOHN GILL'S COMMENTARY
Some think it was written in the times of Claudius Caesar (h), before the destruction of Jerusalem. In the title of the Syriac version, this revelation is said to be made to John in the isle of Patmos, into which he was cast by Nero Caesar. But the more commonly received opinion is, that he had this vision there, at the latter end of Domitian's reign (i) by whom he was there banished, about the year 95, or 96.

Just about any commentator whom I have read agrees with this.
Internal evidence states otherwise.

The fact that their Temple is still up and functioning (see Rev. 11) suggests that revelation was written before the destruction of this temple in 70 AD.

According to Revelation 1:4, John was writing this letter to seven Churches in Asia.
“…to show to His bond-servants the things which must shortly take place.” (Rev. 22:6)

The statements by Ireneaus have been misinterpreted to promote a futurist view of eschatology.

Nero sent John to Patmos, John was about 62.

In the late 90's John was frail and barely able to talk, this is verified by the Jerome who met John before in died, he died a natural death in Ephesus in 100 AD

The Syriac History of John, the Son of Zebedee makes reference to John’s banishment under Nero, who reigned from 54 to 68 AD. It states:

“After these things, when the Gospel was increasing by the hands of the Apostles, Nero, the unclean and impure and wicked king, heard all that had happened at Ephesus. And he sent and took all that the procurator had and imprisoned him; and laid hold of St. John and drove him into exile; and passed sentence on the city that it should be laid waste.”

https://www.nasscal.com/e-clavis-christian-apocrypha/history-of-john-syriac/
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
18,508
7,267
113
#92
in Matthew 24 Christ refers to a time of great trouble, more than has ever been or ever will be at any other time, i.e. "none like it"

is Jeremiah 30 speaking of a time completely unlike it?
Or exactly like it?

a time of great distress and persecution, which has never been before and never will again, centering around the Jewish people and featuring the LORD being with them to ultimately save them from being utterly destroyed?
An unique event that has no equal, nor ever will. The full and final redemption of Israel. Yet future.

BTW....just so everyone doesn't forget.....Israel had absolutely unique beginning, a tumultuous middle.......and most certainly will have an ending. A good ending.
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
18,508
7,267
113
#93
No one missed it. Jerusalem was basically leveled. God sent His servants and then His Son. They killed them all. What do you think was their end?
THAT is the Second Coming? Preposterous. As is historicism and preterism.

Furthermore, Jesus by no means "killed them all". On the contrary, they have OBVIOUSLY been preserved. For the purposes that God has set forth before the world began.

Oh....and check your history. Israel the nation persisted for something like 80-odd more years.
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
18,508
7,267
113
#94
Internal evidence states otherwise.

The fact that their Temple is still up and functioning (see Rev. 11) suggests that revelation was written before the destruction of this temple in 70 AD.
No. The Temple of Rev 11 is obviously future.

The prophetic Temple succession is:

-586BC destruction
-Reconstruction under Ezra and Nehimiah
-70AD destruction
-future end time reconstruction (a prophetic fact that is being planned in the present day in real time and is quite inevitable)
-the likely destruction of the "tribulation temple" though this is not explicitly stated
-millennial temple of the earthly reign of Christ the King per Ezekiel
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
15,058
5,416
113
62
#95
THAT is the Second Coming? Preposterous. As is historicism and preterism.

Furthermore, Jesus by no means "killed them all". On the contrary, they have OBVIOUSLY been preserved. For the purposes that God has set forth before the world began.

Oh....and check your history. Israel the nation persisted for something like 80-odd more years.
They killed them all refers to the Jews killing the prophets and then Jesus.
Before you correct someone, you might try to understand what it is they are saying.
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
18,508
7,267
113
#96
I believe the majority of what was prophesied in Revelation occurred in the first century. I recognize that this isn't the prevailing view of our time. I think we forget sometimes that the Bible , though timeless, had an original intended audience and the simple and plain reading of scripture is generally the most accurate.
Really. So you believe that Israel and gentiles shall drift in the flotsam and jetsam of this insane sin-soaked world that is most certainly headed for disaster without a Biblical anchor and hope for the future?

You had better understand the ages-old repeating Biblical types and patterns of the Christ/anti-Christ duality. And eventual victory of One over the other. So stated in Gen 3 to begin with.

The difference between your pathetic and erroneous view of the cataclysmic event known as the DOTL and mine is the difference
between a firecracker and the Tsar Bomba.

Wake.....up. The flood of Noah itself does not even equal the fury of the DOTL.

Mat 24:21
For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
Mat 24:22
And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect's sake those days shall be shortened.
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
18,508
7,267
113
#97
They killed them all refers to the Jews killing the prophets and then Jesus.
Before you correct someone, you might try to understand what it is they are saying.
Sorry my bad. But my point still stands unassailable.

IMO your view of eschatology is one of the reasons why the state of the Church today is what it is.
Pathetic, vacillating weak and worldly. And prone to being seduced by the most trivial of Satan's lies.

I did entertain the supposed eschatology teachings if a very well educated Presbyterian pastor for a while. Dude had a mind like a bank vault. Lots of information. And yet he had not even the slightest idea of what he was talking about in terms of prophecy. Literally 100% wrong 100% of the time (reminds me of @GaryA in that regard!) And the lowest of the low view of Scripture.

Fighting the forces of Satan with a baby bottle and a rattle is the status of the Church today. Good luck with that.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
36,691
13,135
113
#98
it is not as though he is the only source giving the 90's date of Revelation, but...


The statements by Ireneaus have been misinterpreted to promote a futurist view of eschatology.
i invite you to read the full chapter of Iraneus and see that the context bears out the plain reading.

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0103530.htm

Iraneus without any doubt holds a 'futurist' view of Revelation - as did literally the entire church until, after the reformation, a Jesuit invented preterism in order to defend the papacy from interpretations that cast it as the harlot riding the beast.

so apparently even Iraneus 'misinterpreted himself'?
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
15,058
5,416
113
62
#99
Really. So you believe that Israel and gentiles shall drift in the flotsam and jetsam of this insane sin-soaked world that is most certainly headed for disaster without a Biblical anchor and hope for the future?

You had better understand the ages-old repeating Biblical types and patterns of the Christ/anti-Christ duality. And eventual victory of One over the other. So stated in Gen 3 to begin with.

The difference between your pathetic and erroneous view of the cataclysmic event known as the DOTL and mine is the difference
between a firecracker and the Tsar Bomba.

Wake.....up. The flood of Noah itself does not even equal the fury of the DOTL.

Mat 24:21
For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
Mat 24:22
And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect's sake those days shall be shortened.
As usual you are shown wrong, but instead of humility you choose to double down by inferring things on my behalf while employing language designed to make my ideas seem unusually unreasonable.
As this makes a fruitful and spiritual exchange unlikely, I'll bid you a blessed day.
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
18,508
7,267
113
......and most certainly will have an ending. A good ending.
The preterists and historicists woefully and willfully jettison MASSIVE quantities of Scripture/prophecy to deny this promise.
Not to mention boilerplate unilateral covenant promises.