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Brother Les wrote:Twospirits,
Do you understand what Jesus was talking about when asked about the 'sign' of His Parousia?..... His presence, His comings in Judgment and to give Salvation, was the destrutcion of Jerusalem and The Temple and The Nation. That is when The Parousia happened. God/Jesus is with us. and some of those who were still alive saw Him Coming in Judgment, "in The Glory of The Father".
by twospirits
The "sign" was the destruction of Jerusalem, God's judgment for their rejection of Christ their Messiah. "--and to give salvation", yes when he shed His blood on the Cross in 30 A.D. (the New Covenant). But not in the judgment of 70 A.D. Salvation had nothing to do with that. The warning of "fleeing" had something to do with it, as Jesus prophesied. And no one literally "saw Him" coming in judgment, rather they "rationalized it by Jesus' prophecy."
And no one literally "saw Him" coming in judgment, rather they "rationalized it by Jesus' prophecy."
Jesus declared that society would be in a state of normalcy when he returned. That is there would be no sense of imminent danger or catastrophe (read Matt. 24-38-39; Luke 17-28-29). However, as the days of the destruction of Jerusalem approached, things were anything but in a state of normalcy. Jesus prophesied about this in Luke 19-43 where he speaks of Jerusalem's siege and fall.
twospirits wrote:Because some preterists insist that Jesus' coming (parousia) occurred in 70 A.D. In some spiritual way, they must also deny the nature of the resurrection of the saints.
twospirits wrote:The resurrection of believers is closely tied to Jesus' second coming (1 Thess. 4-13-18). If the resurrection occurred in 70 A.D., it follows that it to is something spiritual and not the literal resurrection of the body, because no such visible resurrection was experienced or observed by the church in 70 A.D. Therefore, the core issue of contention between futurists and preterists is the nature of the resurrection of the dead, and the nature of the coming of Christ as being physical or spiritual.
twospirits wrote:Paul continued to contrast Adam and Christ in verses 47-49. He wrote, “as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly” (v.49). By heavenly he meant Jesus Christ, where in the previous verse Jesus is identified as the one from heaven. That is, we will have a body like his resurrected body.
kramden327 wrote:twospirits wrote:Because some preterists insist that Jesus' coming (parousia) occurred in 70 A.D. In some spiritual way, they must also deny the nature of the resurrection of the saints.
Hi 2,
Good discussion. It may be more accurate to say that preterists deny what futurists have concluded is the nature of the resurrection (i.e. physical, flesh/bones/blood bodies coming "up" from their graves at some point in the future). Not sure where these "graves" or the remains are since practically none exist for all the dead. I think preterists just don't see Scripture pointing to a physical body with mass being involved on either end of how the 'dead are raised'.twospirits wrote:The resurrection of believers is closely tied to Jesus' second coming (1 Thess. 4-13-18). If the resurrection occurred in 70 A.D., it follows that it to is something spiritual and not the literal resurrection of the body, because no such visible resurrection was experienced or observed by the church in 70 A.D. Therefore, the core issue of contention between futurists and preterists is the nature of the resurrection of the dead, and the nature of the coming of Christ as being physical or spiritual.
I would agree that is one of the issues that separate pret's from futurists. What would lead you to believe (Scripturally) that the resurrection of believers would be something visible to the human eye here on earth?(Twospirits) Matt. 27-52-53, "And the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which slept arose, and came out of the graves after his (Jesus') resurrection, and went into the holy city, and appeared unto many." We see that this occurred sometime after the resurrection of Jesus in 30 A.D. Now it is clear from the passage that this was a bodily resurrection and they were seen by many. My point? Why would the resurrection be any different in 70 A.D. that preterists say occurred, than the resurrection of those in 30 A.D.? Since God doesn't change, one would expect the resurrections of the saints to be the same.twospirits wrote:Paul continued to contrast Adam and Christ in verses 47-49. He wrote, “as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly” (v.49). By heavenly he meant Jesus Christ, where in the previous verse Jesus is identified as the one from heaven. That is, we will have a body like his resurrected body.
Does bearing the image mean a physical likeness? We are made in the image of God. Does that speak of physical attributes? I doubt it.
Enjoying the thread 2, thanks.
Dave
Dispence 58 said,
The question is: If it is the "whole world" then has the Gospel been preached to the "whole world"?
dlspence_58 wrote:I'd like to know what Two Spirits and the preterists think of Matthew 24:14.
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