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Thanks for posting the link Grasshopper. It was well worth the time to read it. As more and more people get exposed to work like this the undeniable, plain, common sense of preterism will gradually nudge out dispensationalism.
You, and that article, make the mistake of assuming that the only two options are dispensationalism or hyper-preterism. I'm neither of those.
Full preterism encompasses multiple damnable heresies. It goes against Holy Scripture and against what the Church has taught throughout history. It is also against the Baptist Faith and Message. Full preterists should be given the opportunity to repent, and if they don't they should be excommunicated out of their churches via church discipline.
I'm going to make strongly worded statements condemning the damnable heresies of full preterism:
1. If any man denies the future, physical Second Coming of the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be anathema.
2. If any man denies the future, physical, bodily resurrection and judgment of all men at the Second Coming, let him be anathema.
3. If any man denies that the Lord Jesus Christ is fully God and fully man, including Jesus having a physical, glorified human body as part of His post-resurrection human nature, let him be anathema.
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"Faith is the divine evidence whereby the spiritual man discerneth God, and the things of God." -John Wesley
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..... As more and more people get exposed to work like this the undeniable, plain, common sense of preterism will gradually nudge out dispensationalism.....
Excellent article. It hits the nail on the head. This certainly was one of the factors that led me to Preterism.
"But so many of the responses I get are from people who “don’t want to know” or “don’t want to read.” They have settled on a position not because they studied it but because so many other people believe it and teach it that it has to be true."
And then they pound out, Luther-like, their vaguely thought-out anathemas on the red door.
It is ironic that you have that quote from Wesley in your footer. Wesley validates, in principle, the things you ignorantly anathematize in your #1 and #2.
Can't wait to see the look on you preterists' face on the way up!![]()
Thank you,If, as the early reformers believed, the church is defined as the body of the elect, then in order for you to convince someone like say, me, that covenant theology is correct, you will have to explain where in the Bible the covenants Jehovah cut with Israel promise salvation for eternity to the elect. You will also have to explain why God would change his mind about Israel because of their sin and not change his mind about the church because in my view, the church has as much if not more sin than Israel ever had
And the A-Mils on the way back down.![]()
Thomas15:
This is not the thread to discuss the difference between the "New Covenant"
as it relates to the Church until Christ comes and to Ephraim/Judah after He
returns with the Elect.
But I find your statement interesting and ask if you might start a thread to
sort out the difference in Israel/Judah's New Covenant as it relates to the soon demise ("about to vanish") of the Old Covenant depicted by Heb.8:13.
You wrote:
Thank you,
Mel Miller
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RE: Appeal to early writings of the church fathers:.......
Hank,
For ease of discussion, allow me to isolate the ANFs from the whole of the ECFs. For every doctrine that you can find support for in the ANFs, there are other places in the writings of the ANFs that would oppose you. The ANFs are interesting and yes I read them but the writers were not inspired and some of them we might not consider christian today. None of them traveled with Jesus during his ministry and probably none of them were Jewish converts to Christ.
I agree with you that preterism is not found in the ANFs but I think this is a weak arguement against preterism. All we have to do is look at the Bible which describes the second coming as an event that will be seen by all peoples of the earth when it happens and since history doesn't record this event, it hasn't happened yet, the second coming must be yet future. It really doesn't get any simpler than that.
Hi Thomas,
I was responding to the author.
He brought up the issue of the Early Church Fathers. I simply reponded in like kind.
HankD