I'll be honest, these posts from "I believe we've debunked preterism" ticked me off:
In the first place, we had just had a thread on the results of Christ's 2nd Coming with plenty of Scripture that had been ignored by the preterists.
Secondly, asterisktom saying that I put "'parousia' as antithetical to Scripture" is a direct attack on my character and Christianity. I doubt if he'll apologize for it. "Antithesis" means "the exact opposite" (antithesis Definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary). So asterisktom is saying that I oppose Scripture with my view of parousia.
In light of those two issues, I am going to mention and discuss every single mention of the Greek word parousia in the NT, the LXX, and maybe even other sources.
First of all, just to simplify things, there are three glosses given for the word in the lexicons: presence, arrival, and coming. There are 24 mentions of the word in the TR Greek NT. Of those 24, only 2 are "presence" (2 Cor. 10:10 and Phil. 2:12), both of them referring to Paul's physical presence. The KJV translates parousia as "physical presence" only these two times. However, there are 5 verses where the word is translated as referring to the physical "coming" of individuals: Stephanas and Fortunatus and Achaicus (1 Cor. 16:17), Titus (2 Cor. 7:6-7), and Paul himself (Phil. 1:26), and (arguably) antichrist (2 Thess. 2:12).
So note, there are 7 references to the physical presence of human beings, translated either "presence" or "coming." There are no provable references to some kind of "spiritual" coming.
More to come.
You put "parousia" as antithetical to Scripture. You well know that it is a biblical term. Found several times on the Bible.
I have noticed the anti-preterist posts tend to be sans Scripture. Usually zingy one-liners.
They don't post much scripture, because not a lot of scripture backs what they say.
In the first place, we had just had a thread on the results of Christ's 2nd Coming with plenty of Scripture that had been ignored by the preterists.
Secondly, asterisktom saying that I put "'parousia' as antithetical to Scripture" is a direct attack on my character and Christianity. I doubt if he'll apologize for it. "Antithesis" means "the exact opposite" (antithesis Definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary). So asterisktom is saying that I oppose Scripture with my view of parousia.
In light of those two issues, I am going to mention and discuss every single mention of the Greek word parousia in the NT, the LXX, and maybe even other sources.
First of all, just to simplify things, there are three glosses given for the word in the lexicons: presence, arrival, and coming. There are 24 mentions of the word in the TR Greek NT. Of those 24, only 2 are "presence" (2 Cor. 10:10 and Phil. 2:12), both of them referring to Paul's physical presence. The KJV translates parousia as "physical presence" only these two times. However, there are 5 verses where the word is translated as referring to the physical "coming" of individuals: Stephanas and Fortunatus and Achaicus (1 Cor. 16:17), Titus (2 Cor. 7:6-7), and Paul himself (Phil. 1:26), and (arguably) antichrist (2 Thess. 2:12).
So note, there are 7 references to the physical presence of human beings, translated either "presence" or "coming." There are no provable references to some kind of "spiritual" coming.
More to come.