I showed earlier where both Thomas Ice and Samuel Tregellis attribute the secret rapture taking root in the church to J. N. Darby.</font>[/QUOTE]Notice how you did not respond that what I actually said. I said "dispensationalism in no form." You said "secret rapture." You see, you are having a conversation I am not. No one disputes that dispensationalism was systematized in the 1800s, and continues to this day. No one disputes that certain things in dispensationalism were "new" in teh 19th century. The pre trib rapture may be one of those, but some recent study has cast doubt on that conclusion, and what will you do if it is ever proven that a pretrib rapture teaching did exist earlier????Originally posted by covenant:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Larry; “…you assume that dispensationalism existed in no form prior to 1826. That is demosntrably false, thus weakening the conclusion you draw from it.”
But to the main point, you and others have asserted that dispensationalism was completely new in the 1800s, never before seen in church history. That is simply false. Many of hte teachings of dispensationalism were known.
Thomas Ice on the History of Dispensationalism and Pretribulationalism disagrees with you about that claim Larry.</font>[/QUOTE]Showers in There Really is a Difference supports it. I have not read Ice so I am not sure what he says about it. Your comments here seem to address pretribulationism.</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Larry; “Yet amillennialism and postmillennialism did not exist in the early days of church history.”
Anything conclusion about what? A pretrib rapture?However, it is even clear from Ice’s statement that he couldn’t find anything conclusive (?) before the fourth and fifth century.
Yes, because of political concerns (cf. Showers). But my point was that amill did not even show up until almost 200 and was rejected by most for a long period of time after that. Amill, at one time, was "new" to church teaching, departing from everything that had been taught before that. By your standard, it seems you should reject it.By the fifth century a.d., the amillennialism of Origen and Augustine had won the day in the established Church–East and West.
The first is absolutely not true. In a post of min on March 17, on the Laws of Interpretation thread, TEN scripture verses were used (and without personal views presented – just scripture) in support of the New Covenant being instituted at the Cross as a fulfillment of Jeremiah 31 – but the scripture was “unacceptable”. Then, Strong’s dictionary was used to define the word “nation” as meaning “the Gentile” world, but this was discarded as being irrelevant. After this, FOUR pre-Darby scholars were used for Commentary support so that it would not be just my interpretation alone of the text – but this too was phoo-phooed as being irrelevant. Thayer’s Lexicon was also used but blown off also.</font>[/QUOTE]You didn't quite get it right here. You used ten verses and the point you tried to make was shown not to be the necessary point of the verse. I presented a case that you used them wrongly. You cited commentators and lexicons, and I addressed both with commentators and lexicons. In other words, I used all of your standards of evidence to show your wrong.</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />1) ”In fact, Covenant, like OR, recently bailed out of a conversation in which he was unable to answer basic biblical questions about the text of Scripture.”
Secondly, if you think I dispute that the NC was ratified or inaugurated at the cross, you need to go back and read. I said something very different than that, and that is what you won't address. I tried to take you to Jer 31 to get you to see who the NC was actually made with, and I showed irrefutable evidence that the NC is made only with the nation of Israel. It cannot be made with teh church unless Jer 31 means nothing at all. Just for brief review, the evidence was 1) the name house of Israel/Judah applies only to Israel as a nation, never to anyone else; 2) the covenant is made with those whose fathers were under the Mosaic covenant, something untrue of the church; 3) the covenant is made with those whose fathers came out of Egypt, something untrue of the church, 4) the covenant is made with those whose fathers broke the Mosaic covenant, something untrue of the church. And I could go on, but those were the basics.
So in reality, you provided no necessary conclusion for your position. Your verses supported your position only if you started with your position. If you started with another position, or with no position, your verses would not lead to your conclusion.
I used your own standards of evidence to refute you. You just didn't like the position, so you rejected evidence provided by the same standard you wanted me to use to accept your position.
So, as far as the second comment goes, it was grossly distorted to imply that I didn’t have an answer or couldn’t answer concerning the remainder of Jeremiah 31. However, as I indicated to him previously, I chose not to continue on with the discussion as it was merely proving to be falling on deaf ears and since there obviously seemed to be no genuine desire to take whatever I presented seriously. Because of that, and not because there were not answers, I decided not to waste my valuable time on a hardened heart.</font>[/QUOTE]First, my heart is not hardened. I reject that as a personal attack with absolutely no merit. But I have to wonder how you come to that conclusion. The fact that I reject your sources in favor of other sources that I believe deal better with teh text does not make my heart hardened. I could make the same charge of a hardened heart about you. How would you like that? You see, you are treating my interpretations like you accuse me of treating yours. The difference is that I have interacted with your interpretations; you have not with mine.</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />2) “I was disappointed in that, especially after he said he would give an answer and then decided not to.”
I make my life out of studying the Bible. I took your evidence seriously, until it could no longer be sustained scripturally. Second, I doubt that you have a good explanation of Jer 31:38-40 and I have to doubt that because you won't present it. Why not discuss theology in a theology forum? If you have a good explanation, it will be the first of your position that I have seen.
I wish you would discuss it. I can tell you up front that your method of argumentation (using only certain sources and ruling out others, as well as failing to deal with the text itself) is not acceptable. The text is the ultimate determiner of truth, not Thayer, Gill, Clarke, or anyone else. So why not get to the text?