I dropped you a line in a PM.John,
Email me or PM me and let us talk about help I might be on the John R. bio, when possible please.
rd
God bless.
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I dropped you a line in a PM.John,
Email me or PM me and let us talk about help I might be on the John R. bio, when possible please.
rd
"Allegorical" & "spiritual" hermeneutics are two tools used by preterists to attempt to lend some credence to their doctrine, so any discussion of these hermeneutics must necessarily involve preterism.
And "ignore" is a COWARD'S tool, used by those who can't answer questions in a given forum or thread.
ook again. I didn't say that. I quoted A. T. Robertson, the greatest Koine Greek scholar of the 20th century, as saying that. He was amillennial, rejecting both the postmil and premil positions. (In spite of that, I highly recommend that you find his Word Pictures in the New Testament and consult it often. It is available for free in e-sword and other software packages, being in the public domain.)
See Post #45 below. These other usages you mention are hyperbole, but the usages in Revelation are clearly literal, as are most of the 441 usages in the Bible.
Do you understand the grammatical implication of the presence or absence of the definite article in Koine Greek?
If one interprets with allegorical interpretation coming to the text, no matter how great a scholar one is, he will still end up amil or postmil. A. T. Robertson's greatness as a Greek scholar is uncontested, but he was not a theologian. His advanced grammar, A Grammar of the Greek New Testament in the Light of Historical Research (1934, over 1200 pages) is a famous classic. But in his day, most SBC scholars interpreted allegorically, so he just followed along. But again, he was not a theologian, but a grammarian.This guy was Amillennial?
I thought the "THE" in the greek was a clear indiction of literalness of the 1000 years. How can someone with such a knowledge of greek not see the clearness?
Im confused.
This guy was Amillennial?
I thought the "THE" in the greek was a clear indiction of literalness of the 1000 years. How can someone with such a knowledge of greek not see the clearness?
Im confused.
You certainly are.Im confused.
My grandfather was a Baptist pastor, graduate of SBTS and had A. T. Robertson as a teacher, mentor, and friend.If one interprets with allegorical interpretation coming to the text, no matter how great a scholar one is, he will still end up amil or postmil. A. T. Robertson's greatness as a Greek scholar is uncontested, but he was not a theologian. His advanced grammar, A Grammar of the Greek New Testament in the Light of Historical Research (1934, over 1200 pages) is a famous classic. But in his day, most SBC scholars interpreted allegorically, so he just followed along. But again, he was not a theologian, but a grammarian.
I would love to have a discussion with him on the use of the article in Rev. 20. He would probably snow me under, but I like to think he would see my point.
Here is another. That great anthem to Post Millennialism, The Battle Hymn of the Republic.Here is a regularly sung hymn that reflects that thinking:
If one interprets with allegorical interpretation coming to the text, no matter how great a scholar one is, he will still end up amil or postmil. A. T. Robertson's greatness as a Greek scholar is uncontested, but he was not a theologian. His advanced grammar, A Grammar of the Greek New Testament in the Light of Historical Research (1934, over 1200 pages) is a famous classic. But in his day, most SBC scholars interpreted allegorically, so he just followed along. But again, he was not a theologian, but a grammarian.
I would love to have a discussion with him on the use of the article in Rev. 20. He would probably snow me under, but I like to think he would see my point.
Pre WWI, a greater number of classical theologians were schooled and taught A-Mill view and actually did think that the world would eventually be overrun with believers and the nations will turn to Christ to usher in a kingdom already conformed to His glory.
She stood over me as I studied, hairbrush in hand. [Actually, I cannot tell a lie; I looked it up ]Excellent. Your mother taught you well.
I beg to differ. There is such a thing as a drop and there is such a thing as a bucket. If I talk about something being just a drop in the bucket,' I am comparing something small to something great, not making any sort of accurate comparison.Granted, Peter was making the point that God is not bound by time, and using antithesis to do that. But antithesis must be based on things that actually exist. So I disagree that Peter did not intend to be taken literally. The antithesis he gave could not exist if there were not a real, literal thing as 1000 years, and a real, literal thing called a day. Otherwise, the antithesis has no meaning.
13 fiples to the ganglof, and 8 gangloves (note the plural!) to wrachton. I though everybody knew that.If I were to say, "A ganglof is as a fiple to God," then that would be meaningless because those two items do not exist. I made them up.
I think you'll find that's Postmil.Pre WWI, a greater number of classical theologians were schooled and taught A-Mill view and actually did think that the world would eventually be overrun with believers and the nations will turn to Christ to usher in a kingdom already conformed to His glory.
If one interprets with allegorical interpretation coming to the text, no matter how great a scholar one is, he will still end up amil or postmil. A. T. Robertson's greatness as a Greek scholar is uncontested, but he was not a theologian. His advanced grammar, A Grammar of the Greek New Testament in the Light of Historical Research (1934, over 1200 pages) is a famous classic. But in his day, most SBC scholars interpreted allegorically, so he just followed along. But again, he was not a theologian, but a grammarian.
I would love to have a discussion with him on the use of the article in Rev. 20. He would probably snow me under, but I like to think he would see my point.
You certainly are.
Both views have no literal 1000 year reign of Christ ruling with a rod of iron that nations of the world.How is that an A-Mill view and not a Post Mill view?
It is literally the article "the."Only because you and John were insisting on the literalness of the article "The"
Both views have no literal 1000 year reign of Christ ruling with a rod of iron that nations of the world.
It is literally the article "the."
Yes. Greek grammar makes it clear that he is talking about THE 1000 years, not just any 1000 years.Yes, but does it have to imply a literal 1000 years?