Lodic
Well-Known Member
Meaning, it really doesn't make sense for Jesus to say that some of them would still be alive a week from then. If His point was that some of them would see the Transfiguration, He would have said something entirely different.And so it was.
Not really all that long, since they had already been given a relative time reference of "within their generation".This is where we come back to my statement that preterists have the same problem with the time statements as futurists do. 1 Cor. was written in about the spring of 55 or 56, making it a minimum of 14 years before AD 70. Would you call that "near"? I certainly wouldn't. 14 years ago I had not the slightest idea I would be where I am now. It was a huge gap in time.
And we won't. I'm not trying to "convert" you to Preterism, just trying to show you why I believe this eschatological view.Nope, can't agree.
My turn to say "Nope, can't agree." I'm sure the drugs had a little something to do with why I brought it up. As you said, it was a fun rabbit trail.Since you brought it up for whatever reason, the word is actually the nominative neutral plural of stoixeion, one meaning of which is: "in physics, the four basic elements (earth, air, fire, water)" (Friberg, Friberg & Miller's Anlex). So it certainly can and does mean the elements of nature here. (Rabbit trails can be fun. )
Jesus never changed the timeline for the prophecies during the OD. Jesus "came", but not in a literal sense. God "came" in judgment many times in the OT, but He didn't literally visit those whom He judged. The same with Jesus and Jerusalem in AD 70.Well yes, the Temple and Jerusalem were destroyed as prophesied, but that does not make the whole Olivet Discourse, and certainly not Revelation, about that one event. There are so many, many other things prophesied that did not happen in AD 70. And the main thing is that Jesus did not come. No one saw Him. No one heard any trumpets or loud voices. Nothing!
It will be late this afternoon (or possibly tomorrow) before I can get back. Working on a report.