Thomas Helwys
New Member
Nope
I don't base my theology or dispensationalism on whether some academic scholar agrees or disagrees. The truth of the Bible does not depend on whether 500 people agree with dispensational truth, and 499 do not. If those scholars looked at the issue more carefully, if they have even considered it at all, they would realize that dispensationalism is NOT theology any more than hermenuetics is theology. Theology by definition (Theo logos) is the study of God, not HOW to study God. The conclusion is the theology, how you got there is not.
Yes I have read "City of God" and many of his other writings which is why some of us Non Cals have consistently stated that Calvinism, particularly when it comes to amellenialism is based on Augy.
You are still obfuscating the issues. If God's intent and determination is to restore the new world exactly as the first, that still does not tell us what is going to occur in between to get us there, and Revelation does.
It doesn't HAVE to be physical, BUT IT IS because the word of God SAYS SO. It should be as simple as that unless you allegorize the entire Bible. If you interpret the Bible allegorically, is there ever a time when is it interpreted literally. You could say Jesus didn't literally die on a cross, it was just a figure of speech to demonstrate suffering. You could he didn't literally raise from the dead (which some actually teach) but that it was only figurative.
Which brings up a crucial point: Did Jesus die physically and literally? and did He raise from the dead, physically and literally? If you answer yes to both of the above, then how do you justify what you interpret literally, and what you interpret allegorically? There must be an objective and concrete rule of interpretation of everything is merely subjective including how anyone interprets whatever YOU say.
So in other words, when Jesus said that He must be delivered into the hands of man and be crucified, that was literal (perhaps, at this point I don't even know if you believe THAT), but when He said hereafter you shall SEE the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven, that was figurative?
Did Babylon really fall or not? Was Babylon a real place that is now currently Iraq, or was Babylon merely figurative since it is actually used in a figurative sense in Revelation 17-18 to describe Rome? Was there ever REALLY a Babylon and was Nebechadnezzar REALLY a king?
No it is not an "allusion" to Daniel 7:13 any more than Jesus ascension into heaven was an illusion.
The disciples asked the question in Acts 1, "When they therefore were come together, they asked of him, saying, Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to Israel?:
Notice the question:
1. At this time which shows that the kingdom was NOT in effect when Jesus ascended
2. It was in fact the KINGDOM that was being referred to
3. And it was the kingdom TO ISRAEL
After that Jesus ascended and the angel said "why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven" Acts 1:11
The return of Christ will be "IN LIKE MANNER as ye have SEEN HIM GO". In Revelation 1:7, they see HIS PIERCED SIDE. Why go through all the details of WHAT THEY WILL SEE if it was only figurative?
If you hold to a future of ANY sort, then you are a dispensationalist. That is a fact that anti-dispensationlist refuse to admit. Once Jesus returns and causes a change in economies, you are holding to at least one dispensational position.
I have said in the introduction forum that I don't care what you call me. Iconoclast regular just says "ACH" and that's fine with me. It's a forum name. Why do you use "Greektim" if that's not YOUR real name?
I don't list my school location because of something that happened to my brother and law's wife and son, and the brother of a friend of mine who (when the friend was the actual target, not the brother) who were all murdered as a result of information obtained from where I went to school. My dissertation was on Preterism (60 pages). I did not publish it (for obvious reasons stated above) but will scan it and put it online eventually.
See bold. I completely understand, and I agree with your decision. You should safeguard your privacy. I have received threats from online nutcases, and I take them seriously.