I thought the millennial view (especially Dispensationalism) was introduced around 1830 by John Darby of the Plymouth Brethren. Please elaborate.
Apologies for replying, but I think you might find this informative:
"Dispensationalism", which is what I was taught growing up in IFB and IB circles, is said to have ( largely ) been developed by John Nelson Darby around 1830.
It has been popularized in the Western churches from about the last 150 years or so through men like C.I. Scofield and Harry Ironside.
Based on what I was taught, it takes all the Scriptural passages regarding the end times and lays them out flat...
with a "pre-Tribulational" ( at the very beginning of the 70th "week" of Daniel ) catching away of all of God's saints,
followed by a 7 year period ( half of it peaceful, the last half progressively bad to the point of exceedingly harsh ) of rule by Anti-Christ, who will persecute those who come to Christ during that time period ( while the rest are with the Lord in Heaven ),
followed by the Lord touching down on the Mount of Olives at the end, casting the beast ( Anti-Christ ) and the false prophet into Hell and Satan into chains and ruling from Jerusalem for a literal 1,000 years.
But the millennial view has been around a lot longer than Darby's version of it, which makes the Lord essentially "return" twice...
the first time in the clouds, and the final time bodily after 7 years.