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Let Jesus be Jesus and Preterism Rings and Reigns all through the Bible

HeirofSalvation

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
:wavey:
Luke 21: 20-24 ESV

Jesus Foretells Destruction of Jerusalem

20 “But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its desolation has come near. 21 Then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains, and let those who are inside the city depart, and let not those who are out in the country enter it, 22 for these are days of vengeance, to fulfill all that is written. 23 Alas for women who are pregnant and for those who are nursing infants in those days! For there will be great distress upon the earth and wrath against this people. 24 They will fall by the edge of the sword and be led captive among all nations, and Jerusalem will be trampled underfoot by the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled.

Note verse 22 says to fulfill all that is written. This happens when Jerusalem is destroyed. The Roman war against the Jews which culminated in the destruction of the Jerusalem and the temple and brought the Old Covenant to a close lasted 3.5 years or as the bible says The time, times, and half a time.

It is easy to be a dispensationalist, and also to easily know that the Scriptures clearly predict the fall of Jerusalem in 70 a.d. The parable of the fig tree in this same gospel is usually easily understood to predict this....So also is this direct statement of Christ:

Luk 19:41 ¶ And when he was come near, he beheld the city, and wept over it,
Luk 19:42 Saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things [which belong] unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes.
Luk 19:43 For the days shall come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round, and keep thee in on every side,
Luk 19:44 And shall lay thee even with the ground, and thy children within thee; and they shall not leave in thee one stone upon another; because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation.


This is an obvious reference to the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 a.d. And it was literally fulfilled as he said...

You will note that this passage says nothing whatsoever about clouds as per your OP.....
You will also note that the passages you yourself cite above make no reference to clouds per your OP either...
Luke 21: 20-24 ESV

Thus, you have failed to acknowledge that Jesus easily might have predicted BOTH the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 a.d. and his future return upon the mount of Olives understood to be yet future....

Fallacy 1.) "False dichotomy"/ "Fallacy of the extremes"/ "Black and White thinking"

This would positively and totally rule out any coming of Jesus in the future that could be predicted in the bible

It absolutely would not...even if your rendering is correct...it would only be silent on the topic at most...It does not contradict Dispensational thought regardless of whether you interpret it as you do, or as a dispy might.

since there is no mentioning of Jerusalem being rebuilt after 70 AD to be destroyed again.

Whether the passage mentions that or not...it IS , in fact, the case that Jerusalem was indeed rebuilt...that is an historical fact that supports a dispensational understanding of Scripture...

All that was written including His second coming so to speak would have to have been fulfilled in 70 AD.

Why??? Please support this bald assertion...Why would ALL that was written be required to have already be fulfilled?

To dispute that point is to blasphemy the inspired scripture and very words of Christ.

You are accusing many fellow Christians of believing and teaching "blasphemy"...there are no practitioners of blashpemy in Heaven...You are questioning the salvation of many a Godly fellow Baptist on this board. You should not be so quick to speak idle words...They will be accounted for.

Whether your belief in Preterism is well-founded or not...you are simply ignorant of the method of debate and your argumentation is seriously flawed and inconsistent. Your OP...and your following rebuttals have been full of holes. You would be well served to learn more logic from informed fellow pre-terists, who would be far more capable of stating your theological position than you are. I daresay your argumentation is doing more damage to your position than good. I am sorry to sound so harsh and straightforward. I do not mean to insult you personally, and I hate to give offence (it is not intended to)....but poor argumentation simply does not help your cause.

God bless you as you learn more and more of his truths!! :wavey::thumbsup:
 
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humblethinker

Active Member
Ladies and Gentlemen it’s good to be back.

One night early last January as I sat down in front of the PC I knew I was overwhelmed with work and it wouldn’t be over anytime soon with rollouts and projects and certifications and away vacations scheduled and knew I had to give up something so I decided not to take on any more posting till my schedule would give a little breathing room. In fact I gave up even reading BP so I wouldn’t be tempted to respond to anything. Of course I knew Jesus wouldn’t be back in the mean time so I figured I had plenty of time to tackle other projects and give the futurists time to get their act together and come up with some new arguments, insults (heretic shows no originality), and reasons to put off their inevitable conversion to preterism—resistance is futile because if you don’t convert in this life it is for certain you will in the next. And, now without further adieu let Jesus be Jesus.

Logos! I have a new respect for you! (Actually, I don't think I had any opinion of you heretofore but... you know what I mean, right?) You are hilarious! I love it when people interject humor into their posts and arguments. Life is more fun when we can laugh together and at each other and still have disagreements. I will consider your argument even moreso because of it! So long as it is not true mockery, I think presenting an argument with humor generally shows a confidence and maybe even is evidence of a mastery of the subject at hand. One sure way to know if people are tracking with you in an argument is to use humor and if they don't respond appropriately then you can be confident that they are not tracking with you. So... this subject is interesting to me and though I'm not 'on board' know that I'm tracking with you... Thanks!
 
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HeirofSalvation

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Prove me wrong I want you to—Indeed I dare you to—I just don’t think you got anything.

This is engaging in an attempt to "shift burden of proof"...(Another logical and debate fallacy you are engaging in)

This is also an example of poor debate....One I, (at least) will not fall for.

You have made positive and ill-advised assertions in support of your theological pre-dispositions...we have NO task, or requirement, other than to expose it's failings....Sorry, man....that's how real debate works.:wavey:
 

HeirofSalvation

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I suggest you try reading the bible from a preterist perspective and you will be amazed at how it suddenly comes into complete harmony

This is "question begging"...at minimum...MOST, if not ALL (generally conservative) Theological positions expressed in Scripture will feel consistent if the whole of Scripture is involved...The exact converse might be asked of you yourself...

Read it from a "dispensational" perspective...and you will also find "harmony"...Most Conservative Theological perspectives do....

Here is your fallacy: You think that

"Consistency" = "Validity" and "Validity"= "Soundness"

You are wrong:

A "Consistent" or "Valid" argument, is not sufficient to create a "Sound" one:

And it is painfully obvious that you are unaware of the distinction.

I leave it now, to your Pre-terist freinds (whom you are embarrassing) to explain this to you....
There are numerous arguments, and fallacies of yours I might continue to expose, but this is sufficient for now.
 
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humblethinker

Active Member
It is amazing just how many people reject one error by going to the opposite extreme and embrace the oppsoing error, so for example Hyper Calvinists become Arminian, and vice versa - or futurists become preterists and vice-versa, when the truth lies with the historists who see elements of furturism in prophecy, but equally see elements also fullfilled :D
Hyper cal and arminianism are not each extremes at opposite ends of the spectrum... Only hylercal is.
 

Logos1

New Member
In my Gomer Pyle voice

That be J.N.Darby, the "father" of dispensationalism and the object of your scorn?

You mean the darby version was written by J.N. Darby well surprise, surprise, surprise who woulda thunk it. Bless his heart.
 

Logos1

New Member
It will be our little secret

Ya’ll don’t tell Thomas that I sort of suspected all along that darby wrote the darby translation.

It is always hoot to use his own translation against his seminal work of dispensationalism. He was a better translator than he was a prophet. The biography of darby is actually most fascinating and loads of entertainment to read and I would recommend it to all. To think he could create a theology that contradicts his own translation of the scriptures is pretty interesting. Further, Darby didn’t even have a rapture event in his early works, but after he painted himself into a corner he evolved a magical disappearing act to try to save his doctrine. Like him or not he was a very entertaining character.

He struggled for respectability in the religious community all his life and if he were alive today would no doubt be very pleased that he has such a large following in America, but would no doubt correct his latter day followers on where they went astray from his vision of prophecy.
 

Logos1

New Member
HOS I simply see you as a misguided brother in Christ

I am sorry to sound so harsh and straightforward. I do not mean to insult you personally, and I hate to give offence (it is not intended to)

Have no fear HOS any unintentional dispersion you might have accidently cast in my general direction is no worse than a day at the county fair compared to the usual vitriol I get on boards for being a preterist. I’ve long since learned not to let such things bother me—if I did I wouldn’t be on boards. Compared to most you are generous to a fault. If I may be so bold as to make a humble suggestion—you hold back a bit too much—you should tell me how you really feel about me. You should just get it off your chest. It would make you feel better, we would all get a good laugh, and I’m sure if God has a sense of humor he will be laughing right along with us.

As LBJ would have said "I have every confidence" that when we meet in heaven we will laugh together at comments on boards and at it and the whole notion of dispensationalism in general.
 

Logos1

New Member
Thanks for your support HOS

Luk 19:41 ¶ And when he was come near, he beheld the city, and wept over it,
Luk 19:42 Saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things [which belong] unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes.
Luk 19:43 For the days shall come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round, and keep thee in on every side,
Luk 19:44 And shall lay thee even with the ground, and thy children within thee; and they shall not leave in thee one stone upon another; because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation.


This is an obvious reference to the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 a.d. And it was literally fulfilled as he said

HOS you are most generous to point out in your only scripture reference so far (except for Isa 19:1) that Jesus did indeed predict the fall of Jerusalem and that it did in fact occur in 70 AD. You will make a fine preterist yet one day.

You are correct in noting that I didn’t acknowledge that Jesus could have predicted both I’m adamantly denying He ever did any such a thing and have yet to see anyone produce any scripture to support His saying they were two different events.

In point of fact Jesus ties the two together very nicely in Matthew 24 when after he told the disciples the temple would be destroyed and the disciples asked him when would all these things happen and what is the sign of your coming and the end of the age—note the disciples question implicitly links all these events together at the same time and Jesus does not correct them in saying you got it wrong they are different events he answers over the bulk of the chapter as if they are all one event.

When you skip down to verse 29 as soon as he tells them immediately after the tribulation and talks about the fall of Jerusalem with the sun darkened language He next tells them about the Son of Man appearing in the sky and seeing him coming on the clouds (pretend you don’t see the cloud reference so you can keep screaming about the OP).

Here we see Jesus driving home the preterist position, linking these events, and never one word about them being at different points in time.

I could go even further in linking your Luke scripture which supports preterism, the original OP, and various passages through the New Testament and maybe I will someday, but for now let me suggest reading Don Preston’s “Like Father, Like Son, On Clouds of Glory” where you get a whole book linking these things together and it’s not even his best work.
 
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Logos1

New Member
I wish I could make those cute smiley things like HOS does

you are simply ignorant of the method of debate and your argumentation is seriously flawed and inconsistent. Your OP...and your following rebuttals have been full of holes. You would be well served to learn more logic from informed fellow pre-terists, who would be far more capable of stating your theological position than you are.

HOS you have all these post and yet no scripture that supports the dispy position. I’m almost tempted to ask do dispies believe scriptural support is necessary for their position these days or is dispy commentary enough to suffice?

You prove the truth of Preterism with every post you write with the old adage that actions speak louder than words when you give us your best debate tactic of “if you can’t beat the argument then attack the presenter to try and discredit the argument.”

I already know what your response to this post will be:

I’m a bad debater yada, yada
I made a point that wasn’t in the original post yada, yada
There are better preterists out there yada yada

Hmmm, strange is it not that the poor, preterist debater can find no end to scripture to support his position and God’s gift to debaters has yet to put up one verse to support the dispy position. Hmmm, strange indeed.

You revel in showing off your debate strategery, take delight in your mastery of debate tactics, and have done everything in between except to find one verse of scripture that would support the dispy position.

I know the public is waiting for you to whip out some scripture in support of your position and ready to take notes at how the master weaves it into his overall strategy.

Note pads are waiting, pencils are tapping, and anxious students are holding their breath.........
 

Logos1

New Member
Don’t be a victim of futurism IV

Not only do all the specific time verses tell us that Christ will return soon, but even the less direct statements that are primarily addressing some other topic also lend direct support to a soon coming of Christ. When you read the bible from a preterist perspective you are blessed with seeing all inspired scripture fall into such beautiful harmony.

For example:

Romans 13:12 The night is almost over and the day is near.

Hebrews 10:25 not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.

Hebrews 10:37 Yet a little while, and the coming one will come and will not delay;

You can constantly see in all these little ways all throughout the New Testament that the return of Christ is near, the end of the age is at hand, and the day of the Lord is almost upon them as indeed history bore out in 70 AD.

Don’t be a victim of futurism.
 

humblethinker

Active Member
Logos! I have a new respect for you! (Actually, I don't think I had any opinion of you heretofore but... you know what I mean, right?) You are hilarious! I love it when people interject humor into their posts and arguments. Life is more fun when we can laugh together and at each other and still have disagreements. I will consider your argument even moreso because of it! So long as it is not true mockery, I think presenting an argument with humor generally shows a confidence and maybe even is evidence of a mastery of the subject at hand. One sure way to know if people are tracking with you in an argument is to use humor and if they don't respond appropriately then you can be confident that they are not tracking with you. So... this subject is interesting to me and though I'm not 'on board' know that I'm tracking with you... Thanks!
Well, after reading your posts in this thread I think I was probably mistaken in thinking that you were just employing bravado and shtick.
 

asterisktom

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
So would I be correct in thinking you don’t really have an argument against preterism you just choose not to believe it regardless of all the evidence demanding a first century return of Christ?

The flip side of that is that you don’t really have a futurist argument you just choose to believe it.

There are no bible verses to support a coming of Christ that is future to us. Given all the direct and specific language that His coming would be soon and in the life time of the generation having the gospel preached to them by the Apostles it would be pure folly to elevate your opinion above the teaching of the inspired Apostles who were guided by the Holy Spirit. If they were wrong then the Holy Spirit was wrong. If the Holy Spirit can be proven wrong then we don’t really have any foundation for Christianity.

Good to see you back, Logos. When I have time I want to add to this thread too. We have just returned last night from a 10-day trip here in China.

Now that I finished my writing assignment, I can get to posting here as well. I don't know if you were aware of it, Logos, but there is a Preterist Bible being published in a very short while, first online then hardcover.

I was busy doing the Ezra-Nehemiah introduction, but it is now finished. Much harder than I had imagined.

Back to the OP: There are several apocalyptic image comings in the OT, in Isa. and elsewhere, that definitely get short shrift from futurist interpreters.
 
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Bronconagurski

New Member
Good to see you back, Logos. When I have time I want to add to this thread too. We have just returned last night from a 10-day trip here in China.

Now that I finished my writing assignment, I can get to posting here as well. I don't know if you were aware of it, Logos, but there is a Preterist Bible being published in a very short while, first online then hardcover.

I was busy doing the Ezra-Nehemiah introduction, but it is now finished. Much harder than I had imagined.

Back to the OP: There are several apocalyptic image comings in the OT, in Isa. and elsewhere, that definitely get short shrift from futurist interpreters.

If preterism is so apparent in the bible, then why do you need a special bible to explain it? You people are sounding more and more like the Jehovah Witness crowd, imo.
 

asterisktom

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
If preterism is so apparent in the bible, then why do you need a special bible to explain it? You people are sounding more and more like the Jehovah Witness crowd, imo.

Predictable JW cheap shot. "You people" have your own futurist-biased Bibles. You just don't know it. I would go into detail - it is very rich topic - but it is off-topic here.
 

michael-acts17:11

Member
Site Supporter
If preterism is so apparent in the bible, then why do you need a special bible to explain it? You people are sounding more and more like the Jehovah Witness crowd, imo.

Special bible? My Geneva & KJV give the same soon, quickly, this generation, etc grammatical context for judgement against Israel. They both show the high priest witnessing this with a "coming in clouds" judgement metaphor. What bible are you using that speaks of the prophesied judgement in thousands of years to generations not yet born? I think you're using the special bible.
 

Bronconagurski

New Member
Special bible? My Geneva & KJV give the same soon, quickly, this generation, etc grammatical context for judgement against Israel. They both show the high priest witnessing this with a "coming in clouds" judgement metaphor. What bible are you using that speaks of the prophesied judgement in thousands of years to generations not yet born? I think you're using the special bible.

Methinks y'all sure enough do protest too much.
 

Bronconagurski

New Member
"What bible are you using that speaks of the prophesied judgement in thousands of years to generations not yet born? I think you're using the special bible."

The bible I use says no man knows the day nor the hour. You people are the ones that claim you do know when everything happened. Now exactly when did the abomination of desolation take place? Not the one with the pig, but the one where a man sets himself up as god in the temple? Or have you spiritualized that like every other thing you can't answer?
 

Bronconagurski

New Member
Boys, being able to spiritualize everything to fit your opinions is like being the house at Las Vegas. You never lose.

Matthew 24:21-23 (ESV)
21 For then there will be great tribulation, such as has not been from the beginning of the world until now, no, and never will be.
22 And if those days had not been cut short, no human being would be saved. But for the sake of the elect those days will be cut short.
23 Then if anyone says to you, ‘Look, here is the Christ!’ or ‘There he is!’ do not believe it.

Please, someone explain when this event happened. It will be a time like no other upon the earth, yet I am sure A.D. 70, bad as it was, didn't come close to that description. And if Christ came back then, why the admonition not to believe it? Logically speaking you don't have a leg to stand upon. Only made up spiritualizations.
 
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