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Reasons for the 2nd Coming of Christ

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asterisktom

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Yes, I do have great negativity towards full preterism. I do not apologize for that.

Yes, this comes across quite clearly. Which is why I am not going to pursue this further with you. Not that I am going to leave off posting. However, I will try to refrain from posting on your threads.
 

John of Japan

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Yes, this comes across quite clearly. Which is why I am not going to pursue this further with you. Not that I am going to leave off posting. However, I will try to refrain from posting on your threads.
Since full preterism is well nigh indefensible in light of a proper Christology, you do well to quit trying to defend it. I note that you have come out saying that Christ has no physical body now, which is a huge affront to the precious doctrine of the Incarnation (not to mention completely without Biblical support as to when and how that supposedly happened). I would be just as happy if you quit posting on the BB altogether and spreading your error.
 

Yeshua1

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Since full preterism is well nigh indefensible in light of a proper Christology, you do well to quit trying to defend it. I note that you have come out saying that Christ has no physical body now, which is a huge affront to the precious doctrine of the Incarnation (not to mention completely without Biblical support as to when and how that supposedly happened). I would be just as happy if you quit posting on the BB altogether and spreading your error.
How can it be the same Jesus if he Returns without the same physical body was raised up in?
 

asterisktom

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Since full preterism is well nigh indefensible in light of a proper Christology, you do well to quit trying to defend it. I note that you have come out saying that Christ has no physical body now, which is a huge affront to the precious doctrine of the Incarnation (not to mention completely without Biblical support as to when and how that supposedly happened). I would be just as happy if you quit posting on the BB altogether and spreading your error.

The doctrine of the Incarnation certainly is precious, but Christ having a physical body now has nothing to do with it. You are the one that does not understand the Incarnation, not me. And as far as Biblical support for Christ having a body now, you have none.

Likewise you never answered - nor has anyone else that I noticed - what is meant by "the days of His flesh".

You are like several others here, drawing a wider boundary around orthodoxy. You are the one defending unbiblical tenets, not me.
 

asterisktom

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That is probably a good idea. You are losing horribly. If you can't run with the big dogs it is best to stay on the porch. :D:D

No, I will keep posting. John's continued comments, and yours, give me plenty of incentive. Lord-wiling I will try to avoid the same insults.

For me the truth of preterism made perfect sense, even though I fought against it for several years. I have noticed that the ones who oppose it (and I am speaking of those opposing partial-preterism too) tend to do two things. Juvenile insults and appeal to authority and tradition. When I first noticed that the biblical rebuttals were very weak - and only a very few verses overused against the testimony of many other verses - I knew I was on to the right thing.

Preterism, more than any other system, takes the Lord at His Word. It understands that the issue we are dealing with are spiritual ones. The promises we receive are spiritual too. But you rebutters of this message keep acting like the Jews of the first-century, assuming physical resolutions to spiritual issues. His kingdom is not of this world. It did not come with observation. Spiritual things are invisible.

I am not an enemy of the Gospel, or the Incarnation. I love the Lord with all my heart. My preterism has cost me friends, fellowship, and much grief. But I would rather excise my brain that give it up. It is precious to me. It is truth. It is true, profound, Christology,

It is much more positive than that bleak worldly futurism I had espoused for years.
 

John of Japan

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The doctrine of the Incarnation certainly is precious, but Christ having a physical body now has nothing to do with it. You are the one that does not understand the Incarnation, not me. And as far as Biblical support for Christ having a body now, you have none.
That's like saying, "I've never seen a purple cow, and never hope to see one. But I can tell you one thing now, I'd rather see than be one."

The last we hear from Jesus about His body is a denial that He was a bodiless spirit, and an affirmation that He had "flesh and bones" (Luke 24:39). Since at last word Jesus claimed a physical body, it is up to you to prove when He abandoned that physical body. But you cannot do that, since there is absolutely no Scripture claiming what you say.
Likewise you never answered - nor has anyone else that I noticed - what is meant by "the days of His flesh".
I don't remember you ever asking it. But I'll tell you what. I'll answer this as soon as you answer what I've asked several times on this thread (specifically to you at least once) about how John 14:1-3 was fulfilled in AD 70.

You are like several others here, drawing a wider boundary around orthodoxy.
I stand with the Apostle John, who fled the baths when he heard Cerinthus was there, lest God's judgment fall on him as well as Cerinthus, who was a Gnostic and denied the physical body of Christ. John was as orthodox as anyone in all of church history, but believed in a physical Jesus.
You are the one defending unbiblical tenets, not me.
You've not really defended anything on this thread, much less your egregious error that Christ has no body now.

But I thought you had abandoned the thread.
 

John of Japan

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Was He a different Jesus in the Old Testament, when Isaiah saw His glory? Just what is involved in "sameness"? Think about these things.

We shall be like Him, John said. You are trying to make Him like us.
You have to be kidding me. You claim that I don't understand the Incarnation, but here you are thinking the OT Jesus and the NT Jesus are the same? What in the world is the Incarnation if not that Jesus took upon Himself a human form? Isaiah saw the preincarnate Christ!

And I certainly look forward and long for the day when all true believers will be like Him: sinless, perfect.
 

asterisktom

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You have to be kidding me. You claim that I don't understand the Incarnation, but here you are thinking the OT Jesus and the NT Jesus are the same? What in the world is the Incarnation if not that Jesus took upon Himself a human form? Isaiah saw the preincarnate Christ!

And I certainly look forward and long for the day when all true believers will be like Him: sinless, perfect.

Do you not understand what a "different Jesus" means? Jesus is the same, yesterday. today, and forever. If not, our faith is in vain.

Yes, you do not understand the incarnation at this point. It was for a purpose and for a time. And of course you still did not respond to my two Hebrew verses. I don't expect you to though.
 

asterisktom

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That's like saying, "I've never seen a purple cow, and never hope to see one. But I can tell you one thing now, I'd rather see than be one."

The last we hear from Jesus about His body is a denial that He was a bodiless spirit, and an affirmation that He had "flesh and bones" (Luke 24:39). Since at last word Jesus claimed a physical body, it is up to you to prove when He abandoned that physical body. But you cannot do that, since there is absolutely no Scripture claiming what you say.
I don't remember you ever asking it. But I'll tell you what. I'll answer this as soon as you answer what I've asked several times on this thread (specifically to you at least once) about how John 14:1-3 was fulfilled in AD 70.

I stand with the Apostle John, who fled the baths when he heard Cerinthus was there, lest God's judgment fall on him as well as Cerinthus, who was a Gnostic and denied the physical body of Christ. John was as orthodox as anyone in all of church history, but believed in a physical Jesus.
You've not really defended anything on this thread, much less your egregious error that Christ has no body now.

But I thought you had abandoned the thread.

Gnostics were heretics because they denied that Christ came in the flesh, died in the flesh, rose bodily from the grave. I sent none of these. This is all essential gospel. Your comments about Gnostics are irrelevant.

How can I abandon the thread when you keep making such illogical, unscriptural accusations?
 

John of Japan

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Do you not understand what a "different Jesus" means? Jesus is the same, yesterday. today, and forever. If not, our faith is in vain.
Are you trying to tell me that He did not take upon Himself the form of a servant, as Phil. 2 says? If so, then you are denying the incarnation. I've never heard of such a tangled web of thinking about the incarnation. Now you are intimating that Jesus never had a human body. Or maybe He always had one? I can't tell what you mean.

Yes, you do not understand the incarnation at this point. It was for a purpose and for a time. And of course you still did not respond to my two Hebrew verses. I don't expect you to though.
What Hebrew verses? You've not mentioned the Hebrew.

And talk about denigrating people: "I didn't expect you to."
 
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John of Japan

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Gnostics were heretics because they denied that Christ came in the flesh, died in the flesh, rose bodily from the grave. I sent none of these. This is all essential gospel. Your comments about Gnostics are irrelevant.

How can I abandon the thread when you keep making such illogical, unscriptural accusations?
You say Christ does not now have a body. The Gnostics said He never did. I see a close similarity.

But I have given clear Scripture over and over about the 2nd Coming. In fact, this whole thread is full of Scripture from me and others that you have not answered about the positive results of Christ's 2nd Coming. Not one single one of those positive results happened in AD 70. All that happened then was judgment.

And you have the absolute gall to say that I don't give Scripture, and that you are a preterist because the opponents of preterism do a poor job. I say that you have failed entirely on the grounds of the OP of this thread. You can't even answer what I've asked three times: When did Jesus gather His disciples as in John 14:1-3?
 

asterisktom

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I don't remember you ever asking it. But I'll tell you what. I'll answer this as soon as you answer what I've asked several times on this thread (specifically to you at least once) about how John 14:1-3 was fulfilled in AD 70.

You are right I did overlook that. Sorry. John 14:1 -3 was certainly fulfilled when He came. His apostles had the fulfilment of I. And we die we also will ever be with Lord. What were you looking to. Actual sheep stalls?
 

asterisktom

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Are you trying to tell me that He did not take upon Himself the form of a servant, as Phil. 2 says? If so, then you are denying the incarnation. I've never heard of such a tangled web of thinking about the incarnation. Now you are intimating that Jesus never had a human body. Or maybe He always had one? I can't tell what you mean.


What Hebrew verses? You've not mentioned the Hebrew.

And talk about denigrating people: "I didn't expect you too."

I have no idea how you came to those conclusions about me. When did I ever deny the truths of Phil. 2?

Covenanter is right. You do pour own ideas into what other people write.

Now, I have to go. My wife and I just arrived in Ecuador and are going to look around .
 

John of Japan

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You are right I did overlook that. Sorry. John 14:1 -3 was certainly fulfilled when He came. His apostles had the fulfilment of I. And we die we also will ever be with Lord. What were you looking to. Actual sheep stalls?
I'm sorry, this doesn't even make sense. I have no idea what you are saying. How did Jesus fulfill John 14:1-3 in AD 70? And what in the world do sheep stalls have to do with the passage?
 
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John of Japan

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I have no idea how you came to those conclusions about me. When did I ever deny the truths of Phil. 2?

Covenanter is right. You do pour own ideas into what other people write.
You intimated right here that Christ in the OT and Christ in the NT were the same. You can't deny it. It's here for anyone to read. And I phrased my Phil. 2 comment as a question so as not to misrepresent me. You sure have a thin skin.
 

John of Japan

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Do you not understand what a "different Jesus" means? Jesus is the same, yesterday. today, and forever. If not, our faith is in vain.

Yes, you do not understand the incarnation at this point. It was for a purpose and for a time. And of course you still did not respond to my two Hebrew verses. I don't expect you to though.
Here it is, folks, where asterisktom suggests that the Jesus of the OT and the Jesus of the NT are exactly the same--which if true means there was no Incarnation. I don't think he is denying the Incarnation, I just think he has no idea what he is saying. :Biggrin

As to my not answering his two "Hebrew verses," I suppose he means verses from the book of Hebrews, or "Hebrews verses," not verses in Hebrew. (He gave no references for his quotes.) So concerning Jesus being the same as per Hebrews 13:8, it is in the context of His always being with us always (v. 5), so it is speaking about Jesus as God, which He always has been and always will be. The verse has no contextual connection with the Incarnation.

I suppose the other verse he meant was "days of His flesh," which is in Heb. 5:7--"Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared." This is referring to His near death from hematidrosis in the Garden of Gethsemane, at a time when He was limited to a normal human body instead of a glorified physical body. It certainly doesn't mean that Christ no longer has a physical body.
 
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