Well enlighten me on the whole context of a Literal Physical Millennium.
Ill be waiting.
You may want to sit down.
But, seriously, I am looking for an answer to this too. Either from TCassidy or Mr. Cognitive Dissonance.
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Well enlighten me on the whole context of a Literal Physical Millennium.
Ill be waiting.
I just hope and pray you will listen.Well enlighten me on the whole context of a Literal Physical Millennium.
Ill be waiting.
prophecy70 wrote:
Luke 17:20
Once, on being asked by the Pharisees when the kingdom of God would come, Jesus replied, "The coming of the kingdom of God is not something that can be observed,
Hey, prophecy expert, why didn't you summarize from vs. 20 to the end of the chapter? (Get the context!)
I just hope and pray you will listen.
Luke 17:20 Being asked by the Pharisees when God’s Kingdom would come, he answered them, “God’s Kingdom doesn’t come with observation."
First, who is He talking to. Hint: Pharisees - unbelievers.
Second, He says with observation - With scrupulous and attentive looking for it, or with such an appearance so as to “attract” observation - that is, with pomp, majesty, splendor, which is what the Pharisees were all about, empty pomp, splendor, formalism.
Now the immediate following context.
Luke 17:21 neither will they say, ‘Look, here!’ or, ‘Look, there!’ for behold, God’s Kingdom is within you.”
He uses their own unbelief against them. They say the Kingdom will come with great pomp and ceremony, but He says "No, nobody will say look, here, or look there" pointing to a great pompous religious activity.
He then corrects their error. "God's Kingdom is within you."
The Greek word translated "within you" is εντος. (Within you or Among you.)
There are two possible interpretations.
1. The reign of God is “within you, "in the heart.” It does not come with pomp and splendor, like the reign of earthy kings, who can only control the external actions of their subjects, but it reigns in the heart by the law of God; it sets up its dominion over the will, and brings every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.
Or
2. It may mean the Kingdom is “now among you.” The Messiah has come. The Kingdom is present in the Person of the King. Most bible scholars at this time lean to this interpretation.
I think it could be either but lean towards the second.
Back to the OP for a Biblical discussion.
Tcassidy said:"The Mediatorial Kingdom ended when the times of the Gentiles began (the Babylonian Captivity). It reappeared for a very short time during the earthly ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ (the Kingdom was present with the Presence of the King), but ended again at the Ascension. It will return to earth with the return of the Lord to establish His Kingdom of God on Earth."
The mediatorial kingdom is defined as
1. the rule of God,
2. through a divinely chosen representative,
3. who not only speaks and acts to the people for God,
4. and also speaks and acts for the people to God,
5. its mediatorial ruler is always a member of the human race.
The Mediatorial rulers would include:
Moses
Joshua
Samuel
The Judges
The Monarchial Mediatorial rulers were:
Saul
David
Solomon
The Kings of Judah
Ending with the Babylonian Captivity which began the Times of the Gentiles.
The Mediatorial Kingdom of Christ:
During His earthly ministry. 5BC - 31AD
During His return and the consummation of the ages. (TBD)
You explicitly exclude the present Gospel age, implying Christ is not our mediator; not the mediator for redeemed sinners.
Mediator Scriptures can be found here. I'll requote some -
Gal 3:19 - What purpose then does the law serve? It was added because of transgressions, till the Seed should come to whom the promise was made; and it was appointed through angels by the hand of a mediator. Moses.
1Ti 2:5 - For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus,
Heb 8:6 - But now He has obtained a more excellent ministry, inasmuch as He is also Mediator of a better covenant, which was established on better promises.
Notice the references are present tense. Jesus is perfect God, perfect man in one person so how is he presently disqualified as Mediator?
Perfect fulfilment of prophecy does await Jesus' return in glory when he will bring about the final state - the NH&NE. Not some millennial half-way house where Jesus sits with his human, physical body on David's throne in Jerusalem.
Where does Scripture say there was no mediator between the exile & the incarnation?
Where does Scripture say the glorified Lord Jesus Christ is presently disqualified as a Mediator?
TCassidy said:No, I don't. I didn't claim to list every detail and aspect of the Mediatorial Kingdom. Check Matthew 4:17 and 16:21 for starters. Failure to see the change contained in those verses will lead the reader into serious misunderstanding and confusion.
Where did I say there was no mediator between the exile and incarnation. I said there was no man, no human, mediator.
Where did I say the glorified Lord Jesus Christ was presently disqualified as a Mediator?
I have long been encouraged to listen to what preachers do NOT say, as well as what they DO say. Your statements about the Mediatorial Kingdom omit any reference to the Lord Jesus' present reign & present office as Mediator.
Those two statements -
Added - The Mediatorial Kingdom ended when the times of the Gentiles began (the Babylonian Captivity). It reappeared for a very short time during the earthly ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ (the Kingdom was present with the Presence of the King), but ended again at the Ascension. It will return to earth with the return of the Lord to establish His Kingdom of God on Earth."The mediatorial kingdom is defined as...." -
appear to be statements of your doctrine. Your silence on Jesus' present status indicates that because Jesus doesn't qualify according to your definition, he is presently disqualified as Mediator & that will change when there is an earthly millennial kingdom.
That, I hope , we would all agree.The Universal kingdom of God and the Mediatorial kingdom are two very different things. The former is what has always existed; is universal in scope, outside of which is no created thing; involves the rule of God directly, with no intermediary standing between God and man; is a present reality; and is an unconditioned rule, arising out of the sovereign nature of God Himself.
TCassidy said:In contrast, the Mediatorial kingdom, in its final form, must come to put down all sin and rebellion, finally bringing the Kingdom and will of God on earth as it is in heaven. ... The King of this kingdom is the Lord Jesus, the Son of David; the subjects of it are Israel and the nations ... the center of the kingdom is Jerusalem, and the means of its establishment are the coming and visible appearing of our Savior Jesus Christ.
If I may respond, I don't see where a definition of "a mediatorial kingdom" has to be analogous with the doctrine of Christ as our Mediator.Any doctrine of a/the Mediatorial Kingdom MUST focus on Jesus' present reign & mediatorial work in the present Gospel age, NOT some supposed future millennial kingdom.
If I may respond, I don't see where a definition of "a mediatorial kingdom" has to be analogous with the doctrine of Christ as our Mediator.
Surely we could plot out a Venn diagram and see differences between the Judges time as mediators and Christ's, for example. It is not a slight to our Savior or denial of His role as mediator to explore this.
This is why I have not participated in this thread. You just can't seem to bring yourself to tell the truth.Look at TC's definitions - he specifically excludes the present Gospel age from Christ's Mediatorial Kingdom.
This is why I have not participated in this thread. You just can't seem to bring yourself to tell the truth.
TCassidy said:The Mediatorial Kingdom ended when the times of the Gentiles began (the Babylonian Captivity). It reappeared for a very short time during the earthly ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ (the Kingdom was present with the Presence of the King), but ended again at the Ascension. It will return to earth with the return of the Lord to establish His Kingdom of God on Earth.
.......
The Mediatorial Kingdom of Christ:
During His earthly ministry. 5BC - 31AD
During His return and the consummation of the ages. (TBD)
Ian said:I have long been encouraged to listen to what preachers do NOT say, as well as what they DO say. Your statements about the Mediatorial Kingdom omit any reference to the Lord Jesus' present reign & present office as Mediator.
Those two statements - "The mediatorial kingdom is defined as...." - appear to be statements of your doctrine. Your silence on Jesus' present status indicates that because Jesus doesn't qualify according to your definition, he is presently disqualified as Mediator & that will change when there is an earthly millennial kingdom.
So, you want me to explain a 6 credit hour course from a 550 page textbook in one little post?Are they an accurate & full statement of your belief or the mediatorial kingdom doctrine?
Uh, the Times of the Gentiles has nothing to do with the above. It is right out of Luke 21:24 And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led away captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.Is there any biblical authority to say the times of the gentiles began in Babylonian times?
As far as I can ascertain this teaching began in the 19th century. It is based on the seven times that passed over Nebuchadnezzar, Seven times being 2520 days or 2520 years which would run out in the 20th century. (H Grattan Guinness and others.)
I just hope and pray you will listen.
Luke 17:20 Being asked by the Pharisees when God’s Kingdom would come, he answered them, “God’s Kingdom doesn’t come with observation."
First, who is He talking to. Hint: Pharisees - unbelievers.
Second, He says with observation - With scrupulous and attentive looking for it, or with such an appearance so as to “attract” observation - that is, with pomp, majesty, splendor, which is what the Pharisees were all about, empty pomp, splendor, formalism.
Now the immediate following context.
Luke 17:21 neither will they say, ‘Look, here!’ or, ‘Look, there!’ for behold, God’s Kingdom is within you.”
He uses their own unbelief against them. They say the Kingdom will come with great pomp and ceremony, but He says "No, nobody will say look, here, or look there" pointing to a great pompous religious activity.
He then corrects their error. "God's Kingdom is within you."
The Greek word translated "within you" is εντος. (Within you or Among you.)
There are two possible interpretations.
1. The reign of God is “within you, "in the heart.” It does not come with pomp and splendor, like the reign of earthy kings, who can only control the external actions of their subjects, but it reigns in the heart by the law of God; it sets up its dominion over the will, and brings every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.
Or
2. It may mean the Kingdom is “now among you.” The Messiah has come. The Kingdom is present in the Person of the King. Most bible scholars at this time lean to this interpretation.
I think it could be either but lean towards the second.
Ian said:Have you read your own posts? Are they an accurate & full statement of your belief or the mediatorial kingdom doctrine?
All I wanted was a simple "Yes" or "No." I assume a reasonable degree of intelligence of contributors, that generally they write what they mean. I know I do.So, you want me to explain a 6 credit hour course from a 550 page textbook in one little post?
This is exactly why I think you have no credibility at all regarding the bible or theology. You seem to operate on a Readers Digest Condensed Version of bible and theology. And even then you have torn out 90% of the pages!
I have understood that in the present Gospel age there is a good degree of unity regarding the the Gospel & the ministry of Christ, & of the Holy Spirit regardless of our views on eschatolgy.Ian said:There can be no argument. Jesus is King & Mediator in the present Gospel age. To deny that is to deny the Gospel.
And, in the resurrection when the Lord Jesus Christ is with us in glory, will we need a mediator? Surely his priestly work of redemption was finished at Calvary, we are presently living under the New Covenant in his present Kingdom:
Col. 1:13 He has delivered us from the power of darkness and conveyed us into the kingdom of the Son of His love, 14 in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.
Any doctrine of a/the Mediatorial Kingdom MUST focus on Jesus' present reign & mediatorial work in the present Gospel age, NOT some supposed future millennial kingdom.
Uh, the Times of the Gentiles has nothing to do with the above. It is right out of Luke 21:24 And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led away captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.
It began when Israel/Judah was dominated by the gentile nations and will only end with the consummation of the ages, when Israel will be ruled by her Messiah, and not dominated by the gentile nations any more.
Uh, after Babylon/Medio-Persia came Alexander, followed by the Ptolemy dynasty of Egypt, and the Seleucid dynasty of Babylon. The Maccabees and later the Hasmoneans were able to re-establish Temple worship, but there was no properly consecrated priesthood nor a King. The High Priests did most of the governing. And most of them, some of whom were called "King" were Parthian puppets. They were followed by the Herods, who were Roman puppets.Yes but it does not say when it began. There were times before the Romans came that the Israel had no gentiles ruling over them such as the Macabees and later.
Uh, after Babylon/Medio-Persia came Alexander, followed by the Ptolemy dynasty of Egypt, and the Seleucid dynasty of Babylon. The Maccabees and later the Hasmoneans were able to re-establish Temple worship, but there was no properly consecrated priesthood nor a King. The High Priests did most of the governing. And most of them, some of whom were called "King" were Parthian puppets. They were followed by the Herods, who were Roman puppets.
prophecy70 wrote:
And then find me the Contextual support of a Physical Literal Millennium where Christ sits on an earthy throne reigning with a million souls.
I will defer to TCassidy. He knows more about this subject, than both of us combined!