1. What are your resources?Rick_C wrote:Do you have book, chapter, and section references from Josephus to show that the Thessalonian Jews were, indeed, affected by the Great War in any way? My resources say they were uninvolved and, therefore, were essentially unaffected by it. You mentioned the Jews in Jerusalem coming under God's judgment in 70AD: I know about them (Josephus).
2. I don't think I ever said directly that Non-Believing Thessalonian Jews were affected by Roman armies. However one of the strategies of the Roman armies was to wipe out everything Jewish along the way to Jerusalem so as not to be flanked(From memory...Don't have a reference...will look however.)
3. Once again...Read 1 Thess. 2:14-16 For you, brethren, became imitators of the churches of God which are in Judea in Christ Jesus. For you also suffered the same things from your own countrymen, just as they did from the Judeans, who killed both the Lord Jesus and their own prophets, and have persecuted us; and they do not please God and are contrary to all men, forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that they may be saved, so as always to fill up the measure of their sins; but wrath has come upon them to the uttermost.
1 Thessalonians says that Non-Believing Jews that were persecuting them. 2 Thessalonians says that God would repay those that were persecuting them.
I never said or even alluded to this.Rick_C wrote:(Jerusalem and Thessalonica are not the same city).
You will have to pardon my being naive here once again. I take it very literally when the text says that THOSE that are persecuting you will be judged. Therefore it would have to be within the lifetime of the ones doing the persecuting. Which brings me back to this same point of relief from persecution.Rick_C wrote:Paul expressly wrote that the Thessalonican Jews would come under Christ's (God's) judgment and be eternally destroyed for persecuting the believers there. You haven't provided evidence that this happened to them nor that they were even affected by the Great War in any way. As far as I know, and have no reason to think otherwise, the Thessalonian Jews who persecuted Christians in that city died natural deaths and will be judged on the Last Day.
How would people living at the same time as Paul who were being persecuted by very real living people be comforted by some form of recompense on judgment day thousands of years after they die?
What I am suggesting is that what happened in the 42 months...1260 days...3 1/2 years known as The Jewish War, that this event best fits the description and timing of impending doom and judgment upon those who rejected the gospel and were persecuting the followers of Christ.Rick_C wrote:But if you have documentation that the Jews in Thessalonica were annihilated in 70AD, and my resources say they were not; please post it (I want to know). If you can present this, you would then have a basis to make case for a "70AD fulfillment in Thessalonica" regarding precisely what and who Paul wrote about.
I'd be glad to hear it (and will respond),
It is you that need to justify why it is still future. All you can say is I've not seen any evidence that Non-believing Jews in Thessalonica were actually judged between 67-70AD. Does this mean that it didn't happen? No...It just means that there may have not been any record of it. However Paul did say that it would happen and that the believers would be relieved by it.
Funny thing is...you don't even have to justify why you believe what you do. You simply say...It hasn't happened yet. Why??? Because you say that you didn't see it happen. Or that there is no record of it. All that proves is that you didn't see it or that record of it was lost or simply not recorded.
Be back later for more...I look forward to your response.
Mike