Just a slight comment...and the reason I mention this is because many believe that the Christians in 2010 are the ones being written to by the apostles. This is incorrect. All Scripture can have application to us, but it was surely not written TO us. It was written to whom it was written (usually stated in the first few verses of each epistle). I stress again that we have gotten application mixed up with original interpretation.steve7150 wrote:I want to ask you one question - is the truth important enough for you to look at it from an angle otherwise uncomfortable for you? It was for me.
Allyn,
Preterism does'nt cause me any discomfort. Jesus is Lord and he reigns and that's what really matters. As far as being in the majority goes, if you're with God you're with the only opinion that matters.
I only wish that there would'nt be unpleasentness between believers with different viewpoints particularly since Paul said we all are looking through a dark glass for now.
Now, regarding that "dark glass" from 1 Corinthians 13:12...
1 Corinthians 13:12 - For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
The key word in that text is the word "now." When was this epistle written? Was it pre-parousia or post parousia? Regardless of whether one believes the parousia occurred at around 70 AD, one must believe that Paul is speaking PRIOR to the parousia. After the historical parousia event, all the uncertainty of the things Paul was discussing would be lifted. Clarity would be restored. As post-parousia full-preterist Christians, we don't see through that dark glass any more. The kingdom of God is fully and completely here right now. And since God is a Spirit, it seems quite unlikely that the reference "face to face" is expressing literal, physical terminology. I am not suggesting that you believe in that manner.
The same kind of thinking can be applied to "this present age" and "the age to come." We must understand the timing of when these things were being said. Present-day 2010 Christianity is not the audience.
The same goes for the heresy of Hymanaeus and Philetus of 2 Timothy 2:17-18 who said the resurrection was past. Again, when did they say this? Was it pre-parousia or post-parousia? We know that it was pre-parousia, even by futurist's standards. However, the resurrection was still future to them at the time of the writing. They jumped the gun by a few years. Paul never criticized them for the nature of the resurrection. And if the nature of the resurrection is according to present traditions (a physical and bodily out of the grave type), then how could they have possibly succeeded in overthrowing anyone's faith? All they had to do was look in the cemeterys and also to see if the planet was suffering adversely. No one could possibly be fooled into thinking that this KIND of resurrection was past. But one thing for sure, it destroys the dispensational view of the physical rapture. If the resurrection was already past, then Paul should have been raptured away at least seven years prior. But he wasn't was he?