I am not advocating that we (as ministers of the Gospel) should ignore the subject altogether, but I think we should take care as to how dogmatic we are in our assertions. It seems to me, that most preachers/teachers who have a bible prophecy emphasis always seem to present the material in the same fashion:#1 highly dogmatic (almost arrogant with anyone who has an alternate view)#2 always tied to current events #3 ignoring what bible prophecy must have meant to the early church (i.e. the book of Revelation is only for
From the pew, I have been introduced to the word eschatology but I really had forgotten its meaning, so I did look it up. for the few un-enlightened laymen aboard, like me.es·cha·tol·o·gy: a branch of theology concerned with the final events in the history of the world or of humankind : a belief concerning death, the end of the world, or the ultimate destiny of humankind ; specifically : any of various Christian doctrines concerning the Second Coming, the resurrection of the dead, or the Last Judgment
No, but it does disillusion some. ________________Some facts but mostly just my [email protected]/
I can boldly state from scripture that Jesus will return.But when we get much beyond that–when we try to play the blood moons game or exactly who is the anti-Christ, etc.–it’s almost entirely conjecture.