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USER COMMENTS BY AMILL |
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Page 1 | Page 4 · Found: 66 user comments posted recently. |
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12/21/08 11:00 AM |
AMill | | | |
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A Bible Christian Who Believes wrote: Those who Attack & Futilly Try To Disprove The Authorized Biblical Literalist Pre-Millenial/Pre-Tribulation Dispensational RAPTURE Know Nothing About The Divine Illumination of GOD, The Holy Spirit, Aaaww now c'mon now fellas. Lets be realistic.All this rapture dispensationalist fable stuff was invented by the "visions" of a young girl called Margaret MacDonald in Scotland in the 1830's. Then Darby, Scofield and co ran with this ball. Thats hardly Bible revelation - more Bible speculation. Nuh! No rapture! No flying Christians. Just judgment day when the Lord returns. |
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12/20/08 9:50 AM |
AMill | | | |
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A Bible Christian Who Believes wrote: That Would Following After The Coming of THE RAPTURE. J.V. did Confirm A PRE-(GREAT)TRIBULATION RAPTURE. Don't worry about all this theoretical hypothesis on the so called "rapture" it isn't Biblical nor is it truth. |
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1/2/08 11:49 AM |
AMill | | | |
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Susan wrote: Welcome to the End Times. All real born again Christians - fasten your seat belts! Thats funny?? I didn't know that "real born again Christians" - were PreMill? |
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1/15/07 4:31 PM |
A. Mill. | | | |
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The contrast between the expression, "the first resurrection," and another figurative expression, "the second death" (verse 14). No one understands this latter term literally as applying to a second physical death. It is commonly understood as referring to the eternal punishment of the wicked. Similarly, "the first resurrection" is a figurative expression, and this event (life in the intermediate state) is so called in order to distinguish it from the resurrection of the body which occurs later. Some, however, understand "the first resurrection" to refer to the regeneration of the soul, that is, to the new birth of the believer, which is followed by a period of sanctification in this life and is crowned by his being taken to heaven to reign with Christ during the period between death and the resurrection. In either case the "thousand years" is to be understood symbolically as relating to an indefinitely long period of time. For the Old Testament saints and for those who died in the early part of the Christian era this reign has already continued much longer than a literal one thousand years. |
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