Tight wires frighten me. I heard a speaker tell about a daredevil who stretched one across Niagara Falls. Before walking across, he asked the audience, “Do you think I can do this?” Yes!, came the unanimous reply. After his return, he put a wheelbarrow on the wire. “Who thinks I can…
Robert L. Thomas
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A brother in Christ recently asked an important question about inmillennialism’s interpretation of the following passage: Now, brethren, concerning the coming (Gk. parousia) of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together to Him, we ask you, not to be soon shaken in mind or troubled, either by spirit or by…
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Before looking at 1 Thessalonians, I want to share an announcement for which I am thankful: Inmillennialism is available at Amazon, Books-A-Million, and Barnes & Noble. We Who Are Alive and Remain Our last three posts on First…
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Paul uses a striking image to describe the tribulation the church of the Thessalonians was experiencing. He says the Jews were “fill(ing) up their sins” so that God’s wrath could come on them. This imagery validates inmillennialism’s view of a two-phased tribulation: the preliminary tribulations and the final “great tribulation”/“wrath” that…
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One of my goals in this series of posts on Thessalonians is to show that Paul wrote from the prophetic perspective I call inmillennialism. This prophetic model arises from Jesus’ Olivet Discourse and Paul’s discussion of the kingdom of God in 1 Corinthians 15. I have documented inmillennialism in previous blog…
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Book Of 1 ThessaloniansProphecyQuestions and Answers
Paul and the Rapture — Part 3
by Mike Rogersby Mike RogersThe “rapture passage” (1 Thess 4:13–5:11) creates problems for the current prophetic models. Their interpretations implicate Paul in error. They portray him as naïve and inconsistent. They do not take the Olivet Discourse to be “the word of the Lord” to which Paul appeals (1 Thess 4:15), even though the…