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Old 06-27-2007, 06:40 PM
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ILG ILG is offline
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Question For All You Prophecy Buffs

I was wondering what was taught about prophecy in ancient times. I know that we look at prophecy through the lense of modern developments and I was wondering when it became popular to teach about one world government and one world religions based on prophecy. In Jesus time, the Pharisees thought they had the prophecies all figured out, but in reality, they ended up missing the boat. I would like some insight on prophecy teaching from 200 AD through maybe the 1700's to 1800's. I was wondering how the teachings as we know them today developed.
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Old 06-27-2007, 06:43 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ILG View Post
I was wondering what was taught about prophecy in ancient times. I know that we look at prophecy through the lense of modern developments and I was wondering when it became popular to teach about one world government and one world religions based on prophecy. In Jesus time, the Pharisees thought they had the prophecies all figured out, but in reality, they ended up missing the boat. I would like some insight on prophecy teaching from 200 AD through maybe the 1700's to 1800's. I was wondering how the teachings as we know them today developed.
Todays foretellers depend heavily on the Wall Street Journal and New York Times.
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"It is inhumane, in my opinion, to force people who have a genuine medical need for coffee to wait in line behind people who apparently view it as some kind of recreational activity." Dave Barry 2005

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Articles on such subjects as "The New Birth," will be accepted, whether they teach that the new birth takes place before baptism in water and Spirit, or that the new birth consists of baptism of water and Spirit. - THE PENTECOSTAL HERALD Dec. 1945

"It is doubtful if any Trinitarian Pentecostals have ever professed to believe in three gods, and Oneness Pentecostals should not claim that they do." - Daniel Segraves
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Old 06-27-2007, 06:44 PM
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Originally Posted by Stephen Hoover View Post
Todays foretellers depend heavily on the Wall Street Journal and New York Times.
I agree. I don't think putting today's events into speculation is necessarily wrong, but I think we should put it into perspective.
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Old 06-27-2007, 07:19 PM
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Here is a school of thought that tries make all history bible prohecy.
http://1335.com
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Old 06-27-2007, 08:06 PM
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Most Pentecostal churches I know are not for prophet organizations....
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Old 06-27-2007, 10:54 PM
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The early Church uniformly believed in what is called the post trib rapture.
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Old 06-28-2007, 12:34 PM
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The early Church uniformly believed in what is called the post trib rapture.
I like these sorts of responses. EVERY VIEWPOINT OF PROPHECY claims the early church proposed their version. Lol
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Old 06-29-2007, 05:37 PM
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Prophecy teaching throughout early church history

ILG, I whole heartedly recommend Leroy Froom's "The Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers". It is a four volume overview of prophetic teaching and exposition, from the intertestamental period up to the early 1900s. It covers preChristian Jewish prophecy teachers, early church prophecy teachers, medieval prophecy teachers, and so forth. It identifies who, when, where, and what they taught, and how earlier teachers influenced later teachers (and thus teachings) throughout the time period under discussion.

The author is a Seventh Day Adventist, and by the time you get to the mid 1800s I imagine that SDA bias may begin to show through somewhat, however I have found he has given a very good and honest examination of pre-Millerite prophecy teachings - Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish - using extensive source material and original quotations.

It is an incredibly detailed comparative study of the last 2500 years of prophecy teaching and interpretation, and it is also well written and an enjoyable read.
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Old 06-27-2007, 11:37 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ILG View Post
I was wondering what was taught about prophecy in ancient times. I know that we look at prophecy through the lense of modern developments and I was wondering when it became popular to teach about one world government and one world religions based on prophecy. In Jesus time, the Pharisees thought they had the prophecies all figured out, but in reality, they ended up missing the boat. I would like some insight on prophecy teaching from 200 AD through maybe the 1700's to 1800's. I was wondering how the teachings as we know them today developed.
In the past they pretty much argued about every point and detail, just like today. Different schools of thought held sway at different times, just like today.

To understand Bible Prophecy in the apostolic churches of today you need to study the history of Dispensationalism and how it was developed as an answer to the skepticism of the Enlightenment. Obviously, not all apostolics are dispensationalists, but most of "the movement" developed from within that framework.

For the dates you mention, the biggest debate was literal versus allegorical interpretation. The world was predicted to end with the 2nd coming of Christ over and over again in the Middle Ages. The year 1000 AD; the year 1100 and then 1200, and so on. I forget the exact year, but something like 1214 gripped a lot of people's minds for reasons that I have also forgotten.

In the late 1600's there was a movement, starting in England, that believed the rise of Protestantism and the waning of absolutism represented the dawn of a New World Order.

They felt that just as Sir Isaac Newton had "defined the order" of the world (planetary motion, gravity, the inverse square law, etc) so also would science define the human world and its laws of government. This was the spirit in which the US was born - just look at the back of a dollar bill.

That's where the "New World Order" came from, a belief (sadly an often mistaken belief) that human wisdom and science had "come of age" and that a paradise was on the horizon. The many disappointments that resulted from this have had a big hand in the birth of dispensationalism and such.
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Old 06-27-2007, 11:44 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pelathais View Post
In the past they pretty much argued about every point and detail, just like today. Different schools of thought held sway at different times, just like today.

To understand Bible Prophecy in the apostolic churches of today you need to study the history of Dispensationalism and how it was developed as an answer to the skepticism of the Enlightenment. Obviously, not all apostolics are dispensationalists, but most of "the movement" developed from within that framework.

For the dates you mention, the biggest debate was literal versus allegorical interpretation. The world was predicted to end with the 2nd coming of Christ over and over again in the Middle Ages. The year 1000 AD; the year 1100 and then 1200, and so on. I forget the exact year, but something like 1214 gripped a lot of people's minds for reasons that I have also forgotten.

In the late 1600's there was a movement, starting in England, that believed the rise of Protestantism and the waning of absolutism represented the dawn of a New World Order.

They felt that just as Sir Isaac Newton had "defined the order" of the world (planetary motion, gravity, the inverse square law, etc) so also would science define the human world and its laws of government. This was the spirit in which the US was born - just look at the back of a dollar bill.

That's where the "New World Order" came from, a belief (sadly an often mistaken belief) that human wisdom and science had "come of age" and that a paradise was on the horizon. The many disappointments that resulted from this have had a big hand in the birth of dispensationalism and such.
Thanks! I find all this very interesting. Wish I had a good easy to read book documenting this.
__________________
"It is inhumane, in my opinion, to force people who have a genuine medical need for coffee to wait in line behind people who apparently view it as some kind of recreational activity." Dave Barry 2005

I am a firm believer in the Old Paths

Articles on such subjects as "The New Birth," will be accepted, whether they teach that the new birth takes place before baptism in water and Spirit, or that the new birth consists of baptism of water and Spirit. - THE PENTECOSTAL HERALD Dec. 1945

"It is doubtful if any Trinitarian Pentecostals have ever professed to believe in three gods, and Oneness Pentecostals should not claim that they do." - Daniel Segraves
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