ttoews wrote:Good question. One could ask the same wrt the Trinity and wrt the cross and wrt the Messiah having only a kingdom not of this world. (I suspect you and I could add quite a few doctrines to this list) What Jew would have known that he was, in fact, worshipping a triune God before NT times? What Jew would have known that all salvation was through the cross and by the name of Jesus before NT times? What OT Jew would have known that the Messiah would first come as a suffering Messiah w/o a kingdom of this world? Wrt to these things (which I would categorize as more significant than the millennium) how were the Jews to know what God actually had in mind?
Further, wrt eschatological matters (and assuming your eschatology is correct) how would the OT Jews know that the kingdom is a 1000 year deal?....how would they know that the sacrifices they make in the millennium are not under the old flawed covenant, but under a new covenant that includes gentiles and not just Judah and Israel? Again, one could go on.
Anyway you cut it, in response to your question as to how the Jews were supposed to know.....the answer seems to be that their knowledge wasn't to extend that far until the further revelation of the NT.
You totally missed my point, but I'll answer your questions just the same. The Trinity is a NT revelation. However,
there is no OT text that cannot be understood apart from the Trinity. In other words, if you remove the Trinity, there is NO OT TEXT that is unintelligible. The suffering Messiah IS clearly stated in the OT (Is 53). Further, that the Messiah's kingdom is "not of this world" is plainly stated in the OT as well (Dan 7:13-14).
Continuing with your list, the fact that the Messiah would be rejected, be killed, raise from the dead, and return again is all OT prophecy, unless you wish to call Jesus a liar (Luke 24:27, etc.). Further, the 1000 years is a NT revelation. However, that does not mean that the OT prophecies CANNOT BE UNDERSTOOD.
Let's use Gen 3:15 as an example. This is the first giving of the Gospel. God promised mankind a Redeemer. Now, did Adam and Eve know that Redeemer would be born of the line of David, be the King of Israel, live a sinless life, die for their sins, be resurrected, and ascend to heaven? Of course not. But Gen 3:15 can be taken to be literally true just the same. You don't HAVE to know those things to understand Gen 3:15.
That is what you aren't getting. Let's use Gen 15:18-20 as an example. God promised Abraham that He would give a specific portion of land to his descendents. He even gave the boundaries. Now, the Jews have NEVER possessed that land. So you have to allegorize the text and say it refers to the future inheritance of heaven by the Church, or whatever you want to do with it. We could use any one of a million examples for this. The prophecies concerning the Third Jewish Temple in Ezekiel 40-47 would fit just as well.
Abraham took that promise literally. Let's say you are right. God knew the Jews would never get that land. He knew it would be fulfilled spiritually, but He didn't let Abraham in on that little secret. He let Abraham think that his decendents would actually get that land. Therefore, Abraham was INCAPABLE OF PROPERLY UNDERSTANDING WHAT GOD WAS PROMISING HIM, as were ALL the Jews after him. Therefore, that portion of Scripture was unintelligile until . . . well . . . 2000 years later!!!
So, your hermeneutic forces you to believe that Scripture was, or is, unintelligible until future revelation takes place. I find that position absurd, plainly wrong, and downright offensive to the God we serve. God is not the author of confusion.
So, let me ask you AGAIN:
Since you believe the OT passages are not to be taken literally, and since it took Jesus and the apostles to come along hundreds of years later to give their proper meaning, then how were the Jews to whom they were written supposed to know what God actually had in mind?
Were they capable of understanding what God really meant when He spoke through the prophets? Yes or no, ttoews?
ttoews wrote:No, taken plainly Jesus promises to come again.....and not to come again (pre-trib), and again (post-trib) and again (post-mill). It is a second coming and not a second, third and fourth coming.
I certainly hope you know that no one believes in both a pre and post trib rapture . . . if you don't, why are you even bothering with this discussion?
ttoews wrote:Secondly, 1 Cor 15:51 speaks of a mystery which is that not all will sleep, but all will be changed, etc.
Try reading what I already said, dude. I'll bold the relevant part for you:
- Taken plainly, the rapture and Second Coming are not the same events. The debate is between pre and post-trib rapture. 1 Cor 15:51 tells us the rapture was a mystery. The Second Coming, along with the resurrections associated with it, were not mysteries. Plainly, then, they are different events.
Let's do this mathematically so we can make things concrete. We are going to let A refer to the Rapture, and B refer to the second coming. We are going to let X refer to "a mystery."
If A=X, and A=B, then B=X.
If A=X, and B<>X, then A<>B.
See that? The Second Coming was NOT a mystery. The resurrection was NOT a myster. The rapture WAS a mystery. Therefore, the two events cannot be the same. Try again.
ttoews wrote:This happens at the last trumpet. In a plain reading (aka a straightforward reading) there would be a last trumpet that is actually the last trumpet and not a last trumpet followed by still more and more trumpets as required by your eschatology (see Mt 24:31, possibly 1 Thes 4:16, and Rev 8-11 for the more trumpets)
I am assuming that you know that the Revelation was written well after the epistles to the Corinthians. It is impossible, then, for Paul to be referring to an event THAT HAD NOT YET BEEN REVEALED. There is absolutely NO REASON to equate the Last Trump here with the final trumpet in the Revelation. That's just retarded. That goes back to what I said above about you believing that Scripture is unintelligible. Poor Corinthians . . . they didn't know that they should have just put that portion of Paul's letter aside and said to themselves, "Well, John will right in about thirty years from now to explain to us what the Last Trump is. So for now, we should ignore it. It can't mean anything to us."
So, try again. It is painfully clear that these trumps are not the same event.
ttoews wrote:You do realize Jac, that as we get into this in more depth, it will become very clear that dispensationalism isn't straightforward at all.....and that the "plain reading" is really a matter of perspective.
Of course it is a matter of perspective. Have I ever said otherwise? I read the text like a first century Jew, written by a first century Jew. You read it like a twenty-first century Christian written by a twenty-first century Christian.
Besides this, I have continually said that DISPENSATIONALISM is complicated, but it's INDIVIDUAL PARTS are simple. Even further, I have talked primarily about OT prophecy. We take those as literal promises to literal people, and we read the NT in light of those promises. Your camp allegorizes the texts, rendering them untelligible to their original audiences. Your hermeneutic rejects the plain meaning of Scripture.
For the last time, no, dispensationalism is not simple. It is highly complex. I've not said otherwise. I have repeatedly said that the interpretation of OT prophecy is simple. The interpretation of NT doctrine is relatively simple as well. In both cases, it is a matter of perspective. I choose a literalists perspective. Sorry you don't. But don't bother telling me that you can be a literalist and not be a dispensationalist. Even your own apologists disagree with you on that point. You are far better off arguing that a literal hermeneutic is wrong.