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Author | Topic: Christianity and the End Times | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
The End is Coming Soon is quite a cliche. There have been numerous occasions in the past where Christians have believed that the end times are almost upon us. And - certainly today - there is no shortage of people prepared to profit from it. We even see daft ideas like bar-codes being the Mark of the Beast (they aren’t).
But what does the Bible really say. You won’t find out from those selling an imminent apocalypse. I intend to survey the major end-time predictions and see if they really do match the present situation. Bible Study please.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2
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Daniel is the most important source from the Old Testament.
Daniel 2 presents a sequence of four empires, the last of which will be defeated and destroyed by an eternal kingdom set up by God, which will fill the entire Earth. The fourth is commonly interpreted as the Roman Empire (despite the other chapters of Daniel pointing elsewhere). However, the Roman Empire is no more, it’s end usually identified as the fall of Constantinople in the mid-15th Century. The eternal kingdom is nowhere in sight. Arguably the Turks came closest, but I hardly think that Christians would accept that identification. Some prophecy buffs argue for a New Roman Empire but it is somewhat of a stretch to count it as the same Empire when there is no real continuity - and what of the other empires of history ? Why are none of those counted ? But if we generously accept that highly strained reading we still need a New Roman Empire and there is no sign of that since Mussolini.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2
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But the book of Daniel has more.
Daniel 7 has another prediction of four empires, ending again in an eternal Kingdom. This time the final Empire has eleven Kings, three of whom fall to the eleventh, symbolised as a little horn. The little horn is a blasphemer who seeks to persecute the saints (presumably intended to be faithful Jews) and change times and laws It’s pretty vague - at least to us. However, it seems reasonable to think that these are the same four empires as before - or close enough. Daniel 8 sheds some more light on the matter. Billed as dealing with the end times it tells us that the Greeks will conquer the Persians. The Greek Empire will then be divided into four. This is scene-setting and the end times will come during the latter days of those successor states. The little horn appears again, the king of one of these states. We’re even told that this ruler will end the Jews’ daily sacrifices. Again this points to the past, and it challenges the idea that the Roman Empire is the last of the four. Obviously Alexander the Great and the Diadochi states fit this prophecy very well. The last of those states, Egypt, fell shortly before Rome formally became an Empire - and more importantly Rome plays no part in this prophecy. Those who know the history - even from reading 1 and 2 Maccabees will have a good idea of just who the little horn is meant to be. Of course there is always the dodge of saying that these are future events, but then we would need a new Persian Empire, a new Greek Empire, the Greek Empire to be divided and even then the end is not likely to be that near.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
I guess it has some entertainment value but...
quote: Calling Ron Wyatt an archaeologist is a joke in itself. And from his website the book explains things including:
Why I expect to see the rapture 2014-2016.
Nope! Edited by PaulK, : No reason given.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
Daniel 9 has the famous seventy weeks almost universally accepted as a period of 490 years. The start date is unclear, but it certainly puts a limit on things.
The time is divided into 49 years, 434 years and 7 years. Christians usually choose the start date so that the end of the 434 year period corresponds - roughly - to the crucifixion because they take the messiah who will be cut off to be Jesus. The rest of the events don’t really fit, so they are ignored. It should come as no surprise to informed readers that they better fit events described in Maccabees. Given the other prophecies of Daniel I think we can safely say that the end of the 490 years was meant to be The End. Of course, even in Christian reckoning, it wasn’t
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: I didn’t say that the date was made up, just that it was chosen (out of all the possible dates) because it works out right for their preferred interpretation. Which is very likely wrong for other reasons. Of course some do start making things up. Some insist that there is a gap between the last seven years and the rest - a gap of nearly 2000 years now. That doesn’t have any textual support at all.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: Actually it isn’t that clear. Even in your chosen translation it is possible that messiah the prince comes after the initial 49 years. From what I have read this is supported by the punctuation in the Masoretic text which makes it clear that there are two messiahs, and it does make more sense of the division. (In this reading messiah the prince is likely Cyrus, who certainly qualifies as a prince and is called a messiah in Isaiah 45:1 - the Hebrew text using the same word as Daniel 9:25) I already said that it is the start of 9:26 that Christians read as referring to the Crucifixion, and since thst is explicitly called out as occurring at the end of the second period is a better marker than the appearance even if you were correct. So arguing that 9:25 doesn’t refer to the crucifixion is pointless.
quote: So we have another case of Christianity versus the Bible. In fact since Daniel elsewhere identifies the end times as the Maccabean period (see my discussion of Daniel 7 and 8 above for a start) it’s rather unlikely that Daniel 9 will contradict that. Further - as I have already said and we will see - you run into serious problems with the final 7 years. The Maccabean interpretation does not.
quote: If you investigate the text you will see that destroy is a poor translation, at least in modern English. It is not the only possible meaning and since the city appears to be still there in the following verses... More immediately important this event occurs during the remaining 7 years. I don’t need to tell you that 70 AD is rather more than 7 years after the crucifixion.
quote: This doesn’t make a lot of sense. There is no ambiguity in the verse that leads us to think that it refers to anything other than events in the last 7 years of the 490. It just doesn’t fit Christian ideas of what the prophecy should mean And really are you saying there are two sets of 490 years mixed together, where some events belong to one and some to the other with no hint of which is which? Does that really make sense to you?
quote: Please show us this textual support. Show us the reasons why the count of 490 years should be interrupted for a far longer period than the whole 490 at that time and no other. And it had better be more than it didn’t happen at the time we want so it must be the distant future. Because that isn’t textual support at all. That’s just twisting the text because it doesn’t work for you.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: In your opinion. However, there are many messiahs aside from the presumed Messiah. Every king of Israel, every High Priest qualifies.
quote: Or you are choosing the wrong starting point. In fact the arrival of Cyrus, prince and messiah is highly significant to the rebuilding of Jerusalem and an appropriate point to make a division in the weeks. Since the starting point is highly unclear it is possible (I believe it to be the presumed date - before the Exile - of a presumed prophecy that Jerusalem would be rebuilt)
quote: If it changes the time of the end - as you claim - it certainly does contradict.
quote: There is no discontinuity in the narrative. You simply assume one. In the middle of verse 26.
quote: Sure there is a place in the timeline - it comes shortly after the messiah is cut off. Nobody thinks the prince is Jesus (it’s Antiochus)
quote: Let us note the usual empty attacks.
quote: The seventieth week is no more isolated than the first seven weeks or the remaining sixty two weeks. It is just a division of the seventy weeks, which by all appearances are intended to be continuous. The narrative continues past the messiah being cut off and you can easily find that Antiochus stormed the city and ended the sacrifices and desecrated the Temple. I’ll look up the covenant but everything else is there. It’s not in the seven years following Jesus’ crucifixion.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: The 360 day year seems to be an invention of Christian apologists. Aside from the fact that the Jewish calendar has a 354 day year (usually), a fixed 360 day year without corrections would see the Jewish seasonal festivals moving around the (solar year). But as soon as you add in the corrections you are back with ordinary years.
quote: So the Bible doesn’t mean what it says, because you don’t like it.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: That’s just an interpretation of the timeline. I interpret it as agreeing with Daniel 8 and the messiah who is cut off is the High Priest Onias III
quote: They certainly are. It’s the Prince of the people who are to come who does that.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: It only seems that way because the standard Christian view is based more in Christian belief than the text. Since I don’t assume Christian belief I follow the text.
quote: Cyrus of Persia is hardly an obscure High Priest. The rest is simply assumption. Cyrus is a messiah and a prince.
quote: As usual you misread my points. Daniel 8 is about the end times (it says so!) and those happen to be the period of the Maccabean revolt. It is hardly surprising that Daniel 9 would also cover this period, and it fits it better than your idea that it’s about Jesus. Which is why you have to invent a massive gap between the last seven years and all the rest.
quote: It counts to around Jesus time with your assumed start point. And why can’t cut off refer to anything else. Why crucifixion rather than deposition, exile and murder ?
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: Daniel is absolutely not about the Second Coming because that idea wasn’t around when Daniel was written. However, even under your interpretation there’s no reason why Daniel 9 couldn’t be about the same events. Especially as Daniel 10-12 is about them, too.
quote: I have been quite clear in saying that I, in agreement with the Masoretic text, interpret the verses as referring to two messiahs. Messiah the prince who comes at the end of the 49 years (Cyrus) and the messiah who was cut off at the end of the second period of 434 years (Onaias). And I have already pointed out that I disagree with the interpretation of the word to restore Jerusalem as referring to a royal decree.
quote: I’m not inventing an imaginary prophecy that is not recorded into the Bible. The thing I have in mind IS in the Bible. I just need to remember where.
quote: 1 Maccabees refers to a covenant between Antiochus and the Hellenisers and certainly there are further deals. And I don’t see the lack of a specific record as reason to reject the timescale of 490 years when the rest fits very closely.
quote: Onaias III was killed, as I said. According to 2 Maccabees he was murdered for blowing the whistle on the current High Priest for embezzling temple treasures - to pay the bribe he had promised Antiochus.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2
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quote: That’s the second time you’ve made this mistake. Onaias isn’t messiah the prince. That’s Cyrus. Onaias is the messiah who is cut off.
quote: It doesn’t say that the death of the messiah who was cut off would save anyone.
quote: Your final AntiChrist will live far longer than 490 years after any start date anyone has proposed.
quote: By which you mean you try to force it to fit your beliefs by inventing convenient gaps and 360 day years and the like.
quote: Of course you are foolishly wrong. The original text - like your translations - is unclear and can easily read as two messiahs. The Masoretic text adds punctuation which clarifies the meaning (punctuation hadn’t been invented when the original was written). Having two messiahs makes sense of the division while having one does not.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
quote: The only requirements in the text are being a messiah and a prince. Cyrus is both. Your additional requirements are simply your opinion.
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PaulK Member Posts: 18131 Joined: Member Rating: 6.2 |
The real scholars agree with me that Daniel 9 is about the period of the Maccabean revolt.
If you have any real scholars - and that doesn’t mean people who make up things you like - who can show that the Jews had a 360 day year bring them on. Remember to show how they address the problem of the festivals moving around, so that Passover occurs in autumn as often as spring (for instance).
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