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Getting biblical, here

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3 comments

  • David Nunn
    Exactly why I am not concerned about ebola or islam. I don't embrace either, but I believe that each could have a part to play in fulfillment of prophecy.
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  • Rocklobster
    Many claim that those prophecies can be applied to any period in history.

    BTW, it was also written that Christ would return before the end of that generation.
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  • Rocklobster
    Very true. It's interesting to note that the same dispensationalists who make that claim will then pick a verse from here and a verse from there to support their theory of a sort of "two-part Second Advent," where Jesus sneaks in ahead of time to transfigure believers, then leaves and returns again later on for the true Second Advent. Alrighty then.

    Most prophecy scholars believe that the "parable of the fig tree" from Mt 24 is in reference to the rebirth of the Jewish nation in 1948, while others place the generation's beginning at Israel's acquisition of all of Jerusalem in 1967.

    Either way, scripture supports the idea that a biblical generation is a forty-year period. However, since forty years has elapsed from both agreed-to times without the "rapture" and Second Advent occurring, many prophecy scholars have revised their idea of a biblical generation to seventy, or even eighty years.

    I suppose that we need to be awake so as to keep from missing any of the fun, as instructed.
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