I'm still mulling over all of this. I agree that a figurative 1000 years is a fitting interpretation, and I agree that the time for salvation is now. But I found the use of imagery interesting in the parables and in Psalm 90:4 and it led me to wonder if there was something more that was being said through the references to darkness and night. I presented an interpretation based on an interesting synergy that seems to have different passages all describing parts of the same thing. I presented it more as a tentative musing rather than a tried and tested interpretation. I've read Revelation plenty of times but I still don't consider myself well read on Revelation. I look forward to corrections and insight from my brothers and sisters here.
I like the nature of your premise: an eternal king must have an eternal kingdom and therefore the timeless/eternal kingdom is always present. It is a solid premise. But as a king of kings and therefore a ruler of many kingdoms, other temporal kingdoms may be referenced in some of the passages especially if some kingdoms might exist as a staging ground or proving ground (purification) leading to the eternal kingdom. Scripture tells us that earth and heaven fade away and this may be an indication of their temporal nature. So when the parable of the ten virgins references the kingdom of heaven, it is perhaps speaking about the kingdom of heaven as a kind of temporal kingdom. I don't think that necessarily takes away from the message of the eternal kingdom in itself if that were the case. I'm still contemplating this. Thank you for your reply.
I like the nature of your premise: an eternal king must have an eternal kingdom and therefore the timeless/eternal kingdom is always present. It is a solid premise. But as a king of kings and therefore a ruler of many kingdoms, other temporal kingdoms may be referenced in some of the passages especially if some kingdoms might exist as a staging ground or proving ground (purification) leading to the eternal kingdom. Scripture tells us that earth and heaven fade away and this may be an indication of their temporal nature. So when the parable of the ten virgins references the kingdom of heaven, it is perhaps speaking about the kingdom of heaven as a kind of temporal kingdom. I don't think that necessarily takes away from the message of the eternal kingdom in itself if that were the case. I'm still contemplating this. Thank you for your reply.
I will give you a huge hint/clue. There is a reason Atheists always say well if God created everything, who created God? Because they can't explain away the fact that everything must come from something, and thus if they can say someone had to create God then they can confuses the masses. But I always crush them.
God is not from our Universe, He is from outside our Universe and its TIME CONSTRAINTS, thus He has no need of ever having been created, He is eternal, only things crated in this Universe and thus under our Laws of Nature are mandated to have been created. God is from outside our Universe.