You still haven't answered my question about Job 14: 12. You have people resurrected while there is still a heavens when Scripture says there will not be a heavens when people are resurrected.
[quoting]
"This chapter [Job 14] brings in man raised from the grave. I would not say from the dead. Resurrection from the dead means some raised and others left. Resurrection from the grave will be true after all the saints are raised, and there remain only the wicked to be raised. That will be the resurrection from the grave, but not from the dead (for "from the dead" allows that others remain), there will be none left at that time. There are two resurrections. What is called in the common creeds of Christendom the "general resurrection" is a figment; it has no foundation in scripture. It is entirely opposed to the plainest words of God. Now you have in this world the righteous and the wicked all confused together. The tares are growing with the wheat. But that is only till the judgment come; that is only till the Lord come. And when the Lord comes there will be the separation of the righteous called not only from the dead (other dead being left in their graves), but to heaven where He is now. They are going to be like Himself - "the resurrection of the just." But there remains the great mass of mankind; and that is what Job describes in this chapter. I shall have little more to show, if God will, next Wednesday, about "the resurrection of the just"; but here is the resurrection of the unjust. And therefore you observe how beautifully the language suits. "Man that is born of a woman" - not a word about anyone that is born of God. Those that are born of God will be the righteous. But "man that is born of a woman" (and all are) "is of few days" - it looks at man since the fall - "and full of trouble." "
--William Kelly, commentary on Job 14
[end quoting]
As for 2 Thessalonians, I believe 2:2's [subject of] "the Day of the Lord" [time period] is the same time period as 1:10b's "IN THAT DAY" [time period], just as these two phrases are used side by side in the OT prophecies regarding the same identical time period.
Additionally, I can't think of any phrase where "years" is used, in Scripture" (stating so many years), that does not mean those amount of literal "years". (Cattle on representative hills is an entirely different kind of context. )