The absurdity and heresy of Preterism

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Apr 5, 2020
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#41
No it is a fact he was exiled in 60
something AD, the same period Nero had Christians killed to include Paul and Peter. That’s a fact. (If you can say your position is a fact so can I.)

Why would Nero KILL the other Apostles but save 1 for exile?

Even your own reasoning is absurd.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
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#42
Internal evidence in the book of Revelation that it was written about 95 AD would be the letter to the 7 churches. Jesus describes quite a falling from their original state. If they were started in the 50s (see Acts, and other of Paul's epistles) then it is logical that they had allowed such declination in 40 years. It is hardly likely that they fell into such disarray in merely 10 years (if Rev were written in the 60s)

That is strong evidence.
Your assumptions are irrelevant. A church can go haywire in one year; it need not take 40.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
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#43
Why would Nero KILL the other Apostles but save 1 for exile?

Even your own reasoning is absurd.
And here we go. You disagree, so you insult and slander. Nice Christian character there, Biker.
 
Apr 5, 2020
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#44
if we use Church Fathers Iraneaus and Eusebius: He claims Domitian put John into exile around 95 AD


forums.catholic.com/t/when-was-john-exiled-to...
The early church fathers (Ireneaus and Eusebius) state that John was exiled to Patmos in the mid-to-late nineties.


www.biblewheel.com/forum/showthread.php?1528-Was...
This kind of ties into the Dating of Revelation debate. One of the main arguments used by late daters (AD95) is that John was "banished" to Patmos by Domitian. (Mainly based on Iraneaus' arguably criptic quote.)
 
Apr 5, 2020
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#45
And here we go. You disagree, so you insult and slander. Nice Christian character there, Biker.

That's not slander. That is pointing out if we believe Nero killed every Apostle, it would then be unreasonable to assume he chose to save 1. That defines as absurdity.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
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#46
That's not slander. That is pointing out if we believe Nero killed every Apostle, it would then be unreasonable to assume he chose to save 1. That defines as absurdity.
You assumed that she claimed that Nero killed every apostle. She didn't.
 
Apr 5, 2020
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#47
You assumed that she claimed that Nero killed every apostle. She didn't.

Really?

I am copying her words and pasting them to which I specifically replied towards:

the same period Nero had Christians killed to include Paul and Peter. That’s a fact.
^

In my view of this statement, she is claiming Nero had Christians killed and it is a fact. But then she makes ONE EXCEPTION for her argument, he did not kill John because he put John in Patmos.

In my profession, if that is not rotten baloney, NOTHING IS!
 
S

Scribe

Guest
#48
External Evidence:

"We will not, however, incur the risk of pronouncing positively as to the name of Antichrist; for if it were necessary that his name should be distinctly revealed in this present time, it would have been announced by him who beheld the apocalyptic vision. For that was seen not very long time since, but almost in our day, towards the end of Domitian's reign." (Irenaeus (A.D. 120- 202) around A.D. 180).

Irenaeus was from Asia Minor. The Apostle John was an elder in Ephesus in Asia Minor. Irenaeus was discipled in the faith by Polycarp who was discipled by the Apostle John. Thus, there is a direct link between the one who wrote Revelation and Irenaeus. This strongly supports the credibility of Irenaeus and his statement.

Significantly, no other tradition relating to the date of Revelation developed or gained a following in this part of the world. This is the very area to which the Revelation was given. Later, other traditions developed in the territories of Christendom of a different time of the writing of Revelation. However, these were areas where Revelation was not taken as literally as in Asia Minor. It appears logical that if the theory teaching an earlier date of Revelation were genuine, then it should have had a witness to it in Asia Minor and would have begun earlier than the fifth and sixth centuries. If the early date were really true, then it would have had a 30-year head start to establish itself within early church tradition. However, that is not what happened. Such reality argues against the early date view and is a strong support for the late date view. (Thomas D. Ice Liberty University)
 

acts5_29

Active member
Apr 17, 2020
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#49
Let's be real: there is no way John was NOT exiled from Jerusalem around 70ad. I don't care how you slice it. Jerusalem was levelled in 70ad, and the Diaspora happened. Even if John was not killed by the Romans, he would have been killed by the Jews long before that. The Olivet Discourse specifically says you have to flee to the hills, and clearly that is what John did; or he would not still be alive. Granted, nothing says that John had to be exiled specifically by a Roman emperor, or specifically to Patmos at that time. But he WAS exiled, and likely to Patmos.

Anyway, a subject header such as "The absurdity and heresy of Preterism" is a good example if precisely what I would NOT allow in my own Revelation study.
 
S

Scribe

Guest
#50
Here is another reason that Jesus letter to Ephesus was later than Paul's letter to Ephesus. Paul said they were known for their love. Jesus said they had left their first love. There was a time gap between Paul's writing and Revelation. Thus 95 AD ... Strong evidence.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
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#51
Really?

I am copying her words and pasting them to which I specifically replied towards:

the same period Nero had Christians killed to include Paul and Peter. That’s a fact.
^

In my view of this statement, she is claiming Nero had Christians killed and it is a fact. But then she makes ONE EXCEPTION for her argument, he did not kill John because he put John in Patmos.

In my profession, if that is not rotten baloney, NOTHING IS!
You saw that the way you wanted to see it, not how it is.

"Nero had Christians killed to include Paul and Peter. That's a fact."

Nothing in that quote says anything about the other apostles. Nothing is mentioned about all Christians.

It's time to apologize for your error.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,606
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#52
Here is another reason that Jesus letter to Ephesus was later than Paul's letter to Ephesus. Paul said they were known for their love. Jesus said they had left their first love. There was a time gap between Paul's writing and Revelation. Thus 95 AD ... Strong evidence.
Again, that is no evidence at all that Revelation was written in 95! You're grasping at straws and reveling in fallacies.
 
Apr 5, 2020
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#53
You saw that the way you wanted to see it, not how it is.

"Nero had Christians killed to include Paul and Peter. That's a fact."

Nothing in that quote says anything about the other apostles. Nothing is mentioned about all Christians.

It's time to apologize for your error.


My error?

She clearly dances around the known fact that Nero did in fact (and we know and believe this 100%) had Christians killed. So there is absolutely no logic while having Christians killed that Nero would save any of them. It only makes sense for her preterist argument.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
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#54
My error?

She clearly dances around the known fact that Nero did in fact (and we know and believe this 100%) had Christians killed. So there is absolutely no logic while having Christians killed that Nero would save any of them. It only makes sense for her preterist argument.
I consider your misinterpretation of her words to be absurd.
 
S

Scribe

Guest
#56
Further support for Irenaeus' statement is seen in some of the early enemies of Irenaeus' interpretation of Revelation. Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and Eusebius, to name just a few, support Irenaeus' statement of a Domitian date. They did not believe that the statement of Irenaeus was not clear and should be doubted, as many contemporary preterists desperately contend. Yet all the ancients who were on record concerning this mater accept our understanding of Irenaeus, as do modern translators. It is also not true that early date support goes back to a single individual (although there would be nothing wrong with that since the truth of a matter is often traced back to a single source), since Hegesippus’ (A.D. 150) testimony pre-dates Irenaeus.3 “The first clear, accepted, unambiguous witness to the Neronic date is a one-line subscription in the Syriac translation of the New Testament in a.d. 550,” notes Mark Hitchcock. “Only two other external witnesses to the early date exist: Arethas (c. 900) and Theophylact (d. 1107).” This is scant “evidence,” needless to say, upon which to draw such dogmatic conclusion, as is often done by many Preterists. On the other hand, Hitchcock notes that the late date “has an unbroken line of support form some of the greatest, most reliable names in church history, beginning in A.D. 150. . . . The external evidence from church history points emphatically to the a.d. 95 date for the composition of Revelation.”4 (Thomas D. Ice Liberty University)
 
S

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#58
Polycarp, the bishop of Smyrna, said that no church existed during the ministry of Paul. Paul died around A.D. 66–67. Thus, there was not even a church in existence at Smyrna when the early daters say John wrote to them. Needless to say, this strongly favors the late date.
 
S

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#59
The church of Laodicea would not have had time to develop into the church described in Revelation 3:14–22 if the early date is the true one. An earthquake devastated the city in A.D. 60. History tells us that it took them 25 years to rebuild. Only the late date view makes sense of Christ’s statement to church that says, “I am rich, and have become wealthy, and have need of nothing” (Rev. 3:17). Ten years would have been enough time for such a condition to develop, but it could not have been said of them when they were in the early stages of rebuilding.
 
S

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#60
Many Preterists contend that there are two major reasons from the Book of Revelation itself that provide proof for their earlier date. First, they argue that since John refers to a Temple in Jerusalem (Rev. 11:1-2), then it must have been standing at the time of writing. If still standing, then Revelation was written before the Temple's destruction in A.D. 70. Next they contend that the seven kings of Revelation 17:1-16 refer to a succession of Roman kings in the first century. Preterists contend that “one is” (Rev. 17:10) would be a reference to Nero Caesar and “the other is not yet come” (Rev. 17:10) would be Galba. Thus, while John wrote, Nero was still alive and Galba was looming in the near future. This would mean, according to Preterists, that Revelation was written while Nero was still alive. In rebuttal to the first Preterists argument, it must be remembered that in the Book of Revelation John is receiving a vision about future things. He is transported in some way to that future time in order to view events as they will unfold. The word "saw" is used 49 times in 46 verses in Revelation because John is witnessing future events through a vision. It does not matter at all whether the Temple is thought to be standing in Jerusalem at the time that John sees the vision since that would not have any bearing upon a vision. John is told by an angel to “measure the temple” (Rev. 11:1). Measure what Temple? He is to measure the Temple in the vision. Even if there were a temple still standing in Jerusalem, John was on the Island of Patmos and would not have been allowed to go and measure that Temple. Ezekiel, during a similar vision of a Temple (Ezek. 40—43) was told to measure that Temple. When Ezekiel saw and was told to measure a Temple there was not one standing in Jerusalem (Preterists agree). Thus, there is no compulsion whatsoever to conclude that just because a temple is referenced in Revelation 11 that it implies that there had to be a physical Temple standing in Jerusalem at the same time