Monday, October 12, 2009

Course 9 Week 8 Main Comments

You may place your comments here anytime after midnight Monday night.

14 comments:

Tyler Owens said...

The title of my course is GENERAL EPISTLES AND REVALATION. The instructor is Mr. Matthew McAffee. I will be watching two DVDs this week.

Tyler Owens said...

The first session is an intro to Revalation. He started by saying that this is not just a book about the end times. It has actually three different genres. It is an apocalypse. This is when the author passes on heavenly visions from an angel. It also a prophecy. I have heard a prophecy described as an historical account of future events. It is also an epistle from Jesus.

Tyler Owens said...

Revalation has been interpreted in different ways. It has been thought of as church history. This means that is is continual from Pentecost unto the end. It is also looked at as a spiritual writing. This is that everything is symbolic. They also say it is futuristic. This is saying that chapters 1-3 refer to real places and chapters 4-22 refer to future events. The preterist view says that everything in the book is about present or immediate future events. I think that there is a some of all of those views in it. I agree with some more than others, but I think that God's word is special like that.

roger said...

This week I will be reading chapter ten of Haddon Robinsons book: Biblical Preaching and the title of chapter ten is: How to Preach So People Will Listen.

roger said...

Hey Tyler, I think God's Word is special as well and there are many points of view on The Book of Revelation but what the heck is a Preterist?

roger said...

"How to Preach So People Will Listen",Bro. Robinson says that the effectiveness of what we preach depends on two things:
what we say and how we say it. In order for our sermon to be effective we must be aware of the ingredients sauc as, thought, arrangement, language, voice, and gesture.

roger said...

In chapter 10:" How to Preach So People Will Listen",Bro. Robinson goes into detail on the importance of the delivery of a sermon. From the way we dress to the way we stand, from the use of our language to a pause in our delivery, from being loud to a whisper, all the details that make the sermon listenable. Oh brothers we carry a great responsibility when we step into a pulpit. Praise the Lord!!!

Tyler Owens said...

My parents used to dress me and my brothers in suits for church. I guess it stuck with me. I wore them even before I answered the call to preach. I guess I have always like them. What did your book say about how we should dress? I am curious about that.

Tyler Owens said...

I have never known a "preterist". What I think may be wrong. The instructor says that they believe that everything in the book of Revalation is refering to present events or in the immediate future. They don't think that John was writing to any churches back then. I hope I answered your question, Bro. Roger.

Tyler Owens said...

There are three views about the millenial reign. There is the post-millenial view. This says that the church will grow and things will get better and will just go into the 1,000 year reign. The pre-millenial view says that mankind will get worse and worse. We will have a tribulation period and then Christ will return to rule for 1,000 years. There are differences among pre-millenialists about when the rapture will happen, whether it will be pre-trib, mid-trib, or post-trib. The amillenial view believes that we are living in the millenial reign right now and "1,000 years" just means "a long time". The instructor of the course believes in this view. I disagree with him on this idea. I believe the pre-millenial view and that the rapture will take place before the tribulation.

roger said...

Hey Tyler, thanks for the question. I will try to be brief, but the study says our choice of clothes should coincide with the community in which we minister, we should be groomed and neat. I believe that our appearance reflects our attitude, but that is just my opinion. Tyler I have only seen you a handful of times but your appearance has always been what I think it should be. Bless You!!

Dr. Randy Carney said...

The word, "preterist," means "past."

If you study New Testament Greek, you will hear the scholars talk about the preterist tense. You soon began to understand that it means what we call the past tense in English. (That oversimplifies it a little, but that is basically true.)

That matches the view on Revelation that says that all the events of Revelation have already taken place.

Free Will Baptists as a general rule include post-millenialists (although I don't know any), pre-millenialists, and amillenialists. The descriptions you gave of the last two and the three views on the tribulation represent the varying views of Free Will Baptist. It is interesting that your professor said he was an amillenialist. Most of the people east of the Mississippi seemed to be premillenialists, while those west of the Mississippi seemed to be amillenialists--as a general geographical seemed to go. At least that is what I was once told.

The main thing to know is that Jesus is coming again, and that we all should be ready!

Tyler Owens said...

The next session goes into the text of Revalation. It starts with the prologue in chapter 1: 1-20. There is an itnro and a salutation. The book turns to John's vision very early. He was in a trance like state. This was similar to the vision in Ezekial. It was so powerful that it makes John fall down as a dead man.

Tyler Owens said...

The next session talks more about the text. This is the messages to the churches. There are seven churches that are addressed in this text. The messages go the same way for all the churches. It has an edification portion and then a rebuke. The only exception is the one to Smyrna and to Philadelphia.