Randy Kluth
Well-Known Member
Randy, you're not paying attention. You're better than that. Did you not see the quote of Justin Martyr that I showed you? He was an early church Premil and he said there were many true Christians who believed otherwise from his Premil belief. Shouldn't we believe an actual early church father over Thomas Ice when it comes to what people in the early church believed? I think so.
Yes, I didn't realize how seriously you took your quote from Justin Martyr. I've heard it many times! How I've always taken it is that there were indeed several positions in eschatology in the Early Church, which is normal. But that never indicated to me that there was no dominant Premill consensus. Everything I've read, and I've read quite a bit on this, suggested that Premill was dominant. Every Amill argument seemed to try to read Amill into obvious Premill teaching, and I still feel this way.
I don't quote Ice to defer to him. I quote him simply because I agree with him. He states it nicely so that I don't have to bring up all the quotes myself once again--I've brought them all up before myself. But it's tedious doing this, unless you have them all stored on your computer. I refuse to be like WPM, who regularly copies and pastes long discussions that don't even apply to the person he's talking to. And I don't want you to be like that either.
He misrepresents me all the time by saying I'm ignorant of all this. I can't change his tactics--they're ugly. In reality, I've been reading bits and pieces, and sometimes entire sections of the Church Fathers for a long time. I have a couple of books of readings from them on various subjects. I'm *not* ignorant of them, as he indicates.
So I appreciate and respect the fact you quote something from Justin Martyr. I'm already familiar with it, and I enjoy reading it again. It just doesn't suggest that there were *equal* views of Premill and Amill in his time--it only suggests there were a variety of positions, not saying which view was dominant. I assume the Premill position is dominant not because of Ice, nor because of any one historian, but rather, because the consensus of virtually all scholars and historians on the subject is that Premill was dominant early on. I like to quote Philp Schaff on that, as you probably have already seen.
But thanks for the explanation. Perhaps you have proof that I haven't seen that Amill was dominant early on, or that it was at least an *equal* view at that time? God bless.