You have been pushing this nationalistic theocratic Christian nations replacement theology error for years without any biblical support. Many have challenged you but you refuse to change. The reality is: the Gospel was given to a spiritual organism – the Church – to bring to a lost world of sinners. It was not sent to secular governments as you wrongly allege. Where is your biblical evidence? Nowhere! Sadly, you refuse to receive scriptural rebuke and cease spreading this error.I've said it before and I'll say it again. People are free to present *what they think* characterizes another position. But they are not free to be malicious or provocative about it.
I do not believe I'm holier than you, or than Amills. I don't know why you think this? I just want a respectful exchange of ideas, even if we strongly disagree. Is that too much to ask?
There are some people the Bible says simply will not comply, and the Bible says we are to have nothing to do with them. They are troublemakers and unless their heart changes they will continue in their malicious, provocative ways.
I see nothing wrong or "ironic" about the above? My positions are clear to this Amill group. But others may read and not know what I believe. WPM is blatantly misrepresenting not just the name of a "school," but the specific positions I hold.
When I refer to your school as "Replacement Theology," I define how I believe your positions represent a "replacement" to me. I know you don't think the shoe fits, but the point is, I do, and explain why. You may not agree, and that's okay, but there is no malice in using the name that many use in order to avoid excessive explanation.
If you want to be like WPM, then don't communicate with me anymore. I only wish to have respectful conversations. Referring to your belief as "Replacement Theology" is precisely how it is defined by everybody who holds to my position. It is not intended to be fought over, regardless of how you view things.
You may call my school the School of Millennial abuse. In fact, that is how I've been regularly treated, as if I "abuse" the biblical "Millennium." But I'm not going to throw a fit just because you wish to define my "school of thought" in this way. Neither should you throw a fit because I see your view as a "replacement" and refer to your school as "Replacement Theology."
To me, your belief is a "replacement" of a single "Israel" with "two Israels" or with a "metaphorical Israel," or with the International Church. Your belief that natural Israel exists in the Middle East is something everybody agrees on and has nothing to do with your denial that you are "replacing" our conventional belief in Natural Israel with something Metaphoricall, New Testament, Spiritual, and International.
It is a "replacement" to people like me, and I'm not doing it to insult, provoke, or belittle you. I'm using the term to avoid unnecessary explanation or repetition, explaining that my concern is that you're "replacing" something biblical with something unbiblical. What you're doing is simply trying to remove my complaint that you are "replacing" the definition of "nation" and "Israel" with something else.
If you wish to pursue the negativity like WPM, then I have zero interest in you anymore. Please do not speak lies about me behind my back, like WPM has just done. If you want to carry on a respectful conversation, I'm always read to do that, including WPM.
You do not even know what a Christian is. You invent your own extra- biblical definition to support your error:
"Christians," biblically, are those who start out following Christ. But they have yet to prove they are really in the faith, and completely committed. Many fall away.
Christian nations fit in part the definition of the Abrahamic covenant, that he would father many *nations.*
Many of the Christian nations of the past *were* in a real sense theocracies!
The Great Commission was meant to fulfil the Abrahamic Covenant, which intends to convert entire nations to theocracies!
if we go back to the idea of Christian countries, before all of this modern apostasy set in, you will understand what I mean by "Christian nations," and "Christian theocracies." It is not the perverse kind of theocracy, but the biblical concept of the Kingdom of God enmeshed in the laws of nations.
the U.S. has in fact been a Christian country and so has been in a limited sense a "theocracy."
What utter nonsense! Amils oppose Replacement Theology. They believe in Expansion Theology. You are the No. 1 promoter of this on these boards:
Christian nations have existed since the time that the Roman Empire was Christianized under Theodosius. And since that time we've had Christian France, Christian Germany, Christian Scandinavia, and in the East Christian Byzantium, and many Slavic Christian nations.
There is no such thing in the New Testament as Christian nations. That is your own theory that you have taken from Wikipedia. There is just one unitary spiritual nation – the Israel of God, that God spiritually reigns over today. You have no answer for the clear scriptures that I have already presented. You've skipped around each of them. You have to!
Secular governments have shown themselves throughout history to be man-made entities that exist to represent the people. But the kingdom of God (on the other hand) is here to represent God on earth. Your teaching is an innovation you have personally thought up that you have failed to support with any NT Scripture. Thankfully few have bought into it, even amongst our Premil brethren. You have yet to show us one single Christian government throughout the world. That is because it does not exist.
We must call Christian nations "Christian nations," if that is the intention of the people to as a majority adopt the Christian faith and Christian morality for the people of that nation. But it certainly doesn't mean every citizen of a Christian State will be sincere or will last.
I'm turning the tables on your false claim that "Christian nations," or "theocracies" in this regard, are a "figment of my imagination."
What the NT shows is that Church is indeed a nation made up of members from all nations, tribes, and kindreds shining a light in this world.
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