As we already know, Amils insist the millennium pertains to the here and now.
What I am thinking is this, though. There are 7 days in a week and that the 8th day is always a new beginning of a new week.
Sunday--day 1 of the week
Monday--day 2 of the week
Tuesday--day 3 of the week
Wednesday--day 4 of the week
Thursday--day 5 of the week
Friday--day 6 of the week
Saturday--day 7 of the week
Sunday--day 1 of a new week, thus 8 days later.
By Amils insisting that the millennium is now and that when Christ returns the new and final beginning of a new era commences, they are implying that day 7 is a new beginning not day 8. Except day 7 can't be a new beginning if it is the end of the week rather than the beginning of a new week.
Apparently, if assuming days to be involving a thousand years, we are in day 6 since the fall of man. And that it is not logical that day 6 and day 7 can parallel one another. It can't be both at the same time. Which means their view is even more absurd than I initially thought, because, when Christ returns can't even be meaning the 7th day if they are already applying the 7th day to the here and now. And it for sure can't be meaning the 8th day since everyone already knows that 7 comes after 6, not 8.
I don't know what it is about some of these interpreters at times, that they can't even comprehend simple basic math? As if any week can only consist of 6 days rather than 7 days, and that 2 of these days are meaning the same day, meaning day 6 and 7 in this case, and that day 8 comes after day 6 rather than day 7. Nowhere in the Bible that I am aware of does day 7 ever mean a new beginning. But that doesn't even matter in this case since Amils are having day 6 and 7 run in parallel rather than following one another. Their view has to be one of the most absurd views there is, right up there along with Pretrib, for example. Not that Amil and Pretrib have anything in common theologically, but that both views are absurd and make no logical sense.
What I am thinking is this, though. There are 7 days in a week and that the 8th day is always a new beginning of a new week.
Sunday--day 1 of the week
Monday--day 2 of the week
Tuesday--day 3 of the week
Wednesday--day 4 of the week
Thursday--day 5 of the week
Friday--day 6 of the week
Saturday--day 7 of the week
Sunday--day 1 of a new week, thus 8 days later.
By Amils insisting that the millennium is now and that when Christ returns the new and final beginning of a new era commences, they are implying that day 7 is a new beginning not day 8. Except day 7 can't be a new beginning if it is the end of the week rather than the beginning of a new week.
Apparently, if assuming days to be involving a thousand years, we are in day 6 since the fall of man. And that it is not logical that day 6 and day 7 can parallel one another. It can't be both at the same time. Which means their view is even more absurd than I initially thought, because, when Christ returns can't even be meaning the 7th day if they are already applying the 7th day to the here and now. And it for sure can't be meaning the 8th day since everyone already knows that 7 comes after 6, not 8.
I don't know what it is about some of these interpreters at times, that they can't even comprehend simple basic math? As if any week can only consist of 6 days rather than 7 days, and that 2 of these days are meaning the same day, meaning day 6 and 7 in this case, and that day 8 comes after day 6 rather than day 7. Nowhere in the Bible that I am aware of does day 7 ever mean a new beginning. But that doesn't even matter in this case since Amils are having day 6 and 7 run in parallel rather than following one another. Their view has to be one of the most absurd views there is, right up there along with Pretrib, for example. Not that Amil and Pretrib have anything in common theologically, but that both views are absurd and make no logical sense.
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