Perhaps Zech 14 was partially fulfilled, because living waters did flow out from Jerusalem.....in the early believers who escaped the siege of Jerusalem and flowed out from there to other parts of the world with the gospel. "out of your belly will flow living waters". Interestingly I think I remember reading that they fled through a tunnel that had been built under the city to bring water to it...Hezekiah's tunnel. Jerusalem was left desolate because the possessors of the gospel had either been martyred or fled the city (as well as that the glory of the Lord had departed). That seems to be a pattern for what is happening with the church in the last couple of decades or so too. Many have fled churches because of false doctrines and also because the presence of the Lord has departed many churches....and they are receiving judgment in the form of deceptions......this house is being left desolate too now, sadly.
I take it that some part of some prophecies were fulfilled in type (ensample to the church) and some were partially fulfilled....but awaiting complete fulfillment in the end.
Well I thank you for discussing this subject peaceably with me. I can't tell who started all the arguing, as I haven't been able to keep up with the whole thread and all the posts. It is sometimes hard to know who started a fight anyhow, especially if it involves a kind of gradual rise in temperature. ;)
2Peter 3 clinched it for me...realizing that the thousand years is as a day in that passage is referring to the time of waiting for the Lord to return..it is this time of longsuffering which we are to account as salvation, and which was causing scoffers to mock and chide, where is the promise of His coming? And seeing that much of Revelation is a kind of summation and reiteration of the gospel in general, reiterating so much of the scripture that was written before Rev was given.
Psalm 90, where the thousand years is a day or watch in the night is mentioned....even reading it just this morning, seems to be likening that period on a personal level as the length of an individual's life. (In that, could we arguably say that He is coming for each of us in the end of our life here on earth..?) Our temporal bodies (dead because of sin) will be dissolved in the grave, and we look for a whole new life and "world" to come. And none of us know the day and hour of our deaths. I mean, that is what is most important anyhow, how we spend our lives while we are here to "attain" to the resurrection.....the vast preponderance of believers and all people who ever existed will not be alive on the earth at the end of this age and coming of the Lord to wind things up in a general corporate way. Only one generation out of all the generations who ever lived will be alive at that time, so I think that helps me to keep it in perspective. "It is appointed unto man but once to die and then the judgment." Judgment awaits everyone regardless of who is "alive and remains" in the end or not. There can be more than one layer of truth embedded in the word of the Lord, when He speaks......"one thing has He spoken, two things have I heard".
IMO the context of Psalm 90:4 and 2 Peter 3:8 is using a thousand years as a metaphor for any long period time. Revelation 20:1-10 is a different issue entirely because there, two things are spoken about as identifying a specific period of time - namely, the period of time being spoken of. I do not believe the Amillennial interpretation of either of those two things is biblical and in line with the rest of both the New Testament and the Revelation's statements about the same things.
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