... or thusly:
- that all of the rest of the dead came to life through the course of the thousand years, and thus, in totality, came to life after the thousand years were completely ended
Let's start with this premise. Initially there is one group, they are all dead. But then some of them are part of the first resurrection, thus some of them are no longer dead, they are alive. This initial group of the dead now looks like this, as of the first resurrection. Some of these are no longer dead, the remaining ones are still dead and don't live again until after the thousand years.
Logic says, but unfortunately doctrinal bias' tend to not care about logic, that if some from this group of the dead don't live again until the thousand years expire, this indicates that some from this group of the dead did already live again before these live again. Whoever heard of someone not living again until, unless someone already lived again prior to that?
Would you or any other Amil apply that same reasoning to Christ's resurrection vs the resurrection of the saved? That because those who are His don't live again until He returns in the end of this age, therefore, this means Christ did not already begin to live again before these get to live again. That He has to wait until they live again before He can live again as well. Nobody would reason things in the manner per that scenario. Yet that's exactly the manner some are reasoning things in pertaining to Revelation 20:4-6. That those that have part in the first resurrection don't get to live again until the rest of the dead get to live again after the thousand years.
Initially there is one group, and that they are all dead, it might look like this.
One group, they are all dead.
Then because the first resurrection takes place involving the ones meant in Revelation 20:4,6, not Christ, some of these dead are no longer dead, now they are fully alive.
At this point some of the dead are already living again, some of them aren't. But why not, in regards to the latter? It's rather simple, and that is because the rest of the dead are not part of the first resurrection and never were and never wiil be.
I don't know what it is about Amil in general, but Amil is notorious for having polars opposites meaning the exact same thing? When satan is bound and when satan is loosed, it is the exact same thing. When those who don't live again until after the thousand years, it's the exact same thing as having part in the first resurrection. As if there is no resurrection mentioned in verse 5 that can explain the resurrection unto damnation mentioned in John chapter 5.
If some of the rest of the dead that don't live again until after the thousand years, are also including those that have part in the first resurrection, to remain consistent then, the same has to be true of those that don't live again until after the thousand years, that some of these have part in the first resurrection also. As if that is not an obvious contradiction, that some of the rest of the dead have part in the first resurrection, which then means they too reign with Christ a thousand years, something totally impossible to do at this point since the thousand years would now be in the past.
Clearly, not one single person that has part in the first resurrection, does not live and reign with Christ a thousand years. They all do. Obviously then, anyone that doesn't live again until the thousand years are finished, do not have part in the first resurrection since they fail to reign with Christ a thousand years, a requirement in order to have part in the first resurrection.