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.
Okay, good...
Hey, before I get to the rest of this, I'll say again, directly to you, I really appreciate your thoughtfulness.
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.
Well, again, "until after the thousand years" is not quite right; the actual wording is
"until the thousand years were ended." There is a difference.
So, quoting what I said previously, either that
none of the rest of the dead came to life until after the thousand years were completely ended, or 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 by the time the thousand years were completely ended. As I said, both of those are very valid ways of understanding the Greek and the English there, but only one is correct.
Well, even the logic itself depends on which of the two above understandings are accepted. You~ and possibly others here ~ are taking the first of the two understandings presented above, and I ~ and possibly others here ~ are taking the second.
, but unfortunately doctrinal bias' tend to not care about logic...
You know, no offense, but statements like this are not true and only really worthy of dismissal.
Initially there is one group, and that they are all dead...
Well, yes, as I have said, dead in their sin, children of wrath, as Paul says in Ephesians 2:1-3. We are all initially in this state.
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.
I would include verse 5, as I said.
At this point some of the dead are already living again, some of them aren't.
Yes, at any given point in this age, until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in, and the partial hardening now on Israel has been completely removed (which is not sequential but concurrent), and in this way all Israel will be saved, as Paul says in Romans 11:25-26.
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.
Disagree, as I said. Again, it goes back to what I said above, that there are two valid ways of understanding the Greek and the English there, but only one is correct. In logical terms, 'A' and 'Not A' can only possibly be either 1) both wrong or 2) one right and the other wrong... it is logically impossible for both to be right.
Per our brief exchange a few posts ago, SI is with you regarding verse 5 ~ which does seem at a logical odds to me concerning him ~ but I am not.
I don't know what it is about Amil in general, but Amil is notorious for having polars opposites meaning the exact same thing?
Don't think so; I guess it depends on the individual. I guess what I would say is that this may happen occasionally in one who claims to be Amillennial, and they may actually be Amillennial but unknowingly at least a bit unclear on certain things.
When satan is bound and when satan is loosed, it is the exact same thing.
I don't think any "Amil" would say this. If they do, it may be... one of those "things" alluded to directly above...
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.
Again, using 'after' there is a potential problem. The word 'until' is used in Revelation 20:5; 'after' is not. And that brings us back to the two possible understandings, one of which would be eliminated,
maybe, if 'after' were actually used in that verse.
...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.
I fully realize that in what you were saying here you were presenting a logical inconsistency, and I believe I've spoken clearly to that above; the reason I'm pulling this out of the larger quote is to point out this "reigning with Christ a thousand years," that the thrust of that one thing too can be understood in two valid but different ways...
- that they all reign with Christ for the full thousand years
- that they all come to reign with Christ over the course of the thousand years
...and I obviously am in the latter "camp."
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.
Well, I'm... almost <
smile> ...in agreement with this; I would say it thus, that clearly, not one single person that has part in the first resurrection, does not live and reign with Christ a PORTION OF THE "thousand years" ~ as in
the balance of the "thousand years" from the point that they are born again of the Spirit. They all do. You may still disagree, and that's okay, of course, but you cannot dismiss that as "not making sense" or illogical. I mean, you
can, just because you can do anything you want to do, but I think one
has to say that it
can be seen validly, grammatically, logically, sensibly, reasonably (and any other like adverb) that way.
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.
Again, disagree with the "do not have part" thing ~ because of the sense in which 'until' is used (see above), and again I would say reigning with Christ, individually speaking, over the balance of the thousand years from the point they are born again of the Spirit.
Again. I appreciate your thoughtfulness.
Grace and peace to you, David.