Nice try, but we are speaking of the first resurrection of the church, not the first resurrection of a man, Jesus Christ.
I also made this clear, so you simply have no integrity. That's the nature of people who just copy and paste personal ideologies, and then purposely change what others say in response to it.
No problem. I've already concluded by this post the worthlessness of dealing with you.
It's sufficient for me to have learned your main error in symbolizing telos, rather than taking it as definitive and literal.
The Millennium of Christ is literal, because it's physical time of expiration is literal, just as the cross of Jesus. Telos is never used symbolically, nor for symbolic things. And so, to change the meaning of the word to symbolize it, does the same for both the Millinium and the cross.
It's the nature of the beast to do so:
And he shall speak great words against the most High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws.
Changing of times, or the meaning of time itself, is changing the natural order of things, including the meaning of words, in order to teach false doctrine and make false prophecy.
The New Testament word from which we get our phrase “the end” is the Greek word telos which refers to the point aimed at as a limit, i.e. the conclusion of an act or state. It is the termination point of a thing. The word eschatos simply means end, last, farthest and final. These are two very incontrovertible words.
But, when is “the end” (telos)? When is going to be the final (or eschatos) day of history? When indeed is the “the last day”? When is this current decaying and dying arrangement going to be changed?
Scripture clearly and repeatedly depicts the second coming as the “last (or end, farthest or final) day (singular) of “the last (or end, farthest or final) days” (plural). It also depicts it as “the end.” The New Testament word from which we get our phrase “the end” is the Greek word telos which refers to the point aimed at as a limit, i.e. the conclusion of an act or state. It is the termination point of a thing.
They have a habit of diluting the meaning of the phrase “the last day” to the degree that they literally strip it of its obvious, straightforward and widely accepted meaning.
Likewise, the end of this world and the regeneration of this earth is repeatedly shown to correspond with the end of this age - at the second coming. Time and history find themselves sandwiched in between these two great events. Simply put: “this age” refers to “time” and “the age to come” or the “hereafter” refers to “eternity.”
This contradicts numerous Scriptures. It is not just that much Scripture depicts the second coming as “the end of the age/world,” it is that it labels it as “the last day” or simply “the end.” The Bible shows the resurrection/judgment of the righteous and the resurrection of the wicked to occur on “the last (or final) day” of “the last days” when Jesus comes.
Significantly, in all the references re the last day above, the wording in the original for “last day” is always identical – eschatee heemara. The Greek word eschatee used here comes from the root word eschatos, from where we get our word English eschatology, and simply means end, last, farthest or final.