Spiritual Israelite
Well-Known Member
I don't wish to continue this particular discussion. I think it's just sad that you have decided to dismiss 2 Peter just because of doctrinal bias (I know you will disagree with that being the reason, but that's how I see it).Canonization is a decision about inclusion, not a proof that earlier disputes were incorrect or irrelevant.
You are partially correct.
In the Olivet Discourse, according to Matthew, Jesus’ statement that “this generation will not pass away until all these things take place” most naturally refers to his contemporaries, contextually, grammatically, and lexically. I treat this as a primary contextual anchor for interpreting New Testament eschatology. As a result, I read later epistolary references to the “coming of the Lord” in light of this framework and evaluate whether they are consistent with an imminent, first-century generation OR whether they reflect a development of delayed expectation in the early church. In other words, do the epistles push the goal posts backwards, and why?
My assessment of 2 Peter is anchored in the above framework.
Specifically, I ask whether its depiction of a delayed parousia and the dissolution of the fundamental elements of physical reality stands in conflict with Jesus’ statement in the Olivet Discourse in Gospel of Matthew that “this generation will not pass away until all these things take place.”
Is 2 peter 3 addressing a pre 70ad delay parousia or a post 70ad delayed parousia? That’s the question my framework is attempting to address.
Your comparison between 2 Peter 3 and 1 Thessalonians 5 does not directly engage my framework. The issue is not whether both passages affirm suddenness in the “day of the Lord,” but whether they are addressing the same eschatological expectancy - within their generation or delayed?
1 Thessalonians 5 describes the sudden and unexpected character of the day itself, without framing it as a delayed or deferred expectation relative to a generation-bound promise made in Matthew 24. By contrast, 2 Peter 3 explicitly responds to a perceived delay in the parousia and reorients expectation around that delay.
Lexical similarity isn’t resolving my point. For example, revelation 18:24 is lexically similar to Matthew 23:35, but you have said in the past that don’t believe they are the same, right? 1 Corinthians 10:11 is lexically similar to Matthew 24:3, but you have said in the past they are not the same. So I don’t think this, selectively picking which similarities are the same or not, is the best argument.
My point on the dating of 2 peter:
If, in Gospel of Matthew, the coming of the Son of Man is placed “immediately after the tribulation of those days,” then on what basis does 2 Peter already frame the parousia in terms of delay, if the tribulation and associated events had not yet transpired within that sequence?
I see 2 Peter no different than Enoch, jubilee, shepherd of Hermes, etc…
No, I agree with that premise if you're just saying that Paul wanted to address their concern that the dead in Christ might miss the parousia of Christ.I’ll start my basic premise, and see if we can find common ground first. Would you disagree with this premise:
Paul is not correcting a belief in an imminent OR delayed parousia, nor is he engaging in abstract speculation about the mechanics of resurrection, ie “how the dead are raised”. Instead He is addressing a concern: whether believers who have died will “miss” the parousia of Christ. His answer is that the dead in Christ will be raised first, and therefore will in fact precede the living in participation in the coming of the Lord.
I have one question for clarification, though. You said "the dead in Christ will be raised first, and therefore will in fact precede the living in participation in the coming of the Lord.". What do you mean by that exactly? Do you agree that Paul indicated that after Jesus descends from heaven, the dead in Christ would first be resurrected and would then be caught up together at that time with those who are alive and remain to meet the Lord in the air?