Digital Logos Edition
There is a seismic shift taking place in the study of Bible prophecy. For decades, popular prophecy writers have emphatically insisted that our generation is the terminal generation, the last generation before the rapture of the church. First, we were told that 1988 was the end date. Then it was the turn of the 2001 millennial clock. Next it was 2007. The end keeps getting pushed farther in the future.
As a result of many failed predictions, many Christians are beginning to take a second look at a prophetic system that they were told is the only one that takes the literal interpretation of the Bible seriously. Gary DeMar has taken on the task of exposing some of the popular myths foisted upon the public by prophetic speculators:
Some of the material in 10 Popular Prophecy Myths Exposed & Answered will shock you, but it will make you a better student of the Bible.
Since 10 Popular Prophecy Myths Exposed & Answered is fully integrated with Logos, Scripture passages are linked to your favorite translation for quick reference and to your Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek texts for original-language study! You can also read this volume along with your Bible dictionaries, encyclopedias, and the wealth of other Bible study tools in your digital library.
“In Ezekiel 40–48, Ezekiel is shown a vision of the future in the form of a Temple and City. Like the visions in the first chapter, the elements of these visions were not to be built. The vision pictures the glories of the New Covenant that is realized in the person and work of Jesus Christ who is the ultimate manifestation of the temple, sanctuary, city, land, and people. To be ‘in Christ’ is to be in the temple, sanctuary, city, and land.” (Page 117)
“The ekklēsia that Saul ravaged was made up of believing Israelites who were a living testimony to the fulfillment of God’s promises made to Israel through the fathers and prophets. These Israelites didn’t believe that they were some ‘mystery’ parenthesis.” (Page 17)
“There is no Church-Israel distinction in the Bible because the Greek word ekklēsia is not an invention of the New Testament writers. Ekklēsia was a common word used to describe an assembly or congregation.” (Page 14)
“Dispensationalists teach that the Old Testament did not know anything about a New Testament ekklēsia (church).” (Page 17)
“There is one tree, not two. There is one people of God, not two.” (Page 10)
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Tom
6/19/2019
Glenn Crouch
6/10/2016
Darren Slade
10/15/2013