Today I was listening to a lecture by a well known Amillennial author and he made the same error that I hear so many times by Amillennialists. He said that the first event of the millennium is the binding of Satan which happened at Christ’s First Coming. This can be found, he said, in the [...]
Archive for January, 2009
Misleading Bible Chapter Breaks Can Determine Someone’s Eschatology!
January 29th, 2009
Alan Kurschner Prewrath Message in the Netherlands
January 28th, 2009
Alan Kurschner Ton Verdam a Dutch Prewrath pastor in the Netherlands has opened up a Prewrath website in the Dutch language here. He has translated some of the articles found on this blog in the Dutch language, and he intends to translate and post more content on his website. It is encouraging to see Prewrath embraced more [...]
“Biblical Prophecy in the News” – Soberness, not Sensationalism
January 25th, 2009
Alan Kurschner At the 2008 Prewrath Conference in Orlando, Cooper exhorts the believer not to read so much of the news back into Biblical prophecy. Then he explains three conditions that should exist before Christ’s Return. Download as MP3
INBOX: Question on God’s Plan for Israel
January 24th, 2009
Roger Best Dear Mr. Best, I am a recent convert who God has in His mercy saved I. I am writing because I have questions concerning God’s plan for Israel in Eschatology. I am questioning Dispensationalism partially due to the division of the body of Christ into two peoples of God. What is the prewrath view on [...]
Matthew’s Purpose in Matthew 24 — Critique Against Preterism and Pretribulationsim
January 15th, 2009
Alan Kurschner At the 2008 Prewrath Conference in Orlando, Charles Cooper explicated Matthew’s purpose in his account of the Olivet Discourse found in Matthew 24, distinguishing it from Mark and Luke’s account and purpose. Matthew 24 is applicable to the Church, contra Preterism and Pretribulationism. Preterists commit a fundamental fallacy of assuming that the question and purpose [...]
Two Kinds of Prophetic Agnosticism
January 6th, 2009
Alan Kurschner I do not know, and you better not think that you know (Pride) I do not know, but someone else may know (Humility)

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