“[A] reason for the absence of real yearning for Christ’s Return is that Christians are so comfortable in this world that they have little desire to leave it.”
Alan Kurschner
The Millennial Maze, pp. 139-41 (To be sure, the author of this “comparison” book is Amill and his bias comes out in various places; nevertheless, Grenz does have a keen, nuanced eye when describing the dynamic between millennial positions.)
Historic premillennialists have attempted to carve out a distinctive position between dispensationalism on the one side, and amillennialism on the other. Over against the distinction between Israel and the church posited by the dispensationalism from which many of them came, these thinkers agree with the amillennial emphasis on the church as the spiritual Israel. They employ a “spiritualizing” hermeneutic that transfers to the experience of the church the prophetic expectations of a future glorious age for Israel.
At the same time, historic premillennialists are unwilling to employ universally the spiritualizing hermeneutic. They do not resign Israel to oblivion, but agree with their dispensationalist cousins that there remains yet some future role for Israel in the divine economy, albeit only as the nation turns to Christ and thereby becomes a vehicle of blessing to the world. And they stubbornly cling to the literalist hermeneutic when the meaning of the thousand years of Revelation 20 is in question. Not all prophecy can be spiritualized, they argue, and not every dimension of the future hope for the people of God may be relegated to the eternal state beyond the culmination of history.
Because they are caught in the middle, as it were, contemporary adherents of historic premillennialism find themselves fighting on two fronts. When engaging in discussions with dispensationalists, especially adherents of its classical expression, they direct their polemic against the literalist hermeneutic and the emphasis on Israel that arises out of it. But they defend a literal approach to the Bible and the physical, earthly dimensions of God’s future purposes when confronting amillennialists.
As a result of the double direction characteristic of their apologetic, critics from both the dispensationalist and the amillennialist persuasions charge historical premillennialists with inconsistency. Both assert, for example, that the historic premillennialist hermeneutic is inconsistent, Dispensationalists complain that they are not consistently literal in approaching Scripture. Amillennialists, in contrast, see them as too literalistic. They wonder why historic premillennialists demand a fulfillment within history of the glorious blessings promised to God’s people.
Critics from both persuasions claim that historic premillennialists are likewise inconsistent in their understanding of Israel. Many amillennialists challenge them to consistency in seeing the church as the spiritual Israel. Historical premillennialists readily apply to the church various Old Testament promises originally given to Israel. Such promises find their fulfillment in the blessings the church will enjoy in the millennial era. But amillennialist critics wonder why these “spiritualized” promises require a future age for their “literal” fulfillment. Dispensationalists, in contrast, wonder why historic premillennialists cannot see that their acknowledgment of some distinction between Israel and the church naturally leads to a greater emphasis on the future fulfillment of God’s promises to the nation.
In short, dispensationalists complain that historic premillennialists have set out on the road to amillennialism. Amillennialists, in turn, encourage them to make the complete break with premillennialism demanded by their rejection of dispensationalism.

If you are a Pretribulationist King James Version Only Advocate this post may be disturbing news. Today when I was examining a facsimile of the original King James Version — the actual 1611 edition — I was looking at instances of textual variant notes found in the King James Version; there are 2,193 instances. (Yes, the 17th century Anglican King James translators made textual critical choices when they translated it.)
During my research of textual variant notes, I came across something else that is very interesting. As you know, pretribulationists assert that Matthew 24 does not describe the event of the rapture/resurrection. They claim that Matthew 24:31 describing the “gathering of the elect” is referring to some group of believing Jews and not the rapture/resurrection of the Church. This is to avoid the implication of the rapture/resurrection following after the Antichrist’s Great Tribulation; and in the pretrib system they cannot have the Church being persecuted during this time — it would, as well, undermine their doctrine of imminency since it would have the rapture following after prophesied events.
Observe the asterisk at the beginning of verse 31 and the two verses it cross-references to in the margin: 1 Cor 15:52 and 1 Thess. 4:16. The former verse is the twinkling of an eye rapture/resurrection passage, and the latter is the classic rapture/resurrection passage! Here the KJV translators understand that Matthew 24:31 is describing the same event of the rapture/resurrection, contra pretribulationism.
So for those pretribbers who invest ultimate authority into the textual critical decisions of 17th century Anglican churchmen, I thought I would highlight that these translators’ understanding of Matthew 24:31 agrees with Prewrath — and negates the notion of Pretribulationism.
For a larger image, click here.
I thought I would list some of our popular articles from the past. As a reminder, the archive can be searched from the search box, topic categories, authors, and by the month. Our free audio is always popular but the following is a list of popular articles (just copy and paste the address into your browser):
The most popular of course is Coop’s article on his explanation of Prewrath
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2005/11/the_prewrath_rapture_1.php
Both the Rapture and the Onset of the Day of the Lord’s Wrath Occur on the Same Day.
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2008/03/both_the_rapture_and_the_onset_of_the_da.php
The First Six Seals Are Not God’s Wrath
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2007/10/the_first_six_seals_are_not_gods_wrath.php
Learn about Amillennialism’s origins in Church history. (Ignore the question marks in the article since I need to convert them to quotation marks. When we changed to a new publishing platform it affected some articles which I need to fix soon).
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2007/07/amillennialism_examining_its_origens.php
Consistency Between Jesus and Paul: The Singular Future Parousia of Christ
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2006/09/consistency_between_jesus_and_paul.php
The word “church” being absent from Revelation 4-19
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2006/01/a_reply_to_the_pretrib_argument_the_word.php
A Case for the Prewrath Rapture: the “Cosmic Disturbances”
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2006/0/a_case_for_the_prewrath_rapture_the_cosm.php
Premillennial Nuggets – A Challenge to Amillennialists to Read “Revelation 20” in Context
https://www.prewrathrapture.com/2008/07/a_challenge_to_amillennialists_to_read_r.php
