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Notes
1 "The preterist has an interpretation which has a firm pedestal, but which has no finished sculpture to place on it." -- Merrill C. Tenney, Interpreting Revelation (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1957), 144.
2 Concerning Revelation [[10:11|bible.87.10.11]]+ wherein John is told, "And he said to me, 'You must prophesy again about many peoples, nations, tongues, and kings.'," Chilton says, "St. John's prophecy regarding the destruction of Israel and the establishing of the New Covenant will encompass the nations of the world. . . . John is to extend the proclamation of [the] Gospel to all nations." -- David Chilton, The Days of Vengeance (Tyler, TX: Dominion Press, 1987), 270. But this is a misreading of the text. The text states that what John will yet reveal in the book is about these global entities not to them. The passage has nothing to do with proclaiming the gospel, but everything to do with proclaiming the revelation which is being given to John which concerns these peoples, nations, tongues, and kings. The fact is, the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 is just not that big of a deal to the modern man in Siberia and is not what is in view.
3 "The city of God, described in the last chapters of the book, is obviously unrealized. Even if it be regarded as a symbol of some perfect state of human society, it has not yet been achieved. The preterist view simply does not account adequately for the claim of Revelation to be a prediction of the future." -- Tenney, Interpreting Revelation, 137.
4 "The major problem with the preterist position is that the decisive victory portrayed in the latter chapters of the Apocalypse was never achieved. It is difficult to believe that John envisioned anything less than the complete overthrow of Satan, the final destruction of evil, and the eternal reign of God." -- Robert H. Mounce, The Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1977), 41-42. "[Mild preterist] Gentry actually believes we are in some way in the new heavens and the new earth of Revelation [[21|bible.87.21.1]]+-[[22|bible.87.22.1]]+. If this is true, then we all must be living in the ghetto side of the New Jerusalem. But there is no ghetto in the New Jerusalem." -- Thomas Ice, "Some Practical Dangers of Preterism," in Tim LaHaye, and Thomas Ice, eds., The End Times Controversy (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2003), 420.
5 "Because of their first-century template for interpreting Bible prophecy, preterists come close to investing certain historians with canonic authority. . . . Should Josephus's writings become the sixty-seventh book of the Bible?" -- Larry Spargimino, "How Preterists Misuse History to Advance their View of Prophecy," in Tim LaHaye, and Thomas Ice, eds., The End Times Controversy (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2003), 219.
6 Chilton, The Days of Vengeance, xiii.
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