If you wish to read all about this powerful event, it is all documented in the author’s latest book called The Final Book of Daniel which includes a lengthy discourse on how the vast bulk of Biblical prophecy has already been fulfilled, and what may be for our times or future.
some political figure. Rather the so-called “second coming” really is about the coming of Christ-consciousness WITHIN the typical mortal who is willing to spiritually grow into it.
I suggest having an open mind before passing judgment and actually read some of the author’s story.
some political figure ruling from Jerusalem. Rather the so-called “second coming” really is about the coming of Christ-consciousness WITHIN the typical mortal who is willing to spiritually grow into it.
It was actually the merging of heaven and earth, or the ascension of the planet and all life on it into the 5th dimension! No, I do NOT know when this will take place – no one does.
I first-handedly witnessed this great event by being physically transported by an angel into the distant future, but this has little or nothing to do with Revelation, Daniel’s prophecies, or many other of the concepts thrown around today in an obsessive orgy to locate a supposed “Antichrist” and set a date for a supposed “rapture” during a “seven-year great tribulation” coming in some far-off time.
When you hear the term “last days” mentioned repeatedly throughout the New Testament it did NOT refer to our time, but rather to A.D. 70.
It was actually the merging of heaven and earth, or the ascension of the planet and all life on it into the 5th dimension! No, I do NOT know when this will take place – no one does.
Do yourself a favor and do not waste your time looking for an “Antichrist,” during some future seven-year great tribulation with a rebuilt Jewish temple, or a Rapture.
Now, who is the Antichrist/beast/666 mentioned in John’s Revelation and Daniel 7? I can identify him for you! It was the Roman Emperor Nero of Rome, before A.D. 70.
Do yourself a favor and do not waste your time looking for an “Antichrist,” during some future seven-year great tribulation with a rebuilt Jewish temple, or a Rapture.
Do yourself a favor and do not waste your time looking for an “Antichrist,” during some future seven-year great tribulation with a rebuilt Jewish temple, or a Rapture.
“Do not seal up the words of the prophecy of this book, for the time is NEAR.” (Rev. 22:10)
“…has sent his angel to show his servants what must SOON take place. And behold, I am coming SOON.” (Rev. 22:6-7)
“Do not seal up the words of the prophecy of this book, for the time is NEAR.” (Rev. 22:10)
“Behold, I am coming SOON…” (Rev. 22:12)
“And he saith unto me, seal not the sayings of the prophecy of this book: for the time is AT HAND.” (Rev. 22:10)
Now, after reading these obvious time statements, why haven’t the majority of biblical prophecy students come to their senses? Since when does “soon” and “near” and “at hand” mean somtime two millennia later?
The vast bulk of prophecies in Daniel, Matthew 24, including Revelation, are now ancient history having already been fulfilled almost two millennia ago.
5. Ignoring or misinterpreting statements of imminence of given prophecies, which almost all related to the times before A.D. 70 during the generation from Christ to that time, such as John’s book of Revelation, with obvious time warnings that most overlook such as,
“The revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show to his servants what must SOON take place.” (Rev. 1:1)
“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is AT HAND: repent ye, and believe the gospel.” (Mark 1:15)
4. Misunderstanding about the nature and timing of the coming of the Kingdom, and inability to see the sameness between the Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of Heaven. It is not a mortal kingdom to be established by the Second Advent of the Messiah, but dually spiritual and heavenly, and is already here for those seeking it as suggested by the following verses:
“The kingdom is NOT coming with things that can be seen, for in fact the Kingdom of God is WITHIN you.”
And,
“My kingdom is NOT of this earth.”
“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is AT HAND: repent ye, and believe the gospel.” (Mark 1:15)
4. Misunderstanding about the nature and timing of the coming of the Kingdom, and inability to see the sameness between the Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of Heaven. It is not a mortal kingdom to be established by the Second Advent of the Messiah, but dually spiritual and heavenly, and is already here for those seeking it as suggested by the following verses:
3. Misinterpretation of the final week, or seven years, of Daniel’s “seventy weeks.” A most unnatural and non-literal concept, promoted by many today, is the chopping off the last week of the 490-year prophecy, and sending it far into the distant future, which is where the incorrect concept of a seven-year “great tribulation with an Antichrist” comes from. In fact, it was a continuous stretch of time terminating around A.D. 33 with the so-called “tribulation” from 66 to 70 A.D.
If one carefully and honestly reads scriptures and studies correlating history, one arrives at a different picture than the popular “futurist” view.
Sounds incredibly hard to believe, doesn’t it?
First let us mention five fundamental flaws perpetuated by modern prophecy students, the majority of whom are in the dispensational “futurist” camp, which believes substantial portions of the Bible remain in our future, as opposed to the preterist camp, which believes it is all, or nearly all, fulfilled.
Allow me to introduce myself first. As hard as this may be to believe, this author is the full and promised return of the Biblical prophet Daniel and a verified incarnate angel.
1. Misinterpretation of the term “last days” strewn throughout the New Testament. We are not in the “last days;” rather, that term referred to the last days of the Jewish nation in the time of the apostles, before A.D. 70 and the end of that particular age and their “world.”
First let us mention five fundamental flaws perpetuated by modern prophecy students, the majority of whom are in the dispensational “futurist” camp, which believes substantial portions of the Bible remain in our future, as opposed to the preterist camp, which believes it is all, or nearly all, fulfilled.