Neither of these guys are Heretics. They are both Christian and discussing a difficult subject. Why do so many seek to call one or the other a Heretic? That is stupid. No one has this all totally figured out...come on!
@selviskk Hahaha, I about peed when Tommy said that, then I read this comment. Read my mind lol. How dare you let the Bible do the talking, Gary! Heretic!
Gary DeMar (partial preterist) vs. Thomas Ice (dispensational futurist).
Both these men are completely abandoning the historic Protestant position of prophetic interpretation espoused by a vast majority of the Reformers.
Notice what Dr. John Gill (d.1771) says concerning the day=year principle of the 1260 day time prophecies (Dan.7:25, 12:7; Rev.11:2,3, 12:6,14, 13:5): "forty two months, reckoning A DAY FOR A YEAR, after the prophetic style, make 1260 YEARS" [Gill, Rev.11:2].
Gary mishandles the scriptures. He's forcing his theology into the text, and keeps harping on this point which he totally misses, namely, that Isrel must be purged eschatologically, and then be saved distinctly as a people. He commits many fallacies in this debate.
Neither of these guys are Heretics. They are both Christian and discussing a difficult subject. Why do so many seek to call one or the other a Heretic? That is stupid. No one has this all totally figured out...come on!
musicprodave 4 months ago
@selviskk Hahaha, I about peed when Tommy said that, then I read this comment. Read my mind lol. How dare you let the Bible do the talking, Gary! Heretic!
Xallia621 5 months ago
Gary DeMar (partial preterist) vs. Thomas Ice (dispensational futurist).
Both these men are completely abandoning the historic Protestant position of prophetic interpretation espoused by a vast majority of the Reformers.
Notice what Dr. John Gill (d.1771) says concerning the day=year principle of the 1260 day time prophecies (Dan.7:25, 12:7; Rev.11:2,3, 12:6,14, 13:5): "forty two months, reckoning A DAY FOR A YEAR, after the prophetic style, make 1260 YEARS" [Gill, Rev.11:2].
rkg62976 1 year ago
Gary mishandles the scriptures. He's forcing his theology into the text, and keeps harping on this point which he totally misses, namely, that Isrel must be purged eschatologically, and then be saved distinctly as a people. He commits many fallacies in this debate.
theologymattrz 1 year ago