Its a tough read and I definitely would pray for discernment before trying to tackle it, but in a nutshell its a man who is trying to describe things he didn't understand.
No brother, the two witnesses are prophets sent by God to torment those left on the earth who still reject him. Only two people in scripture never died, Enoch and Elijah. It may very well be them but the Bible doesn’t say for sure
John was sent in the Spirit of Elijah, fulfilling Malachi 3:1. Jesus also confirmed this in Mark 9:11,12,13. But remember John died, he was killed by Herod. Enoch and Elijah never died.
Jesus said, "No man has ascended to heaven at any time" (John 3:13). Elijah physically meets the messengers of King Ahaziah 12 years after the chariots of fire incident (see 2 Kings 1:1-3 and compare the timelines). The word Paul uses to describe Enoch's translation means "to be transported to another place." Genesis 5:21-24 says that Enoch had a "come to Jesus moment" so to speak after the birth of Methuselah (the name means "When he dies, it shall come" - referring to the Flood - something that would knock sense into anyone). Then after naming his son for the coming Flood, he walked faithfully with God for 300 years "and all the days of Enoch were three hundred and sixty five." The exact same phrasing as everyone else who died. Phillip was also transported (same word) in Acts 8:39 but no one says Phillip went to heaven. There is a ton more evidence to unpack that doesn't belong on this forum, but I urge you to read the Scripture very carefully and not insert into it what you have been told by well-meaning people. The Early Church did not teach this, nor did any of the old Jewish commentators and sages, nor do any of the Eastern Orthodox tradition churches. The myth about Enoch and Elijah came about to support the idea that we go to heaven immediately when we die, which is also not supported by Scripture. We're dead till the Resurrection. The Bible does not say that Elijah and Enoch went to heaven. In fact, it says quite the opposite, unless Jesus Christ is a liar and Elijah could send letters from heaven.
Bruh. Eisegesis is strictly forbidden in Revelation 22:19. Christians in every age wind up in a world of hurt when they try to match God's timepiece to their own. Eschatology is best viewed in reverse, noting how the prophecies have been fulfilled, rather than peering toward the misty future without all the facts. Basically, one of the last things Jesus himself said before taking off was, "Complicated business folks, sorry to keep you waiting."
That was a specific warning to the Christians and believing Jews to get out of Jerusalem before Titus razed it to the ground in AD 70. One must be very careful when reading prophecy to divide specific prophecies (Jesus would be born in Bethlehem) from general prophecies (no man knows the day or hour, but one day Jesus will return). Just as Methuselah's name was a warning to those who disbelieved before the Flood, so the prophecy about Jerusalem is limited in scope.
No.
His presidency is biblical.
No. Read more.
Thank You. In God We Trust. MAGA
I don't think so. I believe them to be Elijah and Enoch and Trump doesn't fit either ones description.
The end of Zechariah 4 parallels that chapter in Revelation. It says “ These are the two anointed ones, that stand by the Lord of the whole earth.”
Its a tough read and I definitely would pray for discernment before trying to tackle it, but in a nutshell its a man who is trying to describe things he didn't understand.
No brother, the two witnesses are prophets sent by God to torment those left on the earth who still reject him. Only two people in scripture never died, Enoch and Elijah. It may very well be them but the Bible doesn’t say for sure
John was sent in the Spirit of Elijah, fulfilling Malachi 3:1. Jesus also confirmed this in Mark 9:11,12,13. But remember John died, he was killed by Herod. Enoch and Elijah never died.
Jesus said, "No man has ascended to heaven at any time" (John 3:13). Elijah physically meets the messengers of King Ahaziah 12 years after the chariots of fire incident (see 2 Kings 1:1-3 and compare the timelines). The word Paul uses to describe Enoch's translation means "to be transported to another place." Genesis 5:21-24 says that Enoch had a "come to Jesus moment" so to speak after the birth of Methuselah (the name means "When he dies, it shall come" - referring to the Flood - something that would knock sense into anyone). Then after naming his son for the coming Flood, he walked faithfully with God for 300 years "and all the days of Enoch were three hundred and sixty five." The exact same phrasing as everyone else who died. Phillip was also transported (same word) in Acts 8:39 but no one says Phillip went to heaven. There is a ton more evidence to unpack that doesn't belong on this forum, but I urge you to read the Scripture very carefully and not insert into it what you have been told by well-meaning people. The Early Church did not teach this, nor did any of the old Jewish commentators and sages, nor do any of the Eastern Orthodox tradition churches. The myth about Enoch and Elijah came about to support the idea that we go to heaven immediately when we die, which is also not supported by Scripture. We're dead till the Resurrection. The Bible does not say that Elijah and Enoch went to heaven. In fact, it says quite the opposite, unless Jesus Christ is a liar and Elijah could send letters from heaven.
Bruh. Eisegesis is strictly forbidden in Revelation 22:19. Christians in every age wind up in a world of hurt when they try to match God's timepiece to their own. Eschatology is best viewed in reverse, noting how the prophecies have been fulfilled, rather than peering toward the misty future without all the facts. Basically, one of the last things Jesus himself said before taking off was, "Complicated business folks, sorry to keep you waiting."
That was a specific warning to the Christians and believing Jews to get out of Jerusalem before Titus razed it to the ground in AD 70. One must be very careful when reading prophecy to divide specific prophecies (Jesus would be born in Bethlehem) from general prophecies (no man knows the day or hour, but one day Jesus will return). Just as Methuselah's name was a warning to those who disbelieved before the Flood, so the prophecy about Jerusalem is limited in scope.