Irenaeus was mistaken in this, as he was on a number of things he wrote. The Apostle John, son of Zebedee, did not write Revelation. He and his brother James were both scheduled to be martyred soon after Christ ascended, as Christ predicted for them both in Matthew 20:23. James the son of Zebedee had already been slain by the time Acts 12:2 was written.
Based on what I was able to find in research, Lazarus died again before 1,2,3 John were written, and before Revelation was written, even given the date that you put on it. Lazarus would know nothing of 70 AD because he died around 60AD. Which means he never met Polycarp, and did not push to make Polycarp Bishop of Smyrna which history says John the apostle did.
But the "beloved disciple" was the one who was going to "tarry till I come", Christ predicted in John 21:22. This "beloved disciple" was the writer of the Apocalypse, and his name was John Eleazar / Lazarus. This bodily-resurrected man remained on earth until Christ's AD 70 return, at which time he left this planet with the rest of the bodily-resurrected saints in that year's "rapture".
The beloved disciple was John the apostle. Lazarus had already fled after the religious leaders tried to kill him. He is a part of the history of the Orthodox church, where they built a church above his tomb. John did taste of the cup of Christ, however, he didn't die. He lived to be the one who would see the Kingdom (in vision) before dying. It is strange that the beloved disciple is mentioned every time that John the son of Zebedee is around. That is more than a coincidence to me. You have to consider
The Bible specifically mentions THREE resurrection events, and Paul listed these three in chronological order in 1 Cor. 14:22-24. The first one took place in AD 33. The next one took place at Christ's coming in AD 70. The future resurrection at "the end" will take place I believe in AD 3033 at the close of seven thousand years of fallen mankind's history on this planet.
First of all, according to tradition, 6000 years after the creation of the world was over 1600 years ago. Even by AIGs number, 6000 years came and went some time ago. (A few hundred years I believe). Also, consider what I Cor. 14:22-24 says:
"22 Therefore tongues are for a sign, not to those who believe but to unbelievers; but prophesying is not for unbelievers but for those who believe. 23 Therefore if the whole church comes together in one place, and all speak with tongues, and there come in those who are uninformed or unbelievers, will they not say that you are [f]out of your mind? 24 But if all prophesy, and an unbeliever or an uninformed person comes in, he is convinced by all, he is convicted by all."
There are three resurrections, okay. However, there are only two NAMED resurrections, and they are both in Revelation. Before the 1000 years, and after the 1000 years. Jesus resurrection was the archetype for future resurrections, and thus Jesus is the first fruits. He resurrected alone. Sure, there were people with bodies who came out of the grave, and then died again, as their resurrection was not to glorification. Jesus' resurrection was. The resurrection before the 1000 years is to glorification. They aren't sticking around on Earth. They are the martyr's who now go from being souls under the altar, waiting for vengeance on those who killed them, to this resurrection to glorified bodies. The second resurrection after the 1000 years is to final judgment. Those in the first resurrection aren't subject to this judgment, as Revelation says.
If you go by Luke 21 and Mathew 24, the AD 70 return of Christ Jesus is the inevitable conclusion. I don't dismiss the OT prophesies of the statue in Daniel. That statue was completely destroyed in AD 70 by Christ the "rock" kingdom.
So Rome ceased to exist as Rome in AD 70? Really now...
Ancient Rome was represented by the "iron" element, and the "clay" was the nation of Israel ("we are the CLAY and you our potter..." - Isaiah 64:8). The nation of Israel in God's eyes disappeared in AD 70 along with the physical temple and its functioning high priesthood being eliminated for all time. That is why this Daniel statue cannot possibly exist past the destruction of the "clay" of the OT nation of Israel.
Do not corrupt the context. Daniel already said what the clay is, and that most certainly is not it. Israel has no part in the Gentiles, now matter what you say. The statue speaks to the times of the GENTILES. The iron and clay together shows that there is division in the final presentation of the Gentile empires. And that is clearly visible in todays day and age. And Israel is still... separate from all of that. If Daniel's statue stopped existing, then Gentiles stopped existing. The statue speaks to the Gentiles, and the four great Empires. (though the head speaks to a man, and the legs/feet to a form of empire, where within the whole of that empire, there is division amongst the people. When you consider how imperialism establishes itself, it is clear as to why.)
You spiritualize scripture too much. If you look at the prophecies of the Old Testament that we know have been fulfilled, it should strike you how there is no spiritualizing of the passage necessary to see it has been fulfilled. The fulfillment is clear. That is why so many people HATE the book of Daniel. It is the CLEAREST sign of predictive prophecy fulfilled as written. It basically proves God exists. So they try to say it was written at a later date. Then God answers by some 18 year old finding the oldest existing copy that basically proves it was written exactly when it is says it was written. So the idea that someone wrote it after the events, and then wrote it as though it was prophecy, is patently false. So don't remove Isaiah 64:8 from context. It stops working once you go to the other version of the statue, the four beasts. If it doesn't fit both prophecies, then it is obviously wrong.
You are presuming that the empires represented by that statue continue until the end of fallen mankind's history. They don't. Those images representing all those 4 ancient empires were all destroyed "TOGETHER" at the same time by a single blow by the "rock" kingdom of Christ. Since those ancient empires fell at various points on the timeline of history, this image being destroyed "together" at one time has to represent something other than just the governmental structure of those empires.
What you are forgetting is that , just as was the case with the dreams given to Pharaoh, this prophecy was given twice to Daniel. The first time as a statue, and the meaning was full of praise to Nebuchadnezzar and to those who come after. This is man's view of the empires/kingdoms of the Gentiles, and the times of the Gentiles. God gives the prophecy again to Daniel, which is from God's view of the times of the Gentiles, given in the form of four beasts. It is not the glorious view we have given in the form of Nebuchadnezzar's statue, but the ugliness and ferocity of beasts. The fourth beast terrified Daniel. It was horrible and terrifying to him to see what the fourth beast is and does. And what God has to say about the fourth part of the statue, the fourth beast presented to Daniel:
"23 “Thus he said:
‘The fourth beast shall be
A fourth kingdom on earth,
Which shall be different from all other kingdoms,
And shall devour the whole earth,
Trample it and break it in pieces.
24 The ten horns are ten kings
Who shall arise from this kingdom.
And another shall rise after them;
He shall be different from the first ones,
And shall subdue three kings.
25 He shall speak pompous words against the Most High,
Shall persecute[j] the saints of the Most High,
And shall intend to change times and law.
Then the saints shall be given into his hand
For a time and times and half a time.
26 ‘But the court shall be seated,
And they shall take away his dominion,
To consume and destroy it forever.
27
Then the kingdom and dominion,
And the greatness of the kingdoms under the whole heaven,
Shall be given to the people, the saints of the Most High.
His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom,
And all dominions shall serve and obey Him.’"
The story of the statue, but given in the imagery of beasts, with the stone being presented here as His Kingdom given to the saints of the most High, which is an everlasting kingdom, and all dominions will serve and obey Him. So when this history of the kingdoms, these beasts, the statues, are destroyed by God, here it basically says, then, immediately, at that time is Christ's Kingdom, and all dominions on Earth AT THAT TIME, will worship and obey God/the Messiah.
Again, it isn't that these government structure are destroyed at the same time. The imagery of the stone destroying the WHOLE STATUE, is that the WHOLE STATUE is not a kingdom, and isn't representing a kingdom, but represents the times of the Gentiles. Jesus second coming marks the end of the times of the Gentiles, and the stone becoming a Kingdom covering the Earth marks the PHYSICAL/VISIBLE coming of the Messiah's Kingdom to Earth. It's capital will be Salem/Jerusalem. The Messiah is of the seed of David, and the line of Melchizedek. Poetic that the location of Salem, Melchizedek's capital city either is Jerusalem, or is located in Jerusalem.
What you seem to be missing is that it states clearly here that that fourth beast is different then all the others. Why? It isn't a single kingdom/empire like the others were, and the administration is completely different. Imperialism. It devoured the whole world. It took over the Orient, Asia, Asia minor, India, Africa, Australia, North and South America... it devoured the whole world. And it most certainly would appear horrifying and terrible to Daniel. All the slaughtering of people, oppressing of people, etc. In the past, someone would be taken from that country and made a puppet ruler. They were not independent, but they still had a form of self rule. Not so with Imperialism. Starting with Rome, they took over the area. They sent in governors, proconsuls, etc. to rule over the area with an, ahem, iron fist. (iron foot?) And that continued to be how it was done even to this day. Right down to the USA being an empire (that's how quite a few have viewed us, right down to the Native Americans) with the same political system as Rome... a Republic. However, we are much weaker then Rome when it comes to unity. That just happens to sound like what Daniel says about the iron and clay. Understand the clay in Isaiah is speaking about clay that can be molded. The word for clay in the prophecy speaks of fine pottery, not raw clay. Just as strong as the iron, but doesn't mesh. Not at all the image being portrayed in Isaiah.
You wish to interpret this statue as representing the general concept of "imperialism" being destroyed at one time. That's getting closer, but it's not quite on target. This simultaneous destruction of Daniel's statue was of the members of the Satanic realm which had been operating behind the scenes of those four various ancient empires, trying (without success) to work against Christ's plans for the redemption of mankind.
No. I'm not sure why you miss it. Perhaps because you have your own caricature of what I believe, and are having trouble listening. There isn't one single kingdom destroyed, because that is not what God is showing. It is the destruction of the whole statue that is the point. What that statue as a whole represents. The time of the Gentiles. Man against God. Consider the iron and clay shows that the kingdom gets so large (see fourth beast) in devouring the world, that the various groups that make up this HUGE "kingdom" do not mesh. There are conflicts ALL THE TIME. I mean, Trump ended like, what, eight of them? And they continue up until the end.
God slew every member of that Satanic realm in AD 70, which is why He is pictured as wearing those "MANY crowns" in Rev. 19:12. By then Christ as the "rock" kingdom, with a single blow, had conquered the "prince of the kingdoms of this world" and had reduced that creature and all his legions to dust which blew away on the wind.
The world would be a completely different place if there was no longer a satanic realm. Exorcism would have never been made, because there would be no true story to base it off of. The world would be totally different. Ouija boards wouldn't work. There would be no UFOs. There would be no alien abductions. (You should read up on alien abductions and born again believers. It is quite fascinating. No born again believers have ever reported alien abduction. However, there are those who are now believers who were, prior to becoming believers, terrorized by "aliens" and abductions. In one case, they were about to be abducted, the house was shaking, they were at the door (I believe that is what they say), and he cried out to Jesus and it stopped instantly.
Nonsense. Luke 21 and Matthew 24 were quoting the very same original material spoken of by Christ on the same occasion. And Luke has Christ saying that the ENTIRE list of events given in Luke 21:8-35 were "about to take place" (Luke 21:36) in that first-century generation. And that included Christ's second coming return which Matthew said would be "immediately after" all those events.
Not at all. Not nonsense at all. This is the Olivet Discourse. How long does it take you to read the Olivet Discourse in Matthew? 30 seconds? Do you really think the discourse, being called a discourse, lasted 30 seconds? Perhaps it lasted a half hour, or even an hour. By the questions asked as recorded by Luke, he was recording the AD 70 section of Jesus' discourse. Why? He was writing for the Gentiles, to a Gentile. They do not know, and do not understand Jewish eschatology. So Luke didn't deal with the Jewish eschatological questions the disciples asked. Then he included Jesus second coming, but that was not in response to the questions, as one can see if one reads the questions. It is given it's own section in Bibles. It doesn't even use language connecting it to the previous events, so it seems to come after, and later. In Matthew, he is writing for the Jews, so he glosses over the AD 70 part, and deals with the eschatological questions the disciples asked. What will be the sign of your coming (definition of the Greek word here being related to a king making a royal visit), and then sings of the (in the Greek) completel end. That is the consummation of EVERYTHING. There is nothing to come after. No continuing life on Earth. The complete end of this temporal age/world. Hence Jesus speaks of the final judgment, and even says, well, there are no signs. Why not? Even Jesus doesn't know when, only the Father. All he can say is that liffe will be going along as usual, and then... DONE. No signs. Just, boom, people taken to judgment, and its over. Like with Noah. People were told it was coming, but there was no sign. It just started to rain, and it was over.
There is every reason to believe that Revelation has been fulfilled. The single exception to this first-century fulfillment is Revelation 10:4, because those prophesies were "sealed up" for times in the distant future for John's first-century readers.
There is NO reason to believe that Revelation has been fulfilled. There no reason to believe that there is anything left to be fulfilled for the end times to begin. There are plenty of prophecies left to be fulfilled, however, they are in the end times. According to Peter, the world is moving on by God's PATIENCE, not because there are any prophecies left to fulfill. Not wishing for any of the elect to perish, but that all [the elect] come to salvation. So once the last person God has chosen to salvation comes to salvation, it's on.
Also nonsense. Although the early church experienced periods of persecution from the Jews almost immediately after Christ ascended, persecution of believers across the world has never really ended. As a general rule, "yeah, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution". "In the world ye shall have tribulation" is a more or less constant state of affairs if one is a believer. But this is distinct from "the tribulation of THOSE DAYS" which was an unprecedented and never-to-be-duplicated "great tribulation" for those in Judea and Jerusalem in particular (which lasted from AD 66-70). Those days were "shortened" in order to save the physical lives of God's elect.
Luke speaks to a very specific persecution, and that persecution has an end date of 313AD. A specific period of persecution. It also defines this persecution in terms. This persecution will be such that those martyred will have the opportunity to testify before death. And since the people will know what they are talking about, the arguments will be such that there is no answer. It is that which fuels the anger to the persecution. (I am thinking of Steven this whole time.) The Jews knew exactly what Steven was saying, and in the end, they had no response. It got to the point that to stop him, they martyred him. They had no argument to stand against the wisdom of the Holy Spirit that Steven was uttering. No answer except a building anger and wish to destroy/kill him. And the other martyrs had opportunity to testify as well. Even Polycarp, long after AD 70. This tribulation/persecution spoke of in Luke is a program. Yes there is persecution going on around the world, but it isn't a specific program. It may be more like that now, as we get closer to Matthew's upcoming persecution following WWI and WWII. However, I would see it as once we have a one world order, and then that breaks down, since it will be a unified government, there can be, and I would say will be, a program of persecution like in the first-fourth century.