Light Shining Out of Darkness | Amazing Facts Year End Review FYTube



Light Shining Out of Darkness | Amazing Facts Year End Review

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In 2022, you joined Amazing Facts in casting a wide evangelistic net—and brought thousands into God’s kingdom. As we prayerfully plan how to bring life-changing truth to even more souls in 2023, the Lord is setting our sights higher! More than ever, bewildered people are searching for trustworthy answers to their biggest life questions. You can help reach them and bring them to Jesus! Will you stand alongside Amazing Facts and help lead more of our friends out of darkness and into God’s marvelous light? Remember, all gifts given by December 31 are deductible on your 2022 tax return.

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  1. Augustine's symbolic reading of the Second Coming ruled the Church for nearly 1,500 years, but then came a 19th-century preacher named John Nelson Darby. The Irish reformer was convinced that the Church was in ruins and that the end times were upon us. In his literal reading of the Bible's apocalyptic texts, Darby found that God's creation was divided into seven distinct ages or "dispensations," the final one being the Millennium.

    Darby taught a fiery premillennial doctrine that Christ would undoubtedly return in person to vanquish the Antichrist, bind Satan and reign over his Earthly kingdom for 1,000 years. But first, the righteous and faithful would be "caught up" to heaven during the "Rapture," Darby's creative interpretation of the Second Coming and end of days became known as "premillennial dispensationalism" and eventually came to rule the apocalyptic worldview of evangelical Christianity.

  2. In his best-known work, "The City of God," Augustine argued that the Millennium had already begun (postmillennialism), or more accurately, says Kyle, that the 1,000-year reign of Christ was a "spiritual kingdom" rather than a physical kingdom. Some theologians call Augustine's approach "amillennialism" because it ditches a literal reading of Revelation, Daniel and Matthew, and interprets the prophecies as figurative language describing how Christ works through his Earthly Church to prepare the world for His triumphant return.

    "Through the Middle Ages, the Church saw itself as fulfilling much of [these millennial prophecies]," says Kyle. "The Church was seen as working out God's will on Earth."

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