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Millennialism - Christian millennialism following the Reformation |  | Millennialism - Christian millennialism following the Reformation: Encyclopedia II - Millennialism - Christian millennialism following the Reformation |  | Christian views on the future order of events diversified after the Protestant reformation. In particular, new emphasis was placed on the passages in the Book of Revelation which seemed to say that Satan would be locked away for 1000 years, but then released on the world in a final battle (Rev. 20:1-6). Previous Catholic and Orthodox theologians had no clear or consensus view on what this actually meant (only the concept of an end of the world coming unexpected, "like a thief in a night", and the concept of "the antichrist" were almost universally held). Millenniali ...
See also:Millennialism, Millennialism - The early church and premillennialism chiliasm, Millennialism - Christian millennialism following the Reformation, Millennialism - Pre-Christian millennialism, Millennialism - Transition to the Millennium, Millennialism - Millennialism and Utopianism, Millennialism - Millennialism and Nazism, Millennialism - Millennialism and Social Movements |  | | Millennialism, Millennialism - Christian millennialism following the Reformation, Millennialism - Millennialism and Nazism, Millennialism - Millennialism and Social Movements, Millennialism - Millennialism and Utopianism, Millennialism - Pre-Christian millennialism, Millennialism - The early church and premillennialism chiliasm, Millennialism - Transition to the Millennium, Summary of Christian eschatological differences, 2012, Book of Revelation, Christian eschatology, Rapture, Apocalypse, Apocalypticism, Utopianism, Preterism, Millenarianism, Postmillennialism, Amillennialism, Earth changes |  | |
|  |  | Millennialism: Encyclopedia II - Millennialism - Christian millennialism following the Reformation
Millennialism - Christian millennialism following the Reformation
Christian views on the future order of events diversified after the Protestant reformation. In particular, new emphasis was placed on the passages in the Book of Revelation which seemed to say that Satan would be locked away for 1000 years, but then released on the world in a final battle (Rev. 20:1-6). Previous Catholic and Orthodox theologians had no clear or consensus view on what this actually meant (only the concept of an end of the world coming unexpected, "like a thief in a night", and the concept of "the antichrist" were almost universally held). Millennialist theories try to explain what this "1000 years of Satan in chains" would be like.
Various types of millennialism exist with regard to Christian Eschatology, especially within Protestantism, such as Premillennialism, Postmillennialism, and Amillennialism. The first two refer to different views of the relationship between the "millennial Kingdom" and Christ's second coming. Premillennialism sees Christ's second advent as preceding the millennium, thereby separating the second coming from the final judgment. In this view, "Christ's reign" will be physical. Postmillennialism see's Christ's second coming as subsequent to the millennium and consequent with the final judgment. In this view "Christ's reign" (during the millennium) will be spiritual in and through the church. Amillennialism basically denies a future literal 1000 year Kingdom and sees the church age metaphorically described in Rev. 20:1-6. In this view, "Christ's reign" is current in and through the church.
Other related archives1937, 1970, 1st century AD, 2000, 2012, 27 November, 431 AD, AD 800, Amillennialism, Anabaptist, Anti-Christ, Antichrist, Apocalypse, Apocalypticism, Apollinaris of Laodicea, Armageddon, Arthur Moeller van den Bruck, Book of Revelation, Catholic Church, Charlemagne, Christian, Christian Eschatology, Christian eschatology, Earth, Earth changes, French Revolution, Gennadius, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, German Empire, Gieseler, Golden Age, Hitler, Hohenzollern, Holy Roman Empire, Holy Spirit, Irenaeus, Jerome, Jesus, Jewish thought, Joachim of Fiore, Judeo-Christian, Karl Marx, Lactantius, Melito of Sardis, Methodius, Millenarianism, Nazi regime, Nepos, New Testament, Old Testament, Paradise, Patmos, Postmillennialism, Pothinus, Premillennialism, Preterism, Prophecy, Rapture, Satan, Second Coming, St John, Summary of Christian eschatological differences, Tertullian, Third Reich, Thomas Müntzer, Trinity, Utopianism, Weimar Republic, Yale, Zoroastrianism, apocalypse, constitutionalism, death, denominations, dogma, end of the world, evangelists, famine, four horsemen of the Apocalypse, heresy, hippie, his plans to have major parts of Berlin torn down and rebuilt, last judgment, literature, millennium, pacifism, painters, parliamentarism, pestilence, postmillennialism, premillennialism, sculptors, sects, secular, utopia, war
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Christian millennialism following the Reformation", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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