hodlbod on Nostr: This is the answer I was looking for, thanks! I swim in mostly post-millennialist ...
This is the answer I was looking for, thanks!
I swim in mostly post-millennialist circles, and have lately started to feel the effects of over-realized eschatology you identified above. At the same time, I feel like God must have a place for our work, just because we spend so much time doing it. The amil answer isn't completely satisfying to me, because it seems to limit the scope of the effect our new identity as Christians has on our whole lives, but I think your reference to Jeremiah is also a good answer to that — we "mind our own business and work with our own hands" to build up the city of man not as such, but for the peace of the people within it (either evangelistically, or for the Church as a separate enclave).
Thanks for your thoughts, I'll check out those VanDrunen books.
I swim in mostly post-millennialist circles, and have lately started to feel the effects of over-realized eschatology you identified above. At the same time, I feel like God must have a place for our work, just because we spend so much time doing it. The amil answer isn't completely satisfying to me, because it seems to limit the scope of the effect our new identity as Christians has on our whole lives, but I think your reference to Jeremiah is also a good answer to that — we "mind our own business and work with our own hands" to build up the city of man not as such, but for the peace of the people within it (either evangelistically, or for the Church as a separate enclave).
Thanks for your thoughts, I'll check out those VanDrunen books.