AN INVITATION TO YOU

Bible studyPMT 2016-063 by Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr.


Postmillennialism does not arise among Christians as a natural reflex — though it should if they pray the Lord’s Prayer believingly (“Your kingdom come / Your will be done, / On earth as it is heaven,” Matt. 6:10) and understand the Great Commission rightly (“Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations . . . and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age” (Matt. 28:19, 20).


Our age is one of simplistic Christianity and social collapse. Neither of these problems is helpful for suggesting postmillennialism as an eschatological option. (But remember: postmillennialism does not hold that by the year 2016 we will see the fullness of Christian influence throughout the world. Until the Lord returns we cannot discount the postmillennial hope on the basis of current world conditions.) The simple Bible-thumping of rampant dispensationalism and the disorientation that comes with social chaos lead many believers to eschatologies of despair.


The Greatness of the Great Commission



Greatness of the Great Commission (by Ken Gentry)


An insightful analysis of the full implications of the great commission. Impacts postmillennialism as well as the whole Christian worldview.


See more study materials at: www.KennethGentry.com



The shallowness of modern preaching and the desire for church fun rather than Bible study are hindrances to a hope rooted in Scripture. I know, because I was converted from within a dispensational environment having understood all of Scripture from that confused perspective.


Until . . . . Until I was taught in depth by someone who was strongly committed to Reformed, covenantal, Bible-based postmillennialism: Dr. Greg L. Bahnsen (at Reformed Theological Seminary). When I first entered his class on “History and Eschatology,” my long-ingrained dispensational despair led me to resist his teaching, deeming it absurd. However, he relentlessly expounded the Scriptures in such a way that I set eventually was overwhelmed with the evidence. I set aside my populist theology and committed to the eschatology of hope, postmillennialism.


I am making these opening observations in order to encourage you, my reader, to consider joining with me in promoting the postmillennial faith. Christians are not going to reflexively adopt our worldview. They need a challenging presentation of the deep things of God in order to do so. I write this blog to minister to postmillennialists and to challenge non-postmillennialists. And I would like to invite you to contribute original articles and to send in helpful news links that encourage a postmillennial orientation.


The more of us who are sounding off, the more of us who are producing studies, the better. The modern Christian market is not flooded with postmillennial studies as it is with dispensational superficialities. I want to encourage more postmillennialists to begin publishing materials so that we can reach the broader church. If you submit an article that I can publish, you could then direct your Christian friends to this site to read it. Your testimony might be just what grabs their attention.He Shall Have Dominion small



He Shall Have Dominion

(paperback by Kenneth Gentry)


A classic, thorough explanation and defense of postmillennialism (600+ pages). Complete with several chapters answering specific objections.


See more study materials at: www.KennethGentry.com



So I am asking my readers to consider producing some studies and submitting them to me for publication (without remuneration, unfortunately). These could be testimonies regarding how you came to adopt postmillennialism. Or they could be key texts that have helped firm up your postmillennialism. Or they could point to books and publications that you believe are important for advancing the postmillennial hope.


In addition, I would welcome any news links that might be encouraging to postmillennialism. For instance, I have published several news items showing how Christianity is growing in Muslim lands, despite the enormous persecution of the church in those area. Sometimes Christians are discouraged by their reading only bad news. Bad news sells. But good news lifts! And we need to uncover those news items that might encourage the faith of Christians.


If you would like to send me some items, I would love to hear from you. If you have never written anything for publication, you might want to take my correspondence course on writing to help you along (see ad below). We do need more Christians writing and exercising an influence by the written word.


You can contact me through this website, or directly at: KennethGentry@cs.com. I hope to hear form you!


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Published on August 26, 2016 02:01
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