Do LDS Believe A Premillenial Rapture Occurred Prior to the Great Apostasy?

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flameburns623:
Amgd:

There are various schema for eschatology: the preterist and/or historicist are one; the futurist is another. Some are a-millenial, some are post-millenial, some are pre-millenial. Obviously, most folks know that on the subject of Rapture there are several views: pre-tribulational rapture, post-tribulational rapture, mid-tribulational rapture. Oddly, the views which have long been held and likely are still held by the largest number of Christians get the least amount of press, while dispensationalist pre-tribulation ideas are among the most well-known views popularly speaking.

The RCC, like many historic Christian denominations, favors an amillenial eschatology. Amillenialism sees Biblical references to the Millenium as representative either of the Church or of Heaven itself. Christ is seen as reigning literally upon the earth right now, via His Church. The ‘thousand years’ is seen as being simply symbolic of a large-but finite-number of years. The most common Catholic exegesis of eschatology favors a partial-preterist view: most of the Book of Revelation and of Matthew 24 were fulfilled in the 1st Century AD by the Fall of Jerusalem, the persecution of the Church by Nero, etcetera. You can, with dificulty, find Catholics who entertain other views of eschatology, but they are rather rare.

Just so that everyone understands: LDS eschatology is not based upon dispensationalism and does not teach a ‘secret rapture’ just prior to the beginning of a seven year period of worldwide tribulation. Mormonism does seem to anticipate that the final onset of the end times will bring with them great sufferings and calamities–hence the emphasis of the LDS leadership upon self-sufficiency and the keeping of a three-year supply of necessary items. This would place Mormonism in the pre-Millenialist, post-tribulationist position: they believe in a literal, thousand-year reign of Christ on the earth, preceded by a period of great difficulty and troubles.
Thank you flame. You obviously know more about this stuff than I do. I only know what LDS scripture teaches—with difficulty!

amgid
 
Robert in SD:
Thankyou flameburns. That was a very succinct discription. I think I posted a link to a Catholic Answers article on the issue, which discusses pre- a- and post- millenialism. But I’ll post it again here for amgid’s benefit, and to keep my post short.

I do believe in the millenium, but I believe we are currently living during the millenial reign of Christ, through His Church. The “Tribulation” I was referring to in my earlier post was the final tribulation that occurs just prior to Christ’s Second Coming.

Sorry for any confusion.
This is where I disagree.

Christ was never to Reign threw his church. He wont sit on his own personal throne to rule the earth until his second coming.

Matt 25
31 ¶ When the aSon of man shall come in his bglory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:
 
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Zakuska:
This is where I disagree.

Christ was never to Reign threw his church. He wont sit on his own personal throne to rule the earth until his second coming.

Matt 25
31 ¶ When the aSon of man shall come in his bglory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:
Catholics don’t deny this. They do believe that Christ will one day rule His people directly and not through the mediation of a Church. They simply believe He will not set up a reign of a thousand years on earth. They think His kingdom of direct rule, once established, will have no end. Meanwhile He reigns indirectly right now through His Holy Ghost and through the Church He established.

This aspect of Catholic eschatology isn’t too terribly different from what Mormons or even Evangelical Protestants believe. Where most Evangelicals and Mormons differ from is on the subject of a Millenium–a literal, thousand-year reign of Christ on earth, with His throne literally established in Jerusalem (or in Far West Missouri, in LDS eschatology). Some Evangelicals are a-millenial, but most are pre-millenial or post-millenial.
 
This is true however. You missed the rounds I went with a Catholic poster on this over at FAIR. According to him and much of the Cathcism he quoted, Christ is already sitting on his throne and reigning. the 1000 years has some ho morphed into 2000 and just means some long unspecified amount of time. :confused:
 
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Zakuska:
This is true however. You missed the rounds I went with a Catholic poster on this over at FAIR. According to him and much of the Cathcism he quoted, Christ is already sitting on his throne and reigning.
I hope someone more familiar with RCC eschatology will weigh in. However so far as I understand the Catholic understanding of this topic, Christ IS reigning from Heaven already. Right now he reigns on Earth indirectly, through the medium of His Church. After the Second Advent, He will reign directly.
The 1000 years has somehow morphed into 2000 and just means some long unspecified amount of time. :confused:
For a-millenialists, the reign of Christ through His Church IS the Millenium. Remember that the ‘a-’ in ‘a-millenial’ means ‘no’ as in ‘no millenium’. The ‘Thousand Years’ is not seen as a literal span of 1000 years but is a symbolic of some long but finite period of time.

Perhaps these articles will be of sme help. Rember though that eschatology is one of the most controversial areas of theology and that there is a constant churning and blending of different views so that even within various ‘schools’ of thought there are great variations of opinions.

enjoyinggodministries.com/article.asp?id=386
enjoyinggodministries.com/article.asp?id=403
reformedtheology.ca/endtimes.htm
soulcare.org/Bible%20Studies/eschatology_views.htm

My posting of these links should not be taken to mean I endorse the views therein–I selected these after a cursory review as a good assortment by which to gain a quick overview of the topic.
 
I thought this might be a good framework for comparing Catholic and LDS beliefs concerning the Parousia. Here’s some of what the Catechism of the Catholic Church states on Christ’s return:

He Will Come Again in Glory…

Overall, the Catholic view seems fairly similar to what non-Catholic premillenialists may believe, but without the post-return 1,000 year reign. Most catholics believe that the “1,000 years” is already occurring now, while Christ reigns through the Church. It makes sense that the LDS Church and other Protestant churches would reject the Catholic view, as they have only been around since the 1800s - and cannot point to the continuous reign of Christ through their churches.
 
Matt 25
31 ¶ When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:

How can he be reigning right now?
 
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Zakuska:
Matt 25
31 ¶ When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:

How can he be reigning right now?
He is reigning from Heaven - on his throne - through His Church that has persisted for 2000 years despite the best efforts of those both within and without who have tried to destroy it.

Why do you believe that this text must refer to an earthly political throne, and that Jesus must physcially reign from Earth? It sounds to me like you’re expecting the same kind of “messiah” that the people who crucified Jesus Christ were expecting - a political leader. Do you think you may be similarly mistaken or, perhaps, misguided?
 
Robert in SD:
He is reigning from Heaven - on his throne - through His Church that has persisted for 2000 years despite the best efforts of those both within and without who have tried to destroy it.

Why do you believe that this text must refer to an earthly political throne, and that Jesus must physcially reign from Earth? It sounds to me like you’re expecting the same kind of “messiah” that the people who crucified Jesus Christ were expecting - a political leader. Do you think you may be similarly mistaken or, perhaps, misguided?
Becuase according to the Lord he is not sitting on his personal throne yet.

Rev. 3: 21
21 To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne.

He is sitting on his fathers throne until the throne of David on the earth is finally given to him, and all rule and power has been put down.

No becuase that is precisly what he is to finally do at his second coming.

Rev 19
 
Robert in SD:
Why do you believe that this text must refer to an earthly political throne, and that Jesus must physcially reign from Earth?
For several reasons: Firstly, because the language of the Revelation is too detailed, specific, and explicit to be interpreted any other way. Let’s examine them a bit more carefully:

Revelation 20:

1 And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand.

2 And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan, and bound him a thousand years,

3 And cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no more, till the thousand years should be fulfilled: and after that he must be loosed a little season.
This clearly states that at the beginning of the Millennium, Satan will be bound for the period of 1000 years so that he will not be able to deceive the nations, until that period comes to an end; and that at the end of it Satan will be loosed again so that he can have one last try at deceiving the nations. If your understanding of the Millennium is correct, and we are currently living during the Millennium, and have been living during the past 2000 years, then you must believe that Satan must currently be bound, and must have been bound during the past 2000 years, so that he does not, and would not have had power to “deceive the nations” during the past 2000 years including the present time. But we know that that is not the case. Satan has been aaround, and has been doing his bit during the past 2000 years, and continues to do! So how does your figurative interpretation get round that problem?

4 And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years.

5 But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection.

6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years.
This unmistakably states that there are two resurrections, one at the beginning of the Millennium one at the end; and that the Millennium will then come to an end. It clearly distinguishes between a first resurrection and a second resurrection, one at the beginning and one at the end. It states that at the beginning of the Millennium, there will be a general resurrection of all the true saints who had believed in, testified of, or martyred in the cause of Jesus will be resurrected to live with Christ during the Millennium. If your understanding is correct, then we must assume that this event must have already occurred. When did it occur?

According to the Revelation, before the Millennium begins, a number of important events must take place, including a general resurrection, which are described in the previous chapters of the Revelation, most of which have not yet taken place. How does your allegorical interpretation cater for those?

7 And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison,

8 And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle: the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.
This states that at the end of the Millennium Satan will be loosed to deceive the nations once more. So in what stage of the Millennium do you reckon we are living in then, before it, after it, or in the middle of it?! If in the middle of it, how come Satan is busy at work doing his usual bit? If at the end, when did it come to an end? If at the beginning, I thought you said we weren’t!

10 And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever.

12 And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works.
(Continued in the next post…)

amgid
 
(Continued from the previous post…)

Thus the end of the Millennium leads to the general resurrection of all the dead, the last judgment, and final destruction of the devil and those who have followed him. This clearly identifies the Millennium a specified period of time, with some specific things happening at the beginning of it or before it; some specific things happening at the end of it; and some specific things happening during it. These are too detailed and specific to be understood as you have done. How do you get round that?

Secondly, and most importantly for us, we believe as we believe because in modern LDS scripture the Lord has informed us that that is the true meaning of the scriptures. People like yourself often tell us that we don’t need more revelation from God because we already have all that we need in the Bible. The answers to that is that we need revelation, among other things, to give us definitive answers to the kind of questions that you are raising, as the following quotes testify:

D&C 29:

10 For the hour is nigh, and that which was spoken by mine apostles must be fulfilled; for as they spoke so shall it come to pass;

11 For I will reveal myself from heaven with power and great glory, with all the hosts thereof, and dwell in righteousness with men on earth a thousand years, and the wicked shall not stand.

22 And again, verily, verily, I say unto you that when the thousand years are ended, and men again begin to deny their God, then will I spare the earth but for a little season;

23 And the end shall come, and the heaven and the earth shall be consumed and pass away, and there shall be a new heaven and a new earth.

24 For all old things shall pass away, and all things shall become new, even the heaven and the earth, and all the fulness thereof, both men and beasts, the fowls of the air, and the fishes of the sea;

25 And not one hair, neither mote, shall be lost, for it is the workmanship of mine hand.

D&C 43:

29 For in mine own due time will I come upon the earth in judgment, and my people shall be redeemed and shall reign with me on earth.

30 For the great Millennium, of which I have spoken by the mouth of my servants, shall come.

31 For Satan shall be bound, and when he is loosed again he shall only reign for a little season, and then cometh the end of the earth.

D&C 88:

100 And again, another trump shall sound, which is the third trump; and then come the spirits of men who are to be judged, and are found under condemnation;

101 And these are the rest of the dead; and they live not again until the thousand years are ended, neither again, until the end of the earth.

110 And so on, until the seventh angel shall sound his trump; and he shall stand forth upon the land and upon the sea, and swear in the name of him who sitteth upon the throne, that there shall be time no longer; and Satan shall be bound, that old serpent, who is called the devil, and shall not be loosed for the space of a thousand years.

111 And then he shall be loosed for a little season, that he may gather together his armies.
Thirdly, another good reason to believe as we do is the fact that this is how the early Christians almost unanimously interpreted the scriptures. I have an old Catholic dictionary at home which I picked up very cheaply in a second user bookstore, and it has turned out to be a useful addition to my private library. Under the heading of Millennium, it openly admits that this doctrine was very widely accepted in the early Church; and then without any reasonable justification it goes on to assert the current Catholic position above the early Christian one.
It sounds to me like you’re expecting the same kind of “messiah” that the people who crucified Jesus Christ were expecting - a political leader. Do you think you may be similarly mistaken or, perhaps, misguided?
That is an interesting observation. The Jews were not entirely wrong in the way in which they interpreted their scriptures. The mistake that they made was that they confused the first and the second coming of the Lord together. That is not unlike the kind of mistake that you are making—by confusing the beginning and ending of the Millennium together. There is indeed a true Millennium, with specific (and often similar) events taking place at the beginning as well as at the end of it, hence the apparent reason behind your confusion.

amgid
 
sure seems like you are cherry picking what parts of revelations are symbolic and which are literal. You might want to rethink your analysis of apocalyptic writing.
 
amgid said:
(Continued from the previous post…) …There is indeed a true Millennium, with specific (and often similar) events taking place at the beginning as well as at the end of it, hence the apparent reason behind your confusion.

amgid

Thanks amgid.

I don’t deny the concept of a millenium, I just believe that it is not inagurated by Christ’s Second Coming, although it does conclude with His return, and that the millenium talked about in the Bible is also the age in which we are currently residing. This perception fits with all of the scripture passages you quote. None of the passages you cite to requires one to understand the millenium as a physical reign of Christ that is established after his Second Coming. Indeed, it appears to me that such an interpretation would require both a Second Coming, and a Third Coming.

Thanks, amgid, for presenting your understanding of the LDS position on the millenium. Still, nothing you have presented leads me to re-think my position on the matter, or on my understanding of Revelation in general or the millenial reign specifically.

Furthermore, it seems to me that the LDS interpretation of the concept of a literal future thousand year reign is absolutely necessary for the LDS church in light of the necessity of the concept of a “restoration” of the true church. (In other words, LDS members are compelled to ask, “How can the millenial reign occur in the midst of a total apostacy?”) Thus, the LDS position seems a bit forced to me, just as the fundamentalist position has always seemed a bit forced from their other doctrinal positions regarding the Church.

And, finally, since I have yet to see any real evidence of a total or “great” apostasy, and since I see no necessity for any restoration by Joseph Smith, I fail to see any compelling reasons for setting aside my understanding of Revelation - as taught from a Catholic perspective - to embrace the teachings of your faith. Regarding earlier teachings, there is a careful review of the early history of the Church and its perception of the end times in Olsen’s Will Catholics be Left Behind, that clarifies the Church’s consistent teaching on this issue.

Despite my lack of being persuaded, I certainly appreciate your contribution to the discussion. It has helped me to understand where you and other LDS members are coming from. But again, I will have to respectfully disagree with your conclusions.
 
Robert in SD:
Furthermore, it seems to me that the LDS interpretation of the concept of a literal future thousand year reign is absolutely necessary for the LDS church in light of the necessity of the concept of a “restoration” of the true church. (In other words, LDS members are compelled to ask, “How can the millenial reign occur in the midst of a total apostacy?”) Thus, the LDS position seems a bit forced to me, just as the fundamentalist position has always seemed a bit forced from their other doctrinal positions regarding the Church.
Thank you for your courteous reply; but whether you accept the doctrine of the Apostasy or not, it can have no logical or theological bearing on how you understand the Millennium. If so, how then do you account for the widespread acceptance of it by the early Christians?

amgid
 
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amgid:
Thank you for your courteous reply; but whether you accept the doctrine of the Apostasy or not, it can have no logical or theological bearing on how you understand the Millennium
It does not impact my Catholic understanding of the Millenium, but the LDS Church’s doctrine of the “Great Apostasy” logically precludes an amillenialist view. Consider that *if * there was a total apostasy that resulted in the removal of all Church authority, then Christ could not have reigned on Earth continually through His Church, since it was removed for about 1600 years, until Joseph Smith’s restoration. That was my point.
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amgid:
If so, how then do you account for the widespread acceptance of it by the early Christians?

amgid
It was not my point that the lack of a Great Apostasy disproves Millenialism. My point was the opposite - that the LDS doctrine of the Great Apostasy precludes acceptance of amillenialism. So, I’m not sure I get your point here.

As for early christians who believed in a form of millenialism, let me first stress that it is important to note there has never been a doctrinal statement accepting premillenialism, so to the extent your post may be implying that the Church “changed” its doctrine from premillenialism to amillenialism it is not supported.

I’m sure that as a student of the history of the church you are aware that many early christians believed that the Second Coming was to occur in their lifetime, and many also believed that Christ’s return would usher in an earthly kingdom from which Christ would reign for a thousand years. The most prominent of these early groups were the Montanists. The Church had another word to describe them - heretics. The majority of the church always followed the “amillenialist” point of view. The concept of a secular messianism has been rejected by the church (literal 1,000 year earthly kingdom) has always been rejected.
676 The Antichrist’s deception already begins to take shape in the world every time the claim is made to realize within history that messianic hope which can only be realized beyond history through the eschatological judgment. The Church has rejected even modified forms of this falsification of the kingdom to come under the name of millenarianism,577 especially the “intrinsically perverse” political form of a secular messianism.578
577 Cf. DS 3839.
578 Pius XI, Divini Redemptoris, condemning the “false mysticism” of this “counterfeit of the redemption of the lowly”; cf. GS 20-21. (Catechism of the Catholic Church, #676.)
 
Robert in SD:
It was not my point that the lack of a Great Apostasy disproves Millenialism. My point was the opposite - that the LDS doctrine of the Great Apostasy precludes acceptance of amillenialism. So, I’m not sure I get your point here.
The “point” that I was responding to was what you had expressed in the following paragraph in the previous post:
Furthermore, it seems to me that the LDS interpretation of the concept of a literal future thousand year reign is absolutely necessary for the LDS church in light of the necessity of the concept of a “restoration” of the true church. (In other words, LDS members are compelled to ask, “How can the millenial reign occur in the midst of a total apostacy?”) Thus, the LDS position seems a bit forced to me, just as the fundamentalist position has always seemed a bit forced from their other doctrinal positions regarding the Church.
LDS members are not “compelled” to ask any such question, because such a question never arises in the first place. The “thousand year” Millennium, and the literal reign of Christ, are so plainly taught in the Bible, and affirmed in canonized LDS scripture, that that artificial question never arises in the LDS mind in the first place.
As for early christians who believed in a form of millenialism, let me first stress that it is important to note there has never been a doctrinal statement accepting premillenialism, so to the extent your post may be implying that the Church “changed” its doctrine from premillenialism to amillenialism it is not supported.
That is not what my Catholic dictionary says. I don’t think that this dictionary is on the Internet, so I have scanned the article into my computer, and will post it here for you in full. But I am going to chop it up in smaller bits so that I can comment on specific parts of it. It is Called A CATHOLIC DICTIONARY, by William E. Addis and Thomas Arnold, fellows of the university of Ireland; and revised by T. B. Scannell, D. D. It was published in 1955 by Virtue and Co. Ltd, London; and it is the fifteenth edition (fifth impression) of the book. The first edition was probably published over a hundred years ago. I picked it up second hand for $4.00! Here is the complete text:
Quoting Catholic Dictionary under MILENNIUM:
In the Apocalypse (ch. xx) it is said that, after the destruction of God’s enemies, “the beast and the kings of the earth and their armies,” with “the false prophet” and Satan himself, will be bound and cast into the pit. The saints are then to rise and reign with Christ a thousand years. At the end of this period Satan is to be loosed for a brief space. The nations deceived by him will gather against the “beloved city” in which the saints are encamped. Then fire will descend and devour the wicked; Satan will be cast for ever into hell, and the general Judgment will take place. Many of the early Christians took this as a literal description of events which would occur at the end of the world’s history.
This gives a pretty accurate summary of the scriptural text, and also that many early Christians interpreted it literally.
Those who held to such an interpretation were known as Chiliasts or Millenarians—i.e. believers in the reign of a thousand years. This belief was very common in the early Church. It was held by Papias, bishop of Hierapolis, early in the second century (Eusebius “H.E.” iii. 39), by St. Justin Martyr (“Trypho,” 81), by St. Irenaeus (“Adv. Haer.” V. 36), by Lactantius (“Div. Inst.” Vii. 24), by Tertullian and Victorinus Petabionensis (see Jerome, “De Vir. Illustr.” Xviii, where he refers to a lost work of Tertullian).
This goes further and affirms not only that the belief was held by “many early Christians,” but that it was very common among them, and proceeds to name some prominent ECFs who believed it. Now it proceeds to bring some very unsatisfactory arguments against it:
The opinion was, no doubt, Jewish in origin. (See Grabe, “Spicileg.” Vol. i. p. 231.) It was also held outside the Church in a gross and sensual form by the Judaizing Gnostic Cerinthus (Eusebius “H.E.” iii. 28), and opposed by the Roman presbyter Caius (Euseb. Loc. Cit.) At Alexandria the allegorical mode of Interpretation was of course unfavourable to Chiliasm.
(Continued in the next post…)

amgid
 
(Continued from the previous post…)

Jewish in origin? What is that supposed to mean? The whole of the gospel is “Jewish in origin”. The Apostles were all Jews. Jesus was a Jew! The OT was written by Jews. The Apocalypse, on the other hand, is indisputably is aChristian text; and that is where the doctrine is taught. It is no more “Jewish” than the rest of the Gospels are. Does the Catholic Church dismiss the Apocalypse as being Jewish?
Still, even in the Alexandrian district, Nepos, bishop of Arsinoe, in the middle of the third century, was a vehement Millenarian. He wrote a “refutation of the Allegorists” ([Greek text]), directed particularly against Origen, and had a powerful following.
So he is still honest enough to tell us how widespread the belief was in the early Christian Church.
Peace was restored by Dionysius of Alexandria, who held a council on the matter in 255. (See Eusebius, vii. 23, and Hefele Leclercq, i. 193 sqq.). It was probably the fear of Millenarianism which partly occasioned the objections long prevalent in the East to the authority of the Apocalypse.
So now the Apostasy has reached such a fever pitch in the Christian world that “peace has to be restored” in it over such a simple issue!
After the establishment of Christianity the belief in the reign of the saints for a thousand years almost died out. But St. Augustine (“Civ. Dei.” Xx. 7, PL, xli. 607 seq.) confesses that he once held it. It appeared from time to time in the Middle Ages, and is still advocated by some Protestants.
In other words, after the Apostasy in the early Christian church was finally set in, the belief in the literal thousand years gradually died out! That is what it means.
Muzzareli (quoted by Jungmann, “De Novissimis,” p. 303) sums up the common judgment of theologians on the subject. The theory as held by the early Fathers, he says, is not heretical, but, considering the weight of authority on the other side, it is at least improbable. (Franzelin, “De Trad.” 191.)
So it finally admits that the belief was widely held by the ECFs and by most of the early Christians; that, interestingly, it cannot be regarded as “heretical” even now, but only “improbable;” and the “weight of evidence” against it is nothing more than an apostate Christian tradition.
I’m sure that as a student of the history of the church you are aware that many early Christians believed that the Second Coming was to occur in their lifetime, …
That is not quite true. Some early saints in the days of the Apostles apparently had gottten some such idea into their heads, but St. Paul wrote to them and corrected their mistake:

2 Thessalonians 2:

1 Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto him,

2 That ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us, as that the day of Christ is at hand.

3 Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition;
After that clear warning, the early Christians, or at least the orthodox ones, did not any more believe that the return of Christ was going to take place in their own lifetime.
… and many also believed that Christ’s return would usher in an earthly kingdom from which Christ would reign for a thousand years.
Yes, I am sure many of them did. Most of them in fact I believe did!
The most prominent of these early groups were the Montanists.
I am not sure about that one. See the quote from the Catholic dictionary.
The Church had another word to describe them - heretics.
Not at all! See again the article quoted above.
The majority of the church always followed the “amillenialist” point of view.
Not according to my Catholic Dictionary. See above.
The concept of a secular messianism has been rejected by the church (literal 1,000 year earthly kingdom) has always been rejected.
Evidently not so. See above.

amgid
 
Dear amgid;

You are reading quite a bit into one dictionary entry. *Nothing * in the language of that discussion states that the Church spoke with authority on the issue, then changed it’s mind. As such, the issue was open to much debate. That is far from the “anarchy” that you seem to suggest arose from the difference in belief. The situation would be similar to your earlier description of how LDS members are free to accept or reject the “possibility” that Jesus took a wife and had children. Why does that “difference of opinion” not cause the same sort of calamity for the LDS church that millenarianism caused in your opinion? You can’t have it both ways - describing differences of opinion on your side of the fence as “agency” and describing differences of opinion on Catholic issues that have not been authoritatively settled as evidence of the “Apostasy.” That’s just faulty reasoning, amgid.

Some other comments…
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amgid:
LDS members are not “compelled” to ask any such question, because such a question never arises in the first place. The “thousand year” Millennium, and the literal reign of Christ, are so plainly taught in the Bible, and affirmed in canonized LDS scripture, that that artificial question never arises in the LDS mind in the first place.
Huh? In *this * discussion any LDS member would be required to address the validity of amillenialism. When faced with the theory, an LDS member would be *compelled * to dismiss it because it does not comport with the idea of a removal and restoration of the Church. Are you seriously arguing that LDS members would never think about other biblical interpretations of the millenium because the book of Revelation is “obvious?” C’mon amgid. This argument lacks credibility.

amgid said:
**Quoting Catholic Dictionary under MILENNIUM:…**Many of the early Christians took this as a literal description of events which would occur at the end of the world’s history.

A belief by many is not the same as an authoritative teaching on the issue. Millenarianism was never doctrine, as you suggest. See the link below. Again, an LDS similarity would be the LDS Church’s lack of position regarding the marital status of Jesus Christ. Just because some members say Christ was married, that does not make it doctrine, right? Or are you saying that a different set of rules applies to the Catholic Church?
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amgid:
In other words, after the Apostasy in the early Christian church was finally set in, the belief in the literal thousand years gradually died out! That is what it means.
How in the world do you leap from disagreement among theologians on a discreet theological issue to the conclusion that the “great apostasy” has reached “fever pitch?” Dispute over an interpretation of scripture is far from an apostasy. No one was denying the fundamental tenets of their christian faith - which would be absolutely required for an apostasy. The conclusion that differing opinions on the “millenium” is an apostasy is so far from supportable that it’s almost laughable. If doctrinal development is your evidence of a “great apostasy” then every church - including the LDS Church - has apostasized.

Regarding your questioning of the Montanists, they were early schismatics with heretical ideas. Read about it here…

Montanists - Catholic New Advent Website

And in Carl Olsen’s book “Will Catholics be ‘Left Behind’” he discusses early millenarianism and chiliasm in the Church. Prominent among the early millenarians were the Montanists. (Olsen, supra, p. 143.)

You also wrote:
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amgid:
Jewish in origin? What is that supposed to mean? … It [the Millenium] is no more “Jewish” than the rest of the Gospels are. Does the Catholic Church dismiss the Apocalypse as being Jewish?
This is quite a straw man argument you’ve erected here. See the attached link to understand the jewish messianic connection to the millenium.

Millenium and Millenarianism - Catholic New Advent Website

Early belief in the Millenium does not establish its orthodoxy or its truth, just as evidence of early and widespread belief in Arianism and Gnosticism does not establish the orthodoxy or truth of those beliefs.

The issue comes down to one of authority. The Church is the institution with authority. The Church has been consistent in its *teaching * on the issue. Millenarianism is simply not sound.
 
No Catholic dictionary can supersede the catechism. That would be a far better reference for actual Catholic doctrine.
 
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majick275:
No Catholic dictionary can supersede the catechism. That would be a far better reference for actual Catholic doctrine.
I already quoted the Catechism. amgid apparently dismissed it. Here it is again, with citation to the underlying source material for verification.
The Church’s ultimate trial
675 Before Christ’s second coming the Church must pass through a final trial that will shake the faith of many believers.574 The persecution that accompanies her pilgrimage on earth575 will unveil the “mystery of iniquity” in the form of a religious deception offering men an apparent solution to their problems at the price of apostasy from the truth. The supreme religious deception is that of the Antichrist, a pseudo-messianism by which man glorifies himself in place of God and of his Messiah come in the flesh.576
**676 The Antichrist’s deception already begins to take shape in the world every time the claim is made to realize within history that messianic hope which can only be realized beyond history through the eschatological judgment. The Church has rejected even modified forms of this falsification of the kingdom to come under the name of millenarianism,577 especially the “intrinsically perverse” political form of a secular messianism.578 **
677 The Church will enter the glory of the kingdom only through this final Passover, when she will follow her Lord in his death and Resurrection.579 The kingdom will be fulfilled, then, not by a historic triumph of the Church through a progressive ascendancy, but only by God’s victory over the final unleashing of evil, which will cause his Bride to come down from heaven.580 God’s triumph over the revolt of evil will take the form of the Last Judgment after the final cosmic upheaval of this passing world.581
574 Cf. Lk 18:8; Mt 24:12.
575 Cf. Lk 21:12; Jn 15:19-20.
576 Cf. 2 Thess 2:4-12; 1 Thess 5:2-3; 2 Jn 7; 1 Jn 2:18,22.
577 Cf. DS 3839.
578 Pius XI, Divini Redemptoris, condemning the “false mysticism” of this “counterfeit of the redemption of the lowly”; cf. GS 20-21.

579 Cf. Rev 19:1-9.
580 Cf Rev 13:8; 20:7-10; 21:2-4.
581 Cf. Rev 20:12 2 Pet 3:12-13.
 
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