Michael Heiser's REVELATION Interpretation is MINDBLOWING (Breaking Eschatological Systems)
Michael Heiser argues that the Book of Revelation does not present a linear timeline but a recapitulation of a single end-times event across chapters 16, 19, and 20. By abandoning rigid theological systems like traditional premillennialism and amillennialism, believers can affirm a literal, eternal, earthly kingdom of Christ (a global New Eden) without being bound by the debated 1,000-year timeline.
This video challenges traditional eschatological categories by demonstrating how first-century Second Temple Jewish contexts and Old Testament recapitulation frameworks (especially Ezekiel 38-39) resolve contradictions in our reading of Revelation.
Section summaries
Introduction & History of Premillennialism
optionalProvides basic historical background on the early church fathers and premillennialism.
Rise of Amillennialism & Dispensationalism
optionalReviews Augustine's role in spiritualizing the millennium and John Nelson Darby's development of the pre-tribulation rapture.
Gog and Magog Cosmic Connections
watchEssential explanation of cosmic geography, Psalm 48, and how Ezekiel 38-39 underpins Revelation.
The Netherworld Valley (Ovarim)
watchExplores Semitic linguistics, Ugaritic parallels, and Jude's treatment of Moses' body relative to cosmic boundaries.
The Recapitulation Proof & Critique of Amillennialism
watchShows how John repeats the same battle three times, dismantling the linear timeline while critiquing the amillennial tendency to allegorize real spiritual warfare.
Ditching the Systems & The Revelation 20:6 Problem
watchHeiser exposes the fatal flaws of both systems and introduces his view of an eternal global Eden.
The Satan Problem in the New Testament
watchExamines a comprehensive list of verses showing Satan's high level of activity in the Church Age, challenging amillennial claims of his complete binding.
The Solution: Planao and the Deuteronomy 32 Delay
watchOffers Heiser's unique resolution to the Satan problem, integrating the Great Commission and the Divine Council worldview.
Key points
- Recapitulation over Chronology — Revelation does not present a linear sequence of separate end-times events. Instead, chapters 16, 19, and 20 use the same Old Testament imagery from Ezekiel 38-39 (Gog and Magog) to describe the same climactic battle three times.
- The Cosmic Geography of Armageddon — Armageddon is not merely a political battle in literal geography but a spiritual confrontation on the cosmic mountain (Zion/Har-Magedon). Gog's defeat in the Valley of the Ovarim refers to the spirits of the dead (the underworld) in Second Temple and Ugaritic literature.
- Redefining the Binding of Satan — Satan's 'binding' during the current church age does not mean he is completely inactive or unable to tempt believers. Rather, the Greek 'planao' (deceive) refers specifically to his restriction from initiating the final, unified military march of the nations against Zion until the designated time.
- The Deuteronomy 32 Purpose of the Delay — God prevents Satan from instigating the final battle of Armageddon to allow the Great Commission to go forward. He is delaying the ultimate judgment of the rebel nations (Psalm 82) to reclaim and redeem people from those very nations in accordance with the Deuteronomy 32 worldview.
“But what if we ditch the millennial language? What if we focus instead on the Messiah literally ruling and reigning on earth without depending or even caring about the 1,000-year language.” — Dr. Michael Heiser
“The psalmist is doing theology and cosmic geography. He's not doing literal geography. He's doing cosmic geography to do theology.” — Dr. Michael Heiser
AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.
But what if we ditch the millennial
language?
What if we focus instead on the Messiah
literally ruling and reigning on earth
without depending or even caring about
the 1,000-year language. See, then the
literal kingdom idea is alive and well,
but it doesn't conform to our
theological systems.
>> Debates about the end times have been
ongoing for centuries. And out of those
debates have spawned a plethora of
esqueological systems. But of the many
schools of thought regarding the
apocalypse described in the books of
Revelation, Daniel, and other sources in
the Bible, we're going to hyperfocus on
two, premillennialism and
amillennialism.
and more specifically how these two
esqueological systems read and interpret
the end time scenario and what they
believe about the thousand-year reign of
Christ detailed in Revelation 20 1-6.
First, we'll start with
premillennialism.
Historically, the system of
premillennialism originated in the first
and 2 centuries AD with early church
fathers such as Tertullian, Justin
Martyr, and even Pepius, a bishop who
reportedly heard the Apostle John teach.
Premillennialism derives from a
chronological reading of Revelation and
holds the belief that Christ will return
to establish a literal earthly kingdom
for 1,000 years characterized by global
peace, righteousness, and Christ ruling
from Jerusalem leading up to the final
judgment.
Interesting side note, the early church
fathers beliefs about the thousand-year
reign is now called historic
premillennialism, which differs from the
modern dispensational premillennialism
in the fact that historic premill
doesn't teach a pre-tribulation rapture.
But premillennialism was a widespread
esqueological view in the early church,
and many influential Orthodox leaders
from the first three centuries held this
perspective.
However, views regarding the millennium
began to shift drastically by the 3rd
and fourth centuries with scholars in
Alexandria such as Clement and origin
heavily spiritualizing biblical passages
which laid the groundwork for what would
become amillennialism.
By the fifth century, figures like
Augustine of Hippo fully developed the
amalennial view, which later became the
dominant esquetology for centuries to
follow. The amillennial view is that the
1,000-year millennium described in
Revelation 20 is symbolic and not to be
read literally. All millennialists
believe Christ's reign is a spiritual
reality occurring right now in the
present church age rather than a future
1,000-year political kingdom on Earth
and that the millennium is a figurative
representation of the entire period
between Christ's ascension and his
eventual second coming. Amillennialists
hold that Christ is actively reigning as
king from heaven at the right hand of
the father.
Amillennialism was the dominant view
held by the church from the middle ages
to the reformation. And it wasn't until
the mid-9th century that
premillennialism reemerged, primarily in
Britain and America when British teacher
John Nelson Darby developed a specific
framework that became what we know today
as dispensational premillennialism and
popularized the concept of a
pre-tribulation rapture. Another
interesting side note about John Nelson
Darby is that in October 1827, he fell
off of a horse and was seriously
injured. And it was during that time of
recovery that he began to believe that
the kingdom described throughout the
scriptures was entirely different from
the church and that this was the period
of time that he started developing the
idea of the pre-trib rapture. Do with
that what you will. But looking at these
two esqueological systems from an
overhead view, you can basically
summarize that the two defer from one
another over a literal chronological
reading of Revelation and specifically
the millennial reign or a figurative
spiritual view of it. Now, I want you to
hear this clip of Dr. Michael Heiser
breaking down these two systems and
actually pinpointing where each of them
falls short when held up to the use of
the Old Testament passages in the book
of Revelation where he reads from two
incredible scholarly works. One from
Meredith Klene, an amalennialist, and
one from GK Beal and David Campbell
titled Revelation, a shorter commentary.
And before we hop in here, I just want
to preface this by saying that he really
gets into the weeds in this discussion,
but I'm confident you'll be able to
follow along. Let's check it out.
>> We'll start with the obvious that all of
the esqueological systems agree on. When
we read Revelation 16, we get all this
Antichrist stuff. We know it relates to
Daniel 2. We know it relates to Daniel
7. We know it relates to the little
horn. We know it relates to Daniel
11:36, the figure that makes himself
God. And we know that Paul picks up on
that that very idea in 2 Thessalonians
2:4 to describe the Antichrist.
Everybody knows all those elements.
Everybody agrees.
So what client says what what remains
what what what people just don't do
including scholars is they don't look
back at Ezekiel 38 and39 and see how
that passage
is used by John in Revelation 16 to
reinforce
to articulate his antichrist armageddon
story his prophecy
that's what they don't see and so what
client says client says Come along with
me. Let's look where Ezekiel 38 and39
and you know maybe Psalm 48 a little bit
some of these other passages where
they're used in Revelation 16. So this
is where he starts. So here's his first
line of evidence. Where does Gog hail
from? Where does he come from? Well,
Klein says let's first of all let's
think about the heights of the north.
Psalm 48 relates the marshalling of
enemy forces against Zion in that
passage. So, let me read you Psalm 48.
And if you've read Unseen Realm, this
should be familiar. Great is the Lord
and greatly to be praised in the city of
our God,
obviously Jerusalem, his holy mountain,
beautiful in elevation, is the joy of
all the earth. Mount Zion in the Yaret
Safon in the far north, the city of the
great king. Even though even though
Jerusalem Zion is in the south, we're
going to say it's in the far north
because we're doing theology.
The psalmist is doing theology and
cosmic geography. He's not doing literal
geography. He's doing cosmic geography
to do theology. Here's verse three.
Within her Jerusalem citadels, God has
made himself known as a fortress. For
behold, the kings assembled. As they
came on together, as soon as they saw
it, they were astounded. They were in
panic. They took to flight. Trembling
took hold of them there. Anguishes of a
woman in labor. Okay. By the east wind,
you shattered the ships of Tarsish.
I love the reference to Tarsish there.
Basically, everybody's gathered against
Zion. We're not going to forget about
little Tarses. You know, Spain, they get
in on the act, too. As we have heard, so
we have seen in the city of the Lord of
Hosts, in the city of our God, which God
will establish forever. So, we're
preparing for battle. It's all the
nations against Zion in the heights of
the north. Cosmic geography. Okay, so
Klein says, you know, okay, let's notice
that you get get the heights in the
north, Zion's in the far north. Then he
says, Gog, lo and behold, who would have
thought Gog is also from the Yetade
Safon.
Okay, the language, the phrase is used
in Ezekiel 38:6,
Ezekiel 38:15,
Ezekiel 392.
Klein writes, "It is from the heights of
Zafon that God brings Gog with all his
enemies
to overthrow them on the mountains of
Israel and specifically at Zion." So
there's one connection. Okay, so first
line of evidence is where does Gog come
from? Lo and behold, again, it sounds a
lot like what's going on, the gathering
of the nations, you know, from the
north.
Gog's characterization number two as a
usurper of the harogade the place of
counsel
and we know this from Isaiah 14 the
cosmic rebel seeks to ascend the heights
of Safon and be the most high thus the
great esqueological enemy in Revelation
16:16
marches on the heights of the north Zion
again we're seeing Isaiah 14 repeated at
Armageddon
Interestingly enough, Isaiah 14 is
directed against, drum roll please,
not the Chinese,
not the Russians,
but the king of Babylon,
whereby the prophet uses the cosmic
rebellion story to portray this king. In
Revelation, the enemy is Babylon and the
beast. Klein writes, "Gog is
characterized by the antichrist
syndrome." I love that phrase. He is a
pretender to the throne of heaven. The
correspondence of his experience to the
king of Babylon typology in Isaiah 14 is
seen in the ironic motif of the polar
contrast between his pretentions and his
actual fate like 180° different. Klein
writes, "Challenging Yahweh's
sovereignty on Zion, Gog would take
possession of the mountain heights of
Israel. But he ends up with his vast
military array in the depths of a
valley. He lunged for a heavenly throne
but plunged into a netherworld grave.
Remember Isaiah 14, I'll be like the
most high but he's brought into shol.
Now on this point about can we really
call the the valley where where Gog and
Magog and we read Ezekiel 3839 where
where Gog's armies end up in this
valley. Is that really a netherworld
grave? Is that really a the underworld?
You know, like is that really cosmic?
Oh, yeah. Klein writes, "The valley
where his armies were buried is called
the valley of the ovarim in Ezekiel 39
to11." Literally those passing through
or passing across. That is a term used
for the dead, those who cross over from
this world to the next. It appears in
Job 34:20,
Psalm 144:4.
Another name given to the burial valley
in Ezekiel 39:11 is gay kamongog,
valley of the multitude of Gog. Now,
this netherworld grave description is
legit if if only from Ezekiel 39:11. But
the word translated
travelers in in you know in that passage
in ESV those who who pass through or
pass across the word overim is
significant. I'm going to read from DDD
the dictionary of deities and demons.
Okay, here's what they their entry on on
on this term. The travelers, the ovarim
says in part, the participle cal plural
ovarim of the verb avar to pass from one
side to the other seems to have a
special meaning in the context of the
cult of the dead denoting the spirits of
the dead crossing the border between the
land of the living and the world of the
dead. It can be interpreted as a divine
name in Ezekiel 38 or 39:11 and 39:14
which may have also have been preserved
in the geographical named of Adoreim.
This is numbers 21:10-11, 27:12, 33:44,
33:47-48,
Deuteronomy 32:49,
and Jeremiah 22:20.
In Ezekiel 319 39:14, the word indicates
the dead, just dead bodies. Okay. A
possible solution to this crux interpret
is to relate ovarim here and in verse 11
to the ovarim
mentioned in the ugaric text denoting
the spirits of the dead. So it's not
just dead bodies. It's also a term that
is used in wider Canaanite literature
for the spirits of the dead. The valley
of the ovarim is located quote east of
the sea. That's Ezekiel 39:11 which is
very likely the dead sea. So it was part
of the trans Jordan. This is a region
which shows many traces of ancient cults
of the dead such as the megalithic
monuments called dolmans and place names
referring to the dead and the
netherworld
such as oote which is means the spirits
of the dead por as in bale of peor and
avar that's the end of the entry if you
have read my demons book or I think even
I do this in the angel's book that the
passage in Jude about Michael contending
with the devil for the body of Moses.
This is the key to understanding that
because where Moses dies and is buried,
remember he never gets into the promised
land is buried in a place associated
with the netherworld,
the realm of the dead, the spirits of
the dead. And so there was a strong um
you know tradition growing out of the
burial place and and the Old Testament
terminology.
You know, it was a dark place. There
there developed this this tradition
about is Moses okay?
what what happened to Moses' body? Like
what is and so Michael who is the prince
of Israel is the one who quote unquote
rescues or protects Moses from the Lord
of the Dead. This is the place where Gog
is defeated and his troops wind up. Does
it sound like Isaiah 14?
The answer is yes.
Okay, so that's thread number two.
Thread number three, client says, "Well,
what about the destination of Gog?"
We've talked about where Gog hails from.
You know, where does he come from? We've
talked about the him having the
Antichrist complex that I'm going to go
conquer, you know, the cosmic mountain.
I'm going to go defeat Yahweh. That that
doesn't turn out so well for him. What
about the destination of Gog? Ezekiel 38
and39 make this quite clear. Where is
Gog headed? Klein writes, "Gog advances
against the mountains of Israel." 392
39:17
Ezekiel. It is God's chosen Mount Zion
in the heart of the those mountains that
is his central point of attack. As in
the case of the mustering of the
beastial armies in Revelation 16, the
destination and intended target for Gog
and his hosts is Harmageddon, where the
Lord's anointed is enthroned at his
right hand. The indications for this are
clear. Even though Zion is not mentioned
by name in Ezekiel 38 and39, God does
speak of the mountains of Israel as my
mountains. 38:21
and of the land of Israel as my land.
38:16.
Implicit in that is the royal mountain
city where Yahweh dwells and rules over
the mountainous domains he claims as his
own. Also, such a capital city on the
cosmic mountain was regarded as the
center of the earth. And we've talked
about this. Let me just interrupt Klein
here. We've talked about this before
about cosmic mountain terminology.
Eden, tabernacle, temple, Sinai. These
places were viewed as as the place where
heaven and earth intersect. They are the
center of the earth. Not not in terms of
actual physical geography, but they are
the center of the earth. And that this
is the place from which God runs things.
Okay. So back to Klein, he says in
38:12, Gog is described as scheming to
assault the people of God dwelling at
quote the center, literally the navl of
the earth, unquote. In that concept,
Gog's real objective is exposed,
Yahweh's mount of assembly, rival to
Gog's pseudo safhone.
In the Revelation 20 version of Ezekiel
38 and39, Gog's armies are explicitly
said to compass quote the beloved city
unquote. Okay, which is Jerusalem and
Zion.
Trajectory number four, what about Gog
in Revelation 20? Klein summarizes this
point as follows. He says in Revelation
20 7-10, the Gog Magog assault on Zion
marks the end of the millennium. Within
Ezekiel 38 and39, indications also
abound of the esqueological finality of
the Gog crisis. As in Revelation 20, it
comes after a long age of secure
preservation for God's people. Ezekiel
38:8. In New Testament terms, after the
age in which the church, though sorely
persecuted, is preserved by the Lord to
complete the great commission task.
Revelation 11:7.
And as the judgment of on Gogg in
Revelation 20 merges with the
resurrection of the dead for final
judgment, that's Revelation 20 11-15.
So God's judicial deliverance of his
people from Gog in Ezekiel 38-39
institutes for them the eternal state of
unending never again disturbed felicity
described in Ezekiel 39:21-29.
So Klein has laid out four trajectories
that align Revelation 16 J Armageddon
with Ezekiel 38 and39.
They're all clear. They all make sense.
Again, if you're reading the passage in
light of John's use of the Old
Testament, you know, if you're not doing
that, then you're I don't know, you're
you're making something up. Um, you
know, again, you're talking about Russia
and China or something like that. Well,
go ahead. I I can't stop you. But, you
know, John isn't quoting from mouth
tongue, okay? Or, you know, something
that Lenin wrote or Marks. He's quoting
from the Old Testament. He's quoting
from Ezekiel 38 and39
and Psalm 48. Little bit of, you know,
Zechariah 14, some Daniel. Okay.
John's use of the Old Testament tells us
how to read chapters 16 through 19. So,
you might ask, well, how does this
connect to Revelation 19 specifically?
Because that's where we are here in this
episode. As all interpreters of the book
agree, Revelation 191 11-21, which we
read at the beginning, is the outcome of
the great war against the beast. It's
the outcome of Armageddon. It describes
the climactic battle won by the
returning Christ, the messianic warrior
and judge. Revelation 19 repurposes
descriptive content from the Gog and
Magog battle in Ezekiel 38 and39.
Revelation 19 does it, too. It's not
just Revelation 16. So Klein writes,
"Instruments of judgment mentioned by
both Ezekiel and John include
earthquakes, Ezekiel 38:19 and 20." Can
align that with not only Revelation
16:18-20, but earlier in the book,
sword, Ezekiel 38:21, see Revelation
19:15 and 21. and destructive hail and
fiery brimstone. Ezekiel 38:22, Ezekiel
39:6.
Align that with Revelation 16:21, and
Revelation 19:20.
Most striking, Klein says, is the
distinctive motif of God's summoning the
birds and beasts to feed on the
carcasses of the defeated enemies Gog
had gathered. the banquet theme
elaborated in Ezekiel 39:4
and Ezekiel 39:17-20
and John incorporates that that passage
Ezekiel 39:4 and 17-20 he specifically
incorporates that into the account of
Christ's victory over the beast and his
assembled armies in Revelation 19:17-18
you will you will look in vain okay you
will look in vain to find some other
passage in the Old Testament where we
have the birds and the beasts summoned
to feed on the carcasses of of the the
dead at the cosmic mountain. There is
only one passage that does that in the
Old Testament and it's Ezekiel 39. It's
Gog and Magog.
So that is how Revelation 19 connects.
So we've seen Revelation 16
17, you know, 17 and 18 are really about
the beast. Specifically, Revelation 16
and 19 repeat, repurpose, recapitulate
content from Ezekiel 38-39, the Gog and
Magog event, before we even get to
Revelation 20, where Gog and Magog are
mentioned by name. So, we've got a
repetition cycle between chapter 16,
chapter 19, and chapter 20. They're
describing the same series of events. It
is not a linear chronology of three
separate events. It is a recycling of
three of one event three times. And if
you do that, what it means before you
get to Gog and Magog in in Revelation,
Revelation 20, before you hit there, you
get all these references of the thousand
years. If they're describing the same
thing, then those thousand years must
represent the believers of chapter 16
and the believers the the believing age
in chapter 16, the believing age in
chapter 19. It's the current present
age.
Now, to put it lightly, all of this
cannot be coincidence.
Now, Klein uses the very clear recycling
again in his mind to devastate
premillennial esquetology. And this is
what I was raised on, you know, preacher
rapture, premillennial, you know, return
of Jesus, literal 1,000-year kingdom, so
on and so forth. and Klein by virtue of
of his skilled fariting out of how John
uses Ezekiel 38 and39 in more than one
place in these chapters destroys that
system.
Doesn't really destroy a rapture
question. I mean that that's that's a
little bit, you know, different of a
question, but it it destroys the system,
the general premillennial system. And
and he's happy to do so because he's a
nomillennialist. Now, I would say, well,
Professor Klein, as much as I love you
and and and your article, that's kind of
a yes and no. What does this all mean?
Well, the Old Testament use of John by
Ezekiel 38 and 39 in chapters that
precede the second coming. Notice that
it preceded the return of the Lord
because the return of the Lord, you
know, marks the the climax of
Armageddon.
and the chapter and it's also done
Ezekiel 38 and 39 are also in the
chapters that follow the second coming
revelation 20. This forces the
conclusion that the kingdom language up
through revelation 20 is basically the
present church age. Now you can't really
argue out of that because you'd have to
have two battles of Armageddon, not one.
Okay? You'd have to have two Gog and
Magog events, not one. Doesn't make any
sense. There's only one Armageddon.
There's one battle for Zion. There's one
return of there's one second coming and
you know there's one Gog and Magog
battle. So that's that's point that's
point number one. This is that's what it
means. It's this is where you're driven
by the text. Now that in turn produces
an esquetology. Here's point number two
that has the present age the church age
headed toward Armageddon. Well there's
no surprise there. I mean pretty much
everybody would track with that. But a
millers like Klene will use the
abstraction of 1,000 years. I see and we
told you a thousand years doesn't mean a
literal thousand years. It just means a
long time because the church has been
around for more than a thousand years.
So, so it's an abstract idea. So, I'm
millennialists like Klein will use that
abstraction in Revelation 20 to abstract
everything else out of existence
like a real antichrist. Does does Klein
believe that there will be a real
personal antichrist? I'm not sure. A lot
of our millennialists don't. How about a
real concerted chaos system driven by
real supernatural beings? Well, we
already know a lot of people in the
evangelical world and unfortunately
mostly in the reformed context where
you'll find amillennialism, they don't
believe that. That's too that's too
weird. It's too supernatural.
You know, give us give us our our core
doctrines of the faith and that's the
supernaturalism we have. We don't want
anymore. So, we know that that that
happens. Third, how about the real
release of demonic supernatural forces
in Revelation 9? Well, most
amillennialists would not say that's the
release of the Watchers. Again, that's
too weird. Cuz if we said that, then
we'd have to affirm Genesis 6. God
forbid.
How about the real reinheritance of the
nations and the real fulfillment of the
Psalm 82 judgment of the real rebel
gods? Well, we know they don't want to
touch Psalm 82.
How about the real literal
transformation of the earth back to a
real edenic state in real time? A lot of
millennials don't want to go there
either. They're the church is the
present age and then the Lord comes and
then then we have the eternal state
somewhere. It's this ethereal existence.
And all this talk about the new earth
and the new Eden. Well, that that's just
flowery allegorical language for
something for heaven somewhere. I don't
know. In other words, Klein and others
will will use the the abstraction here
to create a safe esqueological system
for people who don't want to affirm
these other quote unquote bizarre
supernatural elements.
I don't. Okay. If you're wondering what
their justification of such a dual
hermeneutic might be, ask one of them,
you know, not me because I'm not, you
know, I'm I'm not the traditional
amillennialist.
Now, third observation about what all
this means. Again, Klein targets
premillennialism with this, but all he
really destroys is the traditional
definition
of premillennialism. That's all he
actually destroys. If pre pay attention
carefully here to what I'm saying here,
this is important. I mean, the rest of
it's important, but this is important
especially if premillennialism means
quote the system that takes Revelation
as a linear chronology and bases its
idea of a literal reign of Christ on
earth only on the language of Revelation
20:es 1-6. Well, yeah, then Klein has
destroyed that. But what if we ditch the
millennial language?
What if we focus instead on the Messiah
literally ruling and reigning on earth
without depending or even caring about
the 1,000-year language? See, then the
literal kingdom idea is alive and well,
but it doesn't conform to our
theological systems. Now, you already
know this is where I'm at. Okay. My view
of the literal earthly kingdom is the
one that follows
Armageddon and the final judgments,
final resurrection, final judgments. It
is the New Eden. And it is not a
thousand years. It is forever.
A thousand years doesn't cut it. A
thousand years is a blink of an eye for
the reign of Christ on earth. But we're
we are so bound to this language
and bound to a word in Revelation 20
that when somebody like Klein comes
along and shows us that we can't read
Revelation 20 as a linear sequential
chronology and he destroys the system.
We think I can't believe in a literal
kingdom anymore. We must we might as
well all just you know suck up decline
and be a millennialist. No. No, no, no,
no, no, no. The church age is the
kingdom inaugurated
when Eden returns to earth really in
real time. That is the consummation of
the kingdom. And it is not a thousand
years. It is forever.
Klein has not touched that idea. He
destroys a system. He does not destroy a
point of biblical theology.
Now, I would also add to this as a
footnote. Klein actually doesn't undo
even the traditional premillennial
system talk entirely because there's one
reference to a thousand-year reign for
which his use of the data does not
account and that's in Revelation 20:6
and I'll get there in a moment. But the
larger point here is that we ought to
just ditch the traditional language.
Folks, there is no cosmic rule that says
you have to articulate your theology
using a glossery from a theology book or
a theological system. There's no penalty
flag that's going to come out if you say
things like, "Well, I don't really care
if the thousand years in Revelation 20
are the church age. I still believe that
there's going to be a literal kingdom
reign of Christ on earth. There's no
penalty flag for that. Now, you're going
to have people try to throw one because
they can't think outside their box.
What I'm saying is don't care about
their boxes.
Again, some scholars just can't do this.
And on a personal note here, they can't
imagine living outside the boxes that
traditional Christian theological
schemes have made for us to play in.
This is why even scholars again who you
know they can't think outside the box
their seminary training gives them will
call me Mike yours truly an
amalillennialist
like the recent reviewer of my demons
book in the master's seminary journal
and the guy calls me an amalillennialist
I'm not an amalennialist because I'm
using traditional terms now
amillennialists deny that there will be
a literal messianic kingdom on earth I
don't for amillennialists the kingdom is
the church out and then an ethereal
eternal state forever somewhere in some
form. They take the New Eden imagery as
figurative, not literal. Again, I don't.
So, what if we ditch the language and
tear apart the sandbox, knock it down?
My position is that when all this plays
out on Earth, that Christ will literally
return, literally defeat the beast. In
my view, that probably speaks more of a
chaos system than a man, but I do think
it includes a man. I think there will be
a real antichrist
and then Christ will literally reign
forever on earth in a new global Eden.
This is why I say a thousand-year
kingdom is too short. Christ's kingdom
on earth doesn't end after a thousand
years. We don't transition from the
church age here now to some sort of
undefinable nonliteral reign somewhere
in the clouds that the New Testament
writers mistakenly described as earthly.
It's too bad that I believe that
defining an idea like the messianic
kingdom by one word, the word thousand
in Revelation 20, is a flawed approach.
It's a system word and is no replacement
to a biblical theological idea. So,
sorry, I'm not playing the word game.
Theology should not derive from words
that theologians coin or systems
theologians create using words they find
in the Bible. It should derive from
biblical theological data and the data
pool here is a lot wider than Revelation
20. My actual view is far from
traditional amillennialism.
Maybe as far as you can get without
being an atheist. And I'm sorry if you
can't think outside your box. That's too
bad. I might shed a tear for you, but
probably not.
Now, there's an obvious question to all
this that Klein has to answer. Klein is
is deceased. I mean, he can't, you know,
respond to it obviously now. But all of
the systems have to, especially if
you're a traditional amillennialist.
Everybody has, you know, anyone who's
not in the traditional premillennial
camp has to account for this question.
Now, if the kingdom language from
Revelation 16-20 is basically about the
present church age headed toward
Armageddon and toward the return of
Jesus, then what is said about Satan in
Revelation 20 1-7 becomes an issue. Now,
listen to this. I'm going to read
Revelation 20, first seven verses. Then
I saw, and I'm going to I'm going to add
a few, you know, thoughts in here just
to make the point clear. Then I saw an
angel coming down from heaven holding in
his hand the key to the bottomless pit
and a great chain. And he seized the
dragon, that ancient serpent, who is the
devil and Satan, and bound him for a
thousand years. In other words, he bound
him for the length of the church age,
and threw him into the pit and shut it
and sealed it over him so that he might
not deceive the nations any longer until
the thousand years were ended. In other
words, until the length of the church
age had ended. After that, he must be
released for a little while. Okay,
that's part of the Armageddon event.
Then I saw thrones, and seated on them
were those to whom the authority to
judge was committed. Also, I saw the
souls of those who had been beheaded for
the testimony of Jesus and for the word
of God. And those who had not worshiped
the beast or its image and had not
received its mark on their foreheads, on
their hands, or or their hands. They
came to life and reigned with Christ for
a thousand years. In other words, the
dead in Christ during the length of the
church age get resurrected and they
reign with Christ.
Well, they can't reign with Christ in a
literal king because we're all
millennial. Maybe Oh, I get it. I get
it. those who who you know were were
martyed, they are alive in heaven. And
and so during the the length of the
church age, they're ruling in heaven.
That's actually what most millennials
believe, by the way. Verse five, the
rest of the dead did not come to life
until the thousand years were ended. In
other words, until the end of the of the
church age. Okay. Well, all right. This
is the first resurrection.
So, I guess that's when they get new
bodies and now they're ruling and
reigning something that isn't literal,
but it's not the church age because the
church age is over. Verse six, blessed
and holy is the one who shares in the
first resurrection
over such the second death has no power,
but they will be priests of God and of
Christ, and they, i.e. The ones raised
after the church age ends will reign
with him for a thousand years.
Oops.
You see this thousand years cannot refer
to the church age because the church age
has ended according to the preceding
verses. So here we have a reference to a
thousand years that can't be the church
age. So Klein's approach doesn't account
for this one reference in verse six,
does it? And when the thousand years are
ended, Satan will be released from his
prison. That's verse 7. Well, which
thousand years? The first thousand year,
the f the church age or the age that
comes after the church age?
So, what I'm getting at is is Klein's
approach is devastating to traditional
premillennial thinking, but it's not as
clear as he'd like to think. Verse six
muddies it, but the larger point is you
don't need it anyway.
The concept of a literal messianic reign
on earth is built from a data pool that
is much wider than Revelation 20 6. But
here's the bigger question. What about
Satan? What could it possibly mean to
have Satan being bound during the church
age if that's what the thousand years
means?
How is Satan bound during during the
present age? So that quote he might not
deceive the nations unquote. Looks to me
like there's plenty of deception going
on. Earlier in the book of Revelation,
John has Satan alive and well
persecuting believers. Revelation 2:10,
Revelation 21:13, and trying to kill off
the Messiah child. That's Revelation 12.
The rest of the New Testament has a
number of passages that presume Satan is
active in tempting, persecution, in
blinding the eyes of the unbelievers.
So, how are those ideas true in light of
what Klein and others are saying about
Revelation 20? And how could Revelation
20 be true in regard to Satan with all
this other stuff in the New Testament?
How how can this make sense? How do we
get a sensible portrayal of Satan out of
Revelation 20 if if we're supposed to be
reading this? And and again, I I'm I'm
sold by Klein's presentation here, but
he has to answer this question. He does
he doesn't do it in the article. And
frankly, the amillennialist answer to
this is weak. I think there's a better
answer to it. But if we're going to
regard the thousand years years here as
the church age, Satan is limited in some
respect so that he might not deceive the
nations, we have to figure out what that
means because whatever it means, it
can't run and fly in the face of all
this other stuff Satan is doing now in
the present age. So how do we do that?
In verse 7, it says when the thousand
years are ended, Satan will be released
from his prison. And then we get the
whole Armageddon scene rehearsed again.
So we have Satan being bound so that he
quote unquote can't deceive the nations
until he's released right before
Armageddon and then everything's
destroyed. The beast and you know Satan
and the false pro all this you know they
they're destroyed. There's a general
resurrection then we have the eternal
state so on and so forth. We got to deal
with this Satan talk. And how do
traditional ammillennialists, because
that's what Klein is or was, how do they
deal with this? Because a majority of
the church, believe it or not, this this
might come as a shock to a lot of our
listeners, but a majority of the church
is not premillennial, pre-tribulational,
rapture people, okay? Your reformed
traditions are not all your
Presbyterians, your Lutheran, you know,
all this kind of stuff. Um, the major,
you know, denominations, the people who
are, I'm not talking denomination in
name only. the people who are really
believers that are in these
denominations that take scripture
seriously, they're not thinking like Tim
Laay, they're not thinking left behind
and a rapture and all this stuff, that
that's actually a minority view, even
though it it's it's probably the view
that if it comes to like books about
prophecy, that's the view that is most
dominant in in terms of what is sold and
what is read and consumed. But that's
actually not the the majority view
historically in the church. So for those
who who you know look at the at the
kingdom as only the church the present
age and then after the Lord returns we
have some sort of we go to heaven or
some sort of eternal heavenly existence
which more often than not gets
abstracted as I commented in the last
episode that you know we can't have the
kingdom here on earth because then we
look like premillennialists or something
you know you know it it's kind of odd
you So this is why am millennials who
say the kingdom is now and that's the
kingdom period when the lord returns
then we get the eternal state which is
somewhere and the language in the new
testament used to describe it is idyllic
or allegorical
or purely metaphorical or something
again that this is this is how they do
it. They don't they don't expect the
literal release of the watchers in
revelation 9. They don't expect in many
cases a literal antichrist. They don't
they don't literalize any of this
because the thousand years talk they can
make a very good case and Klein does and
we shared that last episode that the
thousand years talk should not be
understood literally but again as the
present church age which is a lot longer
than a thousand years anyway and and
we're we're basing that on Klein's very
deaf handling of how John uses Ezekiel
38 and39 and Psalm 48 Isaiah 14 a little
bit of Zechariah
in Revelation 16 and Revelation 19,
Revelation 20. He uses the same material
in three different places showing that
John is recycling the same set of events
three times. He is not doing a linear
chronology. And if you if you follow
that, you you see it for what it is,
then you can't have an intervening
literal 1,000-year reign in Revelation
20:es 1-6. It doesn't work. So if if
you're going to take this this view, you
still have to answer the Satan problem.
What in the world? What could it
possibly mean that Satan is bound like
in the present age so that he might not
deceive the nations?
That just seems ridiculous because the
rest of the New Testament has a number
of passages that presume Satan is quite
active in tempting, persecuting
believers, blinding the eyes of
unbelievers. I'm going to read you just
some passages about Satan in the rest of
the New Testament here just to make the
point. Recall when I read these that
normative, you know, traditional
amillennialism,
okay, for them, the kingdom was
inaugurated during Christ's first coming
and and we believe that too. I I do, you
know, but I'm not an amalennialist. But
but they're, you know, they they they're
died in the wool there. I mean, this is
when the kingdom begins. The kingdom
begins when Christ shows up the first
time and it and it continues on into the
present age and that is the kingdom.
There is no other kingdom to look
forward to. So with that in mind, just
listen to some of these things that the
New Testament authors have Satan doing
during the present age, which includes
the age of the apostles, okay? When
Jesus was on earth leading up to the
cross. And I'll just listen to some of
these. Matthew 12:26,
"If Satan casts out Satan and he's
divided against himself, how then will
his kingdom stand?" Well, Satan has a
kingdom, too. How does he do how does he
manage that if like he's in jail? Like,
what what's going on there? Matthew
13:39.
This is the the seeds and the sewing.
The enemy who swed, you know, the bad
seeds is the devil. The harvest is the
end of the age and the reapers are
angels. So the devil is sowing bad or
false seed. Okay, how does that work?
Again, in light of this understanding of
Revelation 20, Luke 22:3,
Satan entered into Judas called a
Scariot. Looks like he's active there. I
think Judas was deceived, don't you?
Acts 5:3, Ananas and Safh. Why has Peter
asks Ananas, why has Satan filled your
heart to lie to the Holy Spirit? Plenty
active there. Acts 10:38 G when the the
apostles are talking about how Jesus
went about doing good and healing quote
all who were oppressed by the devil.
Looks like he's active there. Acts 26.
Okay. The gospel is designed to open the
eyes of the unbelievers so that they may
turn from darkness to light and from the
power of Satan to God. Well, that
suggests that the power of Satan is to
keep people from turning to the light.
Might that involve deception? I would
think so. Makes good sense. 1
Corinthians 5:5 where Paul in dealing
with the the unrepentant guy in in
Corinth says, "You are to deliver this
man to Satan for the destruction of the
flesh." Now, we know, you know, you you
know, if you've read Unseen Realm, that
this is a reference to being expelled
from the congregation. You know, it's
it's cosmic geography because the church
is now sacred space and you've removed
sin from sacred space and all that. But
apparently again, Satan has a realm
according to Paul. 1 Corinthians 7:5,
Paul again, he doesn't want the
Corinthians to, you know, to in in this
context withhold um, you know, sexual
activity from each other so that Satan
may not tempt you because of your lack
of self-control.
Satan can tempt according to Paul. 2
Corinthians 2:11, "So that we would not
be outwitted by Satan, for we are not
ignorant of his design." So Paul viewed
Satan as a threat, that he could be
outmaneuvered by Satan. H again, how
does this work? 2 Corinthians 11:14,
Satan disguises himself as an angel of
light. Look, that's deception, folks. So
how does this work with Revelation 20? I
mean, there there just a lot of these.
Ephesians 6, Paul wants believers to be
able to stand against the schemes of the
devil. Like, how do how would that
exclude deception? 1 Thessalonians 2:18,
Paul says that Satan hindered them in
their in their ministry. 2 Thessalonians
2:9, the coming of the lawless one is by
the activity of Satan. Well, the
Antichrist is empowered by Satan. How
does he do that if he's in jail? You
know, I mean, h how does this work?
Honestly, how does it work? 2 Timothy
2:26, he wants Timothy to escape from
the snare of the devil and other
believers than to not be captured by him
to do his will. James 4:7, James says,
"Resist the devil. He'll flee from you."
1 Peter 5'8, "Your adversary, the devil,
prowls around like a roaring lion,
seeking someone to devour." I want to
know how in the world Satan can be so
active
in the rest of the New Testament
in light of this idea that the kingdom
language in Revelation 20:es 1-6
is the present age and Satan is bound
quote so that he might not deceive the
nations unquote. How in the world does
this work? Now, I think the answer to
this is not going to be found in your
typical amalennial defense of this. I
think I think their defense is weak. And
I'm going to offer a different view that
again because I've told you I I agree
with Klein. I agree with the
recapitulation here. Even though I
believe in in a literal coming forever
kingdom literally on earth ruled by a
literal messiah, but I I'm, you know,
I'm not your I'm not a nomillennialist.
not your standard premillennialist
leader because I don't I don't base my
theology on the term
which is what I recommended we don't do
in the last episode and if you know
whether people can wrap their minds
around Mike's unwillingness to play in
the sandbox what you know whatever I
can't just is what it is I don't you
those of you who have been long term in
this audience you you you know you know
the drill by now it's no surprise
so I I accept again what you know
Klein's work here admitting that he's
missed some things. But when it comes to
the Satan problem, I think I have a
better answer than what you're going to
get in in standard responses to this
question. So, let me just illustrate
this. Here's how Beal and Campbell, this
is the the shorter version of Beal's
Revelation commentary,
describe Revelation 20:es 1-7.
They say the millennium is inaugurated
during the church age as God limits
Satan's deceptive powers. And again, I
ask, how would we know? You know, look,
looks to me like Christianity is the
minority religion in the world, at least
like real Christians, not maybe a name
only, but gosh,
I don't see how the limitations working
very well. But anyway, the millennium is
inaugurated during the church age as God
limits Satan's deceptive powers and as
deceased Christians are vindicated by
reigning in heaven. The millennium is
concluded by a resurgence of Satan's
deceptive assault against the church and
the final judgment.
So again, I re I listen to them and I I
read what they've written here and it's
like, so in other words, Satan doesn't
have a deceptive assault against the
church. Now
that just seems to make no sense. Ail
and Campbell would further say, quote,
"In light of the close verbal
connections, it is more natural to
suppose that the curtailing of Satan's
deception through his being thrown into
the abyss in Revelation 20:3 refers to
the same events as his being thrown out
of heaven and down to earth in
Revelation 12 8-9."
Again, this audience is very familiar
with Revelation 12, but I'm going to
read this passage anyway, just these
couple verses. Revelation 12 8 and 9.
This is of course the the heavenly
vision of the woman, you know, with the
12 stars and so on and so forth and the
birth of the Messiah child. So in
response to the birth of the Messiah,
war arose in heaven. This is Revelation
12:7. Michael and his angels fighting
back against the dragon. The dragon and
his angels fought back. But he was
defeated. The dragon is defeated. Was no
longer any place for them in heaven. And
the great dragon was thrown down, that
ancient serpent who is called the devil
and Satan, the deceiver of the whole
world. He was thrown down to the earth
and his angels were thrown down with
him. So Bill says, you know, there's a
lot of similarity between that and this
notion of Satan being bound in
Revelation 20. Well, you know, I'd agree
that there's a connection there, but I
would specifically say it's Luke 10,
which be and Campbell don't bring into
the discussion.
Satan's casting out of heaven happens
when the kingdom is inaugurated. The
Christ child is born. Again, that refers
to the absence of legal authority to
claim members of the kingdom of God as
his own. In other words, if you go back
to Luke 10, when Jesus sends out the 70,
the 72,
and he gives them power over demons and
so on and so forth, they come back and
they're thrilled and and Jesus, one of
Jesus' responses is, "I saw Satan fall
like lightning from heaven." Okay. What
the whole point there is and again you
can go back and look at it in unseen
realm is that Jesus is saying look
fellas the kingdom of God has been
launched and by f by virtue of me
sending out 70 or 72 depending on
whether you're using the septuagen or
the traditional Hebrew text to refer to
the to the nations at you know in
Genesis 10. That's what that's what the
reference point is by virtue of me
sending out 70 or 72 the kingdom
includes Gentiles. that includes the
nations. So the the messaging, the
theological messaging is this. If you
are a member of this kingdom, my
kingdom, the kingdom of of Jesus,
Satan has no claim against you. He
cannot bring any claim against you to
the throne of God. He cannot accuse you.
He cannot claim your soul. He is a
prosecutor without a case. He gets he is
kicked out. God doesn't want to hear it
anymore. He's done. His authority is nil
because you know Jesus knows he's going
to die and rise from the dead. And so
you're not going to end up in Satan's
domain in the underworld. He's lord of
the dead. Guess what? He ain't getting
you because the kingdom now has been
launched and it's going to be
irreversible. He's not going to be able
to stop it. So yeah, there's a
connection between that and what happens
in Revelation 12 and Satan's limitation
in in that respect. So, I'll agree that
there's some connection there, but but I
think we need to look Luke chapter 10 in
here to understand it better as the
absence of legal authority to claim
members of the kingdom of God. It makes
little sense to see this casting down as
a prohibition of Satan's deception,
whatever that means. We haven't answered
the question yet because the text of
Revelation 12:9 again connected to the
Messiah's birth actually tells us if we
read Revelation 12:9 clo closely it
actually says it actually describes
Satan as the deceiver of the nations. It
doesn't tell us his deception is
limited. It's not what the text says. It
gives him that credit as opposed to
removing it. Okay. So I I don't I don't
think this is as tight as they think it
is. Now, that's the standard amillennial
view though. I mean, bean is is going to
be well representative of it. So,
somehow or another, he has Satan not
being able to mount a deceptive assault
against the church during the present
age. And I just don't buy it. It doesn't
make any sense. It defies what else is
in the New Testament. So, it must mean
something else. And that again, I'm
going to I think I'm going to propose a
better view here. So I think in the
standard AML view just doesn't work. It
makes zero sense. I would suggest this.
We are better off defining the deception
spoken of in Revelation 20 in light of
what Satan does when allowed later. See,
we're going to let the text interpret
the text. So here's my proposal. the
Greek lema here in question uh about
deceiving here in Revelation 20. Let me
go back specifically to Revelation 20
here in my Bible. The verse three he's
put into the pit so that he might not
deceive the nations. The lema the Greek
lema translated deceive here is plao.
Okay. Bedag, which is the standard, you
know, Greek lexicon for New Testament
literature, has the lema's primary
meaning as leading astray in a specific
way. The specifics, in my judgment, are
best defined in terms of what Satan does
when he's permitted to do what he does.
And the text is clear on this point. You
know what he does? He leads the nations
against Zion.
So if that's what he does when he's
permitted, then that is what he was
prevented from doing. Get it? We let one
passage interpret the other. It's not
that Satan can't mount any effective
assault against the church. He does that
every blasted day. What he doesn't do is
lead the nations against Zion. But what
does that mean? It means Satan when he
is permitted by God to do so, he moves
the status quo spiritual conflict to a
new level. He initiates, he launches a
direct assault on God's throne, God's
plan, God's city, and God's people.
Specifically, it's related to
Armageddon. Specifically, it's related
to what you know, marshalling all the
forces of human and cosmic evil against
Mount Zion. That's what what what he
does. He marshals the nations. He leads
the nations,
all the people under the fallen sons of
God and those gods in a final rebellion
in an attempt
to overthrow
the esqueological plan of God and the
judgment of the gods of the nations and
of course his own final destruction.
That's what he's not allowed to do. This
is what he's not permitted to do until
the time of the end. the nations, their
gods and those loyal to them, the whole
supernatural chaos system is thereby
deceived by Satan at the end into trying
to do the impossible,
trying to stop or overturn the judgment
of Psalm 82.
It's a repetition of Isaiah 14.
Satan gets all of the forces marshaled
against Zion because he still thinks and
wants desperately to be the most high.
He thinks he can get there.
Now, here's a logical question. Why
would God choose to prevent Satan from
doing this in the first place? Why
restrict him during the present age from
doing this? If you've read my material,
if you've heard me in interviews, you
know the answer to this already. Here's
the logical answer to that logical
question.
God does it because he wants to
forestall the judgment of the nations in
favor of redeeming people from all those
nations. God forestalls Armageddon
through his decision to give the great
commission time.
He prevents Satan from this desperate
act because the desperate act has to
have a response. And the response, of
course, is going to be the return of the
Lord and the destruction of all these
idiots. Okay? But God doesn't want that
to happen yet. Why? Because he wants to
give the great commission time. After
all, here we are again with the
Deuteronomy 32 worldview again. the
return of Christ and the judgment of the
nations and the gods are linked to the
fullness of the Gentiles.
Now, I would suggest that this approach
is far more coherent than standard
amalennialism.
And if we recall that the thousand-year
language is mentioned after Armageddon
once, you know, at least one time where
it can't refer to the church, that's
Revelation 20:6. And if we take the
perspective that what follows Armageddon
is a literal messianic rule under Jesus
that's forever. We can agree that
Revelation 16, Yep, there's
recapitulation there. 16 through 20. We
got it. Got it. Professor Klein got it.
But we still have Christ ruling on earth
forever. Not just a thousand years. And
we are ruling with him forever. Not just
a thousand years. In real time. The
nations will be reclaimed in real time.
Christ will return in real time. There
will be a consummated kingdom, a new
Eden globally in real time. And God is
limiting Satan in a very specific way.
He will not permit him to instigate
Armageddon
until God is ready. And you know what is
God waiting for? He's waiting for the
great commission.
You know, I I I hate to keep saying
stuff like this because I don't want to
make biblical theology sound simplistic
because it isn't, but this just makes
sense.
You know, I I don't know how else to say
it. You know, again, the Deuteronomy 32
worldview again just helps us reframe
the discussion. The divine council
worldview helps us reframe the
discussion. It makes sense and honestly
because it's supposed to make sense. But
if you lack these elements in your
theological framework, you know, the to
help orient you with with respect to the
data points, you you you know, you're
going to get hits. You're going to be
right a lot, but you're going to you're
going to get some real misses that just
mess it up, make it confusing, don't
make sense. It it is what it is. So, I
don't know that there's a label or a
name for the esquetology I've described
here just now and in in Revelation 19
that I hold to. I don't know there's a
name for it or a label for it. And I
frankly don't care. I'm not going to
bother inventing one either. It's the
one that can make sense of the data.
That's all I care about. So, no. If I
were to address the late professor
Klein, as much as I love your Armageddon
work, you're basically the only
evangelical who sees the Mount Assembly
connection for what it is. But I'm
sorry, you haven't overturn the literal
rule and reign of Christ. You've just
torn down a systems, a system, and
systems are not synonymous with biblical
theology.
>> I'm going to suggest that we call this
new esqueological system that Dr. Mike
presented redemptive edenic millennial
hiserism.
But seriously, this was a rare instance
where Mike let his esqueological guard
down and told us what he really thinks
about the end time scenario. And no
surprise here, it's actually really
logical, but also very spiritual when
you look at it through this lens. All
throughout his career, he sort of
skirted around the topic of esquetology.
But here, as he was nearing the end of
his life, he finally laid it all out on
display for us to see his particular
viewpoint and why he repeatedly said
that he didn't like the escatological
systems because they have fatal flaws
when held in context with the rest of
scripture. And this actually ties in
perfectly with earlier discussions we've
had about the cyclical patterning of
God's behavior and how when we look at
the larger image of history throughout
the Bible, he's inching us closer to the
reinstatement of Eden where we'll all
join him in his glory and majesty. When
you view the scriptures through this
lens, it becomes a giant circle that
ends where it began with smaller
fractalized patterns of disobedience and
judgment embedded within it. But at the
end of the day, it doesn't really matter
what your esqueological views are, as
long as you're working for the Lord here
on earth. Because after all, we are
ambassadors for his kingdom, and we're
called to do his will here on earth as
it is in heaven. But at any rate, I pray
that this video has been a blessing to
you. And if you've made it this far,
please like this video, subscribe to
Dance Like David, and leave a comment
that says working for the kingdom. as
any interaction with this video allows
our content to reach and help more
people. And may God shine his face upon
you and give you peace.
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