The two principal schools of preterist thought are commonly called
partial preterism and
full preterism. Preterists themselves disagree significantly about the exact meaning of the terms used to denote these divisions of preterist thought. Some partial preterists prefer to call their position
orthodox preterism, thus contrasting their agreement with the creeds of the
Ecumenical Councils with what they perceive to be the full preterists' rejection of the same. This, in effect, makes full preterism unorthodox in the eyes of partial preterists and gives rise to the claim by some that full preterism is heretical. Partial preterism is also sometimes called
orthodox preterism,
classical preterism or
moderate preterism. On the other hand, some full preterists prefer to call their position "consistent preterism", reflecting their extension of preterism to
all biblical prophecy and thus claiming an inconsistency in the partial preterist
hermeneutic. Sub-variants of preterism include a form of partial preterism which places fulfillment of some eschatological passages in the first three centuries of the current era, culminating in the
fall of Rome. In addition, certain statements from classical
theological liberalism are easily mistaken for preterism, as they hold that the biblical record accurately reflects Jesus' and the
Apostles' belief that all prophecy would be fulfilled within their generation. Theological liberalism generally regards these apocalyptic expectations as being errant or mistaken, however, so this view cannot accurately be considered a form of preterism.
Partial preterism Partial preterism (often referred to as
orthodox preterism or
classical preterism) may hold that most eschatological prophecies, such as the destruction of Jerusalem, the
Antichrist, the
Great Tribulation, and the advent of
the Day of the Lord as a "judgment-coming" of Christ, were fulfilled either in
AD 70 or during the persecution of Christians under the Emperor
Nero. Some partial preterists may believe that the
Antichrist, the
Great Tribulation, and the advent of
the Day of the Lord as a "judgment-coming" of Christ, were not historically fulfilled. on a silver
denarius: [
The beast]
also forced all people, great and small, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on their right hands or on their foreheads, so that they could not buy or sell unless they had the mark, which is the name of the beast or the number of its name. Some partial preterists identify "
Babylon the Great" (Revelation 17–18) with the pagan
Roman Empire, though some, such as
N.T. Wright,
Scott Hahn,
Jimmy Akin,
David Chilton, and
Kenneth Gentry identify it with the city of
Jerusalem. Most interpretations identify
Nero as the Beast, while
his mark is often interpreted as the stamped image of the emperor's head on every coin of the Roman Empire: the stamp on the hand or in the mind of all, without which no one could buy or sell. Another partial preterist view regards first and second century events as recurrent patterns with Nero and Bar Kochba presented as archetypes. There is evidence that the epithet of
Bar Kochba is a play on the Hebrew
Shema with the value equating to the gematria value of 666. The pun on his patronymic equates to the variant reading 616. However, others believe the Book of Revelation was written after Nero's suicide in AD 68, and identify the
Beast with another emperor. The
Catholic Encyclopedia states that Revelation was "written during the latter part of the reign of the Roman Emperor
Domitian, probably in AD 95 or 96". Many Protestant scholars agree. The
Second Coming,
resurrection of the dead, and
Final Judgment however, have not yet occurred in the partial preterist system.
Full preterism Full preterism differs from partial preterism in that full preterists believe that the destruction of Jerusalem fulfilled
all eschatological or "end times" events, including the
resurrection of the dead and Jesus's
Second Coming, or
Parousia, and the
Final Judgment. Other names of full preterism include: •
preterism (because the term itself means "past") •
consistent preterism •
true preterism •
hyper-preterism (a pejorative term used by opponents of preterists) •
pantelism. (The term "pantelism" comes from two Greek roots: παν (
pan), "everything", and τελ- (
tel-), referring to completion). •
Covenant Eschatology •
Fulfilled Eschatology Full preterists argue that a literal reading of Matthew 16:28 (where Jesus tells the disciples that some of them will not taste death until they see him coming in his kingdom) places the second coming in the first century. This precludes a physical second coming of Christ. Instead, the second coming is symbolic of a "judgment" against Jerusalem, said to have taken place with the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem in AD 70. For this reason, those who oppose the notion also call full preterism "the AD 70 doctrine", since the whole eschatology is hinged on this one event.
R. C. Sproul said of full preterist
Max R. King, "for this schema to work, the traditional idea of resurrection must be replaced with a metaphorical idea of resurrection". Detractors of full preterism often refer to the school as
hyper-preterism. In recent years full preterism has divided into sub-groups. An important offshoot that differs markedly from the theology of Max King and Don K. Preston is the Individual Body View (IBV) of full preterism. The term refers to a belief in a rapture of individuals that occurred in AD 66 (not AD 70), an event that first involved an experiential change into spiritual bodies. This is counter to the Max King variant of full preterism, the Corporate Body View (CBV), which Edward E. Stevens, debating against that view, defines as "a spiritual-only change of status for a collective body, and that it had absolutely nothing to do with the resurrection of individual disembodied souls out of Hades to receive their new immortal bodies and go to heaven where their fellowship with God was eternally restored." A more recent reaction within full preterism is in adopting the term "Bible Preterism" to reassert basic Gospel doctrines such as salvation and forgiveness being available from the time of Calvary, a tenet that Don K. Preston denies, asserting these were only available in AD 70.
Related positions • Pauline Eschatology • Israel Onlyism ==Influences within Christian thought==