What does the Bible actually say about the end times that lead to the return of Jesus Christ? The Participant Guide for the Four Views of the End Times, part of a DVD-based small group study that studies the four major end time views, will help you understand the different viewpoints regarding end times prophecy.Four Views of the End Times is asmall group study that takes a look at four different Revelation time lines and tackles DispensationalPremillennialism, Postmillennialism, Historic Premillennialism, and Amillennialism, the four major end times viewpoints. For each view, Four Views of the End Times includes adefinition, supporting Scriptures, a time line of the view's popularity, and a sampling of Christian leaders supportingthat view. Common questions and answers are discussed as part of each session, so anyone can be part of the study group.This is the Participant Guide only, not the entire kit.The Four Views of the End Times DVD-Based Small Group Kit • One DVD with six 15-to-20 minute video sessions• One Participation Guide• One Leader's Guide• One Four Views of the End Times pamphlet (side-by-side comparison,see page 52 for details)• One CD-ROM with tips and optional PowerPoint® presentation toexpand the scope of the teachingAbout speaker and author, Dr. Timothy Paul Dr. Jones serves as Professor of Leadership and Church Ministry at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.View this brief overview on Four Views of the End Times
Timothy Paul Jones is an American evangelical scholar known for his work in apologetics and family ministry. He serves as the C. Edwin Gheens Professor of Christian Family Ministry at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Jones has authored influential texts defending the historical reliability of the New Testament and has promoted a model of “family-equipping ministry,” which balances family discipleship with age-specific church programs. His apologetics have evolved from evidential to presuppositional approaches, emphasizing the role of the church’s moral witness and care for the marginalized. He has been recognized for books such as Misquoting Truth, How We Got the Bible, and In Church as It Is in Heaven, the latter promoting multiethnic church communities. Jones is a member of the Evangelical Theological Society and has been praised as a leading voice in engaging both secular critics and intra-faith debates. He and his wife Rayann have four adopted children.