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Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 109 of 318
Chapter 12: The Rise of the Antichrist

We tend to think of the Apostolic era as a golden age of healthy, explosive Church growth, and while this is substantially correct, we must also seek to do justice to the rampant outbreak of heresy and apostasy that accompanied it. One of Jesus's given indications for the Last Days was a dramatic rise in falling away and false teachers culminating in the great Apostasy.
Feb 03, 2026 02:41AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion

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Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 163 of 318
Chapter 19: A Brief Summary of the Revelation

Revelation is not impossible to understand, but it is extraordinarily deep. One could easily fill multiple volumes exploring the book fully. Thus, this survey will be just that, a thousand foot flyover. The next few chapters will zoom in to cover important symbols within the book, but first, getting the lay of the whole land is necessary.
Feb 10, 2026 10:52AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 157 of 318
Chapter 17: Interpreting Revelation and Chapter 18: The Time Is at Hand

There are two problems that confront us when we seek to interpret the Book of Revelation: (1) What checks and controls should we use to ensure that we do not force God's Holy Word into a mold of our own inventions and (too often) our runaway imaginations? (2) What do we do then with what we have learned? These chapters seek to tackle the first.
Feb 08, 2026 04:02AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 140 of 318
Chapter 16: The Consummation of the Kingdom

The Last Day and the Last Judgment are synonyms. Biblically, they happen at the same time. This should be obvious, but there are only two resurrections: (1) Jesus as the firstfruits, and (2) the (simultaneous) Resurrection of both the righteous and the wicked on the Last Day (Dan 12:2; Jn 5:26-29; Acts 24:15; Rev 20:11-15).
Feb 07, 2026 03:11AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 133 of 318
Chapter 15: The Day of the Lord

Okay, so "the Last Days" are behind us, "The Great Tribulation" is behind us, "the Antichrist" is behind us, "Christ's coming on the clouds" is behind us... All were fulfilled in AD 70. Is there anything actually left to be fulfilled? And if so, how can we meaningfully distinguish it from all the stuff that has already happened?
Feb 06, 2026 02:40AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 125 of 318
Chapter 14: The Restoration of Israel

The last few chapters have been pretty bleak for the nation of Israel. They have by-and-large been excommunicated, cut off from the vine, and placed under cataclysmic judgment. But this presents us with a serious problem. What about God's promise to Abraham that the patriarch's seed would be established "throughout their generations, for an everlasting covenant" (Gen 17:7)?
Feb 05, 2026 02:30AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 117 of 318
Chapter 13: The Last Days

"The Last Days," "The Latter Times," and "The Last Hour," is the period between Jesus's Life and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The Early Church was living at the end of the old age (the aready "obsolete" Old Covenant) and the beginning of the New (Heb 8:13).
Feb 04, 2026 02:31AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 101 of 318
Chapter 11: Coming on the Clouds

For most, what I've said so far sounds strange but fairly plausible on the surface (at least not heretical, I hope). Unfortunately, Matthew 24:29-31 just clearly doesn't work within the interpretation being offered here. It's really quite the insurmountable hurdle because isn't it obvious to anyone with eyes to see that none of what Jesus predicts in this passage has happened yet?
Feb 02, 2026 10:25AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 91 of 318
Chapter 10: The Great Tribulation

Scripture interprets Scripture. We must not seek for authoritative interpretations of Scripture's meaning anywhere outside the Bible itself. This to say, the Bible was not dropped from the sky in the twenty-first century. Now, with this in mind, let's tackle "The Great Tribulation." It's actually not that difficult to understand.
Feb 01, 2026 08:38AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 81 of 318
Chapter 9: The Rejection of Israel

The constantly used imagery of the people of God as a "vineyard" in both the OT and the NT has an obvious direct connection with the idea of the Garden. Israel was a garden planted, watered, and tended to by Yahweh (Ps 80; Is 5). This is an important concept when reading one of Jesus's most striking parables: the story of the Wicked Vinegrowers (Matt 21:33-39).
Jan 31, 2026 05:37AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


Andrew Meredith
Andrew Meredith is on page 73 of 318
Chapter 8: The Coming of the Kingdom

The coming Kingdom of the Messiah was a major theme of the Psalms and the prophets. With the coming of Christ, that kingdom has arrived and is expanding across the world, just as Daniel prophesied when he foretold the Rock that would strike the feet of Rome and then grow into a world-consuming Mountain (Dan 2:35, 44).
Jan 30, 2026 08:34AM
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion


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Andrew Meredith Heresy, apostasy, or both, almost all of the letters to the early churches were written to combat these rising issues. Acts tells us of Paul's final message to the elders of the church in Ephesus warning them to guard the flock with all diligence because "from among your own selves men will arise speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciples after them" (Acts 20:30). By the time Revelation was written, just before 70 AD, some churches had become almost completely ruined by heretical teachings (Rev 2-3).

Some heretics taught that the final Resurrection had already taken place (2 Tim 2:18), some said resurrection itself was impossible (1 Cor 15:12), some taught asceticism and angel worship (Col 2:8, 18-23), others advocated for all kinds of immorality based on having "liberty" in Christ (2 Pet 2:1-3, 10-22), and many more could be listed. Indeed, the extent of false teaching and apostasy was increasing as the era progressed (1 Tim 1:19-20; 6:20-21; 2 Tim 2:16-18; 3:1-9, 13; 4:10, 14-16). Hebrews, one of the last NT books, was written to an entire Christian community who were contemplating abandoning the faith.

And the Apostle John had a very specific term for this apostasy and heresy. He called it "antichrist." Is there a word that has been more misunderstood and abused in eschatology then "antichrist"? If there is, it's hard to think of it. Some facts about "antichrist":

(1) The word "antichrist" does not occur in the book of Revelation. Not once. The term is completely unrelated to "The Beast" and "666" (and "the man of lawlessness" for that matter).

(2) "Antichrist" only appears in three passages: 1 John 2:18-26; 1 John 4:1-6; 2 John 7-11)

(3) "Antichrist" is not a single person. But seems to be both a group of people and the ideology that drives them.

(4) "Antichrist" was already working in the first century, even before John wrote His letters (1 John 2:18; 4:3; 2 John 7).

(5) John seems to have a specific system of unbelief in mind. One that taught the Jesus wasn't the Christ (1 Jn 2:22), that He didn't come in the flesh (4:3), and that the Apostles were not to be listened to (4:6).

(6) The "antichrists" were once members of the Church (2:19), but had left thr Apostolic fold and were trying to deceive others into joining them (2:26; 4:1).

(7) The presence of "antichrist" is one of the signs Jesus gave of the Last Days of the Old Covenant before the Great Tribulation in Matthew 24, and the Apostle John recognizes it as such. "Children, it is the Last Hour, and just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have arisen; from this we know that it is the Last Hour" (1 John 2:18).

Near the beginning of the Apostolic Age, Paul could comfort the church of Thessalonica who were worried that the Day of Judment had already come. He did so by reminding them that the Apostasy must come first (2 Thess 2:3). By the time John (and Jude 17-19) was writing, the predicted Apostasy had arrived. It was truly the Last Hour.


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