Millennium.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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Postmillennialism, also referred to as progressive millennialism, interprets the Bible less literally than premillennialism does.
Postmillennialists regard the millennium as a1,000-year reign of Christian ideals that will end with the return of Christ.
In this view, the millennium will not start suddenly through an apocalypse, but graduallythrough the efforts of human beings.
Postmillennialists believe that through social reform and by upholding Christian ideals, the kingdom of God will be built on earthand Christ will return.
Christ will then defeat Satan in a final battle, as referred to in the Book of Revelation.
Some postmillennialists believe the millennium has alreadystarted.
Amillennialism, the predominant view for much of Christian history, is the belief that biblical references to the millennium are strictly figurative and that there will be noearthly millennium.
Some amillennialists believe that the millennial rule of Christ occurs in the hearts of believers.
Others believe that the description of the millennium inRevelation refers to Christ’s reign in the kingdom of Heaven.
C The Year 1000
In studying the various forms of millennialism, historians have debated whether people recognized the turn of the millennium around the year 1000.
Some scholarsbelieve that an apocalyptic fever had gripped Europe by the year 999.
According to these scholars, many people converted to Christianity, stopped planting their crops,confessed their sins, and forgave each other their debts.
Others abandoned their families to make pilgrimages to Jerusalem in hope of witnessing the Second Coming ofChrist, or they knelt in church in terror as they anticipated an apocalypse.
However, most historians argue that the accounts of millennial hysteria are the romantic concoctions of overly imaginative writers.
These historians note that thedoctrines of the Catholic Church at the end of the 1st millennium were opposed to any teachings about imminent apocalypse.
Furthermore, most people living in theyears 999 and 1000 were not even aware that it was the end of the 1st millennium.
However, there is considerable historical evidence that after the year 1000,millennialism became more widespread.
It gained followers during the Crusades (wars between Western European Christians and Muslims that began in 1096) andthroughout the latter part of the Middle Ages.
D Contemporary Religious and Mystical Beliefs
Today many mainline religious organizations reject the concept of an apocalypse or a Christian millennium.
However, millennialist beliefs are still integral to theworldviews of some denominations of Protestantism.
For example, a number of Evangelical denominations hold premillennialist beliefs, including the Southern BaptistConvention, the Assemblies of God, and the Church of the Nazarene ( see Evangelicalism).
Many members of these and other Evangelical denominations claim that recent wars, plagues, famines, and earthquakes are signs that an apocalypse is imminent and that Christ will return.
According to these groups, the world willexperience a seven-year period of misery and massive destruction, but Christians will be removed from the Earth unharmed.
Adventism is another Protestant branch that holds millennialist views ( see Adventists).
Adventist groups grew out of the religious Millerite movement, led by American Baptist preacher William Miller, who predicted that the world would end by 1843 or 1844.
After his predictions proved false, some disenchanted Millerites formed intovarious Adventist groups, such as the Seventh-day Adventists.
Adventists maintain that various apocalyptic predictions have been fulfilled and that Christ will return inthe near future.
The Seventh-day Adventists assert that an invisible, spiritual apocalypse occurred in 1844 with the “cleansing of heaven,” and they believe that it willeventually be followed by world destruction in which only the faithful will be saved.
Jehovah's Witnesses, another group formed from the Millerite movement, claim the spiritual, invisible Second Coming of Christ occurred in 1874 and that Christ’sinvisible reign started in 1914.
The group believes an apocalypse will come in the near future.
The religious group’s founder, Charles Taze Russell, declared that thefulfillment of Christ’s millennial kingdom would be completed only after the foreordained destruction of nations, governments, churches, and world leaders, all of whichRussell considered representations of Satan’s rule.
The Jehovah’s Witnesses rejected formal religious and governmental organizations, and they developed the practiceof door-to-door evangelism in an attempt to convert nonbelievers.
Millennial beliefs are also an important part of the theology of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, better known as Mormonism.
The religion was organizedby Joseph Smith in 1830.
Smith claimed an angel told him that Christ’s Second Coming was imminent, and Smith believed he had been chosen to prepare humanity forthe millennium.
According to Smith’s visions, the millennial kingdom will be established in the United States.
Today, the church does not stress millennialism as much asit did in the past.
However, many Mormons interpret some world events as the fulfillment of prophecies that foretell an apocalyptic period.
Many other contemporary religious groups have millennialist views.
These include the Unification Church, Hare Krishna, Baha’i, Rastafarianism, and other religiousmovements.
Millennialist prophecy, once central to the early Jewish faith, continues today among members of the Chabad Lubavitch movement, an Orthodox Hasidicsect of Judaism.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s many followers of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson of Brooklyn, New York, believed that he was the Messiah whowould bring about the redemption of the world.
Schneerson never claimed to be the Messiah, but he interpreted current events as apocalyptic signs that foretold theMessiah’s appearance in the near future.
Millennialist beliefs also exist at a grassroots level as a form of popular or folk belief, apart from the sanction of formal religious institutions.
For instance, there is popularinterest in the apocalyptic predictions of Nostradamus, a 16th-century French physician and astrologer, and Edgar Cayce, an American who lived in the early 20thcentury and claimed to have psychic and healing abilities.
Some people also believe that alleged apparitions of the Virgin Mary warn of imminent worldly destruction.
E Recent Millennialist Movements
Apocalyptic and millennialist movements not affiliated with established religious institutions are often depicted in stereotypical ways as doomsday cults, involving violentactivities, mass suicides, and “brainwashed fanatics” with bizarre beliefs.
Of the hundreds of contemporary millennialist groups that exist, relatively few movements havebeen motivated to acts of violence or suicide.
But there have been some exceptions in recent years, including apocalyptic groups such as the Branch Davidians, AumShinrikyo, Heaven’s Gate, and the Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments.
The Branch Davidian sect, a splinter group founded in 1934 from mainstream Seventh-day Adventists, believed that biblical prophecies about the apocalypse were beingfulfilled in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
In 1993 federal agents attempted a raid on the group’s compound in Waco, Texas, in search of illegal weapons.
TheDavidians interpreted the investigation as a sign of the apocalypse, and a shootout erupted in which four agents and a number of Davidians died.
After a 51-daystandoff, agents used gas to force occupants out of the compound, and a fire broke out that killed dozens of Davidians.
The Japanese Aum Shinrikyo (Supreme Truth) sect integrates certain Buddhist, Daoist (Taoist), and Christian doctrines with Tantric (mystic) yoga.
The sect believedthat an apocalypse would occur in 1999.
During the mid-1990s the group had tens of thousands of members in Japan, Russia, Germany, the United States, and severalother countries.
However, many members left the group in 1995.
That year the group’s leaders were charged with killing 12 people after releasing nerve gas in asubway station in Tokyo, Japan, in an apparent attempt to fulfill apocalyptic prophecies.
In 1997, 39 members of the religious group Heaven’s Gate committed suicide near San Diego, California.
Followers believed that a gigantic spacecraft trailed the Hale-Bopp comet in March 1997 and offered an opportunity for them to be transported to a higher realm before the Earth would be annihilated..
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