Blog
Articles on preterism and fulfilled biblical prophecy
A Response to Douglas Wilson on Competing Eschatologies and the Iran Conflict
Serouj Mamoulian · 9 min read
Wilson presents his position as a measured alternative to dispensationalism and hard supersessionism amid competing eschatologies shaping the Iran conflict, yet the framework he proposes still preserves the same structural contradictions that have troubled evangelical theology for more than a century.
dispensationalismIsraeleschatologysupersessionismcovenant theologyDouglas WilsonDaniel 2: The Simplest Rebuttal of the Futurist View
Serouj Mamoulian · 3 min read
Acts 17 and the Resurrection: How The Futurist Polemic Fails
Serouj Mamoulian · 4 min read
Marriage, Resurrection, and the End of the Law: Re-examining Matthew 22:30 in Its Covenant Context
Serouj Mamoulian · 6 min read
Confidence, Not Shame: The Fulfillment of 1 John 2:28–29
Serouj Mamoulian · 5 min read
Romans 11: A Covenantal Reading
Serouj Mamoulian · 6 min read
ChurchIsraelOlive treeRomans 11Romans 9Daniel’s Seventy Weeks and the Collapse of the Dispensationalist Timeline
Serouj Mamoulian · 10 min read
70 weeksDaniel 9dispensationalismAugustine and the Millennium: His Rejection of Chiliasm and Interpretation of Revelation 20
Serouj Mamoulian · 9 min read
Examining the External Evidence for the Date of Revelation
Serouj Mamoulian · 4 min read
Was Preterism the Hymenaean Heresy?
Serouj Mamoulian · 7 min read
One of the strongest objections raised against the preterist view is the charge that it revives what Paul condemned as the “Hymenaean heresy.” In 2 Timothy 2, Paul warns about men who claimed that the resurrection was already past and who, in doing so, were overthrowing the faith of some. Because consistent preterism teaches that the resurrection was fulfilled in the first-century passing of the Old Covenant order, many assume this is precisely what Paul was condemning.
Hymenaeus