Amillenialism Latin meaning "in" (rather than the commoner "none"), and Millennialism, referring to the binding of "the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan" for 1,000 years as described in Revelation chapter 20 verse 2 (also nunc-millennialism or positively realized millennialism) in Christian eschatology is an interpretation of chapter 20 of the Book of Revelation which sees the "1000-year reign" of Christ as having already begun.
This obviously holds that the kingdom is not a physical reign.
Amillennialism teaches that the Kingdom of God will not be physically established on earth throughout the "millennium", but rather
Amillennialists cite scripture references to the kingdom not being a physical realm: Matthew 12:28, where Jesus cites his driving out of demons as evidence that the kingdom of God had come upon them; Luke 17:20-21, where Jesus warns that the coming of the kingdom of God can not be observed, and that it is among them; and Romans 14:17, where Paul speaks of the kingdom of God being in terms of the Christians' actions.
In particular, they regard the thousand years references as a figurative expression of Christ's reign being perfectly completed, as the "thousand hills" referred to in Psalm 50:10, the hills on which God owns the cattle, are all hills, and the "thousand generations" in 1 Chronicles 16:15, the generations for which God will be faithful, refer to all generations.
Amillennialism is most often associated with Idealism as both teach a very symbolic and spiritualised understanding of many of the prophecies of the Bible and especially the Book of Revelation.
Amillennialism also teaches that the binding of Satan in Revelation has already occurred; he has been prevented from "deceiving the nations" by preventing the spread of the gospel. This is the only binding he will suffer in history: the forces of Satan will not be gradually pushed back by the Kingdom of God as history progresses but will remain just as active as always up until the second coming of Christ, and therefore good and evil will remain mixed in strength throughout history. This has lead some Postmillennialists to accuse Amillennialists (and Premillennialists) of being "pessimillennialists". Amillennialists have countered that the parable of the wheat and tares and the parable of drawing in the net show that the good and evil will be sorted out only at the end of the world
Amillennialism stands in contrast to postmillennialism and premillennialism in that some from the former see the "millennium" as literal and others do not, but in the latter almost all see the "millennium" as literal.
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