Kudos for having the courage to bring this view to popular attention. I am curious to see which milennial view this is headed for. A lot of it seems to come from Ken Gentry's book "Before Jerusalem Fell." Gentry is a postmilennialist, though partial- preterism (which this seems to be) is not exclusively a postmil POV.
The first I had heard of this particular listing of the Roman emperors as pertaining to the beast's horns was in Keith Matheson's book on Postmilennialism, which led me to Gentry's book. (Note- I am not a postmilennialist; I read the book to try to better understand the view).
Kudos for having the courage to bring this view to popular attention. I am curious to see which milennial view this is headed for. A lot of it seems to come from Ken Gentry's book "Before Jerusalem Fell." Gentry is a postmilennialist, though partial- preterism (which this seems to be) is not exclusively a postmil POV.
The first I had heard of this particular listing of the Roman emperors as pertaining to the beast's horns was in Keith Matheson's book on Postmilennialism, which led me to Gentry's book. (Note- I am not a postmilennialist; I read the book to try to better understand the view).