I should have done this years ago. Sorry! But better late than never. I’ve added a Google-powered search feature to the Historicism.com website. Just go to Historicism.com and click the “search” option from the menu bar. One benefit of this tool is that from the search page visitors can find results from all of the…
Month: July 2017
New address for the Guinness Archives!
Since I began collecting resources about Henry Grattan Guinness on Historicism.com, they could be found on a page called, “The Guinness Archives” at www.historicism.com/Guinness. But as of this week, I have obtained a new address for the archives: www.hgguinness.com! The address should begin pointing to the correct page on my site by the end of…
Announcing a new edition of The Approaching End of the Age
In 1878, H. Grattan Guinness published his first major work on Bible prophecy, The Approaching End of the Age. In it he defended a premillennial historicist interpretation of Daniel and Revelation, correlating prophetic chronology with discoveries from astronomy, especially regarding harmonizations in the soli-lunar cycles. A digital version of his book has been available for…
The Immanuel Year
In his 1878 book, The Approaching End of the Age, Henry Grattan Guinness included a chart called, “The Immanuel Year”. He described it as, “The great year whose day is the soli-lunar cycle of 33 years, 7 months, Immanuel’s earthly life time, whose months are millenaries, in the course of seven of which answering to…
Interpreting Revelation Literally
A questioner recently asked how historicists respond to people who claim we aren’t interpreting the book of Revelation (or the Bible) literally. I think this question comes up mainly from those who have been influenced by a dispensational understanding of Bible prophecy (e.g. John MacArthur, Jack VanImpe, John Hagee, Tim LaHaye, John Walvoord, John Darby,…
Updates to Historicism.com
I’ve been working on modernizing the code throughout Historicism.com and have nearly finished. All that remain to be updated are a few very old pages on the site. You will notice the wider, fluid layout of the main column, and the constant narrow column on the right for sitewide information. The site is mostly now…