Abstract

This short and limited article draws a sketch of the concept of the Second Arrival of the Promised Messiah, Divine Kingdom, Christian Millennialism and alike that embodies Christian theology, ethics and Christian Philosophy. Like other contemporary religions the concept of apocalypse, eschatology and a final salvation at the hand of Jesus Christ (The Promised Messiah) after his Second Arrival is dealt as a Theo-Philosophical and ethical thought in Christianity. Preliminary Christianity is seemed to be an equal sharer of Judaism in deriving the concept of catastrophic moments and of the establishment of the kingdom of the heir of Davidic family right from the Vision of Daniel expressed in the Book of Daniel of the Old Testament. In Christianity the Danielic Vision is furthered by some comprehensive texts and passages of the four Gospels, Epistles of St. Peter, St. Paul and mostly by the Vision of St. John which seems to be a Christian Edition of Daniel Book due to its thematic synonymity and similarity with the later. It is notable that the Vision of Daniel indicates a long termed kingdom run by a member of David family while the Epistles of St. Paul and certain versions of the visions of St. John predict a Divine Kingdom run by Jesus Christ (The Promised Messiah) for a spell of one thousand years. The present terms of Millennium, Millennialism and Millennial movements have been coined in the light and pursuance of the above biblical thoughts and Prophecies.