- Source: Francisco Ribera
Francisco Ribera (1537–1591) was a Spanish Jesuit theologian, identified with the Futurist Christian eschatological view.
Life
Ribera was born at Villacastín. He joined the Society of Jesus in 1570, and taught at the University of Salamanca. He acted as confessor to Teresa of Avila. He died in 1591 at the age of fifty-four, one year after the publication of his work In Sacrum Beati Ioannis Apostoli, & Evangelistiae Apocalypsin Commentarij.
Works
Apocalypse commentary
In the late Middle Ages and the Protestant Reformation, some commentators sought to identify the Antichrist with the Pope, so that figures from the Book of Revelation might not only be interpreted as representing figures in the past (such as the Emperor Nero) or in the future (in the Last Days), but also in the present. Ribera in 1585 began writing a 500-page commentary on the Book of Revelation, titled In Sacrum Beati Ioannis Apostoli, & Evangelistiae Apocalypsin Commentarii, proposing that the first chapters of the Apocalypse applied to ancient pagan Rome, and the rest referred to a yet future period of 3½ literal years, immediately prior to the second coming. During that time, the Roman Catholic Church would have fallen away from the pope into apostasy. Then, he proposed, the Antichrist, a single individual, would:
Persecute and blaspheme the saints of God
Rebuild the temple in Jerusalem
Abolish the Christian religion
Deny Jesus Christ
Destroy Rome
Be received by the Jews
Pretend to be God
Kill the two witnesses of God
Conquer the world.
To accomplish this, Ribera understood the 1260 days and 42 months and 3½ times of prophecy literally, rejecting an interpretation as 1260 years.
Other works
Vida de la madre Teresa de Jesús (1590), a work of hagiography.
In epistolam B. Pauli apostoli ad Hebraeos commentarii (1600).
Futurism
In the context of interpreting eschatological writings, futurism is the position that the Book of Revelation refers not primarily to the ancient context in which it was written, or to events that have already passed, but rather predicts future events in a period immediately prior to the Second Coming. The Dictionary of Premillennial Theology (1997) states that Ribera was an Augustinian amillennialist, whose form of futurism proposed that only the introductory chapters of Revelation referred to ancient Rome, and the remainder referred to a literal three and half years at the end of time. His interpretation was then followed by Robert Bellarmine and the Spanish Dominican Thomas Malvenda.
Thomas Brightman, in particular, writing in the early 17th century as an English Protestant, contested Ribera's views. He argued that the use of the Vulgate invalidated Catholic commentary on the Book of Revelation, and proposed an alternative historicist point of view.
References
Ralph Thompson, Champions of Christianity in Search of Truth, p. 91.
H. Grattan Guinness, History Unveiling Prophecy or Time as an Interpreter, New York: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1905, p. 289.
Dave MacPherson, The Incredible Cover-Up: Exposing the Origins of Rapture Theories. Omega Publications, Medford Oregon. 1980.
Leroy Edwin Froom, The Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers: The Historical Development of Prophetic Interpretation, Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1948, Vol. 2, pp. 486–493, Vol. 3, pp. 533, 655, 731, Vol. 4, 1195, 1196, 1204.
Taheny, T. T. (2003). "Ribera, Francisco De". New Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12: Ref–Sep (2 ed.). Detroit: Thomson Gale. pp. 220–221.
Notes
External links
Francisci Riberae Villacastinensis, presbyteri Societatis Iesu, doctorisque theologi. In sacram beati Ioannis Apostoli, & euangelistae Apocalypsin commentarij Lugduni 1592
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Juan Francisco de la Cerda
- Francisco Ribalta
- Daftar pelukis Spanyol
- Fransiskus dari Assisi
- Orang Aztek
- Katedral Orihuela
- Universitario de Sucre
- Provinsi di Spanyol
- Maria Magdalena
- Antoni Gaudí
- Francisco Ribera
- Rapture
- Ribera
- Jusepe de Ribera
- Futurism (Christianity)
- Anthony Ribera
- Christian eschatology
- Dispensationalism
- Gertrude the Great
- Francisco de Ribera