Those who believe all prophecy has been fulfilled are called Preterists. Not 
all Preterists agree with each other. There are partial Preterists and full 
Preterists. The partial Preterists are divided into historicists and futurists. 
Some of the partial Preterists believe the full Preterists are pagans, etc.
The word “preterist” means past. Generally speaking, it 
means most Preterists believe most prophecy was fulfilled in the past, 
specifically, by 70 A.D. Partial Preterists say most but not all of it was 
fulfilled in the past.
After giving the Parable of the Fig Tree Jesus said, “When 
ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors. Verily I 
say unto you, This generation shall not pass, till all these things be 
fulfilled” (Matthew 24:34). The problem centers around the identity of “this 
generation.” Preterists believe “this generation” means the generation that 
Jesus was talking to. Many non-Preterists believe “this generation” means the 
generation that sees the fulfillment of all the prophecies Jesus was talking 
about.
For many, the problem with Preterists is the fact that they 
spiritualize and explain away many prophecies, especially the Book of 
Revelation. Instead of studying the Book of Revelation they dismiss it as 
nothing more than a book of symbols. The prophecies say one thing, but they say 
the prophecies mean something else. They attach private interpretations to the 
prophecies instead of letting the Bible interpret itself. When they do this, 
they not only change what the Bible says, they dismiss, explain away or 
spiritualize hundreds of other verses in Isaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel, Zechariah, 
Matthew, II Thessalonians, etc. Everything those prophets said about the first 
coming of Jesus literally happened. It’s a mistake to say that none of what they 
said about the Second Coming of Jesus is going to literally happen.
Many Preterists say Nero was the Antichrist. But Nero 
wasn’t the Antichrist because he committed suicide instead of being cast
alive into the 
Lake of Fire (Revelation 19:20). Nero didn’t 
track all buying and selling. And Nero didn’t force people to take the Mark of 
the Beast.
Many Preterists say 
Israel’s religious leaders were the False 
Prophet. But Israel’s religious leaders didn’t 
build a statue of the Antichrist. Israel’s religious leaders didn’t 
make that statue speak. 
Israel’s religious leaders didn’t make the Jews 
commit idolatry by worshipping the statue. And 
Israel’s religious leaders didn’t get thrown
alive into the 
Lake
 of Fire with the 
Antichrist.
Many Preterists say the final world government was the 
Roman Empire. But the Roman Empire 
was the legs of iron on Nebuchadnezzar’s statue not the feet of iron mixed with 
clay (Daniel 2). The Second Coming of Jesus will be in the days of the feet of 
iron mixed with clay not in the day of the legs of iron.
Many Preterists say the Second Coming of Jesus was a 
spiritual coming that took place in 70 A.D. and no one could see it. But the 
Bible says every eye will see Jesus when He comes back (Revelation 1:7). Two 
angels said Jesus will come back the same way He went away which was visibly 
because people could see Him (Acts 1:9-11). Over and over again, Jesus and 
others told us to watch for the Second Coming, but watching for the Second 
Coming of Jesus is meaningless, if Jesus has already come back. Watching for the 
Second Coming is meaningless if is a spiritual return that no one can see. The 
Bible says so many people will be killed at the Battle of Armageddon when Jesus 
comes back the blood will flow up to the horses bridles for almost 200 miles. 
That doesn’t fit with an invisible return that no one can see. Jesus said the 
sun will be darkened, the moon won’t shine, the stars will fall from heaven, 
everyone on earth will mourn, the lost will be removed from the earth, the sheep 
and goat nations will be judged, etc., but none of that happened in 70 A.D. 
(Matt. 24:29-30; 13:41-42, 49-50; 25:31-46).
Many Preterists say the destruction of 
Jerusalem
and the persecution of the Church in 70 A.D. was the Tribulation Period. The 
Church won’t be here during the Tribulation Period. There was no seven-year 
covenant in 70 A.D. There wasn’t enough people on earth for a 200 million man 
army to invade Israel
in 70 A.D. The Euphrates
 River didn’t dry up. The 
Two Witnesses didn’t lie in the street for three and one-half days while the 
whole world watched. Babylon
wasn’t destroyed by fire in one hour. Jesus didn’t rescue Israel at a 
Second Coming in 70 A.D., etc. (Rev. 9:16; 16:12; 13:11-18; 11:9).
Many Preterists say the Church is the New Jerusalem. The 
Bible says the New Jerusalem will be about 1500 miles square, it won’t need the 
sun or moon, it will have twelve gates of pearls, twelve foundations of precious 
stones, streets of gold, and the tree of life. The Church still needs the sun 
and moon, we still have pain, death, suffering, we’re a spiritual building not a 
physical building with walls, streets, etc. (Rev. 21-22).
Many Preterists say the Millennium is a long period of time 
not a 1,000 years and we’re living in the Millennium right now. But the Bible 
says we will have peace on earth during the Millennium. Instead of peace on 
earth, we have wars and rumors of wars. Instead of thanking God because His 
kingdom has already come to the earth, we are praying that His kingdom will come 
to the earth.
To believe Preterism people have to ignore the differences 
between the Church and Israel, 
ignore current events, reject the most widely accepted date for the writing of 
the Book of Revelation, explain away hundreds of verses of Scriptures all over 
the Bible, etc.
A good question to ask is, “When was the Rapture?” This is 
actually why some Preterists shove the Rapture over to the Second Coming. If the 
destruction of Jerusalem and the persecution of the Church is 
the Tribulation Period, they have to move everything between the Rapture and the 
Second Coming to the period before 70 A.D.
If the prophecies aren’t literally fulfilled, it’s 
impossible to know when anything is fulfilled. If the prophecies aren’t 
literally fulfilled, there is no need to watch for anything. If the prophecies 
aren’t literally fulfilled, there are no signs of anything. If prophecies aren’t 
literally fulfilled, we need to forget about heaven, rewards, the resurrection 
of the dead, etc. because those things won’t literally happen.
Christians should not want to lead anyone wrong. But those 
who say all prophecy has been fulfilled, the Book of Revelation is nothing but a 
book of symbols, no one understands it, and the like are leading people wrong. 
The Bible says study those symbols, search the Scriptures, let Scripture 
interpret Scripture, blessed is the person who reads, hears and keeps the things 
in the Book of Revelation, don’t take anything out of the Book of Revelation, 
the Holy Spirit can help you understand it, etc.
Prophecy Plus Ministries
Daymond & Rachel Duck
daymondduck@bellsouth.net
rachelduck@bellsouth.net
1-731-692-3162