J. Dwight Pentecost - Taught at Philadelphia College of Bible from 1948-55.
It is however contended by dispensational teachers such as Charles Caldwell Ryrie, J. Dwight Pentecost and Arnold Fruchtenbaum that ultradispensationalism is removed enough from dispensationalism to not any longer be dispensationalism at all.
He takes a Dispensationalist position, however, and his Things to Come (1958) is characterized by a comprehensive review of almost every view on the biblical prophetic subject matter that has any form of prominence.
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Pentecost takes a Premillennial and Pretribulational view of the unfulfilled prophetic passages of the apocalyptic biblical literature.
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A Festschrift, Essays in Honor of J. Dwight Pentecost, has been written.
Dwight D. Eisenhower | Pentecost | Dwight Yoakam | Dwight L. Moody | James Dwight Dana | Dwight Twilley | Dwight Gooden | William Dwight Whitney | Dwight Schrute | Dwight Waldo | Dwight, Illinois | J. Dwight Pentecost | Dwight Schultz | Dwight F. Davis | Dwight Chapin | Dwight Ball | Timothy Dwight IV | Roy Dwight | Pentecost River | Pentecost Island | Dwight Stones | Dwight H. Little | Dwight D. Opperman | David Dwight Baldwin | William Dwight | Theodore Dwight Weld | T. A. Dwight Jones | Sereno Edwards Dwight | Hugh O. Pentecost | Henry W. Dwight |
Members of the dispensationalist movement such as Hal Lindsey, J. Dwight Pentecost, John Walvoord, all of whom have Dallas Theological Seminary backgrounds, and some other writers, claimed further that the European Economic Community founded on the Treaty of Rome was a revived Roman Empire, and would become the kingdom of the coming Antichrist and the Beast.