Daniel from Historical Premillennial Perspective

I am working on a comparative eschatological study and need to do some reading on historical premillennial interpretation of several passages from Daniel. I cannot locate logos-format copies of the classic works (Ladd, Payne, Culver, etc.). Can anyone point me to logos resources that might help?
Comments
-
One option is to search for the name of the book among your library. I just did a search for "Daniel and the Latter Days" (written by Culver). There were 31 results in 24 articles. Mostly it linked to journal articles in my library.
Another option is to do a search such as the following: historic NEAR premillennia*. That search brought in 282 results in 81 articles in 56 resources in my library. I use this search operator a lot when I want to find two words that should be located within 10 words of the other. Not every reference puts the two words next to each other and this helps find relevant material.
0 -
They just put A Case for Historic Premillennialism: An Alternative “Left Behind” Eschatology on prepub, which sounds like it might interest you. Unfortunately it's in a pretty expensive bundle. Plus it won't ship for a long time, of course. And you will have to check Amazon's Look Inside or something to get an idea about how much it deals with Daniel.
Mac Pro (late 2013) OS 12.6.2
0 -
fgh said:
They just put A Case for Historic Premillennialism: An Alternative “Left Behind” Eschatology on prepub, which sounds like it might interest you. Unfortunately it's in a pretty expensive bundle. Plus it won't ship for a long time, of course. And you will have to check Amazon's Look Inside or something to get an idea about how much it deals with Daniel.
Just fyi This is a book arguing for a posttrib premillenialism versus a pretrib premillenialism.
Jacob Hantla
Pastor/Elder, Grace Bible Church
gbcaz.org0 -
Just an itty-bitty OT, but if anyone knows a source of the historical end-time calculations in the general range 200bce to 200ce that would sure be helpful. I assume also to the OP of this thread.
I'm not talking about the nutty kind or the theological kind (pre/post/etc). The ones that sat behind the repeated NT logic that 'the Lord had cut-short the days' etc, as well as the 5th and 6th day logic that shows up in 2 Peter, Clement1 etc. The most mysterious one of course is the Apostle Paul's calculation in Romans which presumably lands on or about 80ce (and thus later work stoppage).
"If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.
0