What will God's Kingdom Accomplish?

What God’s Kingdom will accomplish ? What will life be like in a restored paradise ?
Answer:
Since the Millennium is a thousand years, there will be a lot of activity.
We know it first starts in Israel when God saves the tents of Judah first (see. Dan. 12:1, Zech 12, 14, Jer. 30, Isa. 4:3 and Joel and so forth)
It will take a while to bury all the dead, rebuild the planet not just places to live--mankind has been systematically poisoning this planet for years now in the attempt to advance Agenda 21. God tells us that if those days were not shortened (Great Tribulation) that no flesh would be saved--showing the great death toll--not only from violence, which would be the uprising of the masses against the tyranny to the elite who want to exterminate them (Kind of like in the French Revolution).
Anyway--there will be a lot of clean up to do.
The New Covenant will inaugurate the Kingdom--starting first with the Holy Remnant of natural Israel--it is then that the dry bones get their life--what is the receiving of Israel back again but life from the dead.
Then the Temple will be built (See Ezekiel 40-47). The temple in Revelation is a spiritual temple, as the whole book is symbolic and pictures the glorified church, but Ezekiel's temple is literal and for mankind.
Then the resurrection can begin and most likely will come in waves. As one waves is resurrected and gets adjusted then the next can come all the way back to Adam who Jesus ransomed. (still can't understand the disbelief in that one).
Mankind will be given the opportunity to accept Jesus as their King or not. All of mankind will be tested one last time in the "little season". Then the ages beyond the Millennium will be wonderful and we are not given much information on that.
The fallen angels will have been judged, and Satan destroyed along with all who would rather follow him.
What will life be like? Depends on who and what you were in this life. I think for those of the Western culture who are used to all our so called freedoms, it would be very hard if one is not quickly in tune with God. There will be no freedom of speech, religion, no democracy. If one was a tyrant--to be equal with the rest of mankind and to have to show fruits of repentance from their previous evil deeds--that will be hard and they may not make it.
We find in Amos there will be a class who want the old ways. "When will the new moon be over that we may sell the needy for a pair of shoes, and make the ephah small and the shekel great. These are the people who may not make it to the Little Season if they manifest that sin in their heart early, but it will be manifest for all to see in the Little Season.
For those who have been oppressed, the Kingdom will be what they prayed for.
Thank God we have the promise that ALL in their graves will hear the voice of the son of man and come forth. The first group to come forth is the Little Flock--the first resurrection, the second mentioned is the rest of mankind.
The animals will go back to a herbivorous diet. Mankind will reach the perfection of mind and body that Adam lost--hence the restitution of all things (Acts 3).
Answer:
Since the Millennium is a thousand years, there will be a lot of activity.
We know it first starts in Israel when God saves the tents of Judah first (see. Dan. 12:1, Zech 12, 14, Jer. 30, Isa. 4:3 and Joel and so forth)
It will take a while to bury all the dead, rebuild the planet not just places to live--mankind has been systematically poisoning this planet for years now in the attempt to advance Agenda 21. God tells us that if those days were not shortened (Great Tribulation) that no flesh would be saved--showing the great death toll--not only from violence, which would be the uprising of the masses against the tyranny to the elite who want to exterminate them (Kind of like in the French Revolution).
Anyway--there will be a lot of clean up to do.
The New Covenant will inaugurate the Kingdom--starting first with the Holy Remnant of natural Israel--it is then that the dry bones get their life--what is the receiving of Israel back again but life from the dead.
Then the Temple will be built (See Ezekiel 40-47). The temple in Revelation is a spiritual temple, as the whole book is symbolic and pictures the glorified church, but Ezekiel's temple is literal and for mankind.
Then the resurrection can begin and most likely will come in waves. As one waves is resurrected and gets adjusted then the next can come all the way back to Adam who Jesus ransomed. (still can't understand the disbelief in that one).
Mankind will be given the opportunity to accept Jesus as their King or not. All of mankind will be tested one last time in the "little season". Then the ages beyond the Millennium will be wonderful and we are not given much information on that.
The fallen angels will have been judged, and Satan destroyed along with all who would rather follow him.
What will life be like? Depends on who and what you were in this life. I think for those of the Western culture who are used to all our so called freedoms, it would be very hard if one is not quickly in tune with God. There will be no freedom of speech, religion, no democracy. If one was a tyrant--to be equal with the rest of mankind and to have to show fruits of repentance from their previous evil deeds--that will be hard and they may not make it.
We find in Amos there will be a class who want the old ways. "When will the new moon be over that we may sell the needy for a pair of shoes, and make the ephah small and the shekel great. These are the people who may not make it to the Little Season if they manifest that sin in their heart early, but it will be manifest for all to see in the Little Season.
For those who have been oppressed, the Kingdom will be what they prayed for.
Thank God we have the promise that ALL in their graves will hear the voice of the son of man and come forth. The first group to come forth is the Little Flock--the first resurrection, the second mentioned is the rest of mankind.
The animals will go back to a herbivorous diet. Mankind will reach the perfection of mind and body that Adam lost--hence the restitution of all things (Acts 3).