Millennial Day Theory

The view takes the stance that each millennium is actually a day according to God (as found in Psalm 90:4 and 2 Peter 3:8), and that eventually at the end of the 6,000 years since the creation, Jesus will return.

Early premillennialists included Pseudo-Barnabas,[5] Papias,[6] Methodius, Lactantius,[7] Commodianus[8] Theophilus, Tertullian,[9] Melito,[10] Hippolytus of Rome, Victorinus of Pettau,[11][12] as well as various Gnostic groups and the Montanists.

Christians throughout history have often considered that some thousand-year Sabbath, expected to begin six thousand years after Creation, might be identical with the millennium described in the Book of Revelation.

2 (Monday) Events: Enoch translated; Wickedness increases; the Nephilim; The global flood; Tower of Babel; The confusion of languages.

6 (Friday) Events: The Crusades; The Dark Ages; Black Death; Christopher Columbus sets foot on Guanahani; Protestant Reformation; Age of Enlightenment; Scientific Revolution; United States Declaration of Independence; World War II; Israeli Declaration of Independence; Six-Day War; The Antichrist; The Great Tribulation; Second Coming.

Shabbat /(Saturday) Events: Peace for 1000 years; Satan loosed; Gog and Magog; 2nd Resurrection The main support for this view is found in the passages regarding the original Sabbath system that the Judeo-Christian-God instituted, while also taking the verses of Psalms 90:4[13] and 2 Peter 3:8[14] into consideration.