This two-view approach to the investigation ignores the often fierce controversy between the historic premills and the dispensationalists, and it also ignores the rather-less-fierce controversy between the postmills and the amills.
I think that this two-view-approach is potentially very useful, since the key question is that of whether Christ's Second Advent inaugurates the Millennium (the view of both the historic premills and the dispensational premills) or terminates it (the view of both the postmills and the amills).
Great to hear from you, brother! You are the person most responsible for breaking me out of the premill, pretrib eschatology I once held and introducing me to partial-preterist amillennialism :)
For the sake of analysis, I agree that the Two-View approach is categorically useful, yes.
And, of course -- for reasons both fraternal and tactical -- I will always stand with my Supralapsarian and Post-Millenial Calvinist brethren against the Arminian and Romanist hordes.
However, in the spirit of semper reformanda, I do not think that we should sacrifice either the Truth of Infralapsarianism or the Truth of Amillennialism for the sake of our fox-hole alliances.
At the end of the day, Post-Millennialism is just too darn concerned about Material Victory over this Material World.
In Ezekiel 33, the Lord instructs the watchman to signal the approach of the enemy against His people, warning that the watchman who fails to blow the trumpet of alarm shall be guilty of the blood of the people.
Reformed Amillennialism sees the Enemy of the Church approaching. It sees this in light of the Word of God, Holy Scripture. It is giving the warning. No opposition from dreamers of coming earthly peace will stop its trumpet.
As for those who refuse to heed the warning, their blood will be upon their own heads.
~~ Professor David J. Engelsma, A Defense of Reformed Amillennialism
I suppose that Amillennialists (who are, not to put too fine a point on it, THE Creedally-recognized Heirs of Protestantism from Lutheranism to Calvinism and across the entire Reformed landscape) can tolerate the Errors of the PostMillennialists for the time being, for the sake of fraternal charity.
But, ultimately, PostMillennialists (like Pre-Millennialists) must be taught to live in the NOW, to realize that the Victory is already won, and to see the world through Spiritual Eyes.
The funny thing is, Schlissel claims to be (and writes theology as) a PostMillennial.
But he Prays like an Amillennial.
:-)
Best, OP