Yes, the Bible speaks of many being deceived....that would be you.
Whether you like it or not, my view called "amillennialism" goes all the way back to the first Century of the church.
What you do with Revelation is to see it as totally chronological and that is the difference between what I see and what you do, for I see John giving different pictures of the same time period and like the 7 seals and the seven trumpets and the seven bowls of wrath, for I see them as all referring to the same time period and different angels of the tribulation.
Therefore in Revelation 20, to sum it all up, Jesus gave John a spiritual picture of the church age from the beginning when Christ died on the cross and restricted (bound the strong man) Satan's ability to keep the nations in deception about God, Christ and the gospel message to when Satan is freed from his restrictions through the apostasy and the many false doctrines that come out of it. .
First, the 1000 years represents this church age but only in for the time when the church was not in apostasy from the truth but still abiding in the truth and it is not speaking of a literal 1000 years either but it is figurative for that time period.
The first resurrection refers to Christ's resurrection and just as Paul also revealed in 1 Corinthians 15:23, and through his resurrection those who were spiritually dead come to life through their repentance and faith, they live and die during the church age represented by the 1000 years.
When it says they reign with Christ for 1000 years, it is referring to their having the victory over the world the flesh and the Devil and it is not speaking of them reigning over other people.
When it says "and judgment was given them" it is referring to judgment having been given to them in their favor through Christ and his death on the cross and resurrection and ascension to the throne of God also.
When John says, "I saw thrones and they sat upon them" Paul actually pretty much said the same thing in Ephesians 2 when he said that as they were once dead in trespasses and sins, now through Christ he has raised them up and made them sit together in heavenly places.
This refers to the fact that Jesus has been raised up from the dead and is now seated in heaven at the right hand of God on their behalf
One other thing here, although the resurrection of the believer includes the eventual resurrection of his body, it doesn't begin with his body but rather with his spirit where he was made alive through Christ from being dead in trespasses and sins.
This is what John is speaking of in Revelation 20:4-6, for the first resurrection is that of Christ himself and through which all who repent and believe the gospel are included or take part and thus are made alive spiritually.
This is why when you read passages like Ephesians 2 :1-10 it should become clear that our salvation is always associated with the resurrection of Jesus through which we are also made alive from being dead in sins. and you see this in Colossians 3:1-4 also.
I am going to try and find some material on this from trin sources so you can see that many of them believe it this way also, even though I will have differences on some issues, I will look into getting this for you, for this view is as old as the beginnings of the church itself.