J.
Grant Swank, Jr.
Mark it down as biblical truth: There is no pre-tribulation rapture.
However,
untold thousands believe in the "secret rapture of the church" prior to
the tribulation period. This is because untold thousands don't want to
have to think of suffering through a tribulation time frame. The late
Corrie ten Boom called this pre-trib rapture teaching the "American
doctrine." Go figure.
The belief in a secret rapture of
believers before the tribulation is also because of a best-seller, "The
Late, Great Planet Earth," by Hal Lindsey
which was set loose in the l960s. It has been a paperback aggressively
pushed by practically every evangelical / fundamentalist engine going.
Theologians, videos, films and preachers bolster up this myth with their earnest preachings and teachings.
Yet this is nothing but a myth, accented as much by certain theologically conservative Protestant segments similar
unto the Roman Catholic underlining of the immaculate conception
of Mary. Nevertheless, if there is no biblical support for such a
Mariology teaching, it is bogus. Likewise, the pre-tribulation rapture
teaching is bogus.
The pre-trib rapture concept was manufactured in the 1800s in an 18 year old Plymouth Brethren girl's dream, told to her Pastor, John Darby, and then relayed to C. I. Scofield
who bought into the dream as revealed truth. Scofield placed this
pre-tribulation rapture notion as a footnote in his popular Bible,
hence the spread of the myth.
However, just the opposite is
biblical truth. In Matthew 24:29-3l, for instance, the rapture
("gathering together") is placed in the same time frame as the open second coming of Jesus Christ. And all of this is "after the tribulation" (verse 29). That is it in a nutshell!
Yet
pre-tribulation rapturists sidestep this clear passage for more oblique
passages. The latter are twisted and turned in order to fit into the
"American doctrine." Yet such twisting is not sound exegesis. And for
biblically-riveted evangelicals and fundamentalists to commit this
drastic error is bordering on the horrific.
All
other passages in Scripture relating to the "gathering together unto
Him" must refer back to the literal time line provided by Jesus in
Matthew 24.
One must not use a symbolic passage in the Book of Revelation or any other symbolically-based section of the Bible by which to draw a pre-tribulation rapture doctrine.
Further, one must not take words of the apostle Paul
so as to insert them opportunistically into a conjured pre-tribulation
string of Scripture references. Yet this has been done ad infinitum.
Instead, Jesus' literalism of Matthew 24 must be used as the benchmark for all other "gathering together" themes of Scripture.
One starts with literalism and moves into
symbolism when seeking to understand Scripture; it is not the other way around.
During
the 1970s and 1980s there was much written and preached about a
pre-tribulation rapture. This has wound down some in the last decade or
so. Why?
Today, with the world situation being what it is,
there is not that much risk-taking in preaching dogmatically the
pre-tribulation rapture. Why?
Is it because there are many
who are beginning to question its validity? Is it because the world
state is so uncertain that to go out on a limb with a false hope may
ricochet?
One wonders, with world events progressively
becoming more and more anti-Christian, why the pre-tribulation rapture
persons are not celebrating each dawn as the day when Jesus may return
to earth.
Such is not the phenomenon on a large scale.
Furthermore, it may be because the next generation has not bought into
this notion.
In any case, it is
a myth, a legend of conservative Protestantism's own conjuring and has no base in the Holy Scriptures.
Yet
these very Protestants are the ones who ardently point out the myths of
Catholicism while holding to some of their own myths. Both segments of
Christendom need to do some serious housecleaning of manufactured
legends in order to return to the simple Bible truths; otherwise, the church suffers from severe lack of knowledge.
What
is so frightening about holding to a pre-tribulation rapture? It is
more than mere academic quibbling. Holding to such a notion is
drastically weakening the church worldwide.
The church should be preparing for spiritual battle against the most evil forces arrayed by hell.
Instead, the church is languishing with a false hope. This is all orchestrated by the demonic powers in order to
eventuate
in a limp army of believers. And to see that through in this age of
laxity in religion does not take much on the part of the dark powers.
In addition, the apostate segment of religion is doing its fair share
of blackening truth.
Does it take much intelligence to realize that there are awesomely wretched days yet ahead for the righteous remnant?
Those
who are not strong will drop--fall away, as biblically predicted. They
will be too numerous to contemplate. But for those who are truly into
carrying the daily cross there will be nothing able to thwart their
zeal for Christ.
Already the remnant is being strengthened
by the Spirit of light. He is gathering His own together in the power
of the resurrection and the might of the revealed Word. There numbers
are few; but their ardor before the Father is lovingly honored.
Set your vision upon the difficulties yet to be. They are but the trials permitted by the coming Christ.
At
the close of the tribulation period, then there will be the gathering
together of the believers from the four corners of the earth. They will
greet Jesus in the clouds as He descends through space, having left the
right hand of the Father in heaven.
The
gathering together ("rapture") and the second advent then will be
realized as one and the same event occurring at the end of the
tribulation time frame. Jesus' declaration in Matthew 24:29-3l states
it clearly.
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