THE RAPTURE
By Grant Phillips
I
have believed in the
rapture of the
Church since I was
just a child, and
still do. I realize
that some Christians
do not believe that
this is an actual
event, and that is
okay. We are still
brothers and sisters
in Jesus Christ.
Maybe one huge
reason that others
do not believe in
the Rapture is
because it is such
an unusual,
one-of-a-kind event.
The very thought of
millions of people
rising from the
graves and those
alive vanishing in
thin air, all in the
blink of an eye, is
just too awesome to
be real. Nothing of
this magnitude has
ever happened, or
ever could, say
some. Is that really
true? I don’t think
it is. Consider the
following:
-
Long before we
ever came on the
scene, God
created angelic
beings. From
just the little
we know about
angels, this was
some
accomplishment.
-
When God created
the world we
live in, nothing
like this had
ever happened
before, at least
as far as
we know. When He
created mankind,
animal life,
plant life, sun,
moon, stars, and
the galaxies,
this had to be
one whale of an
event. The
angels must have
been standing
around in
amazement.
-
When God covered
the entire earth
with water and
drowned every
living being
except those
protected in the
ark, that too
was a
one-of-a-kind
happening. It
has never
happened since,
and it never
will happen
again since God
promised that He
would not
destroy the
earth again with
water. The
people of Noah’s
day did not
believe there
would be a
flood. It had
never even
rained at that
point of time.
However,
regardless of
the
impossibility of
that ever
happening, the
flood came just
as God told
Noah. Every
living being on
earth drowned,
except those God
protected in the
Ark.
-
When the Creator
God stepped out
of Heaven and
became man by
being born a
human baby boy
from a virgin
girl named Mary,
that had never
happened before,
and will never
happen again. To
top it off, He
accomplished
this feat
without the
natural
male/female
procreation
method He
Himself created.
-
These are just
four
obvious events that
happened in the
past, and are
either beyond
even the scale
of an event like
the Rapture, or
at least equal
to it.
In the future,
probably the very
near future, Jesus
Christ will call His
bride up to meet Him
in the air. Only He
knows the number,
but they will come
from the graves and
from the living. All
will be given new
heavenly bodies
within the twinkling
of an eye. Here one
second, gone the
next. Especially
considering the
events mentioned
earlier, does this
now seem like such a
difficult thing for
Him to accomplish? I
don’t think it does.
To us it sounds
impossible, but to
God it’s “child’s
play” so to speak.
Another reason given
for there being no
Rapture is that we
who believe in the
Rapture are just
“copping out”. We
think we are too
good to go through
the Tribulation and
are not facing
reality. I just
don’t see it that
way. Consider the
following:
·
Why
does Jesus have Paul
make it so clear to
us in 1
Thessalonians
4:13-5:11 that His
people will first be
removed before He
finishes the
remaining years
(seven) promised to
Israel and also
judges the earth?
·
Why
does Jesus tell us
in 1 Thessalonians
5:9 that “…God hath
not appointed us
(the Church) to
wrath (Tribulation)
but to obtain
salvation (Rapture)
by our Lord Jesus
Christ”?
·
Why
does Jesus tell us
in Revelation 3:10,
“Because thou hast
kept the word of my
patience, I also
will keep thee (the
Church) from the
hour of temptation
(Tribulation), which
shall come upon all
the world, to try
them (those without
Christ) that dwell
upon the earth”?
·
When God judged the
world by a
world-wide flood, He
removed His own from
harm’s way first.
Why are Noah and his
family an exact
parallel to the
Church being removed
from harm’s way
first, before God
judges the world a
second time?
·
Jesus reveals
Himself in
Revelation chapter
one. In chapters two
and three He speaks
only to the Church.
In chapter four
verse one Jesus
shows a door open in
Heaven, and
afterwards He is no
longer addressing
the Church, but the
world that He will
soon judge.
·
In
the last chapter of
Revelation and verse
seventeen, we see
the Church mentioned
again as the bride.
The Spirit and the
bride are inviting
those from the
Tribulation to come
to Jesus Christ for
salvation.
Therefore, the bride
is already in Heaven
with the Lord.
·
Is
it not odd that
God’s chosen people
Israel
did not see the
signs in the
Scriptures of Jesus
coming as a Lamb
before He would come
as a Lion? As a
nation, they missed
His prophesied
arrival on earth as
God’s sacrifice for
the redemption of
mankind (the Lamb)
because they were
looking for Him to
return and set up
His kingdom on earth
(as the Lion). Is it
possible that many
of God’s chosen
people of the Church
are misunderstanding
the difference
between the Rapture
and the second
coming of Jesus (His
return as the Lion)?
Even so, He will
still arrive as
prophesied (the
Rapture first, then
the second coming),
just as He did two
thousand years ago.
·
I
too find John 14:1-3
somewhat more
difficult to
understand. Is He
referring to the
Rapture or to His
second coming? I
think the key is in
the phrase, “Let not
your heart be
troubled”. This is
merely my opinion,
but could He be
providing comfort to
His own (the Church,
represented by the
Apostles) by letting
them know that He
will come for them
before He brings
judgment upon the
world?
·
Another thought is
that when Jesus’
wrath falls upon
this earth, everyone
upon the face of the
earth will feel it.
I simply cannot see
Jesus, as our
bridegroom, lashing
out in wrath on His
own bride, the
Church. No groom
would do that. Any
groom would first
move his bride out
of harm’s way,
before exacting
justice on his
enemies. Jesus said
in Ephesians
5:25-27, “Husbands,
love your wives,
even as Christ also
loved the church,
and gave Himself for
it, That He might
sanctify and cleanse
it with the washing
of water by the
word; That He might
present it to
Himself a glorious
church, not having
spot, or wrinkle, or
any such thing; but
that it should be
holy and without
blemish”.
o
Someone may say that
the Church is being
persecuted today and
has been since day
one. Therefore, why
would the Church be
removed to avoid
persecution during
the Tribulation?
What is the
difference? The
difference is that
the persecution of
the Church is not
coming from Jesus.
It is coming from
His enemies, Satan,
to be specific.
Satan administers
persecution now, and
will do so during
the Tribulation.
Jesus will
administer
justice during
the Tribulation, but
will remove His own
before doing so.
o
Someone else may say
why will Israel go through the seven years of
Tribulation, and not
the Church, since
they too are God’s
people? This is a
legitimate question.
Christ’s true church
has never rejected
Him. Israel
has, and still does.
The Church was never
promised any given
number of years for
God’s discipline.
Israel
has, and there are
seven years
remaining.
o
Also, God works with
mankind via
dispensations. When
the last person is
brought into the
Church by salvation
through Jesus
Christ, the Church
Age dispensation
will end. Jesus will
then remove His
Church, and the
dispensation for
Israel
will continue where
it left off with the
remaining seven
years that remain in
God’s promised 490
years for
Israel.
Israel
has completed 483
years of the 490,
but they have seven
more years to finish
the total of 490
years.
o
The
Jewish betrothal and
marriage experience
is an exact parallel
of Jesus and His
bride, the Church,
culminating with the
Rapture.
These are some of
the major reasons I
do believe that
Jesus will remove
His Church prior to
the Tribulation
period. If you do
not believe as I do
concerning this
wonderful prophecy,
I certainly have no
quarrel with you. As
I previously stated,
as Christians, we
are brothers and
sisters in Jesus
Christ, and will in
the end, be with our
Lord and Savior
worshipping Him
together for all
eternity.
I
also see striking
similarities between
our physical
life/death and the
Rapture. Keeping in
mind that there are
no signs for the
Rapture, but all end
time signs point to
the Tribulation and
beyond.
-
As we age, our
body approaches
the time of our
death in the
future.
-
In our early
life, we do not
see many, if
any, signs
pointing to our
death at an old
age, but the
closer we get to
the time of our
body dying, more
signs begin to
appear. Read the
12th
chapter of
Ecclesiastes.
Our vision
fades. Our
hearing fades.
Our joints begin
to hurt. Other
body parts begin
to fail. These
would be signs
that the end of
life for our
body is coming
to a close.
-
Since Jesus’
ascension, the
clock started
ticking for the
world to end.
From that point
and for many
years
thereafter, the
signs were
either
non-existent or
slow to appear.
However, in the
last 62 years
the signs have
exploded on the
scene in rapid
succession and
increasing in
severity. The
signs of
physical human
death are the
same. In the
beginning they
are either
non-existent or
slow to appear,
but as the end
approaches, the
signs come
rapidly and
increase in
severity until
death overtakes
our body.
-
This world as we
know it is going
to die just as
our body ages
and dies. Jesus
has provided
signs for us to
know when the
time of death,
for the world
and our body, is
approaching.
Just as our body
dies in its
final fight to
live, the world
will die
beginning with
the Tribulation
and all that
will follow. We
are seeing these
signs now.
Daniel is no
longer a closed
book, but is
open for
understanding.
Revelation has
never been a
closed book. We
are rapidly
approaching the
final scene of
death. All the
signs are here.
-
The good news
(for Christians)
is that life
follows death,
and not just
life, but
eternal,
everlasting
life. Jesus
explains this to
us in 1
Corinthians 15
through His
Apostle Paul. In
death our bodies
are lowered in
the grave, but
in Christ our
bodies are
raised up to
eternal life.
After our body
dies, we (in our
spirit) are
consciously
alive with Jesus
Christ. At the
Rapture our
bodies are
changed from
earthly bodies
(that eventually
die) to heavenly
bodies (that
never die).
As previously
stated, there are no
signs for the
Rapture. The signs
are for the
Tribulation, which
follows the Rapture
of the Church. Since
there are no signs
for the Rapture, but
we are clearly
seeing the beginning
signs for the
Tribulation, we must
be very close to our
Lord coming for us.
Even so, come, Lord
Jesus! (Revelation
22:20)
Grant Phillips
grantphillips@windstream.net
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