Defending The Pre-Trib Rapture (Again)
by Jack Kelley
"People with a post-trib disposition read 1 Thessalonians 4:15, and then turned to Matthew 24:40-41 where they saw one group being "taken" and another group being "left" after the end of the Great Tribulation. Assuming that these were the Lord's own words Paul was referring to, they stopped there." They had seen what they wanted to see."
In actuality Matthew 24:40-41 is most likely a preview of the Sheep and Goat judgment of Tribulation survivors. The word taken (received) refers to believers going live into the Kingdom, and the word left (sent away) applies to non-believers who are sent to the place prepared for the Devil and his angels. (Matthew 25:31-46)
Of course none of this pertains to our desert island reader above." The verses I used there are clear enough that they don't require any research into the original language. So he wouldn't need a Strong's Concordance, just his Bible.
What's Your Point?So if Jesus never taught about the Rapture, to which of the "Lord's own words" was Paul referring? Some dismiss the phrase, saying that Paul was speaking of a conversation he had with the Lord that doesn't appear in Scripture." But I think we deserve a better answer than that."
Remember, 1st Thessalonians was probably Paul's first written communication, undertaken in 51AD." Depending on whose opinion you accept, Matthew's Gospel was either just being written or was still nearly 10 years away." Those who give it an early date say it was written to the Jews in Jerusalem and may even have been written in Hebrew." In any case neither it nor any other Gospel was yet in wide distribution." (Mark's Gospel, the other candidate for earliest one written, doesn't contain an equivalent to Matthew 24:40-41.)" So if Paul was referring to Scripture, as I believe he was, it had to be the Old Testament.
Yes, like everything else in God's plan, you'll find hints of the Rapture even in the Old Testament." Look at this passage from Isaiah 26:19-21. But your dead will live; their bodies will rise. You who dwell in the dust, wake up and shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the morning; the earth will give birth to her dead. Go, my people, enter your rooms and shut the doors behind you; hide yourselves for a little while until his wrath has passed by. See, the LORD is coming out of his dwelling to punish the people of the earth for their sins. (Emphasis mine.)
Notice how the pronouns change from second person when God speaks of His people to third person when He speaks of the people of the Earth. It means the two groups are different." Those called "my people" are told to "enter your rooms" (the rooms of John 14:1-3?) because the others, called "the people of Earth" are going to be punished for their sins in a period of time called His Wrath." Sound familiar?" (Note: the Hebrew word translated "go" in the phrase "Go my people" is translated "come" in some translations, recalling the command to John in Revelation 4, "Come up here!" But the word has another primary meaning and it's my favorite." It means vanish. "Vanish, my people!" Yes we will.)
Not by any stretch of the imagination has this passage been literally fulfilled." It's an End Times prophecy that promises a resurrection of the dead and hiding of God's people while God's Wrath is unleashed on the people of Earth for their sins." And it was written 2750 years ago." The hiding of the Jews in the desert on Earth at the beginning of the Great Tribulation (Revelation 12:14) cannot be considered as a fulfillment of this passage because no resurrection accompanies it. The resurrection of Old Testament believers takes place at the end of the Great Tribulation. (Daniel 12:2)
Of course, no one knows for sure that this is the passage Paul referred to, but as evidence of its influence on him, let's compare it with what Paul wrote in 1 Thessalonians 4-5.
Isaiah : But your dead will live; their bodies will rise. You who dwell in the dust, wake up and shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the morning; the earth will give birth to her dead.
Paul: The dead in Christ will rise first.
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