The different views of the rapture in relation to the great tribulation

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INTRODUCTION



The rapture is an area of Christian theology which has

historically received little attention with regards to precise

formulation. A brief survey of works detailing the development

of doctrine (such as Bromiley, 1978) reveals almost no

acknowledgment of the rapture. This is perhaps explained by

Berkhof (1975, p. 259) who states "The doctrine of the last

things never stood in the centre of attention, is one of the

least developed doctrines, and therefore calls for no elaborate

discussion.



Further, the very notion of the rapture is much-derided by

critics who find fault due to the allegedly non-existence of

such a doctrine in the scriptures; the seemingly non-existence

of the very word "rapture" in the scriptures (though such an

argument would apply to the Trinity also); and the thought that

the idea of a "secret rapture" where the Church is transported

safely from a catastrophic time of tribulation is foreign to

God's plans and purposes as revealed in history - for indeed,

"the blood of the martyrs is the very seed of the Church"

(Cairns, 1981, p.93).



Such arguments are untenable. The main basis for the rapture

doctrine is I Thessalonians 4:13-18 : Brothers, we do not want

you to be ignorant about those who fall asleep, or to grieve

like the rest of men, who have no hope. We believe that Jesus

died and rose again and so we believe that God will bring with

Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him.



According to the Lord's own word, we tell you that we who are

still alive, who are left till the coming of the Lord, will

certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord

himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with

the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and

the dead in Christ will rise first. After that, we who are still

alive and are left will be caught up with them in the clouds to

meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord

forever. Therefore encourage each other with these words.



From this passage the notion of the rapture is clear; at some

future time all of the saints of God, both dead and alive, shall

be "caught up" into the air to be with their Lord! The Greek

word for "caught up" is arpazo, which means to pluck away

(Zodhiates, 1992, p. 1270) and would be well translated

"rapture" in a Latin Bible (Willmington, n.d, p. 825), such as

Jerome's vulgate - so the word itself is scriptural (just not in

an English translation), as indeed is the notion. The third

objection listed is specific to a particular theological

framework and shall be discussed later. Indeed, many objections

exist, not least that of sincere Christian brethren who seek to

know what must happen to the defenceless family pet when its

owners are suddenly raptured! Such an argument is, of course,

based on emotional issues rather than the scriptures and

detracts from the real issue at hand.



Paul reveals more information in I Corinthians 15:51-52 :

Listen, I tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will

all be changed - in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the

last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be

raised imperishable, and we will be changed.



Having established a preliminary scriptural basis for the

rapture, however, a new problem arises with regards to its

chronological location. As Stern (1992, p. 623) points out,

"Only in relation to the premillenial position does the issue of

when the rapture takes place arise; for Post- and

Amillenialists, the Rapture is vaguely identified with the

Messiah's one and only return." This means that the concept of

the rapture is only particularly defined in the pre-millenial

system of theology. However, this leaves three potential general

times for the rapture to occur, defined in terms of the coming

"great tribulation" - before the tribulation period

(pre-tribulational), during the tribulation period

(mid-tribulational) or after the tribulation period

(post-tribulational). Some humourously (and non-seriously)

suggest a fourth possibility of "pan-tribulationalism" - as God

is in control there is no need to worry about such matters; all

will eventually "pan" out according to His plans. The former

three views however, are worthy of considerable discussion.



POST-TRIBULATION



In essence, the post-tribulational system decrees that the

rapture occurs after the tribulation period - the natural

consequence being that the Church must endure it. Willmington

(n.d., p. 825) dismisses this view of the rapture by appealing

to I Thessalonians 5:9 ("For God did not appoint us to suffer

wrath but to receive salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ")

and Revelation 3:10 ("Since you have kept my command to endure

patiently, I will also keep you from the hour of trial that is

going to come upon the whole world to test those who live on the

earth").



Nevertheless, post-tribulationists dismiss Willmington's views,

appealing to John 16:33, "in this world you will have

tribulation". To the post-tribulationist, it is unthinkable that

God would offer a remarkable transport to the Church as an

escape route in the face of global disaster, eluded to earlier

(although such was the case with Noah). Truly throughout history

the Church has suffered persecution - indeed under such

persecution the Church has historically thrived - not

materially, but in a spiritual harvest, as faith is refined and

tested and the gospel is propagated to further regions. This was

the case in Jerusalem - "Those who had been scattered preached

the word wherever they went" (Acts 8:4). This was the case under

Roman persecution (Cairns, 1981, p. 91-93). Persecution kept the

Church pure - it kept hypocritical, dishonest and insincere

people from the Church. "No light decisions were made for Christ

in those times, especially when acceptance of Christ meant

possible loss of citizenship; imprisonment with daily starvation

and torture until death; crucifixion, and sometimes burning

while still alive and hanging on the cross. . . ." (Hamon, 1981,

p. 80-81). Such is the essence of the Puritan classic, Foxe's

Christian Martyrs of the World.



The flaw in this logic, however, is that the tribulation period

is not a time of persecution. Rather, it is a time of God's

wrath being outpoured on the earth. During this time people

shall cry to the mountains and the rocks, "Fall on us and hide

us from the face of him who sits on the throne and from the

wrath of the Lamb! For the great day of their wrath has come,

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and who can stand?" (Revelation 6:16-17). When Christ returns,

"He treads the winepress of the fury of the wrath of God

Almighty" (Revelation 19:15). Willmington's verses above apply

most certainly - for God has appointed His Church to salvation

and not to wrath. Surely the day of the Lord will be terrible

(Malachi 4:5)!



Messianic Jewish scholar David Stern offers a different and

original reason for his holding to the post-tribulation view -

it is unthinkable "that Messianic Jews are to be faced with the

decision of whether to identify with their own people the Jews

and stay to suffer or with their own people the believers (the

Messianic Community, the Church) and escape" (Stern, 1992, p.

623). Stern develops this idea further : "But if Sha'ul [Paul]

and other Jewish believers are members both of Israel and of the

Messianic Community, Pre-Tribulationists must answer this

question: when the rapture takes place, do Jewish believers in

Yeshua [Jesus] stay behind with the rest of physical Israel, or

do they join the rest of the Messianic Community with Yeshua in

the air? They can't be in both places at once. Is it a matter of

our personal choice? Do we have to choose whether to be more

loyal to the Jewish people or to our brothers in the Messiah?

This is an absurd question, absurd because the situation

proposed will never arise" (Stern, 1992, p. 804).



Stern's objections, however, are based heavily on his emphasis

that Jewish people remain Jewish once becoming Christians;

indeed, they are "fulfilled" Jews. This is, of course, true, but

Stern's emphasis is so great that he (unintentionally, but

effectively) divides the body of Christ in two - those who are

Jewish and those who are Gentiles, despite Paul's admonition

that "there is neither Jew nor Greek. . . . for you are all one

in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28). Stern continues, ". . . .

This is not what they [Messianic Jews] bought into when they

came to faith. They were told, 'Now you're a Jew who has

accepted his Messiah.' They were not told, 'Now you have

abandoned your Jewish people and will spend eternity without

them'" (Stern, 1992, p. 804). Certainly the Gentile Christian is

distinct from the Gentile non-Christian (who will unquestionably

remain after the rapture). The deciding factor is not whether

one is Jewish or otherwise, but whether one is a disciple of the

Lord Jesus Christ or not.



Finally, the rapture is quite distinct from the Second Coming in

which Jesus returns to the earth, to the Mount of Olives

(Zechariah 14). At the rapture, Jesus draws the Saints to

Himself in the clouds (I Thessalonians 4:15-17). At the Second

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Coming, He returns with the Saints (Revelation 19:11-16). The

post-tribulational view virtually has the Saints of God acting

like a yo-yo - arising into the air, only to return immediately

to the earth. This further gives no time for the Bema seat of

Christ or the marriage supper of the Lamb.



PRE-TRIBULATION



The pre-tribulation view may be summarised thus, It was held

that the return of Christ would take place in two stages. First

there would be a quiet appearance of Christ when all true

Christians would be taken from the earth - the 'rapture' of the

saints. After this, Antichrist's reign would continue but be

brought to an end by the appearing of Christ in glory and the

introduction of a 1,000 year reign of Christ on earth from

Jerusalem (Humphreys & Ward, 1995, p. 128-9).



If the book of Revelation is to be taken as a chronological

work, which most futurists would agree, there is great

significance in the similarities between I Thessalonians 4:16-17

above and Revelation 4:1-2 - again a voice like a trumpet is

heard and John is transported instantly through a door in heaven

to the very throne-room of God.



Indeed, the very "door" is significant to those who see a

secondary meaning in the seven Churches of Revelation chapters

1-3, being the historical development of the Church over

history, from the early Church to that at the time of the Second

Coming. With this view the door of Revelation 3:10, opened to

the Philadelphian Church, is equated with that of Revelation 4:1

(Cartledge, n.d., p. 119). This view then equates the lukewarm

Laodecian Church as the false religious system that arises

during the tribulation. Such a view however is

counter-productive as the Philadelphian Church is still part of

the Church and so requires the Church to be divided - the

lukewarm left behind, which implies a Protestant purgatory.



Nevertheless, there is great significance in the fact that John

is told to "Come up hither" (Revelation 4:1) the very same

words spoken to the two witnesses before they too are raptured

(Revelation 11:12). Further, the Church is remarkably absent

from any of the proceedings from Revelation 4:1 to 19:11 when

Christ returns - indeed, the Church surely has no part in the

tribulation.



Not only so, but the tribulation period is the final "week" of

years in Daniel's prophecy (Daniel 9:24-27), specifically

designated for the Jewish people. The times of the Gentiles are

complete, and God again turns His hand to His ancient peoples,

the end result that at His Second Coming the Jews will look on

Him whom they have pierced (Zechariah 12:10) and all Israel will

be saved (Romans 11:26) - the Messiah they expected at Jesus'

first coming will finally arive (Edersheim, 1993, p. 113) !



CONCLUSION



The honest Christian theologian can do nothing less than

assimilate the data of revelation provided in the scriptures and

draw from this one's theology and framework of belief. To do

otherwise is wrong, and one must not be persuaded by purely

emotional arguments, or seek to manipulate scripture to conform

to a preconceived world-view.



When one examines the conflicting views of the rapture in the

pre-millenial framework, it becomes apparent that the only one

which consistently fits the facts of Biblical data is the

pre-tribulation view. Certainly as Christians we look not for

tribulation, but for "His Son from heaven who has delivered us

from the wrath to come" (I Thessalonians 1:10). The early Church

expected the coming of the Lord imminently and did not expect

any intervening events, especially the Thessalonians (Matthew

24:44; I Thessalonians 5:2).



Just as Noah and his family were saved from God's wrath (Genesis

7:6-7), as was Lot and his daughters (Genesis 19:14), and indeed

the Children of Israel were saved from the plagues on Pharaoh

(Exodus 7:18; 8:3, 21-22; 9:3-4; 10:22-23; 11:6-7), so too the

Church shall be saved from the coming great tribulation by the

rapture.



The Christian is commanded to look up - for their redemption

draws near (Luke 21:28)! What can be said but "Amen. Come, Lord

Jesus." (Revelation 22:20).



About the author:

David M. Williams is an international itinerant Bible teacher,

based in Australia. Please visit

http://www.geocities.com/davidmwilliams for more articles and

information.



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