In Mark it is after the tribulation. I assume you are talking about 1 thes 4 about the sleep in Jesus..
1 Thessalonians 4:14
For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.
Once again, the dead Christian with Jesus in heaven come back with Him at the Rapture.
There is no difference between the dead in Christ being gathered from heaven and coming with Jesus in 1 Thess 4:14 and the ones being gathered from heaven in Matthew 24:31 and Mark 13:27. That is what you are missing.
The payback is when He returns not when He comes in the air for us. In 1 thes 4 it says this
2 For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night.
3 For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape.
The tribulation destruction comes after the day of the Lord starts. They will be talking peace then, after the rapture when the day of the Lord starts. Notice the day of the Lord verse comes before the other one?
Yes, we are first gathered to the Lord in the air and then the destruction occurs immediately after that which will catch unbelievers completely off guard which is why it is said to happen like a thief in the night. The scope of the destruction is described in 2 Peter 3:10-12.
What day? You jump around chapters like a grasshopper.
I use scripture to interpret scripture. I relate scriptures together to show what will happen. This is clearly a concept that you don't understand.
Which destruction? Of the planet? Or the enemies when He returns to earth? Or? Be specific.
Those are the same event. The day of the Lord that brings destruction upon His enemies that Paul describes in 1 Thess 5:2-3 is the same day of the Lord that brings destruction upon the entire earth as Peter describes in 2 Peter 3:10-12.
You are jumping all over with your references and it is less than clear what you are talking about at times.
I never referenced 2nd Thessalonians 2, yet you referenced it as if I did. How hard is it to see that I didn't reference that?
You can call something ELSE beside the gathering together in the air the blessed hope all you like. The so called hope you seem to be preaching here is a time after the wrath of God, (which we won't be in) when Jesus returns to earth, and in which the planet is destroyed?! Sorry. The hope of ages I am talking about is being delivered from that wrath and meeting Him in the air.
You are very ignorant about all of this. You are not able to understand much for whatever reason. I am talking about the same hope that you are and I made that clear. The difference is that I see unbelievers being destroyed on the same day that we are gathered together to meet the Lord in the air. But, that isn't my hope. I just happen to believe that will happen on the same day that "the blessed hope—the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ" (Titus 2:13) occurs.
So it is a real 1000 years or not? If not then you wave it away. Admit it
It is a real time period with a beginning and an end, but it is not a literal one thousand years. Similar to how the "thousand generations" referenced in the Old Testament in verses like Deuteronomy 7:9 is not a literal one thousand generations and the "thousand hills" referenced in Psalm 50:10 is not a literal one thousand hills. You do understand that there is figurative and symbolic text in the Bible, don't you?
Why can there not be a thousand generations? We live forever.
LOL. You miss every point that is made. I didn't say there can't be a thousand generations. Not even close. You are apparently not reading what I'm saying very carefully.
Are God's promises only good for a thousand generations and then they expire? No, right? So, it's not talking about His promises applying only to a literal one thousand generations and that's it. If it was meant to be a literal one thousand generations then that would mean they wouldn't apply to the 1,001st generation and beyond. So, it isn't meant to be taken literally. The same goes for the thousand years of Revelation 20. It's figurative text representing the length of time that Satan is bound.
Did you not think there is really a thousand hills on earth?
LOL. Once again you have missed the point. There are more than a thousand hills on earth with cattle on them. What does that tell you about what this means:
Psalm 50:9 I have no need of a bull from your stall or of goats from your pens, 10 for
every animal of the forest is mine, and the cattle on a thousand hills.
Is this saying that only the cattle on exactly one thousand hills belong to God or is it figuratively saying that the cattle on ALL hills belong to God? It's the latter, right? I hope you can understand that. My understanding of the thousand years is similar. It's not a literal one thousand years, but is a figurative reference to all of the years during which Satan is bound.