DancingWall said:
Hi DancingWall
(quote)
Are there any rapturist out there that can explain the last trumpet for me? PLEASE.
Pretty please
I am not a "rapturists" but if Paul is referring to the last trump as in the fall of Jericho it was after they circled the city 7 times after the 6th trump and thus victory over the city. Revelation is showing a city being sieged, so I would assume after the "victory" over the
Harlot is accomplished, the last trump sounds. Whether Paul is referring to this in his passage I don't know. So what is your view of the "last trump"?
As soon as the soles of the priests carrying the ark touched the waters of the Jordan, the waters stopped, and the people were able to cross the Jordan on dry land, just as had happened with Moses (
Joshua 3). Once in the land, Joshua circumcises all the men of Israel at the command of the LORD, and the men of Israel rest and recuperate (
Joshua 5). After the men of Israel had fully recuperated, Joshua commands the army of Israel to walk around the city of Jericho, following seven priests with rams' horn trumpets and the Ark of the Covenant one time every day for six days.
On the seventh day, instead of circling the city one time they circle it seven times. After the priests have blown the trumpets, Joshua orders the people to shout.
The people then shout as the trumpets are blown again, and the wall around Jericho falls down "flat," allowing the Israelites to walk "up into the city." The Israelites killed all the people of Jericho except Rahab and her family and burnt the city to the ground (
Joshua 6). Jericho at Tell es-Sultan is mentioned a few other times in the Old Testament.
This occurs after the fall of babylon. I don't know if this is the same as the 2 witnesses or not. It would have to be after the 42 months given to the gentiles to trounce on the "holy city".
revel 20:4 And I saw thrones, and they sat on them, and judgment was committed to them. Then [I saw] the souls of those who had been beheaded for their witness to Jesus and for the word of God, who had not worshiped the beast or his image, and had not received [his] mark on their foreheads or on their hands. And they lived and reigned with Christ for a thousand years.
5 But the rest of the dead did not live again until the thousand years were finished.
This [is] the first resurrection.