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When Exactly Is the Rapture?

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exodus19

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debate, argue, put forthg all your verses, day in and day out , nothing to do except waste yur time with endless ramblings. i was here about 5 months ago and you all were crying the same tune, well not all, there's acuple of you still here, and putting forth the same tune with a few more scrambled attempts at proving your so called knowledge.

wake up, the second coming is set up by God through the messiah. Isaiah 11:11,12.
he 's the thief,
he's the only one who knows his name Rev 19:
he's the one who recognizes that God has incorporated him into the text.
he 's the one who first comes with a shout
who comes quickly
he's the one with the 7 seals
he's the one who is confirmed from beginning to end.
he's the one who has the sword in his mouth.

want more, how much more???????????????????????????
 
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L0U

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The rapture occurrs at the beginning of the Day of the Lord.

When the Scriptures were written it was not divided by chapters seperating the message.
With this in mind, read the following passage and tell me what is the context of 'the times and the seasons' that Paul called "the Day of the Lord".

1 Thessalonians 4:13-5:2
"But I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not, even as others which have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him. For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep. For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord. Wherefore comfort one another with these words. But of the times and the seasons, brethren, ye have no need that I write unto you. For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night."
Now read 2 Thessalonians to see him do the very same thing again:

2 Thessalonians 2:
"Now concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our assembling to meet him, we beg you, brethren, not to be quickly shaken in mind or excited, either by spirit or by word, or by letter purporting to be from us, to the effect that the day of the Lord has come. Let no one deceive you in any way; for that day will not come, unless the rebellion comes first, and the man of lawlessness is revealed, the son of perdition, who opposes and exalts himself against every so-called god or object of worship, so that he takes his seat in the temple of God, proclaiming himself to be God."
However, Paul is not the only one who links these together.

In His discourse on the Mount of Olives, Jesus proclaimed these very same events in the very same sequence:

1) Apostacy (Matthew 24:10-14)
2) revealing of the man of sin claiming himself to be God (24:15)
3) Great Tribulation by anti-Christ (24:16-24)
4) His coming and our gathering to Him at the Day of the Lord (24:29-31)

Aside from this, I would like to draw everyones attention to what Jesus said in verses 25-28:
"Behold, I have told you before.
Wherefore if they shall say unto you, Behold, he is in the desert; go not forth: behold, he is in the secret chambers; believe it not.For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. For wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together."
Now, what is that but a warning against those who would be speaking of a 'coming of the Lord' before the one He told us of before?
 
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GaryVance

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Nowhere in the scriptures does it say that Christians will be taken out of the world before tribulation begins. Check out Matthew 24 for chronology of end times events and discover that the pre-trib rapture is nowhere to be found.



Yes it does. It even says so in Matthew 24. See Matt. 24.40-41.



Sorry, this text does not say Christians will be taken out before the tribulation. It only says one will be taken and the other left. It neither substantiates nor refutes your position or mine. This is a secondary text. The primary text found in Matthew 24 is verse 31 and the timing is established by verse 29 when it plainly indicates "after" the tribulation of the days preceding it.





Matthew 24:1-8 leads us right up to the beginning of the tribulation and if Jesus were going to tell us of a pre-trib rapture it would be verse nine.





No. Verse 9 happens before the Tribulation.





Sorry again. Verses 1-8 are described as the "beginning of birth pains." Verse 9 plainly indicates a gear shift into the beginning of tribulation with persecution and martyrdom ensuing. Verse 10 finds many turning away from the faith. Verse11 reveals great deception and false prophets arising. Verse 12 shows increase of wickedness and Christian love growing cold. Verse 13 reveals that Christians who stand firm till the end will be saved (the end of what? The tribulation of course). Verse 14 declares the gospel will be preached to the whole world and then the end will come. No rapture mentioned or hinted and these verses most certainly describe tribulation. Verses 15-20 describe the rise of the antichrist and great calamity in Judea. Still no rapture. Verse 21 absolutely clinches the description of the "great tribulation" when it says "For then there will be great distress, unequaled from the beginning of the world until now-and never to be equaled again." Verses 22-26 describe more calamity, false prophets and Christs, lying signs and wonders, and deception. Still no rapture. Verse 27 gives the first clue in Matthew 24 about what the coming of the Lord will be like. Lightning striking in a powerfully VISIBLE way. Nothing secretive here and very much a noticeable event. Verse 29 establishes the timing as related to tribulation. It is AFTER the tribulation. Verse 30 declares that a "sign" is given in the sky that causes the earth to mourn. Then they "will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of the sky, with great glory." Verse 31 finally brings us to the one and only rapture that relates to the blessed coming again of Jesus.



What do we find in verse nine? No rapture. We find Christians being handed over to persecution. Did Jesus just forget to mention it?



Your false premise leads to this false conclusion.





My premise is simply based on plain reading of the text. This prophecy is not difficult to follow verse by verse as we have just done. Jesus neither mentions nor implies anything about a pre-trib rapture. Again I must ask the question. Did Jesus forget to mention the pre-trib rapture or did He not mention it because there is none? Why do you think this important event is not alluded to here? This is a key point to be considered and should not be passed over. This is a vital and primary text for any serious student of the subject to weigh in on.



This is a contrived notion by people trying to bend the scriptures to conform to an extra-biblical idea. Please use the same Bible study methods for this subject as you would all others (starting with primary texts to establish the idea and then go to secondary texts to further substantiate that idea.



It is a contrived notion by people who deny all raptures except their own selfish self-serving one, that is not reality





I don't understand your inference here regarding selfish or self- serving. Twelve raptures? I thought we were discussing the "rapture" related to end time prophesies and the second coming of Christ. The other 11 are not topically related to this thread. I would still recommend the sound Bible study technique I suggested in the quote above. It keeps the mind from drawing misleading conclusions.



No primary text even hints at a pre-trib rapture.



Rev. 3.10 is that premier text which is undeniable.



Sorry again. You have selected a secondary text that neither substantiates nor refutes your position or mine. This scripture barely qualifies as a secondary text because it does not indicate "rapture". It merely says "...I will keep you from the hour of trial..." It doesn't say how this will happen. You have to start with the idea of a pre-trib rapture to draw this conclusion about this verse because it does not clearly indicate rapture or timing. God has used a variety of ways in the Bible to keep His children during trials and testing. Sadly, rapture was never one of them. There is no Biblical precedent to draw this conclusion from.



You would benefit from a little historical study on the origin of this heresy. It was initiated by extra-biblical revelation. I am going to stick with the plain teaching of the Bible and draw my conclusions from scripture only. I do not trust extra-biblical revelators.



You would benefit from loving God and the errors of man in history denying God's love. The denial of key verses that point to first rapture according to readiness is man's flesh not wanting to be ready or even being a tare to deceive brothers and sisters in Christ. You are not going to stick with the plain Bible teaching, that much is clear. You trust extra-Biblical revelators and revelations. How sad for you.



Huh? Loving God and knowing His love for me is the greatest benefit in my life. Denial of key verses? Which ones? Are you suggesting I am a "tare deceiving brothers and sisters in Christ?" I am not sticking with plain Bible teaching? I trust extra Biblical revelators and that is sad for me? I don't get your point. History teaches that a young Scottish girl named Margaret MacDonald first proclaimed the pre-trib rapture after receiving this idea in a vision in the mid eighteen hundreds. There is no historical record of anyone in church history prior to this advocating this idea.



Jesus describes the rapture as coming at the grand conclusion of the tribulation. Verse 29 of Matthew 24 could not make it any plainer. Paul in l Corinthians 15:52 said it would come at the "last trumpet" and Rev. 11:15 reveals the blowing of the seventh and last trumpet and then the "kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ."





Jesus described two raptures, one at the front of the Tribulation and one at the end. Matt. 24.29 would pertain to the back-end, so would 1 Cor. 15.52, and Rev. 11.15. Don't shut your mind down to Luke 21.36 and other verses regarding the first rapture. It betrays you and is intellectually dishonest.





Sorry again. Luke 21:36 is another secondary text that neither substantiates nor refutes your position or mine. It simply says, "..pray that you will be able to escape all that is about to happen." It does not imply "rapture" as the means of escaping. There are other options to consider here including dying. You have yet to offer one verse that plainly leads one to believe in a pre-trib rapture. You are operating from a pre-conceived idea that comes from somewhere other than the Bible and then trying to support that idea with secondary texts. Go back to the primary texts that actually describe the "rapture" and start there. Post trib is plain to see and much easier to understand and explain than the pre-trib concept that is so convoluted.





l Thess. 4:13-18 is a primary text also. 17 being the "rapture" description. Some of you think that two raptures happen. The first for the "true" believers and the second for those who come in late to the game. 17 says "..and so we will be with the Lord forever." "We" implies people such as Paul and all other "good" saints. No pre-trib or two rapture idea conveyed here.



1 Thess. 4.13-18 pertain to the rapture at the 7th trumpet, not the first trumpet. The two raptures are not for true believers, since all believers are true. Your misunderstanding of this needing to bear false witness shows you are not in the truth but self. Remember, first rapture is according to readiness, not a forgone conclusion. These verses are interesting because they say those believers who are "alive" and "left" which is redundant since obviously those who are left are alive and those who are alive are left. Therefore, this must mean those who are left (Matt. 24.40-41) were not taken at first rapture. Thank you Jesus!

If I were you I would stop seeking after the Antichrist first who comes before Christ, but under two raptures Christ comes first through parousia beginning at first rapture.





This is what I mean by "convoluted". There is no rapture mentioned at the first trumpet. I don't understand what you mean about "needing to bear false witness" shows I am not in the truth. Is that an insult? I don't get it. I think the scriptural understanding of "those who are left" probably has more to do with those who "have persevered to the end" of the tribulation. That fits with the context of Matthew 24. I don't understand your last sentence at all. Seeking the antichrist? I don't get it.





2 Thess. 2 in its entirety is a primary text for rapture buffs. Please note that Paul plainly teaches that the antichrist will be revealed and there will be a great rebellion before the rapture. This text alone completely eliminates the possibility of a Pre-trib rapture.







It does not say when the rapture will be. Take another look. Let us be humble and not overassume.

By reading Matthew 24.42 together with 1 Thessalonians 5.2, 4, it is evident that there are at least two raptures: for note that the first passage suggests rapture before the Tribulation because one must be watchful since he does not know when his Lord will come; while the second passage suggests rapture after the Tribulation because one knows when the day of the Lord shall come.





It does say when it won't happen. Verse 3 plainly indicates that the day of the coming again of the Lord and our being gathered to Him "...will not come until the rebellion occurs and the man of lawlessness is revealed..." You should note that two events are described here as happening on one day and neither is pre-trib.





Let us pray for the post-trib person who hardens his stony heart further.





I don't get it. Are you saying I have a stony heart? Why? Because I disagree with you? I used to believe just like you. I read Hal Lindsey in 1973 and bought the whole package. I preached and taught publically this pre-trib doctrine using the same arguments. Independent study of scripture eventually brought me to discard this extra-biblical ideology and simply believe the plain scripture. I pray God reveal to me the stones in my heart and if I am a deceiving "tare" as you suggest. God bless you in your future studies.
 
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ForeverSaved

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GaryVance said:
Nowhere in the scriptures does it say that Christians will be taken out of the world before tribulation begins. Check out Matthew 24 for chronology of end times events and discover that the pre-trib rapture is nowhere to be found.



Yes it does. It even says so in Matthew 24. See Matt. 24.40-41.



Sorry, this text does not say Christians will be taken out before the tribulation.


To be taken is to nowhere else than "before the throne" (rev. 7.9) in 3rd heaven.

Matt. 24.4-31 speaks regarding the Jews, while Matt. 24.32-25.30 is regarding Christians, and 25.31-46 is pertaining to the nations.

Since 24.40-41, both the taken and the left are saved, and since all believers are raptured, the taken are taken before, while the left are taken after during the last week consummation of this age.

I tell you the truth. This is exactly the meaning of this verse. Heed it!
 
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lecoop

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I am amazed after reading all of the above posts. Paul was the only writer in the New Textament that received a revelation of the rapture of the church. He got this revelation long after Jesus died and was resurrected. Therefore, the rapture of the church was a mystery up to that time.

Many people struggle to find the rapture in the Olivet Discourse. It is no wonder that some think it is one verse, while others think it is in a different verse. The fact is, Jesus did not talk about the rapture of the church in this discourse. In fact, he barely spoke of the church at all. That was still a mystery until he rose from the dead. For the most part, Paul was the one that got the revelations concerning the Gentile church. The Olivet discourse was spoken to Jews about the end of the Jewish age. There is no rapture to be found there. One taken and one left? That will happen on the day that Jesus returns, and is the parable of the tares taking place. The angels are removing the tares; the tare is taken, the wheat is left. Where are they taken? The spirit is cast into hell. The body falls dead, and become bird food.

Who are the elect? God promised that he would bring every last Jew back to Israel, and the elect spoken of here are the Jews. They get an angelic escort back to Israel, for the sheep and goat judgement.

The timing of the rapture is a mystery, but will undoubtedly be before the 70th week starts. It most definitely cannot be on the day that Jesus returns, for then there would be no one to enter the milleniel kingdom of God. John sees the church in heaven for the wedding supper, before Jesus even comes back.

As I see it,
Coop
 
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lecoop

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What about the last trump? Just remember, the book of Revelation was written long after Paul wrote about the last trump. Paul did not mean the last trump ever to be blown in the world, but the last trump of a series. Is it the last of the 7 in Revelation? No. At the seventh trumpet in Revelation, the posession of the earth goes back to God, for the earth-lease has expired. God finally takes charge, after 6000 years! There is no mention of a rapture here.

Coop
 
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L0U

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Coop said:
The Olivet discourse was spoken to Jews about the end of the Jewish age.

Coop,
I believe that you are simply repeating what you have been taught concerning this.
John Darby (1800's) was the first in church history to teach that not only Matthew 24 but all of Matthew was for the Jews.
To this it was responded by one of his peers:
Benjamin W. Newton (1805-1898):
"The Secret Rapture was bad enough, but John Darby's equally novel idea that the book of Matthew is on 'Jewish' ground instead of 'Church' ground was even worse" (Prophetic Developments, p. 29).
The reasons why this assumption came under harsh criticism are Biblically substantial.

1) Matthew 24 was a PRIVATE discourse between the Lord and those would become foundational to His Church.(Matthew 24:3)

2) It is christians who are afflicted and killed for Christs' Namesake, not Jews. (vs. 9)

3) It is the christian 'agape' (not the love which is of the world) that will grow cold. Do a study on the 'agape' and you will see that it is never connected with anyone but Christ and His church. (vs. 12)

4) The elect are the elect of Jesus when He comes, wether Jew or Gentile. They are the elect of Christ.
Is there any other Name under heaven by which a Jew must be saved? But that would be another gospel.

Anyway, study these things a bit more.
 
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ForeverSaved

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Rev. 3.10 is clear: Because thou didst keep the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of trial, that [hour] which is to come upon the whole world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.

Not all Christians keep the word of his patience. Ergo, if you are a Christian not necessarily will he keep thee from the hour of the trial of the Great Tribulation if you don't keep the word of his patience.

It will come upon the whole earth one day, the last tribulation. It will try everyone on earth, including the Christians left behind.

God is motivating us to receive us at first rapture (Rev. 12.5).
 
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L0U

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foreversaved said:
Rev. 3.10 is clear: Because thou didst keep the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of trial, that [hour] which is to come upon the whole world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.

Let the Scripture interpret the Scripture.
In John 17:15 we have the very same Teacher using the very same phrase:

In John 17:15 it is requested by the Lord that they be "kept from('toreo ek') the evil."

In Revelation 3:10 the church of Pilidelphia is promised to be "kept from('toreo ek') the hour of trial".

It does not say 'taken off the earth during the hour of trial', for then it would be written "arees autous ek (take them out of) the hour of trial."; which is the very thing the Lord prayed NOT to occur in John 17.

The implication is the same as in John 17:15. And it speaks of the Lord's 'keeping power' within the hour of trial. Just as three men being kept within the flames of a fiery furnace but from the flames.
And we know from history that the disciples were not kept from tribulation. Physical deliverence was not what the Lord was praying about in John 17, niether did He promise the church of Philidelphia that they would be raptured off the earth.

The meaning of this verse met with distortion in the 1800's in favor of pre-tribulationalism; a distortion not unlike what is happening today with the meaning of 2 Thessalonians 2:3 with the revisionism of the word 'apostasia' to mean 'rapture'.

John Wycliffe (1320-1384):
"Wherefore let us pray to God that he keep us in the hour of temptation, which is coming upon all the world, Rev. iii" (Writings of the Reverend and Learned John Wickliff, D.D., p. 155).

Matthew Henry (1662-1714):
"Those who keep the gospel in a time of peace shall be kept by Christ in an hour of temptation [Revelation 3:10]" (Commentary, VI, p. 1134).

John Newton (1725-1807):
"Fear not temptation's fiery day, for I will be thy strength and stay. Thou hast my promise, hold it fast, the trying hour [Revelation 3:10] will soon be past'" (The Works of the Rev. John Newton, Vol. II, p. 152).


 
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ForeverSaved

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L0U said:
Let the Scripture interpret the Scripture.
In John 17:15 we have the very same Teacher using the very same phrase:

In John 17:15 it is requested by the Lord that they be "kept from('toreo ek') the evil."
After I tell you the truth, you better repent.

There is no ek next to toreo in 17.15. You did that of your own flesh.

In Revelation 3:10 the church of Pilidelphia is promised to be "kept from('toreo ek') the hour of trial".

It does not say 'taken off the earth during the hour of trial', for then it would be written "arees autous ek (take them out of) the hour of trial."; which is the very thing the Lord prayed NOT to occur in John 17.
It would not be written as your flesh demands.

The "ek", "out of this world" in John 17.15, that is not next to "toreo" in John 17.15, is a rapturing up, which Jesus is not speaking about, but about keeping them from the evil one now.

If ek is being used in the sense of out of this world in 17.15, then why do you make it not out of this world in Rev. 3.10? That is illogical. Be "not doubletongued" (1 Tim. 3.8).

In the Greek text, after the word “keep” in this verse there is the word ek which means “out of’ (as in the word ekklesia which means “the called out ones”). Here, therefore, ek signifies a being kept out of the Tribulation. And “Because thou didst keep the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of trial” (3.10a) - As we have seen, the trial which is to come upon the whole world is the Great Tribulation; but notice that it is not a keeping from the trial but a keeping from the hour of the trial, In order to be kept out of the hour of trial, we must leave the world. There are only two ways for God to keep us out: death and rapture. And hence part of the living will be raptured before the Tribulation.

You must repent from what you believe.

The implication is the same as in John 17:15. And it speaks of the Lord's 'keeping power' within the hour of trial. Just as three men being kept within the flames of a fiery furnace but from the flames.
And we know from history that the disciples were not kept from tribulation. Physical deliverence was not what the Lord was praying about in John 17, niether did He promise the church of Philidelphia that they would be raptured off the earth.
John 17.15 is distinctly different than Rev. 3.10. Rev. 3.10 says a keeping out of the Great Tribulation, while John 17.15 is here now protection from evil. One is future, the other is present.

As we have seen, when "ek" is involved it is "out of this world".

Since the Great Tribulation has not occured yet we know Rev. 3.10 has not happened yet, though its Rev. 3 church period has.

Physical deliverance is not what is spoken of John 17.15, but it is what is being spoken of in Rev. 3.10.

The meaning of this verse met with distortion in the 1800's in favor of pre-tribulationalism; a distortion not unlike what is happening today with the meaning of 2 Thessalonians 2:3 with the revisionism of the word 'apostasia' to mean 'rapture'.
The meaning of this verse came into clarity like never before (though others believed it in lesser numbers) in the 1800s because of the entry into the Philadephia church period typified by the Brethren movement who taught the Scriptures in the deepest way.

There is no justification for apostia meaning rapture. Just because someone makes this mistake does not justify your mistake and misreading of "out of this world" which you use in one sense and then change the meaning to another sense. If Jesus is speaking of not out of this world (ek) in 17.15, then He is speaking of out of this world in Rev. 3.10 (ek). Ek is being used the same way in both cases.

This is the answer that is suppose to cause you to repent. If you don't repent with this answer, you have major problems.
 
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L0U

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foreversaved said:
There is no ek next to toreo in 17.15. You did that of your own flesh.

Your kidding, right?

John 17:15
"|5083| You keep |0846| them |1537| from"
toreo autos ek
"keep them from"
===============================

Revelation 3:10
"|4671| you|5083| will keep |1537| from"
soi toreo ek
"keep you from"
===============================
I've got no problem with 'ek' meaning out. For instance, look at the first part of John 17:15:

"arees autous ek tou kosmou"
(take them out of the world)

And I have no problem with Revelation 3:10 reading:

"kagoo se teereesoo ek tees hooras tou peirasmou tees"
"And I will keep you out of the hour of trial"

The problem that you fail to admit is that niether verse demands a forceful removal (or rapture) off the face of the earth.


foreversaved said:
If ek is being used in the sense of out of this world in 17.15, then why do you make it not out of this world in Rev. 3.10? That is illogical. Be "not doubletongued" (1 Tim. 3.8).

Uh...did I say that.

foreversaved said:
As we have seen, when "ek" is involved it is "out of this world".

Very well, but if I am taken 'out of this world' I must have of nessecity been in this world. If I am taken "out of the hour of trial" I must have of nessecity been in the hour of trial. Just like the great multitude of Revelation 7 who are seen coming "out of" ('ek') the great tribulation.

foreversaved said:
The meaning of this verse came into clarity like never before (though others believed it in lesser numbers) in the 1800s because of the entry into the Philadephia church period typified by the Brethren movement who taught the Scriptures in the deepest way.

Yeah, I know all about it. Do you?




But Charles Spurgeon knew about it personaly:
"Do not be carried away with new meanings. Plymouth Brethren delight to fish up some hitherto undiscovered tadpole of interpretation, and cry it round the town as a rare dainty; let us be content with more ordinary and more wholesome fishery. No one text is to be exalted above the plain analogy of faith; and no solitary expression is to shape our theology for us. Other men and wiser men have expounded before us, and anything undiscovered by them it were well to put to test and trial before we boast too loudly of the treasure-trove.



We have been requested to reply to a small tract which has been given away at the door of the Tabernacle, by one of the "Plymouth Brethren," but it is so devoid of all sense, Scripture and reason, that it needs no reply. We have not learned the art of beating the air, or replying to nonsense. The only meaning we could gather from the rambling writer's remarks was a confirmation of our accusation, and a wonderful discovery that a long controverted point is now settled; the unpardonable sin is declared to be speaking against the Darbyites. Our portion must be something terrible if this be correct, but we have so little faith in the spirit which inspires the Brethren, that we endure their thunderbolts as calmly as we would those of the other infallible gentleman who occupies the Vatican. Another of this amiable community, having detected an error in one of our printed sermons, has most industriously spread the tidings that Mr. Spurgeon is a blasphemer. At the doors of their meetings and by enclosures in letters this sweet specimen of Christian charity is abundantly distributed; more to their shame than to our injury. We are persuaded that neither the writer of that cowardly anonymous fly-sheet, nor any other Plymouthist, believes in his heart that Mr. Spurgeon would knowingly blaspheme the glorious name of Jesus, and therefore the issue of the pamphlet is, we fear, a wickedly malicious act, dictated by revenge on account of our remarks upon their party. Our name and character are in too good a keeping to be injured by these dastardly anonymous attacks. Neither Mr. Newton nor Mr. Muller would sanction such action; it is only from one clique that we receive this treatment. It is worthy of note that even the printer was ashamed or afraid to put his name to the printed paper. Our error was rectified as soon as ever we knew of it, and being fallible we could do no more; but these men, who pretend to be so marvellously led of the Spirit, have in this case deliberately, and in the most unmanly manner, sought to injure the character of one who has committed the great sin of mortifying their pride, and openly exposing their false doctrine."
(Charles H. Spurgeon- February 1867 Sword And Trowel)From the February 1867 Sword and Trowelrom the February 1867 Sword and Trowel
So then, if 'tereo' means 'keep' or 'guarded' and 'ek' means 'out' or 'from' I have no problem with that.
Jesus never said we would'nt enter into the great tribulation. Nor did the apostles.

Aside from all this, the promise is only given to the church of Philadelphia. No such promise is given to the other six churches but all seven churches are called to be overcomers.

 
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L0U

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W.E. Vine:

"The preposition ek (or ex), which frequently signifies “out of” or “from the midst of,”http://www.christianforums.com/newreply.php?do=newreply&noquote=1&p=21004072#_ftn1

http://www.christianforums.com/newreply.php?do=newreply&noquote=1&p=21004072#_ftnref1 " tereo (τηρέω, 5083) denotes (a) “to watch over, preserve, keep, watch,” http://www.christianforums.com/newreply.php?do=newreply&noquote=1&p=21004072#_ftn1


http://www.christianforums.com/newreply.php?do=newreply&noquote=1&p=21004072#_ftnref1
(Vine, W. E., Unger, M. F., & White, W. 1996. Vine's complete expository dictionary of Old and New Testament words . T. Nelson: Nashville)

Hence the Tayers Lexicon definition of "toreo ek" as "by guarding, to cause one to escape in safety out of."
 
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ForeverSaved

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L0U said:
Your kidding, right?

John 17:15
"|5083| You keep |0846| them |1537| from"
toreo autos ek
"keep them from"
===============================
That blew right past you.

"shouldest take them out of [ek] the world" (17.15a)

"from [ek] evil" (17.15b)

The first instance is rapture from the world, the second instance is not rapture the evil of the world.

"from [ek]...world" (Rev. 3.10a) - rapture from that hour of trial that is to yet come upon the whole world; only death and rapture are assured ways of escaping this assured promise.

World in Rev. 3.10b is used in the same was as the world in John 17.15a. This brings their connection together to speak of rapture, whereas from evil is not speaking of rapture in John 17.15b.

Context is whater matters. God wants you to read with a spirit of discernment!

Revelation 3:10
"|4671| you|5083| will keep |1537| from"
soi toreo ek
"keep you from"
===============================
I've got no problem with 'ek' meaning out. For instance, look at the first part of John 17:15:

"arees autous ek tou kosmou"
(take them out of the world)

And I have no problem with Revelation 3:10 reading:

"kagoo se teereesoo ek tees hooras tou peirasmou tees"
"And I will keep you out of the hour of trial"

The problem that you fail to admit is that niether verse demands a forceful removal (or rapture) off the face of the earth.
Both John 17.15a and Rev. 3.10a are a clear receiving up, and Rev. 3.10a explains the reason, for those Christians who are accounted worthy to escape for keeping His patient Word (see Luke 21.36).

Uh...did I say that.
Yes it did. I just showed you, a second time. Don't be belligerent. Self-declarations don't count, not backed up.

Very well, but if I am taken 'out of this world' I must have of nessecity been in this world. If I am taken "out of the hour of trial" I must have of nessecity been in the hour of trial. Just like the great multitude of Revelation 7 who are seen coming "out of" ('ek') the great tribulation.
John 17.15a does not say when the rapture is, so it applies to both first rapture and the last rapture of the Tribulation, "out of this world". The world exists before the Tribulation. The world is not particular to just the Tribulation. So, when you read Rev. 3.10 "out of the hour of trial", using your quote replacement from John 17.15a, to be taken out of the hour of trial that is yet to come upon the whole world, may include its first parts, but not its whole part since death is not the meaning of being taken out of the world. As we know leading up the Tribulation there is the 6th seal, and already at this point we notice men hiding in caves, before the first trumpet is blown (no deaths here), and then "before the throne" (Rev. 7.9) is the rapture before the first trumpet of the Tribulation (even the first 4 trumpets there is no human deaths on mass yet, as only the earth is affected). How absolutely precise and accurate are the Scriptures! Whether you use "from" or "out of", the application neccesitates the same rapture at first rapture before many Christians are martyred in the Tribulation.

Powerful stuff! I for one am spiritually motivated intuitively to seek to overcome in Christ for the hope of being received at first rapture. In your faith, you have no such hope. How sad for you, as you would be looking for the Antichrist first in your life.

Yeah, I know all about it. Do you?
I just said it didn't I? I wouldn't say it if I didn't know it. Therefore, what we see is not the problem, but how we view what we see. there is my conscience in Christ quickened, and there is your conscience. One receives the hope, the other does not. This will wear on you over time for it is not the truth that you are believing.



But Charles Spurgeon knew about it personaly:
"Do not be carried away with new meanings. Plymouth Brethren delight to fish up some hitherto undiscovered tadpole of interpretation, and cry it round the town as a rare dainty; let us be content with more ordinary and more wholesome fishery. No one text is to be exalted above the plain analogy of faith; and no solitary expression is to shape our theology for us. Other men and wiser men have expounded before us, and anything undiscovered by them it were well to put to test and trial before we boast too loudly of the treasure-trove.​

Be careful of Spurgeon, here we him sin bearing false witness saying only one verse is used which is not the case at all. It is because of several verses that agree. This should be your first sign something is wrong with Spurgeon's claim, when he sins bearing false witness. Very narrow-minded!



Despite the wordiness of Spurgeon, his attack on the Brethen amounts to a mindless self-declaration. Can you see the self-centeredness in this? The Holy Spirit reveals it.



"Robert Govett (Spurgeon praised his writings as having light a century ahead of his time and as being full of gold)" - this was stated about Govett, who believed in two raptures, first rapture according to readiness and the last rapture according to completion, that stops the dissension between pre- and post-trib. Spurgeon did not have the spiritual insight to see first rapture according to readiness though he complimented greatly Govett. This would be a contradition in character, an unstable approach. And as we know Spurgeon had that pride of believing he was premade for salvation, so that needs to be rejected too. He had his faults.
We have been requested to reply to a small tract which has been given away at the door of the Tabernacle, by one of the "Plymouth Brethren," but it is so devoid of all sense, Scripture and reason, that it needs no reply. We have not learned the art of beating the air, or replying to nonsense. The only meaning we could gather from the rambling writer's remarks was a confirmation of our accusation, and a wonderful discovery that a long controverted point is now settled; the unpardonable sin is declared to be speaking against the Darbyites. Our portion must be something terrible if this be correct, but we have so little faith in the spirit which inspires the Brethren, that we endure their thunderbolts as calmly as we would those of the other infallible gentleman who occupies the Vatican. Another of this amiable community, having detected an error in one of our printed sermons, has most industriously spread the tidings that Mr. Spurgeon is a blasphemer. At the doors of their meetings and by enclosures in letters this sweet specimen of Christian charity is abundantly distributed; more to their shame than to our injury. We are persuaded that neither the writer of that cowardly anonymous fly-sheet, nor any other Plymouthist, believes in his heart that Mr. Spurgeon would knowingly blaspheme the glorious name of Jesus, and therefore the issue of the pamphlet is, we fear, a wickedly malicious act, dictated by revenge on account of our remarks upon their party. Our name and character are in too good a keeping to be injured by these dastardly anonymous attacks. Neither Mr. Newton nor Mr. Muller would sanction such action; it is only from one clique that we receive this treatment. It is worthy of note that even the printer was ashamed or afraid to put his name to the printed paper. Our error was rectified as soon as ever we knew of it, and being fallible we could do no more; but these men, who pretend to be so marvellously led of the Spirit, have in this case deliberately, and in the most unmanly manner, sought to injure the character of one who has committed the great sin of mortifying their pride, and openly exposing their false doctrine."
(Charles H. Spurgeon- February 1867 Sword And Trowel)From the

Of the second school, there could be listed such names as George Muller (who first believed in pre-tribulation rapture). The progression of spiritual awareness from some error to know error might be seen as follows: pre to post to partial. This is the progression of more spiritual Christians. Or better yet never assuming pre or post alone, but seeing only pre+post from the start. That is what happened to me. I say harmony off the bat through the gift of having a spirit of discernment.

Charles Spurgeon once said that Robert Govett was a century ahead of his time because what he preached was too deep. This same Govett was the one who shared two deep insights into God’s truth: (1) that it is possible for Christians to be excluded from the millennial kingdom, it therefore requiring of believers to be faithful and diligent; and (2) that not all believers will be raptured before the Great Tribulation, meaning that only the overcoming and faithful ones will participate in the kingdom.

In general, there are three varied schools of thought regarding Matthew 24 & 25: (a) that all which is prophesied here pertains to the church, as advocated by Benjamin Newton; (b) that all in these chapters is related to the Jews, as championed by John Nelson Darby and C. I. Scofield; and (c) that some of the material in these two chapters concerns the church, as we maintain. The reason for such differences lies in one’s understanding of who or what the disciples stand for: whether (a) the disciples represent the church; (b) the disciples symbolize the Jews; or (c) the disciples signify the Jewish remnant as well as the pillars of the church.

If you study you will find the 3rd school of thought is the correct one.

So then, if 'tereo' means 'keep' or 'guarded' and 'ek' means 'out' or 'from' I have no problem with that.

Therefore, given what is said, we can conclude that tereo is not our focus, but the context of what is being said. That is, the keep in Rev. 3.10 would be from the Hour of trial only promised by rapture in agreement with Rev. 17.15a out of the world rapture. And the keep from John 17.15b keep from is not the same usage, comparing context.

Do not shut your mind down to this. Do not try to rationalize your flesh further. You do not want to go down the road you are going.

Jesus never said we would'nt enter into the great tribulation. Nor did the apostles.
Jesus said some would go through the Great Tribulation and some would not, depending on their readiness. The apostles said the same thing.



Aside from all this, the promise is only given to the church of Philadelphia. No such promise is given to the other six churches but all seven churches are called to be overcomers.

Since the 7 churches are representing the 7 church periods, they are not limited just the churches at that time they were given, for obviously the church continues past the first century. 1828 represents the Philadephia church period, and all messages in all 7 churches are for all Christians, not just any one church period or even one church 1900 years ago. Taking these facts into account we know that this message is for all Christians. All 7 churches are to overcome which necessarily if overcoming will be included in the first resurrection rewards of reigning in the millennium (Rev. 20.2-7). But of the 7 churches Philadelphia, because it was the most spiritual, was given the warning to keep His patient Word to be kept from the hour of trial for they were most close to being qualified to be received at first rapture; nonetheless, how bizarre that not all Christians could not receive the same if they were alive at the first rapture.



You ought to be absolutely embarrased and humbled by what has been said. If you can not I dare say God's wrath will come upon you for rejecting His Word.
 
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L0U

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foreversaved said:
Jesus said some would go through the Great Tribulation and some would not, depending on their readiness. The apostles said the same thing.

Chapters and verses please. I've noticed the abundance of speech but lack of Scriptures.


foreversaved said:
Since the 7 churches are representing the 7 church periods, they are not limited just the churches at that time they were given, for obviously the church continues past the first century. 1828 represents the Philadephia church period, and all messages in all 7 churches are for all Christians, not just any one church period or even one church 1900 years ago.

Well, assuming that all seven 'church periods' must run their perspective courses, what of the imminency doctrine (that the Lord can return at any moment) before 1828?
Could the Lord have returned before the "Philadephia church period"??
If so, then the premis of 'church periods' crumbles to the ground.
If not, then the doctrine of imminency fails.

foreversaved said:
You ought to be absolutely embarrased and humbled by what has been said. If you can not I dare say God's wrath will come upon you for rejecting His Word.

IT IS WRITTEN:
"But let us, who are of the day, be sober, putting on the breastplate of faith and love; and for an helmet, the hope of salvation. For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ, Who died for us, that, whether we wake or sleep, we should live together with him."
Your going to have to wake up alot earlier and have alot more coffee to even think of attempting to shake the faith that my Lord has given to me my friend.
 
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L0U

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"But thou hast fully known my doctrine, manner of life, purpose, faith, longsuffering, charity, patience, Persecutions, afflictions, which came unto me at Antioch, at Iconium, at Lystra; what persecutions I endured: but out ('ek') of them all the Lord delivered me."


In virtually all of the 761 occurrances of "ek" in the Bible, a previous connection to the object, usually within it, is implied.
The above is just one.
 
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ForeverSaved

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L0U said:
Chapters and verses please. I've noticed the abundance of speech but lack of Scriptures.

Again, to repeat myself see Rev. 3.10, Luke 21.36, Matt. 24.40-41. 1 Cor. 15.50-52, 1 Thess. 4.15-17, and the fact that you see the church raptured at Rev. 7.9 before the throne before the trumpets of Tribulation blown in Rev. 8.

There are other verses to that need you to reason out,

(1) By reading Matthew 24.42 together with 1 Thessalonians 5.2, 4, it is evident that there are at least two raptures: for note that the first passage suggests rapture before the Tribulation because one must be watchful since he does not know when his Lord will come; while the second passage suggests rapture after the Tribulation because one knows when the day of the Lord shall come.

(2) The places to be raptured towards are also different. Whereas Revelation 7.15 mentions to “the throne of God” and Luke 21.36 mentions “to stand before the Son of man”, 1 Thessalonians 4.17 says that it is to “the air” – Such distinctions would thus indicate that the entire body of believers is not raptured all at one time.

(3) Mark 13 states, “But of that day or that hour knoweth no one, not even the angels in heaven, neither the Son, but the Father” (v.32), So that the day of the coming of Christ is unknown. But 1 Thessalonians 4 declares that “the Lord himself shall descend from heaven, with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God” (v.16). From this second passage we know that the appearing of Christ is after the sounding of the seventh trumpet. And hence the first passage re-lates to pre-tribulation rapture while the second relates to post-tribulation rapture.

Plus there are scores of other verses which you can find fault with if you hold any particular view.

Conclusion: there is a rapture at first rapture and the last rapture at the end of the Tribulation.


IT IS WRITTEN:"But let us, who are of the day, be sober, putting on the breastplate of faith and love; and for an helmet, the hope of salvation. For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ, Who died for us, that, whether we wake or sleep, we should live together with him."
Your going to have to wake up alot earlier and have alot more coffee to even think of attempting to shake the faith that my Lord has given to me my friend.
Do you have any idea how easy it is to destroy your thought as being not of God of the Bible?

1 Thessalonians 1.10 “The wrath to come” - This is the Great Tribulation. Since the Lord Jesus will deliver us from the wrath to come, we must be raptured before the Great Tribulation. Also, 1 Thessalonians 5.9 “For God appointed us not unto wrath” - Once again this “wrath” has reference to the Great Tribulation. Let me say, though, that such an interpretation of “wrath” here as being the Great Tribulation is incorrect. How do we know that this wrath must necessarily be the wrath in the Great Tribulation? And even if it were granted that it is, such an interpretation of this word “wrath” would still be unreasonable because the Great Tribulation, on the one hand, is God’s punishment and wrath coming upon the unbelievers, and on the other hand is Satan’s attack and wrath descending on the believers. When Satan assaults the believers, the latter enter into the experience of the Great Tribulation but do not come under the wrath of God.
 
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ForeverSaved

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L0U said:
Well, assuming that all seven 'church periods' must run their perspective courses, what of the imminency doctrine (that the Lord can return at any moment) before 1828?Could the Lord have returned before the "Philadephia church period"??If so, then the premis of 'church periods' crumbles to the ground.If not, then the doctrine of imminency fails.

Of course.

Make note that the first 3 church periods were consecutive in their nature, but the last 4 remained with us as you know, Thyatira representing the RCC is still here.

Christ can return at any time, that is the attitude all should have. With the knowledge we have had these past 2000 years and the fact that He did not return yet, we know better the meaning of these 7 church periods. Remember, the little book in Rev. 10. The second half is not opened yet which gives the details of the first half of the book. This would help explain that those in earlier centuries would be limited in their understanding of Rev. 2 & 3.

Speculation on if's is silly since we know He did not return. Alternate realities is a ludicrous way to view the world and the church. Even so, Christ said He could return at anytime, meaning this is the attitude one should have no matter what century you are in. Just common sense really.

To fight this in your flesh is the petty self. Let it go, and accept the truth.
 
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ForeverSaved

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L0U said:
"But thou hast fully known my doctrine, manner of life, purpose, faith, longsuffering, charity, patience, Persecutions, afflictions, which came unto me at Antioch, at Iconium, at Lystra; what persecutions I endured: but out ('ek') of them all the Lord delivered me."


In virtually all of the 761 occurrances of "ek" in the Bible, a previous connection to the object, usually within it, is implied.
The above is just one.

Objects are good things, and so is reading in context with a spirit of discernment.

Considering the different usages of the word ek, as I said, we must look at context to derive a clear understanding; and Rev. 3.10 says, "Because thou didst keep the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of trial, that [hour] which is to come upon the whole world, to try them that dwell upon the earth."

"that which is to come upon the whole world", a one time event.

This is a distinctly unique reference to the Tribulation, whereas the others are not necessarily so.

"hour of trial" is the period of time of "that which is to come upon the whole world", the Great Tribulation.

There is no mistaking context here. It is time to stop letting your flesh struggle and let it the cross bring it down to death a little more. Just let go. Let your spirit be your ruling organ over your soul and body.
 
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GraceInHim

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newlamb said:
You got that right! :wave:

Personally I'm pre-mill for a few reasons, mostly relating to Jewish feasts. And I believe that it will be the Fall of 2006 or 2007.

This does not mean that I'm giving up working in the fields for the harvest or waiting on my bum for the trumpet. But I believe that it's really soon. So soon, in fact, that I debated getting a dog a year ago, so I got a hand-me-down older adoptee dog! :)

many visions and dreams are around this time frame... and remember that Yom Kipper is during the fall where the heavens are opened... ;)

and Jeremiah 34 - the whole chapter is on the budding of the fig tree which is Israel... and God is merciful, there will be warnings... just as with Noah and Sodom and also in 70ad.. there was a prophet running around for 3 yrs warning the Israeli people.. read Josephus writings... think about the parables, one of the 10 virgins.... Jesus said when we see the budding of the fig tree, know that this will be the generation...

Israel rebirth 1948... Jerusalem (Mt. Zion) captured in a 6 day war 1967.. add 40 years of trial period... 2007...

Happy New Year :clap:
 
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