Podcast Revelation Questions 4: What About the Rapture?

(Photo: Unsplash)

Check out the So We Speak podcast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

Why Would Jesus Leave His Church on Earth?

This question is more directly asking about a Pre-Tribulation rapture. What sense does it make for the church to be on earth during the Great Tribulation?

This question assumes a futuristic view of Revelation (check out this podcast article for an overview of the four main views of Revelation). It is a popular understanding among futurist viewpoints that believers will be raptured (taken up) into heaven before God’s wrath is fully poured out on the earth. This is believed to happen in Revelation 4.

From a Post-Tribulation rapture viewpoint, another good question to ask is, “Why might God leave believers on the earth during the Great Tribulation?” The answer is that those believers will share the gospel with unbelievers and act as life preservers for the saving of their souls.

Is 2 Thessalonians 2 a Rebuttal to a Pre-Tribulation Rapture?

This chapter describes Christ coming and admonishing believers not to be fearful of missing Christ’s coming.

This passage indicates that Christ will come back after the “Man of lawlessness” (the antichrist). Doesn’t this indicate Christ’s return after the Tribulation and not before?

In the Pre-Tribulation view, the first coming of Christ is to rapture the Christians, and the second coming is to judge unbelievers. According to 2 Thessalonians 2, Christ only comes once. And this is the essence of the disagreement between the Post-Tribulation and Pre-Tribulation rapture views. It asks a better question of, “Is the rapture a separate event from the judgment of Christ?” This chapter would say they are the same event.

For more information, listen to the 1 Thessalonians and 2 Thessalonians book overviews.

Near Death Experiences?

Is this what happened to John? Should Christians view these experiences as legitimate?

John does not claim he went to heaven and saw Jesus. John says that he was in the Spirit on the Lord’s Day (see Revelation 1:10), meaning that the Spirit showed John these things. In Chapter four, John reiterates that the Spirit is showing him these visions. This is different from individuals who claim they went to heaven after their physical bodies died and returned to their bodies.

Secondly, John is writing an inspired revelation from God. This is not the same as a near-death experience. Whatever happens in these experiences, they are not on equal playing ground with the directly inspired words of God. These stories might be encouraging to the extent that they agree with the Bible. To the extent they do not agree with Scripture, they should be disregarded. Scripture has the final authority in God’s revelation.

How Do We Know John Had These Visions, and Did He Make Them Up?

Do we know John had these visions and were their witnesses? Technically nobody else saw what John saw. John was commanded to write it down and share it with the churches. This is what the early church believed.

Did John make these visions up? These visions are informed by Ezekiel and Isaiah and Revelation uses some of the imagery from these two books. However, these visions were not made up just based on what John would have known from Isaiah and Ezekiel. The imagery of Isaiah and Ezekiel serves to confirm the validity of these visions as being from God. These visions also came extremely early in church history, which further confirms the validity of these visions.

Follow the Revelation series from Crossings Community Church!

Brittany Proffitt lives in Dallas and is a writer and content manager for So We Speak.

Give

Subscribe to the Daybreak Devotions for Women

Be inspired by God's Word every day! Delivered to your inbox.


More from Cole Feix

  • featureImage

    The Ḥesed of God, Part 1: Hope and Joy in the Midst of Despair

    Hesed.Hesed is a rich Hebrew word and unfortunately it is extremely challenging to find a word that even comes close in English. The closest our Bibles come to is steadfast love, lovingkindness, or mercy. Yet even these fall short. Hesed is viewed as God’s covenantal, loyal and enduring love for his people, a love that pursues his people when they have done nothing but reject him (think the Israelites in the wilderness). It’s a covenantal loyalty that is unwavering and not based upon the conditi

    3 min read
  • featureImage

    The Power of Praising God in Prison

    Life can be challenging at times. Jesus made it clear that following him doesn’t exempt us from suffering. In fact, following Jesus guarantees suffering and persecution. “If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first” (John 15:18). As followers of Jesus, we will face trials, rejection, and hardship. So, what do we do when life gets tough? Throughout the Bible, we find stories of faithful people enduring trials not because they disobeyed God, but because they followed him. One of th

    3 min read
  • featureImage

    Podcast - Villains of the Bible: Sennacherib

    Sennacherib’s story takes place in the eight century BC. He makes the villain list because of his invasion of the Southern Kingdom of Judah. His father, Sargon, came to the Assyrian throne in 722 BC which was the same year they conquered the Northern Kingdom of Israel. Sargon’s body was never recovered after he died in a battle in Turkey. It was believed that because his body was not recovered after battle, this was a curse from the gods, and he was doomed to wander the afterlife begging for foo

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    The Pinnacle of Temptation

    Jesus was tempted throughout his life. But there were two seasons where the pressure was uniquely intense—two moments when the full weight of temptation bore down on him: the cross and the wilderness. Today, we’re looking at that second one—the wilderness—and more specifically, the third temptation as presented in Luke’s Gospel. To understand it, we need to set the scene.

    17 min read
  • featureImage

    The Weightiness of Worship

    “Because our God is holy, He is actively hostile to sin.God can only burn on and on against sin forever.”A. W. TozerHave you ever heard of the expression “the weightiness of worship?” Where in the Bible have you seen this? Allen Ross states, “For worship to be as glorious as it should be, for it to lift people out of their mundane cares and fill them with adoration and praise, for it to be the life-changing experience it was designed to be, it must be inspired by a vision so great and so gloriou

    7 min read

Editor's Picks

More from Cole Feix

  • featureImage

    The Ḥesed of God, Part 1: Hope and Joy in the Midst of Despair

    Hesed.Hesed is a rich Hebrew word and unfortunately it is extremely challenging to find a word that even comes close in English. The closest our Bibles come to is steadfast love, lovingkindness, or mercy. Yet even these fall short. Hesed is viewed as God’s covenantal, loyal and enduring love for his people, a love that pursues his people when they have done nothing but reject him (think the Israelites in the wilderness). It’s a covenantal loyalty that is unwavering and not based upon the conditi

    3 min read
  • featureImage

    The Power of Praising God in Prison

    Life can be challenging at times. Jesus made it clear that following him doesn’t exempt us from suffering. In fact, following Jesus guarantees suffering and persecution. “If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first” (John 15:18). As followers of Jesus, we will face trials, rejection, and hardship. So, what do we do when life gets tough? Throughout the Bible, we find stories of faithful people enduring trials not because they disobeyed God, but because they followed him. One of th

    3 min read
  • featureImage

    Podcast - Villains of the Bible: Sennacherib

    Sennacherib’s story takes place in the eight century BC. He makes the villain list because of his invasion of the Southern Kingdom of Judah. His father, Sargon, came to the Assyrian throne in 722 BC which was the same year they conquered the Northern Kingdom of Israel. Sargon’s body was never recovered after he died in a battle in Turkey. It was believed that because his body was not recovered after battle, this was a curse from the gods, and he was doomed to wander the afterlife begging for foo

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    The Pinnacle of Temptation

    Jesus was tempted throughout his life. But there were two seasons where the pressure was uniquely intense—two moments when the full weight of temptation bore down on him: the cross and the wilderness. Today, we’re looking at that second one—the wilderness—and more specifically, the third temptation as presented in Luke’s Gospel. To understand it, we need to set the scene.

    17 min read
  • featureImage

    The Weightiness of Worship

    “Because our God is holy, He is actively hostile to sin.God can only burn on and on against sin forever.”A. W. TozerHave you ever heard of the expression “the weightiness of worship?” Where in the Bible have you seen this? Allen Ross states, “For worship to be as glorious as it should be, for it to lift people out of their mundane cares and fill them with adoration and praise, for it to be the life-changing experience it was designed to be, it must be inspired by a vision so great and so gloriou

    7 min read