I think that is the problem with most Christians, including myself at one time. In fact, when you point out that the Bible doesn't mention a pre-trib rapture, and that the doctrine is less than 180 years old, most Christians are astonished.FFC wrote:As I say I'm leaning towards it but I'm not as dogmatic as I used to be. I think the problem is that is the only view i've ever been exposed to.
Sure did. I know that you already have your hands full with Owen's Book, but I would point you toward David Chilton's "Days of Vengeance". (It's a long book, over 800 pages, but not nearly as difficult to read as Owen's works). See also Kenneth Gentry's "Before Jerusalem Fell: Dating the Book of Revelation". Gentry also has a good article online identifying The Beast of Revelation as Nero Caesar.FFC wrote:I have more questions than answers like:
1. if the scenario in Revelations is not the great tribulation, what is it? Certainly nothing that horrific ever happened in 70 AD, symbolic language or not.
We need to remember that Revelation was written to seven first Century churches concerning events that "must shortly take place" (Rev. 1:1), were "near" (Rev. 1:3). Jesus promised to keep the First Century Church of Philadelphia "from the hour of trial that is coming on the whole world, to try those who dwell on the land." (Rev. 1:19). Certainly those early Philadelphia Christians had no interest in Hal Lindsey's horror stories, nor were they concerned with 21 Century events. They were concerned with the persecution they were receiving from Judaists and Romans. God was to avenge them shortly, within that generation.
That's not exactly what Jesus said, but close. He actually warned Christians to flee Judea when the saw the "Abomination of Desolation", clarified in Luke as Jerusalem surrounded by armies (See Matthew 24:15-22 and compare Luke 21:20-24). Christians were to leave Judea before the Great Tribulation, not be raptured into heaven. In fact, Jesus tells us that the days of the Great Tribulation were to be shortened "for the elect's sake" (Matthew 24:22).FFC wrote:2. In Matthew 24 Jesus said that prior to this tribulation everything would be business as usual, but then out of the blue some people are taken and some left standing still (don't worry, I'm not going to start singing "I wish we'd all been ready" :lol: weren't those movies cheesy?)...anyway, I doubt anybody was caught off guard in such a dramatic manner in 70 AD. They would have heard the rumble of the horses and chariots, and the war cries from miles away.
Why not? The righteous dead are resurrected prior to these Christians being caught up in the air. Jesus said that the resurrection takes place "on the last day" (John 6:39-40, 44), not before some "tribulation period". In fact, 1 Thess. 4:17 is held by most dispensationalists to be the main supporting Scripture for the Pre-Trib Rapture, despite the fact that there is no mention of a tribulation period in 1 Thess. at all. I pointed out earlier that the classic dispensational interpretation of the resurrections is wraught with inconsistencies. According to Rev. 20:4-5, the "first resurrection" includes "the souls of those who had been beheaded for the testimony of Jesus and for the word of God, and who had not worshiped the beast or its image and had not received its mark on their foreheads or their hands". This would be, according to them, the tribulation saints. Therefore, if this is the first resurrection, then 1 Thess 4:16 could not happen before the tribulation, unless the first resurrection is really the second, and the second which takes place "after the 1,000 years" (Rev. 20:5) is really the third. Throw in another resurrection for the "millennium saints", and you've got 4 different resurrections that take place 1,007 years apart. However, both Jesus and Daniel taught one resurrection of both the righteous and unrighteous at the same time (Daniel 12:2; John 5:28-29).FFC wrote:3. In 1st thessalonians 5 the dead and alive in Christ are taken, caught up in the air to meet the Lord in the air. This can't be the end of the world yet can it? Christ doesn't even touch down.
He did. He told them to leave Judea, and they did.FFC wrote:4. If like Jesus said there is going to be a great tribulation like never before or after, then wouldn't He make provision for his saints?
Hope this helps.
PL.