The false early rapture timing doctrine

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Blain

The Word Weaver
Aug 28, 2012
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#82
I don't think he's trolling Blain - he's on a mission.
Mission for what exactly? I mean if he wanted to convince people of his doctrine you would think he would at least come back but he appears to have just posted and disappeared. Or perhaps it is to soon to jump to conclusions maybe he is just busy or something
 
Jan 17, 2020
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#83
from the word of God 70 AD
Actually from Daniel's contiguous 70 weeks. The born again could see the spiritual kingdom. The spiritually blind could not. It's the same today.
 
Jan 17, 2020
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#84
You mean this from Matthew 24? Then you should read the Context. The Text cant mean only the Romans.
Btw, the babylonians were not Less worse in 586/587.
Jesus, speaking to the disciples said "when you see armies surrounding Jerusalem, leave the area," which they did.
 
Jan 17, 2020
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#85
They didn't turn into the Antichrist until the 10th century. They broke away from the church when they began free will salvation, true believers remained.
 
Jan 17, 2020
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#86
In your whole life, you’ve never looked upon something or someone to lust?
Before I was saved it was typical. After salvation, I learned to walk in the Spirit and censor all thoughts and imaginations that come from lust. So it's a temptation I don't allow to turn into sin. How's your walk?
 
Jan 17, 2020
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#87
I'm pointing out that the Greek word for "fall" is not there [verse 3].


Also, as pointed out in past posts, the first 7 English translations of the Bible translated this word (in v.3) as "the departure / the departing" BEFORE the kjv came along (later) and changed the word to "a falling away" (dropping the definite article ['the'], while they were at it).


And I'd added: "[and if you're going to point out its RELATION to the word "aphistemi," then see this carries a "geographical/spatial" meaning, as here: https://biblehub.com/text/acts/12-10.htm ] "
But it says what you say nowhere in scripture. That's the problem.
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
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#88
Before I was saved it was typical. After salvation, I learned to walk in the Spirit and censor all thoughts and imaginations that come from lust. So it's a temptation I don't allow to turn into sin. How's your walk?
Not as good as yours. Sounds like you’ve already been made perfect.
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
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#89
But it says what you say nowhere in scripture. That's the problem.
Paul's point in 2Th2 is to tell of the SEQUENCE...

WHAT must take place IN RELATION [time-wise] to what OTHER THING.



He's saying, in v.2, don't let anyone convince you that "the Day of the Lord IS PRESENT [perfect indicative]".

It wasn't, and Paul is explaining (to them) WHY.

However, they were not STUPID people (like the faulty interp's make them out to be ! )



They "understood" WHAT "the DOTL" is (the OT spoke of it, and Paul had mentioned it in the PREVIOUS letter)... and in fact, he had said in his previous letter that they "KNOW PERFECTLY" that it will ARRIVE like the INITIAL "birth PANG [SINGULAR]" comes UPON a woman with child/in labor... (1Th5:2-3). [note: Jesus didn't stop with the FIRST "birth PANG" but mentioned the PLURAL ones that FOLLOW ON FROM that FIRST "birth PANG"--"birth PANGS" work that way;) ]



But people tend to BLUR TOGETHER (into ONE) TWO distinct issues in this passage:

--the SUBJECT of VERSE 1 is "our Rapture" (BOTH PARTS of this verse 1);

--this isn't the Subject of VERSE 2 (which is what Paul is starting out with in v.3a); the Subject of v.2 is "the Day of the Lord" (that they are NOT to be persuaded by anyone trying to convince them that it "IS PRESENT [PERFECT indicative]"...

...meaning, basically, already arrived. This is NOT "Jesus' OWN arrival" nor "our Rapture's arrival" but the arrival of "the DOTL" EARTHLY time period [with its JUDGMENTS UNFOLDING upon the earth; which is consistent with their PRESENT NEGATIVE EXPERIENCES, 2Th1:4]--They understood WHAT it is, Paul is telling of the SEQUENCE--the "ONE THING" that must take place *FIRST* before it can be present to unfold upon the earth WITH its "man of sin" and all that he will DO)



CONFLATING these TWO DISTINCT ITEMS [v.1 and v.2] (as most do) has a person starting off on the wrong path, in interpreting this passage, just as you are doing with it (one issue among several, of this passage, very oft-misinterpreted). Don't skip over (or leave OUT) v.2 when ascertaining what v.3a is referring to!
 

Blain

The Word Weaver
Aug 28, 2012
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#90
Everyone remember how I mentioned that an athiest boasted how he made a rapture thread to troll Christians here in cc and laughed at how easy we were to mess with and how we argued and attacked each other? This is exactly why such people do that, we are Christians called to love to be the light and the world laughs and mocks specifically because of how we treat each other.

We gave our hearts to God and in doing so we are to show who he is in our conduct and actions, if we cannot be in the world but not of it in such a simple thing as a debate then how are we any better than those who are of the world and in it?
Already things are getting out of hand only proving why the atheist boasted
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
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#91
Already things are getting out of hand [...]
I'm not sure what you consider "getting out of hand"...

would you consider the following description to be so? :

"[G1864] 1864 epagōnízomai (from 1909 /epí, "focused on" and 73 /agṓn, "a contest, competition") – properly, to contend (literally, "struggle upon, appropriately"), i.e. with skill and commitment in opposing whatever is not of faith (God's persuasion)."



I'm just curious... are you referring to the "back and forth," or perhaps do you perceive my "caps" as "YELLING" (tho not intended), or something other.... ? = )
 

Blain

The Word Weaver
Aug 28, 2012
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#92
I'm not sure what you consider "getting out of hand"...

would you consider the following description to be so? :

"[G1864] 1864 epagōnízomai (from 1909 /epí, "focused on" and 73 /agṓn, "a contest, competition") – properly, to contend (literally, "struggle upon, appropriately"), i.e. with skill and commitment in opposing whatever is not of faith (God's persuasion)."



I'm just curious... are you referring to the "back and forth," or perhaps do you perceive my "caps" as "YELLING" (tho not intended), or something other.... ? = )
There is a difference being a civil debate and just bickering, there is even a sticky on the bdf that speaks about being civil and there is a proper way to debate but if we allow ourselves to get heated and begin to lash out at each other then it is no longer a debate it is just arguing with each other trying to prove what we think is

The key word in your description is properly and I was not trying to cause problems or anything but we both know how it is a slippery slope to another war thread. So you can take my advice or not
 

Blain

The Word Weaver
Aug 28, 2012
19,215
2,551
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#93
I'm not sure what you consider "getting out of hand"...

would you consider the following description to be so? :

"[G1864] 1864 epagōnízomai (from 1909 /epí, "focused on" and 73 /agṓn, "a contest, competition") – properly, to contend (literally, "struggle upon, appropriately"), i.e. with skill and commitment in opposing whatever is not of faith (God's persuasion)."



I'm just curious... are you referring to the "back and forth," or perhaps do you perceive my "caps" as "YELLING" (tho not intended), or something other.... ? = )
Also for the record it is true I said everyone but that was just because I wanted also say it to everyone but it wasn't your post I was referring to it was this


Before I was saved it was typical. After salvation, I learned to walk in the Spirit and censor all thoughts and imaginations that come from lust. So it's a temptation I don't allow to turn into sin. How's your walk?

Not as good as yours. Sounds like you’ve already been made perfect.

We can disagree but we shouldn't be condescending to each other
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
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#94
There is a difference being a civil debate and just bickering, there is even a sticky on the bdf that speaks about being civil and there is a proper way to debate but if we allow ourselves to get heated and begin to lash out at each other then it is no longer a debate it is just arguing with each other trying to prove what we think is

The key word in your description is properly and I was not trying to cause problems or anything but we both know how it is a slippery slope to another war thread. So you can take my advice or not
If you are speaking of my posts in particular (and this post of yours seems to hint at this being your intended direction, correct me if I am wrong), I would appreciate it being specifically pointed out anywhere (you perceive) that I have gotten "heated" or "lashed out at" another, so I can correct such. Again, I'd appreciate it.
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
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#95
How's your walk?

Not as good as yours. Sounds like you’ve already been made perfect.
Not sure why you're saying this ^ .

We can disagree but we shouldn't be condescending to each other
Okay, so you perceive that I've been "condescending" to another?

Can you please point out where, so I can correct this (for future purposes... can't change things already posted due to "5-min rule," as you know... but for "future" posts).

Thanks. = )
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
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#96
For the readers who've not yet seen the article (related to the Subject under present discussion), posted in the past:

[quoting]


"[Kenneth S. Wuest is a member of the Faculty of the Moody Bible Institute, Chicago, Illinois, and author of numerous books on New Testament Greek.]"

"The Rapture: Precisely When?" - Kenneth S Wuest

"The answer to these questions will only be convincing to the reader if it is based upon the rules of Biblical exegesis. [...<snip>...] That interpretation which is based upon the above rules is to be regarded as correct until it can be shown by the reapplication of the same rules that an error of human judgment has crept in.
"There is such a thing, therefore, as a scientific method of studying the Word. The student who follows the rules of an experiment in chemistry brings that experiment to a successful conclusion. The student who does not ends up with an explosion. Just so, the student who conducts his study of the Bible along the scientific lines noted above arrives at the correct interpretation, and the student who does not at the wrong one. The exegetical method the student uses in answering the question with reference to the time of the rapture will determine whether he believes in a pretribulational or a posttribulational rapture.

[...]
"The words "a falling away" are the Authorized Version rendering of apostasia. The verbal form afistamai from which it comes is present middle of afisthmi, the root verb, which we will study. The simple verb Jisthmi [histemi] in its intransitive sense means "to stand," the prefixed preposition means "off, away from," and the compound verb, "to stand off from." The word does not mean "to fall." The Greeks had a word for that, piptw. Afisthmi, in its various uses, is reported by Thayer as follows: "to make stand off, cause to withdraw, to stand off, stand aloof, to desert, to withdraw from one"; in contexts where a defection from the faith is in view, it means "to fall away, become faithless." The verb is rendered by the translators of the Authorized Version "to depart," in Luke 2:32; Luke 4:13; Luke 13:27; Acts 12:10; Acts 15:38; Acts 19:9; Acts 22:29; 2 Corinthians 12:8; 1 Timothy 4:1; 2 Timothy 2:19; Hebrews 3:12. In Luke 8:13 it is translated "fall away," in Acts 5:37, "drew away," and in Acts 5:38, "refrain." Had they translated the word here instead of interpreting it, they would have rendered it by the word "departure." The reader will observe that the predominant translation of the verbal form is "to depart," also, that where it is translated "fall away," the context adds the idea of "falling away" to the verb, which action is still a departure.
E. Schuyler English, to whom this present writer is deeply indebted for calling his attention to the word "departure" as the correct rendering of apostasia in this context, also informs us that the following translators understood the Greek word to mean "a departure" in this context: Tyndale (1534), Coverdale (1535), the Geneva Bible (1537), Cranmer (1539), and Beza (1565), and so used it in their translations. Apostasia is used once more in the New Testament and is translated "to forsake" (AV), signifying a departure. The neuter noun apostasion in Matthew 5:31; Matthew 19:7; and Mark 10:4 is rendered by the Authorized Version, "divorcement," which word also signifies a departure, here, from antecedent relations.
The writer is well aware of the fact that apostasia was used at times both in classical and koine Greek in the sense of a defection, a revolt in a religious sense, a rebellion against God, and of the act of apostasy. Liddell and Scott in their classical lexicon give the above as the first definition of the word. Moulton and Milligan quote a papyrus fragment where the word means "a rebel." But these are acquired meanings of the word gotten from the context in which it is used, not the original, basic, literal meaning, and should not be imposed upon the word when the context does not qualify the word by these meanings, as in the case of our Thessalonians passage, where the context in which apostasia is embedded does not refer to a defection from the truth but to the rapture of the church. The fact that our word "apostasy" means a defection from the truth is entirely beside the point since we do not interpret Scripture upon the basis of a transliterated word to which a certain meaning has been given, but upon the basis of what the Greek word mean to the first century reader. The fact that Paul in 1 Timothy 4:1 uses this verb in the words "some shall depart from the faith" and finds it necessary to qualify its meaning by the phrase "from the faith" indicates that the word itself has no such connotation. The translators of the Authorized Version did not translate the word, but offered their interpretation of it. They should have translated it and allowed the student to interpret it in its context.

With the translation of the word before us, the next step is to ascertain from the context that to which this departure refers. We note the presence of the Greek definite article before apostasia, of which the translation takes no notice. A Greek word is definite in itself, and when the article is used the exegete must pay particular attention to it. "The basal function of the article is to point out individual identity. It does more than mark 'the object as definitely conceived,' for a substantive in Greek is definite without the article." This departure, whatever it is, is a particular one, one differentiated from all others. Another function of the article is "to denote previous reference." Here the article points out an object the identity of which is defined by some previous reference made to it in the context." Paul in 2 Thessalonians 2:1 has just spoken of the coming of the Lord. This coming is defined by the words "our gathering together unto him," not as the second advent, but as the rapture. The Greek word rendered "and" can also be translated "even," and the translation reads, "the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, even our gathering together unto him."

The article before apostasia defines that word by pointing to "the gathering together unto him" as that departure. This article determines the context which defines apostasia. The translators took the context of 2 Thessalonians 2:10-12 as deciding the significance of the word, but they went too far afield, not grasping the function of the definite article preceding apostasia which points back to the rapture of 2 Thessalonians 2:1, not ahead to the refusal to believe the truth of 2 Thessalonians 2:10-12. The article is all-important here, as in many instances of its use in the Greek New Testament. In 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18, Paul had given these saints teaching on the rapture, and the Greek article here points to that which was well known to both the reader and the writer, which is another use of the Greek definite article. Thus, the departure of the church from earth to heaven must precede the great tribulation period [I would say, "must precede the [7-yr] tribulation period" to be more specific (for 'GREAT tribulation' refers only to the latter half of it)]. And we have answered our questions again. It might be added that the reason why Paul merely speaks of a pretribulation rather than a preseventieth week rapture is that he is addressing himself to the needs of the Thessalonian saints and is not explaining the particular place of the rapture in the prophetic program of God."

--Kenneth S Wuest, "The Rapture--Precisely When?", Bibliotheca Sacra, BSac 114:453 (Jan 57), p.60

[ www. galaxie . com/article/bsac114-453-05 ]


[end quoting that post; bold and underline mine]
 

Blain

The Word Weaver
Aug 28, 2012
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#97
If you are speaking of my posts in particular (and this post of yours seems to hint at this being your intended direction, correct me if I am wrong), I would appreciate it being specifically pointed out anywhere (you perceive) that I have gotten "heated" or "lashed out at" another, so I can correct such. Again, I'd appreciate it.
As I said before it wasn't your post I was speaking of it was the conduct between dave and john but I said everyone just as a genral reminder to everyone to stay civil. As I said you and I both know it is a slippery slope to a war thread and it starts with conduct like this then becomes lashing out at each other in the heat of debates.
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
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#98
To add to that point ^ (in my Post #96 ^ ) :


[from BibleHub]

G646 - apostasia - [recall, Liddell and Scott's "apo stasis"]

Word Origin

from aphistémi

[end quoting]

____________

[see again Acts 12:10 - a "geographical / spatial" departure / departing: "and forthwith the angel departed [aphistemi] from him." kjv]

_____


[and]

See also Hebrews 9:8-9a -

G4714 - stasin/stasis is used in a NEGATIVE sense, in 8 of its 9 occurrences (and there meaning [or, usages], "a rebel, revolutionist,...an insurrection, dissension, strife, uproar, a popular uprising, controversy");

but HERE, in its 9th occurrence ONLY, is NOT [negative], but means "A STANDING"

(in the context of a verse stating "the first tabernacle [the one in the wilderness, per context] yet having A STANDING [G4714]: Which is A PARABLE for the PRESENT TIME..." - Heb9:8-9a)
 

TheDivineWatermark

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2018
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#99
As I said before it wasn't your post I was speaking of [...]
Okay, thank you.

And thank you for your [general] exhortation to all participating in this thread.

Always a good reminder, that others outside this forum are READING everything (or, potentially everything) we write here. = )
 

Kolistus

Well-known member
Feb 3, 2020
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and nor can you say it is unbiblical because you do not see it or those do not see it as you do. All you have to do is look at what was given from the Bible and use what was given and show where i am wrong.


Ok it is no more a false teaching(doctrine) than post trib or No trib rapture. The collective understanding of the church orthodox teaching is the known as the "imminence" of the Lord coming. Calling the Pretrib Rapture false and suggesting those who hold to it are minster of satan is ignorance. Also you should know what you are talking about in context to where the teaching came from, it came from the Word of God and it was not only 1thess 4:13-18. Jesus is the one by where this teaching was established first. Found in John 14:3 "I will come again and receive you unto myself, that where I am, there you maybe also".

Paul the Apostle and he was the apostle to the Gentiles church, was given a special revelation from the Lord Himself regarding the details of what is known as the "Rapture" and it's relationship to the Resurrection. 1cor Paul speaks of the Rapture of the church together with bodily resurrection of deceased believers:

"Behold, I tell you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet; for the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed" (15:51,52,NASB)

I guess we will assume Paul taught doctrines of devils?

Aslo 2thess 2:1 speaks of this.
It is not just 1thess chapter 4:13-18 that your assertion of the doctrine of the Rapture was built on but many scriptures.


and those who spoke of it were:

  1. The Lord Jesus John 14, Matthew 24
  2. Paul 1Thess 4:13-18, Titus 2:13, 1cor 15:51-52, 2thess 2:1
  3. John in the book of Rev 19 coming with HIS saint
There is many scripture to support this understanding. Do you have to agree? No. Is it doctrine of devils from minister of satan? No. Will the pre-trib christian more saved than the post-trip? No. is post-trib a doctrine of devils? No.

The Tribulation Period as it is revealed in Daniel and the Book of Revelation is Gods Judge and Wrath poured out on the earth.
In Revelation chapter 6 is the starting of Gods wrath being poured out on the earth after the Lamb open or breaks the first seal.
Rev 6:1 the four Horsemen come. verse 6:17 says:


"For the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?"(KJV)

I have not been subject to Gods wrath, nor has the church of the living God which are not here after chapter 4 of REV.
This is a good and balanced, graceful approach to this topic.