Variant Eschatological Positions
Day 22
B. Hodge, Biblical Authority Ministries, June 15, 2020
The Dispensational Pre-millennial view has a rapture, but the other end times views don't. So obviously Christians are not in agreement on this. A-millennialism, Post-millennialism, and Historic Pre-millennialism do not have a dispensational rapture event. The modern idea of a rapture is solely associated with Dispensational Pre-millennialism—a view that largely
began in the 1830s in the Plymouth Brethren and Exclusive Brethren churches.
A
few Historic Pre-millennialists may claim to believe it but most do not; but generally the
view doesn’t pertain to a rapture event. I suggest that the Historic
Pre-millennialists that do believe it is because of recent influence by
Dispensational Pre-millennialists and the two positions are being convoluted
into each other by people unfamiliar with the intricacies of the two positions.
Another
preliminary point is what is meant by “rapture”. There is an old meaning (pre-1830s) and a new meaning (post-1830s). Prior to the 1830s, rapture largely meant the
last day and final judgment—or Second Coming (i.e., the final
judgment and the end of all things here on earth before the Kingdom of God is
consummate and we spend eternity with God in perfection.) But the word rapture has a different meaning today in comparison to its past definition. This is what occurred beginning in the 1830s.
Rapture By Today's Meaning
Rapture By Today's Meaning
Rapture
today (as of the 1830s) has taken on a new and different understanding due to dispensationalism. Bear with me as I explain this briefly.
What is meant by rapture today is generally seen as the alleged partial return of Christ (just to the clouds) to take believers to heaven (also sometimes called the “Second Coming” by Dispensationalists, but usually distinguished as merely the “rapture”). This is metaphorically when the wheat is taken out of the field and the tares are left (Matthew 13:24-30).
What is meant by rapture today is generally seen as the alleged partial return of Christ (just to the clouds) to take believers to heaven (also sometimes called the “Second Coming” by Dispensationalists, but usually distinguished as merely the “rapture”). This is metaphorically when the wheat is taken out of the field and the tares are left (Matthew 13:24-30).
Continuing in the dispensational worldview, Christ awaits His real Second Coming (some denote this as the Third
Coming) where He will leave His heavenly throne either 3 ½ or 7 years later and
bring the resurrected saints with Him
to set up an earthly kingdom for a literal 1,000 years on earth. After this return, then Jesus now has an authority on earth to reign from a physical throne in Jerusalem.
And
then finally after the dispensational understanding of the 1,000 years, Christ will have the final judgment and the end of all things here on
earth when the future kingdom is finally consummate and we spend eternity with
God in perfection. This initial event of Jesus reaping people in the sky and taking them to heaven is what is meant by rapture or the rapture event
for this discussion.
The
word rapture is not used in the Bible. However, that is not necessarily a
reason for rejecting it. Many times, Christians give names to biblical
doctrines and theological out-workings of Scripture. For example, “Trinity” is
also not found in the Bible yet is a biblically derived understanding of the
nature of God.[1]
The
rapture is supposed to be a future event that has Christians disappear. Then
they are caught up in the clouds with the Lord in His “partial” second coming to
go to heaven and wait for their return to earth. So Jesus leaves the throne of
God, leaves heaven, almost makes it to earth and then goes back. He gets
Christians and then returns to heaven leaving behind non-Christians.
It
is supposed to happen at either 7 years, 3 ½ years, or immediate before Jesus
comes back a third time, giving up His heavenly throne to set up an earthly
kingdom (depending if you are Pre-Tribulation, Mid-Tribulation or
Post-Tribulation within the dispensational worldview). When Christ’s thousand years of reigning are up, He gives up His earthly throne for a heavenly throne again. At this point, it is to usher
in the end/resurrection and inauguration of the perfect state (I understand
there are variations in these models depending on whom you are talking).
Brief History of “the Rapture”
Brief History of “the Rapture”
Early
Church fathers didn’t comment on the Dispensational “rapture”. There is a
reference, by modern rapture-believers, to Irenaeus (d. A.D. 202) writing about
the end and the evil associated with it where he quotes: “And therefore, when in the end the Church shall be suddenly caught up
from this, it is said, ‘There shall be tribulation such as has not been since
the beginning, neither shall be.’ For this is the last contest of the
righteous, in which, when they overcome they are crowned with incorruption.”[2]
But
Irenaeus was merely quoting 1 Thessalonians 4:17 and Matthew 24:21. To
interpret his quoting of these verses as evidence of his belief in the Dispensational
rapture is without warrant. Furthermore the context reveals that Irenaeus was
talking of the final judgment and resurrection as he finishes that section by
saying that due to this evil, “…a
cataclysm of fire shall also come upon the earth.”[3]
As a note, Irenaeus, in this same section predicted that the end would be 6,000
years after creation, which has come and gone.
Others
have grasped at straws to make early church leaders sound as though they
support a rapture but without much success. It is usually because they don't realize that the word rapture had a different meaning in the past. So when were there any legitimate
references to the Dispensational rapture?
Prior
to the 1830’s one would be hard-pressed to find churches that had creeds,
catechisms, or faith statements that had the rapture. Though a few vague
unpopular references[4]
preceded John Darby and Edwin Irving, around 1830 (reinforced with possible
influence from Darby’s and Irving’s supposed prophetess friend Margaret
MacDonald), it was these two men that began to popularize this view with a new
definition of rapture.
More
so, it was Darby; and he even called it the “doctrine of the secret rapture”,
which proves it was not a known concept. By the late 1800s, they began having a
rash of followers. And when the view was adopted by gap theorists C.I. Scofield
[and he inserted into his Bible study commentaries in 1909] and author and Rev.
Clarence Larkin, with his books Dispensational
Truth (1918-1920)[5]
and The Second Coming of Christ (1918-1922),
the view catapulted into the mainstream for a Dispensational Pre-tribulation
Premillennial position. Other views predominantly reject it.
The
idea of a Dispensational rapture is the idea of Christ having two second comings or more properly, a
second coming and then a third coming. This is problematic in light of Hebrews
9:28 and Acts 1:11. But the view holds that Jesus will secretly return for the
saints and rapture out believers (the Dispensational resurrection); then will
return 3½ or 7 years later to return to
earth for a 1,000 year reign (this is also associated with a form of Judaism with sacrifice at the Temple being reinstated) and then after the millennium there will be
another resurrection.
Biblical Evidence of a Rapture?
The
primary text in the Bible pointed to for a rapture is 1 Thessalonians 4:17:
Then we who are alive
and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord
in the air. And thus we shall always be with the Lord.
However,
the context (1 Thessalonians 4:13-18) reveals this is discussing the resurrection
at the end, not a pre-end event. The
word rapture is derived from Greek word harpazo,
which is translated “caught up”.
Some
might say, that all Christians believe in the rapture since all Christians
believe in the day of judgment/the final day. However, that is an bait and
switch fallacy. The “dispensational rapture event” is not to be equated with
the “end/resurrection sometimes called a "rapture’”—they are two different
instances. The rapture and the doctrine of the end/final resurrection are two
different concepts/events—even within Dispensational Pre-millennialism. The
doctrinal position of the rapture by dispensationalists is NOT the end.
Furthermore,
the context of 1 Thessalonians 4:15-17 has the dead in Christ resurrecting
first and those in Christ who are still alive are the ones who are caught up
with the Lord afterwards.
Interestingly,
the parable of the wheat and the tares has the tares being taken out first
(Matthew 13:24-30)! John 5:28-29 indicates the resurrection will have all
people, good and evil, coming forth at the same basic time, not separated by 1000
years.
The
second primary passage used to give support to the rapture is Matthew 24:39-42.
And did not know
until the flood came and took them all away, so also will the coming of the Son
of Man be. Then two men will be in the field: one will be taken and the other
left. Two women will be grinding at the mill: one will be taken and the other
left. Watch therefore, for you do not know what hour your Lord is coming.
The
context of Matthew 24 regards the judgment on the Jews, particularly Jerusalem
and the Temple’s destruction (see the parallel passages like Mark 13:1-30; also
see: John 2:19 and Mark 15:29). It marks the event that ends the old covenant
with its sacrificial system (e.g., Hebrews 8:13) and the final transition into
the new eternal covenant in Christ (Jeremiah 32:40, Hebrews 13:20). [See
Question on Day 17 for more].
This
is not a future rapture of Christians out of the earth when things get bad. Context
mustn’t be neglected. Although brief, I hope this gets the point across about
why the rapture is problematic.
Read 1 Thessalonians 4:13-5:11, Matthew 13:24-30 (note again that the
tares/weeds are gathered first which is opposite of the rapture teachings. Also
note, that it is a wheat field, not a
tare field).
[1] Bodie
Hodge, God is Triune, February 20, 2008,
https://answersingenesis.org/who-is-god/the-trinity/god-is-triune/.
[2]
Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 5, Chapter 29.
[3] Ibid.
[4] For
example, a college paper by Morgan Edwards for Bristol Baptist College in 1744
mentioned a two fold return of Christ by confusion over the second coming with
the first resurrection, but claimed they were new ideas on his part. But these
had influence over virtually no one.
[5] Larkin
falsely predicted the Second Coming of
Jesus in A.D. 2000 in his book Dispensational Truth, Rev. Clarence Larkin Est.,
publisher, Philadelphia, PA, [37th printing (1920)], 1918, p. 16.