A Response to 'Silence Demands a Rapture'
By Dr. Kelly Nelson Birks
In this review, I have
chosen to respond to Ed
Stevens latest work called
“Silence Demands a Rapture”, by approaching the
subject in a commentary type format so as to best analyze Mr. Stevens view as
to how he arrives at his present position regarding the so called “Rapture” of
the church.
This commentary is not to be understood as an attack against Mr. Stevens
himself, but rather it should be seen as an attempt to understand how he
arrived at his conclusions according to his own public teaching on the subject,
and in doing so, to demonstrate the fallibility of the position as he has
enunciated it by our study of the scripture in order to discover what the Bible
really says on the subject. In doing so we will also note the lack of cogent historical
documentation for what I call the “Ed Rapture”, and to show that holding to
such a theory as this, will serve not to advance the cause of Biblical
Preterist eschatology, but rather to hinder it.
The “Harpazo”
In Mr. Stevens preface to
his article, he states that this issue of the “silence” of a
rapture was something that he has grappled with over a period of time.
It has been such an issue with Mr. Stevens, that he says it has actually robbed
him of sleep. “I lost sleep over it.” The problem seems to begin with an
inadequate understanding of the Greek word HARPAZO as it is used by Paul in 1
Thessalonians. 4: 17. Mr. Stevens says it means, “caught up.”
But while the word does mean to catch, seize, etc., nowhere can it
etymologically be understood to physically remove a person or thing towards a
specific direction. I am referring to the addition of the word “up” to the word
“caught” (catch), in most translations of 1 Thessalonians. 4:17. This word of
“direction” (up, away, etc) has been added by the translators to a great many
versions of scripture. It is simply assumed that the “harpazo” (commonly
referred to as a ‘rapture’) is something that (in this theory) takes the
individual’s physical body off the ground and “up” to another place. However,
the only time the lexicons ever define the word as a “catching UP”, is when
they are offering commentary within their articles concerning the nature of the
way the word is used. However, the word itself (harpazo) does not contain
within it any notion of a direction. (Up, down, away) Sometimes the Greek word
“anatello” is used for “up”, or “raised up”, as in Matthew. 13: 6, Mk. 4: 6. The
adverb, “ano” for “up” is used as a separate word in the cases of “above”,
“brim”, or “high.” The Greek word, “anoteron” which is a comparative degree of
“ano”, and is the neuter form of the adjective, “anoteros”, is used in giving
motion to something to a higher place, as in Luke. 14: 10. The word, “anothen”,
(“from above”), is used of a “place” as in Matthew. 27: 41, Mk.
Thayer’s Greek- English
Lexicon of the NT, on Pg. 74 of the 1977 Zondervan printing says, “to seize on, to carry off by force…to claim for one’s self
eagerly.”
Then, when commenting on
the “meaning’ of the word from specific passages that traditionally contain an
“up” or “away” idea, Thayer says: “ ‘To snatch out or
away’, Matthew.
Regarding Philip’s catching
“away” or “flight” from the desert with the Eunuch to Azotus, clearly, it is
not necessary for us to understand that Philip was physically transported to
Azotus. Why? Because the text does not say that Philip in any
way disappeared, or was supernaturally taken from the Eunuch. It simply
says that, “…the Spirit of the Lord “seized” (harpazo) Philip (with the result
that) the Eunuch saw him no more…” (Acts
The Greek word Harpazo
shows up 15 times in the Greek NT. These can be referenced in the Englishman’s
Greek Concordance. (Pg. 82 of the Zondervan 1970 edition).
Of these that feature a context that makes us to understand that the harpazo is
a reference to a physical removal from one point to another, see John 6: 15.
There, Jesus is threatened by those who would forcibly make him king. But even
this is a reference to having Christ to assume the role of messianic king, not
a physical translation. Acts 23: 10, where the Roman Captain feared for Paul’s
life in the midst of the Jewish mob, and in turn had Paul physically removed
from harm. These are the only two, which point to a legitimate “seizing” in
order to effect a removal from point A to B (and John 6: 15 does not really
refer to this as demonstrated). This leaves Matthew. 11: 12. Jesus is speaking
about the forceful preaching of the kingdom of heaven since the time of John
the Baptist, and that the spiritually violent “harpazo”, or seize (the kingdom)
by force (harpazo). No idea is presented about the forceful preaching of the
kingdom that physically transports someone in a certain direction. It is a
spiritual seizing or taking hold of someone’s conscience that is in view.
Matthew. 13: 9, the devil is
pictured as to playing his part in the Parable of the Sower relative to how he
“seizes” a person so that they cannot respond to the gospel preaching. Again,
no idea of a physical removal from one place to another is expressed by this
part of the parable. It is a spiritual seizing or catching that is explained
here. Surely no one is to believe that Satan actually removed people physically
out of a crowd of those listening to the gospel. (??)
John 10: 12 speaks of the hireling (the Jewish leaders of Jesus day)
that forsakes the flock of God and the wolf comes and seizes them in the flock.
The idea being expressed here is that they are taken away into error or in some
way spiritually harmed by the analogy of the wolf seizing (harpazo) them. . The
rest of the examples follow the same kind of analogy within the text. No one is
literally and physically removed anywhere.
Probably the most
interesting of all is Paul’s reference to himself in 2 Corinthians. 12: 2-4 as being
“caught” or seized to the Third Heaven. Paul speaks of a man (himself- V. 7) as
being harpazo into the Third Heaven. But was it a physical removal from the
planet surface or a spiritual one? Twice he says that this event was not known
to him to have been an “in the body” event or “out of the body” event. (V.’s
2-3) He was somehow harpazo, caught /seized to the Third Heaven (Paradise- V.
4) and heard things that were not lawful to utter. It was such an incredible
event for Paul that he could not say whether it was or was not a “physical”
harpazo. Therefore to point to this passage and say that this situation that
Paul describes justifies an understanding of a physical removal, is easily
countered by the fact that Paul implies that this harpazo was also possibly a
“spiritual” harpazo as he implies that it could have happened either way. This
then leaves us with a passage that actually teaches the possibility of a
non-physical harpazo. If one were to object to the assertion that the event
could have been a NON- physical removal, then we would reply with the Apostle
that he himself could not tell if it was or it wasn’t. Therefore, one must
admit an equal possibility for either. Except for the fact that again, the
Greek word harpazo used in V. 4, will only allow for the lexical/ etymological
meaning of “seized”, “caught”, perhaps “taken”. Clearly, when the translation
adds the word (ADDS the word!), “: caught UP” (V. 4), it’s
adding is from an interpretive sense, and NOT from an exegetical etymological
one. For as we have proved, there can be no directional sense “alone” from the
word harpazo, as it does not contain any of the Greek words that would be so
understood. This taken together with Paul being unable to be emphatic about
whether the event was in or out of the body, it is best not to speculate. Could
God have taken him physically? Yes. But what God could have done is not the
issue here.
Arndt and Gingrich- “A
Greek- English Lexicon of the NT and other Christian Literature” on Pg. 109 of
the 1979 edition, give the basics of the word harpazo as, “snatch, seize, take suddenly and vehemently. To grasp
something quickly, eagerly, with desire.” The lexicon includes the idea
of force in the action: Paragraph 2, a. “To seize or claim for one’s self ”: Paragraph 2, b.
What stands out so clearly
in all of the major (and minor) lexicons is that nowhere is it stated that the
word “harpazo” contains within it the any additional phrasing for “up”
(anotello, ano, etc). All we would need to find in
order to substantiate the “up” or “away” sense that traditionally has been
added to the meaning, is to locate a word formed like, “anoharpazo”, or some
such. But there is no such compound word that would verify the “up” or “away”
sense that commentators have assigned to the word. Assigned without lexical
“etymological” authority apart from the author’s own comments, I might add. Now to the primary text at hand….
1 Thessalonians. 4: 17.
“Then we which are alive
and remain shall be ‘caught’ (harpazo- no “up” “away” etc, indicated in the syntax of the text nor in the Greek word itself),
together with them in the clouds (a cloud coming reference to divinity
appearing- i.e. Jesus is divine. See Dr. Randall Otto’s work, “Coming in the
Clouds”), to meet the Lord (‘meet’ is “apantesis’, Moulton and Milligan in
their Greek Grammar, vol. 1, pg. 14, say, “It seems that the special idea of
the word was the official welcome of a newly arrived dignitary.”), in the air,
and so shall we ever be with the Lord.” Critical to an understanding of the
text at hand is the word “air” from the Paul’s use of the Greek, AER.
(Pronounced, “ear.”)
Strong’s Greek Dictionary,
entry 109, defines it as:
From “aemi”, to breath
unconsciously, to respire. By analogy, to blow.
(1) The air, particularly
the lower and denser air as distinguished from the higher and rarer air.
(2) The atmospheric region.
Please note Strong’s root
definition followed by the primary meaning of the word that Paul uses in 1
Thessalonians. 4: 17. It is in reference to the “place” of respiration. The idea of the
exchange of oxygen within ones immediate sphere, is
what is the associative understanding. Paul is not saying that we meet the Lord
in the harpazo, in our lungs! Understand what Paul is driving at. He is
speaking of a spiritual meeting with the Lord, “within” ourselves.
Within our spirits. Why did he use this particular
form of explanation here? So that the Thessalonians, who could not conceive of
the nature of the harpazo at Christ’s Parousia in the least (and we don’t do a
very good job of it either), would begin to grasp that the meeting with the
Lord was to be a personal meeting “within” the believer. Each believer was to
have his or her own meeting with the Lord. If Paul had meant to communicate
that this meeting was of a physical nature relative to joining the Lord in a
place high above the planet surface, which Strong refers to as the place of
“rarer” air (thinner air, high above the planet), then he would in all
likelihood have used the Greek word “ouranos”. This is the primary word for the
sky high above. The place of rarer air. There would
have been no misunderstanding whatsoever if he had used ouranos. “Ouranos”: “To
lift, to heave.”- Vines, Pg. 548. Paul chooses the more spiritually descriptive
word AER, in order to communicate the primary defined meaning that Strong
actually gives us. Christ would meet the believer within. It is an analogous to
ones spirit that is within their body.
John Noe (a colleague of
Mr. Stevens) sees this in his work, “Your Resurrection Body and Life”. On Pg.
52 he says, “For believers alive today, this gathering is still relevant. It
takes place in the spirit realm, ‘in the air’ inside you (Strong’s #
109-author),that is, your spirit. Rapturists, as we
outlined in chapter one, have failed to differentiate this AER ‘air’ inside you
from the ‘ouranos’ air up in the sky. Consequently, they have also failed to
apply a spiritual sense to Paul’s symbolic language. They insist this is a
vanishing act by living Christians into outer space. How absurd! This ‘air’ is
the heavenly realm of the spirit. And we are spirits.”
Paul’s
use of the Greek words “harpazo” and “aer” in 1 Thessalonians.
What about the NT use of
the Greek word AER that we have been alluding to?
The Greek word AER is used
seven times in the NT.
(1) Acts
Ever tried to throw dust
into the air? Try it and see how high up you can get it. Not very high I assure
you, (especially if there is a breeze). This is the point for Luke using the
word AER here in Acts 22: 23 as opposed to “ouranos.” The Jews could only get
it as high as their immediate sphere. Perhaps a few feet at
best. It would have been within the space that contained the air that
they themselves were breathing.
(2) 1 Corinthians. 9: 26, Paul
says, “…so fight I not as one who beats the AER.” Here, he uses a boxer’s
terminology for comparing the discipline of athletics with the discipline of
the Gospel work of preaching. How far do you think the boxer could swing at the
air? No further than the length of his arms, right? He boxed within his
immediate sphere. Why did Paul not use the word “ouranos” to describe the
actions of a boxers training? Simply because it would have
been ridiculous to do so. Neither the boxer nor the participant in the
harpazo would reach into nor elevate off into the heavens above the planet.
There is a specific reason as to why Paul used AER to describe the nature of
the harpazo event.
(3) 1 Corinthians. 14: 9, As Paul
instructs the Corinthians in true and false tongues, he teaches them that
without speaking words in a language that everyone could understand, they would
merely be “speaking into the AER.” Paul did not want the Corinthians to think
that their words would be heard high above the city, up into the upper
atmosphere. But rather, that those within their immediate
sphere would be able to hear. Those who shared the
same “aer”. That which was a part of their respiration
(Strong’s #109). It was something to be experienced within their immediate
sphere.
(4) Eph. 2: 2 Speaks of
Satan being the “Prince and Power of the AER.” His realm was the arena of the
spiritual, not the physical. He related to people within the sphere of their
spirit, and not in the physical heavens above. His power was over the
unregenerate mans life, not the molecules within the created carbon based
system. His battle was over the lives of men and not over upper ether “real
estate.” After Paul says that Satan was the Prince of the AER, he speaks that
he (Satan) was the spirit, “that now works in the children of disobedience.”
Again, the arena of Satan’s power was over the lives of men in an inner sense.
(4) 1 Thessalonians. 4: 17. (Already covered).
(6-7) Both Rev. 9: 2, and
16: 17 speak in highly symbolic terms concerning the fact that in Johns vision
(which is highly apocalyptic in nature and should only be pressed for
literalism when the context demands it,) he says he sees the AER darkened and
the angel pouring out his vial into the AER… Was the angel “really” pouring out
a literal “bowl” containing something physical into the sky above? Of course not. As is typical with the use of the word AER,
it is a reference to the realm of the spirit, as Noe points out, that is the
arena of the angel’s dealings.
“Begging Your Pardon”
Throughout Mr. Stevens article, there is a continuous stream of what is
known as “question begging” that is utilized. Question begging is a technique
that is used by authors in order to “massage” the reader into a mindset that is
ready to receive the suggested theory (in this case) that the author is
espousing. Notice the repetition of phrases that Mr. Stevens uses like, “How
could it be that some of the apostles and their traveling companions lived
through the events of AD 70 without recognizing the significance of it…?” Or,
“Did it (the Parousia) happen?” “Was it documented?” “Why are these folks…so
silent?” What, how, why, when, if, what about…. The continuous asking of the
audience these questions puts them in tune with where the author wants to take
them. Pretty soon one can be lulled into a state of ready acceptance to the
propositions about to be made. I do not believe that Mr. Stevens is
intentionally doing this. (This is probably just the way he writes). I do
believe that Mr. Stevens sincerely believes that he has found the “
Mr. Stevens suggests: “But
for Preterists it is a critical lack of documentation at the very time when we
need significant historical validation of eschatological fulfillment.”
Really? Why? Why is it necessary for us to
have “historical documentation” in order for the Preterist proposition to be
correct? Why is it that we are being asked to believe this? Is the agreement
with this proposition that which is truly necessary for us to begin to accept
the “Ed Rapture” that is being espoused? I have never felt a need for any
“extra- biblical” historical verification to believe that Christ taught and did
in fact return to the earth in AD 70. The scriptures are sufficient in these
regards. Why do we “need” historical verification as Mr. Stevens asserts? To
please those who oppose the Preterist view? What makes us think that they will
ever accept the Preterist proposition even if we provide them with tons of
historical documentation? “It is the Spirit that quickens, the flesh profits
nothing.” John 6: 63
Spoof Texting
In Mr. Stevens quoting of 1
Thessalonians. 1: 6-10, he insists that when Paul says, “For after all it is only just
for God to repay with affliction those who afflict you, to GIVE RELIEF TO YOU
who are afflicted and TO US AS WELL when the Lord Jesus will be revealed…”,
that the idea of God giving “relief” to the Thessalonians as well as to the
Apostles, actually involves a physical rapture that supposedly fulfills this.
But the context of the verses that are quoted by Mr. Stevens,
makes it clear that the “relief” that Paul was speaking of would be the
cessation of persecution that the Thessalonians were experiencing as the result
of the coming of Christ bringing vengeance on those who do not accept the
Gospel. In other words Christ’s Parousia ends the persecution by the Jews as he
comes to bring an eternal destruction upon them. The idea of placing a rapture here in the text is a manipulating of the passage.
There is no rapture here unless one wants to place the idea there through
suggestion rather than through exegesis. (Heck, a direct reading of the context
is sufficient to see what Paul is referring to).
As to the nature of a
physical “rapture” as supposedly being referred to by Paul in the promise of
our “gathering together to him” in 1 Thessalonians. 2: 1, Mr., Stevens asserts, “If
this isn’t a promise of a rapture, I simply don’t know what else to make of
it.”
We should “make of it’
precisely what the Greek text makes of it. The Greek word for “gathering” is
EPISUNAGOGES. An intensified form (“epi”) of our being
“synagogued” to him. To synagogue or to gather together is not the word
“harpazo” is it? The word “sunagouges” is used various times in the NT in
reference to the church gathering together to Christ in worship within their
various locales. Never once is it ever used in any sense as a physical removal
of individuals to a place where Christ geographically is. In James 2: 2 we are
told that when the local church came together for worship it is referred to as
a “sunagouge”. “For if there come into your ASSEMBLY
(sunagouge) a man with a gold ring….” When writing to the Hebrew
Christians, the author of Hebrews says, “Not forsaking the ASSEMBLING
(sunagouge) of ourselves together…” It is true that in Matthew. 24: 31 and Mk.
“Muzzling the Moment”
The bottom line is that the
lack of historical documentation neither proves nor disproves
a “rapture” as Mr. Stevens is suggesting it does. A number of
observations can be made as to the reasons for the absence of further
extra-biblical testimony as to the events of Christ’s AD 70 Parousia. One does
not have to be compelled into the “Ed Rapture” just because there is no
preserved documentation commenting on it. The scriptures are supposed to be
sufficient for faith and practice. Again why do we supposedly “need” anything
more than that? I for one do not. The lack of written accounts by the church
post AD 70 of the Parousia event does not in fact mean that nothing was ever
written about it outside of the scriptures. Something could very well have been
written, but simply not preserved. God makes no promises to preserve anything
other than his word. Not all of the writings of the Early Church Fathers have
been translated. It is possible that there could be a remark or two (or more)
about the coming of the Lord in AD 70 there within the non-translated writings?
The fact remains that whether there is or is not, no doctrine should be based
upon speculation. And this rapture view is clearly not exegetical, as it is for
the most part speculative and is supported by assuming certain things to be
true that are in fact not in evidence. One can easily get the impression that
the impetus for this current view is proceeding more
from the arena of frustration than anything else. Frustration
over the continuous battling with non-Preterists. Frustration
over the many who are demanding further “proof” for the AD 70 view.
These are not valid reasons to go off into what Heb. 13: 9 says are “different
and strange doctrines.” “Be not carried about by divers and strange doctrines.
For it is good that the heart be established with grace,…”
Heb. 13: 9.
More
“Spoof Texting.”
As Mr. Stevens continues to
build his case for a physical removal of all the saints in the first century,
he presses one passage in particular that at first read seems to establish his
view. He states, “1 John 3: 2 is another example. John clearly says that those
who were true ‘children of God’ would definitely SEE CHRIST (authors
emphasis) at his Parousia and become like him. This is not apocalyptic
language. There is a very real expectation here. He says that they would SEE
Christ return and would be made like him at his coming. Did they see him
return? Did they remain on earth afterwards? If so, why didn’t they (apostle John especially) tell anyone about what they saw and
experienced?”
Once again we notice the
overarching emphasis on the return to question begging by Mr. Stevens in order
to press his audience into aligning with him. He says “clearly”, “definitely”,
“See Christ return”, etc. But is this what the Greek text of 1 John 3: 2 says?
“Beloved, now we are the
sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be, But
we know that WHEN HE SHALL APPEAR, we shall be like him, for we shall see him
as he is.” 1 John 3: 2 KJV.
The highlighted portion is
worth drawing our attention to. The Greek text of John’s statement here does
not say in the Greek, “When he shall appear.” Rather it says, “But we know that
IF he is revealed, we shall be like him…” (Lit.
Version) “The Literal Version of The Holy Bible” (Sovereign Grace Publishers,
Lafayette, In.) correctly gives John’s original Greek here. The difference
between the two versions is of course, “When he shall appear” KJV. And, “If he is revealed.” Now the literal is not questioning
as to whether or not Christ would ever be revealed in his Second Coming. What
it is doing is correctly translating the Greek word EAN (KJV: “WHEN he shall
appear”. Lit. Ver: “IF he is revealed.”) Here, EAN is
a subjunctive conjunction. It means “if”, not “when”.
ASV… “…if he shall be
manifested, we shall be like him.”
Young’s Lit.
Ver. “…if he may be manifested, like him we shall be.”
John did not know if all of
the audience of his epistle was actually going to live long enough to see
Christ in his Parousia. John knew that he most likely would (John
Another text that Mr.
Stevens uses to postulate his theory is his quote of John 14: 3.
“Besides the 1 Thessalonians. 4 text which clearly teaches a ‘catching UP’ (sic) of the
living and remaining saints at the Parousia, there are other texts which either
assert or imply a rapture. Here’s another example—John 14: 3. ‘If I go and
prepare a place for you, I will come again and RECEIVE YOU TO MYSELF, that
where I am, there you may be also.’”
Mr. Stevens then assumes
that where Christ is means that he will take the believer to as well, that is
to heaven. He states, “Notice that Jesus promises to return to them after he
has prepared a place for them in the heavenly realm (John 14: 1-3). He says he
will come back and ‘receive (them) to himself,’ so that where he is (heaven),
they would be also. ”
A close reading of this
text will show that Jesus DOES NOT tell his disciples that where he would take
them to at the John 14: 3 event, was heaven! The text
says, “I will come again and receive you unto myself that WHERE I AM, there you
may be also.” Question: If Jesus comes back to the EARTH to receive his
disciples unto himself, then that tells us WHERE HE IS as a result of his
coming to the earth to receive them. Where he would be upon his coming was THE
EARTH, and that is where the disciples would be with him. That is, on the earth
in the spiritual realm, not heaven. Remember, Parousia means “a coming that
involves a consequential presence.” Christ has been here on the earth (as the
New Jerusalem/ Bride has been since AD 70,- Rev. 21), in an abiding consequential presence. That is
where he would be (“where I am”) at his coming to receive them unto himself. It
is this type of approaching of the text of the scripture with a presupposition
in mind that results in a theory of this kind. I
submit that the entire treatment of the scriptures that Mr. Stevens is giving
here suffers from this type of eisegetical treatment of the Bible in this
subject.
“The Emperor’s New Clothes:
No one noticed he was naked?”
Since it is far more
difficult to ask the reader to accept that some 1000’s upon 1000’s of believers
were suddenly and inexplicably removed in an “Ed
Rapture”, Mr. Stevens must assert the possibility that the actual physical
rapture must have been in fact, a very small number. He attempts to
substantiate this as a possibility by appealing to certain texts that he thinks
may point to this. He says, “It is also possible that the number of folks
‘snatched away’ might have been smaller than we think. In Luke. 18: 8, Jesus said,
‘…when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on the earth?’ ” But this text
from the lips of the Savior, does not mean what Mr. Stevens is suggesting that
it does. He seems to be presenting us with a text that somehow teaches that
when the Lord returns, there would not be much evidence of faith (i.e. true
believers) on the earth. But the context of the passage tells us that the
“faith” that Jesus was there referring to, was a faith that perseveres in
prayer and not a faith that is non- existent in some. Lk.18: 1…“And he spake a
parable unto them to this end, that men ought always to PRAY, and not to
faint…” Christ then gives the parable of the widow seeking justice from the
unjust judge, who after perseverance (teaching us about continuous prayer) finally
receives her request of the judge. Christ then concludes the parable by saying
in this light, “Nevertheless when the Son of Man cometh, shall he find faith on
the earth?” It is the faith that is represented by persevering prayer that he
is talking about as the introductory remarks of Luke. 18: 1 maintain. Mr. Stevens
tries to use the vision of Elijah and the chariot of fire/ whirlwind and the 50
prophets who he asserts witnessed the event, as an indicator that these 50
prophets were not “spiritual enough “ to see into the spiritual realm, and
thereby missed the vision itself. As if those who were “left
behind” at the Parousia / Ed Rapture, were equally unspiritual, and so were not
taken. This is straining of the text to the maximum. A careful reading
of 2 Kings 2: 7-18 will show that the 50 prophets were not any more, or any
less “spiritual” than Elisha who reported what he saw happen to Elijah. This is
not a good text for Mr. Stevens to use to prove his case for a “left behind”
scenario saying that “some “ were not spiritual enough to see it. The fact
remains that according to Christ’s teaching on the subject of the gathering
together of the saints in Matthew. 24: 30-31, that ALL of the elect, not “some” of
the elect, would be participating in the gathering that was to be done by the
angels at Christ’s Parousia. “And he shall send his angels with a great sound
of a trumpet, and they shall gather together (episunagago) his ELECT (all of
them, dead and alive) from the four winds, from one end of the heavens to the
other.” It does not say that he would only gather “some” of the elect, or only
those elect that were “worthy” through some kind of works of holiness, but
simply “the elect ones.” (“Eklektous” in the plural form).
It is simply assigning a view to the text that the passage itself will not
support.
Mr. Stevens continues to
assert that these “left behind” Christians had the writings of the apostles in
the NT, “to plant in the hearts of men and grow a new crop of Christians. And
that is how the church perpetuated itself…” Wait a minute…if the so called
“sleeping” Christians (whatever that is) were left behind because they were not
worthy or walking in faith, then what makes anyone believe that if they did not
notice that everyone was missing (as Mr. Stevens asserts), then why would they
suddenly have the spiritual “sight” to notice AFTER the “Ed Rapture”, and
thereby repent of their sinful laziness, and begin to repopulate the earth with
Christians through their “renewed” witness? Is there something “sanctifying”
involved with the rapture if one misses it because they were spiritually lazy?
This is an insufficient hypothesis to explain how the church “kept going.” It
assumes that the so-called Christians repented after they realized Christ had
come and they missed it. For anyone who knows the Dispensational
Pre-Tribulation rapture theory, one can easily see that this is just a
rehashing of that same weak theory now dressed up in Preterist garb. Now the
Preterist must appeal to old Dispensational theories in order to make their
rapture view palatable? Incredible! There is no more historical evidence for
the left- behinders “waking up”, than there is for this type of physical
rapture taking place in the first century that is being presented by Mr.
Stevens. Consider also the inconsistency of the writings by these “left behind
Christians” and their followers with their announcing of the Postponement
Theory within the writings of Justin Martyr, 2 Clement, and the Shepherd of
Hermas. If the left- behinders had realized their sin and repented and began
preaching the Gospel again, KNOWING that the “rapture” had in fact taken place
in AD 70 (as Mr. Stevens is bound to certainly affirm that they would have had
to), then why, WHY did the Postponement Theory developed by mid- Second Century
ever get off the ground and ever have an audience? Surely some 100 years from
AD 70 there would have been sufficient amounts of believers who had been told
that the left-behinders had made a mistake in the first century by not walking
by faith, who had subsequently then repented, and began preaching the truth of
a fulfilled AD 66 or 70 rapture. It simply makes no
sense whatsoever to believe in a literal first century physical rapture as, (1)
there is no Bible to substantiate it, (as we have demonstrated), and (2), there
is no historical record of it occurring, and (3), the mid- second century
writings would NOT have been about an “end –of –the- world Second Coming”, but
about a “we missed it”, Second Coming rapture. If this was the case, surely the
second century writers would have been waving the flag of a fulfilled prophecy
concerning the rapture in AD 66-70 and not teaching an entirely different one
IF they were a part of an inheritance of the post AD 70 repentant ones. This
new rapture view falls on it’s own sword. It’s like
the end of the “Mission Impossible” message to Mr. Phelps: “This message will
self destruct in 5 seconds. Good luck, Mr. Phelps!” Good luck Mr. Stevens!
Redating the Rapture!
Mr. Stevens next asserts
that this so-called “rapture” took place in AD 66! The problem with this is
that it borrows from the pre-trib Dispensational rapture idea of a Christ
coming FOR his saints at the beginning of the tribulation (modified from the
Dispensational seven year trib, to a three year trib.), and a Christ coming
WITH his saints in AD 70. Mr. Stevens has the rapture taking place in AD 66,
with Christ then being abiding and present on the earth during the 3.5 years of
the Roman siege on
“Let’s play, the
name-game!”
Finally, Mr. Stevens
attempts to “name drop” in a final attempt at supporting his view. He says, “So
far the only thing that has been forthcoming is what those four scholars
(Russell, Terry,
Our response to this is
simple: If those scholars had enough documental, historical, grammatical, and
contextual information to come to a “suggestion” of it, then why did they
simply not develop it themselves? If these scholars could have developed it
(and certainly they could have done so at least to the degree that Mr. Stevens
has), then why didn’t they? We may never know the answer to this question, but
we do not need to know the answer to it. Perhaps they themselves felt that a
“suggestion” was all they could really do. Perhaps they knew that there really
was not enough concrete evidence within the scripture or history in order to
demonstrate even the possibility of such a view. Clearly, if there were “enough”
Biblical evidence, one of them (if not others after them) would have done so
long before now.
Mr. Stevens titles his work
here “Silence Demands a Rapture.” Does the “silence”
on the matter of a physical first century rapture as
suggested by these men, give evidence to the fact of a “rapture”, or does it
give evidence to the fact that there really was not enough credible information
in order for them to substantiate such a rapture? You decide.
A
Conclusion to this Rapture-Delusion.
In conclusion, we offer
three major comments that affect the nature of the church by the view of a physical first century rapture.
(1) This view truncates the
apostolic and successive nature of the New Covenant within the church.
Simply put, there is no
ongoing and uninterrupted development of the NT church on the earth if all the
true Christians were removed from the planet in the first century. The New
Covenant is essentially truncated by the removal of those who were regenerated
and brought into the Covenant in the first century. The answer that Mr. Stevens
offers as to how the church “kept going” is insufficient as we have pointed
out, and frankly one of the hardest things to believe in this entire view.
(2) This view cancels the
Biblical promises regarding the Holy Spirit continually abiding in the church.
Since the church is made up
of individual believers that make up the Body of Christ on the earth, and if
the Holy Spirit abides unceasingly within the believer, then if the believers
are removed, the Holy Spirit must of necessity be removed as well. There are no
texts that teach that The Holy Spirit will come to the earth, and leave the
earth. That he will come and go between true and “sleeping believers.” This is
the implication as suggested by this new rapture view. Consequently, the Holy
Spirit is not here to regenerate anyone after AD 66, and the view that Mr.
Stevens takes, mandates the re-grouping, and re-forming of the church post
departure of the “real” church. This post rapture “church” of Mr. Stevens dies
of it own self-inflicted wounds.
(3) This view mandates a
massive redefinition of the nature of the church.
A new ecclesiology is now
needed if this view is true. What we have now, if this view is correct, is not
in fact the
The implications of this
rapture view presented by Mr. Stevens are of mammoth proportions. Ultimately,
it presents a view of Christianity and the Bible that is foreign to the
original intentions of the authors of the books of the Bible and of the Lord himself.
This view of the rapture if
embraced by Preterists, will set the cause of
Preterism and the development of it back years in the church. If in the view of
some, we stink in the nostrils of our anti-Preterist brothers and sisters now,
what will the development of a view that is anti- Bible and anti- historical,
and anti-reasonable smell like?
Silence does not “demand” a rapture. Silence demands precisely that…”Silence.” The
scriptures remain “silent” concerning the rapture view that is presented by Mr.
Stevens. We should be too.