The Rapture, John
14, And Myths
—
Executive Director
This paper was
presented to the Pre-Trib Research Study Group in
I believe
that John 14:1-3 speaks of Christ’s return at the Rapture for His church.
However, many who do not believe that the Rapture will occur before the
Tribulation say that this passage refers to Christ coming at death for a
believer. There are good reasons why this passage is Christ’s introduction of
the Rapture of the church.
Preterist
Dr. Ken Gentry believes that the Scripture “teaches that Christ comes … to
believers at death (John 14:1-3)”.[1]
Contrary to Dr. Gentry, Leon Morris notes, “The reference to the second advent
should not be missed.”[2] So
why does Dr. Gentry and others of his persuasion miss the thrust of this
passage? Because to take this as a reference to a future second coming would
contradict their theology. Why have the majority of ancient and modern
interpreters taken this text as a future second coming passage? Because the
plain meaning, taken in context, of the language in this passage demands such
an understanding.
John
14:3, where Christ tells His disciples, “I will come again, and receive you to
Myself,” is an expression that is never used of death in the whole Bible.
Commentators on this passage simply declare their view to be so, without
substantiation. Yet, many times, various Biblical texts speak of Christ coming
in reference to His Second Advent (Matt. 24:27, 30, 37, 39, 42-44, 46; 25:31;
John 21:23; Acts 1:9-11; 1 Thess. 4:15; 2 Thess. 1:10; 2:1, 8, etc.). One of the most vocal opponents
of the coming at death view is David Brown. In his pro-postmillennial diatribe
against Premillennialism (1882), in which Dr. Gentry penned a favorable
introduction, Brown provides a six-page rebuttal of the “death” view.[3]
Brown argues:
“And if I go
away”—what then? “Ye shall soon follow me? Death shall shortly bring us
together?” Nay; but “If I go away, I will
come again and receive you unto myself,…”[4]
The coming of
Christ to individuals at death … is not fitted
for taking that place in the view of the believer which Scripture assigns to
the second advent… .
The death of
believers, however changed in its character, in virtue of their union to
Christ, is, intrinsically considered, not joyous, but grievous—not attractive,
but repulsive… .[5]
The bliss of
the disembodied spirits of the just is not only incomplete, but, in some sense, private
and fragmentary, if I may so express
myself… .
But at the
Redeemer’s appearing, all his redeemed will be collected together, and
PERFECTLY, PUBLICLY, and SIMULTANEOUSLY glorified.[6]
The Bible
never speaks of death as an event in which the Lord comes for a believer,
instead, Scripture speaks of Lazarus “carried away by the angels to Abraham’s
bosom” (Luke 16:22). In the instance of Stephen the Martyr, he saw “the heavens
opened up and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God” (Acts 7:56).
Arno Gaebelein aptly summarizes the Biblical statements when he says,
This error is
clearly refuted by the fact that elsewhere in the New Testament the Spirit of
God tells us that the believer’s death is not the Lord coming to the dying
believer, but the death of a Christian means that he goes to be with the Lord;
… For the believer to be absent from the body means “present with the Lord,”…
(2 Cor. v: 1-8).[7]
So then, to
what does this passage specifically refer to?
Further
study of John 14:3 provides further evidence that our Lord’s coming again is
not only a future coming, but His coming for the church at the Rapture. We find
that the aorist tense of the verbs “go” and “prepare” “denote actuality as well
as single acts,”[8]
which support a second coming view of the passage. “The coming again is the
counterpart of the going away; visibly Jesus ascends, visibly he returns, Acts
l:9-11.”[9]
But note also that the language speaks of Christ coming “from heaven to the
earth, He describes a coming for His saints to take them to the Father’s
house.”[10]This
is a description of the Rapture in contrast to the Second Coming.[11]
“This
passage, taken literally, indicates that the believer is going to go to heaven
at the time of Christ’s coming for Him.”[12]
This will not occur at the Second Advent because that will be a time in which
Christ comes with His saints, who are
already in heaven, not for His saints
as John 14:1-3 requires. Arno Gaebelein tells us that Christ is unveiling a new
revelation about the Rapture of the Church:
But here in
John xiv the Lord gives a new and unique revelation; He speaks of something
which no prophet had promised, or even could promise. Where is it written that this
Messiah would come and instead of gathering His saints into an earthly
A
significant number of commentators note that our Lord’s statements in John
14:1-3 parallel another New Testament passage -- 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18.[14]
Renald Showers points out a number of similarities between the two passages.[15]
However, it was the late Mennonite commentator, J. B. Smith,[16]
who demonstrated just how extensive the relationship of these two passages
really is.[17]
Dr. Smith
made word-for-word comparisons between the Rapture passage (1 Thess. 4:13-18)
and a clear Second Advent text (Rev. 19:11-21) and found no significant
parallels. “Hence it is impossible that one sentence or even one phrase can be
alike in the two lists,” observes Dr. Smith. “And finally not one word in the
two lists is used in the same relation or connection.”[18]
He goes on to conclude, “it would be difficult if not impossible to find
elsewhere any two important passages of Scripture that are so diverse in the
words employed and so opposite in their implications… . We believe the
comparison of the words of these two passages… describe different events.”[19]
When it
comes to a comparison between John 14:1-3 and 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 we see
amazing parallels. That John 14:1-3 is a Rapture reference is supported by the
progression of words and thoughts when compared to Paul’s more extensive
Rapture passage (1 Thess. 4:13-18). Observe the following comparison:
|
John 14:1-3 |
I Thess. 4:13-18 |
|
trouble v.1 |
sorrow v.13 |
|
believe v.1 |
believe v.14 |
|
God, Me v.1 |
Jesus, God v.14 |
|
told you v.2 |
say to you v.15 |
|
come again v.3 |
coming of the Lord v.15 |
|
receive you v.3 |
caught up v.17 |
|
to Myself v.3 |
to meet the Lord v.17 |
|
be where I am v.3 |
ever be with the Lord v.17 |
Dr. Smith
notes the following observations as a result of these comparisons:
1.
·
The words or phrases
are almost an exact parallel.
2.
·
They follow one another
in both passages in exactly the same order.
3.
·
Only the righteous are
dealt with in each case.
4.
·
There is not a single
irregularity in the progression of words from first to last.
5.
·
Either column takes the
believer from the troubles of earth to the glories of heaven.[20]
In light
of comparing Scripture with Scripture, it appears obvious that Jesus’ teaching
in John 14:1-3 and Paul’s revelation in 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 speak of the
same event. Dr. Smith concludes, “It is but consistent to interpret each
passage as dealing with the same event—the Rapture of the church.”[21]
How else does one explain the progression of eight specific words/phrases in
exactly the same order, in two different passages, by two different spokesmen?
It is clear that these passages refer to a single future event—the Rapture of
the church. We learn that the church’s Blessed Hope was first revealed by our
Lord on the eve of His crucifixion to His disciples as they grieved over His
departure. Later, the doctrine of the Rapture was explained in greater detail
via Paul’s revelation to give comfort to the Thessalonians who were faced with
a similar problem of departing loved ones that Jesus dealt with in the Upper
Room with His disciples. Now, 2,000 years later and half-way around the world,
today’s church can be comforted by the Blessed Hope that in the next moment of
time we could be face-to-face with our Lord, in the Father’s house, via the
Rapture of the Church. May it be today. Maranatha!
A history
of the Rapture is of necessity a history of Pre-Tribulationism, since most
other views do not distinguish between the two phases of Christ’s return - the
Rapture and Second Advent. The partial Rapture and Mid-Tribulationism theories
have been developed only within the past 100 years.
That the
earliest documents (in addition to the New Testament canon) of the ancient
church reflect a clear Premillennialism is generally conceded, but great
controversy surrounds their understanding of the Rapture in relation to the
Tribulation. Pretribulationists point to the early church’s clear belief in
imminency and a few passages from a couple of documents as evidence that Pre-Tribulationism
was held by at least a few from the earliest times.
As was
typical of every area of the early church’s theology, their views of prophecy
were undeveloped and sometimes contradictory, containing a seedbed out of which
could develop various and diverse theological viewpoints. While it is hard to
find clear Pre-Tribulationism spelled out in the fathers, there are also found
clear pre-trib elements that if systematized with their other prophetic views
contradict Post-Tribulationism but support Pre-Tribulationism.
Since
imminency is considered to be a crucial feature of Pre-Tribulationism by
scholars such as John Walvoord,[22]
it is significant that the Apostolic Fathers, though Post-Tibulational, at the
same time just as clearly taught the pretribulational feature of imminence.[23] Because
it was common in the early church to hold contradictory positions without even awareness
of inconsistency, it would not be surprising to learn that their era supports
both views. Larry Crutchfield notes, “This belief in the imminent return of
Christ within the context of ongoing persecution has prompted us to broadly
label the views of the earliest fathers, ‘imminent intratribulationism.’“[24]
Expressions
of imminency abound in the Apostolic Fathers. Clement of
You have
escaped from great tribulation on account of your faith, and because you did
not doubt in the presence of such a beast. Go, therefore, and tell the elect of
the Lord His mighty deeds, and say to them that this beast is a type of the
great tribulation that is coming. If then ye prepare yourselves, and repent
with all your heart, and turn to the Lord, it will be possible for you to
escape it, if your heart be pure and spotless, and ye spend the rest of the
days of your life in serving the Lord blamelessly.[26]
Evidence
of Pre-Tribulationism surfaces during the early medieval period in a sermon
some attribute to Ephraem the Syrian entitled Sermon on The Last Times, The Antichrist, and The End of the World.[27]
The sermon was written some time between the fourth and sixth century. The
Rapture statement reads as follows:
Why therefore
do we not reject every care of earthly actions and prepare ourselves for the
meeting of the Lord Christ, so that he may draw us from the confusion, which
overwhelms all the world? ..For all the saints and elect of God are gathered,
prior to the tribulation that is to come, and are taken to the Lord lest they
see the confusion that is to overwhelm the world because of our sins.
This
statement evidences a clear belief that all Christians will escape the
Tribulation through a gathering to the Lord. How else can this be understood
other than as pretribulational? The later second coming of Christ to the earth
with the saints is mentioned at the end of the sermon.
By the
fifth century A.D., the amillennialism of Origen and Augustine had won the day
in the established Church - East and West. It is probable that there were
always some forms of Premillennialism throughout the Middle Ages, but it
existed primarily underground. Dorothy deF. Abrahamse notes:
By medieval
times the belief in an imminent apocalypse had officially been relegated to the
role of symbolic theory by the Church; as early as the fourth century,
Augustine had declared that the Revelation of John was to be interpreted
symbolically rather than literally, and for most of the Middle Ages Church
councils and theologians considered only abstract eschatology to be acceptable
speculation. Since the nineteenth century, however, historians have recognized
that literal apocalypses did continue to
circulate in the medieval world and that they played a fundamental role in
the creation of important strains of thought and legend [emphasis added].[28]
It is
believed that sects like the Albigenses, Lombards, and the Waldenses were
attracted to Premillennialism, but little is known of the details of their
beliefs since the Catholics destroyed their works when they were found.
It must
be noted at this point that it is extremely unlikely for the Middle Ages to
produce advocates of a pre-trib Rapture when the more foundational belief of Premillennialism
is all but absent. Thus, the Rapture question is likewise absent. This
continued until the time of the Reformation, when many things within
Christendom began to be revolutionized.
Premillennialism
began to be revived as a result of at least three factors. First, the Reformers
went back to the sources, which for them were the Bible and Apostolic Fathers.
This exposed them to an orthodox Premillennialism. Specifically significant was
the reappearance of the full text of Irenaeus’ Against Heresies, which included the last five chapters that
espouse a consistent futurism and cast the 70th week of Daniel into the future.
Second,
they repudiated much, but not all, of the allegorization that dominated
mediaeval hermeneutics by adopting a more literal approach, especially in the
area of the historical exegesis.
Third,
many of the Protestants came into contact with Jews and learned Hebrew. This
raised concerns over whether passages that speak of national
By the
late 1500’s and the early 1600’s, Premillennialism began to return as a factor
within the mainstream church after more than a 1,000-year reign of
amillennialism. With the flowering of Biblical interpretation during the late
Reformation Period, premillennial interpreters began to abound throughout
Protestantism and so did the development of sub-issues like the Rapture.
It has
been claimed that some separated the Rapture from the second coming as early as
Joseph Mede in his seminal work Clavis
Apocalyptica (1627), who is considered the father of English Premillennialism.
Paul Boyer says that Increase Mather proved “that the saints would ‘be caught up into the Air’ beforehand,
thereby escaping the final conflagration - an early formulation of the Rapture
doctrine more fully elaborated in the nineteenth century.”[29]
Whatever these men were saying, it is clear that the application of a more
literal hermeneutic was leading to a distinction between the Rapture and the
second coming as separate events.
Others
began to speak of the Rapture. Paul Benware notes:
Peter Jurieu in
his book Approaching Deliverance of the
Church (1687) taught that Christ would come in the air to Rapture the
saints and return to heaven before the battle of Armageddon. He spoke of a
secret Rapture prior to His coming in glory and judgment at Armageddon. Philip
Doddridge’s commentary on the New Testament (1738) and John Gill’s commentary
on the New Testament (1748) both use the term Rapture and speak of it as imminent. It is clear that these men
believed that this coming will precede Christ’s descent to the earth and the
time of judgment. The purpose was to preserve believers from the time of
judgment. James Macknight (1763) and Thomas Scott (1792) taught that the
righteous will be carried to heaven, where they will be secure until the time
of judgment is over.[30]
Frank
Marotta, a Brethren researcher, believes that Thomas Collier in 1674 makes
reference to a pretribulational Rapture, but rejects the view,[31]
thus showing his awareness that such a view was being taught. Perhaps the
clearest reference to a pre-trib Rapture before Darby comes from Baptist Morgan
Edwards (founder of
As
futurism began to replace historicism within premillennial circles in the
1820’s, the modern proponent of dispensational Pre-Tribulationism arrives on
the scene. J.N. Darby claims to have first understood his view of the Rapture
as the result of Bible study during a convalescence from December 1826 until
January 1827.[33]
He is the fountainhead for the modern version of the doctrine.
The
doctrine of the Rapture spread around the world through the Brethren movement
with which Darby and other like-minded Christians were associated. It appears
that either through their writings or personal visits to
The
Rapture was further spread through annual Bible conferences such as the Niagara
Bible Conference (1878-1909); turn of the century publications like The Truth and Our Hope; popular books like Brookes’ Maranatha, William Blackstone’s Jesus
Is Coming, and The Scofield Reference
Bible (1909). Many of the greatest Bible teachers of the first-half of the
twentieth century helped spread the doctrine such as Arno Gaebelein, C.I
Scofield, A.J. Gordon, James M. Gray, R.A. Torrey, Harry Ironside, and Lewis S.
Chafer.
In
virtually every major metropolitan area in North America a Bible Institute,
Although
still widely popular among Evangelicals and Fundamentalists, dominance of Pre-Tribulationism
began to wane first in some academic circles in the 1950s and ‘60s. A decline
among Pentecostals, Charismatic, and Evangelicals began in the 1980s as the
result of a shift toward greater social concern emerged. Pretribulationism is
still the most widely held view of the day, but it cannot be taken for granted
in many Evangelical, Charismatic, and Fundamentalist circles as it was a
generation ago.
The
doctrine of the Rapture has not been the most visible teaching in the history
of the church. However, it has had significant advocates throughout the last
2,000 years. It has surfaced wherever Premillennialism is taught, especially
when literal interpretation, futurism, Dispensationalism, and a distinction
between
A few
years ago, pre-wrath advocate Marvin Rosenthal wrote that the pre-trib Rapture
was of Satanic origin and unheard of before 1830. “To thwart the Lord’s warning
to His children, in 1830,” proclaims Rosenthal, “Satan, the ‘father of lies,’
gave to a fifteen-year-old girl named Margaret McDonald a lengthy vision.”[34]
Rosenthal gives no documentation, he merely asserts that this is true. However,
he is wrong. He is undoubtedly relying upon the questionable work of Dave
MacPherson.
Another
thing amazing about Rosenthal’s declaration is that a few paragraphs later in
the article he characterizes his opposition as those who “did not deal with the
issues, misrepresented the facts, or attempted character assassination.”[35]
This description is exactly what he has done in his characterization of pre-trib
Rapture origins. Why would Rosenthal make such outlandish and unsubstantiated
charges about the pre-trib Rapture?
One of
the things that facilitated the Nazi rise to power in
Pretribulationists
have sought to defend against “The Big Lie” through direct interaction against
the charges.[41]
In a rebuttal I made in 1990 to these charges, I gave two major reasons why
“The Big Lie” is not true. First, it is doubtful that Margaret Macdonald’s
“prophecy” contains any elements related to the pre-trib Rapture.[42]
Second, no one has ever demonstrated from
actual facts of history that Darby was influenced by Macdonald’s “prophecy”
even if it had (which it did not) contained pre-trib elements.[43]
John Walvoord has said,
The whole
controversy as aroused by Dave MacPherson’s claims has so little supporting
evidence, despite his careful research, that one wonders how he can write his
book with a straight face. Pretribulationalists should be indebted to Dave
MacPherson for exposing the facts, namely, that there is no proof that
MacDonald or Irving originated the pretribulation Rapture teaching.[44]
There is
a third reason why MacPherson’s theory is wrong, Darby clearly held to an early
form of the pre-trib Rapture by January 1827. This is a full three years before
MacPherson’s claim of 1830.
Brethren
writer Roy A. Huebner claims and documents
his belief that J.N. Darby first began to believe in the pre-trib Rapture and
develop his dispensational thinking while convalescing from a riding accident
during December 1826 and January 1827.[45]
If this is true, then all of the origin-of-the-Rapture-conspiracy-theories fall
to the ground in a heap of speculative rubble. Darby would have at least a
three-year jump on any who would have supposedly influenced his thought, making
it impossible for all the “influence” theories to have any credibility.
Huebner
provides clarification and evidence that Darby was not influenced by a
fifteen-yea-old girl (Margaret Macdonald), Lacunza, Edward Irving, or the
Irvingites. These are all said by the detractors of Darby and the pre-trib
Rapture to be bridges which led to Darby’s thought. Instead, he demonstrates
that Darby’s understanding of the pre-trib Rapture was the product of the
development of his personal interactive thought with the text of Scripture as
he, his friends, and dispensationalists have long contended.
Darby’s
pre-trib and dispensational thoughts, says Huebner, were developed from the
following factors: 1) “he saw from
Isaiah 32 that there was a different dispensation coming … that
German
author Max S. Weremchuk has produced a major new biography on Darby entitled John Nelson Darby: A Biography.[51]
He agrees with Huebner’s conclusions concerning the matter. “Having read
MacPherson’s book …” says Weremchuk, “I find it impossible to make a just
comparison between what Miss MacDonald ‘prophesied’ and what Darby taught. It
appears that the wish was the father of the idea.”[52]
When reading
Darby’s earliest published essay on Biblical prophecy (1829), it is clear that
while it still has elements of historicism, it also reflects the fact that for
Darby, the Rapture was to be the church’s focus and hope.[53]
Even in this earliest of essays, Darby expounds upon the Rapture as the
church’s hope.[54]
The
various “Rapture origin” theories espoused by opponents of Pre-Tribulationism
are not accepted as historically valid by scholars who have examined the
evidence. The only ones who appear to have accepted these theories are those
who already are opposed to the pre-trib Rapture. A look at various scholars and
historians reveals that they think, in varying degrees, that MacPherson has not proven his point.
Most, if not all, who are quoted below do not hold to the pre-trib Rapture
teaching. Ernest R. Sandeen declares,
This seems to
be a groundless and pernicious charge. Neither Irving nor any member of the
Albury group advocated any doctrine resembling the secret Rapture… Since the
clear intention of this charge is to discredit the doctrine by attributing its
origin to fanaticism rather than Scripture, there seems little ground for
giving it any credence.[55]
Historian
Timothy P. Weber’s evaluation is a follows:
The
pretribulation Rapture was a neat solution to a thorny problem and historians
are still trying to determine how or where Darby got it… .
A newer though
still not totally convincing view contends that the doctrine initially appeared
in a prophetic vision of Margaret Macdonald, …
Possibly, we
may have to settle for Darby’s own explanation. He claimed that the doctrine
virtually jumped out of the pages of Scripture once he accepted and
consistently maintained the distinction between
American
historian Richard R. Reiter informs us that,
[Robert]
Cameron probably traced this important but apparently erroneous view back to S.
P. Tregelles, … Recently more detailed study on this view as the origin of Pre-Tribulationism
appeared in works by Dave McPherson, … historian Ian S. Rennie … regarded
McPherson’s case as interesting but not conclusive.[57]
Posttribulationist
William E. Bell asserts that,
It seems only
fair, however, in the absence of eyewitnesses to settle the argument
conclusively, that the benefit of the doubt should be given to Darby, and that
the charge made by Tregelles be regarded as a possibility but with insufficient
support to merit its acceptance… . On the whole, however, it seems that Darby
is perhaps the most likely choice—with help from Tweedy. This conclusion is
greatly strengthened by Darby’s own claim to have arrived at the doctrine
through his study of II Thessalonians 2:1-2.[58]
Pre-trib
Rapture opponent John Bray does not accept the MacPherson thesis either.
He [Darby]
rejected those practices, and he already had his new view of the Lord coming
FOR THE SAINTS (as contrasted to the later coming to the earth) which he had
believed since 1827, … It was the coupling of this “70th week of Daniel”
prophecy and its futuristic interpretation, with the teaching of the “secret
Rapture,” that gave to us the completed “Pre-tribulation Secret Rapture”
teaching as it has now been taught for many years… . makes it impossible for me
to believe that Darby got his Pre-Tribulation Rapture teaching from Margaret
MacDonald’s vision in 1830. He was already a believer in it since 1827, as he
plainly said.[59]
Huebner
considers MacPherson’s charges as “using slander that J. N. Darby took the
(truth of the) pretribulation Rapture from those very opposing, demon-inspired
utterances.”[60]
He goes on to conclude that MacPherson:
did not profit
by reading the utterances allegedly by Miss M. M. Instead of apprehending the
plain import of her statements, as given by R. Norton, which has some affinity
to the post-tribulation scheme and no real resemblance to the pretribulation
Rapture and dispensational truth, he has read into it what he appears so
anxious to find.[61]
One of
Dave McPherson’s strangest claims is that Edward Irving and the Irvingites
taught a pre-trib Rapture. The Irvingites are said by McPherson to be the
source from which Darby clandestinely stole the doctrine and then claimed it as
his own discovery.[62]
More recently, two British theologians have also cited Irving as the real
source of Dispensationalism and Pre-Tribulationism. “Clearly, then, it is
incontrovertible that Irving held to a pretribulation doctrine in a form that
is developed and remarkably similar to contemporary dispensational views,” say
Patterson and Walker.[63]
Such remarks and conclusions make me wonder if these writers have read very
deeply in either Edward Irving or the Irvingite view of eschatology.
A few
years ago, an extensive critical analysis of Irvingite doctrine declared that
they were still overwhelmingly historicist, while Darby and the Brethren had
become futurist. Further, Columba G. Flegg notes that the Brethren teaching on
the Rapture and the present invisible and spiritual nature of the church:
The later
Powerscourt Conferences were dominated by the new sect. The Brethren took a
futurist view of the Apocalypse, attacking particularly the interpretation of
prophetic ‘days’ as ‘years’, so important for all historicists, including the
Catholic Apostolics… . Darby introduced the concept of a secret Rapture to take place ‘at any moment’, a belief which
subsequently became one of the chief hallmarks of Brethren eschatology. He also
taught that the ‘true’ Church was invisible and spiritual. Both these ideas
were in sharp contrast to Catholic Apostolic teaching, … There were thus very
significant differences between the two eschatologies, and attempts to see any
direct influence of one upon the other seem unlikely to succeed—they had a
number of common roots, but are much
more notable for their points of disagreement. Several writers [referring
specifically to MacPherson] have attempted to trace Darby’ s secret Rapture
theory to a prophetic statement associated with Irving, but their arguments do
not stand up to serious criticism.[64]
When
reading the full message of Irvingite eschatology it is clear that they were
still very much locked into the historicist system which views the entire
church age as the Tribulation. After all, the major point in Irving’s
eschatology was that Babylon (false Christianity) was about to be destroyed and
then the second coming would occur. Classic historicism! He also taught that
the second coming was synonymous with the Rapture.[65]
Irving believed that Raptured saints would stay in heaven until the earth was
renovated by fire and then return to the earth. This is hardly pre-trib since
Irving believed that the Tribulation began at least 1,500 years earlier and he
did not teach a separate Rapture, followed by the Tribulation, culminating in
the second coming.
F. F. Bruce,
who was part of the Brethren movement his entire life, but one who did not
agree with Pre-Tribulationism, said the following when commenting on the
validity of MacPherson’s thesis:
Where did he
[Darby] get it? The reviewer’s answer would be that it was in the air in the
1820s and 1830s among eager students of unfulfilled prophecy, … direct
dependence by Darby on Margaret Macdonald is unlikely.[66]
John
Walvoord’s assessment is likely close to the truth:
..any careful
student of Darby soon discovers that he did not get his eschatological views
from men, but rather from his doctrine of the church as the body of Christ, a
concept no one claims was revealed supernaturally to Irving or Macdonald.
Darby’s views undoubtedly were gradually formed, but they were theologically
and biblically based rather than derived from Irving’s pre-Pentecostal group.[67]
I
challenge opponents of the pre-trib Rapture to stick to a discussion of this
matter based upon the Scriptures. While some have done this, many have not been
so honest. To call the pre-trib position Satanic, as Rosenthal has done, does
not help anyone in this discussion. Such rhetoric will only serve to cause
greater polarization of the two camps. However, when pre-trib opponents make
false charges about the history of the pre-trib view we must respond. And
respond we will in our next issue where we
will present a clear pre-trib
Rapture statement from the fourth or fifth century. This pre-trib Rapture
statement ante-dates 1830 by almost 1,500 years and will certainly lead to at
least a revision of those propagating The Big Lie.
[1] Kenneth Gentry, The Beast of Revelation (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1989), pp. 25-26.
[2] Leon Morris, The Gospel According to John (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1971), p.639.
[3] David Brown, Christ’s Second Coming: Will It Be Premillennial? (Edmonton Alberta, Canada: Still Water Revival Books, [1882] 1990), pp. 20-25.
[4] Brown, Christ’s Second Coming, p. 21. (emphasis original)
[5] Brown, Christ’s Second Coming, p. 22. (emphasis original)
[6] Brown, Christ’s Second Coming, p. 23. (emphasis original)
[7] Arno C. Gaebelein, The Gospel of John. A complete analytical exposition of the Gospel of John (New York: Our Hope Publishers, 1925), pp. 266-67.
[8] R. C. H. Lenski, Interpretation of St. John’s Gospel (Columbus, Ohio: Lutheran Book Concern, 1942), p. 973.
[9] Lenski, John’s Gospel, p. 974.
[10] John F. Walvoord, The Rapture Question: Revised and Enlarged Edition (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1979), p. 194.
[11] For a comparison between the Rapture and the Second Coming see Thomas Ice and Timothy Demy, The Truth About the Rapture (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1996), pp. 26-31. Or Thomas Ice and Timothy Demy, Prophecy Watch: What to Expect in the Days to Come (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1998), pp. 100-02.
[12] Walvoord, Rapture Question, p. 195.
[13] Gaebelein, Gospel of John, p. 268.
[14] Renald Showers cites the following individuals who see a connection between John 14:1-3 and 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18: J. H Bernard, James Montgomery Boice, Arno C. Gaebelein, Arthur Pink, Rudolf Schnackenburg, F. F. Bruce, R. V. G. Tasker, and W. E. Vine in Maranatha: Our Lord, Come! (Bellmawr, N.J.: Friends of Israel, 1995), p. 162.
[15] Showers, Maranatha, pp. 161-64.
[16] J. B. Smith, A Revelation of Jesus Christ: A Commentary on the Book of Revelation (Scottdale, PA: Herald Press, 1961), pp. 311-13.
[17]
Earl Radmacher first called my attention to Smith’s comparison during a debate
with Robert Gundry in
[18] Smith, A Revelation, p.312.
[19] Smith, A Revelation, p.312.
[20] Smith, A Revelation, pp. 312-13.
[21] Smith, A Revelation, p. 313.
[22] John F. Walvoord, The Blessed Hope and the Tribulation (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1976), pp. 24-25.
[23] Kurt Aland, A History of Christianity, Vol. 1 (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), pp. 87-93. Millard J. Erickson, Contemporary Options in Eschatology (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1977), p. 112. J. Barton Payne, The Imminent Appearing of Christ (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1962), pp. 12-19.
[24] Larry V. Crutchfield, “The Blessed Hope and the Tribulation in the Apostolic Fathers” in Thomas Ice & Timothy Demy, editors, When The Trumpet Sounds (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1995), p. 103.
[25] Crutchfield, “The Blessed Hope and the Tribulation in the Apostolic Fathers”, pp. 88-101.
[26] The Shepherd of Hermas 1.4.2.
[27] For more information on this matter see Timothy J. Demy and Thomas D. Ice, “The Rapture and an Early Medieval Citation,” Bibliotheca Sacra (Vol. 152, No. 607; July-Sept. 1995), pp.306-17
[28] Dorothy deF. Abrahamse, introduction to The Byzantine Apocalyptic Tradition, by Paul J. Alexander (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985), pp. 1-2.
[29] Paul Boyer, When Time Shall Be No More: Prophecy Belief in Modern American Culture (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1992), p. 75.