Our previous study of the Seven Things You
Have To Know To Understand End Times Prophecy covered the
Sequence of Major End Times Events. We’ll begin this segment
with the second item on our list of seven.
2) The Destiny Of The Three Components Of Humanity: The Nations
(aka Gentiles), Israel, And The Church
Even so-called experts
misinterpret prophecy when they don’t stop to consider who the
Lord, or one of His prophets, is addressing. Just because
something’s in the Gospels doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s
for the Church, or being in Isaiah that it’s only for Israel.
Knowing a prophecy’s intended recipient is critical to
understanding it, and there are three possibilities. I’ll
show you what I mean.
His purpose was to create
in himself one new man out of the two, thus making peace, and in
this one body to reconcile both of them to God through the
cross, by which he put to death their hostility. (Ephes. 2:15-16)
Do
not cause anyone to stumble, whether Jews, Greeks (Gentiles)
or the church of God.(1
Cor. 10:32)
You are all sons of God
through faith in Christ Jesus, for all of you who were
baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.
There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female,
for you are all one in Christ Jesus. (Galatians
3:26-28)
In the 4,000 or so years from the Creation
to the Cross, the human race came to be divided into three
distinct components from God’s perspective. Here’s how it
happened. From the Creation there was one race of Humans, the
family of man, later called Gentiles. Then in
Genesis 12, God called Abraham to build a great nation. He and his
descendants were first called Hebrews (Genesis
14:13), and later Jews (Ezra
4:12). From that time on, the world’s population was
either Jew or Gentile. But at the cross God created the Church,
taken from among both Jews and Gentiles but sharing a destiny
with neither. Now there were three, and everyone on Earth
belongs to of one of them. In his epistles, Paul always took
pains to distinguish the Church from both Jews and Gentiles, in
effect calling the Church a new race of Human in the passages I
cited above. I’ll describe each group’s destiny so you can
see how different they are.
First the Gentiles.
According to Isaiah
56:6-8, Gentiles who converted to Judaism before the cross
became part of Israel and share its destiny (see below) as long
as they died in faith of a coming Redeemer. Gentiles who
meet their Lord after the rapture are called tribulation
believers. They’re either martyred for their faith, in which
case their spirits will go to serve God in His Temple (Rev
7:13-17) and will be joined with resurrection bodies at the
time of the 2nd Coming (Rev.
20:4), or they’ll survive the Great Tribulation to help
re-populate the nations of Earth in the Kingdom age
(Millennium). Believing Gentile survivors are the sheep in
the Sheep and Goat Judgment that we’ll look at later.
Next the Jews. The spirits of Jews
who died in faith of a coming redeemer before Jesus went to the
cross were taken into Heaven with Him after His resurrection (Matt.
27:52-53). They’ll also receive resurrection bodies at the
Second Coming (Daniel
12:1-3). Jews who receive Jesus as their Messiah
after the church disappears will be hidden in the Jordanian
desert (Petra) during the Great Tribulation. (Rev.
12:14) Both groups will dwell in Israel during the
Millennium. (Ezekiel
43:6-7)
Of course Jews and Gentiles
who give their hearts to Jesus during the Church age become part
of the Church and after the rapture / resurrection will populate
the New Jerusalem (Rev. 21). Many of us were taught to call it Heaven, but it’s
actually a separate entity. (More on this in our discussion of
the Millennium, item 6 on our list of 7 Things You Have To
Know.)
Whether Jew or Gentile, those who don’t do
any of the above during their lifetimes will be tormented in
Hell until they’re brought back to life to stand trial at the
Great White Throne judgment of
Revelation 20:11-15. It takes place at the end of the
Millennium. At that time, they’ll be sentenced to eternal
suffering in the Lake of Fire. (Rev.
20:14)
In the Old Testament, God promised Israel
that He would return one day to dwell among them in their land
on Earth forever (Ezekiel
43:6-7). In the New Testament, Jesus promised the
Church that He would come back and take us to be with Him in His
Father’s House (John
14:1-3). Both promises come true. Israel is not the
Church nor is the Church Israel, and both groups are distinct
from the Gentile nations. Much of the confusion surrounding End
Times prophecy results either from the failure to understand, or
the refusal to accept, this truth.
For instance, many Christians today believe
that the Church has replaced Israel in God’s plan and has
inherited all of Israel’s blessings. Israel no longer
serves any purpose in the world, they think, so when God talks
about Israel in the New Testament He really means the Church.
Therefore they misunderstand the Doctrine of Election, the
Olivet Discourse, the Great Tribulation, and other New Testament
teachings having to do with Israel.
Also, many Gentiles sit in
pews on Sundays and think they’re in the church even though
they’re not born again. They think they’re saved because they
try to live a good life, or give money, or belong to a
particular denomination. They’re wrongly convinced that the
Church’s blessings are theirs.
So there are three components of humanity
and they all have different destinies. New Jerusalem is
for the Church, Israel is for the Jews, and the rest of
the world is for Gentile believers who will re-populate the
Earth after the 2nd Coming. All surviving non-believers,
whether Jew or Gentile, will be taken away at the time of the
2nd Coming to await the Great White Throne Judgment at the end
of the Millennium with unbelievers of all ages.
3) The Purpose And Length Of The Great Tribulation
How awful that day will
be! None will be like it. It will be a time of trouble for
Jacob, but he will be saved out of it. I am with you and will
save you,’ declares the LORD . ‘Though I completely destroy all
the nations among which I scatter you, I will not completely
destroy you. I will discipline you but only with justice; I will
not let you go entirely unpunished.’ (Jeremiah 30:7,11)
Jesus said that the Great
Tribulation would be the most intense period of judgment the
world has ever seen, greater than the World Wars, and even
greater than the Flood of Noah. He said that if it were left to
run its course, not a single human being would survive. But for
the sake of His people He would stop it at its appointed time. (Matt.
24:22)
The purpose of the Great
Tribulation is two-fold. It’s explained in the Jeremiah passage
above, where it’s called by its Old Testament name, the Time of
Jacob’s Trouble. God will use it to completely destroy the
nations among whom His people have been scattered, and to
discipline Israel, purifying them to dwell with Him in the
Promised Land. The Church, having been purified at the cross,
requires neither destruction nor discipline and has no business
in the Great Tribulation.
(No matter where you place the
Rapture in the End Times Scenario, if you believe in the Lord’s
all-sufficient work on the cross, then you know that the Church
has to be protected from the End Times judgments, not purified
by them. If you don’t believe the Lord’s work was
sufficient, but that the coming judgments are needed to finish
what He only began, then you have much bigger problems than
figuring out when the Rapture will occur.)
The length of the Great
Tribulation is variously given as 3 1/2 years (Daniel
12:7), 42 months (Rev.
11:2), or 1260 days (Rev.
12:6). If you use a 12 month 30 day calendar for a total of
360 days in a year, these three measurements all turn out to be
the same length. Some commentators claim that in
Matt. 24:22 Jesus
said this time would be cut short, and the English translation
does seem to imply this, but it has to be an incorrect
interpretation of the Lord’s intent. I say this because
while Daniel 12 was
written several hundred years before the Lord spoke on the
matter, John wrote Revelation 60 years after the resurrection.
so it’s length was made clear in testimony given both before the
Lord’s time and after it. If He said the Great Tribulation
is going to be cut short then He contradicted both Daniel and
John, something the bible can’t do. More likely the intent
of Matt. 24:22 is to
explain that if the Lord doesn’t return to put an end to the
Great Tribulation at the appointed time no one would survive it,
but for the sake of His elect He will return to put an end to
it.
The 3 1/2 years, 42 months, 1260 days
references lead us to believe that Earth’s original calendar
consisted of 12 months with 30 days each, and in fact it appears
that prior to about 700 BC all the Earth used such a calendar.
Since then a number of different calendars have emerged ,
apparently to compensate for changes that took place in the
Earth’s orbit about that time. (The calendar used by
Western Nations today is only about four hundred years old.)
In addition,
Daniel 9:27 warns
that an Abomination That Causes Desolation will occur in the
middle of the last seven years, or 3 1/2 years from the end. In
Matt. 24:21 Jesus
identified this event as the official beginning of the Great
Tribulation. Paul confirms this and adds detail by describing
the anti-Christ standing in the Temple proclaiming himself to be
God. (2 Thes. 2:4)
This confirms the length of the Great Tribulation as being 3 1/2
years.
The Abomination That Causes Desolation is a
particular defilement of the Temple that’s happened only once in
history. In 168 BC. Syrian King Antiochus Epiphanes
captured the Temple and converted it into a pagan worship
center. He erected a statue of Zeus with his own face on it in
the Holy Place, thereby proclaiming himself to be God, and
demanded the Jews worship it on pain of death. It was called the
Abomination That Causes Desolation because it made the Temple
unfit for use and triggered the 3 1/2 year Maccabean Revolt. The
Jewish re-capture and cleansing of the Temple in 165 BC is
celebrated in the eight day Feast of Hanukkah.
To summarize, Daniel
spoke of an Abomination That Causes Desolation that would mark
the middle of the last 7 years. An event called the Abomination
That Causes Desolation in 1st Maccabbees took place in 168 BC,
over 300 years later. But 200 years after that, Jesus told His
Disciples that the people of Israel should watch for a future
Abomination That Causes Desolation and referred to Daniel’s
prophecy in doing so (Matt.
24:15-21). He said it would kick off the Great Tribulation.
Paul also described a future event similar to the one in 168BC
saying the “Day of the Lord” could not precede it (2
Thes. 2:3-4).
Therefore, the Abomination
That Causes Desolation that took place in 168 BC was only a
partial fulfillment of Daniel’s prophecy. Jesus referred
to it so people in the end times would be able to recognize the
complete fulfillment when they saw it. They’ll know to look for
a man standing in the Temple calling himself God and demanding
that his image be worshiped. Jesus told those living in Judea
(Israel) that when they see it to flee into hiding immediately,
for the Great Tribulation will have begun.
4) The Purpose Of The Rapture
They tell how you turned
to God from idols to serve the living and true God, and to wait
for his Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead–Jesus, who
rescues us from the coming wrath. (1
Thes. 1:9-10)
The Greek word translated from in the above
passage is “apo.” Literally it means to keep the subject (us)
away from the time, place, or any relation to the event being
referenced, in this case the coming wrath. This verse is one of
several that explain the purpose of the Rapture of the Church,
and that’s to hide us safely out of the way before God visits
His wrath upon the Earth. OK, but when does God’s wrath come?
Then the kings of the
earth, the princes, the generals, the rich, the mighty, and
every slave and every free man hid in caves and among the rocks
of the mountains. They called to the mountains and the rocks,
“Fall on us and hide us from the face of him who sits on the
throne and from the wrath of the Lamb! For the great day of
their wrath has come, and who can stand?” (Rev
6:15-17)
After
Revelation 3 the
church is not seen on Earth again until we come back with the
Lord in Rev. 21:2, as
predicted in Rev. 17:14.
In Rev. 4 John sees a door standing open in heaven and is told to “Come
up here!” Instantly he finds himself in the spirit, standing
before the throne of God at the end of the age. He’s been
transported to the time of the Rapture.
He sees 24 elders there,
seated on thrones of their own around the throne of God. They’re
all dressed in white with crowns of gold on their heads. They
bow down before the Lord and place their crowns at his feet
giving honor and glory to him. In chapter 5 they call themselves
Kings and Priests as they sing praises to God. By their titles,
clothing, crowns, thrones, and activities it’s clear that they
represent the newly raptured church.
There are four Old Testament
views of the Throne of God. Those in Isaiah
6:1-4 andEzekiel
1 and 10 don’t include these 24 elders. The one in
Daniel 7:9-10, an end of the age vision, hints at multiple thrones
but offers no detail. But in the Book of Revelation the 24
elders are mentioned 12 times. Some group has arrived in Heaven
that wasn’t there in Old Testament times, and 12 is the number
of government. It’s the Church, come to rule and reign with
Christ.
So the Church is raptured in chapter 4, and
is shown in heaven in chapter 5, while on Earth God’s wrath is
loosed in chapter 6 as the passage above clearly states.
Paul’s first letter to the Thessalonians
was written in 51AD and contains the very first clear mention of
a Rapture ever given. Neither Jesus nor the Disciples ever
taught it. Its existence was kept secret until then just as its
exact timing is secret to this day. Many of the mistakes made
about the timing of the rapture come from futile attempts to
find Gospel passages that teach it, as we’ll see in our
discussion about the Second Coming.
We think the Rapture is perhaps the single
most important component of End Times prophecy, and for us it
is. So why didn’t Jesus ever mention it?
1 Cor. 2:6-10 gives
us the answer. We do,
however, speak a message of wisdom among the mature, but not the
wisdom of this age or of the rulers of this age, who are coming
to nothing. No, we speak of God’s secret wisdom, a wisdom that
has been hidden and that God destined for our glory before time
began. None of the rulers of this age understood it, for if they
had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory. However,
as it is written:
“No
eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God
has prepared for those who love him”— but God has revealed it to
us by his Spirit.
The phrase “rulers of this
age” refers to Satan & Co. Had they known the astonishing
abundance of blessings the Lord would shower down upon those who
accept His death as payment for their sins, they would have done
everything in their power to prevent the crucifixion. Think of
it. We’re called Kings and Priests, given incalculable wealth
and influence, made heirs with Christ of God’s estate, something
Satan could never achieve and we could never deserve, and it’s
all ours just because we believe. This realization came to Satan
after it was too late to prevent it and turned what should have
been his greatest victory into an agonizing defeat.
And having disarmed the
powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them,
triumphing over them by the cross.(Colossians
2:15)
But like everything in God’s
plan, you’ll find hints of the Rapture even in the Old
Testament. Look at this passage from
Isaiah 26:19-21.
But your dead will live; their bodies will rise. You who dwell in the
dust, wake up and shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the
morning; the earth will give birth to her dead. Go, my people,
enter your rooms and shut the doors behind you; hide yourselves
for a little while until his wrath has passed by. See, the LORD
is coming out of his dwelling to punish the people of the earth
for their sins.
Notice how the pronouns change
from second person when God speaks of His people to third person
when He speaks of the people of the Earth. It means the two
groups are different. One is told to hide because the other is
going to be punished. (Note: the Hebrew word translated “go” in
the phrase “Go my people” is translated “come” in some
translations, recalling the command to John in
Revelation 4, “Come
up here!” But the word has another primary meaning and it’s my
favorite. It means vanish. “Vanish, my people!” Yes we will.)
Now read two of Paul’s most
popular Rapture disclosures.
According to the Lord’s
own word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left
till the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those
who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will come down from
heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and
with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise
first. After that, we who are still alive and are left will be
caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in
the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. (1
Thes 4:15-17)
Now, brothers, about times
and dates we do not need to write to you, for you know very well
that the day of the Lord will come like a thief in the night.
While people are saying, “Peace and safety,” destruction will
come on them suddenly, as labor pains on a pregnant woman, and
they will not escape. But you, brothers, are not in darkness so
that this day should surprise you like a thief. You are all sons
of the light and sons of the day. We do not belong to the night
or to the darkness. (1
Thes. 5:1-5) For God
did not appoint us to suffer wrath but to receive salvation
through our Lord Jesus Christ. (1
Thes. 5:9)
Here’s another even more dramatic shift of
pronouns. Using the third person, Paul describes unbelievers
caught by surprise, thinking they had entered a period of peace
as destruction suddenly rains down upon them, cutting off all
hope of escape. Then Paul switched to the second person, telling
believers we shouldn’t be taken by surprise as the End
approaches, and finally to the first person as he includes us
with him, not appointed to wrath.
Now watch carefully as we lay
Isaiah’s writings over Paul’s.
But your dead will live;
their bodies will rise. You who dwell in the dust, wake up and
shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the morning; the
earth will give birth to her dead. (The dead in Christ will rise
first.)
Go, my people, enter your
rooms and shut the doors behind you; hide yourselves for a
little while until his wrath has passed by.
(After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught
up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the
air.)
See,
the LORD is coming out of his dwelling to punish the people of
the earth for their sins. (While people are saying, “Peace and
safety,” destruction will come on them suddenly, as labor pains
on a pregnant woman, and they will not escape.)
Although the Bible contains 66 books and
involved 40 writers, there’s one Author and His message is
consistent from Genesis through Revelation. This is how Paul
could open his passage on the rapture by saying, “According
to the Lord’s own word …”. The Lord never mentioned the
rapture in the Gospels. Paul had read Isaiah.
Of course there are several
more passages where our Lord promises to protect us from the
coming judgments. And although the cynics can truthfully say
that the word rapture doesn’t appear in any of them, don’t pay
any attention to that. They’re just trying to confuse us.
They know that rapture is a
word of Latin origin, not Hebrew or Greek, the languages of the
Bible. (The earliest translation of the Bible was into Latin,
and the term rapture comes from there.) Its Greek equivalent is
harpazo, which is found in the Greek text of
1 Thes. 4:15-17. When
translated into English, both words mean “to be caught up, or
snatched away.” There’s a similar situation with the word
Lucifer, also of Latin origin. It doesn’t appear in any of the
original texts either, but no one would be naive enough to deny
the existence of Satan on such a flimsy basis.
Next time we’ll cover the
final three of Seven Things You Have To Know To Understand End
Times Prophecy. See you then.