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To: Ronzo
Thank you for your replies and your continuing vigorous defense of post-trib rapture theology!

The first problem with this passage is this: by what authority or rule of interpretation are we allowed to take a promise given to a particular individual or group of individuals in scripture and are allowed to make it a universal truth applicable to all Christians in all time? Well, there isn't one. What Jesus spoke to Philadelphia was true for the Philadelphians. Of course we can certainly learn some very good lessons from these words Jesus spoke, but there is no precedent for claiming their specific promises for the church in general!

The epistles, including all the promises contained therein, are written to specific churches but are applicable to all of us today. Secondly, the promise that Jesus gave the Philadelphians has already been fulfilled. How do we know? That church has passed into the pages of history without ever having to endure the great tribulation! So Jesus' promise to them was true. They certainly had to endure the minor tribulations of their day, but ultimately escaped the great tribulation promised by scripture to the end-times church. The church of Philapdelphia was a real, actual church at that particular point in history. To spiritualize the church of Philadelphia as some sort of end-times church is beyond the bounds of acceptable interpretation.

The Word speaks in metaphors and parables, especially concerning prophesies (Daniel, Revelation, etc.):

And the disciples came, and said unto him, Why speakest thou unto them in parables? He answered and said unto them, Because it is given unto you to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it is not given. – Matthew 13:10-11

You continue…

Thridly, by what right are we allowed to take the passage "I will also keep you from the hour of trial" as being equivalent to the rapture? Is the rapture the only means by which someone could be kept from "the hour of trial?" The simple answer to that is 'no.' We know there are at least two other means whereby these words could be fulfilled without any sort of rapture entering into the picture.

Indeed, rapture is not the only means by which Christ could keep the Philadelphian believers from the hour of trial. And there are other ways of understanding the parable of the ten virgins than what I have mentioned. And it is possible to get another understanding of who is withholding the anti-Christ from being revealed. (Scripture references are at post 5)

However – and this is a big however – these are the understandings I have received in the Spirit. They are how the living Word has brought the Scriptures alive within me.

I do not allow my own reasoning to override the Spirit. (Proverbs 3:5) Neither shall I allow yours to override Him. Trying to convince me to do so is pointless!

Truly, I cannot explain why He has given me a different understanding than yours, but that’s just the way it is and we shall have to agree to disagree.

But before I leave this conversation, concerning wrath….

But we alredy know from various scriptures that the great tribulation is about the persecution of believers, not God's wrath.

Revelation documents the wrath of God poured out on the whole creation – heaven and earth. On earth, the fish, animals and plant life will suffer right along with the human beings no matter whether they call themselves Christian, Jew or something else.

God will not be causing Satan to persecute the believers to execute His wrath but rather He will establish His righteous, final judgment by taking away that which is preventing Satan from doing so even now, namely the Holy Spirit. (2 Thessalonians 2:1-8) This is very much like He righteously judged the Egyptians by repeatedly hardening Pharoah’s heart. Pharoah was utterly exposed and vanquished as evil will be.

When the Holy Spirit is taken up, evil will move in power. Of course, evil will go after everything and everyone affiliated with God! That will include all the Christians who didn’t have the oil in their lamps, who weren’t prepared – and all the Jews. These are the martyrs we see coming out of the Great Tribulation.

The Christians who are prepared will be filled with the Holy Spirit (the "Philadelphians"). They are already dead to the flesh but alive in the Spirit. So when the Spirit is taken up, they will of a necessity go with Him. The ones who are not prepared won't be able to go.

I realize you vehemently disagree with this understanding, but that is what I have received in the Spirit so we shall have to agree to disagree.

Thanks for the engaging debate!

69 posted on 05/31/2004 11:22:47 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Ronzo
There was one other point I should have made last night in my post to you. I said:

The epistles, including all the promises contained therein, are written to specific churches but are applicable to all of us today.

I should have continued that statement as follows:

The epistles, including all the promises contained therein, are written to specific churches but are applicable to all of us today. If a letter from Paul to the Church at Corinth carries the weight of Scripture and applies to all of us today, how much more so should a letter from Christ Himself to the church of Philadelphia!

Sorry to have to make a late addition like that...

73 posted on 06/01/2004 8:09:57 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl
I realize you vehemently disagree with this understanding, but that is what I have received in the Spirit so we shall have to agree to disagree.

Correct--for now we must disagree! But it's interesting how it all comes back to the Holy Spirit!

I really appreciate the opportunity to debate you on this topic! It was a great learning experience, and hopefully the lurkers reading these posts learned a thing or two as well. This is what makes the Free Republic such an excellent resource!

You did a fine job presenting the pre-trib position. You covered most, if not all the main points in favor of it. But your last point is the most important point of all: it's what you received in the Spirit. Some people may think that's a silly way to discern truth, but it's amazing how accurate those Spirit illuminations can be.

The wonderful thing about this particular topic, is that there will ultimately be a "right answer." Whether we are alive here on earth, or have a ring-side seat in heaven, we will see how the end-times ulimately plays out, and all the mystery and confustion will be removed, once and for all. Personally, I hope the pre-trib position is the correct one! But according to insight and the illumination the Spirit gave me, I must be the champion for the post-tribulation ratpure, especially since there's very few, if any evangelicals who hold to that viewpoint. It's a rather scary and unsettling way to look at the end-times, so I don't blame people for teaching a pre-trib rapture, it's so much more reassuring! It was due to that reassurance that I believed in it so strongly for many years.

Yet there is one significant point I have, other than the Spirit's leading, that has caused me to strongly favor the post-trib position, and that point is it's simplicity and elegance. While that might seem a rather subjective way to evalute a position, the fact is we do it all the time, and by looking for a elegant solution, we usually find the greatest truths.

There are many more complications to the pre-trib position that simply don't exist in the post-trib viewpoint. Here's a list of just a few:

1.) There will be a "secret" rapture where Christians will simply disappear without a trace, and this will happen seven years before Jesus really comes back to earth.

2.) Because the pre-trib teachers insist that it is Jesus who comes and rapture the believers, they are forced into the unenviable position of believing in a second and a third coming of Jesus. The second coming is the rapture, and the third coming is when Jesus comes back to earth to reign. Often, it is taught that are two raptures as well, one at the beginning of the seven year tribulation period, and one at the end.

3.) A "new" church will be raised up as people realize that the truth of what happened to all those Christians! However, this is going to be a rather bizzare entity, in that there will be no Holy Spirit for them to rely upon. He's gone...

4.) The reason the church and the Holy Spirit go away is so that God can deal with the Jews. However, this idea is often contradicted by the fact that a new psuedo-church is raised up amongst those who are "left behind..." So God, in fact, does not deal with the Jews alone...

With the post-trib position, there is only one return of Christ--to both rapture the saints and to set up rule on earth. There is only one rapture. There is no need for the Holy Spirit to disappear along with the church. There is no need for a "replacement" psuedo-church. There is no special emphasis on Israel, though Israel does have a special role to play in the end-times. (But her role is geographic, not spiritual.)

It is a simple, elegant doctrine, and one that completely harmonizes with scritpure. You will never find a verse or passage that contradicts it --I should know, I've been looking for one for over ten years!

There is a lot to be said for simplicity. The gospel message of salvation is a very simple message. The core truths of the Bible can easily be understood by a child.

In the end, the post-trib position wins the prize for simplicity and elegance. When looking for truth, simplicity and elegance are very important signposts.

The only downside to the pre-trib position is one of fear. People absolutely hate even thinking about the possiblity of going through the tribualation period, even though there will be Christians who make it through to the end. Personally, I don't blame them for hating the idea. Yet when Jesus came to this earth, knowing full well the extremely painful fate that awaited him, he somehow managed to do all that his Father had in store for him, including the Passion! Why should God expect anything less from us?

Well, that's my take on things, thanks to many insights the Holy Spirit has given me over the years.

Thanks so much for giving me this opportunity to share a view of the end-times not many people consider. If nothing else, it will certainly provide food for thought, and perhaps even further bible study, which is always a good thing!

74 posted on 06/02/2004 1:02:38 AM PDT by Ronzo (GOD bless all those families who lost a loved while serving in the American Armed Forces.)
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