When is the Rapture going to occur in relation to the Tribulation?
The timing of the rapture in relation to the tribulation is one of the most
controversial issues in the church today. The three primary views are
pre-tribulational (the rapture occurs before the tribulation),
mid-tribulational (the rapture occurs at or near the mid-point of the
tribulation), and post-tribulational (the rapture occurs at the end of the
tribulation). A fourth view, commonly known as pre-wrath, is a slight
modification of the mid-tribulational position.
First, it is
important to recognize the purpose of the tribulation. According to Daniel 9:27, there is a seventieth "seven" (seven years) that is still yet to come.
Daniel's entire prophecy of the seventy sevens (Daniel 9:20-27) is speaking of the nation of Israel. It is a time period in which God
focuses His attention especially on Israel. The seventieth seven, the
tribulation, must also be a time when God deals specifically with Israel.
While this does not necessarily indicate that the church could not also be
present, it does bring into question why the church would need to be on the
earth during that time.
The primary Scripture passage on the
rapture is 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18. It states that all living believers, along with all believers who have
died, will meet the Lord Jesus in the air and will be with Him forever. The
rapture is God's removing of His people from the earth. A few verses later,
in 1 Thessalonians 5:9, Paul says, "For God did not appoint us to suffer wrath but to receive
salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ." The book of Revelation, which deals
primarily with the time period of the tribulation, is a prophetic message of
how God will pour out His wrath upon the earth during the tribulation. It
seems inconsistent for God to promise believers that they will not suffer
wrath and then leave them on the earth to suffer through the wrath of the
tribulation. The fact that God promises to deliver Christians from wrath
shortly after promising to remove His people from the earth seems to link
those two events together.
Another crucial passage on the timing of
the rapture is Revelation 3:10, in which Christ promises to deliver believers from the "hour of trial" that
is going to come upon the earth. This could mean two things. Either Christ
will protect believers in the midst of the trials, or He will deliver
believers out of the trials. Both are valid meanings of the Greek word
translated "from." However, it is important to recognize what believers are
promised to be kept from. It is not just the trial, but the "hour" of trial.
Christ is promising to keep believers from the very time period that contains
the trials, namely the tribulation. The purpose of the tribulation, the
purpose of the rapture, the meaning of 1 Thessalonians 5:9, and the interpretation of Revelation 3:10 all give clear support to the pre-tribulational position. If the Bible
is interpreted literally and consistently, the pre-tribulational position is
the most biblically-based interpretation.
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