I Will Come
Again
"And if I
go and prepare a place for you, I WILL COME AGAIN,
and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also." Joh
14:3 When this age-abiding promise was first uttered by Jesus to his apostles, it
did not make sense. To the naturally minded men who followed Jesus, they
assumed the logical move would be for Jesus to take charge as a King, throw off
the yoke of Roman bondage, exalt the Jews and bless the world. Why should he
leave now? There was work to be done here. When Jesus spoke of his death and
strangely of his leaving, the idea simply did not fit into their expectations.
But as they
wended their way along the path to Gethsemane, Jesus had assured them, If I go
and prepare a place for you, I will come again.
Dazed, these
words made little impression on his little band. But forty days later on Mt.
Olivet, huddled together in amazement with eyes turned heavenward, straining to
catch the last glimpse of their ascending Lord, this promise came alive.
"I will come again." Yes their beloved Master would return. The
Apostles wove that glorious theme into the fabric of their ministry and their
very lives.
No other
doctrine is discussed more in the New Testament—over one third of its writings
deal with this momentous event. How our hearts trill at the hope of being
united with the returned Lord, our heavenly Bridegroom, seeing him as he is,
living with him and experiencing his love forevermore—and the reality of
reigning with him (Re 20:5) in a kingdom that extends to the ends of the earth,
bringing "peace...like a river and the glory of the Gentiles like a
flowing stream." Isa 66:12 Long have faithful Christians prayed with the
Apostle John, "Even so, come, Lord Jesus." Centuries have passed.
Seemingly nothing has happened. But suddenly our day is charged with an air of
expectancy.
Few would
question that we are living in an unprecedented time of human history. Most
Bible-believing Christians feel we are living in the very time the Bible says
Christ is to return. There is a surge of interest in prophecy—a revival of
interest in the second advent. Many speak of the imminent coming of Christ.
This expectancy is based on our Lord’s Great Prophecy recorded in Mt 24, Mk 13,
Lk 17 and Lk 21. Many believe that the nearness of Christ’s return is indicated
by such signs as the following: Israel restored (Mt 24:32; Jer 16:13-18);
knowledge and travel increased (Da 12:40); evils exposed as never before (Lu
12:2; 1Co 4:5); infidelity rampant from university to pulpit (Lu 18:8; 2Ti
4:1-4); men seeking pleasure, morality rotting (2Ti 3:1-5, 13); strikes,
walkouts (Jas 5:1-4); racial strife, riots (Zep 1:7-9)’
juvenile delinquency (2 Tim. 3:2); wars and war preparations intensified (Joe
3:9-11); men crying fearfully for peace (1Th 5:3, Luke 21:26); trouble
everywhere (Mt 24:21,22).
But let us take
a closer look at our Master’s words and see what these signs really prove.
And as he
sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came unto him privately, saying,
Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming
[Greek, parousia], and of the end of the world? Mt 24:3
Coming or
Presence
The Greek word
translated "coming" is parousia. It really means
"presence." If parousia means "presence," then the
fulfillment of the signs of this prophecy would mean that Christ is not coming
shortly, but he is already secretly here as a "thief in the night."
Remember, the Scriptures show that Christ’s initial return would be a
thief-like, secret presence (1Th 5:2; 2Pe 3:10; Re 16:15) before "every
eye shall see him." The following dictionaries (standard works in
fundamentalist and evangelical bookstores) confirm this definition of presence.
W. E. Vine’s
Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words: Parousia, literally, a presence,
para, with, and ousia, being...denotes both n arrival and a consequent presence
with."
Robert Young’s
Analytical Concordance to the Bible: Parousia, a being alongside,
presence."
Moulton
and Milligan’s Vocabulary of the Greek Testament Foreword: "Parousia, as
applied to the return of the Lord, is simply the anglicizing of the Greek word
which literally means ‘presence.’"
The Bible
Definition
However, we are
not confined to dictionary definitions. The Lord has provided a Scriptural
definition for the Greek word parousia. Parousia appears in Mt 24:27 where it
is mistranslated "coming." The following chart compares its parallel
citation in Lu 17:26, providing the Bible’s own definition for parousia.
Mt 24:37lu
17:26 But as the days of Noah were, = As it was in the days of Noah, so shall
also the parousia of the Son of man be = so shall it be in the days of the Son
of man.
The phrase
"parousia of the Son of man" in Mt 24:27 means the same as the phrase,
"in the days of the Son of man" in Lu 17:26. the "days of the
Son of man" (Lu 17:26) refers to the time that Christ is present, just as
the "days of Noah" would refer to the time when Noah was present
among his wicked generation. Therefore, parousia in Mt 24:37 should be
translated "presence of the Son of man" instead of "coming"
of the Son of man."
This is
further confirmed by the Apostle Paul’s usage of the word. The thought of
"presence" is plainly shown by the contrast with "absence"
in Php 2:12. "Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed, not as in
my presence [Greek, parousia] only, but now much more in my absence, work out
your own salvation with fear and trembling." This is also shown in 2Co
10:10. Every New Testament scripture in which parousia is used is listed in
Appendix A.
Evangelical
and Fundamentalist Consent to "Presence"
The Emphasized
Bible translated by Rotherham is published by Kregel, an evangelical publishing
house. Rotherham relates his struggle with the word parousia in the third
edition of his translation. Although contrary to his theology, he acknowledged
that parousia means "presence" and so translated it in every
occurrence. He states on p. 271 in the Appendix: "In this edition the word
parousia is uniformly rendered ‘presence’ (’coming,’ as a representative of
this word, being set aside). The original term occurs twenty-four times in the
N.T., viz.: Mt 24:3, 27, 37, 39; 1Co 15:23; 16:17; 2Co 7:6, 7; 10:10; Php 1:26;
2:12; 1Th 2:19; 3:3; 4:15; 5:23; 2Th 2:1, 8, 9; Jas 5:7, 8; 2Pe 1:16; 3:4, 12
and 1Jo 2:28. the sense of ‘presence’ is so plainly shown by the contrast with
‘absence’ (implied in 2Co 10:10, and expressed in Php 2:12) that the question
naturally arises, —Why not always so render it? The more so, inasmuch as there
is in 2Pe 1:16 also, a peculiar fitness in our English word ‘presence.’ This
passage, it will be remembered, relates to our Lord’s transformation upon the
Mount. The wonderful manifestation there made was a display and sample of
‘presence’ rather than of ‘coming.’ The Lord was already there; and, being
there, he was transformed (cp. Mt 17; 2, n.) and the ‘majesty’ of his glorified
person was then disclosed. His bodily ‘presence’ was one which implied and
exerted ‘power’; so that ‘power and presence’ go excellently well together—the
‘power’ befitting such a ‘presence’; and the three favored disciples were at
one and the same moment witnesses of both."
Harry Rimmer
(D.D., Sc.D.), who was styled "Fundamentalism’s outstanding
spokesman" until his death, admitted that the word parousia meant personal
presence. In his book, The Coming King, he observed that the Greek word
parousia is used 13 times in describing the return of Christ and not once does
it have the thought of "coming."
Christianity
Today (a well-known evangelical magazine) published a series of essays on
"Fundamentals of the Faith." the essay in booklet form on "The
Second Advent of Christ" had this to say about parousia: "...let us
look at the Greek words used in the New Testament for the idea of the return.
First of all, there is the word parousia, which means basically
‘presence.’" No doctrine is more frequently mentioned in the New Testament
that Christ’s second advent. Yet, few doctrines have been as greatly fragmented
into such diversified concepts. Much of the beauty of this doctrine has been
wrested from the grasp of God’s people. All secular Greek dictionaries define
parousia, "presence." Most Biblical dictionaries likewise define
parousia, "presence." Most current fundamentalist and evangelical
writings on the second advent usually begin by correctly defining parousia,
"presence." Then a strange thing happens. Somehow the word
"coming" replaces "presence." Incorrect theology requires
parousia to be translated "coming," but Scriptural harmony requires
that it be translated "presence."
"Rightly Dividing the Word of Truth"
Historically
there is not a single Protestant concept of the second advent that has an
unbroken lineage back to the time of the Reformation. Since that time, Bible-believing
Christians have fluctuated among a number of conflicting concepts.
Our purpose in
this work is to set aside all theories of men and ascertain from the
Scriptures, and the Scriptures alone, the glorious beauties of this momentous
event. The faithful Christian is to "study to shew thyself approved unto
God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of
truth" (2Ti 2:15). The Word of Truth was originally written in Hebrew and
Greek. But now the average Christian is no longer dependent upon the
translators or scholars to determine the meaning of a specific Hebrew or Greek
word in a given text. In fact, many of the new "translations" are
mere paraphrases of former translations, with little or no consideration given
to the Hebrew and Greek manuscripts. Further, even the best translations have
some flaws since they are the works of man.
The ready
accessibility of Biblical concordances, Hebrew and Greek dictionaries and
lexicons in libraries and Bible bookstores is one of the blessings of our day.
With the Bible in one hand and a concordance and lexicon in the other, the
average Christian can verify the meaning of original words in the Hebrew Old
Testament or Greek New Testament manuscripts. He can be a "workman that
needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. 2Ti 2:15 For
many centuries, the church has been on a rough and stormy sea longing for the
blessed haven of Christ’s return. Now, with the chart and compass of God’s
word, the Christian can trace the various independent lines of prophecy and see
the blessed haven just before him. As there is the danger of shipwreck upon
reefs just beneath the water’s surface along many shorelines, so the Christian
must be his own mariner avoiding the ensnarements of unscriptural or even
partially Scriptural theories on the second advent. As a "workman that
needeth not to be ashamed," he will utilize, whenever necessary, the tools
that make the Hebrew and Greek texts of Scripture readily accessible.
A Secret Presence Before "Every Eye Shall See Him"
Having observed
that the word parousia means presence and not coming, Mt 24:3 properly reads:
"What shall be the sign of thy presence and of the end of the world?"
Lu 21:25 refers
to "signs" in the plural.
The Scriptures
show that the first stage of our Lord’s parousia, presence, will be secret.
"The day of the Lord will arrive [will be here, Greek, heko—see Strong’s,
Young’s or Vine’s] as a thief." 2Pe 3:10, Rotherham A thief enters a house
quietly, doing a secret work.
Consequently,
the first works of our returned Lord are during a secret presence. The world
will, at first, be unaware that Christ has returned.
"But ye
brethren are not in darkness that day should overtake [implies, a period of
overlapping] you as a thief." 1Th 5:4 Later, his presence will be made
manifest to all. The Scriptures use another Greek word, apokalupsis, to
describe this revealment to all. "The Lord Jesus shall be REVEALED
[apokalupsis] from heaven in flaming fire taking vengeance." 2Th 1:7-8 It
is in reference to this revealment to all, that Scriptures like Re 1:7 apply;
"He cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see him." Christians, who
are not overcharged with the cares of this life, will experience the joys of
discerning the signs of his secret presence (Lu 21:34-36), before they are
"caught up together" with him.
Later
chapters will consider in Scriptural detail both the thief-like presence and
subsequent revealment of the returned Christ to all mankind. See Appendix C for
detailed discussion of "Every eye shall see him." \
Signs of
Christ’s Presence
In considering
the signs of Christ’s presence it is imperative that we are cognizant of three
scriptural points. First, if as established in the previous chapter, the Greek
word parousia means presence and not coming, then the signs that many accept as
evidence of Christ’s imminent coming actually prove that he is already present.
Second, Lu 17:26,27, Mt 24:37, 38, and many other scriptures reveal that Christ
is present before the tribulation period.
And as it was
in the days of Noe, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man. They did
eat, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day
that Noe entered into the ark, and the flood came, and destroyed them all. Lu
17:26, 27.
The point of
comparison is not between the arrival of Noah and the arrival of our Lord. It
is not even between the coming of the flood and the coming of our Lord. The
comparison is between the days of Noah before the flood and the days of the
presence of our Lord before the tribulation with which this Gospel Age ends. In
both periods, the people were in ignorance of the coming trouble. The days of
the Son of man are the days of his parousia, presence—invisible and unknown to
the world. Therefore, we should expect to see signs of Christ’s presence before
the tribulation.
Third, these
signs are to be recognized by faithful Christians as a proof that Christ is
present. This precludes the instantaneous gathering of the living church at Christ’s
return. The dead in Christ are raised "first" when Christ returns,
but the "living in Christ" remain on earth for a period of time after
his return and see signs of his thief-like presence.
The Scriptural
teaching of the living saints being "caught up together" with the
returned Lord will be considered in detail in a later chapter.
There are many
proofs of Christ’s presence, fourteen of which are here considered.
Israel Restored
"...the fig tree—when his branch is yet tender and putteth forth leaves."
Mt 24:32 It is
generally accepted by students of prophecy that the fig tree is symbolic of the
nation of Israel (Jer 24). In Mt 21:19,
Jesus cursed the fig tree because he found no fruit on it and it
withered away. Shortly thereafter, he proclaimed judgment on the nation of
Israel, "Behold, you house if left unto you desolate." (Mt 23:38),
because they had not borne fruitage to God. Israel was subsequently scattered
and persecuted. Historians agree Israel’s rebirth is a miracle of history.
Never before has a nation been destroyed, its people dispersed to the ends of
the earth and then nearly 2,000 years later, regathered to their homeland and
re-established as a nation. The fig tree coming back to life, putting forth
leaves, represents Israel coming to life as a nation and receiving God’s favor
increasingly.
Mt 24:32, Mr
13:28 and Lu 21:29 all say when "the fig tree putteth forth leaves ye know
that summer is nigh." Matthew and Mark follow this by saying, "so
likewise ye, when ye shall see all these things know ye that it is near, even
at the doors." Some claim that the word "it" in Mt 24:33 and Mr
13:29 should be translated "he" and feel the verse means that when
Israel (the fig tree) brings forth leaves, then not "it," but
"he" (Christ) is near at hand. This plainly is not correct. The
"it" refers back to the "summer" in the previous verse.
When the fig
tree shoots forth, then "summer is nigh." Summer is the kingdom time
of favor on earth that follows the destruction of the present social order by
Christ. Christ is already here when the fig tree returns to life. His presence
brings about the restoration of Israel and the destruction of our present evil
world to make room for his kingdom that will rule from the rivers to the ends
of the earth.
Can we be
certain that the "it" refers to the kingdom and not to Christ?
It is wonderful
how the Bible is its own interpreter. Again, the Bible interprets a key word by
means of a parallel account.
In the Lu
21:29-31 account, verse 31 replaces the word "it" of Matthew and Mark
with the phrase "kingdom of God." Compare Lu 21:29-31 with Mt 24:32,
33 and Mr 13:28, 29.
And he
spake to them a parable; Behold the fig tree, and all the trees; when they now
shoot forth, ye see and know of your own selves that summer is nigh at hand. So
likewise ye, when ye see these things come to pass, know ye that the kingdom of
God is nigh at hand. Luke 21: 29-31 Many Christians will agree that the fig
tree, Israel restored, is the greatest sign of our Lord’s prophecy. Actually,
Israel’s reappearance is a proof that Christ is present.
Jerusalem No
Longer Trodden Down
Jerusalem shall
be trodden down of the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.
Lu 21:24 Jerusalem, in this passage, has been generally interpreted two ways.
One:
"Jerusalem" is the literal city. Therefore, the maximum extension of
fulfillment would be 1967 when the old city, Biblical Jerusalem, was captured
and became a part of the modern Israeli State.
The other
interpretation is that "Jerusalem" is symbolic of the Jewish people,
and that the incipient fulfillment began when World War I resulted in the
guarantee of a national homeland for the Jews.
Jerusalem,
ceasing to be trodden down of the Gentiles, was given by Jesus as a sign of his
parousia.
Parousia means
presence, not coming.
Therefore,
whichever application we place on "Jerusalem," Christ must now be
present because Jerusalem is no longer trodden down by the Gentiles.
Other New
Nations
"Behold
the fig tree, and all the trees; when they now shoot forth..." Lu 21:29,
30 If the "fig tree" is symbolic of the new nation of Israel, then it
is logical to conclude that all the other trees shooting forth picture the
birth of other new nations. Israel and all the new nations are signs of
Christ’s presence. Since 1948, over 80 new nations have joined the United
Nations. The birth of so many new nations is further proof that Christ has
returned.
"Many Shall Run To and Fro and Knowledge Shall be
Increased."
The events of
Da 12:4 occur when Michael the archangel (Da 12:1; Jude 9) stands up in the
Time of the End. 1Th 4:16 shows that Christ’s return is accompanied by the
symbolism of "the voice of the archangel." Therefore, the events that
follow Michael’s (the archangel) standing up in Da 12 are proofs that the Lord
is present.
Selden’s first
automobile in 1877 marked the leap forward in transportation. Today there are
over 200,000,000 cars. Through increased and numerous modes of transportation
millions are crossing and recrossing each other’s paths around the world. In
the past 100 years, man has increased his travel from 30 mph to 25,000 mph
right off the planet to the moon. Sophistication in communications,
additionally, allows man to see and hear almost anywhere in the world
instantly.
If the increase
of knowledge from the dawn of history to the 1800’s is given a value of one,
then knowledge has doubled 16 times within the last 10 years. One hundred years
ago, 90 percent of the world’s population could not read or write. Today, 40
percent of the world’s population can read and write. Ninety percent of all
scientists who have ever lived are alive today. Fifty percent of the world’s
inventions have been created in the last decade.
The noted
historian Barbara Tuchman has observed, "Man entered the Nineteenth
Century using only his own and animal power, supplemented by that of wind and
water, much as he had entered the Thirteenth, or for that matter, the First. He
entered the Twentieth with his capacities in transportation, communication,
production, manufacture and weaponry multiplied, a thousandfold by the energy
of machines." (The Proud Tower, foreward, xvi) Unprecedented travel and
increase of knowledge mark the presence of Christ.
Evils are
Exposed as Never Before
Therefore
judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who both will bring to
light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the
hearts...1Co 4:5 Never in all the annals of history have ecclesiastics,
statesmen, men in government, heads of industry, labor leaders and the rich
been so-cross- questioned, criticized
and exposed as now at the bar of public judgment. Notwithstanding their
determined effort to avoid the examination, they are obliged to endure the
trial. Watergate, Agnew and exposed manipulations by the multi-nation oil
interests, are but a few examples. The most significant thing about Watergate
is not that it took place (corruption is as old as human history), but that it
could not be covered up. Try as they would, it could not be hidden. Why? We are
living in the time that the hidden things of darkness will be made manifest.
Even a totalitarian state like Russia is powerless to prevent exposure as
evidenced by the Solzhenitsyn affair. His expose gained worldwide coverage.
Further exposures resulted in the overthrow of the communist empire. These
world-wide exposures of corruption are another proof that we are at the time of
our Lord’s return and the end of the world.
Little Faith
on the Earth
...When the Son
of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?" Lu 18:8 "...his
appearing...the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine...and
they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto
fables. 2Ti 4:1-4 Infidelity is rampant from university to pulpit. In the
professed church of Christ the Word of God is no longer the standard of faith,
the guide of life. Human philosophies are theories are taking its place. Even
heathen vagaries are flourishing in places formerly beyond their pale.
A survey
taken among delegates to the National Council of Churches revealed that over
one third could not state they had a firm belief in God; thirty-one per cent
could not say there is life after death; sixty-two per cent did not believe miracles
happened as the Bible says they did; seventy-seven per cent did not believe the
devil actually exists; and eighty-seven per cent rejected the Bible concept of
inherited sin. Our day is in such marked contrast with the past that church
historians speak of it as the post-Christian era. This world-wide scarcity of
faith means the Son of man has come.
Signs of the
Last Days
"In the
last days will come time of trouble. Men will love nothing but money and self
[affluence and materialism]; no gratitude, no piety, ... implacable in their
hatreds, scandalmongers, intemperate and fierce [drug addiction and senseless
violence], despisers of those that are good, traitors...lovers of pleasure
rather that lovers of God, men who hold an outward form of religion, but are a
standing denial of its reality." 2Ti 3:1-5 N.E.B., K.J.V.
These verses
read like Twentieth Century headlines. A further word about one of these signs:
"Lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God." This has been
remarkably fulfilled in a prevalent philosophy of today. "Hedonism,"
the philosophy that the end and object of life is pleasure, is not new.
But today,
for the first time, it has received general acceptance throughout the world.
The various conditions predicted in 2Ti 3:1-5 are further proof that we are in
the "last days" of this "present evil world."
Capital and
Labor Strife
Ye rich men,
weep and howl...your riches are corrupted...the rust of them shall be a witness
against you...ye have heaped the treasure together for the last days. Behold
the hire of the laborers who have reaped down your fields, which is of you kept
back by fraud, crieth: and the cries of them which have reaped are entered into
the ears of the Lord of sabaoth. Jas 5:1-4.
Strikes and
walkouts, the cries of laborers for their wages, are signs of the last days. We
hear them steadily increasing. As we have seen from 2Pe 3:3,4, these "last
days" occur during the parousia or presence (mistranslated
"coming") of Christ. The exorbitant profit of the industrialist and
capitalist have heaped up until the "last days." The "Lord of
sabaoth" has heard the cries of the workers. Since the return of the Lord,
much of the injustice against the working man has been corrected. The
protection of the rights of the working man is a phenomenon of our time. We
have only to reflect back to 1894 when the then-future president Howard Taft
wrote of the Pullman Strike of 1894, "It will be necessary for the
military to kill some of the mob...they have only killed six...as yet, this is
hardly enough to make an impression." The Proud Tower by Barbara W.
Tuchman, page 478.
Never
before in human history has the right of the worker to pressure management for
higher wages and better working conditions been guaranteed by laws. But both
capital and labor are tarred by the same sin of selfishness. Labor’s demands
will continue to increase for both just and fancied rights. Management will
share just so much of its profits and the death struggle will be upon us. This
equalizing of the scales of justice between capital and labor marks us as in
the "last days" of Jas 5:1-4. Another sign that Christ has returned.
Revolution
and Anarchy
For the day of
the Lord is at hand: for the Lord hath prepared a sacrifice, he hath bid his
guests. And it shall come to pass in the day of the Lord’s sacrifice, that I
will punish the princes, and the king’s children, and all such as are clothed
with strange apparel. In the same day also will I punish all those that leap on
the threshold, which fill their masters’ houses with violence and deceit. Zep
1:7-9 Throughout the Christian Age, economically speaking, there have been
basically two classes: the "haves" and the "have-nots." A
large middle class is a peculiarity of our era and locates us in the Day of the
Lord.
For centuries,
the wealthy have been aligned with church and state in the exploitation of the
masses.
We are in the
"Day of the Lord" spoken of by Zephaniah. To recompense the
exploitations of the past, the returned Lord has prepared a sacrifice from the
avaricious accumulations of the wealthy.
And the guests
(masses) have been invited to share. This economic leveling has resulted in the
large middle class of our day.
Demonstrations,
riots the struggles between capital and labor, racial majorities and minorities
will progressively get worse in the day of the Lord’s presence until they end
in complete anarchy. Already, anarchy is just below the surface—ready to burst
forth at the slightest provocation.
While the Lord is balancing the scales of
justice for the past wrongs of the vested interest class, the exploited class
by their unjustified demands and violence reveal that they have nothing better
to offer.
Because their
ideologies are honey-combed with selfishness and deprivation, they will
accomplish but one thing: the destruction of our social order.
The events that
Zephaniah foretells take place during the Day of the Lord. The magnitude of the
prophecy rules out a 24-hour day—or a shorter period of time. The masses are
invited to share the economic excess of the wealthy and time is required to
reveal the deceit and violence of the exploited as they rebel against the
status quo.
The whole
revolutionary trend of our day, with its periodic violent eruptions, is another
sign that the Lord has returned.
Wars and War
Preparations
Prepare war,
wake up the mighty men, let all the men of war draw near; let them come up:
Beat your plowshares into swords, and your pruninghooks into spears; let the
weak say, I am strong. Assemble yourselves, and come...gather yourselves
together round About...joe 3:9-11 Joe 3:1 identifies the events of this chapter
as occurring during the regathering of Israel. As already seen, the regathering
of Israel is a proof of Christ’s presence, therefore, in the days of Israel’s
return (Joel 3:1), the wars and intensified was preparations are further signs
of Christ’s presence. A phenomenon of our era is the two World Wars affecting
every corner of the globe. By 1980, civilian breeder reactors in forty
countries will turn out, as a by-product, enough plutonium to make 5,000
nuclear bombs a year.
Sociologist
Andreski, the noted expert on wars, writes, "Our own century has so far
been much more warlike then its predecessor." Time magazine (March 9,
1970) in concurring, observes that 100,000,000 have died in wars since the
being of the 20th century, while only 3,845,000 died in the 19th century. The
premium is on nuclear armaments. Wars and intensified war preparations are
another proof of the return of Christ.
"Let
the Weak Say I Am Strong"
The previous
scripture in Joe 3:10 reveals that during the intensity of war and war
preparations, the weak nations say, "I am strong." For centuries the
weaker nations placated and satisfied the whims of the stronger nations in fear
of the consequences. This has changed in our day. In the United Nations, the
weaker powers stand up to the great powers, verbally assailing and influencing
them as never before. The bar of world opinion and power politics limit the
harassment of weaker nations by major powers.
The greatest
power in the world today, the United States, has bitterly experienced the
"weak" saying, "I am strong." In the war against North
Korea and again in the conflict with North Vietnam, the United States was
unable to wage total war for fear of the consequences of world opinion. With
hat in hand, the United States gradually withdrew from Vietnam, hoping not to
lose too much face in an impossible situation.
The strangle hold of the small oil-rich
nations on the economies of the great world powers is another fulfillment of
this sign.
The weak
nations saying, "I am strong," is still another proof that Christ has
returned.
"Peace
and Safety"
Men’s hearts
failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on
the earth. For when they say Peace and Safety; then sudden destruction cometh
upon them..." Lu 21:26; 1Th 5:2,3 "The Day of the Lord" is
marked by fearful nations crying for peace in conferences, but to no avail. The
trouble comes upon them in spasms, as "travail upon a woman with
child."
In 1907 a world
court was set up at the Hague, Netherlands, to arbitrate international
disputes. War was outlawed. "Peace and safety" were assured. Then
World War I shook the world with an impact unprecedented in history as a whole
world order began to crumble. In 1938 Neville Chamberlain "appeased"
Hitler with part of Czechoslovakia and returned to England pronouncing,
"peace in our times." Shortly after, the nations were embroiled in
World War II.
Since the
end of World War II, no previous generation has witnessed such a frenzy of
peace-efforts, both on the United Nations level and nation-to-nation
negotiations. Yet, war and sudden destruction continued to erupt as in Korea,
Vietnam, Asia, Africa, the Middle East, etc. The Cold War ended with the fall
of the Soviet Union. No longer was there rivalry between two super-powers, the
United States and the Soviet Union. Seemingly, the world would now have peace.
Then smalls wars like Desert Storm and the Yugoslavian ethnic wars broke out.
The scriptures also indicate that Russia will again become a power to reckon
with. The unprecedented peace efforts prove the presence of Christ.
Unprecedented
Trouble
For then shall
be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this
time, no nor ever shall be. And except those days should be shortened, there
should no flesh be Saved...mt 24:21,22 This unprecedented trouble is a sign of
Christ parousia (presence, not coming). Watchful Christians discern Christ is
invisibly present during this "great tribulation." Therefore it
cannot apply to a seven-year period between "a secret rapture" and
his visible return.* *See detailed discussion on the "seven-year
tribulation" theory, Appendix B.
Historians
agree we are in such an era of unprecedented trouble. For example: Looking back
from the vantage point of the present we see that the outbreak of World War I
ushered in a twentieth-century ‘Time of Trouble’... from which our civilization
has by no means yet emerged.
Directly or indirectly
all the convulsions of the last half century stem back to 1914 and Sarajevo:
the two World Wars, the Bolshevik
Revolution, the rise and fall of Hitler, the continuing turmoil in the
Far and Near East, the power-struggle between the Communist world and our
own...—Edmond Taylor, The Fall of the Dynasties, Doubleday, N.Y., 1963, p. 16.
We have seen
that twentieth century wars have cost the lives of 100 million, but
unprecedented wars are only one aspect of this great tribulation.
Tribulation as
a result of Christ’s presence is everywhere. it has never been so widespread
and intense.
Population
Explosion: Before 1650 A.D.
the population doubled every 1,000 years; it doubled in 1850 (200 years later);
doubled again in 1930 (only 80 years later); and doubled again in 1965 (only 35
years later). In 1990 the world population was 5.5 billion. By 2000 A.D. it will
increase by one billion. Up to 15 million people die of starvation annually.
There are 30 million refugees and 100 million homeless.
Each day 40,000
babies die of starvation in Third World countries while Americans spend over
$900 million yearly feeding dogs and cats.
Pollution: The U.S. has 5% of the world’s
population, but annually disposes of 290 million tons of toxic waste, uses 26%
of the world’s oil, release 26% of the world’s nitrogen oxides, produces 22% of
the world’s carbon dioxide emissions.
Solid wastes,
radio-active and toxic chemical wastes are contaminating our rivers, lakes and
oceans. Air pollutants from car exhaust and industry spawn disease. Deaths from
respiratory disease doubles every five years. Skin cancer caused by the depletion
of the ozone layer is rapidly increasing. Acid rain is destroying our forests,
which in turn will produce "global warming." This "greenhouse
effect" could melt polar ice caps causing oceans to rise and wipe out
hundreds of thousands of miles of densely populated coastal lands (affecting 2
billion people). Also, it would dramatically increase temperature variations.
This would trigger life-threatening droughts and heat waves turning
"breadbasket farmland" (like our Midwest) into barren desert.
Severe food
shortages would result. Time is running out, according to Lester R. Brown,
president of the highly respected WORLDWATCH INSTITUTE. "Preceding
generations have always been concerned about the future, but ours is the first
to be faced with decisions that will determine whether the earth our children
inherit will be inhabitable."
Scientists are
now concerned that the population explosion could hasten and increase the
effect of Global warming. (New York Times, Jan. 18, 1990). Drastic climate
changes resulting in economic disaster in many nations could trigger wars for
survival. Crime and Violence continue to spiral. Automatic weapons are
readily available to the "kid" on the street. An estimated 100,000
guns are taken into American schools daily. In large cities, students are
scanned for weapons upon entering school and the halls are patrolled by armed
police. There is an upsurge in the most violent types of crime by teens of all
races, classes and life-styles. Once muggers robbed a person and ran off. Now they
beat, violate or murder them. There were over 2200 homicides in New York City
during 1990. Also, every 21/2 weeks a child was murdered in New York by a
parent. Over three million wives are battered each year in the U.S.
Drugs: We are
losing the drug war because the huge profits are too corrupting. In 1989 the
major U.S. chemical companies sold 18.5 million pounds of chemicals to
"front companies" in South America who in turn sold these chemicals
to drug cartels. There are 2.2 million hard-core drug users in the United
States. While 1 out of 40 persons in New York City is hard-core, nationally 1
out of 100 are hard-core users. The number of casual users is substantially
higher. Is it any wonder the crime rate is spiraling? Seventy percent of New York
City’s drug users are affluent. One thousand drug addicted babies are born
every day.
Economic chaos: The U.S. entered the 1990’s with a
staggering debt of over $3 trillion and a perilous foreign trade imbalance; the
S & L Associations on the verge of complete collapse; the commercial banks
in serious trouble; insurance companies failing; 1300 companies claiming
bankruptcy per week. The nineties witnessed the bankruptcy of many corporate
giants.
In 1983, the
U.S. was the world’s largest creditor nation. By 1990 it became the biggest
debtor nation (C. Fred Bergsten, head of the INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL
ECONOMICS, 1990). Weekly monitoring shows the U.S. debt has swelled to over $4
trillion. Many economists predict it will soon top $5 trillion. No longer are
we the unchallenged economic power of the world.
Out of the
2,500 Savings and Loan Associations, over 1,000 needed to be bailed out. It is
more than a fiasco of high risk loans and mismanagement. S & L heads have
swindled astronomical sums.
Government
regulators are accused of hiding facts to avert election issues.
Indeed, our
generation IS experiencing a "Time of Trouble such as never was since
there was a nation."
This
unprecedented trouble is a sign that Christ’s coming is not imminent but he
already is here.
Nations On
The Run—Another Remarkable Prophecy
"Woe unto
you that desire the day of the Lord! to what end is it for you? the day of the
LORD is darkness, and not light. As if a man did flee from a lion, and a bear
met him; or went into the house, and leaned his hand on the wall, and a serpent
bit him." Am 5:18, 19, 20 In Amos’ prophecy the fleeing man represents the
world’s experiences in this dark "time of trouble." At the dawning of
our era, Great Britain ruled the most expansive empire on earth. The lion in
this prophecy, Britain’s national symbol, appropriately illustrated the mighty
nation that devoured (colonized) weaker nations. Colonialism’s suffocating
grasping led to the world’s fleeing to another form of government.
The man in Am
5:20 escaped the lion only to meet the bear—a form of government diametrically
opposed to the grasping greed of colonialism—communism! The former Soviet
Union, the "bear" of Amos’ prophecy, offered man another hope for
safety in this time of trouble. Communism’s failure to rescue man was
underscored by its precipitous fall. The nations are now seeking another hope
of security—nationalism.
Entering the "house" of
nationalism has been anything but comfortable for the world. Bosnia, Serbia,
Germany and other nations now seeking safety in nationalism are suffering civil
war, economic malaise, the rise of new "hate groups" and other ills.
While in the supposed security of ultra-nationalism (will church and state
reunite?) the people place their hand on the wall. Seeking rest in the
supporting structure of human government will result in being bitten by the
serpent. That old Serpent, the Devil and Satan, which once deceived the nations
that they were Christ’s Kingdom (Re 12:9) will bite them again. Then the
nations will feel the rebuke of Jehovah in the great time of trouble.
Nations on the
run is one of the signs of the "day of the Lord," the day of Christ’s
presence.
There are
many additional signs that prove Christ as already returned, but the ones we
have considered are more that adequate to establish a point. "What shall
be the signs of thy parousia [presence]?" The fact that we have seen these
signs fulfilled in our day proves we are living in the period of Christ’s
secret presence—the period before "every eye shall see him."
Why Some
Christians Are Unaware
Lu 21:34-36
warns that when Christ returns some Christians are unaware of His presence.
this "Day" comes as a snare upon two kinds of Christians. some are
overcharged with the cares of this life; others neglect the Word and Spirit of
God to follow leaders who misguide them.
Study Lu
21:34-36. Remember that this chapter is speaking of signs of Christ’s second
presence and notice how watching Christians are aware when the day of the Lord
comes upon them; whereas the world and negligent Christians are not.
Our Lord says,
"Take heed to yourselves, lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with
surfeiting, and drunkenness, and cares of this life, and so that day come upon
you [Christians] unawares. For as a snare shall it come on all them [the world]
that dwell on the face of the whole earth. Watch [watch yourselves and also the
word of prophecy] ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted
worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before
the Son of man."
The phrase
"that ye may be accounted worthy to escape" in verse 36 of the King
James Version is a poor translation. compare the following translations:
Revised Standard Version, "praying that you may have strength to escape
all these things that will take place." Rotherham, "making
supplication that ye may gain full vigour to escape all these things that are
about to be coming to pass." New English Bible, "praying at all times
for strength to pass safely through all these imminent troubles."
These
translations indicate that the thought of the Greek* is that watching and
praying Christians will receive the strength to pass through the tousles during
the early period of that "day." Note that the church is still on the
earth. Strength is not necessary for an experience from which the Lord removes
you, but the Lord gives strength to
endure the dangers Christians must encounter in the tribulation.
However,
negligent Christians are ensnared by these dangers. Note well the implications
of this scripture. Faithful Christians are here during part of the tribulation
period, but are sustained by the strength of the Lord.
______________________________________________________
*Both Vines
Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words and Thayer’s Greek-EnglishLexicon
of the New Testament observe that the Greek word in Lu 21:36 translated
"accounted worthy" in the King James Version is not found in the most
authentic manuscripts. Instead the Greek word katischuo appears which means
"full strength." The word "escape" is a translation of the
Greek word ekpheugo which means "to seek safety." Thayer defines
katischuoekpheugo—"to have strength to overpower or overcome."
_________________________________________________________
The Church
Lives Into Part of the Tribulation
Na 1:5-8
confirms this thought. Verse 5 reveals the mountains quaking, the hills melting
and the whole world being devoured by the presence of the Lord. Verse 6 asks,
"who can abide in the fierceness of his anger?" Verses 7 and 8 answer
this question: "The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble; and
he knoweth them that trust in him." The "day of trouble" (see
also Da 12:1; Zep 1:14-15), which accompanies the Lord’s presence finds the
church still here on the earth.
And the Lord is
their stronghold during this tribulation; whereas, in verse 8, he will pursue
his enemies with an overrunning flood and darkness.
Study Ps
46:1-6, which deals with the tribulation period that brings the present world
to an end. While the earth is being removes, while the mountains are being
carried into the sea, while the sea is roaring, while the mountains are
shaking, we find in verse 4 that the church, the "City of God," is
still on the earth. Why is it that "she shall not be moved" during
the tribulation? Is it because she is with Christ in heaven? No! "God is
in the midst of her" while she is yet here on earth. The church would not
need this protection if she were already taken home, but she needs it in the
time of trouble while she is still here. God will not only protect her in the
early stages, but in addition, He "will help her right early." The
church will only experience part of the tribulation before her resurrection
change.
this cannot
refer to "tribulation saints," since only the church, the bride of
Christ, is symbolized in Scripture as the City of God (compare Ps 46:5 and Re
21:2.
A deeper
insight into the nature of the tribulation in Psalms 46 is obtained from the
meaning of the word mountain as used in the Bible.
Jer 51:24-25,
the nation of Babylon, because of her many military victories, is called a
"destroying mountain." Speaking of the nations that opposed Israel,
Isa 41:15 states that Israel
would "thresh the mountains" and "make the hills as chaff."
In Da 2:35, 44, 45, the Kingdom of God is spoken of as a "great mountain,
and filled the whole earth." thus we see in Scriptural usage, mountains
are symbolic of people (see Re 17:15). The roaring sea would represent the
restless or anarchistic elements of mankind. When Psalms 46 says, "The
waters thereof roar and be troubled,
though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof" and "though the
mountains be carried into the midst of the sea" it means "the great
tribulation" will result in the destruction of the nations by anarchistic
elements of society.
A further proof
that the church is still here during part of the tribulation is found in Mt
24:21. Remember, Matthew 24 contains a series of signs or events that would
denote not the imminent coming, but the secret presence of Christ. Faithful watchers
would discern these signs of Christ’s presence. A period of unprecedented
trouble is spoken of in Mt 24:21 as one of the signs of Christ’s presence; and
faithful watchers will see these signs. Therefore, some of the church will be
on earth when the tribulation begins and discern it as a sign of Christ’s
presence.
These
scriptures are but a few that reveal that the church will still be on earth
during part of the tribulation.
Is the
Tribulation a Period of Seven Years?
The tribulation
period is variously referred to in Scripture as follows: "Great
tribulation such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no
nor ever shall be," Mt 24:21; "A time of trouble, such as never was
since there was a nation," Da 12:1; "a day of trouble," Isa 22:5; Obadiah 14; Na 1:7; Hab 3:16; Zep 1:15; Eze 7:7. It is
interesting to note that nowhere in these tribulation scriptures is a
seven-year period mentioned. Many fundamentalists are unaware that the
"seven-year tribulation" is mistakenly based on Da 9:24-27—a
scripture that has nothing to do with the "tribulation" that closes
the Christian Age. (Turn to Appendix B for a detailed discussion on the Origin
and Scriptural Evaluation of The Seven-Year Tribulation’ Theory.")
"Caught Up
Together With Him"
Paul, speaking
of the appearing of the Lord Jesus Christ, called it "that blessed
hope." Ti 2:13 What a blessed hop indeed when finally united with Christ,
our beloved bridegroom. soon the warfare will be ended, the toiling and
suffering over. Soon we will experience that joy of seeing him face to face and
sharing the presence of his fellowship throughout eternity. Long have
Christians waited for the second coming of Christ; long have they fervently
prayed for the time they would be united with him whom they have grown to love
so much.
Inspiring
thoughts of this glorious event have been the basis of many hymns. A phrase
evolving from this joyous expectation is the "rapture."
It is well
to bear in mind that the word "rapture" is not found in the Bible.
Consequently, we must determine if the popular rapture concept is actually
Scriptural. A consideration of all the scriptures on the resurrection of the
saints reveals that when Christ returns, the "dead in Christ" are
raised; then, during the period between his return and the full establishment
of his Kingdom, the living saints are gathered to him individually as they die
over a period of time.
What Say the
Scriptures
1Th 4:16, 17,
describes the raising of the saints at Christ’s second presence. Note the
sequence of time between the resurrection of the "dead in Christ" and
the living saints being caught up.
For the Lord
himself shall descend from heaven...and the dead in Christ shall rise first:
Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them...to
meet the Lord... This scripture plainly states that Christ first resurrects the
saints who are "dead, having fallen asleep in death since his first advent.
"Then" (afterwards, Greek epeita, "thereafter") the living
saints are "caught up" to meet the Lord. The contrast of
"first" and "then" denotes a difference of time. Paul
doesn’t tell us here how long the time difference is, but other scriptures do.
Note another important point. Evidently the phrase "caught up together
with them" does not denote the time, but rather the place of their being
together, for in 1Th 5:10, the same Greek word hama is again translated
"together" and clearly denotes place. "That whether we wake or
sleep, we should live together with him." Thus, nothing in 1Th 4:16, 17,
indicates that the "dead in Christ" and the living church are taken
at the same time.
1Co 15:51, 52,
also describes the two parts of the resurrection of the saints. "We shall
not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an
eye, at [during] the last trump." The word "at" is a poor
translation. Rotherham correctly translates it "during." The phrase
"the last trump" implies previous trumpets. The only other trumpets
in the New Testament are a series of seven trumpets found in Revelation. Some
mistakenly believe that the trumpet of 1Co 15:51 sounds during a "secret
rapture" to be followed by a "seven-year tribulation" during
which, among other events, the seven trumpets of Revelation literally sound.
However, since the trumpet of 1 Corinthians 15:51 is called the last trumpet,
it must correspond with the last of the seven trumpets of Revelation. This
would mean the previous six trumpets have already sounded. Evidently, the
sounding of these six trumpets is not literal, since such a literal sounding
would have aroused worldwide attention. Therefore, we can reasonably conclude,
that the six trumpets are symbolic. And if the first six are symbolic, then the
seventh trumpet is also symbolic. Scriptural proof that the symbolic meaning of
the trumpets are a proclamation of truth, will be dealt with at a later point.
It is during this period of the sounding of the last trump that the
resurrection of the church will occur.
The
"day of the Lord" is also the "day of the trumpet." Zep
1:15,16 This symbolic trumpet, proclamation of truth, sounds during the whole
"day of the Lord."
"We
Shall Not All Sleep, But We Shall All Be Changed"
Some will have
slept in death before their resurrection at Christ’s return. However,
Christians living during Christ’s presence will be changed in the twinkling of
an eye without sleeping in death. Each, at the instant of their dying, will be
raised to immortality.
Re 14:13 gives
us the time element of the resurrection of the saints who are alive at Christ’s
return: "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from
henceforth:...that they may rest from their labours; and their works do follow them." All the saints, even those
living today, are, in this text, considered "dead."
"Ye are
dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." (Col 3:3) These
"dead" do die. a point of time is indicated by the word
"henceforth."
The point
of time is Christ’s return. Preceding verses describe events during Christ’s
presence; then Re 14:13 speaks of something that happens from
"henceforth," that is, from the return of Christ onward. Blessed are
the saints who die from that point on because, though they rest from their
labours in the flesh, they will not have to wait in the sleep of death. Their
"works" follow immediately with them as they are raised to meet the
Lord. Thus, we see that these scriptures teach the resurrection of the sleeping
saints at this return; and then, an individual resurrection of the remaining
living saints as each dies and become changed "in the twinkling of an
eye."
The Problem
of a Partial Quotation
A set of verses
in our Lord’s Great Prophecy is frequently used to prove the instantaneous
gathering of the living saints to Christ in the air. It will be seen however,
that they have nothing to do with the living saints being taken to heaven.
I tell you, in
that night there shall be two men in one bed; the one shall be taken, and the
other shall be left. Two women shall be grinding together; the one shall be
taken, and the other left. Two men shall be in the field; the one shall be
taken, and the other left. Lu 17:34-36 This is a classic example of the danger
of a partial quotation. Upon the basis of this limited citation, it might be
reasoned that the ones that are taken are caught up to heaven, but verse 37
rules out this possibility: And they answered and said unto him, Where, Lord?
And he said unto them, Wheresoever the body is, thither will the eagles (Gk.
eagles or vultures) be gathered together.
The curiosity
of the disciples was aroused by Jesus’ statement that two people would be in
various situations and one would be taken. They specifically asked where they
would be taken. Notice that Jesus did not say they would be caught up together
with him at his return. His answer is "wheresoever the body is, thither
will the eagles be gathered together." Some feel the body here referred to
is the body of Jesus.
However,
Mt 24:28 specifies that the body of which the eagles are gathered is a dead
body or carcass. The lesson of the eagle in Job 39:30 corroborates this usage
of a slain body. Further, if the body is referring to the literal body of
Jesus, then eagles must also be literal and thus would render the passage
meaningless. Both the body and the eagles are symbolic. Jesus is evidently
basing his lesson on two characteristics of eagles found in Job 39:27-30; the eagle’s ability to see her prey (food) afar off; and
her willingness to travel a great distance to secure this food—where the body
(food) is, there the eagle will be. The Scriptures compare faithful Christians
to eagles in this respect. they have the ability to see or discern spiritual
food afar off and they will travel great distances to secure it.
A Rich Feast
This lesson of
Lu 17:34-36 is beautiful. Remember, Luke 17 and Matthew 24 are accounts of our
Lord’s Great Prophecy in which He gave signs of his parousia, presence. The
living church cannot be caught up at the moment of Christ’s return, for they
will be here on earth discerning the signs of Christ’s presence. But their
relationship to the returned Lord is blessed and unique.
Chapters tow
and three of Revelation describe seven churches. Many Bible-believing
Christians hold to the concept that these represent seven stages of the church
down through the Christian Age. To the Philadelphia, or sixth stage, the Lord
said, "Behold I come quickly."
(Re 3:11) But,
the Laodicean, or seventh stage of the church, the Lord says, "I stand at
the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice and open the door, I will come in
to him, and will sup with him, and he with me." Re 3:20 So it is with the returned Lord. The fulfilled signs of our
Lord’s Great Prophecy prove that we are in the Laodicean or seventh stage of
church history, the period during which the Lord is present and some of the
church remain here on earth. We might refuse to hear his knock; that is, refuse
to understand the truth of his presence or even refuse to open the door of our
hearts to the returned Lord. Nevertheless, he is present whether we accept it
or not.
To those who do
accept it, there is a great spiritual feast. They sup together with their
returned Lord. This feast of truth that is to be the blessed portion of the
church on earth when the Lord returns is also brought out in Lu 12:37-40: Blessed are those servants, whom the Lord when he cometh
shall find watching: verily I say unto you, that he shall gird himself, and
make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth and serve them. And if he
shall come in the second watch, or come in the third watch, and find them so,
blessed are those servants. And this know, that if the goodman of the house had
known what hour the thief would come, he would have watched, and not have
suffered his house to be broken through.
Be ye therefore
ready also: for the Son of man cometh at an hour when ye think not. Lu 12:37-40
The faithful church will be watching for the Lord’s return. When he returns,
they will recognize it and he will serve them with a special feast of truth.
This feast is not in heaven. It is enjoyed by watchful servants on earth. These
verses depict the blessed conditions of faithful Christians who remain on earth
for a period of time after our Lord returns. This is one aspect of the two-fold
lesson of the eagles we are considering. When the Lord returns, the eagle
class, faithful Christians, will be gathered to this rich spiritual feast. The
second lesson is that the eagle can see food afar off and will travel great
distances to secure it.
Re 18:1-5
reveals what is involved in this traveling.
Fleeing
Babylon
And after these
things I saw another angel come down from heaven, having great power; and the
earth was lightened with his glory. And he cried mightily with a strong voice,
saying, Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become the habitation of
devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and
hateful bird. For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her
fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her,
and the merchants of the earth are waxed rich through the abundance of her
delicacies. And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, my
people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her
plagues. For her sins have reached unto heaven, and God hath remembered her
iniquities. Re 18:1-5 Many believe the mighty angel of verse one is our
returned Lord. The Greek word aggelos, here translated "angel,"
simply means "messenger." Re 20:1-3 also used the word
"angel" or "messenger," when referring to the returned
Christ coming down from heaven and binding Satan. Mal 3:1-3, a parallel passage
to Re 18:1-5, speaks of our returned Lord as the "messenger of the
covenant."
Our returned
Lord, the mighty angel of Re 18:1, enlightens the earth with his glory. (We
will deal later with other scriptures that show a great enlightenment of truth
along every line—scientific, humanitarian, philosophical, religious, etc.,
which causes the earth to tremble. Ps 97:1,4) Re 18:2-4, reveals that the
returned Lord has a message against Babylon. Most agree that Babylon is a false
Christian system.
Re 17:5 indicts
both a mother system of Babylon and daughter systems. Therefore, Babylon
represents a number of false Christian systems. Note the difference between the
fall of Babylon in Re 18:2-4 before her plagues come, and the destruction of
Babylon in Revelation 18:8 when the plagues come. Therefore, the Lord is
present for a period of time before the destruction of Babylon. Before his
return, the Lord tried to "heal" Babylon (Jer 51:9), but she refused
to be "healed." At his return, he cast her off from favor. Revelation
18:2-4 refers to Babylon’s fall from divine favor. Then in Revelation 18:4, our
returned Lord has a message for all true Christians in Babylon: "Come out
of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive
not of her plagues."
This is the
lesson the eagle. The returned Lord has promised a great spiritual feast of
truth, yet most Christians are in Babylon when he returns. Just as the eagle
can see food far away and travels a great distance to secure it, so faithful
Christians will discern the lack of spiritual food in Babylon and will leave.
They must flee Babylon (Jer 51:6) in order to enjoy the spiritual feast from
the returned Lord.
The
confirmation of applying Re 18:1-5 to the beginning period of Christ’s
presence, during which the living saints are gradually caught up to the Lord,
is found in Revelation 14. The time element and message of Re 14:8 is exactly
the same as Revelation 18:2.
And there
followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen, is fallen, that great city,
because she made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication.
Re 14:8 It is during the period of this proclamation of the fall of Babylon
from favor that we are given our "henceforth" period of Re 14:13,
"Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth." We have
already seen that Revelation 14:13 proves the individual resurrection of the
living church over a period of time. The synchronizing of the time element of
Revelation 18:1-5 and Revelation 14 is further proof that when our Lord returns
there is a gradual resurrection of the living church, not instantaneous
gathering to Christ.
The lesson
of Lu 17:34-37 is important to all Christians now living during our Lord’s
presence. The eagles of verse 37 are symbolic of faithful Christians. The bed,
mill and field of verses 34 through 26 are also symbolic. The represent
different spiritual conditions in the nominal churches. The ones in the mill,
the field, and the bed who are taken represent faithful Christians. When the
Lord returns, He will call his people out of Babylon. He will attract them as
eagles are attracted by food for which they have a keenness of vision and
appetite. The watching and worthy are taken, this is, they leave Babylon, and
the others are left to experience the plagues that destroy Babylon. The food of
"present truth" now provided by our present Lord is having its
intended effect of gathering his saints by and to it. It is not the gathering
by one man or many men unto themselves or into a new denomination, but a
gathering unto Christ himself, the true and only Master and Teacher.
A Further
Proof
A further proof
that the one in the bed, the one in the mill and the one in the field (Lu
17:34-36) do not picture the living church caught up to heaven is found in
verses 30-33 of Luke 17.
Even thus shall
it be in the day when the Son of man is revealed. In that day, he which shall
be upon the housetop, and his stuff in the house, let him not come down to take
it away and he this is in the field, let him likewise not return back. Remember
Lot’s wife. Whosoever shall seek to save his life shall lose it; and whosoever
shall lose his life shall preserve it. Lu 17:30-33 If, as some feel, the living
Christians are taken, the rapture takes place instantaneously, then those who
are taken have no time to make a choice or do anything else. This is contrary
to verses 30 to 33. When the Son of man is revealed, the one in the field has
the choice of turning back and the one upon the housetop can decide to go down
into the house to take his belongings. These verses harmonize with Lu 17:34-
37, where, like the eagles, the one in the bed, the mill and the field are
gathered to a feast.
When the Lord
returns and calls his people out of Babylon (the nominal churches), those on
the housetops (Christians with a higher degree of spirituality) should leave
immediately without taking any Babylonish encumbrances with them. And even when
the flight from Babylon has begun, none should turn back as did Lot’s wife,
verse 32.
Verse 33
further confirms that these verses refer to a condition of separation here on
earth. Notice it is after one is taken that he still has the choice to turn
back. After the gathering begins, his course of action will determine whether
he loses or saves his life.
From the
foregoing scriptures discussed in this chapter, it become evident that the
instantaneous change and resurrection of both the living and dead in Christ at
the moment of his return, is not a Scriptural concept. 1Co 15:50, 51 and 1Th
4:16, 17 reveal that all faithful Christians who dies before the second advent
will be raised to be together with their Lord at his return. From that time
onward, Re 14:13 reveals that members of the living church on earth will be
caught up individually to their returned Lord as they complete their course on
earth. Many scriptures show that the returned Lord will reveal himself in a
very special way to faithful Christians on earth and provide a rich feast of
spiritual truth.
"Every
Eye Shall See Him"
Having
established Scripturally that the second advent of Christ begins with a secret
invisible presence which is discernible only to the church by the eye of faith,
the question logically arises, will the future revealment to all mankind
involve mental perception or literal sight?
Harmony must be
sought between two sets of scriptures relative to this matter. Mt 24:30-31 and
Re 1:7, if taken literally, could be interpreted to mean that all mankind will
see the returned Christ with their literal eyes. On the other hand, the
following four scriptures state, with clarity, that after Christ ascended into
heaven, mankind would not and could not see him with the literal eye.
(1) "Yet a
little while, and the world seeth me no more; but ye [shall] see me: because I
live, ye shall live also." Joh 14:19 Here is a plain statement by Jesus
just prior to his death and resurrection that the world would never again see
him. Then he adds that "ye," the apostles and all the church would
see him again. Why? Because "ye shall live also."
Just as Christ
was resurrected, so his faithful followers will be raised at his second advent.
"The world seeth me no more." When Christ returns, the world will not
see him with the literal eye, but his followers will literally see him when
they are caught up together with him in their resurrection bodies. 1Jo 3:2
(2) Heb 1:1-3
tells us that the glorified Christ is the express image of the Father’s person.
Col 1:15 speaks of Christ,
"who is the image of the invisible God." These scriptures show that
when Christ ascended into the presence of God, he was the exact image of the
Father. From 1Ti 6:16 we learn that Christ is "dwelling in the light which
no man can approach unto; whom no man hath seen, nor can see." If no man
can see Christ after his ascension, because he is the exact glorious image of
the Heavenly Father, then no man can see the returned Christ of glory.
(3) Ac
22:6-8 and 11-14 reveal that a mere glimpse of the glorified Christ completely
blinded Saul of Tarsus. If required the power of God through Ananias to even
partially restore Saul’s sight.
Literal, or Symbolic
These four
scriptures show that the glorified Christ will not and cannot be seen at his
return. Yet Re 1:7 and Mt 24:30 seem to indicate that all mankind will see the
returned Lord. Will this be by literal sight or by mental perception (as for
example, when we say, "I see [understand] what you mean")? As
Christians, we cannot afford to base our conclusions upon one set of scriptures
that do not fit with our views. We must accept the challenge: "Study to
show thyself approved unto God...rightly dividing the Word of Truth." The
only valid way to ascertain the correct view of any Biblical doctrine is to
collate all the scriptures on a given subject and then rightly divide them,
that is, harmonize them. Only then can we be sure of the correct understanding.
When all the scriptures on a given subject are brought together, they will
harmonize. They will not contradict.
It is generally
admitted that some scriptures are symbolic, for example, the fig tree of Mt
24:32 which represents the nation of Israel and the eagles of Lu 17:37 which
symbolize faithful Christians. The problem is how to determine if a passage is
literal or symbolic.
Whenever a
literal interpretation does violence to reason or places the passage in direct
antagonism to plain statements of Scripture, it is a good indication that the
passage should be considered figuratively and its interpretation as a symbol should
be sought in harmony with obviously plain and literal passages.
Remember
Joh 14:19; 1Ti 6:16; Ac 22:6-8, 11-14 and Lu 17:20 are all plain statements to
the effect that the returned Lord cannot and will not be seen by the human eye.
These scriptures should be read and reread. They are literal statements that
cannot be taken symbolically.
Mental
Perception
Now, for a
consideration of the other set of scriptures (Mt 24:30-31 and Re 1:7), which
speak of all mankind seeing the returned Lord.
Are they
literal or symbolic? In both texts, the Greek word translated "see"
is optomai. The following definition is from An Expository Dictionary of New
Testament Words by W. E. Vine: OPTOMAI—to see; used a) objectively, with
reference to person or thing seen, or b) subjectively, with reference to an
inward impression or a spiritual experience or a mental occupation.
Thus we see
optomai can mean either literal sight or mental perception.
The following
are examples of how the Greek word optomai is used in Scripture to denote
mental understanding.
Lu
3:6—"And all flesh shall see [optomai] the salvation of God."
One doesn’t
literally see salvation, one understands it.
Joh
1:51—"And he [Jesus] saith unto him [Nathanael], Verily, verily, I say
unto you, Hereafter ye shall see [optomai] heaven open, and the angels of God
ascending and descending upon the Son of man."
Nathanael never
literally saw this. In an allusion to Jacob’s ladder, Jesus is saying that the
Son of man would become the real ladder of communication between heaven and
earth.
Three more
examples of optomai are found in the following: · Re 19:10—"And he said
unto me, See [optomai] thou do it not.
·" Mt 24:4—"... And they
said...see [optomai] thou to that.
·" Mt 24:24—"... I am
innocent...see [optomai] ye to it."
These
scriptures reveal that the Bible does use optomai, translated "see"
in Mt 24:30-31 and Re 1:7, in a symbolic sense to denote mental understanding.
A thoughtful
reading of Mt 24:30-31 and Re 1:7 reveals terminology that leads itself to
symbols, and in fact, are often used in the bible as symbols. For example, in
the following quotation of Mt 24:30-31, words that frequently are used
symbolically are her italicized. "And then shall appear the sign of the
Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and
they shall see [optomai] the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with
power and great glory. And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a
trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one
end of heaven to the other."
The scripture
simply cannot be taken literally. Any concept with which it is harmonized
requires a symbolic interpretation. For example, some apply this scripture to
the living saints being caught up with Christ to heaven. But here in Mt
24:30-31 they are gathered "from one end of heaven to the other." If
understood liberally, the saints would already be in heaven when Christ
returns, and this scripture would teach that the saints are taken at that time
out of heaven and not to heaven. This rules out a literal interpretation of Mt
24:30-31. It also says that they are gathered from the "four winds."
Are the saints gathered from four literal winds?" Those who teach the
rapture concept recognize this problem and symbolize the four winds and the
word "heaven" in verse 31 to mean that the church will be gathered
from all parts of the earth.
However,
this presents a greater problem. By what rule can we arbitrarily symbolize the
word "heaven" in verse 31, yet insist that it is literal in verse 30
where it mentions "the sign of the Son of man in heaven" and
"coming in the clouds of heaven"? Mt 24:30-31 is either literal or
symbolic; it cannot be both. A literal application does not make sense;
therefore, both verses must be consistently symbolic.
Symbolic
Meaning of Mt 24:30-31
Heaven and
heavens are often symbolic of corrupt religious systems (2Pe 3:5-10; Isa
34:5-4; Joe 2:9-11). See can denote mental perception (Lu 3:6; Joh 1:51; Re
19:10; Mt 27:4,24). Clouds often represent trouble as in Joe 2:1-2, a parallel
text of Mt 24:30-31.
The word angels
is translated from the Greek word aggelos which literally means messenger and
often refers to any messenger of God (Rev. 2 and 3, the seven angels or
messengers to the church). Trumpets are often used to denote a proclamation of
truth (1Co 14:8; Joe 2:1).
With these
symbols in mind the explanation of Mt 24:30, 31 becomes meaningful. Here the
Master tells us in verse 30 that one of the first signs or evidences of
Christ’s return will be in heaven, that is, in the corrupt religious systems.
Verse 29 speaks of the powers of the heavens shaking. Agnostic revolutionary
influences have infiltrated the churches. The resultant battle between the
fundamentalist and the modernist has sorely rent the church heavens. Since
Vatican II, Catholicism is being similarly shaken. The Son of man comes in
"clouds of heaven," that is, during this trouble that is shaking the
churches. The Luke account includes "distress of nations with
perplexity." This worldwide trouble in both the churches and the nations
will increase in intensity until all the people of the earth mourn because of
it. Finally "they shall see [discern] the Son of man coming in the
clouds" of trouble, that is, they will realize that the trouble is the
result of our Lord’s return. While the heavens (nominal churches) of Mt 24:30
are being shaken, verse 31 reveals that the returned Lord will "send his
angels [messengers] with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather
together his elect—from one end of heaven (corrupt church systems) to the
other." Re 18:1-4, a parallel passage, further confirms that this trumpet
is a proclamation of truth. Through this great proclamation of the truth,
faithful servants of God will call the Lord’s people out of Babylon.
Symbolic
Meaning of Re 1:7
"Behold,
he cometh with clouds [in a time of trouble]and every eye shall see [optomai,
discern] him [as the trouble intensifies, it will become evident that the day
of God’s wrath has come], and they also which pierced him [the Jewish nation
will especially discern Christ’s presence in the final phase of the time of
trouble when they are delivered from an invasion of many nations (Ezek. 38, 39;
Zech.12:10)]: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him [as the
day of wrath intensifies all will experience much sorrow and anguish]."
Re 1:7 cannot
be taken literally since those who literally pierced Jesus have long since
died. If "they also which pierced him" is symbolic of the living
Jewish people, then the "clouds" and "every eye" seeing him
must also be symbolic.
Thus we find
that the Bible does not contradict itself. Many scriptures plainly state that
the returned Lord cannot be literally seen by man. In harmony with this, the
few scriptures that refer to mankind seeing the returned Christ, are obviously
symbolic and denote a mental discernment of Christ’s presence.
(A more
detailed Scriptural proof of the symbolic explanation of Mt 24:30-31, Re 1:7,
and all other scriptures in which the word "see" denotes mental
perception of Christ’s return, will be found in Appendix C.)
The Man of
Sin
In his second
letter to the Thessalonians the apostle Paul shows that two circumstances must
precede the second presence of our Lord: (1) a great falling away from the
original, apostolic faith; and (2) the appearance of the Man of Sin, the
antichrist (2Th 2:3). No interpretation of our Lord’s second advent should be
seriously considered which fails to identify these two events. Having proven
that our Lord has already returned, we now proceed to show that the Man of Sin
has indeed come, fulfilling every detail of the prophetic description.
Let us first
note, however, the disharmony between this prophecy and some current views.
Some claim that the Lord Jesus first comes secretly to take his saints—and then
the Man of Sin appears. An examination of an error made in the early church is
instructive on this point. Recognizing that Christ was to come invisibly, as a
thief (1Th 5:4, Re 16:15), some believers in Paul’s day concluded that Jesus
was already present and that the resurrection of the dead in Christ had,
therefore, occurred (2Th 2:1-2, 2Ti 2:18). In order to correct this mistake,
Paul found it necessary to advise that they "be not soon shaken in
mind...that the day of the Lord is present [Greek, enistemi]. Let no man
deceive you by any means; for that day shall not come, except there come a
falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of
perdition." 2Th 2:2,3 Compare with the Revised Standard Version. Notice,
the invisible presence of Christ is preceded, not followed, by the revealment
of the Antichrist. Also verses 1 and 3 teach that the Man of Sin precedes two
things: (1) "The coming of our Lord"; and (2) "our gathering
together unto him." This eliminates the possibility of Christians being
taken to heaven before the Man of Sin is revealed.
It should
be observed further, that Paul did not attempt to correct their error by asking
if they had seen Jesus with their literal eyes, or had heard a literal trumpet
with their ears, or had seen large numbers of Christians suddenly disappear.
Had such arguments been appropriate, Paul would certainly have employed them.
The concept of the invisible presence was correct: the Day of the Lord would
steal quietly upon the world and many would be overtaken by it unawares (1Th
5:2-4).
Mystery of
Iniquity
Read 2Th
2:3-8 again. In verses 7 and 8 Paul call the "Man of Sin" the
"Mystery of Iniquity" and says that "it," not
"he," already is a work in his day. This could not be a literal man.
He would be nearly two thousand years old now. Why did Paul call the "Man
of Sin" the "Mystery of Iniquity"? Remember the beautiful
mystery Paul showed in (Eph 5:30-32, Col 1:26-27 and 1Co 12:12-28). Christ is
"not one member but many." Just as the human body is a union of many
members, so the church is the body of Christ. Paul’s lesson of contrast is
clear. Just as there is a mystery class of righteous or justified believers who
compose Christ, so there is a mystery class of iniquity (evil workers) who
comprise Antichrist. Paul’s use of the phrases, "Man of Sin" and
Mystery of Iniquity" in verses 7 and 8 prove they are one and the same.
Origin of
the Man of Sin
To trace the
origin of the Man of Sin, we must begin in Paul’s own day.
Writing to the
church at Thessalonica, he warned them, saying, "For the Mystery of
iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth [Greek, restrains] will let
[Greek, restrain], until he be taken out of the way.
And then shall
that Wicked be revealed." 2Th 2:7, 8 Compare with the Revised Standard
Version. In the ambitions of leaders to be "lords over God’s heritage"
(1Pe 5:3), and in the desire of some to avoid the path of sacrifice which Jesus
ordained. the Antichrist principle found fertile soil. When the Roman Emperor,
the restraining one, ceased his opposition to Christianity, this spirit of
worldly ambition blossomed rapidly into the Papacy. "As ye have heard that
[the] Antichrist shall come," wrote the Apostle John, "even now are
there many antichrists." 1Jo 2:18 Pointing out that the spirit of
Antichrist was already at work, he proceeded in the remainder of the chapter to
advise how to escape its influence when it did come.
That there
was a great "falling away" from true Christian faith during the early
centuries of the Gospel Era, no Protestant will deny. Pompous rituals and
elaborate ceremonies replaced the simple preaching of the Gospel. Salvation was
sought no longer through the blood of Christ alone, but from holy water, relics
of saints, medals and amulets, the rosary and the intercession of Mary.
Multitudes flocked to converted heathen temples to pray to and adore the very
same idols which the Pagans had worshipped a short time before. The names of
the statues were simply changed form those of Pagan gods and heroes to the
names of Christian martyrs and saints. The Roman Emperor, who as Pontifex
Maximus ("Chief Religious Ruler"), had been the head of all the Pagan
priests, vacated his office in favor of the Bishop o Rome, the new Pontifex
Maximus. Whereas the Roman emperors had claimed to possess the Keys of Janus
and Cybele, the new supreme pontiffs, dressed in the same costume as their
forerunners, claimed possession of the Keys of St. Peter and attempted to prove
that the Apostle Peter had once been the Bishop of Rome, ; something completely
unsubstantiated by history This Man of Sin, growing out of the apostasy, as
foreseen by Paul, exalted "himself above all that is called God, or that
is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself
that he is God." 2Th 2:4 The temples to which Paul refers is not a literal
building, but the Church of God, for he elsewhere declares, "Ye are the
temple of the Living God." 2Co 6:16 The self-exaltation of the bishops of
Rome in the temple (church) of God was extravagant beyond measure. Applying
divine prerogatives to themselves, they claimed that every human being must be
subject to their authority. "The pope holds the place of the true
God," declared Pope Innocent III (A.D. 1198-1216). The Lateran Council
(A.D. 1123) acclaimed the pope as "Prince of the Universe." St. Bernard
(A.D.1090-1153) wrote that "none except God is like the pope, either in
heaven or on earth." And Pope Nicholas (A.D. 858-867) boasted that
Constantine had "conferred the appellation of God on the pope, who,
therefore, being God, cannot be judged by man. Astounding as these false claims
are, they deceived the whole Christian world during most of Papacy’s dark reign
(Re 13:5, 6). Only a faithful few escaped their baneful influence and remained
loyal to their true Lord and Head. And be it noted that the Greek prefix
"anti" signifies not merely "against" or
"opposing," but also "instead, in the place of." (See
Strong’s or Vine’s) Thus, Antichrist is not simply an opponent of our Lord and
his truth, but as impostor, a usurper of his position. Attributing the purest
motives to the popes, the Papacy would still be the Antichrist; for claiming to
be the "Vicar of Christ" on earth and supreme "Head of the
Church," each pope in turn has applied the Messianic promises and
appellations of Scripture to himself. Even kings were required to kiss the
pope’s great toe, in supposed fulfillment of Psalm 2:12, "Kiss the Son,
lest he be angry."
The
System—Not Individuals
We are
not, of course, stating that any one pope was the Antichrist, must less that
every Catholic or pope is a man of sin. What we are saying is that the Man of
Sin, the Antichrist, the "Mystery of Iniquity" is the Papal system.
It is not an individual.
Antichrist
in Other Prophecies
There is
general agreement that the "little horn" on the fourth beast of
Daniel 7 and the leopard beast of Revelation 13 are symbolic of Antichrist.
Whether these picture a literal Man of Sin or a system is the question. Some
feel the four beasts of Daniel 7 represent four governments. The fourth beast
is the Roman Empire and the "little horn" on this beast symbolizes a
single individual who is the Man of Sin. Yet they claim the leopard beast of
Revelation 13 pictures not a government, but a personal Man of Sin and the ten
horns picture ten governments that support this worldwide dictator.
Here we
are confronted with a basic violation of Scriptural interpretation. When the
bible identifies a symbol, then we are on shaky ground to give that symbol a
different meaning. Daniel, Chapter 7, clearly states that beasts represent
governments and it lists the governments: Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, Rome.
By what logic are the beasts of Revelation symbolic of an individual when
beasts in Daniel are admittedly governments? Also, is it not inconsistent to
claim the "little horn" in Daniel is a man, whereas the horns of
Revelation are governments? Consistency requires a uniform application of the
beasts and horns in both Daniel and Revelation. The justification for this
reversal of interpretation is the claim that the leopard beast of Revelation 13
is referred to by a personal pronoun "he"; whereas the government
beasts of Daniel are not. This simply is not valid. In Da 7:19, 20, the fourth
beast, which all agree represents the Roman Empire, is referred to by the
personal pronoun "his." In Da 8:3-7 the beasts picturing Medo-Persia
and Greece are continually referred to by the personal pronouns "he"
and "him."
Daniel
Chapter 7
Several facts
concerning the "little horn" prove that Antichrist is a system and
not an individual. Da 7:25 reveals that the "little horn...wears out the
saints of the most high." And this presents a dilemma if a personal
antichrist wears out the saints during a future "seven-year
tribulation." If as some claim the true church is taken to heaven before
the "tribulation," who are "the saints of the most high"
that are persecuted by the Man of Sin? They reply that these are the
"tribulation saints" of Revelation 7 and not the saints or church of
Christ who are taken before the tribulation. They add that the "tribulation
saints" will be in the kingdom, but have no part in reigning with Christ
in His kingdom. This, they say, is reserved exclusively for the church of
Christ.
With this
the future literal Man of Sin concept crumbles. In Da 7:13= 14, Christ is
brought before the Heavenly Father and given the kingdom. In Da 7:18 and 22,
"The saints of the most high," the same saints that are persecuted by
the "little horn," the Man of Sin, are also given the kingdom.
Remember, only Christ and his church reign in His kingdom. Therefore, "the
saints of the most high" in Daniel 7 are not the "tribulation
saints," but the Church of Christ who reigns with Christ. This also gives
us the time element of the Man of Sin. The "little horn" persecutes
these saints, consequently, the "little horn," the Man of Sin, is revealed before either the
Day of Christ when the saints are resurrected or the tribulation occurs.
1260 Days
What and when
is this 1260-day period? The Bible is its own interpreter. That is, the Lord
has put into the Bible certain rules for interpreting symbols, parables, time
prophecies, etc. If we ignore these basic Scriptural rules then our
understanding of scripture will be confused. The Scriptural rule for
interpreting time prophecy is found in Eze 4:1-8. Here we are given a 390-day period
and in verse 6 of Ezekiel 4 we read, "I have appointed thee each day for a
year." By this divinely provided rule of interpretation, 390 days equals
390 years.
Therefore, all
agree that the seventy week (7 weeks x 7 days = 490 days) of Da 9:24-29 refer
to 490 years and not 490 days. This is based on the day-equals-a year key
provided in Eze 4:6. Why then do some make an exception to the 1260 days of
Daniel and revelation and insist on a literal period of 1260 days? According to
the Lord’s rule in Eze 4:6, a day for a year, this would be a 1260-year period.
Many students of prophecy apply this to the period between A.D. 539 and 1799.
In 539 A.D. the last of the three horns (civil powers) that stood in the way of
the Pope of Rome being recognized as the civil ruler of Rome was removed (Da
7:8). Remember, horns in prophecy consistently picture civil or governmental
powers. The pope was already acknowledged as the supreme religious ruler of the
empire.
This year 539
A.D. marks the beginning of papacy’s (the "little horn") civil power.
For 1260 years papacy, the Man of Sin, ruthlessly persecuted the true church
(Da 7:25) until papacy’s persecuting power was broken by Napoleon imprisoning
the pope in 1799. This persecution had reached its ultimate in the so-called
Holy Inquisition.
Established by
Pope Innocent III in 1204 A.D., it was applied with unimaginable cruelty in
every country and the so-called "holy office" of the Inquisition
continued the carnage until the armies of Napoleon put an end to its work.
Whole villages and towns were indiscriminately slaughtered on the theory that
"God will know his own." Tens of thousands were burned alive at the
stake, while countless others were subjected to torture by the most hideous
inventions. Aside from the more spectacular crimes of the Inquisition proper,
the steady, relentless crushing of individuals over many centuries certainly
presents an appalling scene. No wonder the prophet Daniel was alarmed! Da 7:28
Napoleon’s imprisoning of the pope and his death in 1799 ended one of the most
bloody periods in history, the 1260-year’s persecution of the saints by Papacy.
The
Scriptures do not speak of a "seven-year tribulation" nor do they
speak of two back to back 1260-day periods. The following citations are the only
places in the Bible which mention the 1260 days: Da 7:25; 12:7; Re 11:2, 3; 12:6, 14; 13:5. Each agrees with Da 7:25. The holy
people (saints means holy ones) of Daniel 12:7; the holy city (identified in Re
12:2 as the bride of Christ) of Re 11:2, the woman (symbolic of Church, 2Co
11:2) of Revelation 12:6, 14; the saints in Revelation 13:5, 7 all show the
Church of Christ is persecuted for 1260 days by Antichrist. And the Bible rule
for time prophecy is a day for a year (Eze 4:6). During the 1260 years of
Papacy’s persecution of the Church, God’s two witnesses (Re 11:3 the Old and
New Testaments) witnessed in sackcloth—the dead language of Latin.
Earmarks of
Antichrist
Da 7:25
delineates four characteristics by which the Man of Sin can be identified.
"And he [1] shall peak great words against the most High, and [2] shall
wear out the saints of the most High, and [3] think to change times [4] and
laws."
We have already
considered the first two points: the preposterous words by which popes claimed
to be "as God" and the wearing out of the true Church by papacy.
Papacy did indeed "change times."
Unwilling to
await the unfolding of God’s plan, papacy changed the time of Christ’s Kingdom.
It declared the reign of Christ had already begun and applied scriptures
relating to the Millennial glory of Christ to the unchallenged dominion of the
popes up until 1799. (Douay Bible, First Edition, footnote on Re 20:2) Another
example of Papacy’s attempting to "change times" is in their changing
of the calendar.
Did papacy
change laws? The precepts and commandments of God meant little. By the claimed
right of issuing "dispensations" the popes frequently set aside the
moral law. Murder of heretics was called praiseworthy, subjects were encouraged
to rebel, oaths and contracts were canceled and torture was declared to be an
"act of faith." Spying, intrigue, perjury and theft were pronounced
virtuous deeds when performed in the service of the church. Not content,
moreover, in dispensing with divine laws, the popes were always ready to create
new ones if convenience so required. Clerical celibacy was prescribed, meat was
forbidden for centuries on Fridays, ecclesiastical taxes were levied and
liberties of the people were frequently curtailed.
Indeed, the
four earmarks of the Man of Sin given in Da 7:25 have been fulfilled in the
infamous reign of papacy, especially up to 1799.
This is why
Martin Luther and the other Reformers identified the papal system as
Antichrist. The Man of Sin already has been revealed, therefore, there remains
no objection that the Lord is now present (2Th 2:3).
With the
combined weight of the testimony of prophecies of our Lord’s return before us,
we may have as full a confidence of his presence as those who were his personal
eyewitnesses on the Mount of Transfiguration at his first advent (2Pe 1:16-18).
In fact, our
confidence in Jesus’ return is "more sure" based on prophecies—We
have also a more sure word of prophecy, Whereunto ye do well that ye take heed,
As a light that shineth in a dark place, Until the day dawn and the day star
Arise in your hearts. 2Pe 1:19 The
watchers, the children of light, see the day dawning and their Day Star, Jesus,
arising on the horizon while the world still sleeps. This blessed knowledge so
strengthens and energizes their hearts that they are sanctified in a way they
could not be otherwise. He has kept his promise, He has come again.
They see
the foregleams of the Sun of Righteousness which will eventually rise with
"healing in his wings" (Mal 4:2) to bless the groaning creation. With
joy they realize that they will also be with him as, Then shall the righteous
shine forth As the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Mt 13:43
APPENDIX A
A Listing of
Every Scripture in which the Greek Word Parousia Occurs
The following
is a listing of every scripture in which the Greek word parousia occurs. (It is
correctly translated presence in this listing): "What shall be the sign of
thy presence?" Mt 24:3 "So shall also the presence of the Son of Man
be." Mt 24:27, 37, 39 "They that are Christ’s at his presence."
1Co 15:23 "What is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? Are not even
ye, presented before our Lord Jesus Christ at his presence?" 1Th 2:19 That
"he may establish your hearts unblamable in holiness before God, even our
Father, at the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ." 1Th 3:13 "We which
are alive and remain unto the presence of the Lord shall not precede them which
are sleep." 1 Thessalonians 4:15 "Be preserved blameless unto the presence
of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Thessalonians 5:23 "Now we beseech you,
brethren, by [respecting] the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ, and our
gathering together unto him." 2Th 2:1 "Then shall be revealed the
lawless one, whom the Lord Jesus shall slay with the breath of his mouth, and
bring to naught by the manifestation [epiphania] of his presence." 2Th 2:8
See R.V.
"Whose
presence is after..." 2Th 2:9 "Be patient, therefore, brethren, unto
the presence of the Lord." Jas 5:7 "Be ye also patient; establish
your hearts: for the presence of the Lord draweth nigh." Jas 5:8 "The
power and presence of our Lord Jesus Christ." 2Pe 1:16
"There
shall come in the last days scoffers [in the church], walking after their own
lusts [desires], and saying, Where is the promise of his presence." 2Pe
3:3, 4 "And hasting unto the presence of the day." 2Pe 3:12
"When he shall appear, we may have confidence, and not be ashamed before
him at his presence." 1Jo 2:28 "For his letters, say they, are
weighty and powerful; but his bodily presence is weak, and his speech
contemptible." 2Co 10:10 "Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have
always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence,
work out your own salvation with fear and trembling." Php 2:12 "I am
glad of the presence of Stephanas..." 1Co 16:7 "God...comforted us by
the presence of Titus; and not by his presence only..." 2Co 7:6,7
"Through my presence again with you..." Php 1:26, Marshall’s Greek
Interlinear
APPENDIX B
Origin and
Scriptural Evaluation of "The Seven-Year Tribulation" Theory
Many hold the
"seven-year tribulation theory, which briefly states is this: Christ
secretly returns to earth to "rapture" the church and takes them to
heaven. This will be followed (not necessarily immediately) by seven literal
years of tribulation during which the "man of sin" enters upon the
world’s stage. At the close of the seven years, Christ returns publicly with
the church ("every eye shall see him"), destroys antichrist and the
false prophet and begins his Millennial Reign. There are variations of the
"seven-year tribulation" theory. Some feel Christ gathers the church
at the middle of the seven years and call their concept the
"mid-tribulation rapture." Others hold that the church is taken after
the tribulation and refer to their concept as the "post-tribulation
rapture."
The
"seven-year tribulation" theory has its roots in dispensationalism
which in turn originated, not in historic Protestantism, but in the 1800’s with
J.N. Darby, the leader of the major segment of Plymouth Brethren, a wonderful
group of people, but hardly representative of historic Protestantism.
Even more
disconcerting is that Darby revived the counter-reformation views of a Spanish
Jesuit named Ribera. A basic concept of the Reformation was that Papacy as a
system was the Antichrist and that much of the book of Revelation was having
its fulfillment during the history of the church. In 1590 Ribera published a
commentary on the Revelation, as a counter-interpretation to Protestantism, in
which he applied all but the earliest chapters of Revelation to the end time
and that Antichrist would be a single evil person (not a system) who would rule
the world for three and a half years during the end time.
Darby claimed
that all the events from the sixth to the nineteenth chapters of Revelation
occur during a "seven-year tribulation."
However,
nothing in the book of Revelation say or even hints that the seven seals are
loosed, the seven trumpets sounded and the seven plagues poured out during a
seven-year period. A seven-year period is not even mentioned in the book
Revelation. To be sure, a 31/2-year period is mentioned. However, nowhere is it
indicated to be half of a seven-year period. It can be easily proven from
Scripture that the 31/2 years occur before the tribulation. (See the section
"Daniel Chapter 7" in Chapter VI). Therefore, the reformers such as
Wycliffe, Luther, Calvin, Wesley believed the 31/2 years or 1260 days were
symbolic of a 1260-year period which began before their time and extended to
the "time of the end."
The
"seven-year tribulation" concept rests solely on an inconsistent
application of Da 9:24-27, which speaks of a seventy-week period determined
upon the Jewish people. Seventy weeks equals 490 days.
All agree, upon
the basis of Ezekiel 4-6—a day for a year—that this seventy weeks equals not
490 literal days, but 490 years. Again, there is unanimity that the 69 weeks of
Da 9:25 marks a period from a decree issued in Nehemiah’s day to the first
advent of Christ. Verse 26 states that "after" the 69 weeks
"shall Messiah (Christ) be cut off."
Verse 27 shows
that "in the midst of the [70th] week he [Christ] shall cause the
sacrifice and the oblation to cease." Christ’s death abolished the
necessity of the further offering of typical sacrifices by Israel’s priesthood.
Note well that
Da 9:26 states "after" the 69 weeks "shall Messiah [Christ] be
cut off." The Hebrew word achor means after. It does not mean in or
during. Yet those who advocate the seven year tribulation say that Messiah was
cut off in or during the 69th week. This is a mis-translation of verse 26 which
plainly states "after" the 69 weeks Christ would be cut off. The 70th
week is after the 69 weeks and verse 27 clearly shows it is in the midst of the
70th week that Christ died.
Therefore the
seven-year period of the 70th week is not left over until the end of the Christian
age. And thus the seven-year tribulation concepts falls.
The
historic position of Protestantism for 300 years since the Reformation has been
that the 70th week immediately followed the 69 weeks and was fulfilled with the
death of Christ "in the midst" (middle) of it. In the 19th century,
dispensationalists came along and said, "Not so, there is a parenthesis
between the 69 weeks and the 70th week. This gap is the period between the
first advent and the rapture. Then, they say, "The 70th week, seven years,
begins to count. And the ‘he’ of Da 9:27 is not Christ, but anti-christ, and
the seven years of the 70th week is the ‘seven-year tribulation’ during which
Chapters 6-19 of Revelation are fulfilled." The mere fact that this gap is
purely an assumption, not founded on Scripture, seem to matter little to the
seven-year dispensationalists.
APPENDIX C
Every Scripture
in which the Word "See" Occurs Relative to Seeing at His Second
Advent
Mt 24:30, 31
"And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven; and then
shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man
coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. And he shall send
his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his
elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other."
As has been
shown in Chapter V, Mt 24:30-31 cannot be taken literally. The following is a
Scriptural analysis of the symbols in this highly figurative passage.
Heaven and
Heavens
Isa 34:2-5, 8, speaking of the destruction during The
Day of The Lord, states that "all the host [multitude] of heaven shall be
dissolved...and shall fall down...for my sword shall be bathed." (Verses 4
& 5) The literal heavens do not contain a multitude of people.
But the people
in the symbolic heavens (the corrupt religious systems) will be punished
(symbolized by his sword drenched in blood) by the returned Lord. Joel 2
describes The Day of the Lord. Verses 9-11 speak of a great army that causes
the earth to "quake" and the heavens to "tremble." Literal
heavens do not tremble before an army, but revolutionary forces will terrify
and overthrow the nominal church heavens. The heavens of Joe 2:10 must be the
same as in our text of Mt 24:29-31, for in the heavens of both scriptures the
sun and the moon are symbolically darkened.
Clouds
Joel 2, a
parallel scripture to Mt 24:29-31, reveals that clouds, symbolize trouble. In
Joe 2:1, 2 there is reference to the "clouds" that become
distressingly ominous in the early dawn of the Lord’s new day.
"A day of
clouds and of thick darkness, as the morning spread upon the mountains; a great
people and a strong; there hath not been ever the like, neither shall be any
more after it, even to the years of many generations."
It will be
noted from this that the "clouds" which appear in the early dawning
of the day of the Lord’s presence really consist of "a great people and a
strong," the like of which has never before been known.
This is
evidently a reference to the uprising of armed forces so tremendous that
civilization will crumble and fall under the impact of the revolutionary
struggle they will precipitate. These clouds of trouble are even now visible.
See It has
already been established that the Greek word optomai can mean mental perception
(Chapter V).
Angels The word "angel" in the Greek,
aggelos, literally means "messenger."
Often it refers
to the angelic host, but it can just as appropriately refer to any messenger of
God. For example, the returned Christ is symbolized by an angel that binds
Satan for the 1,000 years (Re 20:1-3).
Trumpets The word "trumpet" is used in
Scripture to symbolize a proclamation of truth. In the context of speaking the
truth clearly, Paul said, "If the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who
shall prepare himself to the battle?" 2Co 14:8 Again Joel 2 parallels Mt
24:30, 31 and reveals the symbolic meaning of this trumpet. From verse 1 we
learn that it is a proclamation of truth that warns the people of The Day of
The Lord. In Zep 1:14 and 16, The Day of The Lord is spoken of as the "day
of the trumpet," in which a warning of truth is given "against the
fenced cities, and against the high towers [vested interests of the present
evil world]."
This trumpet in
Mt 24:31 is evidently the same as the "last trump" of 1Co 15:52 and
the trump of God in 1Th 4:16, since all three are related to the return of
Christ. This trumpet is symbolic of a great proclamation of truth at Christ’s
return.
Four Winds Re 7:1 speaks of winds from the four
corners of the earth that, when loosed, result in great destruction. Loosing of
four winds would produce a whirlwind, which is another symbol used in scripture
(Jer.25:32; Isa 66:15-16) to describe the final and severest phase of the
"time of trouble" (Da 12:1).
Now that we
have determined from parallel scriptures the meaning of the symbols in this
highly figurative passage, Mt 24:29-31 becomes easily understood. In answer to
the disciples’ query on the signs of his presence (Mt 24:3), Jesus listed a number of events that have always been true of
history; "wars and rumours of wars"; "nation shall rise against
nation"; famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes." Then Jesus said
"all these are the beginning of sorrows [or tribulation]." There are
no unusual events. They are common to history. Then in Matthew 24:29 he says
"Immediately after the tribulation of those days [the common tribulation
of history]" something is going to happen in the heavens. "The powers
of the heavens shall be shaken." Drastic changes will rock the nominal
church heavens. "The sun [the gospel sun] shall be darkened, and the moon
[Mosaic Law] shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from
heaven." The Gospel (New Testament) and the Mosaic Law (Old Testament)
were always under attack from those outside the church.
Re 12:1 shows
the sun and the moon have always been the sustaining power of the woman, the
true church. But the phenomenon of our time is that the Bible (Sun and Moon) is
under attack from modernist within the church who deny the divine inspiration
of Scripture. (A survey taken among delegates to the National Council of
Churches revealed that over one third could not state they had a firm belief in
God.)
Stars can
symbolize either faithful or unfaithful teachers. These "stars" which
"fall from heaven" represent false teachers who gravitate from a
spiritual to an earthly ministry on a political and social level. Indeed, the
powers of the heavens are shaking. The battle between the fundamentalist and
modernist has sorely rent the church heavens. The God-is-dead theology was but
one example of this shaking. Since Vatican II, Catholicism is also being sorely
rent.
Verse 30,
"And then [after the tribulation of those days] shall appear the sign
[Greek, semeion, evidence] of the Son of man in heaven." One of the first
evidences of Christ’s parousia, presence, will appear in the nominal church
heavens. It is the darkening of the sun and moon, and the fall of the stars.
When we see a wholesale attack by leaders in the churches on the divine
inspiration of the Bible, and ministers falling from a spiritual condition to a
political or social gospel, then we know that Christ has returned.
From Joe
2:9-11, we saw that it is agnostic revolutionary forces that are shaking the
heavens. Indeed, their philosophies have influenced theologians to reject the
Bible and degenerate to political battle. This was reflected in the
recommendation of the Conference on Church and Society (Detroit, 1968) that the
churches should support violence if necessary to achieve social change. These
revolutionary philosophies are also shaking the earth. Revolution has been on
the march since the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917. Revolutionary and
counter-revolutionary forces erupted into World War II. Then followed the
Communist takeover of one third of the world. The flame of revolution spread
throughout Africa and Asia as oppressed nations threw off the yoke of
colonialism. We are witnessing the black revolution, the sex revolution, the
youth revolution. No wonder the Luke account (Lu 21:25, 26), when speaking of
the shaking of the heavens, adds, "Upon the earth distress of nations,
with perplexity; the sea and the waves [the restless and lawless elements]
roaring; men’s hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things
which are coming on the earth [society]; for the powers of heaven [nominal
church] shall be shaken."
The roaring sea
and waves symbolize the restless masses of humanity (Isa 57:20), curbed but not
full restrained, by the laws and regulations of society. Everyone has heard
some of this "roaring," with occasional stormy outbreaks dashing like
tidal waves against the earth (social order) and seeking to swallow it up.
Restrained for a time, these waves are gathering weight and force; and, as
prophetically shown, it is only a question of a few years until all the
mountains (kingdoms) are "carried into the midst of the sea," in
anarchy. Psalm 46:2 In this connection Mt 24:30 says, "all the tribes of
the earth mourn" as they "see" the Son of man coming in the
clouds [trouble] of heaven," (and "earth," Luke). This
unprecedented trouble has caused all mankind to mourn. They are experiencing
the world shattering before them. Mankind sees the clouds—trouble. Many even
discern these drastic changes as birth pangs that must precede a new world
order. As the trouble intensifies, they will begin to discern the Son of man in
the clouds of trouble and recognize that the "great tribulation" will
give birth to the Kingdom of Christ on earth.
While the
heavens (nominal churches) of Mt 24:29 are experiencing a great shaking, verse
31 shows a harvest work in progress. "And he [Christ] shall send his
angels [messengers]with a great sound
of a trumpet [truth], and they shall gather together his elect from the four
winds, from one end of heaven [nominal churches] to the other."
Zep 1:14, 16
reveals that "the day of the Lord’ is also "a day of the
trumpet." This rules out a literal trumpet that sounds momentarily, and
confirms a symbolic trumpet of truth that sounds for a period of time.
Mt 24:31
describes a great gathering of the elect, the church (1Pe 1:2), that is
accomplished by a proclamation of truth (trumpet) during Christ’s presence.
This is a reference to the harvest work at the end of the Gospel Age which is
described in detail in Mt 13:24- 30, 36-43). Here Jesus says that the angels
are the reapers that gather the wheat (faithful Christians). Reapers do not
refer to spirit angels, but to the Lord’s people who engage in the harvest
work. Matthew 9:38 Since tares look like wheat, the lesson is that the angels
(messengers of the returned Lord) will do a separating work, not between the
church and the world, but in the nominal church, the present
"heavens." This work is represented under various symbolic
descriptions—it is the gathering of the wheat from the tares into the barn (Mt
13:30); it is the gathering of the good fish into baskets and the casting of
the unsuitable fish caught in the gospel net back into the sea (Mt 13:47-49);
it is the gathering of his jewels (Mal 3:17); it is the calling of "my
people" out of Babylon (Re 18:4); it is the midnight cry to the virgins,
which separate the wise from the foolish (Matt. 25:6); and, in this prophecy,
it is the gathering of the "elect" from all the non-elect of
Christendom, from the four winds—from every quarter.
We are not to
expect spirit angels to appear with wings and to fly through the air blowing a
great trumpet, and here and there catching away some of the saints—no more than
we are to expect to become literal fish and to be put into literal baskets, or
literal grains of wheat to be put into a literal barn. The angels or messengers
used by our Lord in this harvest gathering will be such messengers as he has
used in his service throughout this age—earthly servants, begotten of his holy
Spirit, "new creatures" in Christ Jesus.
This
"gathering of his elect [the church] from the four winds" means that
this gathering will be accomplished before the four winds are completely loosed
and become a whirlwind. The harvest work will be completed before the
whirlwind, or final feature of the time of trouble, takes place. Also, the
elect are gathered "from one end of heaven to the other," that is,
out of all the nominal churches.
The harvest
work of Matthew 13 and Mt 24:31 is the same work of Re 18:1-4, where we have
already seen that the returned Christ gathers his faithful people out of
Babylon (heavens, nominal churches), and provides them with a rich spiritual
feast of present truth.
Thus we wee
that by rightly dividing the word of Truth—comparing the symbols of Mt 24:29-31
with symbols in parallel scriptures—the Bible becomes its own interpreter.
Re 1:7 Re 1:7
is also often used to prove that every one will literally see the returned
Christ. "Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see (optomai)
him, and they also which pierced him; and all kindreds of the earth shall wail
because of him."
The word
"see" in the Greek is optomai which we have already seen can mean
either mental perception or literal sight. This verse cannot be taken
literally, since those who literally pierced Jesus have long since died. The
Jewish people living on the earth when Christ returns did not literally pierce
him. If "they which pierced him" is symbolic, then the
"clouds" and "every eye" seeing him must be symbolic.
Christ returns in clouds of trouble. As the time of trouble reaches its climax,
every eye, all mankind, will begin to discern that the trouble is the result of
Christ’s invisible presence. "They which pierced him" at Calvary are
symbolic of the Jewish people living at Christ’s return. Zec 12:10 shows that
one of the final features of the time of trouble will be an invasion of the
modern state of Israel. Their deliverance, by the returned Christ, from this
invasion will cause them to discern that Christ is present.
And during the
time of trouble, "all kindreds of the earth shall wail because of
him." The time of trouble is the direct result of Christ’s presence. As it
grows in severity, all mankind will lament until they finally discern that it
is an evidence of Christ’s presence.
Mt 26:64
Another scripture sometimes misapplied to literal sight is Mt 26:64. Speaking
to the High Priest, Jesus said, "hereafter shall ye see [optomai] the Son
of man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of
heaven." Again, the Greek word translated "see" is optomai,
which here means mental perception. If this scripture is literal, then the High
Priest will be living on earth when Christ returns. This is literally
impossible the High Priest Caiaphas was representative of the whole Jewish
nation. And we have seen in the previous scripture that the returned Lord will
be revealed to the Jewish nation in a very special way during the time of
trouble—clouds.
Lu 13:35 Lu
13:35 says "Ye shall not see [eido] me, until the time come when we shall
say, Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord." The Greek word
here translated "see" is eido. It, also, can denote mental perception
or literal sight. (Strong’s Concordance defines eido as to see literally or
figuratively.) This Jewish nation was cast off from special favor by these
words of judgment pronounced by Jesus. But as Zec 12:10-14 shows, they will
repent of their denial of Christ and see (discern) and experience the second
presence of Christ and become a leading nation in Christ’s Kingdom.
Ac 1:11 Ac
1:11 is another scripture sometimes used to prove that the returned Lord will
be seen by the literal eye. "...Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up
into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so
come in like manner, as ye have seen him go into heaven." Acts 1:11 does
not say as you see the Lord ascend into heaven, so in like manner shall you see
him come again. It does not say that those who saw him go will see him come,
not that anyone else will see him come. What it does say is that the manner of
his coming will be like the manner of his going. The manner was not with great
splendor and great demonstration, trumpet sounds and voices, a great shout
rending the air and the Lord’s person shining in supernatural glory and
brightness. But it was quietly, secretly, none seeing him or knowing of the
fact, except his faithful followers. The world did not see him go, or even know
he was going, and they didn’t care. Thus, only the church at first will discern
his presence.