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Here is THE TRUE Savior YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified/Pierced for our sins and “HERE IS THE PROOF” From the Ancient Egyptian Semitic: "Yad He Vav He" is what Moshe (Moses) wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3) Ancient Egyptian Semitic Direct Translation Yad - "Behold The Hand" He - "Behold the Breath" Vav - "Behold The NAIL"
I am "one of those folks" who scrapes by day to day. I would really like to hear what you say about the book of Peter (I think that is what you said.) However, the donation part is a struggle for me. Would you consider posting it here on YT in the future?
Trying to decipher what someone might have meant, writing almost two thousand years ago in a different language and context is certainly no simple task! I used to struggle with this, hoping that one day I would somehow figure it all out. Fortunately, I came to the conclusion that i's not something I need to do, and was never intended for me. Instead, I came home to the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church which our Lord founded on the Rock of Pope Saint Peter, where I have found my place amongst Christ's followers in experiencing the continuing revelation of our Lord's good news :) If anyone else is looking for something like that, I hope they will consider joining us!
Would be honored, hope you speak fairly of this gospel, it is one of my favorite texts from the Nag Hammadi Library. I do understand most all of the lines Christ says, but a few like the lyon eating man, or a few others are but a best guess. All the rest are clear to me. Perhaps, the Secret book of John, or On the Origins of the World, would also be good topics of a video if you have not already done them. Thank you very much. Be blessed in your journey. There is truth in all spiritual works, but one must find them, this is true seeking.
I grew up a Southern Baptist, with this rapture ideology. I was blown away when I learned how new the idea of the rapture actually was. Evangelical Christianity is about as much of a new religious movement, distant from historical Christianity, as Mormonism.
As a somewhat elderly person, I remember "The Late Great Planet Earth", by Hal Lindsey, which was the bestselling paperback book of the 1970's. Mr. Lindsey predicted that the Rapture would take place before 2000. And, having moved the goalposts, he is still asserting in 2023 that the Rapture is just around the corner!
@@LimeyLassen As a matter of fact, I just read a fascinating book by Paula Fredriksen entitled, "From Jesus to Christ". The book is about the earliest days of the Christian Church and discusses, among many other things, how early Christians dealt with the fact that end of world had not arrived in spite of the fact that it was widely expected to do so in the early Church.
@@Contemplate55 "Cognitive Dissonance is the perception of contradictory information and the mental toll of it." It's a useful concept in education, because we need stress to learn abstraction. Otherwise, learning is nothing more than memorization.
@@LimeyLassen Revelation Chapter 12 sign happened in 2017. (explained on YT: "Revelation 12 sign & Conception Comet!") 1 day with the lord is the same as 1000 years. Christ died and resurrected around year 30. + 2 days = 2030 "After two days will he revive us: in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live in his sight." There's many instances of this two day thing, for example in the good Samaritan story, but today I found out about this: Solomon's reign began in 970 BC, which is exactly 3000 years before 2030, and 1000 years before year 30 It's also exactly 3000 years from the beginning, so in the middle of 6000 years... leaves out the last 1000 years, or the seventh day, when God rested. That's millennial kingdom of Christ.
As a Christian, with an insane dad who obviously never read the bible he claimed to quote, the rapture was a source of trauma for me all the way up until the point that I actually read the bible and saw that it wasn't in there. My understanding of Christianity changed SO MUCH when I read it myself and stopped letting other people tell me what it was about. But I will NEVER forget the amount of fear in my heart when my dad was saying the rapture was right around the corner any time anything in the world happened.
Unfortunately, too many Christians hold to what they’re told without reading the Bible themselves. Shortly after my conversion at age 12, I remember being taught the whole dispensational schema for the future, while studying the book of Revelation. I was too young and inexperienced in Bible interpretation to see how many liberties were being taken with what Scripture actually said. I accepted it, but, as time went on, it made less and less sense to me. A “secret rapture“ just does not appear in the Bible, and I think it’s becoming less popular among evangelicals. Certainly most Reformed believers tend to reject it, as they generally favor covenant theology to dispensationalism. It is sad to me how many Christians seem to have deconstructed,and left the faith because they could not reconcile pet doctrines of their traditions (like the rapture) when it’s not clearly taught in Scripture in the first place!
@@DarthBoardBVE I've sadly found a lot of this, too. People will explain to me the reasons they left the faith, only for me to inform them that those things aren't anywhere in the Bible, or were apocryphal syncretic material that has been unconsciously incorporated into a lot of Evangelicalism (e.g. Milton). It doesn't mean those things aren't still confusing and incredibly damaging to people, but it's hard to watch people realize they may have given up something they did love over something that they didn't have to believe in the first place.
I always felt like Southern Baptists especially were a politically-interested country club that exploits ignorant kids with weird things like "If you ask Christ to save you, you're saved forever." There was no eucharist. The readings were politicalized. After 9/11, the church got church for a few years. It's the kind of place you'd expect MTG to attend. The pastor was my Western Religions professor. He was smarter than you'd expect of most low rent Protestant pastors but his lectures were remarkably shallow. Like a lot of them, he seems to think that Christianity didn't exist until Martin Luther
The rapture is in the bible. Jesus said he will come like a thief in the night no one will know the day or hour not even the angels in heaven only his father knows when he will send him. Jesus said the dead in him will rise up and join him in the clouds then those who are living who believe in and follow him. Jesus said two men will be walking in the field one will be taken the other left, two women will be grinding in the mill one will be taken the other left. The parable of the bridesmaids and the lamps is about the rapture so yes the rapture is in the bible.
@dragonf1092 I'd like to ask the pro-Rapture folks "If no one knows when the Rapture will happen but the Father, how come are you obsessed with it?" They always forget that being a street prophet is a serious sin.
My father always called the rapture his retirement plan. His belief that he would be raptured before death led to bad financial decisions. This is an dangerous aspect of rapture thinking that is seldom talked about.
I remember in 1975 the J.W.s were going gaga because they were being told the world systems would all be destroyed in that year. So many of them believing they would be taken out of here ran up credit cards, defaulted on loans, sold homes to go wait on the mountain top etc. And nothing happened!!!!! What a whiff!!!! And we still have people today preaching that same mentality , you know the one where in the blink of an eye we'll all get raptured out of here. This stuff is getting old!!!!! 1988 and 1989 came and went. 2011 came and went. When are people gonna wake up!!!! This rapture thing is not on the calendar!!!!!
This is kind of why I don’t like Protestantism…. Its lead to so many cults and has even lead to the unfortunate rise of atheism in the west due to its denial of early church history.
Honest to god the rapture basically is what caused so much religious trauma for every person I knew growing up. I knew people who contemplated suicide, thought about putting down pets so that the pets wouldn't starve without them, or just have trauma from being forced to live in an apocalyptic family making them extreme nihilists. Why care about anything if the world is going to delete itself at any second? Why make friends outside of your religion if you know they are going to suffer after you leave? Soooooo much trauma...
This is so crazy to me as someone who grew up Jewish. I feel Judaism is very much rooted in the world and its joys, and our duty to it. There was some vagaries about the messiah and afterlife, but I maybe spent a week or two on these concepts out of 15 years Torah school. I never understood until I was an adult that some of my peers in school found so much terror in their faith, and I can see why.
From what I remember from my own religious studies class in school, the passage 'you know not the day nor the hour', which is the closest the Bible gets to the idea of rapture, actually refers to the reader's death, rather than anything as grand as suddenly turning into Superman and flying away. This in itself is already pretty frightening, but not to the point of someone Thanos-snapping your friends and family out of existence. It's basically equivalent to what people think 'memento mori' means nowadays.
@@k_schreibz from what I've learned Judaism is and always has been vague on the very idea of an afterlife, is that correct? I agree, Judaism has that going for it. My experience of Wicca is similar: live a good life now and the next will take care of itself.
Growing up in Italy, you are exposed almost exclusively to Catholic beliefs. So I always find fascinating the number of doctrines (sometimes cults) that have been originated in the US, from Mormonism to those who "play" with snakes
I grew up Church of England, and the only time our family was inside a church was for christenings and weddings. To me this stuff is both fascinating and seriously weird.
North America in the mid to late 1800s was a veritable font of all manner of "doctrines and cults" from Mormonism, to Progressivism, to American Spiritualism. The extent to which they have penetrated every day existence in the western world is often not well recognized.
Growing up, immersed in the matrix of the tribulation/rapture ideology, I was a very depressed kid. I fully expected to be dead by 16 or at least 17 due to the pervasive doom story. I had a "bucket list" by age 11 and went through a profound depression when I turned 13. However, Im still alive, decades later. Dont raise kids with a doom narrative - they will turn out nihilistic and with lifelong depression. Im much better now, but its taken years of psychological help.
The tribulation is only a doom narrative to those who dont believe, to those who believe, it is comforting, a means to an end, the end being this sinful and corrupted world we live in.
When people start in on me with their rapture preparations and predictions, I try to gently remind them that Jesus said nobody knows when the Son of Man will return, so maybe try living the way Jesus commanded us to live instead.
That's exactly what my grandfather used to tell me when I said I was worried about the rapture and the apocalypse, ideas that I used to watch on american TV.
Found it several years ago when the algorithm was suppressing it due to its subject matter. The level of respect for and distance from its subject matter meant that it was simply a matter of time before it got given a second look. A few years and 600k added subscribers later, seems like Google fixed the problem. Glad to see this channel thriving.
Its close but his sources like bartman are deconstructionist mine as well be physical extremist or humanist sources. In america certain groups politcally pay them to try and mess with the christians
I grew up in a Southern Baptist family that deeply believed in the Rapture. I definitely had a few terrified moments when I was the first one home in the afternoon, thinking my family had been taken up, which made me think deeply about my sins. I didn't know any of the history behind the belief till now. This video is so packed with interesting info, I had to watch it twice 👏🏻
As a teenager, at a friend's youth group in the 80s, we were shown a rapture movie. I don't recall the title, but it had me terrified for decades that any moment the rapture could happen and, would I be good enough to be taken up or would I be left behind? What about my loved ones? I now see these types of beliefs as acts of terror. Child abuse even!
I am so sorry to hear that, I can not imagine the terror you experienced.... This is one of the big reasons I've stayed away from most religious groups it's just fear mongering, trying to gain power, and control, and oppress people, meanwhile 80 percent of them are doing way worse things..... At the end of the day the only system that makes sense to me, is live, and let live within reason.
As an Australian raised as a Catholic to Polish parents... My only knowledge of the rapture was from American pop culture. It feels so foreign to any religious upbringing I had.
As a fellow polish Catholic same. Legit never in Bible class as a kid at church or even in catholic school they mentioned anything about this. It’s solely based off prot ideals… honestly it seems like once Protestantism became a thing especially American Protestantism, that’s when society started drifting away sadly from the faith. All because of these 30,000 sects promoting some non biblical theory all because pastor Billy Bob “ foresaw “ it.
As someone who grew up in a catholic country (help!) and studied in a religious school, I never heard of the rapture. I remember hearing it mentioned in popular American media and not knowing what they were talking about.
@josepheridu3322 by in large we Catholics are Amillennial, although we don't typically put much emphasis on the end times in general, so the idea of the pretrib rapture is nonsensical even to Catholics who do focus on the end times.
I'm an exchristian in Latin America and although for a few years I had realized how biased were the Bible interpretations I was thought, it had never crossed my mind how this core belief was really not standing on solid ground at all. It's been long since I refused to continue believing in their ideas, but after watching this I feel lied to. I understand belief systems are complex and nuanced, but the community I grew in has this idea so fixed in both belive and practice that you would think it was more coherent within its own context and theology, but it's holding to thin air only and being used as a huge threat to all behavior of beliveres
i am catholic from south america, and when i was little i always though it was strange about why the rapture was not in the bible despite the american media describing it, Then I realized that it was just a belief of the evangelicals from there XD
From a preacher I listened to years ago at the Bethlehem church, all I can say is this: don't worry about the world's end...worry about your own. It doesn't matter what happens to the world so long as you take care of yourself spiritually. You can save no one's soul, but your own.
Sadly, you can't save anyone, not even yourself. When oxygenated blood stops flowing to your brain it will begin to die, which means your memory, your hopes, beliefs and dreams will die with it. For you that will be the end, you will cease to exist just like the billions and billions who went before you, it will be as if you never existed. However, if you want to fool yourself into believing that all of that is untrue, you are more than free to do so, don't let a few facts get in the way of a good dream. There is a reason why all religions are called "faiths".
The word is harpazo and His word tells you to pray you are counted worthy to escape all the horrors coming upon this earth. There’s nowhere to hide in the earth. Of course His church is going to be pulled out before the destruction. Another video promoting lies and people in the comment section literally falling for it
@@cathysnyder8559 Really? How on earth can an adult believe such nonsense? is it "fear of hell"? Are you afraid of all the other religion's hell? if not why not? because Christianity got to you first. St Ignatius Loyola said? Give me a child until he is seven, and I will show you the man. What he means is, he will scare the child so much that the child will be whatever he is told to be.
@@cathysnyder8559Your splitting hairs here. What I mean is only you have control over what you choose to believe or disbelieve. If you trust in Jesus, and at least **attempt** to adhere to what the bible says, that is enough.
I grew up under such psychological terrorism. I remember that this scared me so much, to the point where I'd dream about being left behind™ and it was truly terrifying. Not something healthy for a kid.
I seriously can’t convey how scarring the idea of the rapture was for me as a kid. It didn’t just terrify me whenever I wasn’t aware that my parents and siblings were out of the house; it left me feeling responsible for the souls of every kid around me. The pressure it burdened me with has lingered well into adulthood, even if it no longer has to do with the rapture specifically.
I know exactly what you mean. I had the added curse of feeling like I had to repent over and over again whenever the rapture anxiety would well up, and would get caught in an OCD-like tick until the anxiety subsided.
I hear you. I too grew up with rapture theology. Now I see that Christianity in general creates a life crushing burden to get the world saved and guilt and shame when we can't do it. Even if we believe we are forgiven everyday it still doesn't change the sense of failure.
Your comment makes me sad. I hope I don't sound condescending, but that is an awful thing to do to a child. A child should be raised with love, hope and understanding, not fear.
The big question. What other doctrine have you bought that has been surmised by men, to be sound, yet little scriptural evidence? It makes no sense that if Christ is to return, and rule, what is the obsession with thinking going to heaven is being with the lord, if he's on earth ruling? So it is, with the trinity, and a host of man made religious ceremony, and Idolatry.
I grew up southern evangelical. It blows my mind how some of the doctrine I took for granted is actually on the fringes of Christian belief. I was taught that huge chunks prophecy were fulfilled in the last century and that, roughly speaking, the events of the “Left Behind” series could transpire at any moment. Scary!
@@makepeoplemadI agree and I align more with Catholicism (I’m new to Christianity and haven’t been confirmed in any church yet) it isn’t a complete Protestant issue though. Most Protestants also think the rapture is ridiculous but the Protestants who have the most influence on Christian pop culture in America are these evangelical mega church style baptists (not saying all baptists are bad). Could you please explain the spiritual dead being resurrected? The end times are not something that I have been focusing on learning so I’m curious to hear the Orthodox view.
@@makepeoplemad That's absolute nonsense and a complete bastardization of the word of God. You do understand that the scripture is extremely important. You don't focus on the rapture "too much" it's literally the next huge event in human history....lol.
The events of the left behind can't happen because that book is incorrect on how the Rapture will take place, the rapture will not happen at random when no one is looking or expecting, the rapture will happen only when the antichrist enters the rebuilt temple in Israel and proclaim himself god in there... it will not happen before that day, that is what Paul explained in 2nd Thessalonians.
@@makepeoplemad The second coming isn't the Rapture you're right, the second coming happens after the Great Tribulation which is after the Rapture.. there fixed your understanding of the bible regarding that part. Also, not sure how you can be proud to be ignorant... "We also never read Revelations in Liturgy, since it's unfulfilled prophecy" ... that's the weirdest flex I ever heard, who acts like it's a great thing to be ignorant of things that God went out of His way to tell us about on purpose? Then again the Orthodoxy is basically the same thing as the Catholics, your temples are full of images of saints and other apostasies, so why bother actually trying to learn the truth right?
@@michaelcastro5339 nope much of revelation is fulfilled in 70 AD. Also The thousand year reign was already fulfilled in two ways: 1. The Church 2. The conversion of the Roman Empire into the Christian Byzantine Empire which reigned for more than 1000 years. Revelation is not read in liturgy because the book was not deemed officially canonical until much later than the other books of scripture (oh by the way, who determined which books were canonical and would go into the Bible? Oh yeah it was the Orthodox lol). Regardless Revelation contains the patterns history and is extremely important and obviously much remains unfulfilled. Of course, rapture isn’t in the book so that’s fake but it does portray the second coming and also the council of the saints who are offering bowls of our prayers to God (that’s called intercessory prayers of the Saints which of course is denied by evangelicals).
Imagine my shock that something essential to Christian Fundamentalism has no basis in the Bible. I grew up around a lot of Evangelicals and they don't know anything about the Bible. It's actually kind of weird. I made the terrible mistake of trying to date a girl who was a devout Evangelical back in the early 2000s. I studied the Bible to try to understand her. It... didn't go well. She was a nice girl, but her dad couldn't stand the possibility that I was either Catholic or Jewish.
@@billbadson7598 Basically, a Christian can be too pagan (Catholicism is considered overly pagan in flavour and thought by certain Protestant fundamentalists) or too symptomatic of the pre-Christ belief in God (Jews are considered in denial about Jesus being the Son of God).
One of my favorite things about this rapture is that when many non evangelical and Iman/Muslims priest are given this question they go "only god really knows" which a polite way of saying "please stop asking me that question"
Which is smart. Asking that question is like the blind leading the blind. Just read the Bible and ask God your questions. Your mind will eventually be opened to the truth.
@@robertdowns9534 The Bible doesn't talk; it needs man to explain it, that is why we have priests and pastors. It is often amusing that even the most so-called Bible-based Evangelical cult--I mean church--still has a pastor even while insisting that the Bible is all you need. I often want to ask the cult leader--I mean pastor--why he has that job if the Bible is all we need, which makes him a hypocrite and a liar basically.
I was 25 years old the first time I read the New Testament, so I came into it with no preconceived ideas, and never talk to anybody about it, I just wanted to read it for myself. I was actually surprised when someone mentioned to me that there is a pre-tribulation rapture because I did not see that anywhere in the Bible. I studied it closer and it wasn’t there. I am very happy to see more and more people are coming to realize there is no pre-tribulation rapture, just the second coming of Christ after tribulation.
What people don't understand is just what constitutes tribulation (You really do need eyes to see and ears to hear what the spirit is saying. Read the books that were removed from the bible, Jude the apostle recommends a prophet called Enoch. I have the R.H. Charles rendition. You find an on line copy for free. Just copy, and paste in you dockets. Seriously there were books removed from the canon over the years, But by the grace of God Some have been returned. These really are the keys to the kingdom that were removed. You need the Holy Spirit to understand the scriptures not mans interpretation of them trust in Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.
@@jbmac4889 You’re correct that a number of books that were available during Jesus’ time have been systematically buried. The apostles quoted from the book of Enoch. I’ve actually read it before but it was way over my head. So many people have a few scriptures that they know by heart but don’t really appreciate what all there is to truly having wisdom. That can take a lifetime of study. Lord bless you in your personal pursuit of understanding!
Free from the burden of dogma, indeed. Too bad that theists don't care about what is actually true and instead just make up what they want to be true and they'll cherry pick any verse from their holy book to pretend they're making a point while living contradictory to their words.
@@borkabrak the Bible has told you plenty of times that we walk by faith and not by sight. To call things that aren't as though they were/are. If you believe There is only one Truth, that is His. Ours, Mine, Yours don't exist.
@@JDA89 Well, then you just admited that your blind and dogmatic. Makes sense, one will inevitably lead to another. It's the most obvious of infinite severe problems inherent to faith that harm individuals as well as entire societies. The scientific method is the most reliable way to jusrifiably have confidence in knowing what is true because of actionable and demonstrable foundations, findings, and patterns. Faith has none of that, it's just blind, dogmatic make belief.
I feel like if M. Night Shyamalan wrote that story, a possible twist at the end would be that God only likes _skeptics,_ so he _vaporized_ everyone else.
You guys should read the books, they're written at like a sixth grade reading level. Truly terrible writing, and the cherry on top is that the authors (yes, two people got together to write these novels) were doing writing classes for a while too.
Missionary kid here, parents were southerners, and this was a huge wedge between my family and every other american family we met (not families from other countries, just Americans). My father considers this near heresy, pure wishful thinking that has no basis in the bible, reality or logic. I'm glad that he taught me to rebuff these pro-rapture arguments. Read the originals, the different versions of the originals, the translations, the different translations, context is everything and remember that each verse should strengthen the others, not force them to stretch beyond disbelief.
Look a little closer...Luke 21:36 (read it)...be careful of leading people astray...Jesus went to prepare a place for us and will be coming back in a time 'As in the days of Noah' people eating, drinking, marrying and given in marriage' (Mark 24:38) - this obviously is 'before' tribulation because tribulation is going to be so horrendous people will JUST be trying to survive
why are you mixing scripture? why must we take a reference in Luke and make it fit in with Mark and then bring it into Revelations? Why must you change the context? You are cherry picking to make it all follow poorly written fantasy fiction from the 20th century. Who was Luke written for? What was it talking about. Was it the same as for Mark? Revelations? No? Then stop spreading lies. None of this means "poof and you're gone, lucky you!" @@mdorn6592
As someone who grew up in the Bible Belt, went to Christian school, and had periodic panic attacks over the Rapture, this is honestly very reassuring lol. Rapture anxiety is so real.
I only had one nightmare from it, but it wasn't pushed too aggressively on me except during the stretch I had that nightmare. It was by some "only God is keeping me from murdering babies left and right as I see them" conservative Sunday "school teacher." Thankfully, I had already watched the more Western-Enlightenment/folk-Eastern-themed animes on TV/DVD called Howel's Moving Castle and Spirited Away, respectively. The nightmare involved the sky darkening, and some half vulture/crow big nosed dark wing "angels" descending in hosts/garrisons and one going to every household and asking if people had put the holy-water on their noses or not, as a sign of their faith. There was some sadness involved with I or someone in my family not having done it perhaps running out of time, then I woke up and realized how dumb a "some are left behind flight-rapture" would be (the whole "disappearing" didn't make sense with Paul's literal letter). Then I read some passages in the "O.T." that were supposed to relate to the final judgement, etc. And they literally said that Yahweh/God would "test people like gold and silver are tested through the fire" AT THE END TIMES, so it didn't make sense that he would not test some of "his" people given he didn't mention that some would be excluded in that O.T. passage. Bibliolatry is so ignorant and damaging.
me too! distancing myself from christianity and then starting to learn about the roots of it for myself (through channels like this) have healed so much of my religious trauma and have helped so much
Rapture anxiety 12 years old Wake up alone No phone no internet no tv ".....welp.." Couldn't tell you how many times that happened to me. Felt on purpose around when I stopped counting.
Oh God, you unlocked a memory to me I never knew existed. Our family weren't super religious by any means, but I did grow up in a Christian household and I read a lot when I was a kid. I stumbled upon books explaining the Rapture, and for nights then, I could sleep. It's just so terrifying getting left behind to suffer for eternity to kid me back then.
This topic has been one of the many culture shocks I’ve experienced as I’ve transitioned out of Christianity. The fact that most people don’t believe the Rapture as fact was so odd to me. I was raised with it as a pure fact, that it was coming literally any day now, and you better be good or you’ll be left behind! Living life as if the world could end any minute is not good for the mental health, or the development of a child.
Even though American Evangelicals call themselves "Fundamentalists" who profess to take the Bible literally, in fact much of their doctrine is based on very creative readings of the text and even dream revelation. I grew up in a community like that myself, and I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that they're living in a wholly different reality than the rest of the secular world.
That's quite sad, because if you've been sealed with the holy Spirit of promise you will not be left behind. You get sealed with it the moment you understand the gospel and trust on the blood of Christ that he shed to pay for your sins, and that he rose again on the third day. Question is, have you had that moment of believing on Christ, or were you just a churchian who went to church and believed you'd get to heaven because you go to church and are good enough ? 12 That we should be to the praise of his glory, who first trusted in Christ. 13 In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise, 14 Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise of his glory. --- Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life. ---- 8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: 9 Not of works, lest any man should boast. ---- 9 Who can tell if God will turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we perish not? 10 And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil, that he had said that he would do unto them; and he did it not. ^^ from this we can see that God sees turning from ones evil ways as a work. So turning from sin is a work. And works don't save.
@@mkovis8587 When someone says they're an ex-Christian it's safe to assume they've already read the scriptures. Citing verses at them is not productive, or respectful.
@@jessefontenot9846they want the Third Temple to be built and for more chaos in the Middle East, since this accelerates the beginning of the events of the 7 year Great Tribulation (in their interpretation). Most evangelicals believe in the Pre-Tribulation Rapture, which means they believe all the born again Christians will be miraculously raptured in a single moment, and the Tribulation begins after that. The Tribulation and it's events can only happen if the Third Temple is built, so the Antichrist can go into it and commit the Abomination of Desolation, as spoken of in the books of Daniel, Matthew, and Revelation. The Antichrist is also the man who will save Israel in the beginning of the 7 years, but halfway he will commit the Abomination and start killing everyone who doesn't believe he is God. They want to accelerate these circumstances. Chaos in the middle east leading to Israel's dire situation, along with pumping all the money and support they can to ensure Israel survives until the Tribulation begins so the Antichrist's can come on the scene. Antichrist arriving guarantees the Return of Christ and the Pre-Trib Rapture to happen. They are total fools. What if the Rapture is "Post-Tribulational"?, in their own theology this just begins the worst 7 years the world will ever go through and they don't even get to be raptured before it! It's a very heinous religious accelerationism. I am Orthodox Christian and don't believe in pretrib rapture even before I came to Orthodoxy. I was an evangelical before and believed in it in my childhood, very bad for kids... Not to mention US foreign policy making martyrs of Orthodox Christians in Middle East and Eastern Europe.
Being an American Christian myself who never fully bought into the rapture concept, I think a lot of misconceptions like that comes from us getting too caught up in popular culture and not thinking for ourselves- which could be why God allowed us to lose all cultural influence to shake up the church and force us to get our priorities straight.
Since the British have mostly aposticized their official and dissenter religion since WW2 they have forgotten it and just assume it is American. Modern media will ride any wave of faddishness that sells copy. It is easier to get published in America than any other nation.
I grew up Pentecostal. My family always preached against the rapture. I was told my whole life the word rapture wasnt even in the bible . . Tbh i never really tried to find out. Thank u for this
Grew up in a rapture, death cult. We were not taught to grow up and give to the world. Education was restricted. As children and young adults, we were taught the rapture was coming at any moment, and to be prepared. (Sinless.). Jobs, family, friends, hobbies, education meant nothing. We were to make it to the rapture. This causes stunted growth, social and economic problems, and absolute trauma and fear. It took me 30 years to get away, but I am so happy I did even though I am mourning the life I didn’t get to live due to the lies put forth by this doctrine
I gotta say ideas have consequences and certainly your testimony is living proof of that. I've been around certain people in my Christian experience that were definitely on the fringes. And all I could do was step away from them. If in this Christian life you find a worthy calling be careful to handle with care . I'm a partial preterist, not ever gonna ascent to any "rapture theology"!!!! I first heard this catching away stuff in the early 70s with the so called Jesus Movement. Hal Lindsay and the Late Great Planet Earth. I laughed all the way home!! This idea is so ridiculous it's not even worth describing. Too many people are stuck with this misguided theology!!!!!!
When I was younger, growing up in church, one of the biggest problems I had with youth leaders or anyone in the church was their wholesale adherence to rapture theology. If you asked them to show you simple things-like the chronology of where it comes from in the Bible-you would immediately draw personal criticism. Having studied so much Christian and Jewish texts over the years I have just accepted that churches are places for social gathering and belonging, not much else.
@@Apinetree123 Yeah the Catholics have kinda a long record of making up extra-Biblical beliefs as well. Papal infallibility, transubstantiation, abortion bans, celibacy of the priesthood...
The problem is that modern Christianity is often preached from a position of complete and total divorce from its original contexts, by preachers who are either ignorant of that context or desperate to make their faith more 'relevant'. Fanfiction piles on top of fanfiction, until nobody can articulate why they believe certain things anymore. It's not only the twisting of the Bible's origin messages, but also the advancement of things that you yourself might not believe but some past preacher did and you're just parroting that along in a game of telephone.
Too much fear mongering and heavy handedness, and not enough love and acceptance was what caused many youth to flee the churches as far back as the 1960s, as shown in the film Jesus Revolution.
You literally stole those words out of my mouth !!! I agree with you 100%. What bunch of f*cked ups came up with these weird, scary, unsubstantiated fairytales ! The morons... And I can go on like this forever...
I think to most rapture believers It's not belief that the world must come to and end while they're alive, just that if it does, they're gonna be spared the experience. Though maybe it originated the way you've described it when Paul was helping early Christians to cope with it not arriving soon enough.
John 16:33 “These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.”
That's why I converted to Madness. May Chthulu and his Elder God entourage eat me first and spare me the horror of their wrath on the rest of the world.
John 6 39-54 Jesus says at the Last day four times All doctrines here in Mystery Babylon say there's a thousand or more years after the day Jesus calls the Last day How about that arrogance
@@squirreljones3595 a day is 1,000 years in this case. The last day literally means the last 1,000 year period of time in God's 7,000 year plan to redeem the earth.
As an ex-evangelical who read the full left behind series (😂), this video brings healing. I'm shocked to learn that this is a fringe idea within Protestant Christianity! But i really shouldn't be. I feel closer to hope with everything with I unlearn. Thank you so much for this and your channel, your work 🙏🙏🙏
I grew up going to Catholic schools and was taught that the Rapture was a weird Protestant idea that they came up with because they didn’t want to admit that they would suffer even though Good Christians suffer throughout the Bible. Just what I learned in school.
Brutal but kinda true. American Evangelical protestantism, especially the “health and wealth” and word of faith Pentecostal types have a real problem with suffering. Some genuinely believe that Christians who suffer disease and the like only do so because they don’t have enough faith. Contrast that with Catholic and Orthodox theology surrounding suffering. Night and day.
If you think about it, it sounds like when the end of days does happen. Which i sort of assume will be a cranking of the pain and chaos to 11, wouldnt experiencing such suffering make evangelicals apostasize?
As a European ex-Catholic, I was just told that "Rupture" is just another English world for "Second Coming" or "Final Judgement". I'm only now learning how weird it really is.
@@RaptureReadyforJesus-qv2ql the churches which descend from Jesus and Apostles are that of the Holy Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Churches, we've stood for millenia teaching about Christ
@@Kman.Religious people love to think that everyone on the planet is religious whether they realize it or not. They insist on “secularism” being a religion in of itself, or that atheists worship science or something. They / you can’t comprehend someone who isn’t spiritual at all. That we are all just lying to ourselves.
As a Catholic, I am taught that the "rapture" described in the New Testament occurs only when Christ returns. Based on scripture, it seems this is after the Tribulation, but just before the Wrath. There is nothing in scripture that says Christ will return twice!
As a Catholic, you need to look long and hard at what you've been taught. I understand the difficulties with end-times issues and we can't be dogmatic. Be reconciled with God and grow up in all things in Christ. Then let God be God and work things out as He sees fit.
Oh, yes, there is. He does not come down to the earth at the rapture. That's why it is the catching away. We are caught up together with Him in the clouds. When He returns and sets His feet on the Mount of Olives, He comes as a judge.
Jesus the son of Almighty God Jehovah returned in 1914 and will soon destroy all but one of some 30,000 different religious groups claiming to represent Jesus Christ and Almighty God Jehovah give praise to his name and keep living...
I grew up watching the Left Behind movies. My mom read me the books as a kid. Scared me more than anything. I remember trying to comfort my little brother who was terrified of “Mr. Rapture”. 🤦🏼♀️
Atheist here, this is a very interesting topic. Especially since as a Filipino Catholic, the first time I heard about the rapture is from the internet. And I was really baffled when I found out that its a big thing with Evangelicals.
I've been a Christian all my life. I never even heard of "the rapture" till a few years ago and it was so weird to hear of it. It's like fundamentalist Christianity is a totally different religion, I don't recognize much of the faith I grew up with in fundamentalism, and at times, it's the complete opposite of what I was taught.
Yep, like it's no longer enough to be 'Saved'... now American Evangelicals gotta invent ever more 'extreme' examples of their 'Specialness' (aka, Narcissism).
It is not as if the rapture is a completely new idea. It can be traced back to the Old Testament stories of Enoch and Elijah being taken alive into heaven.
Also in the 70s, there was that Christian rapture horror movie series that started with "A Thief in the Night." Those movies were shown in churches, and traumatized many children especially.
Me too! Whenever my parents were late to pick me up or I walked home and my mom left for groceries without telling me, I wasn't freaking out, but I definitely thought about the possibility I was left behind.
Traumatized? Oh the horror!!! Jesus returning for the church,before the wrath of God falls on the world. Oh the horror!! IF,you're not a Christian! And guess what? ALL the children get taken in the rapture. I guess your pastor wasn't educated.
As my father-in-law used to say about people expecting the second coming any moment. "What makes them think they are so special that it will happen during their lifetime."
I always believed that it was just old people who were scared to face their own deaths so they want a 'quick and painless' salvation from death. If you just are supernaturally spirited away you don't have the pain and agony of disease or injury.
Hebrews proves we are all saved the same way. We believe God and what He says, and it is counted unto us as Righteousness. (I believe, or faith in that to mean salvation. But know this, Jesus will defend His Word and that is comforting to me.
I remember in the 1980s Ron Reagan's Interior Secretary James Watt seriously argued that we did not need to protect our natural resources because, based on the bible, the world would be ending soon.
That is the most tragic thing about this misguided fringe belief - its connections to fossil fools and US politicians resulting in a race to destroy Earth’s habitable biosphere for the rest of us and countless other species.
Myaunt had the same views. We shouldn't worry about pollution, or driving entire species into extinction. or nuclear war, or squandering earths resources because God was going to renew the Earth at his coming. Doesn't sound like "Wise Stuardship to me.
You’re my favourite account for religious concepts. It feels very unbiased which is refreshing. You don’t attack the views and you don’t defend them, simply analysing them.
I see quite a bit of biased here.He says there is only one bible passage that proponents of pretribulation rapture look at;he suggests that the bible doesn't say about the pretribulation rapture by asking the question "where did the idea come from".He also calls it fiction. And by the way all the things Jesus mentions in Mat 24 is answering a question He was asked,"the signs of His coming and of the end of this age and when it's gonna happen ". He obviously is not aware of the post tribulation rapture (infact more than 1), that's why he agrees with those who say this theology is confused. However l'm impressed by so much work he's done gathering several scholars' interpretations although he's got a side that he inclines to.
Everybody with a brain has multiple biases. Par for the course. I like RFB because the I perceive Dr. Andrew Henry’s aspiration is to minimize and mitigate the bias when talking about facts and interpretations/approaches.
Matthew 24:40-42 "Two men will be in the field; one will be taken and the other left. Two women will be grinding with a hand mill; one will be taken and the other left. Therefore keep watch, because you do not know on what day your Lord will come."
@StealthySpace7 that's irrelevant. You seem to not know what they are arguing for. I can tell what they are arguing for but you seem to not know what they are arguing for.
@ it's a really really simple question, you left this on a video explaining how the rapture is not supported in the Bible (which it isn't) so I assume you disagree
I grew up in an extremely conservative religious family. The church we went to had literal "Rapture drills" in which we had to practice. We would watch videos about the rapture all the time. This was all terrifying and caused me so much trauma. It took me years into my adulthood to deprogram myself from the mental abuse that I went through. That's what mostly drove me away from being a religious or dogmatic person. I do believe that teaching such concepts are dangerous for children as it is a form of abuse. Evangelical practices are gross.
@quantum5147 Stop with the terrifying nonsense. You probably look at all sorts of different vampire and demonic movies but yet the rapture is so terrifying lol
@@christiansoldier77 it's not biblical, but it's scary because of ambiguity, but then again we could be wiped out by forces of nature at any time any way, so we should just hope in the resurrection. Orthodoxy is the way.
@@ThumbKnuckle It is biblical. The bible literally speaks about multiple times. It isn't scary . What is scary about joining with Jesus ? No we are not going to be wiped out by nature. That's a myth created by the climate change people.
@@christiansoldier77Children are not typically exposed to horror films or told to believe they are true, with the threat of eternal damnation as a consequence of disbelief. But the real damage to children is epistemic: if you are told doubt is sin, never develop the critical thinking tools required to question what you're being 'taught,' and are fed ideas you are unable to break down, you're being brainwashed. As an adult that damage is compounded when you realise how much time you have lost and how much work you will need to put in to achieve parity with people who have been raised to think pluralistically. It's not just an intellectual crisis for the individual, all this takes an emotional toll which you will also need to overcome, usually without the support of your immediate family (who caused the damage in the first place).
As an atheist turned Christian I read the Bible on my own many times before going to a church. Once I began attending in the early 90s I was surprised by the "Pre-tribulation Rapture" doctrine. I had never read anything in the Scriptures that prepared me for this doctrine. I was fully prepared to go through the "10 Days of Awe" and joyfully embrace my destiny as a soldier of Christ standing against the Beast system "occupying" until Jesus returned. In the 30 years of rigorous study since then I am more againItst this doctrine than ever. I agree with Corrie tenBoom.
I remember my grandma used to say "if" and not "when I die". She said "if" for years and even though I was brought up in churches that preached the rapture, I always felt it was weird she did that. She finally started saying "when" about 5 years before she died and although I no longer believed in the rapture or much of the bible by that point, I did feel kinda bad for her that she had given up after believing since the 70s.
Well, all I know is that I have believed in 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 since the 70's, and still look for it, as Paul tells us that believe; "Looking for that blessed hope and appearing of the glory of the great God and savor Jesus Christ." Titus 2:13.
It offends my family so bad when I say death is natural and okay and even good.... Family of pastors in Appalachia blah blah... That should explain it 😂
@@rosemadder5547 Actually, death was not natural nor okay or even good, but rather an enemy (1 Corinthians 15:26) because when God made Adam and Eve they were made to live forever. God even said of all his his creation, “It is good” because there was no death, a concept we can not understand, but one Adam and Eve understood when God killed an animal to fashion clothing to cover them both, as after they sinned, their eye’s were opened revealing their nakedness. This death (sacrifice of blood) was the first on Earth, the second death of great note was that of Jesus Christ death on the cross, shedding his blood to redeem man from the consequence of sin, which is death, Romans 5:17. And 6:23.
@rosemadder5547 They everywhere, ain't they? 😂 WV lady here and I grew up in a Church of God Holiness where half my famil6 worked (great-aunt was my Sunday School teacher some grandmother knew if I acted up before I even got back in) so I feel your pain.
The idea of the rapture has become a part of the popular culture of more religiously conservative states. I grew up going to a mainline Protestant church that was not Evangelical in any way, and lived a mostly secular life, but I am only learning that this was not a mainstream Christian view rooted clearly in the Bible until now. It is presented in the common culture (I am speaking about a southeastern state) as just a fact or integral part of Christian belief, even among the general population that is not Evangelical
What a fascinating video! I grew up in an evangelical church where all 5 pastor/elders politely disagreed with each other on end times theology. If I remember correctly there was one holder of each of the four eschatological variations, and the Dispensationalist was viewed as the fringe one. (Makes sense, because every time I study Christian theology and someone says "here are the range of views and this one is the most extreme," my church almost always chose the extreme one lol.) The Left Behind books were viewed in my church as silly fiction to satisfy the mainstream Christians who didn't get the real nuances of eschatology. We were very into John Piper and I recognize hearing Darby and Scofield's names come up too. Now that I'm an adult who thinks for myself and explores spirituality on my own terms, videos like these bring back memories of Sunday School debates I haven't thought about in years! Thanks for the education @religionforbreakfast , it's a huge part of my adult growth!
@@josepheridu3322 That's because the only time they stop being tolerant of differing eschatological views...is when they become doomsday cults. If you're not a doomsday cult, you have no stake in the minutiae of the end of the world. But if you are, then nothing matters more.
I rememebr a girl in my class was obsessed with these books. She went on to be an essential oil peddler and promoted several MLMs. Feels like certain types are just on rails to a very odd path in life.
I didn’t grow up Christian, but I did grow up in a very evangelical Christian area. I had heard the stories about Jesus being born and resurrected and all that, but I only heard about the rapture as a teenager. I found it very confusing why anyone believed it lol. This video definitely helped me get a better idea of where it came from!
That's beautiful lol. Most believe in a literal 6 day creation and Noah's flood. They are scared that most Christians no longer see this as literal and they double down on their "science".
I'm catholic, started going to a southern Baptist Church every other Sunday with my boyfriend and his grandma... I'm gonna stick with Catholicism in the long run, thanks, but we started going in January and were still talking about Revelation and the rapture in September
@@masonkiel yep you are right.Here is a video where Mike debates a Catholic that knows his stuff! To me the Catholic Church was completely wrong because I completely knew nothing, after reading and watching a couple videos “wow” 100% Catholic! I do give Mike credit he is brave for defending his thoughts. ruclips.net/video/f7YleyNnNSk/видео.htmlsi=lqhE9zOxEo0gmM6l
Leave the rapture idea, "behind". It's a hiccup from 1831 . The protestant church in many circles bought into this nonsense years ago. Hopefully we can stamp it out for good!!!;
I was working on a story about a devout church filled with True Christians, except for that one poor trash family who were considered no better than they should be. And when the Rapture comes, that family is the only one missing from the congregation.
I grew up Catholic, seriously Catholic. I was an altar boy, my sister was a lectern, my dad was in the Knights of Columbus, and my mother volunteered at the local nunnery, and believed unto her deathbed a concept of "Catholic Spiritualism" which involved talismen, special ceremonies, and such. My sister and I went to Catholic schools. That's how Catholic we were. After I left the Church as a teen, I started exploring other religions, mostly Protestant, but also other traditions like Buddhism, and ecumenical like Unitarianism. It was during that Protestant phase that I learned about this idea of the Rapture. From the beginning, I thought it would make an entertaining fictional book or movie, but people actually believe this stuff! It's like believing that Star Wars is a documentary.
Wait, what? Star Wars ISN’T real? But then how do you explain duct tape? It has a dark side and a light side, and it binds the universe together. How can you not see that as reflection of the Truth of The Force?? 😂
Being an altar boy from a catholic family and going to catholic schools makes someone “seriously catholic“? And here I was thinking that to be a true catholic is to understand and belive in the teachings of the catholic church and to love God with all our heart. 🤦♂️
more support for the idea of extraterrestrial influence, people getting beamed up into the clouds stuff. more support for the idea that Evangelicals love Trump because they think that he is their best bet for being raptured.
As an atheist who’s seen alot of content talking about religion, it’s kind of refreshing, to me, how neutral your delivery feels. Despite the subject matter didn’t feel a heavy bias toward the validity or lack thereof of the stories in question.
@@shermhart7617 everyone else in this comment section is stating their beliefs too, you better go tell them all as well that we aren't allowed to do that. The rest of us didn't get the memo you received apparently.
And what is this utuber promoting? No rapture so then what ? Are we just waiting for the coming Kingdom. Or do we now have Domion Now theology. Basically Rimanism promotes ether on or other.
My parents grew up in a Christian fundamentalist doomsday cult, and told us stories about what they were taught. Everyone in the church was constantly told that judgement day was right around the corner, and they were the true chosen children of God and would be saved from doomsday. The were fully in on the UPC being the mark of the beast thing. Thankfully, they had left the church long before I was born.
This is a terrific (as usual) overview of this topic. In the novel Atlas Shrugged one of the many subplots involves the disappearance of heads of industries who wind up in a special hidden area. The author, Ayn Rand, claimed to be an atheist but this plot devise was clearly glommed from this religious concept. Although I've never read of this connection anywhere else.
In the game Bioshock (whose plot's backstory is based heavily on Atlas Shrugged) a tycoon named Andrew Ryan (see what I mean?) builds an underwater city literally named Rapture where all captains of industry, scientists and censored creatives could flee from government control.
Having read the book, I can see the similarities but rapture teachings were far less popular at the time rand was writing. The popularization of the concept is very much a recent thing with the word rapture only entering the popular lexicon in maybe the 80s if we’re generous. Rand was also an atheist immigrant who was probably less knowledgeable about niche American cults than someone born and raised in a Christian American household would have been. I saw the flight of the industrialists more as an analogue to emigration. The overarching moral of the story is “if you put undo burdens on the people who provide for you they will cease to do so.” One of the main ways to accomplish that was to simply leave the country, as rand and her family had done. The industrialists get fed up with the government mandating that they destroy their life’s work and be grateful for it and they just leave. Proving that ultimately, they were the ones who had all the power after all since no one else is capable of doing what they had been doing and the court grinds to a halt. A big issue with the “materialist rapture” reading is that they do not all leave at the same time, Dagny figures out what is happen and even speaks to some of them prior to their disappearance. They also leave voluntarily, making their own way to the hidden valley, rather than suddenly being whisked into paradise.
@@silvershadchan4085 In a way hypocritical in relying on 'socialist' benefits. Yet pure libertarianism in that she was out to get as much for herself as possible.
@@davidmacdonald8882 Friend, you may have just penned the most insightful comment to date on Evangelicalism and how it's distorting Christianity and turning so many people against it.
However the movement was from Plymouth England and John Darby was an Irish protestant minister born City of Westminster London England. If there were not obviously contradictory prophesies in old and new testament orthodox canon, then such interpretations and movements would not take root. Confusion leads to imaginative choice and a sense of assembling the puzzle. In the Gospel of Mark, Jesus mostly talks plain and does not couch his philosophy in riddles. His Apostles still don't get it...he says that several times. In Matthew the personality of Jesus is described as somewhat annoyed with his Apostles like he is about to go outside and yell. When people are told things they do not want to hear, often they act stupid, obtuse or selectively deaf...like toddlers.
I was raised in the Pentecostal church, and this doctrine was heavily taught, and emphasized at the core of that belief system. It was pure fear and guilt, every day, and every hour. It literally controled me for many years, and even to this day, still "left behind" that psychological trauma. It's awful, and it takes time to transition from it. You can form a whole cult around this doctrine, and that's just what it is, a cult. It is intended to control people into conformity and obedience, to ignore corruption. If you believe this doctrine, you can justify and excuse so many things. It was fear, and guilt, along with the Pentecostal(the 'gift' of speaking in tongues, bestowed upon those God deems worthy, and as 'evidence' of baptism by the holy spirit) gifts, you felt guilty if you did not "receive" these gifts, and you judged people who didn't, because basically, if you were "baptized in the holy spirit", you also had the gift of "discernment", so in kther words, you were fit to judge, as it wasn't YOU judging, it was the holy spirit doing it. I mention that because it was just an esspecially heinous brand of evangelicalism. We were all taught that faith in Christ was sufficient, but that we also needed... All that? Truly, it's disturbing, and hard to describe all in this comment section. But it all simply made me feel empty while being taught that this feeling was that of being whole.
finally, I've found my people. I was raised pentecostal and it literally scarred me. I was guilted into thinking I wasn't doing enough or I was doing it wrong because my life wasn't perfect. yet, when I would confide in someone about it, it was "a part of god's plan." I would read my Bible everyday, go to church every time it was open, fast during important times, pray nonstop. I did EVERYTHING! but I never got those gifts. I did get comfort until I started actually studying the Pauline texts. his writings are contradictory and full of vagueness. I was told that I was wrong for pointing those things out and to believe it entirely. it wasn't until a church leader said that 1 Timothy 2:12 was a misunderstanding, even though it perfectly contradicts 1 Corinthians 11:5. I was veiling at the time, but I stormed out and ripped my scarf to shreds. I cried in the bathroom for the rest of the service. it broke my heart to see how much they didn't realize. the rest is history, but I miss that time of ignorance. because while I still had problems, I had a scapegoat in religion.
I Also grew up Apostolic Pentecostal, here is my problem with this theology. The word Firmament can be found in the Bible so many times it's not even funny. A Pentecostal Preacher won't touch that with a 1 Watt laser pointer 4 miles away. However , they constantly push the word "Rapture" which is not in the Bible Anywhere. You Ask them, not one in my 44 year's could ever explain that to me...I have a family full of "Oneness Pentecostal's". Not knocking their beliefs, but back it up Biblically. I javelin had enough "Pastor's " burn me, so I don't put much thought into them. I Do Believe in God, Jesus Christ & the Holy Ghost, however, I do believe "Pentecostal's don't know everything. I will work out my Salvation with Fear & Trembling, not follow a bunch of "Holliness" nut job's from the late 18th century, early 19th century. Sorry, seen and witnessed too much. I try to keep my mind and heart focused upon Jesus, not what "Other's think the way thing's should be because an Organization more corrupt than the mafia says So.
OH MY GOODNESS there is a small part in this comment that made something click for me as someone raised catholic (tho no longer religious) because i never understood how many christian groups seem to be ok with judging others because i was told only god could judge. but the belief of the holy spirit bestowing ‘discernment’ so its not the person themself judging... internet stranger, your comment just helped my understand how so many justify their judgemental behavior when i would think it went against their beliefs, but that judgement is often in fact part of and justified by their beliefs. thank you so much for this comment, this whole subject has always baffled me
Chosen=Adopted Children Of God. "As Many That Are Led By The Spirit Of God Are The Sons Of God... Spirit Of Adoption By Which We Cry Abba-Father" - Rom.8:14-16 "Israelites To Whom Pertained The Adoption" - Rom.9:4
I grew up in a hardline Fundamentalist Baptist church and this was probably their biggest obsession. Every tiny thing that happened in the news was "proof" that the rapture was imminent. Usually coupled with the "at no time in human history has it ever been this way or have we been so close to Christ's return." Which is funny, because 28 years after saying goodbye to this scene, I have family members who still say the exact same things to me, word for word. They even still think Russia is going to be behind the whole Antichrist thing. Which is to say I consider the concept of "The End Times" to be a complete joke.
@@normanclatcher Doesn't track, I'm from Canada so to us Russia is either east or west, not north. Either the uttermost north is supposed to be global (see Russia relative to Canada's Northern Territories not being very north-y) or it's supposed to just be within Iron Age scopes. (Or you're implying Russia has invaded the North Pole, which i'm pretty sure you're not, but I never know, breatharians exist.)
@@neoqwerty The attack is supposedly on Israel, and the read I subscribe to is that it's on the location of the modern nation-state of Israel, in the Levant. Go north and you find the destabilized states of Syria and Lebanon- north of them, Turkey- north of _them,_ Russia. Gog of Magog: Rosh (Russia), Prince of Meschech (Moscow) and Tubal.
I just want to point this out because you are so smug. If the end times happen in the future, then every moment we move forward puts us closer to the end times. The past is further from the end times. So everyone tell you that we are closer to the end times is correct.
You can’t talk about the popularity of Dispensational Premillennialism without talking about temporal narcissism. As a country with relatively little history, the United States is pre-disposed to thinking that history has just been building up to this moment (and America, and it’s current place in the world, is the end point). Believing that they will see the end of the world, and the coming of God’s Kingdom on Earth, fits in to this “it’s all about me and my era” mindset.
Growing up in an evangelical family in Central America, I was terrified by this when I was a child. The language used about how he will come like a thief in the night to take away all the good people and the rest will be left behind to experience all kind of terrors by the antichrist, and this could happen tomorrow because we're already at the end of times. That's a horrible thing to tell children, all the anxiety that created about if I was good enough or I could suffer a horrible fate tomorrow. I'm not part of the church now for that reason.
Thank you for this, as a former open Plymouth Brethren Christian I’ve been trying to understand Darby and how his rapture theology became common place in an America who barely knew my denomination existed.
Wow this was a solid breakdown! Been struggling with the rapture most of my life as it didn’t make sense but was shoved down my throat in several churches. Glad this video exists to break it down into digestible material
I am sorry that this rapture idea was shoved down your throat. I never had that kind of experience. The rapture is a Johnny come lately doctrine out of the early 19th century from the British Isles into America thru the effort's of J.N.Darby and publicized thru C.I. Scofield and Chafer thru Dallas Theological Seminary. The idea that alive believers are caught up into heaven in mansions( John 14) and come back to earth with Jesus at his coming are a very troubling set of ideas that upon examination are a real stretch. Plus the idea of God having two plans of salvation, one for the church and another for the later day Jews.!!! No such split in God's plan for humankind exists.!!!!;
@@davidwoods6015 right and I never knew the true origins of the premillennialism idea till just this year. Every church I ever went to and every Christian I ever talked to believed it. Once I started to be shown different ideas my eyes were opened. Now we can debate about what the new earth would look like for sure but the rapture to me just seems fishy and I always questioned it which only gave more anxiety regarding it
I remember a conversation with a friend in 1982 ;at a bible study in California. He mentioned a name that I wasn't familiar with. "John Nelson Darby" and the Plymouth brethren ". Sooo!!!!! began a search for more info. Gradually over time it became apparent that these rapture ideas were certainly abberational and the product of a misguided zeal for 2nd advent expectations. Mormons, JWs, 7 Day Adventists, New Thought and later Mary Baker Eddy came out of this 2nd great awakening!!!! Sooooo!!!!!; here we are in the 21st century with a smorgasbord of conflicting beliefs. Welcome to the real church world.!!!!!!
I would just tell you there is no reason to believe in a "heaven bound" so called rapture! The Apostle's idea from 1.Thess 4 has to do with a common occurrence from the Roman world in Paul's day! The conquering king returning home after a long campaign is met on the road with a citizen delegation from the city there to usher him into the city. That's what Paul is describing in 1 Thess.4!!! Jesus at His coming is met by a delegation of believers and escorted earthward . Jesus never changes direction, we do!!!! This is done to facilitate Ps.110 and the new heaven and new earth!!!! Nothing to do with an avoidance of a tribulation and a boogieman!!!! That's all futurist's hogwash!!!!!!
"Christianity started out in Palestine as a fellowship; it moved to Greece and became a philosophy; it moved to Italy and became an institution; it moved to Europe and became a culture; it came to America and became an enterprise." ~Sam Pascoe
yes, and after twenty centuries of traveling and "developing," Christianity still cannot prove that it is anything other than a belief in a delusion. Two-thirds of Americans may embrace that religion in some way, but that doesn't convince me at all, on the contrary! But then again, I'm not an American...
Pre-tribulation rapture theology was popularized extensively in the 1830s by John Nelson Darby and the Plymouth Brethren, and further popularized in the United States in the early 20th century by the wide circulation of the Scofield Reference Bible. Rapture doctrine did not exist before Darby invented it in 1830 AD. Before it "popped into John Darby's head" no one had ever heard of a secret rapture doctrine.
You're speaking out of both sides of your mouth at the same time friend. You *FIRST* stated that the position was "POPULARIZED" by Darby, and _T H E N_ you said it was actually "INVENTED" by him. The 'ole Darby argument is as lame as a dog's broken hind leg. Where's an argument from scripture to support what it is you believe?
@@Kman. You want me to show you something from your great book of fantasies and fairy tales? Scriptures can be interpreted by 20 different people to mean 20 different things.
Thats a lie,Darby didn't invent the rapture. Hey,instead of believing everyone who you like,do some research first. Then you might actually deserve some respect. The Apocalypse of Elijah This third-century text exists in two versions, one Coptic, another Greek. It is written from a premillennial perspective and contains extensive detailed material on the tribulation period. After discussing the emergence of the Antichrist onto the world’s stage (ch. 3) and the arrival of the two witnesses to oppose him (ch. 4), the document describes the Rapture as Christ’s deliverance of His people to preserve them from wrath (ch. 5). The pertinent passage reads: On that day the Christ will pity those who are His own. And He will send from heaven his sixty-four thousand angels, each of whom has six wings. The sound will move heaven and earth when they give praise and glorify. Now those upon whose forehead the name of Christ is written and upon whose hand is the seal both the small and the great, will be taken up upon their wings and lifted up before his wrath. Then Gabriel and Uriel will become a pillar of light leading them into the holy land. It will be granted to them to eat from the tree of life. They will wear white garments and angels will watch over them. They will not thirst, nor will the son of lawlessness be able to prevail over them (Apocalypse of Elijah 5:1-6). This text clearly depicts the Rapture as an event that will remove Christians from earth to Heaven before the outbreak of the Antichrist’s persecution. In this way, they will be shielded in Heaven from his cruel deeds. In his article “The Rapture in the Apocalypse of Elijah,” Gumerlock notes that this apocalypse states the Rapture’s purpose as the removal of God’s people from wrath. He argues that that period of wrath should be understood as the tribulation period, since “the sinners left behind on earth cry: ‘See, now we will die in a famine and tribulation [Apocalypse of Elijah 5:12].’” If his interpretation is accurate, then this text is clearly teaching a pretribulational Rapture. The Apocalypse of Pseudo-Ephraem Also known as “On the Last Times, the Antichrist, and the End of the World” or “Sermon on the End of the World,” this text survives in two somewhat varied versions, one Syriac, another Latin. The Latin version contains a pretribulational statement: We ought to understand thoroughly, therefore, my brothers, what is imminent or overhanging. . . . Why therefore we do not reject every care of earthly actions and prepare ourselves for the meeting of the Lord Jesus Christ, so that He may draw us from the confusion, which overwhelms all the world. . . . For all the saints and elect of God are gathered together before the tribulation, which is to come, and are taken to the Lord, in order that they may not see at any time the confusion which overwhelms the world because of our sins. The material that follows clearly equates this tribulation with the period of the Antichrist’s dominance over the earth as foretold in the books of Daniel and Revelation. One area of disagreement between this document and modern pretribulationism is that Pseudo-Ephraem thought the Tribulation would be just three and a half years in length, not seven. Nevertheless, his view is still clearly pretribulational in sum and substance. In their article “The Rapture and an Early Medieval Citation,” Demy and Ice conclude, “Although the sermon has some ambiguities, it, like pretribulationism, clearly emphasizes imminence, two comings separated by the tribulation, and the promise of deliverance of believers from the tribulation.” Some critics will counter by questioning the reliability of these two sources. After all, we don’t know exactly when or where they were written, or even who their authors were! But this objection misses the point entirely. Pretribulationists do not appeal to these two sources as authoritative sources for theology, but only to demonstrate the falsity of their critics’ accusation that pretribulationism is a recent invention. So the origin and authoritativeness of these documents are utterly irrelevant to the discussion at hand; all that matters for the present purpose is that they are demonstrably Christian documents from the ancient and medieval periods that clearly teach a form of pretribulationism. The History of Brother Dolcino Brother Dolcino was the leader of the 14th-century movement known as the Apostolic Brethren. While none of his writings on this subject have survived, an anonymous Latin document written in 1316 records firsthand information on the life and teachings of Brother Dolcino. This document contains yet another statement of early pretribulationism: Again [Dolcino believed and preached and taught] that within those three years Dolcino himself and his followers will preach the coming of the Antichrist. And that the Antichrist was coming into this world within the bounds of the said three and a half years; and after he had come, then he [Dolcino] and his followers would be transferred into Paradise, in which are Enoch and Elijah. And in this way they will be preserved unharmed from the persecution of Antichrist. And that then Enoch and Elijah themselves would descend on the earth for the purpose of preaching [against] the Antichrist. Then they would be killed by him or by his servants, and thus Antichrist would reign for a long time. But when Antichrist is dead, Dolcino himself, who then would be the holy pope, and his preserved followers, will descend on the earth, and will preach the right faith of Christ to all, and will convert those who will be living then to the true faith of Jesus Christ. Once again, the end times chronology presented in this text is quite clear: first the Antichrist is revealed, then the Rapture occurs, then an extended period of tribulation grips the earth, then the church returns to earth with Christ at His second coming. In his article “A Rapture Citation in the Fourteenth Century,” Gumerlock rightly concludes: This paragraph from The History of Brother Dolcino indicates that in northern Italy in the early fourteenth century a teaching very similar to pretribulationism was being preached. . . . While not suggesting that pretribulationism was the dominant view of the rapture in the Middle Ages, it is likely that such teaching did not occur in a vacuum and that others besides Dolcino were aware of it. It can reasonably be assumed that the Apostolic Brethren (who numbered in the thousands) believed, as did their leader, that when the Antichrist would arrive, they would be transferred to paradise and be preserved there from his persecution in the tribulation.
Fun fact: the author of the original "Left Behind" book series, Jerry Jenkins, is the father of Dallas Jenkins, who... surprise, surprise... is the director behind the Jesus series "The Chosen"
I mean depending on the interpretation of revelation being the crisis of 3rd century of Rome or symbolic of any big crisis, we technically had many raptures
The inability of a priest to even be able to point it out in the bible was one of perhaps a dozen contradictions I noticed as a literal child that made me rapidly become a non-believer. The Church does NOT have the power to proselytize to people with autism or ADD lol
I'm a Protestant Christian, and I honestly didn't hear much about rapture theology growing up in my church community or most other churches I've been a part of since. Definitely not universal within protestantism.
@@PurpleRegina It's really not rare though. It's just super popular within recent American evangelicalism, which isn't reflective of the views of many current Protestants across the world, let alone the strong majority of Christians who have ever lived.
Growing up the idea of the rapture terrified me as a kid. To think that this world I just entered could end any moment. And he only eat out would be to believe in God and Jesus. It's sad that this is one of those things that kept me a Christian while I was young. Kids will take what the adults say around them as truth if you let them.
I also grew up being taught rapture and end time theology as fact. And I believed it. That is until it bothered me so much that I decided to study it for myself about 10 years ago. I learned many of the historical things shared in this video and read a lot of books that focus on scripture. My conclusion was that the Bible does not support this idea of a rapture. In fact I found much evidence that the "prophetic" scriptures about the future "end times" were actually talking about literal events that already happend around the time of 70AD, the fall of the temple and Jerusalem to the Romans.
Not so, this is Daniel’s real seventy weeks. Week 1 BC 1483 - BC 1433 Week 2 BC 1433 - BC 1383 Week 3 BC 1383 - BC 1333 Week 4 BC 1333 - BC 1283 Week 5 BC 1283 - BC 1233 Week 6 BC 1233 - BC 1183 Week 7 BC 1183 - BC 1133 Week 8 BC 1133 - BC 1083 Week 9 BC 1083 - BC 1033 Week 10 BC 1033 - BC 983 Week 11 BC 983 - BC 933 Week 12 BC 933 - BC 883 Week 13 BC 883 - BC 833 Week 14 BC 833 - BC 783 Week 15 BC 783 - BC 733 Week 16 BC 733 - BC 683 Week 17 BC 683 - BC 633 Week 18 BC 633 - BC 583 Week 19 BC 583 - BC 533 Week 20 BC 533 - BC 483 Week 21 BC 483 - BC 433 Week 22 BC 433 - BC 383 Week 23 BC 383 - BC 333 Week 24 BC 333 - BC 283 Week 25 BC 283 - BC 233 Week 26 BC 233 - BC 183 Week 27 BC 183 - BC 133 Week 28 BC 133 - BC 83 Week 29 BC 83 - BC 33 Week 30 BC 33 - AD 17 Week 31 AD 17 - AD 67 Week 32 AD 67 - AD 117 Week 33 AD 117 - AD 167 Week 34 AD 167 - AD 217 Week 35 AD 217- AD 267 Week 36 AD 267 - AD 317 Week 37 AD 317 - AD 367 Week 38 AD 367 - AD 417 Week 39 AD 417 - AD 467 Week 40 AD 467 - AD 517 Week 41 AD 517 - AD 567 Week 42 AD 567 - AD 617 Week 43 AD 617 - AD 667 Week 44 AD 667 - AD 717 Week 45 AD 717 - AD 767 Week 46 AD 767 - AD 817 Week 47 AD 817 - AD 867 Week 48 AD 867 - AD 917 Week 49 AD 917 - AD 967 Week 50 AD 967 - AD 1017 Week 51 AD 1017 - AD 1067 Week 52 AD 1067 - AD 1117 Week 53 AD 1117 - AD 1167 Week 54 AD 1167 - AD 1217 Week 55 AD 1217 - AD 1267 Week 56 AD 1267 - AD 1317 Week 57 AD 1317 - AD 1367 Week 58 AD 1367 - AD 1417 Week 59 AD 1417 - AD 1467 Week 60 AD 1467 - AD 1517 Week 61 AD 1517 - AD 1567 Week 62 AD 1567 - AD 1617 Week 63 AD 1617 - AD 1667 Week 64 AD 1667 - AD 1717 Week 65 AD 1717 - AD 1767 Week 66 AD 1767 - AD 1817. Week 67 AD 1817 - AD 1867 Week 68 AD 1867 - AD 1917 Week 69 AD 1917 - AD 1967 Week 70 AD 1967 - AD 2017 You’ll see that the seventieth week began the year we got Jerusalem back. It ended the year Trump declared Jerusalem the capital of Israel again. This was the same year of the Great American solar eclipse….where God declared he was done with this nation. The church has gotten it so very wrong. A day is a year, and a week is a 50 year jubilee cycle, for a grand total of 3500 years. I have this whole timeline on my channel. The church is so very deceived.
Some of what happened in the first century was siilart to end time prophecies, but most of the prophecies weren't fulfilled then, proving that was a mere shadow of the end time. And when Israel starts building the tribulation, you need to understand that the real end is very near.
Thank you for doing this series on dispensationalist theology. It is the theology I grew up with (and no longer believe while remaining a Christian). I remember being fascinated to the elaborate charts I would see in bookstores showing history and the end times. My Scofield is still sitting on the shelf behind me now with my collection of translations. These videos clarify for me why it no long made sense. Essentially, premillennial dispensationalism says that Jesus's mission failed, and He has to come back to assert Himself by force. If Jesus taught the truth, I can't believe it could fail so spectacularly.
I thought I had a pretty good sense of where these ideas came from, but this video set me straight in more ways than one! As always, scholarship is king!
I think I worked through a Bible study book by D. L. Moody as a youth, so that was a surprise, though not as surprising as hearing about John Piper pushing back against it. Personally, I always found it kind of strange that after allowing believers to live through both peace and suffering through the ages, God would then specifically take them away for a particular series of events. Quite convenient for those who don’t have to live through the Tribulation though. I’ll leave two quotes: ‘The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.’ ‘My power is made perfect in weakness.’
Here are a few more paraphrased quotes to ponder: I go (to Heaven) to prepare a place for you and will come receive you (there); and repent and pray always to escape everything that's coming and stand before me; and I will keep you from the time of testing that's coming on everyone on earth.
Reading these comments it is simultaneously sad and reassuring that so many others had Rapture anxiety growing up. It was terrible 'knowledge' to be burdened with as a young teenager.
This is what Paul wrote in 1 Thessalonians 5. "For you yourselves are fully aware that the day of the Lord will come like a thief in the night. While people are saying, “There is peace and security,” then sudden destruction will come upon them as labor pains come upon a pregnant woman, and they will not escape." The harpazo is what removes the faithful from this coming judgment.
@cammus1249 , so you must not believe that prophecies are coming to pass, like Israel returning to the Land? Then there is the Matt 24 set of prophecies Jesus called the "beginning of sorrows" that includes racial and international strife, while there is famine, pandemics and earthquakes. I mention those because they're all in the news at the moment. And the icing on the cake before the rapture will be seen when Jews get religious about the Law of Moses again, and Israel starts building a new temple (which will be used by the Antichrist not long after the rapture).
One thing I never understood is, if the rapture really happened, it would prove beyond a doubt the truth of one branch of evangelical Christianity. So wouldn't the rapture, realistically, lead to the conversion of those left behind? And wouldn't that be a bit of a problem for the Antichrist?
Not always. If conspiracy theory project blue beam is true. The rapture would be the best time to discredit christainity by including ww3, total blackout so mass loss of communications along with a fake alien invasion 😂. Far out oh ya! But maybe truth is stranger then fiction lol
This was the thing that struck me most about it. I think that it's probably that evangelical Christians find it inexplicable that people don't already believe evangelical Christianity, which feels obvious to them. So it seems to them that such people would continue not to believe.
I have never believed in the rapture. It is not anywhere in the bible. The bible tells us that we will have to "endure to the end." If we are going to be "raptured" and removed from the tribulation, why would the bible tell us that we must endure to the end?
Having grown up catholic (serving as an Altar boy) in Germany it is genuinely interesting how different the denominations, worshipping the same God, really are and where they set their priorities. I think in all my 20 years i've NEVER heard anyone in our region preach about the end times or trying to calculate when the world would end.
I’m mid-trib and from my perspective, nobody could see the rapture in the Bible because the Catholic church adopted Augustin’s Amillennialism, and they controlled doctrine, and institutionalized education and printing. People only saw the rapture during the Reformation when everyone was once again allowed to read Bibles for themselves. Most people trace the history of the rapture doctrine to John Darby in the 1820s, but _Dispensationalism Before Darby_ contains hundreds of archival records in which ideas that would later be labeled “Dispensationalism” and the “Rapture” were talked about in the early 1600s. And it’s no mere coincidence that this is when God’s word was once again getting into the hands of the masses.
@@biblehistoryscience3530 religeon seperates man from God. and as far as the rapture goes ... if it comes it comes ...and if not it doesnt ...one way or another we will all die!
@johnnybgoode7983 , praise the Lord then, but the attitude “what will be will be” runs counter to the Lord’s warnings… In Matt 24, Jesus described how terrible the great tribulation will be and what the world will be like at his appearance. It will be like in the days of Noah (people feasting and marrying and not knowing about imminent catastrophe), and at that time one will be taken and another left behind. Then Jesus warned everyone to watch because we don’t know when he will appear, and Luke 21 spells it out more clearly. Jesus warned everyone to repent from sin, to watch and pray always to be accounted worthy to ESCAPE all the things that are coming and stand before him. So prepare. And by the way, Revelation describes a totally different world at the Second Coming than the days of Noah in Matt 24. There will be billions of deaths, as wave after wave of supernatural wrath is poured out on earth, then Jesus comes at the end of God’s Wrath in 7 Bowls.
Always great to learn the scholar perspective of these texts. I was actually amazed when I meet people who used to fear being left behind. I really think is an awful fear to install in a child's brain.
This is FASCINATING! I listened to this video in case some information, that hadnt heard before would be presented that would either confirm or contradict my understanding of this deceptive doctrine which has no basis in Scripture. I am SO GLAD I did! Im going to have to listen again to this deep dive on the topic in order to commit some of what I learned to memory. This could be useful in future conversations on the topic. Thank you, so much!
@@leroyj3627 most folks will ask for a verse a verse that is simple , well consider a verse that says Jesus is a lamb , people that understand how he was a sacrificial lamb of sacrifice can relate to the verse that calls him a lamb ... Meaning they have had the conversation or a deep teaching on that topic almost no preachers really teach the topic of harpazo fully , which is why people argue about when the rapture happens and almost no one actually teaches what will happen during the tribulation so the result is people that want the short version get a version that has had much info removed in order to make it a short version
When people compare things that only GOD can do to things that man does they won't get the full meaning , Revelation explains in more detail but it requires a deep thought process , consider someone tell you that Jesus was born in a manger in 2023 , well you know that cannot be true because it has already happened .. so learning what verse actually say in their original text reveals more
I grew up in a Pentecostal/Assembly of God/Church of God family. When I was about 8-10 years old I read a book called “Raptured” by evangelist Ernest Angley. It had graphic descriptions of the Tribulation with left behind Christians (how wack is that?) being told to recant under threat of being boiled alive in oil or drawn and quartered. Later our church showed a movie called “A Thief In the Night”. If I remember correctly it started off with a young mother going to her baby’s room and finding her gone, with her clothing and diaper left behind along with her husband missing. For most my early teen years I lived in constant fear of being “left behind.” I had recurring nightmares for years. I even panicked if I couldn’t get in touch with parents or friends. I think we should have a healthy fear of God and of going to hell but this theology is wrong.
It's the classic idea of not being enough, guilting you into following them and their kind. Have your own understanding and relationship, don't let special interests pressure you.
Wow you certainly need help, it is quite simple to understand all you need is a humble heart and the right help if you could trust me I am more than willing to help you best wishes Graham
@@grahamjones548 Thank you for the sentiment but I am more than fine now. I was a kid and impressionable and had not done much Bible study of my own as I was only a child. I was a victim of people who believed bad theology. I’ve forgiven them as I’m commanded to do, as even the preachers were poorly educated. I have been a deacon, Sunday School teacher, Bible study leader and am clear in my theology and doctrine now. God bless. 🙏🏼
@@andrewtrotter9023 quote---. I have been a deacon, Sunday School teacher, Bible study leader and am clear in my theology and doctrine now. God bless. 🙏🏼--unquote Nope!! You are NOT!!! >>>About the catholic church: Change the Sabbath" Had she not such power, she could not have done that in which all modern religionists agree with her,- she could not have substituted the observance of Sunday, the first day of the week, for the observance of Saturday, the seventh day, a change for which there is no Scriptural authority."- "A Doctrinal Catechism," by Rev. Stephen Keenan, page 174. "The Catholic Church of its own infallible authority created Sunday a holy day to take the place of the Sabbath of the old law."- Kansas City Catholic, Feb. 9, 1893. "The Catholic Church, . . . by virtue of her divine mission, changed the day from Saturday to Sunday."- Catholic Mirror, official organ of Cardinal Gibbons, Sept. 23, 1893. "Ques.- Which is the Sabbath day? "Ans.- Saturday is the Sabbath day. "Ques.- Why do we observe Sunday instead of Saturday? "Ans.- We observe Sunday instead of Saturday because the Catholic Church, in the Council of Laodicea (A. D. 336), transferred the solemnity from Saturday to Sunday ."- "The Convert's Catechism of Catholic Doctrine," by Rev. Peter Geiermann, C. SS. R.., page 50, third edition, 1913, a work which received the "apostolic blessing" of Pope Pius X, Jan. 25, 1910. What was done at the Council of Laodicea was but one of the steps by which the change or the Sabbath was effected. >>>>Biblical Proof the seventh day (Saturday) IS the Sabbath Matt 27:62 The next day, the one after Preparation Day....... Mat 28:1 In the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, Mark 15:42 - It was Preparation Day (that is, the day before the Sabbath). Mark 16:1-2 - When the Sabbath was over, Mark 16:9 When Jesus rose early on the first day of the week Luke 23:54 It was Preparation Day, and the Sabbath was about to begin Luke 23:56 Then they went home and prepared spices and perfumes. But they rested on the Sabbath in obedience to the commandment. Luke 24:1 On the first day of the week, very early in the morning, .... John 19:31 Now since it was preparation day, in order that the bodies might not remain on the cross on the sabbath, for the sabbath day of that week was a solemn one, John 19:42 because of the Jewish day of Preparation, since the tomb was close at hand, they laid Jesus there. 42 And so, because it was the day of preparation for the Jewish Passover John 20:1 The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, >>>>FACTS" --The ONLY day GOD RESTED ON--Seventh day!! Gen 2:1-3, EX 20:8-11 --The ONLY day GOD BLESSED--Seventh dayt---Gen 2:1-3, EX 20:8-11 --The ONLY day GOD SANCTIFIED--Seventh day--Gen 2:1-3, EX 20:8-11 --The ONLY day GOD NAMED--Seventh day--Sabbath--Isaiah 58:13 --The ONLY day GOD DECLARES as HIS HOLY DAY--Seventh day--Isaiah 58:13, Matthew 24:36-41
@@andrewtrotter9023 ZECHARIAH 13:8 And it shall come to pass that in all the land,” saith the Lord, “two parts therein shall be cut off and die, but the third shall be left therein. Population of earth 7.888 in 2021. 2/3s equals----5.232 billion >>8 And it shall come to pass, that in all the land, saith the Lord, two parts therein shall be cut off and die; but the third shall be left therein. 9 And I will bring the third part through the fire, and will refine them as silver is refined, and will try them as gold is tried: they shall call on my name, and I will hear them: I will say, It is my people: and they shall say, The Lord is my God.
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Here is THE TRUE Savior
YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified/Pierced for our sins and “HERE IS THE PROOF”
From the Ancient Egyptian Semitic:
"Yad He Vav He" is what Moshe (Moses) wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3)
Ancient Egyptian Semitic Direct Translation
Yad - "Behold The Hand"
He - "Behold the Breath"
Vav - "Behold The NAIL"
I am "one of those folks" who scrapes by day to day. I would really like to hear what you say about the book of Peter (I think that is what you said.) However, the donation part is a struggle for me. Would you consider posting it here on YT in the future?
Trying to decipher what someone might have meant, writing almost two thousand years ago in a different language and context is certainly no simple task! I used to struggle with this, hoping that one day I would somehow figure it all out.
Fortunately, I came to the conclusion that i's not something I need to do, and was never intended for me. Instead, I came home to the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church which our Lord founded on the Rock of Pope Saint Peter, where I have found my place amongst Christ's followers in experiencing the continuing revelation of our Lord's good news :)
If anyone else is looking for something like that, I hope they will consider joining us!
The Bible is a style of Cryptography. You're taking it literally. It's more symbolic.
Would be honored, hope you speak fairly of this gospel, it is one of my favorite texts from the Nag Hammadi Library. I do understand most all of the lines Christ says, but a few like the lyon eating man, or a few others are but a best guess. All the rest are clear to me. Perhaps, the Secret book of John, or On the Origins of the World, would also be good topics of a video if you have not already done them. Thank you very much. Be blessed in your journey. There is truth in all spiritual works, but one must find them, this is true seeking.
I grew up a Southern Baptist, with this rapture ideology. I was blown away when I learned how new the idea of the rapture actually was. Evangelical Christianity is about as much of a new religious movement, distant from historical Christianity, as Mormonism.
Yep same. I hit a rebellious streak and found catholicism and orthodoxy to be superior in their wisdom, authority, and age
Although at least Protestants can be traced back to Catholics. Mormons are just ridiculous
@@Hmmmmmmmm320
#MeToo
@@Hmmmmmmmm320 same that why I join the OCA
How do you explain Thessalonians 4
As a somewhat elderly person, I remember "The Late Great Planet Earth", by Hal Lindsey, which was the bestselling paperback book of the 1970's. Mr. Lindsey predicted that the Rapture would take place before 2000. And, having moved the goalposts, he is still asserting in 2023 that the Rapture is just around the corner!
It's been "just around the corner" for 2000 years
@@LimeyLassen Best answer.
@@LimeyLassen As a matter of fact, I just read a fascinating book by Paula Fredriksen entitled, "From Jesus to Christ". The book is about the earliest days of the Christian Church and discusses, among many other things, how early Christians dealt with the fact that end of world had not arrived in spite of the fact that it was widely expected to do so in the early Church.
@@Contemplate55 "Cognitive Dissonance is the perception of contradictory information and the mental toll of it."
It's a useful concept in education, because we need stress to learn abstraction. Otherwise, learning is nothing more than memorization.
@@LimeyLassen Revelation Chapter 12 sign happened in 2017. (explained on YT: "Revelation 12 sign & Conception Comet!")
1 day with the lord is the same as 1000 years. Christ died and resurrected around year 30. + 2 days = 2030
"After two days will he revive us: in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live in his sight."
There's many instances of this two day thing, for example in the good Samaritan story, but today I found out about this:
Solomon's reign began in 970 BC, which is exactly 3000 years before 2030, and 1000 years before year 30
It's also exactly 3000 years from the beginning, so in the middle of 6000 years... leaves out the last 1000 years, or the seventh day, when God rested. That's millennial kingdom of Christ.
As a Christian, with an insane dad who obviously never read the bible he claimed to quote, the rapture was a source of trauma for me all the way up until the point that I actually read the bible and saw that it wasn't in there. My understanding of Christianity changed SO MUCH when I read it myself and stopped letting other people tell me what it was about. But I will NEVER forget the amount of fear in my heart when my dad was saying the rapture was right around the corner any time anything in the world happened.
Unfortunately, too many Christians hold to what they’re told without reading the Bible themselves. Shortly after my conversion at age 12, I remember being taught the whole dispensational schema for the future, while studying the book of Revelation. I was too young and inexperienced in Bible interpretation to see how many liberties were being taken with what Scripture actually said. I accepted it, but, as time went on, it made less and less sense to me. A “secret rapture“ just does not appear in the Bible, and I think it’s becoming less popular among evangelicals. Certainly most Reformed believers tend to reject it, as they generally favor covenant theology to dispensationalism. It is sad to me how many Christians seem to have deconstructed,and left the faith because they could not reconcile pet doctrines of their traditions (like the rapture) when it’s not clearly taught in Scripture in the first place!
@@DarthBoardBVE I've sadly found a lot of this, too. People will explain to me the reasons they left the faith, only for me to inform them that those things aren't anywhere in the Bible, or were apocryphal syncretic material that has been unconsciously incorporated into a lot of Evangelicalism (e.g. Milton). It doesn't mean those things aren't still confusing and incredibly damaging to people, but it's hard to watch people realize they may have given up something they did love over something that they didn't have to believe in the first place.
I always felt like Southern Baptists especially were a politically-interested country club that exploits ignorant kids with weird things like "If you ask Christ to save you, you're saved forever." There was no eucharist. The readings were politicalized. After 9/11, the church got church for a few years. It's the kind of place you'd expect MTG to attend. The pastor was my Western Religions professor. He was smarter than you'd expect of most low rent Protestant pastors but his lectures were remarkably shallow. Like a lot of them, he seems to think that Christianity didn't exist until Martin Luther
The rapture is in the bible. Jesus said he will come like a thief in the night no one will know the day or hour not even the angels in heaven only his father knows when he will send him. Jesus said the dead in him will rise up and join him in the clouds then those who are living who believe in and follow him. Jesus said two men will be walking in the field one will be taken the other left, two women will be grinding in the mill one will be taken the other left. The parable of the bridesmaids and the lamps is about the rapture so yes the rapture is in the bible.
@dragonf1092 I'd like to ask the pro-Rapture folks "If no one knows when the Rapture will happen but the Father, how come are you obsessed with it?" They always forget that being a street prophet is a serious sin.
My father always called the rapture his retirement plan. His belief that he would be raptured before death led to bad financial decisions. This is an dangerous aspect of rapture thinking that is seldom talked about.
Bad theology kills.
Rapture ! is not in the KJV bible , "caught up" IS !@@frankmarrero7088
I remember in 1975 the J.W.s were going gaga because they were being told the world systems would all be destroyed in that year. So many of them believing they would be taken out of here ran up credit cards, defaulted on loans, sold homes to go wait on the mountain top etc. And nothing happened!!!!! What a whiff!!!! And we still have people today preaching that same mentality , you know the one where in the blink of an eye we'll all get raptured out of here. This stuff is getting old!!!!! 1988 and 1989 came and went. 2011 came and went.
When are people gonna wake up!!!! This rapture thing is not on the calendar!!!!!
I agree that it should be discussed more
This is kind of why I don’t like Protestantism…. Its lead to so many cults and has even lead to the unfortunate rise of atheism in the west due to its denial of early church history.
Honest to god the rapture basically is what caused so much religious trauma for every person I knew growing up. I knew people who contemplated suicide, thought about putting down pets so that the pets wouldn't starve without them, or just have trauma from being forced to live in an apocalyptic family making them extreme nihilists. Why care about anything if the world is going to delete itself at any second? Why make friends outside of your religion if you know they are going to suffer after you leave? Soooooo much trauma...
This is so crazy to me as someone who grew up Jewish. I feel Judaism is very much rooted in the world and its joys, and our duty to it. There was some vagaries about the messiah and afterlife, but I maybe spent a week or two on these concepts out of 15 years Torah school. I never understood until I was an adult that some of my peers in school found so much terror in their faith, and I can see why.
From what I remember from my own religious studies class in school, the passage 'you know not the day nor the hour', which is the closest the Bible gets to the idea of rapture, actually refers to the reader's death, rather than anything as grand as suddenly turning into Superman and flying away. This in itself is already pretty frightening, but not to the point of someone Thanos-snapping your friends and family out of existence. It's basically equivalent to what people think 'memento mori' means nowadays.
Really? Can you elaborate more? Can you tell me about the state and year you grew up at? Just curious.
@@k_schreibz from what I've learned Judaism is and always has been vague on the very idea of an afterlife, is that correct? I agree, Judaism has that going for it. My experience of Wicca is similar: live a good life now and the next will take care of itself.
@@kirstencorby8465 exactly.
Growing up in Italy, you are exposed almost exclusively to Catholic beliefs. So I always find fascinating the number of doctrines (sometimes cults) that have been originated in the US, from Mormonism to those who "play" with snakes
Fanno morir dal ridere😂
@KeivanHH as a catholic living in America, I can confirm it’s wild.
I grew up Church of England, and the only time our family was inside a church was for christenings and weddings. To me this stuff is both fascinating and seriously weird.
North America in the mid to late 1800s was a veritable font of all manner of "doctrines and cults" from Mormonism, to Progressivism, to American Spiritualism. The extent to which they have penetrated every day existence in the western world is often not well recognized.
Honestly we are all weird, you included
Growing up, immersed in the matrix of the tribulation/rapture ideology, I was a very depressed kid. I fully expected to be dead by 16 or at least 17 due to the pervasive doom story.
I had a "bucket list" by age 11 and went through a profound depression when I turned 13. However, Im still alive, decades later.
Dont raise kids with a doom narrative - they will turn out nihilistic and with lifelong depression. Im much better now, but its taken years of psychological help.
The tribulation is only a doom narrative to those who dont believe, to those who believe, it is comforting, a means to an end, the end being this sinful and corrupted world we live in.
@@LeonJohn4444 condescending and blind
@@jetpetty1613 Nothing about my comment implies being condescending and or blind, im just stating a fact.
Hey, all kids are being raised in a doom narrative nowadays with "climate change" instead... Is that one better? At least the world approves..
@@LeonJohn4444how about you tribulate on these nuts
When people start in on me with their rapture preparations and predictions, I try to gently remind them that Jesus said nobody knows when the Son of Man will return, so maybe try living the way Jesus commanded us to live instead.
👍🏼
That's exactly what my grandfather used to tell me when I said I was worried about the rapture and the apocalypse, ideas that I used to watch on american TV.
I've learned so much about religion and humanity's experience from this channel. It's one of my favorite educational channels of all time.
He’s so thorough and unbiased. Pure academic and sensitive and respectful
Found this channel in 2022, amazing insight.
It's one of the few channels that make me think "I didn't know how much I didn't know"
Found it several years ago when the algorithm was suppressing it due to its subject matter. The level of respect for and distance from its subject matter meant that it was simply a matter of time before it got given a second look. A few years and 600k added subscribers later, seems like Google fixed the problem. Glad to see this channel thriving.
Its close but his sources like bartman are deconstructionist mine as well be physical extremist or humanist sources.
In america certain groups politcally pay them to try and mess with the christians
I grew up in a Southern Baptist family that deeply believed in the Rapture. I definitely had a few terrified moments when I was the first one home in the afternoon, thinking my family had been taken up, which made me think deeply about my sins. I didn't know any of the history behind the belief till now. This video is so packed with interesting info, I had to watch it twice 👏🏻
Good. Consider your sins intensely.
@@dangin8811 consider your mom.
@@treelzebub yours will consider me for many weeks
And that is our clue. What causes fear, is not of God.
Its frustrating how such a nonsensical teaching became so widespread
This post was made by the Lutheran Gang
As a teenager, at a friend's youth group in the 80s, we were shown a rapture movie. I don't recall the title, but it had me terrified for decades that any moment the rapture could happen and, would I be good enough to be taken up or would I be left behind? What about my loved ones? I now see these types of beliefs as acts of terror. Child abuse even!
A Thief in the Night? That's the normal one used to make kids terrified, or at least used to be.
I am so sorry to hear that, I can not imagine the terror you experienced.... This is one of the big reasons I've stayed away from most religious groups it's just fear mongering, trying to gain power, and control, and oppress people, meanwhile 80 percent of them are doing way worse things..... At the end of the day the only system that makes sense to me, is live, and let live within reason.
Get over it you baby. You were fine.
@neila6340 😂👍 and there's that lolol.
Climate change fearmongering is way worse, tho.
As an Australian raised as a Catholic to Polish parents... My only knowledge of the rapture was from American pop culture. It feels so foreign to any religious upbringing I had.
As a fellow polish Catholic same. Legit never in Bible class as a kid at church or even in catholic school they mentioned anything about this. It’s solely based off prot ideals… honestly it seems like once Protestantism became a thing especially American Protestantism, that’s when society started drifting away sadly from the faith. All because of these 30,000 sects promoting some non biblical theory all because pastor Billy Bob “ foresaw “ it.
As someone who grew up in a catholic country (help!) and studied in a religious school, I never heard of the rapture. I remember hearing it mentioned in popular American media and not knowing what they were talking about.
Most Catholics believe Jesus' kingdom will be established, not in the rapture but some Catholics probably do.
@@josepheridu3322they don't, it's heretical
@josepheridu3322 by in large we Catholics are Amillennial, although we don't typically put much emphasis on the end times in general, so the idea of the pretrib rapture is nonsensical even to Catholics who do focus on the end times.
As an Orthodox I share the same experience. I had no idea what the Americans meant by rapture.
@@Player-re9moOrthodox and Catholics usually tend to be on the same page on about 95% of everything.
I'm an exchristian in Latin America and although for a few years I had realized how biased were the Bible interpretations I was thought, it had never crossed my mind how this core belief was really not standing on solid ground at all. It's been long since I refused to continue believing in their ideas, but after watching this I feel lied to. I understand belief systems are complex and nuanced, but the community I grew in has this idea so fixed in both belive and practice that you would think it was more coherent within its own context and theology, but it's holding to thin air only and being used as a huge threat to all behavior of beliveres
i am catholic from south america, and when i was little i always though it was strange about why the rapture was not in the bible despite the american media describing it, Then I realized that it was just a belief of the evangelicals from there XD
Así que hablas español? :3
@@raulnatokapa pero por supuesto
@@rfij3268 yeah totally, I just bought it from the constant repetition of the interpretation of that one passage
@@raulnatokapa y yo tambien compa
From a preacher I listened to years ago at the Bethlehem church, all I can say is this: don't worry about the world's end...worry about your own. It doesn't matter what happens to the world so long as you take care of yourself spiritually. You can save no one's soul, but your own.
Sadly, you can't save anyone, not even yourself. When oxygenated blood stops flowing to your brain it will begin to die, which means your memory, your hopes, beliefs and dreams will die with it. For you that will be the end, you will cease to exist just like the billions and billions who went before you, it will be as if you never existed. However, if you want to fool yourself into believing that all of that is untrue, you are more than free to do so, don't let a few facts get in the way of a good dream. There is a reason why all religions are called "faiths".
The word is harpazo and His word tells you to pray you are counted worthy to escape all the horrors coming upon this earth. There’s nowhere to hide in the earth. Of course His church is going to be pulled out before the destruction. Another video promoting lies and people in the comment section literally falling for it
Actually you can’t save your soul-only the Lord Jesus Christ can save your soul!
@@cathysnyder8559 Really? How on earth can an adult believe such nonsense? is it "fear of hell"? Are you afraid of all the other religion's hell? if not why not? because Christianity got to you first.
St Ignatius Loyola said? Give me a child until he is seven, and I will show you the man. What he means is, he will scare the child so much that the child will be whatever he is told to be.
@@cathysnyder8559Your splitting hairs here. What I mean is only you have control over what you choose to believe or disbelieve. If you trust in Jesus, and at least **attempt** to adhere to what the bible says, that is enough.
I grew up under such psychological terrorism. I remember that this scared me so much, to the point where I'd dream about being left behind™ and it was truly terrifying. Not something healthy for a kid.
I seriously can’t convey how scarring the idea of the rapture was for me as a kid. It didn’t just terrify me whenever I wasn’t aware that my parents and siblings were out of the house; it left me feeling responsible for the souls of every kid around me. The pressure it burdened me with has lingered well into adulthood, even if it no longer has to do with the rapture specifically.
I know exactly what you mean. I had the added curse of feeling like I had to repent over and over again whenever the rapture anxiety would well up, and would get caught in an OCD-like tick until the anxiety subsided.
I hear you. I too grew up with rapture theology. Now I see that Christianity in general creates a life crushing burden to get the world saved and guilt and shame when we can't do it. Even if we believe we are forgiven everyday it still doesn't change the sense of failure.
Your comment makes me sad. I hope I don't sound condescending, but that is an awful thing to do to a child. A child should be raised with love, hope and understanding, not fear.
Yes, a friend I knew would always run the water in her sink to see if it turned ....red.
The big question. What other doctrine have you bought that has been surmised by men, to be sound, yet little scriptural evidence? It makes no sense that if Christ is to return, and rule, what is the obsession with thinking going to heaven is being with the lord, if he's on earth ruling?
So it is, with the trinity, and a host of man made religious ceremony, and Idolatry.
I grew up southern evangelical. It blows my mind how some of the doctrine I took for granted is actually on the fringes of Christian belief. I was taught that huge chunks prophecy were fulfilled in the last century and that, roughly speaking, the events of the “Left Behind” series could transpire at any moment. Scary!
@@makepeoplemadI agree and I align more with Catholicism (I’m new to Christianity and haven’t been confirmed in any church yet) it isn’t a complete Protestant issue though. Most Protestants also think the rapture is ridiculous but the Protestants who have the most influence on Christian pop culture in America are these evangelical mega church style baptists (not saying all baptists are bad). Could you please explain the spiritual dead being resurrected? The end times are not something that I have been focusing on learning so I’m curious to hear the Orthodox view.
@@makepeoplemad That's absolute nonsense and a complete bastardization of the word of God. You do understand that the scripture is extremely important. You don't focus on the rapture "too much" it's literally the next huge event in human history....lol.
The events of the left behind can't happen because that book is incorrect on how the Rapture will take place, the rapture will not happen at random when no one is looking or expecting, the rapture will happen only when the antichrist enters the rebuilt temple in Israel and proclaim himself god in there... it will not happen before that day, that is what Paul explained in 2nd Thessalonians.
@@makepeoplemad The second coming isn't the Rapture you're right, the second coming happens after the Great Tribulation which is after the Rapture.. there fixed your understanding of the bible regarding that part. Also, not sure how you can be proud to be ignorant... "We also never read Revelations in Liturgy, since it's unfulfilled prophecy" ... that's the weirdest flex I ever heard, who acts like it's a great thing to be ignorant of things that God went out of His way to tell us about on purpose? Then again the Orthodoxy is basically the same thing as the Catholics, your temples are full of images of saints and other apostasies, so why bother actually trying to learn the truth right?
@@michaelcastro5339 nope much of revelation is fulfilled in 70 AD. Also The thousand year reign was already fulfilled in two ways: 1. The Church 2. The conversion of the Roman Empire into the Christian Byzantine Empire which reigned for more than 1000 years. Revelation is not read in liturgy because the book was not deemed officially canonical until much later than the other books of scripture (oh by the way, who determined which books were canonical and would go into the Bible? Oh yeah it was the Orthodox lol). Regardless Revelation contains the patterns history and is extremely important and obviously much remains unfulfilled. Of course, rapture isn’t in the book so that’s fake but it does portray the second coming and also the council of the saints who are offering bowls of our prayers to God (that’s called intercessory prayers of the Saints which of course is denied by evangelicals).
Imagine my shock that something essential to Christian Fundamentalism has no basis in the Bible.
I grew up around a lot of Evangelicals and they don't know anything about the Bible. It's actually kind of weird. I made the terrible mistake of trying to date a girl who was a devout Evangelical back in the early 2000s. I studied the Bible to try to understand her. It... didn't go well. She was a nice girl, but her dad couldn't stand the possibility that I was either Catholic or Jewish.
Catholic OR jewish?
@@billbadson7598
My question as well....
@@billbadson7598 Basically, a Christian can be too pagan (Catholicism is considered overly pagan in flavour and thought by certain Protestant fundamentalists) or too symptomatic of the pre-Christ belief in God (Jews are considered in denial about Jesus being the Son of God).
@@iggyzeta9755 so was he catholic or jewish?
Well, are you a frequently knee bender or a non pork consumer? Inquiring minds want to know!
Thanks!
"No man ever believes that the Bible means what it says:
He is always convinced that it says what he means."
~George Bernard Shaw
Not me i know Jesus said there are no genders and bathed his homies and removed his single towel
One of my favorite things about this rapture is that when many non evangelical and Iman/Muslims priest are given this question they go "only god really knows" which a polite way of saying "please stop asking me that question"
I think it was Frank Herbert who wrote that the "unwritten commandment of all religions is: thou shalt not question"
I mean, can you blame them?
Which is smart. Asking that question is like the blind leading the blind. Just read the Bible and ask God your questions. Your mind will eventually be opened to the truth.
Would you prefer they make something up and dogmatically insist it is the truth when in fact they do not know?
@@robertdowns9534 The Bible doesn't talk; it needs man to explain it, that is why we have priests and pastors. It is often amusing that even the most so-called Bible-based Evangelical cult--I mean church--still has a pastor even while insisting that the Bible is all you need. I often want to ask the cult leader--I mean pastor--why he has that job if the Bible is all we need, which makes him a hypocrite and a liar basically.
I was 25 years old the first time I read the New Testament, so I came into it with no preconceived ideas, and never talk to anybody about it, I just wanted to read it for myself. I was actually surprised when someone mentioned to me that there is a pre-tribulation rapture because I did not see that anywhere in the Bible. I studied it closer and it wasn’t there. I am very happy to see more and more people are coming to realize there is no pre-tribulation rapture, just the second coming of Christ after tribulation.
Agree!!❤
It IS THERE! Read Thessalonians. It is also referred to many times in other places. You have to know what it is talking about tho.
What people don't understand is just what constitutes tribulation (You really do need eyes to see and ears to hear what the spirit is saying. Read the books that were removed from the bible, Jude the apostle recommends a prophet called Enoch. I have the R.H. Charles rendition. You find an on line copy for free. Just copy, and paste in you dockets. Seriously there were books removed from the canon over the years, But by the grace of God Some have been returned. These really are the keys to the kingdom that were removed. You need the Holy Spirit to understand the scriptures not mans interpretation of them trust in Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.
@@jbmac4889 You’re correct that a number of books that were available during Jesus’ time have been systematically buried. The apostles quoted from the book of Enoch. I’ve actually read it before but it was way over my head. So many people have a few scriptures that they know by heart but don’t really appreciate what all there is to truly having wisdom. That can take a lifetime of study. Lord bless you in your personal pursuit of understanding!
ITS there Dear Just Gotta have the spiritual eyes to SEE it 100% Pretrib
"And the Truth shall set you free"
John 8:31-32
Free from the burden of dogma, indeed. Too bad that theists don't care about what is actually true and instead just make up what they want to be true and they'll cherry pick any verse from their holy book to pretend they're making a point while living contradictory to their words.
The problem is our different methods of determining truth. Some go by what they can see. Some by what they're told.
@@borkabrak the Bible has told you plenty of times that we walk by faith and not by sight. To call things that aren't as though they were/are. If you believe There is only one Truth, that is His. Ours, Mine, Yours don't exist.
@@JDA89 Well, then you just admited that your blind and dogmatic. Makes sense, one will inevitably lead to another. It's the most obvious of infinite severe problems inherent to faith that harm individuals as well as entire societies.
The scientific method is the most reliable way to jusrifiably have confidence in knowing what is true because of actionable and demonstrable foundations, findings, and patterns. Faith has none of that, it's just blind, dogmatic make belief.
Left Behind is like if God picked M. Night Shyamalan to write a twist ending for the Bible.
I feel like if M. Night Shyamalan wrote that story, a possible twist at the end would be that God only likes _skeptics,_ so he _vaporized_ everyone else.
Wait.. didn't he actually write a story like this, except anybody who got caught in the darkness would get raptured?
M. Night shyamalan has predictable twists 😔
You guys should read the books, they're written at like a sixth grade reading level. Truly terrible writing, and the cherry on top is that the authors (yes, two people got together to write these novels) were doing writing classes for a while too.
@@btsnakeno bro, You should read the Bible
Missionary kid here, parents were southerners, and this was a huge wedge between my family and every other american family we met (not families from other countries, just Americans). My father considers this near heresy, pure wishful thinking that has no basis in the bible, reality or logic. I'm glad that he taught me to rebuff these pro-rapture arguments. Read the originals, the different versions of the originals, the translations, the different translations, context is everything and remember that each verse should strengthen the others, not force them to stretch beyond disbelief.
So you were abused as a child is what you are admitting.
@@kevchard5214WHAT are you on about
All mercenary children are abuse either sexually or mentally or both. @@chkingvictim
Look a little closer...Luke 21:36 (read it)...be careful of leading people astray...Jesus went to prepare a place for us and will be coming back in a time 'As in the days of Noah' people eating, drinking, marrying and given in marriage' (Mark 24:38) - this obviously is 'before' tribulation because tribulation is going to be so horrendous people will JUST be trying to survive
why are you mixing scripture? why must we take a reference in Luke and make it fit in with Mark and then bring it into Revelations? Why must you change the context? You are cherry picking to make it all follow poorly written fantasy fiction from the 20th century. Who was Luke written for? What was it talking about. Was it the same as for Mark? Revelations? No? Then stop spreading lies. None of this means "poof and you're gone, lucky you!" @@mdorn6592
As someone who grew up in the Bible Belt, went to Christian school, and had periodic panic attacks over the Rapture, this is honestly very reassuring lol. Rapture anxiety is so real.
It was traumatic when the church tried to brainwash me about this. I got muscle shakes, couldn't sleep.
I only had one nightmare from it, but it wasn't pushed too aggressively on me except during the stretch I had that nightmare. It was by some "only God is keeping me from murdering babies left and right as I see them" conservative Sunday "school teacher." Thankfully, I had already watched the more Western-Enlightenment/folk-Eastern-themed animes on TV/DVD called Howel's Moving Castle and Spirited Away, respectively. The nightmare involved the sky darkening, and some half vulture/crow big nosed dark wing "angels" descending in hosts/garrisons and one going to every household and asking if people had put the holy-water on their noses or not, as a sign of their faith. There was some sadness involved with I or someone in my family not having done it perhaps running out of time, then I woke up and realized how dumb a "some are left behind flight-rapture" would be (the whole "disappearing" didn't make sense with Paul's literal letter). Then I read some passages in the "O.T." that were supposed to relate to the final judgement, etc. And they literally said that Yahweh/God would "test people like gold and silver are tested through the fire" AT THE END TIMES, so it didn't make sense that he would not test some of "his" people given he didn't mention that some would be excluded in that O.T. passage. Bibliolatry is so ignorant and damaging.
me too! distancing myself from christianity and then starting to learn about the roots of it for myself (through channels like this) have healed so much of my religious trauma and have helped so much
Rapture anxiety
12 years old
Wake up alone
No phone no internet no tv
".....welp.."
Couldn't tell you how many times that happened to me. Felt on purpose around when I stopped counting.
Oh God, you unlocked a memory to me I never knew existed. Our family weren't super religious by any means, but I did grow up in a Christian household and I read a lot when I was a kid. I stumbled upon books explaining the Rapture, and for nights then, I could sleep. It's just so terrifying getting left behind to suffer for eternity to kid me back then.
I love your channel, I wish more people in the comment section actually watched/listened to your videos.
This topic has been one of the many culture shocks I’ve experienced as I’ve transitioned out of Christianity. The fact that most people don’t believe the Rapture as fact was so odd to me. I was raised with it as a pure fact, that it was coming literally any day now, and you better be good or you’ll be left behind! Living life as if the world could end any minute is not good for the mental health, or the development of a child.
It's not only most people; most variations of Christianity don't subscribe to the idea either. It seems to be an American thing. Shrugs.
Even though American Evangelicals call themselves "Fundamentalists" who profess to take the Bible literally, in fact much of their doctrine is based on very creative readings of the text and even dream revelation. I grew up in a community like that myself, and I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that they're living in a wholly different reality than the rest of the secular world.
But works great at keeping flock quiet and obedient. That's all there is to it.
That's quite sad, because if you've been sealed with the holy Spirit of promise you will not be left behind. You get sealed with it the moment you understand the gospel and trust on the blood of Christ that he shed to pay for your sins, and that he rose again on the third day.
Question is, have you had that moment of believing on Christ, or were you just a churchian who went to church and believed you'd get to heaven because you go to church and are good enough ?
12 That we should be to the praise of his glory, who first trusted in Christ.
13 In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise,
14 Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise of his glory.
---
Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life.
----
8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.
----
9 Who can tell if God will turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we perish not?
10 And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil, that he had said that he would do unto them; and he did it not.
^^ from this we can see that God sees turning from ones evil ways as a work. So turning from sin is a work. And works don't save.
@@mkovis8587 When someone says they're an ex-Christian it's safe to assume they've already read the scriptures. Citing verses at them is not productive, or respectful.
What worries me is the many powerful people who believe this, want this, and put their vast resources into making it happen.
You mean like Israel?... They've been screaming for a king/messiah for rhe last few thousand years.
yup especially how it relates to Zionism and the forced removal and killing of Palestinians
I’m confused.
How do you make the rapture happen?
@@jessefontenot9846 i think she's referring to the tribulation period itself, not just the event known as the rapture... I could be guessing.
@@jessefontenot9846they want the Third Temple to be built and for more chaos in the Middle East, since this accelerates the beginning of the events of the 7 year Great Tribulation (in their interpretation).
Most evangelicals believe in the Pre-Tribulation Rapture, which means they believe all the born again Christians will be miraculously raptured in a single moment, and the Tribulation begins after that. The Tribulation and it's events can only happen if the Third Temple is built, so the Antichrist can go into it and commit the Abomination of Desolation, as spoken of in the books of Daniel, Matthew, and Revelation.
The Antichrist is also the man who will save Israel in the beginning of the 7 years, but halfway he will commit the Abomination and start killing everyone who doesn't believe he is God.
They want to accelerate these circumstances. Chaos in the middle east leading to Israel's dire situation, along with pumping all the money and support they can to ensure Israel survives until the Tribulation begins so the Antichrist's can come on the scene. Antichrist arriving guarantees the Return of Christ and the Pre-Trib Rapture to happen. They are total fools. What if the Rapture is "Post-Tribulational"?, in their own theology this just begins the worst 7 years the world will ever go through and they don't even get to be raptured before it!
It's a very heinous religious accelerationism. I am Orthodox Christian and don't believe in pretrib rapture even before I came to Orthodoxy. I was an evangelical before and believed in it in my childhood, very bad for kids... Not to mention US foreign policy making martyrs of Orthodox Christians in Middle East and Eastern Europe.
Great! Thank you, as European I was always wondering why this evangelical Americans are obsessed with rapture, now I understand.
Because these people are too weak to endure persecution like all other Christians throughout history and in other parts of the world do
Being an American Christian myself who never fully bought into the rapture concept, I think a lot of misconceptions like that comes from us getting too caught up in popular culture and not thinking for ourselves- which could be why God allowed us to lose all cultural influence to shake up the church and force us to get our priorities straight.
Well said
Since the British have mostly aposticized their official and dissenter religion since WW2 they have forgotten it and just assume it is American.
Modern media will ride any wave of faddishness that sells copy. It is easier to get published in America than any other nation.
I grew up Pentecostal. My family always preached against the rapture. I was told my whole life the word rapture wasnt even in the bible . . Tbh i never really tried to find out. Thank u for this
Grew up in a rapture, death cult. We were not taught to grow up and give to the world. Education was restricted. As children and young adults, we were taught the rapture was coming at any moment, and to be prepared. (Sinless.). Jobs, family, friends, hobbies, education meant nothing. We were to make it to the rapture. This causes stunted growth, social and economic problems, and absolute trauma and fear. It took me 30 years to get away, but I am so happy I did even though I am mourning the life I didn’t get to live due to the lies put forth by this doctrine
This reinforces my opinion that this is just another abusive cult founded by psychopaths.
@@sarahrosen4985 It is, Darby a nutty guy, Scofield was typical fraudster, and all those little groups are nothing but a cults.
Sorry that you had to grow up with that :(
I gotta say ideas have consequences and certainly your testimony is living proof of that. I've been around certain people in my Christian experience that were definitely on the fringes. And all I could do was step away from them. If in this Christian life you
find a worthy calling be careful to handle with care . I'm a partial preterist, not ever gonna ascent to any "rapture theology"!!!!
I first heard this catching away stuff in the early 70s with the so called Jesus Movement. Hal Lindsay and the Late Great
Planet Earth. I laughed all the way home!!
This idea is so ridiculous it's not even worth describing. Too many people are stuck with this misguided theology!!!!!!
So glad you have been set free from that… whom the Son sets free, is free indeed 🙏
When I was younger, growing up in church, one of the biggest problems I had with youth leaders or anyone in the church was their wholesale adherence to rapture theology. If you asked them to show you simple things-like the chronology of where it comes from in the Bible-you would immediately draw personal criticism. Having studied so much Christian and Jewish texts over the years I have just accepted that churches are places for social gathering and belonging, not much else.
When it comes to protestantism, you couldn't be more right.
I highly recommend “the meaning and end of religion” by Wilfred Cantwell Smith!
@@Apinetree123 Yeah the Catholics have kinda a long record of making up extra-Biblical beliefs as well. Papal infallibility, transubstantiation, abortion bans, celibacy of the priesthood...
Agreed
The problem is that modern Christianity is often preached from a position of complete and total divorce from its original contexts, by preachers who are either ignorant of that context or desperate to make their faith more 'relevant'. Fanfiction piles on top of fanfiction, until nobody can articulate why they believe certain things anymore. It's not only the twisting of the Bible's origin messages, but also the advancement of things that you yourself might not believe but some past preacher did and you're just parroting that along in a game of telephone.
I hate this sort of fear mongering so much. It's genuinely traumatic for people who are raised being told that this will happen.
Too much fear mongering and heavy handedness, and not enough love and acceptance was what caused many youth to flee the churches as far back as the 1960s, as shown in the film Jesus Revolution.
You literally stole those words out of my mouth !!! I agree with you 100%. What bunch of f*cked ups came up with these weird, scary, unsubstantiated fairytales ! The morons... And I can go on like this forever...
I was raised COGIC and they preached this nonsense so I was scared for a while then when I got older left and forgot about it 😂
Get ready to be surprised.
@@theway674 and may I ask how would we be surprised ? I'm curious...
There's a certain arrogance in believing that the world must come to an end while the believer is living in it.
I think to most rapture believers It's not belief that the world must come to and end while they're alive, just that if it does, they're gonna be spared the experience. Though maybe it originated the way you've described it when Paul was helping early Christians to cope with it not arriving soon enough.
John 16:33
“These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.”
That's why I converted to Madness. May Chthulu and his Elder God entourage eat me first and spare me the horror of their wrath on the rest of the world.
John 6 39-54 Jesus says at the Last day four times
All doctrines here in Mystery Babylon say there's a thousand or more years after the day Jesus calls the Last day
How about that arrogance
@@squirreljones3595 a day is 1,000 years in this case. The last day literally means the last 1,000 year period of time in God's 7,000 year plan to redeem the earth.
As an ex-evangelical who read the full left behind series (😂), this video brings healing. I'm shocked to learn that this is a fringe idea within Protestant Christianity! But i really shouldn't be. I feel closer to hope with everything with I unlearn. Thank you so much for this and your channel, your work 🙏🙏🙏
SAME! THIS WHOLE VIDEO SHOOK ME. It brings healing, but also anger. I'm feeling very mixed emotions right now.
@@addisondrudge6908 totally understand the anger! Take care of yourself; looking after yourself during this kind of thing is super important
I'm Jamaican and all denominations there teach about the rapture. I don't know about Roman Catholics though
@@RollingCalf my mother is Jamaican and was raised SDA. Rapture theology was denounced and criticized by them.
@@xaayer i was raised in Sunday church
I grew up going to Catholic schools and was taught that the Rapture was a weird Protestant idea that they came up with because they didn’t want to admit that they would suffer even though Good Christians suffer throughout the Bible. Just what I learned in school.
Brutal but kinda true. American Evangelical protestantism, especially the “health and wealth” and word of faith Pentecostal types have a real problem with suffering. Some genuinely believe that Christians who suffer disease and the like only do so because they don’t have enough faith. Contrast that with Catholic and Orthodox theology surrounding suffering. Night and day.
If you think about it, it sounds like when the end of days does happen. Which i sort of assume will be a cranking of the pain and chaos to 11, wouldnt experiencing such suffering make evangelicals apostasize?
As a European ex-Catholic, I was just told that "Rupture" is just another English world for "Second Coming" or "Final Judgement". I'm only now learning how weird it really is.
But Catholics do not teach the full truth in regard to Jesus
@@RaptureReadyforJesus-qv2ql the churches which descend from Jesus and Apostles are that of the Holy Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Churches, we've stood for millenia teaching about Christ
The fact that ADULTS believe this is crazy💀
...and YOU believe in___________?
I used to believe it. Now I don't. It is crazy.
@@someonesomeone25 What "CRAZY" thing is it you believe in now?
@@Kman. Nothing crazy. Bog standard nihilism.
@@Kman.Religious people love to think that everyone on the planet is religious whether they realize it or not. They insist on “secularism” being a religion in of itself, or that atheists worship science or something. They / you can’t comprehend someone who isn’t spiritual at all. That we are all just lying to ourselves.
As a Catholic, I am taught that the "rapture" described in the New Testament occurs only when Christ returns. Based on scripture, it seems this is after the Tribulation, but just before the Wrath. There is nothing in scripture that says Christ will return twice!
As a Catholic, you need to look long and hard at what you've been taught. I understand the difficulties with end-times issues and we can't be dogmatic. Be reconciled with God and grow up in all things in Christ. Then let God be God and work things out as He sees fit.
Oh, yes, there is. He does not come down to the earth at the rapture. That's why it is the catching away. We are caught up together with Him in the clouds. When He returns and sets His feet on the Mount of Olives, He comes as a judge.
*_God Bless_*
Jesus the son of Almighty God Jehovah returned in 1914 and will soon destroy all but one of some 30,000 different religious groups claiming to represent Jesus Christ and Almighty God Jehovah give praise to his name and keep living...
@@grahamjones548can you tell us more about this Jesus that came in 1914?
I grew up watching the Left Behind movies. My mom read me the books as a kid. Scared me more than anything. I remember trying to comfort my little brother who was terrified of “Mr. Rapture”. 🤦🏼♀️
There's literally a article about 100 suicides a year annually occuring alongside depressed nihilism do to rapture theology.
Rapture sounds like Raptor aka serpent dragon dinosaur
To this day, I still cannot believe this content is free. This is the only channel on this platform that I have ever felt like donating to.
Atheist here, this is a very interesting topic. Especially since as a Filipino Catholic, the first time I heard about the rapture is from the internet. And I was really baffled when I found out that its a big thing with Evangelicals.
It's almost nauseating to learn the history of the beliefs I was raised on like this, thank you so much for laying it out so clearly.
American born religions are especially batshit crazy. I mean, app religion is a tool for control, but yeah...
All you had to do was read the Bible, you would of found there was no rapture. The only person raptured was Enoch
@@terintiaflavius3349 How many "Reapings"?
I've been a Christian all my life. I never even heard of "the rapture" till a few years ago and it was so weird to hear of it. It's like fundamentalist Christianity is a totally different religion, I don't recognize much of the faith I grew up with in fundamentalism, and at times, it's the complete opposite of what I was taught.
As an ex Christian I find the diversity within Christianity fascinating, and sometimes entertaining
@@MaryamMaqdisiwhy are you ex one?
Yep, like it's no longer enough to be 'Saved'... now American Evangelicals gotta invent ever more 'extreme' examples of their 'Specialness' (aka, Narcissism).
It is not as if the rapture is a completely new idea. It can be traced back to the Old Testament stories of Enoch and Elijah being taken alive into heaven.
@@EinsteinsHairthose were single persons and it had nothing to do with Jesus or the end-times.
Also in the 70s, there was that Christian rapture horror movie series that started with "A Thief in the Night." Those movies were shown in churches, and traumatized many children especially.
That's precisely why I consider the rapture to be unbiblical; it brings terror only to the believers who ought to feel secure.
Me too! Whenever my parents were late to pick me up or I walked home and my mom left for groceries without telling me, I wasn't freaking out, but I definitely thought about the possibility I was left behind.
Boomer children, mostly.
Traumatized? Oh the horror!!! Jesus returning for the church,before the wrath of God falls on the world. Oh the horror!! IF,you're not a Christian! And guess what? ALL the children get taken in the rapture. I guess your pastor wasn't educated.
As a person who grew up in a Christian Baptist; family i totally believed this in my younger years, Blessed Be.
Saaaame
As my father-in-law used to say about people expecting the second coming any moment. "What makes them think they are so special that it will happen during their lifetime."
I always believed that it was just old people who were scared to face their own deaths so they want a 'quick and painless' salvation from death. If you just are supernaturally spirited away you don't have the pain and agony of disease or injury.
I was shocked when I found out 'rapture' wasn't even in the Bible.
All Christians, no matter where they are in rhe stream of time, are commanded to keep on the watch. It's part of being Christian.
And I would say to him, "what makes me feel so special that Jesus would want me in heaven for eternity?" (Like I do.)
Hebrews proves we are all saved the same way. We believe God and what He says, and it is counted unto us as Righteousness. (I believe, or faith in that to mean salvation. But know this, Jesus will defend His Word and that is comforting to me.
I remember in the 1980s Ron Reagan's Interior Secretary James Watt seriously argued that we did not need to protect our natural resources because, based on the bible, the world would be ending soon.
He also said when the last tree is chopped down, Jesus will return.
I had a biology professor with the same views.
That is the most tragic thing about this misguided fringe belief - its connections to fossil fools and US politicians resulting in a race to destroy Earth’s habitable biosphere for the rest of us and countless other species.
@@barbaraaly6186 Should have encouraged that biology professor to go pet a glaucus atlanticus.
Myaunt had the same views. We shouldn't worry about pollution, or driving entire species into extinction. or nuclear war, or squandering earths resources because God was going to renew the Earth at his coming.
Doesn't sound like "Wise Stuardship to me.
You’re my favourite account for religious concepts. It feels very unbiased which is refreshing. You don’t attack the views and you don’t defend them, simply analysing them.
I see quite a bit of biased here.He says there is only one bible passage that proponents of pretribulation rapture look at;he suggests that the bible doesn't say about the pretribulation rapture by asking the question "where did the idea come from".He also calls it fiction.
And by the way all the things Jesus mentions in Mat 24 is answering a question He was asked,"the signs of His coming and of the end of this age and when it's gonna happen ".
He obviously is not aware of the post tribulation rapture (infact more than 1), that's why he agrees with those who say this theology is confused.
However l'm impressed by so much work he's done gathering several scholars' interpretations although he's got a side that he inclines to.
Everybody with a brain has multiple biases. Par for the course. I like RFB because the I perceive Dr. Andrew Henry’s aspiration is to minimize and mitigate the bias when talking about facts and interpretations/approaches.
Matthew 24:40-42
"Two men will be in the field; one will be taken and the other left. Two women will be grinding with a hand mill; one will be taken and the other left. Therefore keep watch, because you do not know on what day your Lord will come."
What is your point by quoting those verses?
@StealthySpace7 can you really not understand their point they are trying to make?
@ are you arguing for or against the rapture
@StealthySpace7 that's irrelevant. You seem to not know what they are arguing for. I can tell what they are arguing for but you seem to not know what they are arguing for.
@ it's a really really simple question, you left this on a video explaining how the rapture is not supported in the Bible (which it isn't) so I assume you disagree
I grew up in an extremely conservative religious family. The church we went to had literal "Rapture drills" in which we had to practice. We would watch videos about the rapture all the time. This was all terrifying and caused me so much trauma. It took me years into my adulthood to deprogram myself from the mental abuse that I went through. That's what mostly drove me away from being a religious or dogmatic person. I do believe that teaching such concepts are dangerous for children as it is a form of abuse. Evangelical practices are gross.
Evangelicals are only conservative relative to the 1950s, anytime before that and they'd be mega fringe.
Orthodoxy is the way.
@quantum5147 Stop with the terrifying nonsense. You probably look at all sorts of different vampire and demonic movies but yet the rapture is so terrifying lol
@@christiansoldier77 it's not biblical, but it's scary because of ambiguity, but then again we could be wiped out by forces of nature at any time any way, so we should just hope in the resurrection.
Orthodoxy is the way.
@@ThumbKnuckle It is biblical. The bible literally speaks about multiple times. It isn't scary . What is scary about joining with Jesus ? No we are not going to be wiped out by nature. That's a myth created by the climate change people.
@@christiansoldier77Children are not typically exposed to horror films or told to believe they are true, with the threat of eternal damnation as a consequence of disbelief. But the real damage to children is epistemic: if you are told doubt is sin, never develop the critical thinking tools required to question what you're being 'taught,' and are fed ideas you are unable to break down, you're being brainwashed. As an adult that damage is compounded when you realise how much time you have lost and how much work you will need to put in to achieve parity with people who have been raised to think pluralistically. It's not just an intellectual crisis for the individual, all this takes an emotional toll which you will also need to overcome, usually without the support of your immediate family (who caused the damage in the first place).
As an atheist turned Christian I read the Bible on my own many times before going to a church. Once I began attending in the early 90s I was surprised by the "Pre-tribulation Rapture" doctrine. I had never read anything in the Scriptures that prepared me for this doctrine. I was fully prepared to go through the "10 Days of Awe" and joyfully embrace my destiny as a soldier of Christ standing against the Beast system "occupying" until Jesus returned. In the 30 years of rigorous study since then I am more againItst this doctrine than ever. I agree with Corrie tenBoom.
What do you agree with Corrie Ten Boom about?
Who is Corrie tenBoom?
@carywest9256 She is a Dutch Lady who hid Jews during the German occupation in WWII.
They are afraid suffering and hardship. I believe that it's a part of being a Christian myself.
@@paulbegley1464 I agree
I remember my grandma used to say "if" and not "when I die". She said "if" for years and even though I was brought up in churches that preached the rapture, I always felt it was weird she did that. She finally started saying "when" about 5 years before she died and although I no longer believed in the rapture or much of the bible by that point, I did feel kinda bad for her that she had given up after believing since the 70s.
Well, all I know is that I have believed in 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 since the 70's, and still look for it, as Paul tells us that believe; "Looking for that blessed hope and appearing of the glory of the great God and savor Jesus Christ." Titus 2:13.
It offends my family so bad when I say death is natural and okay and even good.... Family of pastors in Appalachia blah blah... That should explain it 😂
@@rosemadder5547 Actually, death was not natural nor okay or even good, but rather an enemy (1 Corinthians 15:26) because when God made Adam and Eve they were made to live forever. God even said of all his his creation, “It is good” because there was no death, a concept we can not understand, but one Adam and Eve understood when God killed an animal to fashion clothing to cover them both, as after they sinned, their eye’s were opened revealing their nakedness.
This death (sacrifice of blood) was the first on Earth, the second death of great note was that of Jesus Christ death on the cross, shedding his blood to redeem man from the consequence of sin, which is death, Romans 5:17. And 6:23.
@rosemadder5547 They everywhere, ain't they? 😂 WV lady here and I grew up in a Church of God Holiness where half my famil6 worked (great-aunt was my Sunday School teacher some grandmother knew if I acted up before I even got back in) so I feel your pain.
@@petratical exactly. Do not let these people steal your hope. They are mistaken.
The idea of the rapture has become a part of the popular culture of more religiously conservative states. I grew up going to a mainline Protestant church that was not Evangelical in any way, and lived a mostly secular life, but I am only learning that this was not a mainstream Christian view rooted clearly in the Bible until now. It is presented in the common culture (I am speaking about a southeastern state) as just a fact or integral part of Christian belief, even among the general population that is not Evangelical
this channel is the best for an academic approach to religion. thank you!
I like this one: _The Americanization of the Apocalypse: Creating America's Own Bible_ (2023, Oxford) by Donald Akenson
What a fascinating video! I grew up in an evangelical church where all 5 pastor/elders politely disagreed with each other on end times theology. If I remember correctly there was one holder of each of the four eschatological variations, and the Dispensationalist was viewed as the fringe one. (Makes sense, because every time I study Christian theology and someone says "here are the range of views and this one is the most extreme," my church almost always chose the extreme one lol.) The Left Behind books were viewed in my church as silly fiction to satisfy the mainstream Christians who didn't get the real nuances of eschatology. We were very into John Piper and I recognize hearing Darby and Scofield's names come up too. Now that I'm an adult who thinks for myself and explores spirituality on my own terms, videos like these bring back memories of Sunday School debates I haven't thought about in years! Thanks for the education @religionforbreakfast , it's a huge part of my adult growth!
Churches, and religions in general, are usually very tolerant to very different eschatological views. They rarely establish any official view of it.
@@josepheridu3322 That's because the only time they stop being tolerant of differing eschatological views...is when they become doomsday cults.
If you're not a doomsday cult, you have no stake in the minutiae of the end of the world. But if you are, then nothing matters more.
I rememebr a girl in my class was obsessed with these books. She went on to be an essential oil peddler and promoted several MLMs. Feels like certain types are just on rails to a very odd path in life.
I didn’t grow up Christian, but I did grow up in a very evangelical Christian area. I had heard the stories about Jesus being born and resurrected and all that, but I only heard about the rapture as a teenager. I found it very confusing why anyone believed it lol. This video definitely helped me get a better idea of where it came from!
Okay, so the Evangelicals are to Christianity what Sovereign Citizens are to modern law.
Pretty much.
That's beautiful lol. Most believe in a literal 6 day creation and Noah's flood. They are scared that most Christians no longer see this as literal and they double down on their "science".
There’s a lot of overlap between the two groups.
White evangelical christians vote for Trump. How far do you have to diverge from the New Testament to vote for Trump?
@@crisgon9552check out the Urantia book a very different kind of Christianity
I'm catholic, started going to a southern Baptist Church every other Sunday with my boyfriend and his grandma... I'm gonna stick with Catholicism in the long run, thanks, but we started going in January and were still talking about Revelation and the rapture in September
Don't. It's apostate. You are not to worship saints and mother Mary...and the pope is a heretic
Are you still going to stay as catholic even if you attend baptist church
Hello, I believe you should watch some videos on RUclips by Mike Gendron about Catholicism with an open and yearning heart ❤
@@masonkiel yep you are right.Here is a video where Mike debates a Catholic that knows his stuff! To me the Catholic Church was completely wrong because I completely knew nothing, after reading and watching a couple videos “wow” 100% Catholic! I do give Mike credit he is brave for defending his thoughts.
ruclips.net/video/f7YleyNnNSk/видео.htmlsi=lqhE9zOxEo0gmM6l
Leave the rapture idea, "behind". It's a hiccup from 1831 . The protestant church in many circles bought into this nonsense years ago. Hopefully we can stamp it out for good!!!;
I was working on a story about a devout church filled with True Christians, except for that one poor trash family who were considered no better than they should be.
And when the Rapture comes, that family is the only one missing from the congregation.
I grew up Catholic, seriously Catholic. I was an altar boy, my sister was a lectern, my dad was in the Knights of Columbus, and my mother volunteered at the local nunnery, and believed unto her deathbed a concept of "Catholic Spiritualism" which involved talismen, special ceremonies, and such. My sister and I went to Catholic schools. That's how Catholic we were. After I left the Church as a teen, I started exploring other religions, mostly Protestant, but also other traditions like Buddhism, and ecumenical like Unitarianism. It was during that Protestant phase that I learned about this idea of the Rapture. From the beginning, I thought it would make an entertaining fictional book or movie, but people actually believe this stuff! It's like believing that Star Wars is a documentary.
Wait, what? Star Wars ISN’T real? But then how do you explain duct tape? It has a dark side and a light side, and it binds the universe together. How can you not see that as reflection of the Truth of The Force?? 😂
So what do you believe now?
Being an altar boy from a catholic family and going to catholic schools makes someone “seriously catholic“?
And here I was thinking that to be a true catholic is to understand and belive in the teachings of the catholic church and to love God with all our heart. 🤦♂️
more support for the idea of extraterrestrial influence, people getting beamed up into the clouds stuff.
more support for the idea that Evangelicals love Trump because they think that he is their best bet for being raptured.
When you went to church or math did they speak in Latin?
As an atheist who’s seen alot of content talking about religion, it’s kind of refreshing, to me, how neutral your delivery feels. Despite the subject matter didn’t feel a heavy bias toward the validity or lack thereof of the stories in question.
I'm a atheist, I'm a atheist. Always gotta tell people, no one cares
@@shermhart7617but what about people who say, As a Catholic? its a way to state your belief while also adding context to whatever they are gonna say.
@@shermhart7617 everyone else in this comment section is stating their beliefs too, you better go tell them all as well that we aren't allowed to do that. The rest of us didn't get the memo you received apparently.
And what is this utuber promoting? No rapture so then what ? Are we just waiting for the coming Kingdom. Or do we now have Domion Now theology. Basically Rimanism promotes ether on or other.
@@AlanWolf-d7lsee Matthew 24, Mark 13, and Luke 21. This is Jesus telling us what to expect and the sequence of events.
My parents grew up in a Christian fundamentalist doomsday cult, and told us stories about what they were taught. Everyone in the church was constantly told that judgement day was right around the corner, and they were the true chosen children of God and would be saved from doomsday. The were fully in on the UPC being the mark of the beast thing. Thankfully, they had left the church long before I was born.
This is a terrific (as usual) overview of this topic. In the novel Atlas Shrugged one of the many subplots involves the disappearance of heads of industries who wind up in a special hidden area. The author, Ayn Rand, claimed to be an atheist but this plot devise was clearly glommed from this religious concept. Although I've never read of this connection anywhere else.
In the game Bioshock (whose plot's backstory is based heavily on Atlas Shrugged) a tycoon named Andrew Ryan (see what I mean?) builds an underwater city literally named Rapture where all captains of industry, scientists and censored creatives could flee from government control.
Having read the book, I can see the similarities but rapture teachings were far less popular at the time rand was writing. The popularization of the concept is very much a recent thing with the word rapture only entering the popular lexicon in maybe the 80s if we’re generous. Rand was also an atheist immigrant who was probably less knowledgeable about niche American cults than someone born and raised in a Christian American household would have been.
I saw the flight of the industrialists more as an analogue to emigration. The overarching moral of the story is “if you put undo burdens on the people who provide for you they will cease to do so.” One of the main ways to accomplish that was to simply leave the country, as rand and her family had done. The industrialists get fed up with the government mandating that they destroy their life’s work and be grateful for it and they just leave. Proving that ultimately, they were the ones who had all the power after all since no one else is capable of doing what they had been doing and the court grinds to a halt. A big issue with the “materialist rapture” reading is that they do not all leave at the same time, Dagny figures out what is happen and even speaks to some of them prior to their disappearance. They also leave voluntarily, making their own way to the hidden valley, rather than suddenly being whisked into paradise.
@alg11297 Ayn Rand is the post child of Libertarianism who right before she died had signed up for Medicare and Social Security benefits.
It's a horror trope too.
Sudden disappearance of someone or lots of people, mysterious circumstances.
@@silvershadchan4085 In a way hypocritical in relying on 'socialist' benefits. Yet pure libertarianism in that she was out to get as much for herself as possible.
You can always count on ‘Murican ‘Vangelicals for the most craziest takes on Christianity
They are doing their damndest to turn Jesus into a four letter word.
Painfully true.
@@davidmacdonald8882 Friend, you may have just penned the most insightful comment to date on Evangelicalism and how it's distorting Christianity and turning so many people against it.
However the movement was from Plymouth England and John Darby was an Irish protestant minister born City of Westminster London England.
If there were not obviously contradictory prophesies in old and new testament orthodox canon, then such interpretations and movements would not take root. Confusion leads to imaginative choice and a sense of assembling the puzzle.
In the Gospel of Mark, Jesus mostly talks plain and does not couch his philosophy in riddles. His Apostles still don't get it...he says that several times. In Matthew the personality of Jesus is described as somewhat annoyed with his Apostles like he is about to go outside and yell.
When people are told things they do not want to hear, often they act stupid, obtuse or selectively deaf...like toddlers.
I was raised in the Pentecostal church, and this doctrine was heavily taught, and emphasized at the core of that belief system. It was pure fear and guilt, every day, and every hour. It literally controled me for many years, and even to this day, still "left behind" that psychological trauma. It's awful, and it takes time to transition from it.
You can form a whole cult around this doctrine, and that's just what it is, a cult. It is intended to control people into conformity and obedience, to ignore corruption. If you believe this doctrine, you can justify and excuse so many things.
It was fear, and guilt, along with the Pentecostal(the 'gift' of speaking in tongues, bestowed upon those God deems worthy, and as 'evidence' of baptism by the holy spirit) gifts, you felt guilty if you did not "receive" these gifts, and you judged people who didn't, because basically, if you were "baptized in the holy spirit", you also had the gift of "discernment", so in kther words, you were fit to judge, as it wasn't YOU judging, it was the holy spirit doing it.
I mention that because it was just an esspecially heinous brand of evangelicalism. We were all taught that faith in Christ was sufficient, but that we also needed... All that?
Truly, it's disturbing, and hard to describe all in this comment section. But it all simply made me feel empty while being taught that this feeling was that of being whole.
I hear you!. In my pursuit of more of God I have left Christianity. I hope you have too.
finally, I've found my people. I was raised pentecostal and it literally scarred me. I was guilted into thinking I wasn't doing enough or I was doing it wrong because my life wasn't perfect. yet, when I would confide in someone about it, it was "a part of god's plan." I would read my Bible everyday, go to church every time it was open, fast during important times, pray nonstop. I did EVERYTHING! but I never got those gifts. I did get comfort until I started actually studying the Pauline texts. his writings are contradictory and full of vagueness. I was told that I was wrong for pointing those things out and to believe it entirely. it wasn't until a church leader said that 1 Timothy 2:12 was a misunderstanding, even though it perfectly contradicts 1 Corinthians 11:5. I was veiling at the time, but I stormed out and ripped my scarf to shreds. I cried in the bathroom for the rest of the service. it broke my heart to see how much they didn't realize. the rest is history, but I miss that time of ignorance. because while I still had problems, I had a scapegoat in religion.
I Also grew up Apostolic Pentecostal, here is my problem with this theology. The word Firmament can be found in the Bible so many times it's not even funny. A Pentecostal Preacher won't touch that with a 1 Watt laser pointer 4 miles away. However , they constantly push the word "Rapture" which is not in the Bible Anywhere. You Ask them, not one in my 44 year's could ever explain that to me...I have a family full of "Oneness Pentecostal's". Not knocking their beliefs, but back it up Biblically. I javelin had enough "Pastor's " burn me, so I don't put much thought into them. I Do Believe in God, Jesus Christ & the Holy Ghost, however, I do believe "Pentecostal's don't know everything. I will work out my Salvation with Fear & Trembling, not follow a bunch of "Holliness" nut job's from the late 18th century, early 19th century. Sorry, seen and witnessed too much. I try to keep my mind and heart focused upon Jesus, not what "Other's think the way thing's should be because an Organization more corrupt than the mafia says So.
Last line of your comment sums it up beautifully...!!!
OH MY GOODNESS there is a small part in this comment that made something click for me as someone raised catholic (tho no longer religious) because i never understood how many christian groups seem to be ok with judging others because i was told only god could judge. but the belief of the holy spirit bestowing ‘discernment’ so its not the person themself judging... internet stranger, your comment just helped my understand how so many justify their judgemental behavior when i would think it went against their beliefs, but that judgement is often in fact part of and justified by their beliefs. thank you so much for this comment, this whole subject has always baffled me
Chosen=Adopted Children Of God.
"As Many That Are Led By The Spirit Of God Are The Sons Of God...
Spirit Of Adoption By Which We Cry Abba-Father" - Rom.8:14-16
"Israelites To Whom Pertained The Adoption" - Rom.9:4
I grew up in a hardline Fundamentalist Baptist church and this was probably their biggest obsession. Every tiny thing that happened in the news was "proof" that the rapture was imminent. Usually coupled with the "at no time in human history has it ever been this way or have we been so close to Christ's return." Which is funny, because 28 years after saying goodbye to this scene, I have family members who still say the exact same things to me, word for word. They even still think Russia is going to be behind the whole Antichrist thing.
Which is to say I consider the concept of "The End Times" to be a complete joke.
The Russia part tracks, unfortunately. An "attack from the uttermost north" is hard to picture coming from anywhere else.
@@normanclatcher Doesn't track, I'm from Canada so to us Russia is either east or west, not north.
Either the uttermost north is supposed to be global (see Russia relative to Canada's Northern Territories not being very north-y) or it's supposed to just be within Iron Age scopes. (Or you're implying Russia has invaded the North Pole, which i'm pretty sure you're not, but I never know, breatharians exist.)
@@neoqwerty The attack is supposedly on Israel, and the read I subscribe to is that it's on the location of the modern nation-state of Israel, in the Levant.
Go north and you find the destabilized states of Syria and Lebanon- north of them, Turkey- north of _them,_ Russia.
Gog of Magog: Rosh (Russia), Prince of Meschech (Moscow) and Tubal.
I just want to point this out because you are so smug. If the end times happen in the future, then every moment we move forward puts us closer to the end times. The past is further from the end times. So everyone tell you that we are closer to the end times is correct.
@@neoqwerty jokes on you, its canada after yall go full communist
I was raised in constant focus on this throughout my childhood. It was frightening and traumatic.😢
As always, a brilliant breakdown of why, where, when, and how. It's nice to see an objective outline of the history of these ideas... :)
In Ezekiel 13 he also says he is against those who teach my children to fly away to save their souls
Chief, that passage has *A B S O L U T E L Y* nothing to do with the end times, *smh.*
You can’t talk about the popularity of Dispensational Premillennialism without talking about temporal narcissism. As a country with relatively little history, the United States is pre-disposed to thinking that history has just been building up to this moment (and America, and it’s current place in the world, is the end point). Believing that they will see the end of the world, and the coming of God’s Kingdom on Earth, fits in to this “it’s all about me and my era” mindset.
Growing up in an evangelical family in Central America, I was terrified by this when I was a child. The language used about how he will come like a thief in the night to take away all the good people and the rest will be left behind to experience all kind of terrors by the antichrist, and this could happen tomorrow because we're already at the end of times. That's a horrible thing to tell children, all the anxiety that created about if I was good enough or I could suffer a horrible fate tomorrow. I'm not part of the church now for that reason.
Thank you for this, as a former open Plymouth Brethren Christian I’ve been trying to understand Darby and how his rapture theology became common place in an America who barely knew my denomination existed.
The Greek word from this term “rapture” is derived appears in 1 Thessalonians 4:17, translated “caught up.”
Greek word is harpazo
See Matthew 24:29-31, verse 30 uses gathered together.
Wow this was a solid breakdown! Been struggling with the rapture most of my life as it didn’t make sense but was shoved down my throat in several churches. Glad this video exists to break it down into digestible material
This happens to a lot of people who are simply to lazy to search the scriptures and see if what they have been taught is biblical.
I am sorry that this rapture idea was shoved down your throat. I never had that kind of experience. The rapture is a Johnny come lately doctrine out of the early 19th century from the British Isles into America thru the effort's of J.N.Darby and publicized thru C.I. Scofield and Chafer thru Dallas Theological Seminary. The idea that alive believers are caught up into heaven in mansions( John 14) and come back to earth with Jesus at his coming are a very troubling set of ideas that upon examination are a real stretch. Plus the idea of God having two plans of salvation, one for the church and another for the later day Jews.!!! No such split in God's plan for humankind exists.!!!!;
@@davidwoods6015 right and I never knew the true origins of the premillennialism idea till just this year. Every church I ever went to and every Christian I ever talked to believed it. Once I started to be shown different ideas my eyes were opened. Now we can debate about what the new earth would look like for sure but the rapture to me just seems fishy and I always questioned it which only gave more anxiety regarding it
I remember a conversation with a friend in 1982 ;at a bible study in California. He mentioned a name that I wasn't familiar with. "John Nelson Darby" and the Plymouth brethren ". Sooo!!!!! began a search for more info.
Gradually over time it became apparent that these rapture ideas were certainly abberational and the product of a misguided zeal for 2nd advent expectations. Mormons, JWs, 7 Day Adventists, New Thought and later Mary Baker Eddy came out of this 2nd great awakening!!!! Sooooo!!!!!; here we are in the 21st century with a smorgasbord of conflicting beliefs. Welcome to the real church world.!!!!!!
I would just tell you there is no reason to believe in a "heaven bound" so called rapture! The Apostle's idea from 1.Thess 4
has to do with a common occurrence from the Roman world in Paul's day! The conquering king returning home after a long campaign is met on the road with a citizen delegation from the city there to usher him into the city. That's what Paul is describing
in 1 Thess.4!!! Jesus at His coming is met by a delegation of believers and escorted earthward . Jesus never changes direction, we do!!!! This is done to facilitate Ps.110 and the new heaven and new earth!!!!
Nothing to do with an avoidance of a tribulation and a boogieman!!!! That's all futurist's hogwash!!!!!!
"Christianity started out in Palestine as a fellowship; it moved to Greece and became a philosophy; it moved to Italy and became an institution; it moved to Europe and became a culture; it came to America and became an enterprise."
~Sam Pascoe
yes, and after twenty centuries of traveling and "developing," Christianity still cannot prove that it is anything other than a belief in a delusion. Two-thirds of Americans may embrace that religion in some way, but that doesn't convince me at all, on the contrary! But then again, I'm not an American...
I'm a simple man. ReligionForBreakfast new video? Me happy
Same lol
Pre-tribulation rapture theology was popularized extensively in the 1830s by John Nelson Darby and the Plymouth Brethren, and further popularized in the United States in the early 20th century by the wide circulation of the Scofield Reference Bible. Rapture doctrine did not exist before Darby invented it in 1830 AD. Before it "popped into John Darby's head" no one had ever heard of a secret rapture doctrine.
You're speaking out of both sides of your mouth at the same time friend. You *FIRST* stated that the position was "POPULARIZED" by Darby, and _T H E N_ you said it was actually "INVENTED" by him. The 'ole Darby argument is as lame as a dog's broken hind leg. Where's an argument from scripture to support what it is you believe?
That's not true Darby got the idea from Scottish girl around 1826...the girl HEARD it before Darby
@@Kman. You want me to show you something from your great book of fantasies and fairy tales? Scriptures can be interpreted by 20 different people to mean 20 different things.
Thats a lie,Darby didn't invent the rapture. Hey,instead of believing everyone who you like,do some research first.
Then you might actually deserve some respect.
The Apocalypse of Elijah
This third-century text exists in two versions, one Coptic, another Greek. It is written from a premillennial perspective and contains extensive detailed material on the tribulation period. After discussing the emergence of the Antichrist onto the world’s stage (ch. 3) and the arrival of the two witnesses to oppose him (ch. 4), the document describes the Rapture as Christ’s deliverance of His people to preserve them from wrath (ch. 5). The pertinent passage reads:
On that day the Christ will pity those who are His own. And He will send from heaven his sixty-four thousand angels, each of whom has six wings. The sound will move heaven and earth when they give praise and glorify. Now those upon whose forehead the name of Christ is written and upon whose hand is the seal both the small and the great, will be taken up upon their wings and lifted up before his wrath. Then Gabriel and Uriel will become a pillar of light leading them into the holy land. It will be granted to them to eat from the tree of life. They will wear white garments and angels will watch over them. They will not thirst, nor will the son of lawlessness be able to prevail over them (Apocalypse of Elijah 5:1-6).
This text clearly depicts the Rapture as an event that will remove Christians from earth to Heaven before the outbreak of the Antichrist’s persecution. In this way, they will be shielded in Heaven from his cruel deeds.
In his article “The Rapture in the Apocalypse of Elijah,” Gumerlock notes that this apocalypse states the Rapture’s purpose as the removal of God’s people from wrath. He argues that that period of wrath should be understood as the tribulation period, since “the sinners left behind on earth cry: ‘See, now we will die in a famine and tribulation [Apocalypse of Elijah 5:12].’” If his interpretation is accurate, then this text is clearly teaching a pretribulational Rapture.
The Apocalypse of Pseudo-Ephraem
Also known as “On the Last Times, the Antichrist, and the End of the World” or “Sermon on the End of the World,” this text survives in two somewhat varied versions, one Syriac, another Latin. The Latin version contains a pretribulational statement:
We ought to understand thoroughly, therefore, my brothers, what is imminent or overhanging. . . . Why therefore we do not reject every care of earthly actions and prepare ourselves for the meeting of the Lord Jesus Christ, so that He may draw us from the confusion, which overwhelms all the world. . . . For all the saints and elect of God are gathered together before the tribulation, which is to come, and are taken to the Lord, in order that they may not see at any time the confusion which overwhelms the world because of our sins.
The material that follows clearly equates this tribulation with the period of the Antichrist’s dominance over the earth as foretold in the books of Daniel and Revelation. One area of disagreement between this document and modern pretribulationism is that Pseudo-Ephraem thought the Tribulation would be just three and a half years in length, not seven. Nevertheless, his view is still clearly pretribulational in sum and substance. In their article “The Rapture and an Early Medieval Citation,” Demy and Ice conclude, “Although the sermon has some ambiguities, it, like pretribulationism, clearly emphasizes imminence, two comings separated by the tribulation, and the promise of deliverance of believers from the tribulation.”
Some critics will counter by questioning the reliability of these two sources. After all, we don’t know exactly when or where they were written, or even who their authors were! But this objection misses the point entirely. Pretribulationists do not appeal to these two sources as authoritative sources for theology, but only to demonstrate the falsity of their critics’ accusation that pretribulationism is a recent invention. So the origin and authoritativeness of these documents are utterly irrelevant to the discussion at hand; all that matters for the present purpose is that they are demonstrably Christian documents from the ancient and medieval periods that clearly teach a form of pretribulationism.
The History of Brother Dolcino
Brother Dolcino was the leader of the 14th-century movement known as the Apostolic Brethren. While none of his writings on this subject have survived, an anonymous Latin document written in 1316 records firsthand information on the life and teachings of Brother Dolcino. This document contains yet another statement of early pretribulationism:
Again [Dolcino believed and preached and taught] that within those three years Dolcino himself and his followers will preach the coming of the Antichrist. And that the Antichrist was coming into this world within the bounds of the said three and a half years; and after he had come, then he [Dolcino] and his followers would be transferred into Paradise, in which are Enoch and Elijah. And in this way they will be preserved unharmed from the persecution of Antichrist. And that then Enoch and Elijah themselves would descend on the earth for the purpose of preaching [against] the Antichrist. Then they would be killed by him or by his servants, and thus Antichrist would reign for a long time. But when Antichrist is dead, Dolcino himself, who then would be the holy pope, and his preserved followers, will descend on the earth, and will preach the right faith of Christ to all, and will convert those who will be living then to the true faith of Jesus Christ.
Once again, the end times chronology presented in this text is quite clear: first the Antichrist is revealed, then the Rapture occurs, then an extended period of tribulation grips the earth, then the church returns to earth with Christ at His second coming. In his article “A Rapture Citation in the Fourteenth Century,” Gumerlock rightly concludes:
This paragraph from The History of Brother Dolcino indicates that in northern Italy in the early fourteenth century a teaching very similar to pretribulationism was being preached. . . . While not suggesting that pretribulationism was the dominant view of the rapture in the Middle Ages, it is likely that such teaching did not occur in a vacuum and that others besides Dolcino were aware of it. It can reasonably be assumed that the Apostolic Brethren (who numbered in the thousands) believed, as did their leader, that when the Antichrist would arrive, they would be transferred to paradise and be preserved there from his persecution in the tribulation.
Well yes that's a simplified summary of a portion of the video. Your point?
Fun fact: the author of the original "Left Behind" book series, Jerry Jenkins, is the father of Dallas Jenkins, who... surprise, surprise... is the director behind the Jesus series "The Chosen"
As a Christian the rapture never made sense to me it’s like a big plot hole
I mean depending on the interpretation of revelation being the crisis of 3rd century of Rome or symbolic of any big crisis, we technically had many raptures
The inability of a priest to even be able to point it out in the bible was one of perhaps a dozen contradictions I noticed as a literal child that made me rapidly become a non-believer. The Church does NOT have the power to proselytize to people with autism or ADD lol
Ummm, why?
@@danielbroome5690And woe betide them when you have both!
@@starmaker75 I guess if you define any fall of civilization as a rapture yeah
I'm a Protestant Christian, and I honestly didn't hear much about rapture theology growing up in my church community or most other churches I've been a part of since. Definitely not universal within protestantism.
This is extremely rare to hear
@@PurpleRegina It's really not rare though. It's just super popular within recent American evangelicalism, which isn't reflective of the views of many current Protestants across the world, let alone the strong majority of Christians who have ever lived.
That’s why American Evangelicals are specified as believing in this concept.
Growing up the idea of the rapture terrified me as a kid. To think that this world I just entered could end any moment. And he only eat out would be to believe in God and Jesus. It's sad that this is one of those things that kept me a Christian while I was young. Kids will take what the adults say around them as truth if you let them.
I also grew up being taught rapture and end time theology as fact. And I believed it. That is until it bothered me so much that I decided to study it for myself about 10 years ago. I learned many of the historical things shared in this video and read a lot of books that focus on scripture. My conclusion was that the Bible does not support this idea of a rapture. In fact I found much evidence that the "prophetic" scriptures about the future "end times" were actually talking about literal events that already happend around the time of 70AD, the fall of the temple and Jerusalem to the Romans.
Not so, this is Daniel’s real seventy weeks.
Week 1 BC 1483 - BC 1433
Week 2 BC 1433 - BC 1383
Week 3 BC 1383 - BC 1333
Week 4 BC 1333 - BC 1283
Week 5 BC 1283 - BC 1233
Week 6 BC 1233 - BC 1183
Week 7 BC 1183 - BC 1133
Week 8 BC 1133 - BC 1083
Week 9 BC 1083 - BC 1033
Week 10 BC 1033 - BC 983
Week 11 BC 983 - BC 933
Week 12 BC 933 - BC 883
Week 13 BC 883 - BC 833
Week 14 BC 833 - BC 783
Week 15 BC 783 - BC 733
Week 16 BC 733 - BC 683
Week 17 BC 683 - BC 633
Week 18 BC 633 - BC 583
Week 19 BC 583 - BC 533
Week 20 BC 533 - BC 483
Week 21 BC 483 - BC 433
Week 22 BC 433 - BC 383
Week 23 BC 383 - BC 333
Week 24 BC 333 - BC 283
Week 25 BC 283 - BC 233
Week 26 BC 233 - BC 183
Week 27 BC 183 - BC 133
Week 28 BC 133 - BC 83
Week 29 BC 83 - BC 33
Week 30 BC 33 - AD 17
Week 31 AD 17 - AD 67
Week 32 AD 67 - AD 117
Week 33 AD 117 - AD 167
Week 34 AD 167 - AD 217
Week 35 AD 217- AD 267
Week 36 AD 267 - AD 317
Week 37 AD 317 - AD 367
Week 38 AD 367 - AD 417
Week 39 AD 417 - AD 467
Week 40 AD 467 - AD 517
Week 41 AD 517 - AD 567
Week 42 AD 567 - AD 617
Week 43 AD 617 - AD 667
Week 44 AD 667 - AD 717
Week 45 AD 717 - AD 767
Week 46 AD 767 - AD 817
Week 47 AD 817 - AD 867
Week 48 AD 867 - AD 917
Week 49 AD 917 - AD 967
Week 50 AD 967 - AD 1017
Week 51 AD 1017 - AD 1067
Week 52 AD 1067 - AD 1117
Week 53 AD 1117 - AD 1167
Week 54 AD 1167 - AD 1217
Week 55 AD 1217 - AD 1267
Week 56 AD 1267 - AD 1317
Week 57 AD 1317 - AD 1367
Week 58 AD 1367 - AD 1417
Week 59 AD 1417 - AD 1467
Week 60 AD 1467 - AD 1517
Week 61 AD 1517 - AD 1567
Week 62 AD 1567 - AD 1617
Week 63 AD 1617 - AD 1667
Week 64 AD 1667 - AD 1717
Week 65 AD 1717 - AD 1767
Week 66 AD 1767 - AD 1817.
Week 67 AD 1817 - AD 1867
Week 68 AD 1867 - AD 1917
Week 69 AD 1917 - AD 1967
Week 70 AD 1967 - AD 2017
You’ll see that the seventieth week began the year we got Jerusalem back. It ended the year Trump declared Jerusalem the capital of Israel again. This was the same year of the Great American solar eclipse….where God declared he was done with this nation.
The church has gotten it so very wrong. A day is a year, and a week is a 50 year jubilee cycle, for a grand total of 3500 years. I have this whole timeline on my channel. The church is so very deceived.
ohhhh "sure"... it shows that you have "studied" the Bible "a lot"... The rapture has been announced since the old testament jjjajajaja
Some of what happened in the first century was siilart to end time prophecies, but most of the prophecies weren't fulfilled then, proving that was a mere shadow of the end time. And when Israel starts building the tribulation, you need to understand that the real end is very near.
So then what of the future? If these things already happened, has Christ already returned?
Wrong!! Rapture theory was popularized in mid 1800's by Moody, Darby, & Scofield. For 1800 years the theory never exited..
Thank you for doing this series on dispensationalist theology. It is the theology I grew up with (and no longer believe while remaining a Christian). I remember being fascinated to the elaborate charts I would see in bookstores showing history and the end times. My Scofield is still sitting on the shelf behind me now with my collection of translations. These videos clarify for me why it no long made sense.
Essentially, premillennial dispensationalism says that Jesus's mission failed, and He has to come back to assert Himself by force. If Jesus taught the truth, I can't believe it could fail so spectacularly.
Those charts are very confusing. The Gospel is simple and easy. A free gift.
I thought I had a pretty good sense of where these ideas came from, but this video set me straight in more ways than one! As always, scholarship is king!
@@comparedtowhat2719 Well there's a lot of pretentious laziness on this platform so it's good to give credit when it's really due
I think I worked through a Bible study book by D. L. Moody as a youth, so that was a surprise, though not as surprising as hearing about John Piper pushing back against it.
Personally, I always found it kind of strange that after allowing believers to live through both peace and suffering through the ages, God would then specifically take them away for a particular series of events. Quite convenient for those who don’t have to live through the Tribulation though.
I’ll leave two quotes:
‘The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.’
‘My power is made perfect in weakness.’
Here are a few more paraphrased quotes to ponder: I go (to Heaven) to prepare a place for you and will come receive you (there); and repent and pray always to escape everything that's coming and stand before me; and I will keep you from the time of testing that's coming on everyone on earth.
Reading these comments it is simultaneously sad and reassuring that so many others had Rapture anxiety growing up. It was terrible 'knowledge' to be burdened with as a young teenager.
If my parents left me with a sitter when I was young, I would have full-blown panic attacks.
You were all tortured by the fear that you MIGHT go through the great tribulation, but now you're calmed by the thought that you WILL go through it?
This is what Paul wrote in 1 Thessalonians 5.
"For you yourselves are fully aware that the day of the Lord will come like a thief in the night. While people are saying, “There is peace and security,” then sudden destruction will come upon them as labor pains come upon a pregnant woman, and they will not escape."
The harpazo is what removes the faithful from this coming judgment.
@biblehistoryscience3530 I can't speak for the others but I no longer believe in any tribulation; I'm not a Christian.
@cammus1249 , so you must not believe that prophecies are coming to pass, like Israel returning to the Land? Then there is the Matt 24 set of prophecies Jesus called the "beginning of sorrows" that includes racial and international strife, while there is famine, pandemics and earthquakes. I mention those because they're all in the news at the moment.
And the icing on the cake before the rapture will be seen when Jews get religious about the Law of Moses again, and Israel starts building a new temple (which will be used by the Antichrist not long after the rapture).
One thing I never understood is, if the rapture really happened, it would prove beyond a doubt the truth of one branch of evangelical Christianity. So wouldn't the rapture, realistically, lead to the conversion of those left behind? And wouldn't that be a bit of a problem for the Antichrist?
Not always. If conspiracy theory project blue beam is true. The rapture would be the best time to discredit christainity by including ww3, total blackout so mass loss of communications along with a fake alien invasion 😂. Far out oh ya! But maybe truth is stranger then fiction lol
This was the thing that struck me most about it. I think that it's probably that evangelical Christians find it inexplicable that people don't already believe evangelical Christianity, which feels obvious to them. So it seems to them that such people would continue not to believe.
@@godlaydying Makes sense. But then they might just as well stop trying to convert people.
Mass alien abduction. ⚡⚡
my theory is that the rapture has already occurred and a very small group of good people left but no-one noticed.
Kurt Vonnegut once wrote :" Let's be perfectly honest--for most people the end of the world can't come soon enough..."
I am ready to leave!
"Life is suffering." -The first Noble Truth of Buddhism.
Its actually The end of this earth age,
I have never believed in the rapture. It is not anywhere in the bible. The bible tells us that we will have to "endure to the end." If we are going to be "raptured" and removed from the tribulation, why would the bible tell us that we must endure to the end?
Thank you for doing this video. I really wish more people knew this information!
Having grown up catholic (serving as an Altar boy) in Germany it is genuinely interesting how different the denominations, worshipping the same God, really are and where they set their priorities. I think in all my 20 years i've NEVER heard anyone in our region preach about the end times or trying to calculate when the world would end.
I’m mid-trib and from my perspective, nobody could see the rapture in the Bible because the Catholic church adopted Augustin’s Amillennialism, and they controlled doctrine, and institutionalized education and printing. People only saw the rapture during the Reformation when everyone was once again allowed to read Bibles for themselves.
Most people trace the history of the rapture doctrine to John Darby in the 1820s, but _Dispensationalism Before Darby_ contains hundreds of archival records in which ideas that would later be labeled “Dispensationalism” and the “Rapture” were talked about in the early 1600s. And it’s no mere coincidence that this is when God’s word was once again getting into the hands of the masses.
@@biblehistoryscience3530 religeon seperates man from God. and as far as the rapture goes ... if it comes it comes ...and if not it doesnt ...one way or another we will all die!
@@johnnybgoode7983 , are you a Christian?
@@biblehistoryscience3530 absolutely
@johnnybgoode7983 , praise the Lord then, but the attitude “what will be will be” runs counter to the Lord’s warnings…
In Matt 24, Jesus described how terrible the great tribulation will be and what the world will be like at his appearance. It will be like in the days of Noah (people feasting and marrying and not knowing about imminent catastrophe), and at that time one will be taken and another left behind.
Then Jesus warned everyone to watch because we don’t know when he will appear, and Luke 21 spells it out more clearly. Jesus warned everyone to repent from sin, to watch and pray always to be accounted worthy to ESCAPE all the things that are coming and stand before him. So prepare.
And by the way, Revelation describes a totally different world at the Second Coming than the days of Noah in Matt 24. There will be billions of deaths, as wave after wave of supernatural wrath is poured out on earth, then Jesus comes at the end of God’s Wrath in 7 Bowls.
Always great to learn the scholar perspective of these texts. I was actually amazed when I meet people who used to fear being left behind. I really think is an awful fear to install in a child's brain.
This is FASCINATING!
I listened to this video in case some information, that hadnt heard before would be presented that would either confirm or contradict my understanding of this deceptive doctrine which has no basis in Scripture. I am SO GLAD I did!
Im going to have to listen again to this deep dive on the topic in order to commit some of what I learned to memory. This could be useful in future conversations on the topic.
Thank you, so much!
what you have chosen is deception and deny truth
so sad that you chose this , bad choice
@@Forseen-vm1qs Why do you say this? Do you believe in a pre-trib rapture?
@@leroyj3627 most folks will ask for a verse a verse that is simple , well consider a verse that says Jesus is a lamb , people that understand how he was a sacrificial lamb of sacrifice can relate to the verse that calls him a lamb ... Meaning they have had the conversation or a deep teaching on that topic
almost no preachers really teach the topic of harpazo fully , which is why people argue about when the rapture happens and almost no one actually teaches what will happen during the tribulation so the result is people that want the short version get a version that has had much info removed in order to make it a short version
When people compare things that only GOD can do to things that man does they won't get the full meaning , Revelation explains in more detail but it requires a deep thought process , consider someone tell you that Jesus was born in a manger in 2023 , well you know that cannot be true because it has already happened .. so learning what verse actually say in their original text reveals more
I grew up in a Pentecostal/Assembly of God/Church of God family. When I was about 8-10 years old I read a book called “Raptured” by evangelist Ernest Angley. It had graphic descriptions of the Tribulation with left behind Christians (how wack is that?) being told to recant under threat of being boiled alive in oil or drawn and quartered. Later our church showed a movie called “A Thief In the Night”. If I remember correctly it started off with a young mother going to her baby’s room and finding her gone, with her clothing and diaper left behind along with her husband missing. For most my early teen years I lived in constant fear of being “left behind.” I had recurring nightmares for years. I even panicked if I couldn’t get in touch with parents or friends. I think we should have a healthy fear of God and of going to hell but this theology is wrong.
It's the classic idea of not being enough, guilting you into following them and their kind. Have your own understanding and relationship, don't let special interests pressure you.
Wow you certainly need help, it is quite simple to understand all you need is a humble heart and the right help if you could trust me I am more than willing to help you best wishes Graham
@@grahamjones548 Thank you for the sentiment but I am more than fine now. I was a kid and impressionable and had not done much Bible study of my own as I was only a child. I was a victim of people who believed bad theology. I’ve forgiven them as I’m commanded to do, as even the preachers were poorly educated. I have been a deacon, Sunday School teacher, Bible study leader and am clear in my theology and doctrine now. God bless. 🙏🏼
@@andrewtrotter9023 quote---. I have been a deacon, Sunday School teacher, Bible study leader and am clear in my theology and doctrine now. God bless. 🙏🏼--unquote
Nope!! You are NOT!!!
>>>About the catholic church: Change the Sabbath"
Had she not such power, she could not have done that in which all modern religionists agree with her,- she could not have substituted the observance of Sunday, the first day of the week, for the observance of Saturday, the seventh day, a change for which there is no Scriptural authority."- "A Doctrinal Catechism," by Rev. Stephen Keenan, page 174.
"The Catholic Church of its own infallible authority created Sunday a holy day to take the place of the Sabbath of the old law."- Kansas City Catholic, Feb. 9, 1893.
"The Catholic Church, . . . by virtue of her divine mission, changed the day from Saturday to Sunday."- Catholic Mirror, official organ of Cardinal Gibbons, Sept. 23, 1893.
"Ques.- Which is the Sabbath day?
"Ans.- Saturday is the Sabbath day.
"Ques.- Why do we observe Sunday instead of Saturday?
"Ans.- We observe Sunday instead of Saturday because the Catholic Church, in the Council of Laodicea (A. D. 336), transferred the solemnity from Saturday to Sunday ."- "The Convert's Catechism of Catholic Doctrine," by Rev. Peter Geiermann, C. SS. R.., page 50, third edition, 1913, a work which received the "apostolic blessing" of Pope Pius X, Jan. 25, 1910.
What was done at the Council of Laodicea was but one of the steps by which the change or the Sabbath was effected.
>>>>Biblical Proof the seventh day (Saturday) IS the Sabbath
Matt 27:62 The next day, the one after Preparation Day.......
Mat 28:1 In the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week,
Mark 15:42 - It was Preparation Day (that is, the day before the Sabbath).
Mark 16:1-2 - When the Sabbath was over,
Mark 16:9 When Jesus rose early on the first day of the week
Luke 23:54 It was Preparation Day, and the Sabbath was about to begin
Luke 23:56 Then they went home and prepared spices and perfumes. But they rested on the Sabbath in obedience to the commandment.
Luke 24:1 On the first day of the week, very early in the morning, ....
John 19:31 Now since it was preparation day, in order that the bodies might not remain on the cross on the sabbath, for the sabbath day of that week was a solemn one,
John 19:42 because of the Jewish day of Preparation, since the tomb was close at hand, they laid Jesus there. 42 And so, because it was the day of preparation for the Jewish Passover
John 20:1 The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early,
>>>>FACTS"
--The ONLY day GOD RESTED ON--Seventh day!! Gen 2:1-3, EX 20:8-11
--The ONLY day GOD BLESSED--Seventh dayt---Gen 2:1-3, EX 20:8-11
--The ONLY day GOD SANCTIFIED--Seventh day--Gen 2:1-3, EX 20:8-11
--The ONLY day GOD NAMED--Seventh day--Sabbath--Isaiah 58:13
--The ONLY day GOD DECLARES as HIS HOLY DAY--Seventh day--Isaiah 58:13, Matthew 24:36-41
@@andrewtrotter9023 ZECHARIAH 13:8
And it shall come to pass that in all the land,” saith the Lord, “two parts therein shall be cut off and die, but the third shall be left therein.
Population of earth 7.888 in 2021.
2/3s equals----5.232 billion
>>8 And it shall come to pass, that in all the land, saith the Lord, two parts therein shall be cut off and die; but the third shall be left therein.
9 And I will bring the third part through the fire, and will refine them as silver is refined, and will try them as gold is tried: they shall call on my name, and I will hear them: I will say, It is my people: and they shall say, The Lord is my God.