My point to the other poster was about spiritualizing Scripture, which is basically just making stuff up to prove what you believe.
For example, Matt 25 has a parable about 10 virgins and a wedding. The poster spiritualizes the parable into "proving" a pretrib rapture.
iow, spiritualizers equate what Scripture mentions to mean something totally unrelated to the text itself.
I've always been interested in WHY people believe what they believe. So I'm always looking for Scripture that actually says what they claim/believe to see if they have actual support for their belief.
For example, Matt 25 has a parable about 10 virgins and a wedding. The poster spiritualizes the parable into "proving" a pretrib rapture.
iow, spiritualizers equate what Scripture mentions to mean something totally unrelated to the text itself.
I've always been interested in WHY people believe what they believe. So I'm always looking for Scripture that actually says what they claim/believe to see if they have actual support for their belief.
God convicted me that I should ignore others, and just focus on what the black and white message in the Bible is. Some pretty outstanding Christians sometimes err in matters that aren't central to their ministry. But I should focus on what God is telling me in the clearest, most unambiguous way.
I'm not saying we should ignore commentators or those expert in these matters. I'm just saying that some pretty spiritual people can get outside of their area of expertise, and lead us astray. We need to be on guard against making people little gods.
So when I look for a teaching in the Bible on the endtimes, I look for the blueprint, the origin of the doctrine, and its development in several biblical authors. And I follow the black and white message that uses the same words consistently from one messenger to another. We get bored, and want a novel message, or prefer to avoid argument and try to find a middle ground.
Bad idea! We need to believe that God is saying in crystal clear terms. As Walter Martin used to say--God doesn't have a speech impediment. He doesn't even lisp. He spells out exactly what He wants us to know. We don't have to solve puzzles. When He wants to say something, He says it several times, and is quite blunt, and may even give several examples.
We shouldn't look for the weird isolated verses that we may take wrong. It's okay to try to figure them out. But the things we should focus on are the things God makes of a higher priority, by repeating them over and over. I can't say this enough.
Postrib is plainly taught in 2 Thes 2. Paul says that Christ can't come for the Church until the Antichrist is revealed, and destroyed. That is clear. And it originated, in its language, from Dan 7, where the Son of Man comes from the clouds to destroy Antichrist. And this language is used consistently by all of the NT authors who dealt with it. It is the very language used in the book of Revelation.
Since it's this unmistakable, we shouldn't fear that great men have taught Pretrib. It was their obsession, but certainly not their "cup of tea." They should've left alone what they didn't understand.
But if God shows something to you, you should believe it, and not doubt it. The Holy Spirit can be very, very clear. It's our doubt that makes things hard to decipher. Or perhaps we just pray and lose patience? Until we see clearly, we should be very humble about it!
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