I just supplied (in my Post #88 of this thread - https://christianchat.com/threads/revelation-a-cyclical-view.214798/post-5288040 ) a LINK to a previous post I'd made (Post #2594 in a different thread) at which post I provided the ACTUAL QUOTES by a writer who existed A HUNDRED YEARS BEFORE Darby, who [ALSO] SPLIT the timing of our Rapture from that of His Second Coming... (did you read those quotes?)
I can't help that "Norton" (or whoever) was unaware of that [previous] 1744 writer (Morgan Edwards). = )
[see the post at the LINK to my Post #2594... quoting the writer in 1744, a HUNDRED YEARS earlier ]
I can't help that "Norton" (or whoever) was unaware of that [previous] 1744 writer (Morgan Edwards). = )
[see the post at the LINK to my Post #2594... quoting the writer in 1744, a HUNDRED YEARS earlier ]
I appreciate the post. I did read the post previously but didn’t notice the additional link at the bottom that mentioned the Morgan Edwards writings. It does seem that he posits a rapture and return of Christ with the Church after 3.5 years. While I suppose that technically, this does ”split” the time of the rapture, it still isn’t describing what Darby and McDonald refer to when they discuss the rapture.
In my opinion, after reading the material, there is a reason the authors I quoted refer to the first account of the “secret rapture” occurring in the 1830s. Perhaps others spoke of a separation in time at the Second Coming (which I will concede that Robert Norton who transcribed her vision was inaccurate about this being the first separation account), this is very different from the notion that Christ would come and only be seen by the Church. That is what is referred to by the “secret rapture.” The entire “left behind” notion is the idea that Christ’s Second Coming is invisible. That is what is spoken of by the vision of the young girl and the eschatological stance of Darby. So, I still stand by my statement that “no one ever conceived of a ‘secret rapture’ prior to the 1800s” and I find it striking that Darby’s views mirror this concept from the girl’s vision.
Yet, I think we are missing the forest from the trees. My original point was that this eschatological view was completely foreign to the Church for 1800 years. So even if we say there were some earlier elements in the 1700s, I think it is striking that no one for 1700 years ever looked at the biblical text and interpreted the Second Coming in this way. It doesn’t mean it’s wrong, but I just think it is odd that people will act as if my interpretation of Revelation is so foreign when no Christian for 17 centuries ever understood the book the way most who dismiss my views so harshly.
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