So they continue to heaven as Jesus said? ( in mat 25, Rev 14, acts 1, mat 24, and the last supper dialogue)As I said, a near timeless upward movement is hardly travel as in a "U Turn." Your characterization is wrong-headed, in my opinion.
So they continue to heaven as Jesus said? ( in mat 25, Rev 14, acts 1, mat 24, and the last supper dialogue)As I said, a near timeless upward movement is hardly travel as in a "U Turn." Your characterization is wrong-headed, in my opinion.
So they continue to heaven as Jesus said?
Many years ago perry stone uncovered that same dynamic.You have flipped it. "left" means to be rejected and left to die according to the Greek word used. You spin it into something positive, going against the Greek meaning of the word.
The taken are the ones taken in the rapture and the ones left are left to suffer and die in the wrath of God.
My point was that this was not to be characterized as a time consuming journey. That is how "U Turn" would be used, as if you went on a journey in one direction, and then suddenely had to do a "U Turn," turn around and come back.
This isn't how it will take place, and that's not how I've depicted it. In an instant the saints will be called to appear with Christ as he descends from heaven. That is not to be depicted as a "U Turn" unless you wish to mock it.
1) yes he does kill all refusing the mark
Without question.
2)Rev 14 is not going away.
How do you think you made it go away?
Many years ago perry stone uncovered that same dynamic.
He was debating that "taken and left" in the Greek.
The conclusion was as you are stating.
Good find.
Not mocking.
It is you that seems to be reframing the postrib position.
Do they return to earth from the sky or not?
Matt 24 and 25 has those left behind.If no saint goes through the trib, who is being killed?
Matt 24 and 25 has those left behind.
Postrib rapture starting place is " anti pretrib rapture"
A very bad starting place
Except Jesus prophesied mat 24 as future.Both the "taken" and the "left" are Jews who are being judged for rejecting Christ and remaining in Jerusalem to defy Rome. Some are taken to their death or into exile. Those "left" are left to manage agricultural fields for Roman soldiers. It is *all* judgment. There is no Rapture in this, in my opinion.
You will, incidentally, find the same principle in previous judgments of God in the Bible. When Assyria or Babylon came against Israel the same thing happened. Many were deported or killed. But a few were always left to act as slaves in their own fields, to produce food for their captors.
All that error of those times, and that is your foundation.That is patently false. Postrib is the traditional rendering of the Church, far, far before there was any such thing as Pretribulationism!
I'm not post trib, but why would non-Christians refuse the mark?Matt 24 and 25 has those left behind.
Of course they are killed for refusing the mark.
Millions of them.
The church age ends .
Jacob's trouble begins.
Exactly as Romans 11 declares
The 7 yr trib is Jacob's trouble, Israel's trouble.
Hosea illustrates God repurchasing the wife gone awhoring...Israel. the covenant people.
Without Hosea, Ruth, and romans 11, we will never unpack end times.
There are all sorts of "starting places".
Postrib rapture starting place is " anti pretrib rapture"
A very bad starting place
Except Jesus prophesied mat 24 as future.
He referred to Daniel and some was "near future" and some pointed to a distant future of a coming trib and Antichrist.
But Jesus sealed it as in our future as , "trib such as the world has never seen or ever will"
Modern slaughters far outweigh ad 70.
All that error of those times, and that is your foundation.
You are depicting your position as legitimate and authenticated by men.
..as is every false doctrine of the past!
Not me.
You never see me seeking the approval of men.
A bible and a cup of coffee.
So where was earth's population gathered preflood?
The Son returns in Rev 19.
That is postrib return.
You are trying to place the rapture there.
All rapture verses are normal life and commerce....which is opposite your chaos, horror and murder setting.
But the AC kills all refusing the mark.
Are you thinking the rapture is Jesus coming for 20 people in bunkers?
Many years ago perry stone uncovered that same dynamic.
He was debating that "taken and left" in the Greek.
The conclusion was as you are stating.
Good find.
◄ 3880. paralambanó ►Both the "taken" and the "left" are Jews who are being judged for rejecting Christ and remaining in Jerusalem to defy Rome. Some are taken to their death or into exile. Those "left" are left to manage agricultural fields for Roman soldiers. It is *all* judgment. There is no Rapture in this, in my opinion.
You will, incidentally, find the same principle in previous judgments of God in the Bible. When Assyria or Babylon came against Israel the same thing happened. Many were deported or killed. But a few were always left to act as slaves in their own fields, to produce food for their captors.
After Jesus says, "I tell you, on that night...one will be taken and the other left...," they ask, "Where, Lord?" and He answered, "Wherever there is a carcass, there the vultures will gather."◄ 3880. paralambanó ►
Lexiconparalambanó: To take, to receive, to take along, to accept
Original Word: παραλαμβάνω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: paralambanó
Pronunciation: pah-rah-lahm-BAH-no
Phonetic Spelling: (par-al-am-ban'-o)
KJV: receive, take (unto, with)
NASB: took, received, take, taken, receive, took along, tookaside
Word Origin: [from G3844 (παρά - than) and G2983 (λαμβάνω - receive)]
1. to receive near, i.e. associate with oneself (in any familiar or intimate act or relation)
2. (by analogy) to assume an office
3. (figuratively) to learn
Truly a pretrib rapture.
the one taken is to a good place as a groom takes his bride.what a coincidence.
◄ 3880. paralambanó ►
Lexiconparalambanó: To take, to receive, to take along, to accept
Original Word: παραλαμβάνω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: paralambanó
Pronunciation: pah-rah-lahm-BAH-no
Phonetic Spelling: (par-al-am-ban'-o)
KJV: receive, take (unto, with)
NASB: took, received, take, taken, receive, took along, tookaside
Word Origin: [from G3844 (παρά - than) and G2983 (λαμβάνω - receive)]
1. to receive near, i.e. associate with oneself (in any familiar or intimate act or relation)
2. (by analogy) to assume an office
3. (figuratively) to learn
Truly a pretrib rapture.
the one taken is to a good place as a groom takes his bride.what a coincidence.
After Jesus says, "I tell you, on that night...one will be taken and the other left...," they ask, "Where, Lord?" and He answered, "Wherever there is a carcass, there the vultures will gather."
How does this sound like a good place to be taken?