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The title of the OP is the title of a documentary I watched today on Netflix. It had in it the account of one survivor that brought up a very frightening scenario.
A massive tornado tore through Joplin, MO in May of 2011. A town at the center of the Bible Belt. One of the persons filmed was gay, but also claimed to be Christian. And that is not where this OP is going. That is in God's hands. Someone (I don't remember his name or position) had been predicting that the world would end on a certain day in May, which happened to be before the day of this tornado. Much of Joplin was talking about this, mostly in derision and it was quite the butt of many a joke when the world didn't end on that day.
But to get to the point. This one person, I will call him Dale since I never registered his name, was caught sheltering in a diner when the tornado hit. Everything was destroyed around him, but he survived. It was a harrowing experience and during it he decided that this was the rapture (pre-trib, premil, rapture). He saw people rising up off the ground and going into the sky and disappearing. When the storm passed, he stood up and looked around at a world without trees or houses, just rubble, and an eerily colored sky in the wake of the storm. He was all alone. The only man standing. He sincerely and genuinely thought the rapture had occurred and God didn't take him because he was gay. He thought this for a long time, because he said he walked for miles, looking for his mother, believing she had been taken in the rapture. He only realized it wasn't the rapture when he did find her.
I try to imagine what that would feel like to find myself in any scene of such destruction and think the rapture had occurred and I was left standing, or that it was occurring while all around me was shattered to pieces. I can't. But what are we doing to our children when we teach them something that has no biblical soundness to it?
What we have in probably the majority of our churches today is that pre-trib, premil, rapture teaching. It is taught with authority and as an indisputable fact. It is supported by selective Bible passages isolated from the full counsel of God. No other possibilities are considered or examined. It is promoted by those we should be able to trust, famous preachers, J MacArthur and Hal Lindsey among them. This has been going on since Darby first brought it into the open in the 1830's. All generations since have been inundated with it. Generation after generation who knows nothing else. And we can see from what happened to "Dale" in the tornado, how deeply it sinks into the psyche of a person, so that removing it is next to impossible. It is as though their very Christianity depends centrally on that one belief. It is a hill they are willing to die on.
And as I said, there is no sound biblical support for it. If any wish to dispute that and give their sound biblical support you have the floor. But please don't use a quoted scripture here and another there, removing them from the surrounding context and the full counsel of God. And by the full counsel of God I mean, make sure they don't contradict anything else.
A massive tornado tore through Joplin, MO in May of 2011. A town at the center of the Bible Belt. One of the persons filmed was gay, but also claimed to be Christian. And that is not where this OP is going. That is in God's hands. Someone (I don't remember his name or position) had been predicting that the world would end on a certain day in May, which happened to be before the day of this tornado. Much of Joplin was talking about this, mostly in derision and it was quite the butt of many a joke when the world didn't end on that day.
But to get to the point. This one person, I will call him Dale since I never registered his name, was caught sheltering in a diner when the tornado hit. Everything was destroyed around him, but he survived. It was a harrowing experience and during it he decided that this was the rapture (pre-trib, premil, rapture). He saw people rising up off the ground and going into the sky and disappearing. When the storm passed, he stood up and looked around at a world without trees or houses, just rubble, and an eerily colored sky in the wake of the storm. He was all alone. The only man standing. He sincerely and genuinely thought the rapture had occurred and God didn't take him because he was gay. He thought this for a long time, because he said he walked for miles, looking for his mother, believing she had been taken in the rapture. He only realized it wasn't the rapture when he did find her.
I try to imagine what that would feel like to find myself in any scene of such destruction and think the rapture had occurred and I was left standing, or that it was occurring while all around me was shattered to pieces. I can't. But what are we doing to our children when we teach them something that has no biblical soundness to it?
What we have in probably the majority of our churches today is that pre-trib, premil, rapture teaching. It is taught with authority and as an indisputable fact. It is supported by selective Bible passages isolated from the full counsel of God. No other possibilities are considered or examined. It is promoted by those we should be able to trust, famous preachers, J MacArthur and Hal Lindsey among them. This has been going on since Darby first brought it into the open in the 1830's. All generations since have been inundated with it. Generation after generation who knows nothing else. And we can see from what happened to "Dale" in the tornado, how deeply it sinks into the psyche of a person, so that removing it is next to impossible. It is as though their very Christianity depends centrally on that one belief. It is a hill they are willing to die on.
And as I said, there is no sound biblical support for it. If any wish to dispute that and give their sound biblical support you have the floor. But please don't use a quoted scripture here and another there, removing them from the surrounding context and the full counsel of God. And by the full counsel of God I mean, make sure they don't contradict anything else.