Major Rapture Terms and Passages
OVERVIEW
What are the major New Testament terms and passages that support the pretribulational rapture? This writer overviews all the New Testament terms relating to the coming of the Lord and shows how they are used. He also examines the major passages that teach the rapture in the New Testament, discovers their meaning, and shows the similarities between the passages. This produces a solid support for the pretribulational rapture as you are im-pacted by the weight of this collection of New Testament passages. Maranatha!
Believers of every generation have had a longing for Jesus Christ's return. This
"coming" of the Lord was considered the blessed anticipation-that Jesus would come back to earth and end all human sorrow. And after a general resurrection and judge-ment, Christ would initiate a new heaven and a new earth, even eternity itself. Though few could explain the details of how the Lord would come back, this second coming was voiced by nearly all Christians.
With the resurgence of the study of Bible prophecy at the begin- fling of the nineteenth century, students of the prophetic Word noticed something about 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

How did this Pauline prophecy fit with Jesus coming back to judge the nations here on earth? Where do the scriptural statements about resurrection and judgment fit? And what about the new heaven and earth? How is this passage reconciled with the idea of a so-called millennium, the possible restoration of the Jews, and the church as the kingdom?
Most of the great amillennial scholars ignored the idea that 1 Thessalonians 4 could be any different from other passages that teach about "the coming" (parousia) of Christ. In fact, to them the word parousia seemed to sum up the doctrine of only one return of Jesus.
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, scholars of prophecy became more keenly aware of studying eschatological passages with greater attention to solid hermeneutics. This led to a better under- standing about: 1) how God providentially worked differently in various ages of biblical history; 2) how the end of history had a larger prophetic scheme of things than originally thought; and, 3) how important a role interpreting by context played in compre- hending the full scope of prophetic truth.
In time it became more clear to some that, by contextual study, the coming of Christ to "rapture" away the church saints was an entirely different event than was His coming to judge sinners and to rule and reign for a thousand years. As well, many of the great Bible teachers of that period were able to see that both events were to be taken as distinct literal, historic comings and could not simply be spiritualized away. Even today it is appropriate to ask
Mal Couch
certain questions. How can we be certain of this difference when we read a given prophetic passage that speaks of Christ coming again? How do we know if it is a rapture passage or if the verses are referring to the second coming of our Lord to rule worldwide for a thousand years in Jerusalem?
This chapter will deal with the distinctive of rapture passages, and it will classify the common factors that bind these passages together. There are truths that seem to tie these rapture verses into common units of thinking, though some of the elements may also appear in passages and contexts that deal with the second coming of Christ. Though not all of the similar elements may prove the doc-trine of the rapture, there are links that carry strong and convincing arguments that cannot be simply overlooked nor dismissed.
By studying contexts, it can be shown that there are two distinct resurrections. There is the resurrection for "those in Christ," who will be taken to glory before the terrible Tribulation begins. And there is a raising of the Old Testament saints and the Tribulation martyred believers to enjoy the blessings of the Lord's one-thousand-year literal kingdom reign.
Just what are those common factors which act as indicators and pointers that can be discovered in all rapture verses? Below are 11 categories that help classify the key elements in such passages. While other categories may be found by other scholars, we believe these are the most obvious. And of the verses listed, only one has less than five of the common categories! After listing the categories, we will look at them more in depth.
• RESURRECTION. Though the resurrection is mentioned in second coming passages, these verses and sections of verses reveal certain special elements when they prophesy about those who will be coming forth from the grave. 1 Corinthians 15:23- 24




• HOPE AND COMFORT. These passages tell of a particular hope and comfort, because believers in Christ will be caught away to be at home in heaven with their Lord. John 14:1-3









• THE CHANGE. A new body is given to both those who are resurrected as well as to those who are alive but who will suddenly be transformed so that they can go home to be with the Lord in heaven. 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18





• A RETURN TO HEAVEN. John 14:1-3







• TAKEN DIRECTLY BY THE LORD HIMSELF or, INTIMATELY FACING CHRIST AT HIS COMING. John 14:1-3











• LIVING GODLY BECAUSE HE Is COMING. James 5:7-9







• THE PRONOUNS WE, YOU, AND Us AS A PROOF THAT THE RAPTURE COULD HAVE HAPPENED TO PAUL'S Own GENERA-TION. John 14:1-3















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• THE USE OF THE TECHNICAL TERM PAROUSIA TO DESCRIBE THE RAPTURE. James 5:7-8









• OTHER EXPRESSIONS USED FOR THE COMING. John 14:1-3








• BEING TAKEN TO THE FATHER. John 14:1-3



• THOSE IN CHRIST OR ALLUSIONS TO THE CHURCH. 1 Thessalonians 2:17-19

4:13-18; 5:1-11; 2 Thessalonians 2:1-2




The Rapture and Resurrection
The Living and the Resurrected Saints Caught Up Together
What makes the resurrection as mentioned with the rapture any different from the resurrection at Christ's second coming? The resurrection related to the rapture has to do with "the dead in Christ," or "those in Him." This is specifically referring to the church saints, those who have become a part of the spiritual body of Christ in this dispensation.
Four distinct passages link the resurrection of church saints to the rapture. In the most all-inclusive rapture passage, 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

But we do not want you to be uninformed .... about those who are asleep... (v. 13). God will bring with Him those who have fallen asleep in Jesus (v. 14). The Lord Himself will descend... and the dead in Christ shall rise first (v. 16). Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air... (v. 17 NASB).
The Thessalonians church seems to have been concerned about the death of those who had accepted Christ as Savior. "Will they live again?" "When will they be raptured?" These questions had not been answered and they were grieving as the pagans who had no guarantees about an afterlife (v. 13). The Thessalonians are answered as they are informed that those believers who have died will in no way miss out on the blessing of the Lord's coming.
And from the Greek text Paul adds: "In no way, not even, should we proceed the ones who have been put to sleep" (v. 15). The word "proceed" (phthasomen) has with it a double negative that carries the force of an extra emphatic, "We should absolutely not proceed those who have been put to sleep!" This becomes a Greek idiom which effectively takes away any apprehension about the dead in Christ being left.1 This idiom has the sense of an emphatic future, i.e. "when the time comes this is the sequence of events."2 The dead in Christ shall rise first (v. 16).
Those Awake and Asleep Will Live Together With Christ
In 1 Thessalonians 5:1

"them," the lost. They are in [spiritual] darkness, and they will not escape the terror which will overtake them like a thief (vv. 3-4).
In verses 5:9-10 Paul comes back to the issue of the rapture he began writing about in 4:13-17. In verse 10 he summarizes and restates the fact that both those who are asleep (the dead in Christ) and those awake will live together with Jesus:
Whether we are found among the living or the dead when he comes... This was designed to calm their minds in their trials, and to correct an error which seems to have prevailed in the belief that those who were found alive when he should return would have some priority over those who were dead.3
From the Greek text, verse 10 would read:
[Christ] died for us, in order that whether we should right now be fully awake or whether we should right now be sleeping, we shall in the future, [and] all at once at the same time, be alive together with Him (author's translation).
The expression "in the future... be alive"4 prophetically sees the resurrected saints in Christ and those raptured believers together someday living with Him. The force of the verb could also mean "now and forever we shall live with Him."5 And the expression "all at once at the same time" sheds even more light on this resurrection and the rapture. Actually, this represents two expressions joined together "Together with" (hama) and "with Him" (sun auto). Barnes interprets this: "Those who are alive and those who are dead-meaning that they would be together or would be with the Lord at the same time; "6 Hendricksen adds: "Those who are awake are those who are alive, the survivors, the ones who according to 4:15 are 'left until the coming of the Lord'."7
Two Resurrections or More?
Even some of the older Bible scholars who would not be accepting of a dispensational rapture see two resurrections in 1 Corinthians 15:23-24

To explain, each [will be resurrected] in his own order: Christ the first fruits, next after that, those [believers] who belong to Christ at His coming, after this, [will come] the consummation whenever [Christ] [in the future] will be handing over the kingdom to the God and Father, [including] whenever He abolishes all rule and all authority and power (author's translation).
"The whole context is governed by" in Christ... made alive.8 Dispensationally, verse 23 clearly has the church saints in mind and is not describing Jesus' coming to reign over Israel as the Son of Man nor His coming to judge the world. He is returning to take the church. Since the kingdom is unquestionably separated in verse 24 from verse 23, the rapture resurrection is the only explanation for this passage.
Ellicott's Commentary notes:
There is to be a sequence in the resurrection of the dead, and St. Paul explains this by the three groups: 1) Christ Himself, the first fruits; 2) the faithful in Christ [emphasis mine] at His coming; 3) all the rest of mankind at the end, when the final judgment takes place. The interval between these two as to its duration, or where or how it will be spent, is not spoken of here. The only point the Apostle has to treat of is the order of the resurrection.9
Alford writes:
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... the resurrection of the rest of the dead, here veiled over by the general term to telos [the end]-that resurrection not being in this argument specially treated, but only that of Christians [emphasis mine] .... It ought to be needless to remind the student of the distinction between this parousia [the coming for those in Christ] and the final judgment; it is here peculiarly important to bear in mind.10
Robertson and Plummer also believe this passage is open to be interpreted as Christ coming exclusively for His own, the church saints, as separate from another coming in which He raises other dead:
Of these tagamata [each in his own order] there are two, clearly marked, in the present passage; Christ, who has already reached the goal of Resurrection; and Christ's Own [the church], who will reach it when He comes again. Perhaps St. Paul is thinking of a third tagama [order], some time before the End. But throughout the passage, the unbelievers and the wicked are quite in the background, if they are thought of at all.11
Christ's own, the church saints who have died, are still waiting for the resurrection. 12 This passage shows a sequence in the unfolding of the final events concerning that resurrection. Since Paul was addressing the church, he was not concerned with detailing all future resurrections. He concentrated instead on the present church saints who are asleep and their place in the scheme of things.
Hope and Comfort
Almost all of the rapture passages speak of the blessing of the Lord's return for His own, or more specifically, the return of Jesus Christ to take His children home to heaven. This is the hope and comfort! And it is a different scenario than that of Jesus coming back to judge the earth, to reign and rule as Messiah. In fact a key to most rapture passages is this "going home" joy and anticipation!
Going Home!
In John 14:1-3

Let not the heart of each of you be disturbed. All of you together are believing in God, in the same way, all of you continue to trust in Me. In My Father's house are many dwelling places, but if not, I would have told you; because I go to prepare a room for you [to live in]. And if I am going and prepare a room for you, I will be coming again and take you along [to my own home], that where I am, I and you [together]! (author's translation).
The hope and comfort in this passage is stated in a kind of a negative, "Let not the heart be disturbed." The reason: Christ is going to prepare a place for them, and He will come again for them and receive them to Himself. This is a rapture passage because it is implied that His coming could have taken place while they were alive. Though death could overtake them (as it did), their new bodies would be taken home by the resurrection at the time of the rapture.
The Father's "house" (oikos) could not be the location of the earthly kingdom in which Jesus will reign. Jesus would be going soon, in the historical context of His death, to His Father's house. He will come for His own and take them back to a location He has prepared. Thus it is a specific and personal promise concerning the new dispensation of the church that
would soon replace the dispensation of law. Jesus is not saying that His disciples will simply die and go to the Father's house (though that would be true of their souls if they died before He came for them). Therefore, His coming for them must refer either to the rapture while they are living or the bodily resurrection that takes place simultaneously. "The dead in Christ shall rise first. Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and thus we shall always be with the Lord" (1 Thess. 4:16b- 17 NASB

Waiting Steadfastly
James 5:7-9


Be waiting steadfastly then, until the time of the visitation (parousia) arrives. Behold, the farmer waits for the precious fruit of the ground, waiting patiently concerning it,.. . You too, be waiting steadfastly, firmly stabilize your emotions, because the visitation of the Lord has progressively been drawing near (author's translation).
The phrase "be waiting steadfastly" refers to patience and forbearance.13 In the illustration of the farmer, it is said he also "waits." This verb (ekdechetai) has the idea of "eager expectation." 14James urges his readers not only to wait eagerly with expectation for the Lord's coming but also to "firmly stabilize your emotions (kardia)."
This rapture passage gives confidence and hope despite persecutions falling on the early church. The farmer waits hopefully for the refreshing rains that herald the coming of new crops. So believers can look for the Lord coming for them. Barnes writes, "In due time, as [the farmer] expects the return of the rain, so you may anticipate deliverance from your trials." 15
Rescued from the Coming Wrath
First Thessalonians 1:9-10

You turned.. . to presently be serving a living and true God, and to presently be eagerly waiting for His Son from the heavens, whom [God] raised from the dead, Jesus, who [will be] dragging (rescuing) us [to Him- self] from the wrath which is coming! (author's translation).
The verb "be eagerly waiting" (anamenö) is given intensity with the preposition ana. And, it has a continual or linear idea, "to keep on waiting." 16 On this hopeful anticipation Hendricksen adds:
The force of the verb to wait must not be lost sight of. It means to look forward to with patience and confidence .... It implies (both in Greek and in English) being ready for his return .... The thought of His coming does not spell terror for the believer . ... For it is this Jesus who rescues (is rescuing) us from the wrath to come (the coming wrath).17
Barnes says:
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The hope of his return to our world to raise the dead, and to convey his ransomed to heaven, is the brightest and most cheering prospect that dawns on man, and we should be ready, whenever it occurs, to hail him as our returning Lord, and to rush to his arms as our glorious Redeemer. 18
Our Hope When He Comes
Paul writes in 1 Thessalonians 2:17-19

Comforting One Another
In the most important central rapture passage (I Thessalonians 4:13-18

In verse 18, Paul exhorts the believers to find and give comfort in these words from the Lord about the rapture and the accompanying resurrection. At its root the word "comfort" (parakaleo) can mean to "call alongside" or "counsel." "Likewise, be counseling one another by these words." The present tense and active voice in Greek are used to emphasize that they need to be comforting each other right now and until the Lord comes. This is an exercise in faith in order to recognize the certainty of ultimate triumph.20
After writing about the Day of the Lord (5:2) and the wrath to come (5:9), the apostle again concludes with the same command to comfort one another because God will not put His own through these days of horror that will come on the world. From the Greek text, Paul writes in 5:11:
Therefore, be continually comforting one another and building up one another, even
as [I know] you presently are doing (author's translation).
Some believers had fallen asleep in Jesus (4:14-15). Some will be alive when the
rapture takes place (4:17), and they will assuredly miss the terrible Day of the Lord that is coming on the earth (5:9). Thus, the larger hope is that we will be with our Savior whether by the rapture or by resurrection. Comforting words indeed!
The Day of the Lord Has Not Come
Most believe 2 Thessalonians 2:1

Now I am begging you, brothers, concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ
even [concerning] our gathering together up to Him... (author's translation). A.T. Robertson sees the entire verse as "referring to the rapture, mentioned in 1
Thessalonians 4:15-17

Paul gives comfort by using two negatives: "Do not totter or waver" (saleuo) in [your] mind, nor "be terrified" (throeô), to the effect that the Day of the Lord has come (v. 2). As A.T. Robertson has already noted, Paul is indeed referring back to the rapture in 1 Thessalonians 4:15-17

Christ's Resurrection Gives Hope
In the larger context of 1 Corinthians 15, Paul argues that we have no hope if Jesus was not raised from the dead. "Those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished, if we have hoped in Christ in this life only, we are of all men most to be pitied" (15:18-19 NASB). The apostle then gives the great assurance to church saints: "in Christ all shall be made alive" (v. 22 NASB). And following Christ's resurrection comes the resurrection of the believers at the rapture, "after that [the resurrection of Jesus] those who are Christ's at His coming" (v. 23 NASB). "As He promised (John 14:2-3


In 15:49, Paul continues his anthem of hope in regard to the resurrection, "as we have borne the image of the earthly, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly." He follows this with the hopeful declaration: "Behold, I am telling you something not before revealed, we shall not all be put to sleep, however, we shall all be changed, in a moment, at a blink of an eye, with the last trumpet; for the trumpet will sound, and the dead ones will be raised imperishable, and we shall all be changed" (15:51-52, author's translation).
These verses truly express a hope and comfort. Saying "behold," the apostle uses a forceful exclamatory to point the reader's attention to a "momentous revelation... to which he calls our earnest attention."23 This is an "emphatic introduction of information of great moment."24 Paul twice says "we shall be changed" (allassö) at some point in the future. This word has the force of "to alter," or in other contexts, "change the customs."25 As well, "to take a new position, one thing for another, to alternate."26
Because of the unique dispensation of the church, and the fact that living believers in Christ will be changed and translated before the coming wrath, Paul proclaims with great joy this blessed "new" revelation. "That [Paul] did not refer only to those whom he was then addressing, is apparent from the whole discussion. The argument relates to Christians-to the church at large."27
A New Citizenship
One of Paul's most hopeful proclamations is found in the Greek of Philippians 3:20-21

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welcome] a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will alter the configuration of our body [that has] a limitation" (author's translation).
Here Paul declares our heavenly citizenship and the future transformation of our humble (abased, limited) body. He adds: "we are waiting expectantly (apekdechomai) for a Savior." This word can mean "receive, welcome." 28 Paul includes himself in that anticipation. Alford puts it this way: "We wait for, expect, till the event arrives.... 29 "Paul's heart is in heaven. We wait for.... vividly pictures Paul's eagerness for the... coming of Christ as the normal attitude of the Christian colonist whose home is heaven."30
Great Expectations!
Paul almost shouts his excitement about the possibility of the rapture in Titus 2:13

"Excitedly expecting continually" is often translated simply "looking for" (,prosdechomai) in some versions. And indeed, the present tense makes this "expecting" a continual hope. "This expectation [is] an abiding state and posture."31 But the word also has the force of "welcome, wait for, expect."32 The "blessed hope" might be translated "the joyous anticipation." There is no question about this "expectation." It is going to come about, and it produces within a great joyousness that looks forward to ultimate redemption. "This describes the great expectancy which is the ruling and prevailing thought in the lives of men looking for their Lord's return."33
Having Confidence When He Comes
Christ could reveal Himself by the rapture at any time. The apostle John continues the thoughts of Paul in his personal love letter, 1 John. In two different contexts he speaks of "confidence" and hope in regard to Jesus' coming. From the Greek text he writes:
However, now [I want you to specifically] keep on sticking with Him, so that whenever He should be revealed, we might have confidence, and not shrink away from Him in shame at His coming (2:28). We shall be like-ones with Him, because we shall see Him as He is. And everyone who is having this anticipation on Him, is purifying himself, as that One is [existing as] pure! (3:2b).
Sometimes "confidence" (parousia) can be translated "joyousness," "courage," or "boldness."34 By using "we" John implies that even he himself may be alive when Jesus comes and that his generation of believers may not have to die. He also encourages them to live the Christian experience close to Jesus, lest they are ashamed at His appearance. John is not referring to a post-resurrection experience but something that could happen while he is alive
In 3:2, John declares that when a believer "anticipates" or "hopes" for the Lord's return it produces a purifying effect within. "One who sets his hope by faith on the Son of God experiences an inward purification that is as complete as Christ's own purity."35
The Change
When the rapture takes place, believers will instantly receive a new, glorified body like Christ's, and the resurrection of those asleep in Jesus takes place. This "change" really affects both the living and the dead, in order that they may be brought into the very presence of the living God and His Son. By implication Paul first addresses this in 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

Meeting the Lord In the Air
It is clear the dead in Christ could not be raised (4:16) and that we who are alive could not "be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air" (4:17 NASB) unless we had glorified bodies. The apostle seals this issue with his conclusion, "Thus we shall always be with the Lord" (v. 17 NASB).
We May Live Together with Him
Since believers in Christ are not destined for the wrath (5:9) but are to obtain salvation through His sacrifice, they are raptured to "live together with Him" (5: l0b NASB). This thought continues the fact that Christians must be changed in order to exist with the Lord.
Those Who Belong to Christ
After thoroughly explaining the need for the resurrection (1 Cor. 15:12-21

We shall not all sleep [physically die], but we shall all be changed .... The dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed. For this perishable must put on the imperishable, and this mortal must put on immortality (vv. 51b, 52b-53 NASB).
In Greek the word "change" (allasso) can mean "to take a new position, one thing for another, to alternate."36
Conforming Our Body
From the Greek, Philippians 3:21

The word "alter," often translated "transform" (metaschamatizö) can literally mean to "alter the schematics." Jesus will "turn about" our present body into something new! The word can mean to "change the form of a person or thing, to be changed in form, change configuration, change of position or posture."37 "Limitation" is often translated "humble state" (tapeinoseos). The word can mean "to lower, reduce, to humble, abase, a lessening."38 Paul is speaking about a body that is now less than "the body of His glory." It is earthly, natural, fleshly, perishable (1 Cor. 15). Sin controls, condemns, and brings about a groaning for
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release. Thus, we groan "within ourselves, waiting eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our body" (Rom. 8:23 NASB

The word "together-forming," often translated "conformity" (summorphon), can literally mean "together-formed." Homer Kent writes:
The present body is described literally as "the body of lowliness"..., a description calling attention to its weakness and susceptibility to persecution, disease, sinful appetites, and death. At Christ's coming, however, the earthly, transient appearance will be changed, whether by resurrection of those dead or by rapture of the living, and believers will be transformed and will receive glorified bodies that will more adequately display their essential character.. . as children of God and sharers of divine life in Christ.39
Being Like Jesus
Though it is hard to fully fathom, John says, "We know with certainty that, whenever He should be revealed, we shall be like ones with Him, because we shall see Him as He is" (1 John 3:2b

A Return to Heaven
Many of the rapture passages imply or speak directly of a return to heaven. In fact, seven specific contexts let us know our destiny is above. These "catching away" passages are rapture verses.
To My Father's House
Jesus said to His disciples: "In My Father's house are many dwelling places. I go to prepare a room for you [to live in]. I will be coming again.., where I am, I and you [together]!" (John 14:2-3

Rescued From the Father
In 1 Thessalonians 1:9-10

Taken Before the Father
In 1 Thessalonians 3:13

Always With the Lord
Few would argue that when Paul says "thus we shall always be with the Lord" (1 Thess. 4:17 NASB

Gathered to Him
Many believe when the apostle writes of "the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, even our gathering together to Him," he is still speaking of our going home to heaven (2 Thess. 2:1

Our Citizenship in Heaven
There is no question about what Paul is saying in Philippians 3:20

Taken Directly to the Lord Himself
or Intimately Facing Christ at His Coming
This "taking" is not before Jesus as the King of Israel, the Messiah when He begins His earthly rule. All the contexts of the rapture passages either explicitly state or imply "going home to be with the Lord in heaven." But they also indicate believers will see Jesus instantly by the dynamic rapture and change upon those living or by the resurrection of the church saints. The purpose for this "catching away" of the living is so that the wrath may fall on the earth. When He comes to reign in His second coming, church saints return with Him.
Where Jesus Is, We Are
In John 14:3

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souls will be joined to their bodies. The disciples will then receive their new bodies. But they could have been snatched away while living and suddenly have met Him in the air.
Waiting for God's Son
Believers are to be eagerly waiting for the return of the resurrected Jesus, God's Son from heaven (1 Thess. 1:10

The force of the verb to wait must not be lost sight of. It means to look forward to with patience and confidence,... being ready for his return .... The thought of his coming does not spell terror for the believer.46
The Judge Is Approaching
When the apostle James writes of Christ as an approaching Judge (James 5:9


Jesus Who Drags Us Away
Paul writes of "Jesus, who delivers us from the wrath coming" (1 Thess. 1:10



Snatched Away
First Thessalonians 4:17

Other passages speak of that face-to-face encounter "(in the presence of)" with the Lord (1 Thess. 2:19

phrases make it clear that when the rapture comes, we are indeed to be with Him! "Whether we are awake or asleep, we may live together with Him" (5:10). "Our gathering together to Him" (2 Thess. 2:1




Living Godly Because He Is Coming
In six distinct passages, godly living is tied to the rapture hope. Critics of the rapture often claim this doctrine is but an escape for those who teach it. But the apostles James and Paul both make it an incentive for living because He could appear to take us to Himself at any moment.
Do Not Complain Against Another
James pleads: "Do not complain, brethren, against one another, that you yourselves may not be judged; behold the judge is standing right at the door" (James. 5:9 NASB

Do Not Sleep, Be Sober
After Paul's great teaching on the rapture and the accompanying resurrection of church saints, he reminds believers in Christ they are not "destined for wrath" (1 Thess. 5:9

Paul further prays that God will sanctify the whole person so that we may be preserved morally intact and undiminished because of Christ's return:
Now may the God of peace Himself sanctify you entirely; and may your spirit and soul and body be preserved complete, without blame at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ (5:23 NASB).
The word "entirely" could read "quite complete" or "through and through."55 "To concentrate, to separate from things profane .... Here alone in the New Testament it means the whole of each of you, every part of you 'through and through' (Luther) qualitatively rather than quantitatively."56
Living Without Stain
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Paul urges those in Christ to "keep the commandment without stain or reproach until the appearing (epiphaneias) of our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Tim. 6:14

The Blessed Hope and Christian Living
The grace of God and its accompanying salvation should cause us to be instructed and to be looking "for the blessed hope ...... (Titus 2:12-13

Do Not Shrink Back
Like Paul, the apostle John urges believers to "have confidence" and "not shrink away from Him in shame at His coming" (1 John 2:28

John adds that just fixing our hope on Jesus' return has a purifying effect on the child of God: "Everyone who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself . ... One who sets his hope by faith on the Son of God experiences an inward purification that is as complete as Christ's own purity."60
The Pronouns We, You, Us as a Proof That the Rapture Could Have Happened to Paul's Own Generation
Without doubt, the early church and the apostles hoped for Christ's soon return. As with some engagements, a wedding date may not have been set, or it may even be uncertain as to the when. Yet the bride and groom long for and anticipate their coming union. So the disciples had this longing but were given no hint as to the time of the rapture. Since it did not come upon them, we do not question their hope nor the Lord's revelation about the doctrine itself. It simply means that it is yet to come. We could be that generation!
The phrases and verses below (author's translations) demonstrate this great and eager "going home" taught by the apostles. Sometimes the we, you, and us may not be directly translated in all versions. But it is understood in the Greek grammar.
John 14:1-3

Let not your heart be troubled. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I prepare a place for you. I will receive you to Myself.
Where I am, there you may be also. James 5:7-9

You be patient, therefore, brethren, until the coming of the Lord. [You] behold, the farmer waits for the produce of the soil.
You too be patient.
[You] strengthen your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand. [You] do not complain,... that you be not judged.
[You] behold, the judge is standing right at the door. 1 Thessalonians 1:9-10

You wait for His Son from heaven.
Jesus, who delivers us from the wrath to come. 1 Thessalonians 2:17-19

You [our hope], in the presence of our Lord Jesus at His coming. 1 Thessalonians 3:13

That [He may] establish your hearts.. . before our God and Father at the coming of
our Lord Jesus with all His saints. I Thessalonians 4:13-18

We do not want you to be uninformed, brethren, about those who are asleep. That you may not grieve.
If we believe that Jesus died .. even so God will
bring with Him [Jesus] those who have fallen asleep in Jesus.
We say to you by the word of the Lord.
That we who are alive, and remain until the coming of the Lord, shall not precede those who have fallen asleep.
The dead in Christ shall rise first. Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air.
We shall always be with the Lord.
[You] comfort one another with these words.
1 Thessalonians 5:1-11

You, brethren, are not in darkness, that the day [of the Lord] should overtake you like a thief.
You are all sons of light and sons of day. We are not of night nor of darkness. But since we are of the day, let us be sober.
God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.
[Christ] who died for us, that whether we are awake or asleep, we may live together with Him.
[You] encourage one another, and [you] build up one another.
1 Thessalonians 5:23

May the Lord sanctify you... without blame at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.
2 Thessalonians 2:1-2

With regard to the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together to Him.
[You] be not quickly shaken... to the effect that the day of the Lord has come.
1 Timothy 6:14

You keep the commandment without stain or reproach until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ.
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1 Corinthians 15:51-52

We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye.
The dead in Christ will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed.
Philippians 3:20-21

Our citizenship is in heaven.
We eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. [Christ] will transform the body of our humble state.
Titus 2:13

[We are] looking for the blessed hope and the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Christ Jesus.
1 John 2:28

We may have confidence and not shrink away from Him in shame at His coming.
1 John 3:2-3

We know that, when He appears, we shall be like Him, because we shall see Him just as He is.
Everyone who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself, just as He is pure.
The Use of the Technical Term Parousia (the Coming) to Specifically Describe the Rapture
It is not the purpose of this section to give a complete study on the word parousia except to simply say that the word can be applied to the rapture of the church or to the coming of Christ to establish the millennial kingdom. Context is the key issue in determining which coming is in view. It is also important to note that the word does not mean simply "a coming." It may, by context, mean "a presence," "an arrival," "a situation," or simply the coming of a dignitary for an official "visit."61
Thus, when the word parousia is used in rapture passages, it in no way has to be understood as a "coming to stay." Nor does the word automatically have to relate to the second coming of Christ; that is, His coming to earth to reign on the throne of David. By context then, it may just be translated the "event," the "appearance," or the "visit." In light of this, the passages below are translated from the Greek text (author's translations).
James 5:7-9

Be waiting steadfastly then, until the time of the visitation arrives.
Be waiting steadfastly .... because the visitation of the Lord has progressively been drawing near.
1 Thessalonians 2:17-19

Are not you in fact [our joy] when we face our Lord Jesus at [the time of] His appearance.
1 Thessalonians 3:13

That [He may] firm up the hearts of you faultless,... in the [very] presence of the God and Father of us with the arrival of our Lord Jesus.
1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

We, the ones living and remaining until the coming of the Lord.
1 Thessalonians 5:23

May He preserve your spirit and soul and body with the arrival of our Lord Jesus Christ.
2 Thessalonians 2:1-2

Concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ even [concerning] our gathering together up to Him.
1 Corinthians 15:23-24

Christ the first fruits [resurrected], next after that, those who belong to Christ at His visitation.
1 John 2:28

So that when He appears, we may... not shrink away from Him in shame at His coming.
Other Expressions Used for the Coming
Besides parousia, other words and phrases describe the idea of Christ's rapture return to catch His own away. These words add weight and confirm this doctrine.
I Will Return
Jesus said, "I will come again, and receive you to Myself" (John 14:3

The Lord's Coming Is Imminent
Besides using the word parousia, James adds this coming "is at hand" (James 5:8

James further sees Jesus the Judge standing right at the door (5:9). Christ "has come right up to the door." By the perfect tense, the apostle is saying, "He is, as it were, even now approaching the door.. "66
The Lord Descends From Heaven
In 1 Thessalonians 4:16

Gathering Together Up to Him
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In 2 Thessalonians 2:1



The Blessed Hope and Appearing
Though the noun "appearing" (epiphaneia) can refer to the second coming of Jesus (2 Thess. 2:8



In Titus 2:13

Being Taken to the Father
Three main passages refer directly to our being raptured to the Father. The first is John 14:1-3

Thus, this is a specific and personal promise concerning the new dispensation of the church. Jesus is not saying His disciples will simply die and go to the Father's house. (Though that would be true of their souls if they perished before He came for them. And indeed, this is what happened.) Thus, His coming for them would either be the bodily resurrection, or the bodily rapture while they would still be alive. We know now, of course, that they died. They now await the resurrection of their new bodies and the joining of their souls to those bodies.
First Thessalonians 3:13

In a powerful passage on the Trinity and the deity of Christ, Paul writes about the "appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ" (Titus 2:13

Those in Christ or Allusions to the Church
The rapture has to do with the dispensation of the church or those "in Christ." The church age is a unique period with special promises. Those with Him now by faith will not face the coming wrath (1 Thess. 5:9

Most of the rapture passages mention the believer's relationship to Jesus. Paul speaks of "our Lord Jesus at His coming" (1 Thess. 2:19


In Paul's great resurrection and rapture section, 1 Corinthians 15:12-28

In Titus, Paul calls the Lord "our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ" (2:13). He "gave Himself for us," and thus redeems and purifies "a people for His own possession" (2:14).
These statements are important because they reveal the unique position the church now has with its Savior that spares it from the coming wrath. Thomas writes:
When God vents his anger against earth dwellers (Rev. 6:16


Kent concludes:
At Christ's coming,.. . the earthly, transient appearance will be changed, whether by resurrection of those dead or by rapture of the living, and believers will be transformed and will receive glorified bodies that will more adequately display their essential character... as children of God and sharers of divine life in Christ.74
Conclusion
These rapture passages form webs of related themes that can be identified and cataloged. Key verses interface with each other and give patterns that are undeniable. All the accumulated rapture data strengthens the doctrine and gives believers assurance. These verses spell out that the living believers in Christ will be changed and taken home by the Lord before the terrible period of the wrath begins, and they reveal that the dead in Christ will be resurrected to receive a new, eternal body. Together we go home with the Lord and are presented to God our Father.
Too often the rapture is dismissed as an imaginary creation of fanatical dispensationalists. But the patterns defined here reinforce this doctrine. As this author examined various amillennial and post- millennial grammatical commentaries for this study, he found most of the scholars in these persuasions true to the grammar observed in the
rapture passages.
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