The "Millenium Rule" SCRIPTURES ONLY thread

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keithr

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The annointed brothers of Jesus started being resurrected at the beginning of "the presence" of Jesus in his heavenly throne (1), those dying after it continue being raised (2), and the last ones still alive will be transform the last moment (3).

1. Those of them who were long dead were resurrected shortly after that event happened in the heavens at the beginning of the end time, when his presence started (after 1914 according to Biblical Chronology).

1 Thess. 4:16 (...) those who are dead in union with Christ will rise first.
1 Cor. 12:23 (...) those who belong to the Christ during his presence.
What has the 1 Cor. 12 got to do with Jesus' presence? It's about Christians all being members of the body of Christ. There is no mention at all of any period of time nor of Jesus' presence on the earth.

The resurrection of Christians is not spread out over many years, as you suppose. The 1 Thessalonians 4 passage makes that clear. Jesus descends from heaven with a shout (a sudden and quick event), then the dead saints are resurrected and the alive saints are changed, then they are all caught away at the same time. The resurrection and changing to spirit beings of the whole Church happens very quickly - 1 Corinthians 15 (WEB):

(51) Behold, I tell you a mystery. We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed,​
(52) in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised incorruptible, and we will be changed.​

2. The rest of dying anointed will die and resurrect at the same moment of their death:

Rev. 14:13 And I heard a voice out of heaven say, “Write: Happy are the dead who die in union with the Lord from this time onward. Yes, says the spirit, let them rest from their labors, for the things they did go right with them.
The Revelation 14 passage is not talking about the Church. It's describing events on the earth after the resurrection of the Church and the Great Tribulation. It's during the day of judgement (the Millennium), when the resurrected Church is reigning with Jesus. Revelation 14:7 (WEB):

(7) He said with a loud voice, “Fear the Lord, and give him glory; for the hour of his judgment has come. Worship him who made the heaven, the earth, the sea, and the springs of waters!”​

I think that the JW's are mistaken on this (and their interpretation of who the 144,000 are).
 
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ElieG12

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Jesus "presence" is not on earth. It is when he is enthroned in heavens. That is an event invisible to human eyes, and we can only know about it through the sign Jesus gave to us in Mat. 24, Luke 21 and Mark 13.

His presence is not the same as his "coming".

The expression "his (Jesus') presence" appears more than once in the NT.

1 Thess. 4:13-18 is about the first resurrection.

PS: I fixed the biblical quote, I meant 1 Cor. 15:23.
 
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Phoneman777

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1Th_4:14 For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.
"bring forth from death as Jesus was" - according to the context and Paul's chiasm.
Zec 14:5 And ye shall flee to the valley of the mountains; for the valley of the mountains shall reach unto Azal: yea, ye shall flee, like as ye fled from before the earthquake in the days of Uzziah king of Judah: and the LORD my God shall come, and all the saints with thee
1) "Saints" means "holy ones" which include "angels".

2) New Jerusalem will descend to Earth 1,000 years after the Resurrection of the Just with the angels and the redeemed inside at the Resurrection of the Damned.

Try again.
1Th_3:13 To the end he may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all his saints.
"Saints" means "holy ones" which include "angels".

Try again.
Jud 1:14 And Enoch also, the seventh from Adam, prophesied of these, saying, Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his saints,
"Saints" means "holy ones" which include "angels".

Try again.
Rev 17:14 These shall make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall overcome them: for he is Lord of lords, and King of kings: and they that are with him are called, and chosen, and faithful.

Rev 19:14 And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean.
New Jerusalem will descend to Earth 1,000 years after the Resurrection of the Just with the angels and the redeemed inside at the Resurrection of the Damned.


"THE LIVING KNOW THAT THEY SHALL DIE, BUT THE DEAD KNOW NOT ANYTHING".

"NEITHER HAVE THEY ANY MORE A REWARD, FOR THE MEMORY OF THEM IS FORGOTTEN".

"ALSO, THEIR LOVE, THEIR HATRED, THEIR ENVY ARE PERISHED, NEITHER HAVE THEY ANY MORE A PORTION OF ANYTHING THAT IS DONE UNDER THE SUN."

"WHATSOEVER THY HAND FINDETH TO DO, DO IT WITH ALL THY MIGHT, FOR THERE IS NO WORK, NOR DEVICE, NOR KNOWLEDGE, NOR WISDOM IN THE GRAVE, WHITHER THOU GOEST".

"THE DEAD PRAISE NOT THE LORD, NEITHER ANY THAT GO DOWN INTO SILENCE."

"SHALL THY LOVINGKINDNESS BE DECLARED IN THE GRAVE, OR THY FAITHFULNESS IN DESTRUCTION?"

"SHALL THY WONDERS BE KNOWN IN THE DARK, AND THY RIGHTEOUSNESS IN THE LAND OF FORGETFULNESS?"

"THE SOUL THAT SINNETH, IT SHALL DIE."

"HE THAT CONVERTETH THE SINNER FROM THE ERROR OF HIS WAY SHALL SAVE A SOUL FROM DEATH."

"TO THEM, WHO BY PATIENT CONTINUANCE IN WELL DOING SEEK FOR GLORY, HONOR, AND IMMORTALITY: (WILL BE GIVEN) ETERNAL LIFE".

"(GOD) ONLY HATH IMMORTALITY".

"NO MURDERER HATH ETERNAL LIFE ABIDING IN HIM."

"SO A MAN LIETH DOWN, AND RISETH NOT AGAIN, TILL THE HEAVENS BE NO MORE, THEY SHALL NOT WAKE NOR BE RAISED OUT OF THEIR SLEEP".

"IF I WAIT, THE GRAVE IS MINE HOUSE."'

"LIGHTEN MINE EYES LEST I SLEEP THE SLEEP OF DEATH."

"OUR FRIEND LAZARUS SLEEPETH...LAZARUS IS DEAD."

"THEY SHALL SLEEP A PERPETUAL SLEEP, AND NOT WAKE, SAITH THE LORD".

"DAVID IS BOTH DEAD AND BURIED AND HIS SEPULCHRE IS WITH US TODAY."

"FOR DAVID IS NOT ASCENDED INTO HEAVEN."

"BUT A MAN DIETH, AND WASTETH AWAY; YEA, A MAN GIVETH UP THE GHOST, AND WHERE IS HE?"

(I GOT PLENTY MORE DISPROVING THE IDEA OF "INNATE IMMORTALITY OF MAN".
 
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Phoneman777

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Refer back to my post #161.

1 Thessalonians 4:14 (KJV):
(14) For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.​

Paul is reassuring those that were grieving for their fellow Christians that had died.
Reassuring them of being brought forth from the tomb as Jesus was, so that they "sorrow not as others (pagans) which have no hope".
Remember that this was the early years of the Church and most Christians were expecting that Jesus would return imminently, which Paul later corrects - 2 Thessalonians 2:1-5 (WEB):

(1) Now, brothers, concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and our gathering together to him, we ask you​
(2) not to be quickly shaken in your mind, and not be troubled, either by spirit, or by word, or by letter as if from us, saying that the day of Christ has already come.​
(3) Let no one deceive you in any way. For it will not be, unless the rebellion comes first, and the man of sin is revealed, the son of destruction,​
(4) he who opposes and exalts himself against all that is called God or that is worshiped; so that he sits as God in the temple of God, setting himself up as God.​
(5) Don’t you remember that, when I was still with you, I told you these things?​

(Note verse 1, where the coming of Jesus and our gathering together with him are regarded as two different events, both of which are still to come in the future.)
In speaking about Christ's glorious coming, doesn't Paul say "the Lord shall descend from heaven with a shout" immediately followed by "...and the dead in Christ shall rise first" in 1 Thess. 4?

In 2 Thess. 2:1, doesn't Paul follow up the two events described as "the coming of our Lord" and "our gathering together with Him" by the singular word "day of Christ..." and singular "day shall not come..." in verse 2?

See, the evidence at face value points to Christ's coming and our gathering as two events on the same day - a "7 year tribulation" separating the "coming" and "gathering" is purely subjective inference, requiring another discussion as to why the 70th week is nailed firmly down in history, not floating out there waiting for God to release the "prophetic pause button".
A few Chritians will have died, and some Christians were grieving for them, thinking that they would therefore miss out on Jesus' return to reign in glory.
Actually, he said he wanted to enlighten them about the death of their loved ones so they "sorrow not, even as others which have no hope". Pagans had no hope in death - they wrote of their deceased loved ones "goodbye forever" while Christians wrote "goodnight until morning".
In verse 14 Paul is saying that those Chiristians that have died will also (as well as those that are still alive when Jesus comes to gather his Church) be with Jesus when he returns for his second advent on the earth. He is not saying that the dead Christians will be brought with Jesus when Jesus comes for his bride - Jesus doesn't bring his betrothed with him when he comes to surprise his betrothed and take them to the wedding! Therefore, the implication is that the dead in Christ will be resurrected at some point before Jesus' coming back to earth, just as those alive will be changed (death and resurrection in the twinkling of an eye) and caught up to be with Jesus before Jesus comes to reign on the earth - for we will be reigning with him (Revelation 20:6, 2 Timothy 2:12).

Paul then descibes the events of Jesus' return for his Church, when Jesus descends from heaven to the sky (the air above the earth - he doesn't descend to the earth), which is then when the dead in Christ are resurrected and when the alive in Christ are changed. This is again to reassure the grieving saints that those saints that had died will not miss out - we will all be gathered to Jesus at the same time, and we will all return with Jesus when he (later) comes to reign on the earth.

1 Thessalonians 5:9-10 (WEB):
(9) For God didn’t appoint us to wrath, but to the obtaining of salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ,​
(10) who died for us, that, whether we wake or sleep, we should live together with him.
I'm not sure if you read the OP, but your interpretation destroys Paul's chiasm, as well as introduces a "cosmic road trip" from heaven to earth which has nothing to do with the theme of this chapter portion, which is the Resurrection of the Just when the saints are brought forth from the tomb. "Bring" refers not to "geolocation" but "regeneration".

To preserve the chiasm, "bring" must rhyme with "rose" just as "died" rhymes with "sleep".

Therefore, "bring with Him" refers to "bring forth from the tomb as Jesus was".

Remember, "For the living know that they shall die, but the dead know not anything".
 
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keithr

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Jesus "presence" is not on earth. It is when he is enthroned in heavens. That is an event invisible to human eyes, and we can only know about it through the sign Jesus gave to us in Mat. 24, Luke 21 and Mark 13.
I've never before heard anyone claim that Jesus' "coming" or "presence" referred to his being made king in heaven. I can't help feeling that Paul would have worded this differently if "presence" meant "enthroning" - 1 Thessalonians 3:13 (WEB):

(13) to the end he may establish your hearts blameless in holiness before our God and Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus with all his saints.​

(although his saints are enthroned too, surely Paul would have written "enthroned" if that is what he meant).

His presence is not the same as his "coming".
While parousia can be translated as 'presence', it can also be translated as arrival, e.g.:

1 Corinthians 16:17 (WEB):
(17) I rejoice at the coming [parousia] of Stephanas, Fortunatus, and Achaicus; for that which was lacking on your part, they supplied.​
2 Corinthians 7:6-7 (WEB):
(6) Nevertheless, he who comforts the lowly, God, comforted us by the coming [parousia] of Titus;​
(7) and not by his coming [parousia] only, but also by the comfort with which he was comforted in you, while he told us of your longing, your mourning, and your zeal for me; so that I rejoiced still more.​

After all, Jesus said that he would be with us throughout the whole Gospel Age - Matthew 28:20 (WEB):

(20) teaching them to observe all things that I commanded you. Behold, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” Amen.​

PS: I fixed the biblical quote, I meant 1 Cor. 15:23.
1 Corinthians 15:23 (WEB):
(23) But each in his own order: Christ the first fruits, then those who are Christ’s, at his coming.​

That makes more sense - I thought it must have been the wrong reference! (Actually quoting the words is better than just giving a reference, but sadly most people seem too lazy to bother.) However, "those who are Christ’s" refers not just to Christians, but to all mankind. As the previous verse says:

(22) For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all will be made alive.​
 

Ghada

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I have an idea. Please post scriptures that support millennial rule along with those that seem to say otherwise. PLEASE do NOT provide your own opinions or interpretations, ONLY the scriptures. Thank you in advance. I'll get it started with this.

Revelation 20:1-15 ESV​

Then I saw an angel coming down from heaven, holding in his hand the key to the bottomless pit and a great chain. And he seized the dragon, that ancient serpent, who is the devil and Satan, and bound him for a thousand years, and threw him into the pit, and shut it and sealed it over him, so that he might not deceive the nations any longer, until the thousand years were ended. After that he must be released for a little while. Then I saw thrones, and seated on them were those to whom the authority to judge was committed. Also I saw the souls of those who had been beheaded for the testimony of Jesus and for the word of God, and those who had not worshiped the beast or its image and had not received its mark on their foreheads or their hands. They came to life and reigned with Christ for a thousand years. The rest of the dead did not come to life until the thousand years were ended. This is the first resurrection. ...
All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the LORD: and all the kindreds of the nations shall worship before thee. (Ps 22)

Arise, O God, judge the earth: for thou shalt inherit all nations. (Ps 82)

O let the nations be glad and sing for joy: for thou shalt judge the people righteously, and govern the nations upon earth. Selah. (Ps 67)

Before the LORD; for he cometh to judge the earth: with righteousness shall he judge the world, and the people with equity. (Ps 98)

Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice: and let men say among the nations, The LORD reigneth. (1 Chron 16)

And he that overcometh, and keepeth my works unto the end, to him will I give power over the nations: And he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken to shivers: even as I received of my Father. (Rev 2)

And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean. And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God. (Rev 19)

None of these promised prophecies have come to pass on earth yet.
 

keithr

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In speaking about Christ's glorious coming, doesn't Paul say "the Lord shall descend from heaven with a shout" immediately followed by "...and the dead in Christ shall rise first" in 1 Thess. 4?
No, he wasn't referring to Jesus' coming in glory in 1 Thessalonians 4:15-17, he was referring to "our gathering together to him" (2 Th 2:1). That's a different event to Jesus' "glorious coming". With the gathering, Christians are taken from the earth to heaven, whereas at the second coming the Christians descend from heaven to the earth with Jesus (the event that Paul alludes to in verse 14, when he confirms that those Christians that had already died will not miss out but will also be with the rest of the body of Christ when they all descend with Jesus).

1 Thessalonians 3:13 (WEB):
(13) in order to establish your hearts blameless in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all His saints.​

Jesus returns alone in order to gather all his saints (the rapture/first resurrection). At his second coming Jesus returns with all of his saints to establish his Kingdom on the earth. They are two different events at different times.

In 2 Thess. 2:1, doesn't Paul follow up the two events described as "the coming of our Lord" and "our gathering together with Him" by the singular word "day of Christ..." and singular "day shall not come..." in verse 2?
2Th 2:1-2 (WEB):
(1) Now, brothers, concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and our gathering together to him, we ask you​
(2) not to be quickly shaken in your mind, and not be troubled, either by spirit, or by word, or by letter as if from us, saying that the day of Christ has already come.​

No, he says don't be deceived into thinking that the "day of Christ" had already come, i.e. he was referring to the "coming of our Lord Jesus Christ" only. "Our gathering together to him" had to occur before the "coming of our Lord", because we will come with Jesus when he comes to establish his Kingdom on the earth. Therefore by the fact that they were still living as humans on the earth it should have been evident that the "day of Christ" had not yet come, but he goes on to remind them:

(3) Let no one deceive you in any way. For it will not be, unless the rebellion comes first, and the man of sin is revealed, the son of destruction,​
(4) he who opposes and exalts himself against all that is called God or that is worshiped; so that he sits as God in the temple of God, setting himself up as God.​
(5) Don’t you remember that, when I was still with you, I told you these things?​

Actually, he said he wanted to enlighten them about the death of their loved ones so they "sorrow not, even as others which have no hope". Pagans had no hope in death - they wrote of their deceased loved ones "goodbye forever" while Christians wrote "goodnight until morning".
Indeed, as non-believers have no hope, so they grieve for those that have died. Hence Paul was saying that Christians should not grieve for those Christians that have died, and goes on to explain that those dead Christians will not miss out on sharing in Christ's rule, therefore there was no need to grieve.

I'm not sure if you read the OP, but your interpretation destroys Paul's chiasm, as well as introduces a "cosmic road trip" from heaven to earth which has nothing to do with the theme of this chapter portion, which is the Resurrection of the Just when the saints are brought forth from the tomb. "Bring" refers not to "geolocation" but "regeneration".
Read again the Cambridge Bible Notes on verse 14:

But the Apostle does not say here “will raise them with Jesus,” it is not the resurrection of the dead that is in question, but their relation to the Parousia, their place in Christ’s approaching kingdom. Therefore he says: “God will bring them with Him,”—they will not be forgotten or left behind when Jesus comes in triumph.​
The argument of this verse is condensed and somewhat subtle. When the Apostle begins, “If we believe” etc., we expect him to continue, “so we believe that those who died will, by the power of Christ’s resurrection, be raised to life, and will return to share His glory.” But in the eagerness of his inference St Paul passes from the certainty of conviction in the first member of the sentence (“If we believe”) to the certainty of the fact itself (“God will bring them”) in the second. In the same eagerness of anticipation he blends the final with the intermediate stage of restoration, making the resurrection of Jesus the pledge not of the believer’s resurrection simply (as in 2Co_4:14), but of his participation in Christ’s glorious advent, of which His resurrection is the prelude. The union between Christ and the Christian, as St Paul conceives it, is such that in whatever Christ the Head does or experiences, He carries the members of His body with Him. The Christian dead are “the dead in Christ” (1Th_4:16); they will therefore be in due course the risen and the glorified in Christ (2Th_1:12); comp. 2Ti_2:11, “If we died with Him, we shall also live with Him.” The point of the Apostle’s reasoning lies in the connection of the words “died and rose again.” Jesus has made a pathway through the grave, and by this passage His faithful, fallen asleep, still one with the dying, risen Jesus, will be conducted, to appear with Him at His return.​
 

Phoneman777

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Which isn't what Paul wrote.
Anyone reading this thread knows my position is that Paul didn't "say" that, but was "referring" to that.

Believe dead saints are in heaven all you want, as long as you don't lead people to think "bring with Him" means "bring dead saints from heaven to Earth with Him at the Second Coming" - which is a chiasm-destroying lie.
 

Phoneman777

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No, he wasn't referring to Jesus' coming in glory in 1 Thessalonians 4:15-17, he was referring to "our gathering together to him" (2 Th 2:1). That's a different event to Jesus' "glorious coming".
Here's why I have a problem with that. This "gathering" involves the Lord's "shout", "voice", and "trumpet" - which some have said is the LOUDEST verse in all the Bible. How can such earth-shattering, catastrophic CACOPHONY ever be associated with a subtle, sudden, "secret rapture" gathering where those "left behind" see piles of clothes and jewelry where Christian stood moments before?
With the gathering, Christians are taken from the earth to heaven, whereas at the second coming the Christians descend from heaven to the earth with Jesus (the event that Paul alludes to in verse 14, when he confirms that those Christians that had already died will not miss out but will also be with the rest of the body of Christ when they all descend with Jesus).

1 Thessalonians 3:13 (WEB):
(13) in order to establish your hearts blameless in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all His saints.​
The Greek "hagios" literally means "holy (ones)" which can refer to both angels in heaven or the redeemed on Earth.

It's Biblically sound to conclude from Scripture that at the Second Coming, Jesus will come with His "holy angels" to collect the dead and living "holy humans" who rise at that time in the Resurrection of the Just -- then, after spending 1,000 years in New Jerusalem above, the glorious city will be transported to Earth and descend at the very time when the Resurrection of the Damned takes place.

See, we can't demand that "hagios" here means "the Lord will come with 10,000 dead saints in heaven".
Jesus returns alone in order to gather all his saints (the rapture/first resurrection). At his second coming Jesus returns with all of his saints to establish his Kingdom on the earth. They are two different events at different times.


2Th 2:1-2 (WEB):
(1) Now, brothers, concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and our gathering together to him, we ask you​
(2) not to be quickly shaken in your mind, and not be troubled, either by spirit, or by word, or by letter as if from us, saying that the day of Christ has already come.​
The "day of Christ" involves both the "coming" and "gathering" simultaneously, as there will be nothing "secret" about His coming to "gather" us seeing that the "shout", "voice" and "trumpet" of God will accompany Him.
No, he says don't be deceived into thinking that the "day of Christ" had already come, i.e. he was referring to the "coming of our Lord Jesus Christ" only. "Our gathering together to him" had to occur before the "coming of our Lord",
"the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together with Him...the day of Christ...that day shall not come..."

There's absolutely nothing in the context that demands "coming" and "gathering" happen on different days - only the subjective inference of a "tribulation" which separates these two events leads you to conclude this. In the absence of such subjectivity, anyone will correctly conclude that Paul's referring to two simultaneous events, just as he does when he wrote "for the Lord Himself shall descend...and the dead in Christ shall rise...and so shall we ever be with the Lord."
because we will come with Jesus when he comes to establish his Kingdom on the earth. Therefore by the fact that they were still living as humans on the earth it should have been evident that the "day of Christ" had not yet come, but he goes on to remind them:
Jesus establishes His kingdom on Earth after the 1,000 years when the wicked are finally destroyed and the Earth is made new. No humans will be left alive on Earth when Jesus comes 1,000 years prior at the Second Coming, according to 2 Peter 3:10 KJV.
(3) Let no one deceive you in any way. For it will not be, unless the rebellion comes first, and the man of sin is revealed, the son of destruction,​
(4) he who opposes and exalts himself against all that is called God or that is worshiped; so that he sits as God in the temple of God, setting himself up as God.​
(5) Don’t you remember that, when I was still with you, I told you these things?​
The Man of Sin already arose long ago after the "Restrainer" was taken out of the way, just as Paul predicted.

If you want to know who the Restrainer was, ask any of the Early Church Fathers what Paul told the early church by mouth which he refused to put to pen and paper - and you'll also understand why he employed such extreme caution against doing so.
Indeed, as non-believers have no hope, so they grieve for those that have died. Hence Paul was saying that Christians should not grieve for those Christians that have died, and goes on to explain that those dead Christians will not miss out on sharing in Christ's rule, therefore there was no need to grieve.
It's better if we focus on the crux of the latter half of chapter 4, which is the promise of the resurrection, with which is what he told us to comfort people at funerals...that they will rise from their graves when Jesus comes just as assuredly as Jesus rose from the grave on the 3rd day.

But, what do we comfort people with? Talk of our dead loved ones dancing on streets of gold, singing in angelic choirs, deceased rock musicians strumming electric guitars and banging spectacular drum kits, etc, none of which is true because "the dead know not anything".
Read again the Cambridge Bible Notes on verse 14:

But the Apostle does not say here “will raise them with Jesus,” it is not the resurrection of the dead that is in question, but their relation to the Parousia, their place in Christ’s approaching kingdom. Therefore he says: “God will bring them with Him,”—they will not be forgotten or left behind when Jesus comes in triumph.​
One man's opinion but nothing establishing that, Scripturally.
The argument of this verse is condensed and somewhat subtle. When the Apostle begins, “If we believe” etc., we expect him to continue, “so we believe that those who died will, by the power of Christ’s resurrection, be raised to life, and will return to share His glory.” But in the eagerness of his inference St Paul passes from the certainty of conviction in the first member of the sentence (“If we believe”) to the certainty of the fact itself (“God will bring them”) in the second. In the same eagerness of anticipation he blends the final with the intermediate stage of restoration, making the resurrection of Jesus the pledge not of the believer’s resurrection simply (as in 2Co_4:14), but of his participation in Christ’s glorious advent, of which His resurrection is the prelude. The union between Christ and the Christian, as St Paul conceives it, is such that in whatever Christ the Head does or experiences, He carries the members of His body with Him. The Christian dead are “the dead in Christ” (1Th_4:16); they will therefore be in due course the risen and the glorified in Christ (2Th_1:12); comp. 2Ti_2:11, “If we died with Him, we shall also live with Him.” The point of the Apostle’s reasoning lies in the connection of the words “died and rose again.” Jesus has made a pathway through the grave, and by this passage His faithful, fallen asleep, still one with the dying, risen Jesus, will be conducted, to appear with Him at His return.​
This is entirely subjective and ignores the CHIASM:

A. "For if we believe Jesus DIED (DEATH)
B. and ROSE again (RESURRECTION)
A. so them also which SLEEP in Jesus (DEATH)
B. will God BRING with Him. (RESURRECTION)

Did you notice how the commentator conveniently ignores the chiasm in order to establish his conclusion that "the apostle does not say here "will raise them with Jesus"? That's a red flag that ought not be overlooked by anyone seeking the truth, friend.
 
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ewq1938

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Anyone reading this thread knows my position is that Paul didn't "say" that, but was "referring" to that.

Same thing. Paul did not "refer" to what you claim.


Believe dead saints are in heaven all you want, as long as you don't lead people to think "bring with Him" means "bring dead saints from heaven to Earth with Him at the Second Coming"


Yet that is what shall happen. Christ comes not only with angels but the saints, who died and will be resurrected prior to being brought with Christ at the Coming.
 

ewq1938

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A. "For if we believe Jesus DIED (DEATH)
B. and ROSE again (RESURRECTION)
A. so them also which SLEEP in Jesus (DEATH)
B. will God BRING with Him. (RESURRECTION)

A. "For if we believe Jesus DIED (DEATH)
B. and ROSE again (ACTION AFTER A RESURRECTION)
A. so them also which SLEEP in Jesus (DEATH)
B. will God BRING with Him. (ACTION AFTER A RESURRECTION)
 

keithr

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Here's why I have a problem with that. This "gathering" involves the Lord's "shout", "voice", and "trumpet" - which some have said is the LOUDEST verse in all the Bible. How can such earth-shattering, catastrophic CACOPHONY ever be associated with a subtle, sudden, "secret rapture" gathering where those "left behind" see piles of clothes and jewelry where Christian stood moments before?
Where does it state in the Bible that the rapture is something that will happen secretly? Why are you assuming that piles of clothes and jewelry will be left behind? I don't think the Bible says either of those things.

Regarding the shout, or trumpet, it does not specify whether or not it will be heard on the earth. The trumpet and shout could occur only in heaven, where Jesus is - it is God announcing to Jesus that now is the time to go and gather the Church (because "of that day or that hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father", Mark 13:32). The Greek word is keleuma, which means a word of command, or signal - the Online Bible Greek Lexicon says, "an order, command, spec. a stimulating cry, either that by which animals are roused and urged on by man, as horses by charioteers, hounds by hunters, etc., or that by which a signal is given to men, e.g. to rowers by the master of a ship, to soldiers by a commander (with a loud summons, a trumpet call)". It's not a voice on earth that the dead in their tombs shall hear, for that will be the voice of Jesus (John 5:25-29).

The Greek "hagios" literally means "holy (ones)" which can refer to both angels in heaven or the redeemed on Earth.
That's irrelevant, because 1Th 3:13 says, "the coming of our Lord Jesus with all his saints". Whether that's all saints only or all saints and all angels, it is still with all the resurrected Christians (resurrected because they will be coming from heaven). Therefore 1Th 4:16-17 can't be referring to Christ's coming to establish his Kingdom because he cannot bring all the saints with him if he is coming to resurrect and gather all the saints from the earth.

It's Biblically sound to conclude from Scripture that at the Second Coming, Jesus will come with His "holy angels" to collect the dead and living "holy humans" who rise at that time in the Resurrection of the Just -- then, after spending 1,000 years in New Jerusalem above, the glorious city will be transported to Earth and descend at the very time when the Resurrection of the Damned takes place.
At his second coming, when the second resurrection takes place, the first resurrection has already taken place, which is why the resurrected Christians can return with Jesus and share in his reign over the resurrected rest of mankind (the "rest of the dead", Rev. 20:5). As 1Th 4:14 says, "God will bring with him those who have fallen asleep in Jesus", and Colossians 3:4, "When Christ, our life, is revealed, then you will also be revealed with him in glory".

The second resurrection doesn't take place at the end of Christ's 1,000 year reign, it takes place at the beginning of it. It's not God's plan to sacrifice His Son Jesus in order to redeem all mankind, and then to resurrect all the non-Christians to say to them "Your sins are all forgiven. However, you did sin so now you can die a second time. Goodbye!". Their slate is wiped clean when they are resurrected, and they will be judged on their actions during the 1,000 years of Christ's reign, on how they react when they have full knowledge of God and Jesus, and having sampled an unrighteous world during their first lives they will then live in a righteous world, and Satan's deceiving influences will have been removed. It is a time of blessing and restoration to perfection ("whom heaven must receive until the times of restoration of all things, which God spoke long ago by the mouth of his holy prophets", Acts 3:21 - Jesus' return from heaven is for the time of restoration of all things). Only after the final test and judgement at the end of the 1,000 years will the "rest of the dead" have eternal life, with the incorrigible suffering a second, permanent, death.

See, we can't demand that "hagios" here means "the Lord will come with 10,000 dead saints in heaven".
I agree. There is nobody dead in heaven, and there would be no point in Jesus bringing dead people with him!

The "day of Christ" involves both the "coming" and "gathering" simultaneously, as there will be nothing "secret" about His coming to "gather" us seeing that the "shout", "voice" and "trumpet" of God will accompany Him.
I believe that the day of the Lord/Christ refers to the whole 1,000 years of his reign, not just a single day.

There's absolutely nothing in the context that demands "coming" and "gathering" happen on different days - only the subjective inference of a "tribulation" which separates these two events leads you to conclude this. In the absence of such subjectivity, anyone will correctly conclude that Paul's referring to two simultaneous events, just as he does when he wrote "for the Lord Himself shall descend...and the dead in Christ shall rise...and so shall we ever be with the Lord."
I hadn't even thought of the "tribulation" when I wrote that. It says, 2Th 2:1-2 (WEB):

(1) Now, brothers, concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and our gathering together to him, we ask you​
(2) not to be quickly shaken in your mind, and not be troubled, either by spirit, or by word, or by letter as if from us, saying that the day of Christ has already come.​

This is similar to saying, "Concerning the cup final, and the first round match, don't be confused into thinking that the day of the final has already happened". It's saying that the cup final match had not yet happened, and neither has the first match of the competition even been played yet, so if somebody says that either have already happened, they are mistaken.

Jesus establishes His kingdom on Earth after the 1,000 years when the wicked are finally destroyed and the Earth is made new. No humans will be left alive on Earth when Jesus comes 1,000 years prior at the Second Coming, according to 2 Peter 3:10 KJV.
Remember, "They lived and reigned with Christ for a thousand years", Rev 20:4. So what/who is Jesus regining over for 1,000 years? How can he be reigning for a 1,000 years if he hasn't established his kingdom at the beginning of that 1,000 years? How can he reign over nobody, because there are no humans alive anymore?

I don't consider 2 Peter 3:10 to be literal. Why would Peter say (3:12), "looking for and earnestly desiring the coming of the day of God, which will cause the burning heavens to be dissolved, and the elements will melt with fervent heat?" if that meant everyone will be killed? Similarly Paul's words are not literal in 1 Corinthians 3:11-13 (WEB):

(11) For no one can lay any other foundation than that which has been laid, which is Jesus Christ.​
(12) But if anyone builds on the foundation with gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay, or stubble;​
(13) each man’s work will be revealed. For the Day will declare it, because it is revealed in fire; and the fire itself will test what sort of work each man’s work is.​

The Man of Sin already arose long ago after the "Restrainer" was taken out of the way, just as Paul predicted.
I disagree with that, but that's another subject so I won't digress onto that.

Did you notice how the commentator conveniently ignores the chiasm in order to establish his conclusion that "the apostle does not say here "will raise them with Jesus"? That's a red flag that ought not be overlooked by anyone seeking the truth, friend.
Ignoring what the Greek word means and assuming it means what you want it to mean, is also a red flag that ought not be overlooked by anyone seeking the truth. The Greek word ago according to the Online Bible Greek Lexicon means:

1) to lead, take with one​
1a) to lead by laying hold of, and this way to bring to the point of destination: of an animal​
1b) to lead by accompanying to (into) a place​
1c) to lead with one’s self, attach to one’s self as an attendant​
1d) to conduct, bring​
1e) to lead away, to a court of justice, magistrate, etc.​
2) to lead,​
2a) to lead, guide, direct​
2b) to lead through, conduct to: to something​
2c) to move, impel: of forces and influences on the mind​
3) to pass a day, keep or celebrate a feast, etc.​
4) to go, depart​
 

Phoneman777

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Same thing. Paul did not "refer" to what you claim.
You insinuate otherwise.
Yet that is what shall happen. Christ comes not only with angels but the saints, who died and will be resurrected prior to being brought with Christ at the Coming.
Look, when Albert Pike told the occult world Lucifer's plans to unleash all manner of chaos upon the world, he was talking about people who believe dead saints go straight to heaven before the Second Coming when he wrote the following:

"...and the multitudes disillusioned with Christianity whose spirits will be from that moment without direction and leadership and anxious for an ideal, but without knowledge where to send its adoration, will receive the true light through the universal manifestation of the pure doctrine of Lucifer brought finally out into public view."


Confused Christians everywhere will be standing in the streets looking skyward, demanding an answer from God as to why He didn't sneak into town and sneak out with them as the fires of untold chaos rage all around. They'll discover their false pulpit prophets can offer no help, leaving them uncertain about what to do at the same time they see us still faithfully preaching that dead saints don't got to heaven until Jesus comes in glory, so we need to trust in Him alone to raise our beloved dead saints from the grave and deliver us at the Second Coming.

Will these confused Christians join us or will then believe the "spirits of devils working miracles which go forth to deceive the nations" appearing as Grandma, Grandpa, Mom, Dad, etc., telling the world they've been in heaven, and then pointing to Lucifer - in a counterfeit Second Coming - and telling us to follow him? Millions will believe the lies of Lucifer because they refuse to believe Moses and the Prophets.
 

Phoneman777

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A. "For if we believe Jesus DIED (DEATH)
B. and ROSE again (ACTION AFTER A RESURRECTION)
A. so them also which SLEEP in Jesus (DEATH)
B. will God BRING with Him. (ACTION AFTER A RESURRECTION)
Saying Jesus "rose" means He "resurrected" aka "brought back to life". Everything else He did is "action after a resurrection".

In the same way, God will "bring" everyone else forth from the tomb as He was brought forth, an interpretation which preserves the Chiasm.
 

Phoneman777

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Where does it state in the Bible that the rapture is something that will happen secretly? Why are you assuming that piles of clothes and jewelry will be left behind? I don't think the Bible says either of those things.
Good, because the "father of Dispensationalism" J. N. Darby came up with that false idea.
Regarding the shout, or trumpet, it does not specify whether or not it will be heard on the earth. The trumpet and shout could occur only in heaven, where Jesus is
Had to stop right here and answer this:

Paul says the Lord shall descend from heaven with the shout/voice/trumpet which means the noise from these three must descend with Him.

By your logic, I should be able to "descend" from a plane with a parachute I left onboard the plane. Not happening. Therefore, the shout/voice/trumpet will be heard by us down here because these "descend" with the Lord as He descends from heaven.
 

ewq1938

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Saying Jesus "rose" means He "resurrected" aka "brought back to life". Everything else He did is "action after a resurrection".

In the same way, God will "bring" everyone else forth from the tomb as He was brought forth, an interpretation which preserves the Chiasm.

A resurrection still has to happen BEFORE one leaves a tomb. A dead body cannot RISE unless a resurrection takes place FIRST.

Christ was laying down when he resurrected/came back to physical life.
 

keithr

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Paul says the Lord shall descend from heaven with the shout/voice/trumpet which means the noise from these three must descend with Him.

By your logic, I should be able to "descend" from a plane with a parachute I left onboard the plane. Not happening. Therefore, the shout/voice/trumpet will be heard by us down here because these "descend" with the Lord as He descends from heaven.
You don't need a parachute in order to descend from a plane, and Jesus doesn't need to make a noise in order to come down from heaven!

The Greek word en can be translated many ways. It could be that "with" is correct, or it could be that "at" is the correct interpretation. Strong's says:

1722. ἐν en [en;] a primary preposition denoting (fixed) position (in place, time or state), and (by implication) instrumentality (medially or constructively), i.e. a relation of rest (intermediate between 1519 and 1537); "in," at, (up-)on, by, etc.: ...​

So that is consistent with a command being given and then Jesus moves, and is inconsistent with Jesus moving while the command is being given.

The verse is ambiguous enough that the GNB translates it as:

(16) There will be the shout of command, the archangel's voice, the sound of God's trumpet, and the Lord himself will come down from heaven. Those who have died believing in Christ will rise to life first;​

Whether the command is heard here on the earth or just in heaven only, I guess we'll have to wait and see (or hear), but it makes more sense to me that the shout of command would be in heaven where Jesus can hear it and take the appropriate action.