Scott Downey
Well-Known Member
- Dec 19, 2021
- 11,458
- 6,981
- 113
- 66
- Faith
- Christian
- Country
- Virgin Islands, U.S.
- Gender
- Male
example here
I asked this here from copilot, and you will see copilot points out it is a deviation from what scripture says
Premillennialism is fraudulent view because it assumes a pretrib rapture, and that is found no where in the New testament
You’re raising a sharp critique that many scholars and Bible readers have made: the pre‑tribulation rapture—the idea that believers are secretly taken before a seven‑year tribulation—does not appear explicitly in the New Testament. Let’s break this down carefully:
What the Text Actually Says
• 1 Thessalonians 4:16–17 – Paul describes believers being “caught up” to meet Christ in the air, but he does not separate this event from the visible return of Christ.
• Matthew 24:29–31 – Jesus explicitly places the gathering of the elect after the tribulation, not before.
• John 5:28–29 – Resurrection of both righteous and wicked occurs at “the hour” of Christ’s coming, not in two stages.
• Revelation 20:4–6 – The “first resurrection” is tied to Christ’s visible reign, not a secret removal of the church.
Where Pre‑Trib Comes From
• The system was popularized in the 19th century by John Nelson Darby and later the Scofield Reference Bible.
• It relies on separating Israel and the Church into distinct programs, reading Daniel 9’s “70th week” as a future tribulation period.
• This framework is not directly stated in Scripture; it’s an interpretive grid imposed on the text.
Premillennialism vs. Pre‑Trib
• Premillennialism itself simply means Christ returns before a literal millennium.
• Pre‑tribulationism is one version of premillennialism, but not the only one.
• Historic Premillennialism (held by early church fathers like Irenaeus) was post‑tribulational—the church endures tribulation, then Christ returns.
So, it’s not accurate to say all premillennialism assumes pre‑trib. The “fraudulent” element you’re pointing to is really the modern dispensational pre‑trib system, not premillennialism as a whole.
Straightforward Reading
If you strip away commentary traditions:
• The NT consistently ties the resurrection, rapture, and Christ’s return together in one climactic event after tribulation.
• That aligns more with Post‑Trib Premillennialism or Amillennialism, depending on whether you take Revelation 20 literally or symbolically.
In short: You’re right that the New Testament never teaches a secret pre‑trib rapture. Premillennialism in its historic form doesn’t require it, but modern dispensational premillennialism does—and that’s where the disconnect from the text arises.
Would you like me to build a timeline chart directly from the NT passages (Matthew 24, 1 Thessalonians 4, Revelation 20) so you can see how the sequence unfolds without commentary overlays?
I asked this here from copilot, and you will see copilot points out it is a deviation from what scripture says
Premillennialism is fraudulent view because it assumes a pretrib rapture, and that is found no where in the New testament
You’re raising a sharp critique that many scholars and Bible readers have made: the pre‑tribulation rapture—the idea that believers are secretly taken before a seven‑year tribulation—does not appear explicitly in the New Testament. Let’s break this down carefully:
What the Text Actually Says
• 1 Thessalonians 4:16–17 – Paul describes believers being “caught up” to meet Christ in the air, but he does not separate this event from the visible return of Christ.
• Matthew 24:29–31 – Jesus explicitly places the gathering of the elect after the tribulation, not before.
• John 5:28–29 – Resurrection of both righteous and wicked occurs at “the hour” of Christ’s coming, not in two stages.
• Revelation 20:4–6 – The “first resurrection” is tied to Christ’s visible reign, not a secret removal of the church.
Where Pre‑Trib Comes From
• The system was popularized in the 19th century by John Nelson Darby and later the Scofield Reference Bible.
• It relies on separating Israel and the Church into distinct programs, reading Daniel 9’s “70th week” as a future tribulation period.
• This framework is not directly stated in Scripture; it’s an interpretive grid imposed on the text.
• Premillennialism itself simply means Christ returns before a literal millennium.
• Pre‑tribulationism is one version of premillennialism, but not the only one.
• Historic Premillennialism (held by early church fathers like Irenaeus) was post‑tribulational—the church endures tribulation, then Christ returns.
So, it’s not accurate to say all premillennialism assumes pre‑trib. The “fraudulent” element you’re pointing to is really the modern dispensational pre‑trib system, not premillennialism as a whole.
Straightforward Reading
If you strip away commentary traditions:
• The NT consistently ties the resurrection, rapture, and Christ’s return together in one climactic event after tribulation.
• That aligns more with Post‑Trib Premillennialism or Amillennialism, depending on whether you take Revelation 20 literally or symbolically.
In short: You’re right that the New Testament never teaches a secret pre‑trib rapture. Premillennialism in its historic form doesn’t require it, but modern dispensational premillennialism does—and that’s where the disconnect from the text arises.
Would you like me to build a timeline chart directly from the NT passages (Matthew 24, 1 Thessalonians 4, Revelation 20) so you can see how the sequence unfolds without commentary overlays?
(as they have done so many times before).
with the letters Lol in your reply to my post betrays the fact that you are not even able to do the latter yet.