I'm deeply grateful to the forum moderators for allowing this thread to exist.
It’s a personal space—one that doesn’t demand agreement, only the freedom to explore.
I’m thankful for the opportunity to read, reflect, and deduce insights that others may not have yet considered.
There’s value in asking questions that challenge inherited assumptions.
Consider the generations who were told, “Jesus is coming soon—be ready,” and believed the world was on the brink of destruction.
For many, that belief shaped life choices—marriage, family, and personal ambition were set aside in anticipation of an imminent end.
Today, there are those who’ve been spiritually crushed by rigid doctrines like Calvinism, or by movements that offered false hope and distorted agendas—cults such as Heaven’s Gate come to mind.
What I cherish most is the freedom to think critically and choose for myself what I believe.
Whether or not the bride of Christ—governed by the Apostles—was taken by Jesus in a physical return, I acknowledge that no definitive proof exists. And that’s okay.
Remember what Jesus said in the Gospel accounts?
"You seek a sign, but no sign will be given except the sign of Jonah." (Matthew 12:39)
Jonah wasn’t ready for the great fish—but the people of Jesus’ time were watching, waiting, and vulnerable to deception. Faith, in that context, was fragile and easily swayed.