Well as far as the topic goes I think the strongest argument is that no one knows the day or the hour and it would be too easy for anyone just to count forward 7 years from the making of the covenant.
Post tribulation arguments
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by webdog, Sep 22, 2015.
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blessedwife318 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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blessedwife318 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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blessedwife318 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Darby, Schofield, Ryrie all make that very clear.
Here is Ryrie:
But now for quotes from Spurgeon himself on this issue.
Bold Mine
He considered the idea of Israel and the Church being distinct from each other an " absurdity"
That itself is enough to put him firmly outside of the camp of Dispensationalism.
But for the sake of argument I will continue.
I think we can all agree that another mark of Dispensationalism is the "Pre-Trib" Rapture of the Church.
Well lets see what Spurgeon said about the timing of the Rapture.
To be honest he does not say a lot about the rapture but I did find this sermon
Some more quotes from this sermon
So there is the two big distinctions between Classical Premillennialism and Dispensational Pre-Millennialism and Spurgeon clearly falls into the Classical camp.
Continued: -
blessedwife318 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Here is the disticntion as I understand them taken from here
1. First, historic premillennialists believe in New Testament priority in which the New Testament interprets/reinterprets the OT.
2. Second, historic premillennialists believe the church is the new Israel.
3. Third, unlike dispensationalists, historic premillennialists do not believe in a future restoration of national Israel.
Of course there is also the timing of the Rapture, as Pre-trib is curcial to dispensational thought since it fits with their clear division between Israel and the Church.
First is must be noted that using the word "Dispensation" does not make use a Dispensationalist.
Can't be a Dispensationalist if you don't see the Church and Israel as distinct. And you really can't if you believe that the Church has replaced Israel which is why Watts cannot be counted among the Dispensationalist camp.
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blessedwife318 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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blessedwife318 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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SovereignGrace Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
I have a friend in South Carolina...Myrtle Beach area, who pastors a Reformed SBC church. He falls into the historical pre-mill group that does not agree with dispensationalism whatsoever. He sees the church and Israel as the one sheepfold.
He sees the church enduring until the end, and not raptured about before the great tribulation. Being amil, I can find a lot of agreement with my dear Brother's eschatology. With the dispensationalists? Not so much. -
blessedwife318 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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The Concept of the Church as a parenthesis has not been mentioned, by knowledge, by anyone in this thread, so not sure why you bring it up other than you have no ability to address this thread under your own eschatological bias. However, that there is a parenthetical nature to the Tribulation itself is very apparent, if only based on the fact that this period is distinguished in both Old and New Testaments ass a specific time in History unique to itself. The "Church Age" as many call this current Age, is not a parenthesis, but a beginning to the cumulative results of the Redemptive Plan of God. Just as the Law was unique in it's own right, and not a parenthesis, but the prescribed will of God for Israel which also impacted the world.
If you care to discuss any of these issues, perhaps this is not the thread, though I would say that the A-mil view is certainly an argument against a poet or pre-trib view, lol.
In case the above doesn't register, let me say something in your a language you can understand:
Darby in the darby through darby , and then darby by 1800s darby darby reaching darby invented darby darby darby.
Darby Darby that darby makes darby theology darby darby darby, and don't darby that darby those that darby darby darby.
Darby darby. -
And this is the typical response that we see from a-millennials, particularly the member in view in DHKs response: you are not even addressing what is said, and seeking to argue about something everyone else is sick of hearing.
You owe DHK an apology for your error.
blessedwife318 said: ↑There is a distinction between those two ideas that must be maintained.Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑It is dishonest to push dispensationalism into historical premillennialism when they do not fit together.Click to expand...
And as far as a dispensational view being incompatible with a historical premillennial view, perhaps if you spent more time in your Bible than reading the theologies of men you might come to understand how ignorant such a statement is.
You will not refute that there are differing Ages or Economies in Biblical History;
You will not refute that there is a Rapture;
You will not refute there will be a Tribulation which is distinct period prophesied;
You will not refute that there will be a one thousand year period following the Tribulation;
You will not refute that Israel was not the Church;
And you will not refute any First Century Biblical teaching, which all of these are.
If you want to try...step up. But don't bring the words of men...we will examine these issues in the Word of God.
Continued... -
Martin Marprelate Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
If you look into Spurgeon's idea of a 'millennium,' you will find that it actually has no end.
I attended some lectures on Spurgeon's eschatology at the Metropolitan Tabernacle some years back, and it is the view of his successor, Peter Masters, that his position most closely resembled Amillennialism.
I will try to find my lecture notes. -
blessedwife318 said: ↑The central issue of Dispensationalism is the distinction between Israel and the Church.Click to expand...
Just because you sit under teachers who are greatly biased and confused, and have muddled your thoughts with junk theology greatly tinged with hatred...doesn't mean the nonsense spouted is relevant to anyone in this thread in this discussion.
What is a dispensation?
Is it a division of people?
Or Ages and ministries of God?
And that is precisely DHKs point in regards to OR...an incessant hang-up with Darby despite the fact...no-one even quotes Darby.
Dispensational Theology has a central focus on the differing ministrations, and how the Church and Israel play into that is only one aspect of a multi-faceted view based on a more literal rendering of Scripture, which, I will throw in, is how men have always rendered the Word of God.
blessedwife318 said: ↑Darby, Schofield, Ryrie all make that very clear.
Here is Ryrie:
Quote:
The essence of dispensationalism, then, is the distinction of Israel and the Church. This grows out of the dispensationalists consistent employment of normal or plain interpretation, and it reflects an understanding of the basic purpose of God in all His dealings with mankind as that of glorifying Himself thought salvation and other purposes as well
Ryrie, Dispensationalism Today, 47.Click to expand...Click to expand...
So Ryrie places a distinction between Israel and the Church first you think that is the central issue.
Great.
Now let's set Mr. Ryrie and Dispensationalism aside and actually look at what Scripture teaches.
And I will guarantee you that Dispensational will far closer to substantiating their views than your teacher...OR. I would say you but you don't seem to know what to believe. Ever get that worked out?
blessedwife318 said: ↑But now for quotes from Spurgeon himself on this issue.Click to expand...
By the way, the post you responded to plainly stated that Spurgeon was a Calvinist.
blessedwife318 said: ↑Quote:
Distinctions have been drawn by certain exceedingly wise men (measured by their own estimate of themselves), between the people of God who lived before the coming of Christ, and those who lived afterwards. We have even heard it asserted that those who lived before the coming of Christ do not belong to the church of God! We never know what we shall hear next, and perhaps it is a mercy that these absurdities are revealed at one time, in order that we may be able to endure their stupidity without dying of amazement. Why, every child of God in every place stands on the same footing; the Lord has not some children best beloved, some second-rate offspring, and others whom he hardly cares about. These who saw Christ's day before it came, had a great difference as to what they knew, and perhaps in the same measure a difference as to what they enjoyed while on earth meditating upon Christ; but they were all washed in the same blood, all redeemed with the same ransom price, and made members of the same body. Israel in the covenant of grace is not natural Israel, but all believers in all ages. Before the first advent, all the types and shadows all pointed one way —they pointed to Christ, and to him all the saints looked with hope. Those who lived before Christ were not saved with a different salvation to that which shall come to us. They exercised faith as we must; that faith struggled as ours struggles, and that faith obtained its reward as ours shall
Charles H. Spurgeon, "Jesus Christ Immutable," in The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, 15:8.Click to expand...
A distinction between Israel and the Church does not mean "the Lord has not some children best beloved, some second-rate offspring, and others whom he hardly cares about," it has to do with the revelation provided to each group and the ministry God was effecting during those times.
And they are different.
Even prior to Israel being created, God was ministering differently among men.
If you care to discuss this, perhaps you might better understand something that I am sure Mr. Spurgeon understands better now.
blessedwife318 said: ↑Bold MineClick to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑He considered the idea of Israel and the Church being distinct from each other an " absurdity"Click to expand...
Not one member of Israel was eternally redeemed and forgiven through the Blood of Christ. Every member of the Church is.
And I would ask you...are you saying that all of Israel was saved? Do you not understand that only the faithful of Israel were counted as just? And that even though counted just through faith...they were still in need of Atonement?
I can understand you not understanding the difference between a people who to a man died not having eternal redemption through Christ, but Spurgeon? Thanks for the quote. I will put that up there with his charismatic tendencies.
blessedwife318 said: ↑That itself is enough to put him firmly outside of the camp of Dispensationalism.Click to expand...
But I am used to you debating something completely irrelevant to the topic at hand.
blessedwife318 said: ↑But for the sake of argument I will continue.Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑I think we can all agree that another mark of Dispensationalism is the "Pre-Trib" Rapture of the Church.Click to expand...
Any time you want to actually discuss what the Bible has to say about it let me know. If you would like to present a Biblical presentation to substantiate an A-mil view, or a mid-Trib view, or a poet-trib view...let me know.
Continued... -
blessedwife318 said: ↑Well lets see what Spurgeon said about the timing of the Rapture.
To be honest he does not say a lot about the rapture but I did find this sermon
Quote:
This terrible time which our Lord describes is, in addition, a time of universal alarm—“Upon the earth distress of
nations, with perplexity; men’s hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the
earth: for the powers of Heaven shall be shaken.” You know that fear is contagious—when one person trembles, many
begin to feel the same sort of tremor. And when all the people, wherever we shall go, at home or abroad, shall be in distress—when
everywhere the hearts of men shall seem to die within them, or turn, as it were. to stone, so that they cannot
act or move, like those who guarded the tomb of Christ, when they saw Him rise, were as dead men—if it should ever
come to that and there should be a general panic, then you who have Christ for your Master, God for your Father, eternity
for your heritage and Heaven for your home—even then you may “look up, and lift up your heads.”
You ask, perhaps, “How shall we do that?” You cannot do it without your Lord. With God, all things are possible.
In Christ, you can do all things. Without Him you can do nothing. If you live away from your Lord and Master, in those
days of terror that are yet to come, your hearts will quail for fear, and you will be like other men. If you run with them,
you shall fear with them. If your strength is where their strength is, you shall be as weak as they are! But if you have
learned to look up, why, even in those stormy times you shall keep to the habit of looking up! And if you have learned to
lift your heads above the world, you shall keep to the habit of lifting up your heads! If your portion is in Heaven, it shall
not be shaken when the earth rocks and reels to its very foundations. If your treasure is in Heaven, then your treasure
shall not be lost.Click to expand...
At the very least, we can see that Spurgeon believed in a specific time of tribulation.
blessedwife318 said: ↑This quote alone shows that Spurgeon believes we will be on earth during the tribulationClick to expand...
Got any Bible passages to back up this view?
Oh that's right, your just arguing. No need to bring the Bible into this.
blessedwife318 said: ↑and that we are to view it as a time to life up our heads waiting for his return.Click to expand...
The point being...Israel was the intended audience when Christ taught it then.
Want to argue about that?
blessedwife318 said: ↑Some more quotes from this sermon
Quote:
TO you who are without Christ, all the fear and dread you have ever had in this life will be as nothing compared with
the alarm and terror of that day! Your fears, when you have been laid low with fever, and have been near to death’s door,
will be but as child’s play compared with what you will feel at that tremendous day which is soon to come! Yet Christ
says to His people, concerning even that time of terror, “Look up, and lift up your heads.” There is nothing for you who
have put your trust in Him, to ever fear! It is your Judge who is coming, but He comes to acquit you and to exhibit you to
the assembled universe clad in His own righteousness which you already wear. He who is coming is your Lord, your
Friend, your Bridegroom! He who has sworn to deliver you is coming to call your body from the grave and to raise you
up to dwell together with Him forever. That day of Christ’s appearing shall be to you a morning of the ringing out of
harps and a time of joyous shouts and blissful songs—
“There shall be weeping, there shall be weeping,
At the Judgment Seat of Christ,”
but not for you who are in Him! It shall be your joy day, your wedding day, the brightest day in all your history!—Click to expand...Click to expand...
...strong delusion and hope in their god, the antichrist.
We do see moments when fear arises, but the general attitude of the unbelieving will be one of trust in Antichrist.
Quote:
It will be an amazing sight when Jesus comes again! It must have been an amazing sight when Jerusalem was destroyed,
but the true Christian knew all that was going to happen. And all that did happen, terrible as it was, was only a
confirmation of his faith and a fulfillment of his Lord’s prophecies. So shall it be when, at the Last Great Day, we walk
among the sons of men calmly and serenely! They will marvel at us. They will say to us, “How is it that you are so joyous? We are all alarmed, our hearts are failing us for fear.” And we shall take up our wedding hymn, our marriage song, “The
Lord is come! The Lord is come! Hallelujah!” The burning earth shall be the flaming torch to light up the wedding procession!
The quivering of the heavens shall be, as it were, but as the dancing of the feet of angels in those glorious festivities!
And the booming and crashing of the elements shall, somehow, only help to swell the outburst of praise to God, the
Just and Terrible, who is to us our exceeding joy!Click to expand...
I am sure this tickled many ears, perhaps still does, but not something that particularly impresses me.
Especially in a discussion centered on post-trib arguments.
blessedwife318 said: ↑This sermon shows that if Spurgeon had a view on the rapture it was post-trib.Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑He makes it clear throughout the sermon that he believe we will be on earth during the tribulation.Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑There is no way you can get a pre-trib view out of this sermon.Click to expand...
But again, arguing, I understand.
blessedwife318 said: ↑So there is the two big distinctions between Classical Premillennialism and Dispensational Pre-Millennialism and Spurgeon clearly falls into the Classical camp.
Continued:Click to expand...
God bless. -
blessedwife318 said: ↑Now consider Darby:
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ch/...y.html?start=1
First Darby went into law--four years.
Then he was a Catholic priest for over two years.
Then he was saved and became part of the Brethren church.
This is a great contrast to the Calvinistic Baptist upbringing of Spurgeon.
If you read carefully the beliefs that he had, there is nothing new.
Premillennialism had been taught before. It simply had "fallen out of favor" for 1500 years. It was not the popular teaching of the day. So it was new to that generation.Click to expand...
Here is the disticntion as I understand them taken from hereClick to expand...
Instead of arguing over what men say.
blessedwife318 said: ↑1. First, historic premillennialists believe in New Testament priority in which the New Testament interprets/reinterprets the OT.Click to expand...
You don't see the New Testament as not only holding new revelation, but clarifying the Old?
If you don't, my sympathies.
blessedwife318 said: ↑2. Second, historic premillennialists believe the church is the new Israel.Click to expand...
Do Dispensationalists?
And this is relevant because...?
Because you thought DHK said Spurgeon was a Dispensational premillennial?
blessedwife318 said: ↑3. Third, unlike dispensationalists, historic premillennialists do not believe in a future restoration of national Israel.Click to expand...
But again...relevance to this thread, or even DHKs post?
None whatsoever. Your teachers have taught you well, you replicate their own confusion.
blessedwife318 said: ↑Of course there is also the timing of the Rapture, as Pre-trib is curcial to dispensational thought since it fits with their clear division between Israel and the Church.Click to expand...
Secondly, the Pre-Trib Rapture is not crucial, but simply an element within dispensational theology. It is a distinctive, but takes a backseat to the concept of differing ministries in differing Ages. The building of the Church began at Pentecost on the framework of faith in the death of Christ.
Find that in the Old Testament. Find one person in the Gospels that believed in Christ.
Dare ya.
blessedwife318 said: ↑Quote:
Dispensationalism had been taught before. Isaac Watts taught dispensationalism. Some say that the dispensationalism that Watts taught was closer to that of Scofield than Darby's. Many throughout history have taught dispensationalism. It is not new.Click to expand...Click to expand...
Tell that to these Presbyterians.
Of course, they sound a little vitriolic and biased in their presentation, which might interest you.
blessedwife318 said: ↑First is must be noted that using the word "Dispensation" does not make use a Dispensationalist.Click to expand...
And curious how one can call someone a Calvinist and show similarities in views and that means one is a dispensationalist. So is that it? Did you mean to say "One doesn't even have to use the word dispensation to be called one"?
blessedwife318 said: ↑Quote:
Discussing dispensations or even articulating a detailed dispensational
scheme does not make one a dispensationalist, however, a point
that most dispensationalists recognize. For example, Walvoord observes
that Charles Hodge, a postmillennialist, described four biblical
dispensations,22 which leads him to the conclusion that “acknowledging
the presence of dispensations is not limited to a single theological
system.”23 Moreover, Ryrie himself admits that “Covenant Theologians
hold that there are various dispensations (and even use the word) within the outworking of the covenant of grace,”24Click to expand...Click to expand...
To DHKs post?
It doesn't change the fact that the same general views predate Darby. Labeling Darby as the father of Dispensationalism and denying those views prior, which is what was said in the post, boils down to absurdity.
blessedwife318 said: ↑Quote:
As a prophecy is the foretelling of things to come in words, so a type is
the foretelling of something to come in some real emblem or figure or resemblance
of it: Now as there are many ancient prophecies which were
not understood by the persons to whom they were first spoken, nor by
the persons who spoke with them; 1 Pet. 1:11, 12. Yet when they are fulfilled
they come to be better understood, and bear witness to the hand of
God both in the prophecy and in the accomplishment: So though types
may be obscure when they are first appointed, yet when they are accomplished
or fulfilled they are better understood, and shew the hand of God
both in appointing the sign, and bringing to pass the thing signified.30
Watts understands types to be merely shadows of spiritual reality to be
realized in the church, and thus he downplays the importance of the
type itself. John Feinberg explains what this implies:
Nondispensational systems stress that the type is shadow and the antitype
is reality; therefore, the meaning of the antitype supersedes and cancels
the meaning of the type in its own context. Dispensationalists do not
think types necessarily are shadows, and they demand that both type and
antitype be given their due meaning in their own context while maintain-ing a typological relation to one another.31Click to expand...Click to expand...
Show me any other issue where the type is not considered shadow.
Continued... -
blessedwife318 said: ↑In several cases Watts calls Israel “the church,”47 proclaims the “church
or nation of the Jews” to be a “type or figure of the whole invisible
church of God,”48 and explains that for Israel “the church was their whole nation, for it was ordained of God to be a national church.”...Watts, however, appears to use the term
more specifically and sees at least a typological relationship between
the two bodies and very likely a replacement of Israel by the church.
Watts manifests this replacement emphasis in several places. He
argues that God has rejected Israel as his people because of their sin
and has replaced them with the Christian churchClick to expand...Click to expand...
The Old Testament contains shadow, parable, and figure of what God would do in this Age.
Israel is a picture of the Church, but we would be foolish to ascribe Israel as the Church. She is not.
I agree with Watts' views. He is correct, though we would have to have more to see if the "replacing" of Israel speaks of the type yielding to the antitype.
We can say with some authority that based on Prophecy Israel will be active as a Nation in the Millennial Kingdom. That does not preclude the fact that all believers in that day will be the Church of Christ, for only those born again, something that did not take place in Old Testament Economies...can be called the Church.
Jews who are saved following Pentecost become members of the Church, but, those Jews do not shed their heritage, nor do they relinquish the promises made to them as a Nation, for every promise of God will be fulfilled to the letter.
So the above quote is a little obscure, and would have to have more of his view explained in order to see if it is consistent with Scripture.
blessedwife318 said: ↑What is strikingly absent from these triumphant declarations of
the future earthly reign of Christ, however, is the nation of Israel.Click to expand...Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑y dispensational characteristics
on the other hand, begin to make sense. Like the dispensationalist,
Watts sees progressive stages in the outworking of God’s plan in the
world. But Watts understands that plan much differently than the dispensationalist.
He sees the plan of God as rooted in a covenant of
grace, manifested primarily in spiritual blessings upon the church, and
culminated in the spiritual reign of Christ over his church with no
place for national Israel.Click to expand...Click to expand...
But that would not exclusively deny his holding to Dispensational Distinctives. Nor does it negate the points made by DHK.
blessedwife318 said: ↑Can't be a Dispensationalist if you don't see the Church and Israel as distinct.Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑And you really can't if you believe that the Church has replaced Israel which is why Watts cannot be counted among the Dispensationalist camp.Click to expand...
How about actually discussing The Source.
Then perhaps your hang-up with Dispensationalism might take a back seat.
blessedwife318 said: ↑How many dispensations are there? People today quibble over the same thing. Why should that be a point of controversy?Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑He saw things as "progressive revelation." Many people do.
Many people have in history. It is not uncommon. No matter what eschatological stance one takes this is not new.
The point is made that his interpretation is literal. This is not novel. That is the way the ECF interpreted the Bible. The person that introduced the allegorical method of interpretation was Origen, and the person that made it popular was Augustine. It was unknown before that time. A literal interpretation certainly isn't novel. Then he believed in a separation of Israel and the church. This also is not a novel idea. These beliefs can be traced to many throughout history.Click to expand...
Then do so. I have seen that claim many times but on further investigation it has always fallen apart.Click to expand...
Not the Church.
Want to go back further? Read Romans 9-11.
blessedwife318 said: ↑At best what I have seen is people taking the Classical Premillennial teachings and try to shove Dispensationalism into it but it doesn't work, they are too distinct from each other to be merged together throughout history.Click to expand...
And if you actually read your Bible once in a while you would see that the views of Dispensationalism correlate to Biblical Truth far better than an A-millennial view, a Mid-Trib view, or a Post-Trib view.
True Historical Premillennialism is derived from the New Testament, not the works of men. And when you can show why a pre-trib rapture does not correspond to Biblical Teachings, then perhaps you might have something.
But you cannot. You know it, I know it.
blessedwife318 said: ↑What he did is put these things all together. We build on those who have gone before us. Revelation is progressive. He didn't find anything new. He simply put things together that others believed before him. And yet he is castigated for this, and unfairly so. OR calls him a heretic full of false doctrine, and the cause of the downfall or heresies of many. He is not in any place to say such things.Click to expand...
Again if that is trueClick to expand...
Don't you know whether or not revelation is progressive or not?
Let's not gloss over that point and jump straight to "putting facts together."
blessedwife318 said: ↑that all Darby did was put "these things together" you should be able to show a clear historical trend of Dispensational teaching.Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑I look forward to see that, because as I have said before my Dispensational Bible College did not have a problem stating that Darby was the founder of Dispensational thought,Click to expand...
And who cares what your "bible" college taught. That is your primary problem, the teachings of men given more time than the teachings of Scripture.
blessedwife318 said: ↑they made no claims to Classical Premillennialism.Click to expand...
blessedwife318 said: ↑But maybe you know something that my Professors there did not.Click to expand...
If you cannot see the correlation between Darby's views and Scripture, and instead would rather take a derisive attitude towards a theological system that by far correlates to Scripture than the A-mil, Mid, and Post trib position, help yourself.
God bless. -
blessedwife318 said: ↑Originally Posted by SovereignGrace View Post
I have a friend in South Carolina...Myrtle Beach area, who pastors a Reformed SBC church. He falls into the historical pre-mill group that does not agree with dispensationalism whatsoever. He sees the church and Israel as the one sheepfold.
He sees the church enduring until the end, and not raptured about before the great tribulation. Being amil, I can find a lot of agreement with my dear Brother's eschatology. With the dispensationalists? Not so much.Click to expand...Click to expand...
Israel and the Church are not "one Sheep-fold."
This suggests that men were eternally saved by being born as a Jew, and that is simply absurd.
God bless. -
blessedwife318 said: ↑Well as far as the topic goes I think the strongest argument is that no one knows the day or the hour and it would be too easy for anyone just to count forward 7 years from the making of the covenant.Click to expand...
The Day of the Lord coming upon men as a thief in the night applies primarily to the wicked. But the discerning of the Tribulation will know precisely what is going on, and because of that...they will be saved.
And by understanding Scripture they will know the time of the Lord's Return.
Israel, for instance, when preserved in the Wilderness, will have a 3 1/2 year clock.
We do not know the day nor the hour at this point, but, it is irrelevant to the Church, as she will be caught up prior to the Tribulation.
God bless.
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