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TRUE AND FALSE PROPHECIES: A COMPARISON OF THE ASCENSION EVENT AND THE RAPTURE

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, November 19, 2024 – There are many ways to discern a false prophet. I’ve gone over some of them in earlier articles (if you’re interested, type “false prophets” into this webpage’s search bar in the upper right corner). As I’ve mentioned in several of the articles, false prophets can still preach God’s Truth, though they mix it with the devil’s lies. Is there a way, then, to know when a prophet is giving us good intel about the future?

Yes, thank God, there is. Jesus himself told us about it in various parables that stressed two key features about prophecies that deal with future events. These two features are:

  1. Unexpectedness. The events will happen when you least expect them; and even if they do occur more or less when you expect them to occur, they’ll unfold differently than you anticipated. In some cases (like the coming of Jesus, the Messiah), they’ll be so unlike what was anticipated, many will doubt whether the event fulfilled the prophecy.
  2. Urgency. Prophecies that give you the impression you still have plenty of time to get things right with God are not from God. They are false, as all prophecies about future events are fueled by a sense of spiritual urgency – an urgency that arises from the prophesied unexpectedness of their occurrence. The urgency also comes from our understanding that we as individuals must be ready at every moment of every day to face God for the judgement, because after we breathe our last (which could come at any time), it’s too late to make amends. At that point, what we’ve done, we’ve done, and what we’ve left undone, we’ve left undone, and that for all eternity.

These two characteristics – unexpectedness and urgency – are the hallmarks of prophecies that come from God regarding future events. In short, if the prophecy doesn’t highlight the quality of unexpectedness in the event’s occurrence and the urgency of our taking immediate steps to prepare for it spiritually, the prophesy is not from God.

With these rules of thumb in mind, let’s take a look at the most highly anticipated and publicized future event of all time – the second coming of Jesus Christ. In particular, let’s look at the ascension event that Jesus and Paul prophesied and which has been popularized recently as the “rapture”. As I’ve written here before, I’m not a fan of the rapture, as I believe it’s a false prophesy. The ascension event as foretold by Jesus and Paul is unquestioningly from God, but the rapture is not. Here’s why.

UNEXPECTEDNESS

Unexpectedness is a key feature in future event prophecies that come from God. We are to expect the unexpected; we are to prepare for the unexpected; but we should still anticipate being entirely surprised when it occurs. We won’t be sitting with a stopwatch, counting down the seconds or watching the power balls drop our lucky numbers one by one. Jesus mentions that people will be doing things as mundane as working in the fields or sleeping in a bed or lounging around waiting for the very late bridegroom to show up (some perhaps giving up hope that he’ll even come). I also believe that the unexpectedness of the ascension event will be supernaturally imposed by God – whoever’s still on Earth when it happens won’t know it’s about to happen, because God will prevent them from knowing, the same way he supernaturally prevented the disciples from knowing about Judas Iscariot’s planned betrayal of Jesus (so they wouldn’t try to stop him).

Unexpectedness will also play out in how the ascension event itself will play out – that is, what it will actually look like. Jesus said that he will return in glory with his holy angels, and that he’ll send his angels to all corners of the earth to gather his Church. At Jesus’ ascension 40 days after his resurrection, two angels told the disciples that Jesus would return the same way he went up – that is, via the cloud in the sky and accompanied by holy angels.  Paul mentions being “caught up in the clouds… in the air”, the same way Jesus is described ascending (and also the same way Elijah and the two witnesses are described ascending). This, then, we can assume is how the ascension event will play out, at least according to scriptural references.

The rapture, on the other hand, widely publicizes a type of disappearance that doesn’t align with scripture and is almost comical. The bodies of believers disappear, but their clothes are left behind either in a heap on the floor or bench or car seat, or neatly folded with glasses, watches, and jewelry on top. In every instance, the actual disappearance is not witnessed, just the aftermath is. None of the “left behind” people see the disappeared disappear; typically, they look away for a second, and when they look back, the person is gone. Or they come home to an empty apartment or an empty house, finding only the aforementioned heap of clothing on a chair or the floor. Nobody witnesses anyone rising up in a cloud or into the clouds accompanied by angels, as prophesied by Jesus and Paul and as relayed by the disciples at Jesus’ ascension. There’s just a “Now you see ‘em, now you don’t” moment, which is not scriptural.

There’s also a question of timing. Paul prophesies that the “dead in Christ” will rise first, after which the rest will ascend. Jesus states that he’s send his angels to the “four winds” to gather his Church, which seems to me like it won’t happen all at once but staggered over a period of time. Paul does mention that it will happen in “a twinkling”, or very fast, but I believe the “twinkling” refers to how fast the ascended will change from their earthly body to their glorified one. I don’t believe the ascension of the Church will happen in a twinkling.

Let’s look at Elijah’s ascension as an example of what might happen to Jesus’ Church. It was well-known among the local prophets of each region that Elijah would be taken to Heaven. God must have informed them all, because Elijah knew it, Elisha (the prophet who took over from him) knew it, and all the lesser prophets knew it. What they didn’t know was the exact time or exact manner that Elijah would be taken. First, they all thought it would likely happen on this day at this place, and then God sent Elijah somewhere else that took a few days’ journey to get to. So then they all thought it would likely happen at that place, but God sent Elijah somewhere else, until everyone involved just kind of slacked off a bit, thinking it wouldn’t happen for a while… until suddenly, chariots and horses of fire appeared in the sky and Elijah was taken up in a whirlwind. That was the last that anyone on Earth saw of Elijah until his cameo appearance with Moses at the transfiguration.

Eijah, Elisha, and all the local prophets were definitely not expecting chariots and horses of fire to emerge from the clouds in the sky. Nor were they expecting the chariots and horses to show up when they did. In fact, after the several false starts, the two prophets were just ambling along shooting the breeze when Elijah was unexpectedly whisked away. I think the ascension event for us will be just like that – both expected and unexpected, and in a manner that was unanticipated.

I also believe that the ascension of Jesus’ Church will happen one by one and that each of the ascendees will be escorted by angels. If we’re here when it happens and we’re blessed to be chosen, we’ll all see Jesus coming in the clouds in his glorified body, but it will be his holy angels who come for each of us individually to take us up into the sky to join Jesus. How that will play out? How will the angels will approach us and draw us up into the sky? I guess we’ll have to wait and see when the time comes. Tellingly, the angel escorts are glaringly absent from any rapture movie I’ve ever seen, even though Jesus pointedly mentions them in his ascension prophecy.

I have attended at the death of a loved one, and while I didn’t see any angels present, I definitely felt their presence (and the absence of their presence when they left with my loved one’s soul). At the ascension of the remnant Church, the angels will be in their glorified form, like Jesus, and fully visible to everyone on Earth. Just the thought alone of this glorious event makes me so excited and happy! Like Elijah anticipating going Home to Heaven, I can’t wait!

URGENCY

The overwhelming emotion that is expressed as a jubilant “I can’t wait!” fuels a sense of urgency that is the second main characteristic of a prophecy from God. God’s prophecies never leave us with the impression that we can settle on our lees or that we’ll always have plenty of time to prepare. The urgency characteristic contrasts sharply with the “If at first you don’t succeed…” feature of the rapture doctrine, which assures us that if we or our loved ones miss out on the first round of the second coming, we shouldn’t be unduly worried because we can catch up with Jesus at the second round (as if there will be such a thing). I believe, and again scripture backs me up here, that there will logically only be one second coming, not two or more, which means that anyone left behind after the ascension event prophesied by Jesus and Paul will not have another opportunity. It will be just one and done.

The whole point of the urgency feature in God’s prophecies is to prevent people from procrastinating spiritually. As I mentioned above, we should be ready at every moment of every day to come before God for Judgement. We shouldn’t be “rapture-ready”, we should be Judgement-ready, which incites in us an entirely different and deeper degree of spiritual readiness. I don’t want to lay my head down at night with unrepented sin on my soul, any more than I want to go through any part of my day with sin on my soul. I want always to be Judgement-ready and prepared to meet God at any time.

This is the sense of spiritual urgency that a prophecy from God inspires in us, and I don’t see that in the rapture doctrine, mainly because it promises second or even third chances to get right with God after the initial rapture event. I also don’t see it in the rapture-related doctrine of the tribulation period preceding Jesus’ second coming that insists that people will simply be able to call out to God right up to the last minute and be saved. I believe the cut-off time for conversion will occur at the end of the birth pangs period and just before the tribulation proper begins, and no-one knows the day or hour for that. The book of Revelation doesn’t describe any conversions – none at all – after the tribulation proper begins in Chapter 8. There’s horrendous suffering accompanied by copious cursing and blaspheming, but no conversions. Not one conversion is recorded in scripture after the start of the tribulation. What we do see recorded is that, for all their suffering, none of the unsealed repent.

This bleak outlook for the unconverted is meant to be bleak. It needs to be bleak. Its bleakness relays an urgency that is the hallmark of a prophecy from God. We should not be left with the impression that we’ll always have plenty of time to change our ways. The devil wants us to think that, but God doesn’t. We should also not be given the impression that our unconverted loved ones will have plenty of time to convert. Jesus says that anyone who loves his spouse, parents, children, etc., more than they love him is not worthy of him. A harsh statement, certainly, but necessarily harsh. We should pray for our unbelieving loved ones (who else will pray for them?), but we should never let their unbelief come between us and Jesus or between us and God. If we must choose between our family and Jesus and God, we must never hesitate to choose Jesus and God. The rapture prophecy, with its loosey-goosey approach to conversion and the promise of mid- and post-tribulation conversions for those who currently reject the Gospel, is clearly false.

God’s prophecies always have two key features: unexpectedness and urgency. The unexpectedness comes from the miraculous nature of the event, and the urgency comes from the necessity always to be Judgement-ready. Prophecies that don’t have these characteristics don’t come from God.

I HAD A RAPTURE DREAM: THE FINAL SOLUTION

MCLEODS, New Brunswick, April 17, 2024 – Not sure why all the “rapture dream” videos have been popping up in my YouTube feed lately, but there certainly is a bumper crop of them. The mass psychosis is reaching pandemic proportions among those who insist that “Jesus is coming back soon” to whisk them away before things become too nasty down here.

Never mind that Jesus warned his followers that they’d be classed as outlaws and would of necessity have to suffer the same persecutions that he did.

Never mind that Daniel prophesied that believers will “fall by the sword, and by flame, by captivity, and by spoil, many days”, or that the “king of fierce countenance… shall destroy the mighty and the holy people” and “shall wear out the saints of the most high”, or that John in Revelation prophesied of that same king that “it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them.”

Never mind scripture. The YouTube prophets have it all figured out, thanks to the guiding hand of the televangelists. No genuine believers, according to them, will have to suffer anything prophesied by Jesus, Daniel, John, or any of God’s prophets. Hallelujah and praise the Lord, amirite?

Only what we have here in reality is a spiritually invoked mind-worm that is infesting those who want to believe that God would never allow them to suffer the prophesied trials and indignities. Interestingly (and perhaps tellingly), all the people publicizing their rapture dream confessed to fervently wanting to have such a dream. Many of these dreams were also accompanied by a “presence” on or near the dreamer’s bed.

Here’s what we know about presences on or near beds while people are in a state of sleep or near-sleep – they’re well-documented as being demonic entities. And here’s what we know about demonic entities – they’re well able to mimic heavenly presences, as scripture tells us that Lucifer himself will appear as an angel of light.

As born-again believers, we know that a mass ascension will indeed take place because Jesus told us it would. His words are clearly recorded in scripture. But this ascension will occur only at the very end of time when Jesus comes back in glorified form with his holy angels, who will gather together the last of his faithful and take them Home. This event will be highly visible to everyone on Earth, not just to a chosen few, and all those not involved in the ascension will be simultaneously struck with the certain knowledge of who Jesus is and what they lost by rejecting him.

Any so-called rapture that will take place before this witnessed-by-all mass ascension will not be a supernatural event but very much a human-engineered one. It will involve the individual snatching away and abduction of pre-selected people (“snatching away” and “abduction” being the root meaning of the word “rapture”), likely leaving only their clothing behind as “evidence”. Of these abductees, most will be genuine believers, although some will be rapture believers, and a few will be wolves in sheep’s clothing who are in on the scheme. It will be the final solution meant to rid the world of evangelizing Christians once and for all, as after this event is publicized as the rapture among rapture-pushing denominations and they realize they’ve been left behind, what faith they had will be dissolved under their hurt pride.

Do I believe these abductions will take place soon? I have no idea. Despite the rapture being a human-engineered event, its timing is still up to God. Even the people planning the abductions have no idea when they’re going to take place. Nonetheless, they’ve been preparing for the operation for some time now, awaiting the signal. Note that it won’t require a lot of people to be “raptured”, just enough to get rid of the worst of the troublemakers (that is, those who refuse to fall for their lies) and to lend credence to the myth of the rapture so that those left behind will be soul crushed. After Jesus has allegedly come and gone without them, what will these people have left to believe in?

Some of you may be wondering how I know about the planned abductions. Did I stumble across a leaked document on the deep dark web? Did I overhear a whispered conversation? Did I bug a secret meeting of the infamous cabal?

Nope. None of the above. The simple fact is, dear reader: I had a rapture dream, too. ;D

THE RAPTURE AND THE ASCENSION: PART 1 OF 2

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, February 29, 2024 – Since my dream last summer, I’ve been poring over feature-length movies, short movies, and other depictions of the alleged future event known as the the “pre-tribulation rapture”, or “rapture” for short. What I’ve found is that very little in these fictional presentations is scriptural, which should not be surprising, since the rapture itself is a modern invention that isn’t named in scripture. What is named is an event described as a “taking up” or an ascension. The ascension has already happened to several people (most famously to Jesus) and is prophesied to happen to many more.

There are major differences between the rapture and the ascension, mainly because they’re not the same phenomenon. Since its creation in the mid-1800s, the pre-tribulation rapture and its related mythology have led countless people, including born-again believers, into error. But what is it about the rapture that leaves so many so rapt?

First of all, the rapture gets a lot of press. Over the decades, untold millions have been poured into promoting and marketing the alleged future sudden disappearance of “true believers”. That’s why there are so many feature-length movies (we, the “afflicted and poor”, certainly aren’t bankrolling them!) as well as well-oiled TV and Internet evangelists stumping for the rapture at every turn. The trend has also infected church youth groups, with many of the short phone-filmed rapture videos written and performed by teenagers.

The second main reason for the rapture’s popularity is its formulaic “easy on the soul” mythology. In movies and short videos, the rapture is almost always presented the same way. The opening scenes portray a family or a group interacting amicably, with occasional squabbles. Some of the members are described as being “true believers”, while the rest are either unbelievers or backsliders. The true believers are shown urging and warning the others to repent and turn back to God, but their efforts are mocked or ignored. Then, out of the blue, the rapture occurs and the true believers disappear, leaving behind only their clothes and jewelry and whatever else they were wearing or carrying. Sometimes the left-behind clothes are neatly folded, sometimes they lay in a heap, and sometimes they remain rather comically strapped into the front seat of a car or lounging on a park bench.

The rest of the movie deals with the fallout of the rapture event on the people who are “left behind”. We learn how they feel about their dilemma and we see them struggling to adapt to the post-rapture reality. The so-called tribulation period has also been unleashed at the same time as the pre-tribulation rapture, bringing with it additional challenges (e.g., militarized world government, forced mark of the beast, etc.). Many of the left-behind believers respond to the ever-worsening situation by upping their game as Christians, while many more turn their back on Christianity altogether. Those who do turn back to God are persecuted and martyred.

A third reason why the rapture has caught the attention of Christians is that it offers hope beyond hope. Where scripture tells of a time when it will be too late to convert and be healed, those who believe in the rapture are assured that it’s never too late. The message here is: “Take your time; there’s always another bus” (even though in reality the final one’s long gone).

The ascension is nothing like the rapture. Rather than a one-off event, ascensions have occurred throughout history, with the final ascension set to take place at Jesus’ second coming. Also, instead of a disappearance, the ascension is a physical rising of a believer, body and soul, into the air. The rising is described in scripture as a “taking up”, so that whoever witnesses the ascension sees the ascending person literally rising up into the clouds. No clothes are reported to have been left behind after the ascensions, except for Elijah’s prayer mantle, which Elisha immediately claimed and put to good use.

Besides Jesus, other notable ascendees include Enoch and Elijah, as well as the two witnesses in the book of Revelation. There are also the holy angels described by Jesus as “ascending and descending” and the ascending and descending angels described by Jacob in one of his dreams. Additionally, random unnamed believers known only by their location (e.g., “in the field”) or activity (e.g., “grinding at the mill”) are likewise unexpectedly “taken”.

Paul describes the final ascension in some detail, explaining how the dead in Christ along with any remaining believers on Earth will be “caught up… to meet the Lord in the air” at Jesus’ second coming. Jesus mentions the same event in both Matthew and Mark, with his angels being sent to “gather together” the last believing stragglers from one end of heaven to the other. The use of the word “heaven” implies that the believers rise into the air with the angels, where Jesus is waiting for them in his glorified body.

The lists below highlight the main differences between the rapture and the ascension.

THE RAPTURE

  • People disappear
  • One- or two-time mass event
  • Not in scripture
  • Clothes left behind
  • Heavily promoted
  • Unknown until the 1800s

THE ASCENSION

  • Taken up into the sky
  • Multiple singular events and final mass event
  • In scripture
  • Clothes not left behind
  • Not promoted
  • Known since Enoch

Given these and other significant differences between the mythical rapture and the scriptural ascension, what is the point of pushing the rapture not only on Christians but also on the public in general? In other words, who created the pre-tribulation rapture mythology, why was it created, who benefits, who’s pushing it, and why are they pushing it now? And most importantly, why is all this especially relevant to us as born-again believers?

I explore these questions in detail in “THE RAPTURE AND THE ASCENSION: PART 2 OF 2”, posted here.