We’re going to babystep this because it’s necessary. There is a haze of confusion about what the Bible says regarding the last days and what Jesus said. It runs the gamut from full preterists, who believe that all the prophecies regarding the last days have already been fulfilled, to partial preterists, who are self-explanatory. Then there are presentists and futurists, each clinging to their dogma with a Charlton Heston-like death grip.
It’s no longer enough to believe Christ is Lord; it’s no
longer sufficient to believe He is the way, the truth, and the life. In order
to be deemed a brother or sister in Christ nowadays, you also have to subscribe
to the non-salvific dogma being foisted and presented as more important than
the lordship of Christ. If anything the Bible says contradicts our preferred theological
bend, we just ignore it because we’ve carved a niche out for ourselves, we’ve
laid hold of a slice of the pie, and we will defend the slice of pie with far
greater fervor than ever we would defend Christ.
We’ve become so childish and infantile in our reaction to
being challenged that with not an ounce of self-awareness, we boldly declare
that you might be saved, sanctified, and reconciled unto God, living a life
wholly surrendered to Christ and pursuing righteousness consistently, but if
you don’t believe in in a pre-tribulation rapture, you’re just going to get
left behind when Jesus comes for those who do believe in it.
I must have missed that part during Sunday school class. I’ve
always assumed that Jesus is returning for a bride who does not have spots or
wrinkles or any such thing but is holy and without blemish. I always assumed
that was the criteria, but I guess you learn something new every day.
Apparently, it’s whether or not you have the right view on
eschatology that will determine whether or not you are welcomed into the
marriage supper of the Lamb and not whether you were born again and made clean
by the blood of Jesus.
Although we can blame the modern-day church for much of what
ails it, and all of it can be traced back to our willingness to compromise the
truth of Scripture in exchange for the acceptance or validation of the godless,
whispers of the Christ having already returned, and all prophecy having already
been fulfilled have been bandied about since the early days of the church.
It had become such an ongoing point of contention that Paul
addressed it via the urging of the Holy Spirit in his second letter to the
Thessalonians.
2 Thessalonians 2:1-4, “Now brethren, concerning the coming
of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together to Him, we ask you, not to
be soon shaken in mind or troubled, either by spirit or by word or by letter,
as if from us, as though the day of Christ had come. Let no one deceive you by
any means; for that Day will not come unless the falling away comes first, and
the man of sin is revealed, the son of perdition, who opposes and exalts
himself above all that is called God or that is worshipped, so that he sits as
God in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.”
Even though we’ve rebranded Gnosticism and no longer refer to
it by that name, the root and fruit are the same as ever. In short, it’s the
belief or assertion that one individual possesses some hidden, secret knowledge
heretofore undiscovered that elevates them spiritually above their fellow man.
If we are not rooted in the Gospel, and what flows out of us
is not in harmony with God’s word, then we are preaching another gospel entirely.
If we are not in Christ, then we are not in the way; if we are not in the way,
we are not walking in it.
Perhaps we’ve gotten too used to being coddled, and we just
need someone to slap some sense into us.
Whether it’s Jesus, Paul, Peter, Luke, or John, the running
theme throughout all their writings when the focus turns to the end times is to
take heed that we are not deceived. Paul says let no one deceive you. Jesus
says take heed that no one deceives you. Peter says beware, lest you also fall
from your steadfastness, being led away with the error of the wicked.
Galatians 1:8-9, “But if we, or an angel from heaven, preach
any other gospel to you than what we have preached to you, let him be accursed.
As we have said before, so now I say again, if anyone preaches any other gospel
to you than what you have received, let him be accursed.”
If we’re falling for sweaty guys in their mom’s basements
with a whiteboard and magic marker, making illogical connections and creating
extrabiblical doctrine, how will we be able to keep from turning away from the
truth if an angel were to come preaching another gospel?
I’ve lost count of how many imminent rapture warnings I’ve
seen over the last couple of years alone. It’s come to the point that if a week
goes by without another ‘Tomorrow’s the day, pack your bags and make sure your
passport is up to date’ e-mail, I start to worry and wonder if everything’s
okay.
Deception, deceivers, and those attempting to deceive have
existed since the beginning of the church. Even in its infancy, when those who
had walked with Jesus, heard His words, and were witness to His death, burial,
and resurrection were still among the living, there were those who would come
in with mal intent and attempt to teach things antithetical to His instruction.
Because the apostles knew the danger such individuals posed and understood
their intent was not benign, they confronted and rebuked them in the strongest
possible terms.
We have seen the effects of a little leaven in our modern age
and bore witness as entire swaths of what identifies as Christendom, claiming
to be of Christ, descended to the darkest recesses of hedonism and heresy, all
the while maintaining that they walk in the light.
Truth matters because it sets us free. Truth matters because
it is one of the immutable characteristics of Jesus. Without truth, we wander
in deception. Without light, we wander in darkness. Without Jesus, we can never
come to the Father.
Truth is not subjective; it is not given to personal
interpretation or preference. It is absolute, immutable, unshakeable, and
eternal. Build your foundation on the truth of Christ, and you will weather any
storm. Build it on anything less than Jesus, and you will be swept away by the
tempest.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
1 comment:
I've been up against Rapturists many times. The most exasperating was a middle aged woman who declared she knew she would get 'to go' because she believed in the Rapture. With one exception I have found that those who are determined to believe in the false doctrine are not open to debate. It is their religion. Only once did I see a spark occur in a person who I quoted Revelation 20:4. I asked him who he thought those saints were who died for refusing the mark of the beast. I could see in his demeanor that he was going to go straight to his Bible and read it for himself. Ultimately, believing in a doctrine or not, those who don't think they will have to be here when the mark is not an option, won't know what to refuse. And too many will fall in line mindlessly. Some lines, once crossed over, cannot be undone.
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