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The Rapture & Great Tribulation
Christians across North America believe that one day they will be raptured and will be spared the "Tribulation" and "Antichrist."
They might be surprised to learn that the false doctrines of the rapture and dispensationalism were invented in 1830 by John Darby.
In fact, you won't find the word "rapture" in the Bible. It's a hoax. But this didn't stop Cyrus Ingerson Scofield from stealing Darby's deceptive doctrines and incorporating them in his Scofield Reference Bible which was first published in 1909 and revised in 1917. Labeled a charlatan and heretic by Christian author Stephen Sizeman, shyster Scofield even conferred a doctorate on himself in 1892. You can read more about this scoundrel here.
In spite of Scofield's sordid background, the erroneous rapture doctrine was popularized by Hal Lindsay in his book The Late Great Planet Earth in 1970 and sensationalized by Tim LaHaye with his apocalyptic Left Behind series of books beginning in 1995.
The heretical Scofield Reference Bible was even picked up by the Dallas Theological Seminary as a textbook for its students. Many other Bible colleges in the United States also teach students about the rapture and dispensationalism as if they are facts.
Not only is there no rapture. The "Antichrist" is a make-believe character promoted by the Scofield futurists. A quick check in Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible reveals that the Bible warns that not just one but many antichrists will emerge over the ages.
The spirit of antichrist is already in the world, the Bible says. Anyone that denies God and His Son is antichrist. And antichrist systems are alive and well today. However, don't expect a guy who calls himself the real Antichrist to pop up any time soon.
But the lies don't stop there. Many evangelical Christians like to talk about the "Great Tribulation" which they say is a 3½ year-period that is still to come marked by the appearance of the Antichrist. Well, guess what? Those 3½ years of great tribulation have already come and gone and culminated in the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The famous historian Flavio Josephus observed and recorded in great detail the terrifying Roman siege of Jerusalem which lasted from the spring of 67 AD until the fall of 70 AD (3½ years).
In his book The Destruction of Jerusalem, written in 1805, George Peter Holford explains that the Olivet Discourse of Jesus, recorded in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke, is a prediction of the events that would soon come to pass and lead to the destruction of Jerusalem and its magnificent temple.
But the heretical Scofield futurists would have you believe that Jesus was speaking of events 2,000 years or more in the future. Holford's book contains much information from Josephus. Why does the Olivet Discourse not appear in the Gospel of John, you might ask? Because John's detailed account of the soon-to-arrive destruction of Jerusalem is contained in the Book of Revelation.
Well, what about 666, the "number of the beast"? Surely, the beast of Revelation 13 is still to come. No, many theologians think not. That's another instance of how many of us have been hoodwinked to believe the lies of the dispensational futurists.
The last verse of Revelation 13 in the King James Version doesn't say the number of the beast is 666. It says "let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast for it is the number of a man, and his number is Six [sic] hundred threescore and six" (or six hundred and sixty-six). John was speaking in code to the seven churches in Asia Minor. He knew that, if his readers were smart enough to use Hebrew gematria, the number six hundred and sixty six would give them the name Nero Caesar.
It was Nero, the wicked beast, who punished John by banishing him to the Isle of Patmos in the Aegean Sea where he wrote Revelation. Before that, Nero had tried to kill John by boiling him in oil but he didn't succeed. And the siege of Jerusalem began in 67 AD when Nero was Emperor of ancient Rome until he committed suicide in AD 68.
Don't let the futurists fool you. The rapture, the "Great Tribulation" and the coming "Antichrist" are all hoaxes perpetrated by the evangelicals who have been duped by the heretical Scofield Reference Bible.
The dispensational futurists would have you believe that John wrote the Book of Revelation to forecast events that would take place more than 2,000 years after it was written. The truth of the matter is most of the events in the Book of Revelation had already taken place by the time Jerusalem and its magnificent temple had been utterly destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD. In the opening chapter of the Book of Revelation, John indicates that he is writing about events that must "soon take place", not 2,000 years later.
The Modern Message
About 100 years ago, the evangelical church walked away from the biblical approach to reaching the lost as modeled by Jesus.
At one time, evangelists focused on making the lost aware of their sinful condition and then leading them to repentance before introducing them to the grace made available through the death and resurrection of Jesus.
For example, here's what John Gill, a British writer and theologian (xxxx -xxxx), said:
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John R. Stott, a British priest and theologian (1921-2011) put it this way:
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Famous British preacher Charles Spurgeon (1834-1892) had this to say:
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Okay, enough Brits! Here's a quote from world- famous evangelist Billy Graham:
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Billy Graham was making reference to Galatians 3:24. In the King James Version, the verse reads:
- to be continued -
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