In our last study we saw that the Tribulation is a period of unparalleled trouble because of God’s judgments. Where will the Church be when this terrible time is ushered in?
John 14:3: “And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also.”
The Church is a “called-out” company of believers, of Jews and Gentiles from every nation under Heaven (Acts 15:14). The place of the Church in the divine program is in the nature of a parenthesis, and that parenthesis ends with the “mystery” of the Rapture (1 Cor. 15:51-53; 1 Thess. 4:16-17). When the Church has been completed and raptured, then the prophecies relating to Israel will take up their course again. Moreover, consider the relationship of the Church to Christ (Eph. 5:31-32). The Church is the Bride of Christ, and to make the Church go through the Tribulation would be to subject Christ Himself a second time to the visitation of God’s wrath, negating Jesus’ statement on the cross, “It is finished” (John 19:30). Specifically, see Revelation 3:10.
If it had been part of the divine program that the Church should pass through the Tribulation, would not our Lord have referred to this fact and have warned His disciples and us of it? Yet in John 13-17, where He was speaking to “His own”, not a mention is made of the Tribulation. He only spoke of this in Matthew 24-25; Mark 13; and Luke 21. But these statements and warnings have no relation to the Church at all. Our Savior’s great word to the Church is John 14:1-3. In addition to this, when we turn to the Epistles, which were written specifically for the Church, here again we find there is no word of warning to believers to prepare for the Tribulation.
The great hope of the Christian is not death, or even Heaven; it is “the blessed Hope” (Titus 2:11-13). The doctrine of the Lord’s Return is presented in scripture as an incentive to holy living (1 Jn. 3:2-3); to patience (James 5:7-8) and to a diligent walk (1 Peter 1:13-15). If the Church must go through the Tribulation, then we should be looking for the Tribulation and not for the imminent return of our Lord (1 Thess. 1:10). The great “hope” which Paul holds before believers is that they may go without dying; and if they have to go through the Tribulation first, would it not be better to die than to be alive?
Psalm 2:5 tells us that the Tribulation will be a visitation of the wrath of God upon His enemies; but we are not His enemies and there is no wrath reserved for us, for Christ has borne our judgment for sin at Calvary (Jn. 5:24; Rom. 5:9; 1 Thess. 1:10; 5:9). If Christians are to go through the “purgatory” of the Tribulation, why must only those Christians who are alive have to experience this fearful judgment?
Church is represented as being in Heaven before the Tribulation period begins.
The Tribulation cannot take place before the Lamb opens the book with the seven seals (Rev. 5); it is only after these seals are broken that the trouble begins (Rev. 6).
When ambassadors, who have been offering peace, have been insulted and ejected, their government recalls them – and war begins! God will recall and remove His ambassadors before the Tribulation.