Chapter Nine
THE MIDTRIBULATION RAPTURE THEORY
Less
objectional than the posttribulation rapture theory, although still with very
little to commend it, is the view which claims the Church will endure the first
half of the Tribulation period, to be raptured as some midpoint, generally
associates with sound of the seventh trumpet of Revelation 11. According to this view, the Church not only
is promised Tribulation, the ease and worldliness of its members demand that she
shall be purged and purified. Passages
which indicate that believers shall be exempt from this hour of trial are not
recognized, although it is seen that the Church shall be spared anything
characterized as wrath. Rapture at
Revelation 4 is denied; the event is placed rather in Revelation 11, symbolized
by the resurrection of the two witnesses.
The cloud of Revelation 11:12 is said to be a reference to the presence
(parousia) of Christ, and the seventh trumpet is identified with the
“last trump” of I Corinthians 15.
In
common with the pretribulational position, midtribulationalists general
identify the restrainer of II Thessalonians 2 as the Holy Spirit, and insist on
the removal of the Church before the revelation of the Antichrist.
In
common with posttribulationalism, they deny the imminent return of Christ,
insist that the Church is seen on earth after Revelation 4:1, and affirm that
the Church needs at least part of the Tribulation’s purifying fires.
In
a real sense, midtribulationalism is a compromise view between the other two
alternate positions and lacks the strength of either, meanwhile being involved
in additional problems peculiar to its own prophetic system. The slender number of its advocates and the
dearth of convincing midtribulational literature both put a large question mark
over the validity of the viewpoint.
Nevertheless, its major claims demand some investigation and the more
important difficulties involved must be observed.
I. The Church and the Tribulation
A. The Church Is Promised Tribulation
Midtribulationalists
press this argument in the support of their views, making an erroneous
assumption that, since persecution is the lot of the believer in this age,
Tribulation must be his portion in the period to come.
Persecution, whether during the reign of
Antichrist or in the present time, is (speaking generally) the allotted portion
of those who will live Godly, and such suffering during the time of tribulation
is therefore quite in harmony with the character and calling of the Church of
Christ, and the teaching of the New Testament.
This same writer expresses
the viewpoint of his school when he asks: “What is the difference in character
between persecution now, and the probably more intense persecution yet to come,
since both are for the testimony of Jesus?” Since this question is sufficiently answered
in the second chapter of this investigation, it need not prolong the discussion
at this point, save to reiterate the fact that the Tribulation to come differs
from even the most intense persecution of this age in source, in degree, and in
the basic purpose for which it is sent.
Moreover, the Church has been expressly promised deliverance, as
demonstrated earlier from many Scriptures, even though this author makes the
amazing assertion: “We search in vain
for one single text containing a promise either expressed or implied
that the Church will be taken away prior to the Tribulation”! To keep the record straight, here are
several: Romans 5:9; I Thessalonians
1:10; 4:17, 18; 5:4, 9; II Thessalonians 1:6-9; II Peter 2:5-9; and Revelation
3:10, 11.
B. The Church Needs to be Developed and
Purged
The
imperfections of the Church are readily admitted, but tribulationalists have
erred in maintaining that the wrath to come includes sanctifying values:
Thus the Great Tribulation will be a true
mercy to the Lord’s people by fully developing and sanctifying them for their
heavenly destiny and glory.
Pretribulationalists
believe that conviction of sin and progress toward godliness is available
through the work of the Spirit (John 16:8) and the application of the Word of
God (John 15:3). There is no
Tribulation in view, nor is it needed, in the vital truth of Ephesians 5:25-27:
Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also
loved the church, and gave himself for it; that he might sanctify and cleanse
it with the washing of water by the word, that he might present it to himself a
glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it
should be holy and without blemish.
The untruthfulness of the
statement hardly needs comment, when it is maintained that pretribulationalism
“involves that the utmost measure of unfaithfulness or carnality in a believer
puts him in no peril of forfeiting the supreme honour of rapture or of having
to endure the dread End Days.”
Pretribulationalists
believe, rather, that the last living generation of believers has no more need
of purging than other generations which, through death have gone immediately
into the presence of the Lord. A
Church, cleansed by blood of Christ and made both perfect and complete in Him,
needs no “Protestant purgatory” to fit it for heaven (Rom. 8:1). Chapters 2 and 7 more fully develop this
important theme.
C. The Church Will Be Removed Before Wrath
Is Poured Out
With
this statement, all three groups would largely agree. The difficulty comes in determining the time when wrath is
poured out. Posttribulationalists are
forced to say that there is no wrath until the catching up of the saints
on the day of the appearing of Christ, that is, not until Revelation
19:15. Midtribulationalists insist that
nothing before the outpouring of the vials can be called wrath, as
indicated in Revelation 16:1. The
following illustrates that view:
I do not believe that the Church will go
through any part of that period which the Scripture specifically designates as
the wrath of God, but I do believe that the abomination of desolation will be a
specific signal for a hasty flight followed by a very brief but a very terrible
persecution, and that followed very quickly by the rapture of the Church preceding
the outpouring of the vials of the wrath of God.
Pretribulationalists insist
that the entire period covered by Revelation 6:1-19:15 is primarily a period of
divine wrath (as demonstrated in chapter 2), and believe that since wrath
is found as early as 6:17 and since it is impossible to get entirely away from
the chronological succession of these judgments, the weight of Scripture
evidence is on their side. All one must
do is read the content of the seven seals and the first six trumpets in order
to determine whether or nor anything before the seventh trumpet should be recognized
as wrath.
D. The Tribulation Lasts Three and One
Half
Years, Not Seven
Such
a conclusion is not only necessary to the midtribulationalist view, it is
insisted upon as a vital truth.
Speaking of the divided nature of Daniel’s seventieth week, Harrison
declares:
This should forever save us from the common
mistake of speaking of the Tribulation as a seven year period. The Bible never so refers to it; rather, it
begins in the middle of the seven. It
is the latter three and a half years.
All that leads up to it Jesus refers to as merely “the beginning of sorrows.”
Again, in a more recent
publication:
It is of great significance that a 7-year
period is never mentioned in The Revelation; always a 3½-year period. It has no concern with Daniel’s Seventieth
Week, as such, but with the stirring events connected with and following the
mid-week revealing of the Anti-Christ.
By thus making the
Tribulation a three and one half year period, instead of a seven, and by
placing this time of “great tribulation” after the seventh trumpet,
Harrison affirms that the Church will be taken out before wrath is poured out,
and even calls his position pretribulational.
“Wrath” is a word reserved for the Great
Tribulation – see “wrath of God” in 14:10, 19; 15:7; 16:1, etc.
The Day of Wrath has only now come
(11:18). This means that nothing that
precedes in the Seals and Trumpets can rightfully be regarded as wrath. He has restrained it until this
time.... We do not find warrant in
Scripture, in any form of its teaching, for the thought that the Church will go
through the Tribulation
.
. . . . .
. . . . .
. . . . .
Let us get clearly in mind the nature of
the Tribulation, that it is divine “wrath” (11:18; 14:8, 10, 19; 15:1, 7;
16:1, 19) and divine “judgment” (14:7; 15:4; 16:7; 17:1; 18:10; 19:2).
This rewarding is unquestionably at His
pre-Tribulational coming.
The Church is in heaven during the
Tribulation, not merely to escape the judgments of God but to share in their
administration.
To
Harrison, Revelation 5-11 is descriptive of the closing scenes of the Church
Age, and as was seen at the close of chapter 7, he pictures this first half of
the week as a “sweet anticipation to John,” “sweet as honey,” during which the
saints will be “sitting pretty.” The
seals are not judgments, but “man’s folly,” neither are the first six trumpets
“judgments.”
He
holds that the first three and one half years of Daniel’s seventieth week
belong to the end of the Church age,
and in order to give a precedent to such a view, insists that after the death
of Christ, “the Church paralleled for 40 years the Jewish Age, till the latter
closed with the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 a.d. This argues for
a similar overlapping at the close of the Church Age.”
Such
views, although no doubt held with the greatest sincerity, are most
questionable and open to severe criticism.
Several of these affirmations will now be considered briefly, still remembering
that in any such investigation, censure is direct against ideas rather
than men.
(1)
Harrison’s position is clearly midtribulational; he
has left normal pretribulationalism, even though he chooses to retain its name.
(2)
It is contrary to the clear testimony of the book of
Revelation to say that nothing before the seventh trumpet is wrath, or judgment. We may call the seven seals “man’s folly,”
but God calls them “wrath.” Revelation
6:16, 17 twice calls the first six seals “wrath”: “Hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and
from the wrath of the Lamb: For the
great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?” It is remarkable that Harrison twice lists
the verses in Revelation where wrath is found, once in great detail, and
in both instances he completely overlooks Revelation 6:16, 17. Certainly, these verses do not forward his
argument!
(3)
The Great Tribulation is rightly identified with the
time of God’s wrath, but to support his thesis, our author must force it entirely
into the period following the seventh trumpet.
Revelation 7:14 refutes this.
Since this is the only verse in the book which uses the term “great
tribulation,” it is significant that it is found before the opening of the seventh
seal and before the sounding of any trumpets.
The writer, “H. W. H.,” noted previously, foresaw this and with greater
consistency acknowledged the fifth and sixth seals as part of the Great
Tribulation. Indeed, he actually makes the first half
of the week the Great Tribulation, and the latter half the Day of the
Lord. He argues that, according to
Matthew 24:29, the Great Tribulation precedes the signs in the sun,
moon, and stars, and that according to Acts 2:20, these signs shall mark the
coming of the great and notable Day of the Lord. Since these heavenly signs are found in the time of the sixth
seal (Rev. 6:12, 13), he argues that the Great Tribulation is found in the
first six seals.
Although
not agreeing with him that the Great Tribulation differs from the Day of the
Lord, it is interesting to note that here is a midtribulationalist whose
arguments effectively cancel out Harrison’s view that the Tribulation is
limited to the time following the seventh trumpet.
(4)
In Revelation 11:18, ήλθεν
can hardly be rendered “only now come,” as though this conclusively sets the commencement
of the day of wrath. The aorist may
carry the force of completed and final action, and this would seem better
suited to the context here. If this
verse anticipates (from the viewpoint of heaven – 11:15) the end of the
Tribulation, it may refer to the consummation of wrath rather than its
commencement, for it has been seen that wrath starts at Revelation 6:16. Also, if it be argued that the Greek verb in
11:18 means “only now come,” what then of 6:17 where ήλθεν is
likewise used in connection with God’s wrath?
(5)
The literal fulfillment of Daniel’s seventieth week
calls for a future period of seven years, and Daniel 9:25-27 clearly identifies
this “week” with the Tribulation period and the rule of Antichrist. The “prince that shall come” confirms the
covenant for one week, not for half of that time. It is impossible to get away from a literal seven year Tribulation
period without making one of two concessions:
First, if the entire last “week” is to be fulfilled in three and one
half years, the important chronology of the rest of Daniel’s prophecy of
seventy weeks is destroyed. Second, if
only the last half of a seven year “week” falls in the Tribulation period, then
the first half must overlap the Church age.
Harrison chooses the latter course, which is no less precarious than the
former.
As
it has been seen from Matthew 24 and Revelation 6-19, the Tribulation is highly
Jewish in content, and during this period the Church is never seen. To cast even half of such a period back into
the Church age would result in the greatest of confusion. For instance, how could God seal 144,000 for
service from the twelve tribes of Israel in an age when His witnessing body is
the Church, when converted Jews enter into the Church, into the unity of the
body of Christ, and lose their former identify as Israelites? Such a view would also necessitate a secret
beginning of the seventieth week and a highly secret first three and one half
years, an absolute impossibility in the light of the predicted events which
must precede the seventh trumpet.
Posttribulationalists scoff at any idea of a secret rapture;
think of the sport they could have with the concept of a secret Tribulation!
An
outstanding feature of Daniel’s seventieth week seems to be that each part of
the week is set off by some striking event.
The first sixty-nine weeks commence with the commandment to restore
Jerusalem; they end in notable fashion with the cutting off of Messiah. The seventieth week is to end with the visible
splendor of the second advent, and it would be most singular indeed if the
commencement of the entire week should be on a day, unmarked and unnamed, belonging
to a previous age.
Such,
however, is not the case, for the beginning of the seventieth week is to be
marked by the making of a public covenant, confirmed by Antichrist with the
nation Israel according to Daniel 9:27.
The covenant must be public, for it will involve the befriending of
Israel and the restoration of their ancient worship. Yet the midtribulationalist view necessitates that this be a secret
covenant made between Israel and the Beast, an utter impossibility for so
important an event involving a whole nation.
Some smart reporter would get hold of the thing and broadcast it to the
world! Yet, if any of the tremendous
events of the first half of the week would leak out, it would ruin the doctrine
of imminency and enable Bible students to set with reasonable accuracy the time
of the rapture, another impossibility in the light of Mark 13:32, 33 and
kindred Scriptures. The events of
Revelation 5-11 may be thought of, by some, as the “beginning of sorrows,” but
if these events are thrust into the Church age just before the advent of
Christ, they certainly become the “beginning of troubles” for any sane exegesis
of God’s holy Word.
Harrison’s
idea of an overlapping of the Jewish age over the first forty years of the
Church age only makes the difficulty worse.
God does not take up a new work until He has laid down the old one, at
least in respect to His dispensational economies. Daniel’s first sixty-nine weeks ended with the cutting off of Messiah. The age of law ended at the cross,
when Christ redeemed men from the curse of the law (Gal. 3:13). Christ fulfilled Daniel’s prophecy. Christ
ended the dispensation of Moses (John 1:17, etc.) – not the Roman Titus
in 70 a.d. The empty sacrifices and rituals of Judaism
are observed, in some quarters, until this day, and did not have their
cessation when the nation was scattered and the city destroyed. Yet the theory being propounded involves
itself in error at the beginning of the age to justify and set the precedent
for other errors which have been attached to its close.
(6)
The midtribulational position rejects an imminent return
of Christ, while fostering an unscriptural emphasis upon date-setting. Either the first three and one half years
are yet future, in which case the truth of an imminent return of Christ is
denied, or the seventieth week may already have been entered unwittingly, in
which case current events might be expected to synchronize with the seals and
trumpets of Revelation 5-11. Harrison
wavers between the two positions. In The
End, he uses typical posttribulational arguments against imminency:
For Peter there was no possibility of such an experience, our Lord having
told him that he would live to old age and die a martyr’s death.... All Peter preached and penned was with the
prospect of death.... For Paul
his Lord’s commission ... left him facing a long preaching career that precluded,
for much of his lifetime, any momentary return of Christ. He warns that the apostasy must come first
... and “that in the last days perilous times shall come.”
We see from the Scriptures that Christ could
not have returned in the lifetime of Peter nor yet in the days of the Apostles;
nor yet before the Reformation; nor yet before the missionary program is
completed; nor yet before the apostasy has overtaken us; nor yet before the
last days in which we seem to be living.
In His
Coming, an attempt is made to salvage an imminent return,
but the only way the author finds to avoid abandoning the truth that Christ may
come at any time is to say that the Church is already in the time of the
trumpets, which, of course, leads to date-setting.
In
both of these books by Harrison, the date-setting trend induced by the
midtribulational position is abundantly illustrated. It is held, for example, that the “time of the end” began with
the World War of 1914-18, that the trumpets of the Revelation began their sounding
in World War II, and that the space of about half an hour in Revelation 8:1
measures the time between these conflicts!
Such novelty is the natural outcome of the theory that the Church may
have already entered the secret first half of the Tribulation period.
(7)
Even if the rapture were placed in the eleventh chapter
of the Revelation, it would be an easy matter to prove that Tribulation
conditions exist long before that point, even throughout the first half of the
week. An examination of Revelation 6-11
readily reveals if that which precedes the seventh trumpet is called “wrath,”
or if it is called “great tribulation,” or if it includes the Tribulation
martyrs. Pretribulationalists and
posttribulationalists alike agree that the seals and the trumpets are clearly a
part of the Tribulation, and most probably take place during the more severe
latter half of this period.
Midtribulationalist H. W. H. himself concedes that everything after the
sixth seal falls within the Great Tribulation.
However,
even on pretribulational grounds, it can be demonstrated that definite
Tribulation conditions will prevail during the less severe first half of these
seven years. The Holy Spirit as an
abiding Presence in this world will be gone; His ministry as restrainer will be
terminated. The preservative influence
and testimony of the Church will be past, for she will be with her Lord in
heaven. Satan will be cast down into
the earth (Rev. 12:7-13), and this before the woman, Israel, flees to
the wilderness for the last three and one half years. During this early period, Antichrist and the false prophet will
be in control, though veiled as to their true identity, for they make a
covenant with Israel. Even in veiled
form, the Antichrist will know his purpose and program, and with Satan as
master will not be merely “a peace-loving, well-intentioned statesman”!
This
first half of the week differs from the present Church age, moreover, because
God’s primary emphasis is upon the godless nations, and upon Israel, with her
temple and covenant and sacrifices (Daniel 9:27). Converts from the Tribulation period will already be subject to
persecution and martyrdom. The persecution
of Israel obviously starts somewhere in the first half of the week, for she is
driven into the wilderness for the last three and one half years (Rev.
12:14). Likewise, the two witnesses begin
their prophecy, with accompanying plagues and judgments, during the first half
of the week. This seems obvious, for
the period of their prophecy is set for one thousand two hundred and threescore
days (Rev. 11:3), a full three and one half years, yet they ascend into heaven
in the same hour as the second woe (Rev. 11:12-14). The third woe trumpet, incorporating all seven vials of God’s
wrath, follow their death. If the vials
comprise the latter half of the week, then the testimony of the witnesses falls
within the first half. If the vials
occupy only a portion of the last half of the week, then the prophecy of the witnesses
overlaps both halves. In either case,
they begin their ministry during the first three and one half years, and the
very nature of their judgments speaks of Tribulation conditions (Rev. 11:5, 6,
10).
Whether
one places the rapture in the fourth chapter or as late as the eleventh chapter
of Revelation, it is exceedingly difficult to escape the conclusion that the
prime characteristic of the entire seven years is that of awful Tribulation.
II. Is the Rapture in Revelation Eleven?
Several
reasons have been introduced for placing the rapture of the Church in the
eleventh chapter of the Revelation.
These deserve at least brief comment, before passing on to the central
issue, the identifying of the seventh trumpet of Revelation 11:15 with the last
trump of I Corinthians 15:52 and I Thessalonians 4:16. Again, Harrison’s clear commitment to the
midtribulational position warrants his views taken as the norm for those who
place the rapture in the middle of Daniel’s seventieth week.
(1)
The rapture of the Church is seen symbolized in the
resurrection and ascension of the two witnesses: “How, if the two witnesses are symbolic of ‘ larger company of
witnesses,’ then their resurrection and ascension must be symbolic of the
resurrection and rapture of that larger company.” But the two witnesses are not symbols. The normal, literal interpretation of the
passage, including as it does the details of their dress, their prophecy, and
their plagues, indicates that they are individual men. They are spoken of as “two prophets,” and
when they are killed, their dead bodies lie a definite period of time in a
literal city which is identified as Jerusalem.
It would not make good sense to say that symbolic bodies were killed,
only to lie on literal streets, any more than to deny them literal burial in
symbolic graves. The narrative of the
two witnesses is evidently meant to be taken literally.
(2)
It is claimed that these two witnesses symbolize the
two classes at the rapture – the “Dead” and the “Alive.” This idea breaks down when it is remembered
that both witnesses die and must be raised.
Nor is it by any means certain, as averred, that these are Moses and
Elijah (others say Enoch and Elijah), even though they witness with power equal
to those Old Testament prophets.
(3)
The “cloud” of Revelation 11:12 is identified with
that of I Thessalonians 4:17, “a definite reference to the Lord’s presence – parousia.” Here again, any identification of the two is
exceedingly precarious. Many times in
Scripture the presence of God is indicated by a cloud, but that is no
indication that two such references in two distinct books by different authors
necessarily speak of the same appearing of the Lord, yet alone the parousia
of Christ.
(4)
Nor is the “great voice” which bids the witnesses to
“Come up hither” of any necessity even remotely connected with the “shout,” or
even with the “voice of the archangel” of the Pauline passage. It is not unimportant that at the rapture
“the Lord himself shall descend from heaven,” while here in Revelation 11, the
voice comes from heaven and calls them up thither.
(5)
The mention that “thy wrath is come” after the seventh
trumpet sounds is used to show that wrath begins after the Church is caught up,
but as noted, the earlier reference to wrath in 6:16, 17 is not cited.
(6)
Throughout, it is assumed without any particular proof
that the seventh trumpet falls in the middle of the week. However, in 11:17-19, the sounding of the
seventh trumpet is clearly associated with the reign of Christ, the judging of
the dead, and the rewarding of “thy servants the prophets,” all of which occur
at the end of the Tribulation with the revelation of Christ and the
resurrection of Israel, at which time “The kingdoms of this world are become
the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and
ever” (Rev. 11:15).
It
is most evident that the seventh trumpet brings the chronology of the book
right up toward the time of the end, and makes it exceedingly difficult to
identify it with a supposed midtribulational rapture. Posttribulationalists are a little more consistent at this point,
for they identify the seventh trumpet with the day of Christ’s revelation, the
last day of the seven year period. Yet
even they have difficulty in so doing, for the seven vials of wrath, containing
the seven last plagues, all follow the sounding of this seventh trumpet,
although evidently in rapid succession as the consummation of the judgments of
God. The seventh trumpet is evidently near
the end of the Tribulation, associated as it is with resurrection, rewarding,
and reigning, yet cannot be on the final day because of the seven vial
judgments which are to follow.
Midtribulationalists must labor to explain why they believe nothing preceding
the seventh trumpet belongs to the Tribulation, while posttribulationalists are
embarrassed by the record of seven vials following the trumpet which
presumably marks the revelation of Christ and the end of all such judgment.
Both
difficulties grow out of a fallacious identifying of the seventh trumpet of
John with the “last trump” of Paul, which problem will be dealt with
shortly. Pretribulationalists, who make
no such assumption, are free to give the seventh trumpet a normal and natural
place in the chronology of the Tribulation, evidently well toward the end of
the period, yet not on the last day, and certainly not in the middle of the
week. A Revelation 11 rapture makes
havoc with any attempt of understanding the chronology of what admittedly is a
difficult book.
(7)
In Revelation 10:7, “In the days of the voice of the
seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be
finished, as he hath declared to his servants the prophets,” – in this verse,
midtribulationalists find proof of the completion of the Church, just before
her rapture. The text is obscure, as
indicated by the fact that Harrison also links it with the “mystery of
godliness” (I Tim. 3:16), and with the “mysteries of the kingdom of heaven”
(Matt. 13). A better explanation it would seem, is that
which has been offered by Ironside on this “mystery”:
This is the theme of the seven-sealed roll;
the vindication of God’s holiness in having so long tolerated evil in His
universe. What greater mystery
confronts and confuses the human mind than the question, Why does God allow
unrighteousness so often to triumph? It
is what men call the mystery of Providence; but Providence is only another name
for God. This is His
secret. He will disclose it in due
time, and all shall be clear as the day....
His final triumph over all evil is what is so vividly presented in the
rapidly-shifting tableau of the Revelation. ...
Here, then, is not the
mystery of the completion of the Church, but the finishing of the mystery of
Satan’s sway and of God’s long toleration of iniquity, consummated in the
binding of Satan when Christ destroys His enemies with the brightness of His appearing. It is the bringing to a climax of the
“mystery of iniquity” found in II Thessalonians 2:7.
It
seems unnecessary to prolong these comments upon the theory that rapture falls
in Revelation 11. To say that “the temple
of God was opened in heaven” (v. 19) indicates that the bodies of believers
(the temple of the Holy Spirit, I Cor. 3:16) are now in heaven;
to say that the two witnesses symbolize the dead and the living at Christ’s
coming; to say that the “mystery” and the “cloud” are those found in I
Thessalonians 4 – this is an attempt to prove a doctrine upon surface similarities. These are the husks, and not the wheat of
true exegesis. True, some interesting
parallels between the experience of the witnesses and the experience of the
Church may be demonstrated, but this can be done with the translation of Elijah
or the ascension of Christ, for parallels and similarities abound through
Scripture. The actual identification of
one event with another must rest upon more definite and more Biblical
similarities than these. As Newell
(tersely) writes concerning Revelation 11 and the two witnesses:
Where are the churches?
Brethren, they are not there!
The people are occupied with something entirely different. “And they that dwell upon the earth shall
rejoice over them, and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another; because
these two prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth.” The whole earth was in their hands for
judging and tormenting. Where is the
ministry of reconciliation in that day?
Where are the ambassadors that were formerly pleading in Christ’s stead
to be reconciled to God? That day is
gone! People with discernment see
that. God is doing something else then;
judgment is on. And Israel and the
nations are involved in it – not the Church!
III. The Seventh Trumpet and the “Last Trumpet”
The
identification of the seventh trumpet of Revelation 11:15 with the last
trump of I Corinthians 15:52 and I Thessalonians 4:16 is probably the most
important key to the Midtribulation rapture theory. The entire structure of this view stands or falls with the
ability of its adherents to prove three related propositions: first, that the seventh trumpet falls in the
middle of the week; second, nothing before this trumpet is Tribulation; and
third, that the seventh trumpet is identical with the “last trump.” The obvious weaknesses of the first two propositions
have been demonstrated, and the fallacy of the third will be even more
transparent.
(1)
Any identification of these two trumpets is, at best,
based on the surface similarity that one is designated “last,” while the other
completes a series of seven. In rather
a naïve way, both midtribulationalists and posttribulationalists assume that
this is sufficient evidence to prove that they are identical.
Then the same mighty angel lifts his hand to
heaven and swears that the End-Time has come, declaring that during the days in
which the seventh angel sounds his trumpet, the mystery of God would be
finished. It will be remembered, that
the rapture is to take place, according to First Corinthians, fifteen,
fifty-two, at the sounding of the seventh trumpet, and that the Church is
spoken of as a mystery. Apparently the
Church ascends as the seventh angel sounds his trumpet.
The same assumption is made
even more emphatically:
St. Paul, by inspiration of the Spirit,
definitely places the Resurrection and the Rapture of the saints through the
coming of Christ “at the last trumpet” (I Cor. 15:51, 52). This is a specific locating of the
event. Unquestionably the Holy Spirit
revealed the fact and inspired the recording of it. How dare any one locate it otherwise? ... Can we postulate the Rapture at any other
place than that given by and through the Apostle Paul and claim to maintain the
integrity of God’s Word? ... When,
however, we reach the last Trumpet in The Revelation, last in the series, we
shall find much satisfying evidence that the event is actually taking place.
This
identification of the two trumpets is not new.
Hermann Olshausen, in his Biblical Commentary on the New Testament,
had made the same claim almost one hundred years before, although adding: “The expression [last trump] is of course to
be understood figuratively of some stupendous spiritual influence, which
arouses mankind for some mighty purpose.” However, we are more inclined to agree with
Ellicott, who says:
There are no sufficient grounds for supposing
that there is here [in I Cor. 15:52] any reference to the seventh Apocalyptic
trumpet (Rev. 11:15).... This σαλπιγξ [trumpet] the Apostle here terms εσχατη [last], not with reference to any preceding
series ... but as connected with the close of this αιωυ [age] and the last scene of this world’s history.
We believe that the “last
trump” will close the Church age, but that it will sound several years prior to
the seven judgment trumpets of Revelation.
(2)
There are many references to trumpets in the Word of
God. Unless there is clear and concrete
evidence, it is most precarious to identify trumpets found in different parts
of the Bible. Paul’s “last trump” need
not be the same as John’s “seventh trumpet,” and particularly so, since
different subjects are in view. Then
too, trumpets serve for various purposes.
In Leviticus 23:24, there as “a memorial of blowing of trumpets, an holy
convocation” (cf. Num. 29:1-6).
From Numbers 10:1-10 it is apparent that the same trumpets were used for
vastly different purposes: “the calling
of the assembly,” “the journeying of the camps,” the gathering together of the “princes
... of Israel,” to “blow an alarm,” and to “blow with trumpets over your
burnt-offerings, and over the sacrifices.”
The
actual blowing of the trumpets was not the central issue: “But when the
congregation is to be gathered together, ye shall blow, but ye shall not sound
an alarm” (v. 7). The important question
is, “what tune did the trumpets play?”
Even though two trumpets may be clearly identified as the same, that in
itself does not suffice to prove that each trumpet blast commands the same action. Nor did the trumpets of Israel serve to call
the heathen, or any other nation outside the camp. It is most arbitrary to claim:
“The Trumpets, in their religious aspect, serve to assemble God’s
earthly people in their land and His heavenly people in heaven.
(3)
Now, dealing more directly with the matter of the
identification of the two trumpets, it is asked: “How can a trumpet sound for the Church before seven other
trumpets, and still be called the ‘last trump’?” This is a fair question, but the simple answer is that the “last
trump” and the seventh trumpet are each last in their own sphere. The “last trump” is last in respect to the
Church, and if mention of it must be found in the book of Revelation, let it be
identified with the trumpet voice of 4:1 which said, “Come up hither,” and not
with the last of a series of trumpet judgments which pertain, not to the
Church, but to Israel and the nations in the Tribulation. The “seventh trumpet” of Revelation 11 is
“last” only in respect to the other six of the series. It certainly is not the last trumpet to
sound in time and eternity, or even in respect to the Tribulation and the
return of the Lord. The trumpet of
Matthew 24:31, which serves to gather the elect of God, is “after the
tribulation of those days” (v. 29), and so follows (in point of time) the
sounding of the seventh trumpet. Harrison
admits this, but Lang is
in error when he states: “The last trump of Scripture is recorded in Rev.
11:15-18.” The very fact that another trumpet must blow
after the Tribulation, which is obviously after the seventh trump, gives one to
believe that the sounding of a trumpet will have a prominent place in the experience
of Israel during the Millennium – this, a very normal expectation if one is to
judge from Israel’s history. It would
be very abnormal to dogmatize that no trumpet will sound its voice throughout
eternity, simply on the basis that the closing signal of the Church age is
designated as the “last trump.”
(4)
Again, one may inquire: “How can a trumpet blown for the Church at a pretribulational
rapture be rightfully called ‘last,’ when no trumpet precedes, and seven
trumpets follow?” As it has been seen,
the fact of subsequent trumpets is no problem.
Even a schoolboy knows that the sounding of “the last bell” in the
morning does not mean that the bell will not ring at regular intervals during
the day. As to the objection that a
single trumpet cannot properly be called “last,” the explanation of Silver in
this respect is very plausible: “It is
not improbable that there are two blasts sounded in quick succession. The ‘trump of God’ sounds and the dead
arise: almost instantly it sounds again and the living are translated.” If such is the case, since the dead are to
rise first, the trumpet of I Thessalonians 4:16 will awaken the dead in Christ,
and the trumpet of I Corinthians 15:52 (the “last trump”) will summon those who
have been raised and those who are alive and believe in Christ, into the Lord’s
presence.
Nor
is it improbable that there will be additional trumpet signals in the last days
other than those indicated by Scripture.
While the merits of pretribulationalism do not depend on details such as
these, there is certainly nothing to overthrow or weaken the position in the
alleged identification of Paul’s “trump” with the “seventh trumpet” of John.
(5)
Moreover, there are distinct points of dissimilarity
between these trumpets. The contexts in
question are vastly different. The
trumpets of Revelation introduce judgments of God; they bring into being a time
of unparalleled suffering, and comprehend the godless nations of the
earth. The trumpet of I Corinthians 15
and I Thessalonians 4 is distinctly for the Church, implies nothing of judgment
or anything else connected with the godless, and introduces for the believer in
Christ a time of unprecedented glory and privilege, even the joy of His
presence. In the trumpet portion of the
Revelation, there is no hint of translation, but a rushing onward toward the
climax of God’s fearful wrath and certain judgment. There are indications that the blasts of the seven trumpets
extend over the respective period of judgment each introduces, even as in
Exodus 19:19, “the voice of the trumpet sounded long, and waxed louder and
louder,” and in Joshua 6:5, 13, at the conquest of Jericho, “the priests went
on continually, and blew with the trumpets,”
So, Revelation 10:7 speaks of “the days of the voice of the
seventh angle, when he shall begin to sound.”
There is no parallel here to a trumpet signal for the hosts of the
redeemed to ascend, characterized as it must be: “in a moment, in the twinkling
of an eye, at the last trump.” All this
speaks of brevity, of speed, of an instantaneous translation, and certainly not
of a prolonged trumpet blast and a period of days or weeks during which are
poured out the seven last judgments of God.
In
addition, the very terminology which describes the trumpets differs. The seventh trumpet is said to be blown by
an angel, but the “last trump” is clearly designated as “the trump of God.” While it is not contended that each angelic
trumpet may not be a trump of God, inasmuch as angels are commissioned
to do God’s bidding, it does not follow automatically that the last of these
seven is the trump of God.
Strombeck comments:
In the search for “the last trump” one must,
then, be guided by the fact that it is God’s own trumpet, sounded by the Lord
Himself. In view of this one would
hardly be willing to contend that the last trumpet of God is the last of a
series of trumpets blown by the priests of the Aaronic priesthood. These were not in a class with the trumpet
of God. Remembering that the angels are
only a little higher than man, it is just as contrary to the laws of logic to
say that “the last trump,” which is God’s own trumpet, is the last of a series
of trumpets blown by angels. Both men
and angels are creations of God. They
cannot sound the trumpet of the Creator.
When
midtribulationalists identify the rapture of the Church with the ascension of
the two witnesses in Revelation 11:12, they seem to overlook completely the
fact that the seventh trumpet is not blown until 11:15, with the great
earthquake of the “second woe” intervening.
Thus, in Revelation 11, the resurrection (if such is typified) precedes
the seventh trumpet and is found in the time of the sixth, while in I
Corinthians 15, resurrection is “at [έυ] the lat trump,” and in I
Thessalonians 4, the Lord descends “with the trump.” The supposed identification of these trumpets strains the
Scriptures at every point of investigation, yet this is the core of the
midtribulational argument. Instead of a
positive identification of the two trumpets in question, the best
midtribulationalism can offer is a shallow, surface similarity – a similarity
which breaks down wherever and whenever it is examined in the light of relevant
Scriptures.
(6)
By the very nature of their position, midtribulationalists
must go to the eleventh chapter of the Revelation, with its account of the
resurrection of the two witnesses and the sounding of the seventh trumpet, to
find anything which even vaguely resembles a rapture of the saints in the midst
of the week. From the viewpoint of
those who endeavor to find therein some tangible support for this theory, the
chapter must be most disappointing. In
view is the ancient city of Jerusalem, with its temple, its court and its altar
– hardly the setting in which to find vital Church doctrine. The witnesses and their ministry give every
evidence of being literal and cannot be relegated to the position of symbols,
particularly of the dead and the living believers in Christ. The chronology of the entire scheme is in
error, for the witnesses are raised in the time of the sixth trumpet rather
than the seventh, while this seventh trumpet is identified with events at the
close of the week rather than with its midpoint. If anything prior to the sounding of the seventh trump falls
within the dispensation of grace, than grace is no longer grace, or else the
seals and the trumpets must be made sweet and desirable, in which case language
fails to have any significant meaning.
Nothing less than the most flagrant spiritualization can deny that
Tribulation commences with Revelation 6 and “great tribulation” at least by
7:14. As demonstrated, the barest
surface similarity links the trumpet of Revelation 11:15 with the “last trump”
which sounds at the rapture of the Church; beyond this ,all else is
contrast. Harrison presents “sixfold
evidence linking World War II with the Trumpets of Revelation 8,”
but since error is so evident in the chronology of the first six trumpets, making
their blowing in the neighborhood of 1941, it is hardly to be expected that the
chronology of the seventh should be any the less in error. Concerning the eleventh chapter of the
Revelation, Ottman says: “Interpreters
of the Revelation exhibit more confusion in the exposition of this chapter than
elsewhere,” and cites the words of Dean Alford that this chapter is “undoubtedly
one of the most difficult in the whole Apocalypse.” It is upon this chapter that midtribulationalists
lean most heavily to demonstrate their thesis, but instead of substantiating it
as true, the chapter exposes its error and breaks the theory into pieces.
IV. Revelation 4 and the Twenty-Four Elders
There
is one remaining midtribulational line of argumentation which demands some
recognition. Stated simply, it is the
negative proposition that there is no indication of the rapture in Revelation
4, not even symbolically when John responds to the summons, “Come up
hither.” Harrison proposes seven
reasons why rapture cannot occur at this point in the book and for the sake of
a complete hearing, these will have brief consideration – although there is
little to be gained by such a denial if the place of the rapture cannot be established
later on in the Revelation.
A. What Happens at Revelation
4:11?
(1) “After these things I saw ... I heard
... I was” merely records the personal experience of the seer. It is just a change of viewpoint, it is
argued, for John has seen and recorded “these things” and now turns to record
“other things.” But there is more to
the verse than this1 Change of time and
place are involved, for with the words “come up hither,” the scene moves into
the future and shifts from earth to heaven.
Jesus is no longer seen as a mediatorial Priest “walking in the midst of
the lampstands,” but comes into view in an entirely different character, and
for the execution of other purposes. To see the rapture at this point in the
Revelation corresponds perfectly with 1:19, which is the almost undisputed
chronological key to the book. The
present Church age corresponds to “the things which are,” and “the things which
shall be hereafter” (μετά ταΰτα)
refers evidently to events which shall transpire after the Church age has been
completed. This being the case, it becomes
apparent that 4:1 commences the futuristic section of the Revelation,
identified as it is by the double use of the expression μετά
ταΰτα. John has been speaking of things which pertain to the churches,
but now he is about to unfold his vision of conditions upon earth and events in
heaven after God’s program for the churches is finished.
(2) It is said further that “these things”
refer to the visible churches which go on into the Tribulation, and (3) that a
rapture at this point is inconsistent with the structural plan of the book: the
Church, once mentioned, is left to play its part even though it is not again
mentioned. It is difficult to find any
weight to support these two arguments, for they so largely assume that which
the author has undertaken to prove, namely, that the Church continues beyond
this point in the book.
(4) It is argued that the revealed order
of harvesting, “first the tares” (Matt. 13:30), indicates that the seals and
trumpets must harvest the tares before the Lord of the Harvest gathers the
“wheat” into His barn. But this is
hardly conclusive, for in Matthew 13, the angels do the reaping, not the
Beast, nor Satan. The time of reaping
is set by God and starts with Revelation 14:15, not in chapter 6 with the
opening of the first seal. It is most
peculiar that our author argues that seals and trumpets harvest the tares, for
according to his view, these fall in the sweet half of the seven years
and are not part of the Tribulation at all, but are rather in the closing
scenes of the Church age.
(5) There fails to appear any redeemed
company in glory. The position and
description of the twenty-four elders fail to suggest any company of people
such as would have to be present after the rapture. Since both midtribulationalists and posttribulationalists argue
strenuously that the elders cannot represent the Church, the identification of
this interesting company will receive a more detailed treatment very shortly.
(6) None of the revealed accompaniments of
the coming of Christ are here in this passage.
But this is not true, for translation is suggested in the words “come up
hither,” and there is a voice as of a trumpet, an open door in heaven, and a
redeemed company with their crowns. All
of this, however, is not directly to the point. There is no need that all the accompaniments of the rapture be
restated at every mention of the event.
Nor is it necessary to pretribulationalism to find the rapture at all in
this experience of John.
Chronologically,
the rapture most probably occurs between the third and fourth chapters. The Tribulation section of the Revelation
presumes that rapture is past, and neither rapture nor Church
find mention at all in it. Judgment is
in view and the persons involved are those who dwell on the earth. From this point on, the redeemed are seen in
glory, and when Christ returns to the earth, He brings His saints with Him.
(7) The last of these reasons, said to be
conclusive, is that Paul places the rapture at the “last trumpet,” identified
with the seventh trumpet of Revelation 11.
Some of the difficulties of this view have already been
demonstrated. From these seven reasons,
it is safe to conclude that, although John’s experience need not typify the rapture, it has not been proved
that it could not, and more important, nor has it been disproved that
rapture occurs at this point in the chronology of the book. Pretribulationalists believe that from the
viewpoint of Revelation 4:1, John looks down upon a world torn by Tribulation
judgments, from which the Church and the restraint of the Holy Spirit have already
been removed. As for the company beheld
in heaven, although it is not essential to pretribulationalism to prove that
the elders do indeed represent the Church in glory, if such an identity can be
demonstrated, the case becomes that much more unassailable.
B. Who Are the Twenty-four
Elders?
The
first momentous sight to greet the eyes of the Apostle John when he was caught
up into heaven to behold “things which shall be hereafter,” was a throne set in
heaven, and One sitting upon the throne surrounded by twenty-four elders, each
of which was upon a throne, wearing golden crowns and white raiment. Who are these glorious and privileged
individuals, seated in such a place of prominence about the glorified
Christ? Is there any way of determining
their real identity? They are mentioned
twelve times in the Revelation, and only in that portion where the Church is no
longer seen on the earth (Rev. 4:4, 10; 5:5, 6, 8, 11, 14; 7:11, 13; 11:16;
14:3; 19:4). Do they, as so widely believed,
represent and picture the glorified Church?
There are a number of factors involved in finding an answer to these questions.
They
are not a symbolic group. It is most
difficult to conceive of John holding conversation with one-twenty-fourth part
of a symbolic host (Rev. 5:5). These
elders are individuals, although their title and actions indicate that they
function in a representative sense (Rev. 5:8).
It will be remembered that when Moses was commanded to give God’s
message to the children of Israel, he did so through the elders of the people
(Ex. 19:3-8). Likewise in the New
Testament eldership is a representative office (Acts 15:2; 20:17), so although
the elders of the Revelation cannot symbolize the Church in glory, they
can be representative of the Church, and thus still indicate the
presence of that glorified body in heaven before Tribulation judgment. To recognize these elders as representative
of the Church overcomes the objection:
“If so great a company of redeemed were present, their failure to appear
and join in the New Song is utterly inexplicable.”
But it must be remembered that the rapture
will only add a relatively small number to the multitude of saints already
“with Christ.” Even if Dr. Harrison
were right, there still ought to be a great number of saints in heaven. In private conversation, Dr. Harrison has
recognized this fact, but stated that these believers must be in some other
part of heaven, for it is vast enough that they do not appear in the scene
described by Revelation 4-5. If this be
so, why could not the raptured saints also be there in that remote part of
heaven? It is easier to believe that
the twenty-four elders do represent the Church.
Harrison
says that “there is no suggestion that those whom they represent are there with
them. Quite the opposite: they always
appear and act in their individual capacity.” If this were true, after the rapture which
Harrison places in Revelation 11:12, their number should materially increase,
which, however, is not the case (Rev. 11:16).
Twenty-four may well be the very number of representation, as was the
case in the number of courses of the Levitical priesthood (I Chron. 24:1-19).
To
further the identification of the elders, they are not angels (Rev. 5:11;
7:11), for the angels are grouped around the elders; nor are they the same as
the four living creatures. Every time
the elders are mentioned, they are clearly distinguished from celestial
beings. Scripture never speaks of the
angels being crowned or seated on thrones; they are never designated elders,
neither are they said to sing. Nor
could angels ever join with the song of the redeemed, for no redemption was
provided for angels who left their first estate, while angels who did not fall
need no redemption. However, all of
these privileges from which angels are excluded are open to the Church (Matt.
19:28; I Pet. 5:4; II Tim. 4:8).
These 24 elders are not angels ... as
is shown ... by their white robes and crowns, the rewards of endurance
... but representatives of the Church, as generally understood.
There
are five characteristics which seem adequate to identify the elders as
representatives of the glorified Church:
their position, their worship, their raiment, their
crowns, and their song.
Their
position, in proximity to a throne which evidently is that of Christ,
and the fact that they themselves occupy thrones, indicates that the Church is
in view. They are found in the place of
honor, with a royal association between their own thrones and the one central
throne. To the Church alone is
co-enthronement with Christ promised (Rev. 3:21; Matt. 19:28), as also the
authority to judge angels (I Cor. 6:2, 3).
Neither the twenty-four elders, nor their thrones, ever appear after
Revelation 19:7-9. From that point, the
Church is seen as the bride of Christ, and evidently sits together with God’s
Son upon His throne.
The
identification of the elders with the Church is furthered by considering their worship. The initial act recorded of these elders is
that they worship Him who sits upon the throne. In fact, throughout the book, whenever the elders are found in
the presence of Christ they are prostrate in worship before Him.
The four and twenty elders fall down before
him that sat on the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and
cast their crowns between the throne, saying Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive
glory and honour and power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy
pleasure they are and were created (Rev. 4:10, 11).
And the four beasts said, Amen. And the four and twenty elders fell down and
worshipped him that liveth for ever and ever (Rev. 5:14).
And the four and twenty elders, which sat
before God on their seats, fell upon their faces, and worshipped God (Rev.
11:16).
And the four and twenty elders and the four
beasts fell down and worshipped God that sat on the throne, saying, Amen:
Alleluia (Rev. 19:4).
This attitude of worship, coupled with their intimate
knowledge of God and His doings (John 15:15; Rev. 5:5; 7:13-17), is what would
be expected of saints so recently caught up into the presence of their Lord.
The
identification is made more certain by their raiment, for they are
clothed in white (Rev. 4:4), everywhere typical of the righteousness of saints
(Rev. 3:4, 5, 18; 7:9, 13, 14; cf. Isa. 61:10). It was an express promise to the overcomers
at Sardis that they should be clothed in white raiment, even to walk with the
Lord in white. Coupled with this
raiment is the fact that the elders wear crowns, mindful of the promise
made with those at Smyrna (Rev. 2:10) and the warning to those at Philadelphia
(Rev. 3:11). They do not wear the
monarch’s crown, or diadem (διάδημα),
but the victor’s crown, won in conflict (στέφανος; cf.
II Tim. 4:8; James 1:12; I Pet. 5:4).
The fact that these representative elders are crowned also indicates
that resurrection is past, for disembodied spirits wear no crowns. As Seiss comments: “The coronation time is the resurrection time; and no one can be
crowned until he is either resurrected if dead or translated if living.”
Thus
the saints, represented by the elders, have been translated and have received
their resurrection bodies. They have
been rewarded, as the Lord has promised (I Cor. 3:12-14; 9:25; I Thess. 2:19;
II Tim. 2:12), and are now wearing their crowns. The clear indication is that resurrection and rapture are
past. In fact, it is rather obvious
that they have just received their crowns, for shy should angelic beings who
have worshiped and adored Christ from eternity past wait so long and for this
particular moment to cast their crowns at His feet? Is it not more logical to conclude that the rapture and the
rewarding of Church saints have just taken place – that the Church, fresh from
scenes of earthly conflict, in gratitude and humility cast their every reward
before the feet of the Saviour, joining the four living creatures in ascribing
to Him all glory and honor and power? (Rev. 4:9-11).
A
fifth identifying mark that these elders do represent the Church is found in
the song they sing and the important claims that are made therein:
And they sung a new song, saying, Thou are
worthy to take the book, and to open the seals thereof: for thou wast slain,
and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and
people, and nation; and hast made us unto our God kings and priests: and we
shall reign on the earth (Rev. 5:9, 10).
At this point both
midtribulationalists and posttribulationalists introduce their primary argument
against identifying the elders with the Church, or with representatives of the
Church, or with redeemed people at all.
There is a textual problem involved with the pronoun “us,” as found in
the song of the elders. The important
Codex Alexandrinus, of the fifth century, omits the word completely in verse 9,
and a variety of manuscripts support the third person, “them” and “they” in
verse 10. From this, it is argued most
strenuously that the elders do not sing their redemption song, but rather, they
sing of others from every tribe and nation who have been redeemed. While admitting that this is the reading
favored by most of the revisers, it needs to be pointed out that the evidence
is in no wise overwhelming.
“Thou has redeemed us ...” (v. 9). This
text is supported by the Textus Receptus, Codex Sinaiticus (4th
century), Codex Basilianus (8th century), Codex St. Petersburg
(apparently 8th century), Minuscule 1 (of uncertain date), and several
other minuscules of late date, the Coptic, Latin, and Armenian (5th
century) versions, and quoted by Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage (248 a.d.), and by Primasius (6th
century).
“And has made us ...” (v. 10). This
is supported by the Textus Receptus, Codes Fuldensis (6th century
Latin version), Codex Coislinianus (10th century), and quoted by Arethas,
Bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia (10th century).
“and we
shall rein on the earth ...” (v. 10).
This text is supported by the Textus Receptus, MSS. Demidovianus (12th
century), MSS, Lipsienses (14th and 15th centuries), and
quoted by Arethas (10th century), Primasius (6th
century), Julius Firmicus (345 a.d.),
Idacius (the name under which Vigilius of Thapsis, 484 a.d. published his work).
Also on this matter of manuscript evidence for
maintaining the wording of the Authorized Version, Seiss writes:
Ηγορασας
ημας hast
redeemed us. Some critics and expositors have rejected
this ημας,
for the reason that it is omitted in the Codex Alexandrinus, and in the
Ethiopic version; though the latter is not much more than a loose
paraphrase. The Codex Sinaiticus, however,
which was discovered in 1860, and which is of equal antiquity and authority
with the Codex Alexandrinus, contains it.
The Codex Basilianus, in the Vatican, contains it. The Latin, Coptic or Memphitic, and Armenian,
which are of great value, contain it.
And so do all other MSS. And versions. And to discredit it, simply and only because it does not appear
in that one single Codex of Alexandria, is most unreasonable and unjust to the
weight of authority for its retention.
Dr. Tregelles, on full examination, was firmly convinced of its right to
a place in the text, before the Codex Sinaiticus appeared; and the
presence of this ημας in that MS., ought to settle the question of its genuineness
forever. The evidences from the
context, also argue powerfully for a construction which necessarily embraces
it, whether expressed or not. We regard
it as indubitably genuine.
Lang has further noted:
It is said that Alford, upon Dr. Tregelles
assuring him that Codex Sinaiticus has the word, stated that he would re-insert
it in his text. But this was not done,
on account, we are told, of his death.
Since
there is such textual support for the reading of the Authorized Version,
advocates of the new reading can hardly be said to have won a sweeping
victory. It would seem, to the contrary,
that there is much in favor of retaining the old reading. Yet, even if the “us” were omitted and these
verses thrown into the third person, still, there would be no adequate grounds
for insisting that the elders were singing of the redemption of others. The song of the redeemed, sung by Moses and
the children of Israel, as recording in Exodus 15:13, 17, is obviously sung
about themselves, but is was sung objectively in the third person.
Thou in thy mercy hast led forth the people
which thou hast redeemed: thou hast guided them in thy strength unto thy
holy habitation.... Thou shalt bring them
in, and plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance, in the place, O
Lord, which thou hast made for thee to dwell in. [Italics added.]
There
are other cases in the New Testament where the third person is used in the
place of the first person, no doubt for the sake of modesty. Paul evidently speaks of himself when he
said: “I knew a man in Christ ...” (II Cor. 12:2). Similarly, John referred to himself as “the disciple whom Jesus
loved” (John 21:20). Even though textual
evidence be massed against the older reading of Revelation 5:9, 10, which to
date has not been achieved, still it would not prove that the elders were
referring to others as the redeemed of God.
Of verse 10, Bengel writes: “The Hebrew construction of the third
person for the first, has a graphic relation to the redeemed, and also
has a more modest sound than us, priests.”
In
the light of such evidence, it seems valid to conclude that the elders’ song is
not sung by some unknown celestial beings, but by those who have experienced
for themselves the cleansing power of the blood of Christ. That which they sing of themselves can be
true only of the Church of Jesus Christ, of which they are a part, for the
Church has been “redeemed” (I Pet. 1:18); its members are “priests” (I Pet.
2:5, 9; Rev. 1:6); they have been gathered “out of every kindred, and tongue,
and people, and nation” (Acts 1:8); and certainly they “shall reign” with
Christ on the earth (II Tim. 2:12).
Israel, too, is to have a “new song” (Rev. 14:3, cf. 15:3) and
will sing it themselves before the throne and the living creatures and the
elders. It is, therefore, not strange
that the “new song” of the Church will be sung by those to whom it
rightfully belongs. How could glorified
saints stand by in mute silence while others sing redemption’s story and not
join in the refrain?
Considering
the textual support for the song of the elders, and in view of the many other
striking marks of identification, it is most surprising how lightly some of the
brethren pass over all of this and insist that the elders are not redeemed, in
fact, are not even human at all. It has
been said that prejudice “squints when it looks,” and possibly that is the
reason why the elders have fared so badly.
Commentators, who have mustered all their arguments to prove that the
elders cannot represent the Church, have given only the most vague ideas as to
what or whom they think the elders do represent. Lang calls them “the senior executive officers
of the Most High,” and “the noblest princes of heaven”
while Reese is satisfied to designate them as “angelic lords.”
Most,
however, will prefer to use the names the elders themselves suggest, namely,
“redeemed from every nation,” and “kings and priests unto God.” They will see in them the Church of Jesus
Christ, caught up to God, rewarded and glorified, preserved from Tribulation
fires, and ascribing all glory and praise to the Saviour they love with a pure
heart fervently.
It
is important that these elders are never seen in heaven prior to the fourth
chapter of the Revelation. In a vision,
Isaiah saw the Lord and the heavenly seraphim, but saw no elders (Isa. 6:2, 3);
Ezekiel looked up into glory and saw the four living creatures, but not the
twenty-four thrones with their elders.
With good reason, English inquires:
Why did Isaiah, who viewed other wonders of
heaven, who looked upon the seraphim, fail to see the elders? Why did Ezekiel, who beheld other marvels –
the precious, colorful stones, the rainbow, the glories; who viewed the four
living creatures, miss the four and twenty elders seated upon thrones? Why did not John, in his former vision, take
note of their presence in heaven? These
servants of God did not see or describe the four and twenty thrones, and the
four and twenty elders seated upon them, because the elders were not yet in
heaven. It was when John was caught up
into heaven in an experience quite similar to the coming translation of the
Church – as a spectator, however, and not as a participant – that the four and
twenty elders are first seen enthroned about the throne of the Lord. Here is a new body in heaven, at the end of
the Church age and prior to the tribulation.
They are not angels. They are
not the seraphim. They are not the
cherubim. They are not the four living
creatures. They are evidently human
beings, redeemed saints, as further examination of the passage will confirm.
In
this present chapter, the leading arguments for midtribulationalism have been
discussed, including the two main passages involved, the fourth and the
eleventh chapters of the Revelation, and the key problems of the trumpets and
the elders. Now, it must be left for
the reader to judge whether or not the midtribulational theory has been
disproved, and that from the passages most commonly cited in favor of the
position. Returning once more to the
elders, the following analysis by Armerding will be of interest to many, and
will form a suitable conclusion to this phase of the investigation.
Again we see them, together with the four
living creatures, listening to the new song of the 144,000 who stand on Mount
Sion with the Lamb (Rev. 14:3). And the
last thing that is said of them is that they fall down, in company with the
four living creatures, and worship Him who sits on the throne, saying, “Amen,
Alleluia” (Rev. 19:4). This last act of
theirs is characteristic of them.
Indeed, there are three things which seem to characterize them all through:
(1) their intimate knowledge of Christ, (2) their nearness to Him, and (3) the
worship they give Him. And we recall
that our Lord, when praying for His own, asked that they might know Him, that
they might be with Him, and that they might behold His glory (John 17:3,
24). And they were none other than the
men which the Father had given Him out of the world.