The Imminent Coming of Christ by Thomas Ice The New Testament
teaching that Christ could return and rapture His church at any-moment,
without prior signs or warning (i.e., imminency), is such a powerful
argument for pretribulationism that it is one of the most fiercely
attacked doctrines by pre-trib opponents. Non-pretribulationists
sense that if the New Testament teaches imminency, then a pre-trib
rapture is virtually assured.
DEFINITION OF IMMINENCY
- What is the biblical definition of imminency? Dr. Renald
Showers defines and describes imminence as follows:
- 1) An imminent event is one which is always "hanging
overhead, is constantly ready to befall or overtake one; close
at hand in its incidence." ("imminent," The Oxford
English Dictionary, 1901, V, 66.) Thus, imminence carries the
sense that it could happen at any moment. Other things may happen
before the imminent event, but nothing else must take place before
it happens. If something else must take place before an event
can happen, then that event is not imminent. In other words,
the necessity of something else taking place first destroys the
concept of imminency.
- 2) Since a person never knows exactly when an imminent event
will take place, then he cannot count on a certain amount of
time transpiring before the imminent event happens. In light
of this, he should always be prepared for it to happen at any
moment.
- 3) A person cannot legitimately set or imply a date for its
happening. As soon as a person sets a date for an imminent event
he destroys the concept of imminency, because he thereby is saying
that a certain amount of time must transpire before that event
can happen. A specific date for an event is contrary to the concept
that the event could happen at any moment.
- 4) A person cannot legitimately say that an imminent event
will happen soon. The term "soon" implies that an event
must take place "within a short time (after a particular
point of time specified or implied)." By contrast, an imminent
event may take place within a short time, but it does not have
to do so in order to be imminent. As I hope you can see by now,
"imminent" is not equal to "soon."
-
- 1 A. T. Pierson has noted that, "Imminence is the combination
of two conditions, viz,: certainty and uncertainty. By an imminent
event we mean one which is certain to occur at some time, uncertain
at what time."
-
- 2 IMMINENCY IN THE NEW TESTAMENT
-
- The fact that Christ could return, but may not soon, at any
moment, yet without the necessity of signs preceding His return
requires the kind of imminence taught by the pre-trib position
and is a strong support for pretribulationism. What New Testament
passages teach this truth? Those verses stating that Christ could
return at any moment, without warning and those instructing believers
to wait and look for the Lord's coming teach the doctrine of
imminence.
-
- Note the following New Testament passages: 1 Corinthians
1:7-"awaiting eagerly the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ,"
1 Corinthians 16:22-"Maranatha." Philippians 3:20-"For
our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait
for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ;" Philippians 4:5-"The
Lord is near." 1 Thessalonians 1:10-"to wait for His
Son from heaven," 1 Thessalonians 4:15-18-"For this
we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive,
and remain until the coming of the Lord, shall not precede those
who have fallen asleep. For the Lord Himself will descend from
heaven with a shout, with the voice of {the} archangel, and with
the trumpet of God; and the dead in Christ shall rise first.
-
- Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together
with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and thus
we shall always be with the Lord. Therefore comfort one another
with these words." 1 Thessalonians 5:6-"so then let
us not sleep as others do, but let us be alert and sober."
1 Timothy 6:14-"that you keep the commandment without stain
or reproach until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ,"
Titus 2:13-"looking for the blessed hope and the appearing
of the glory of our great God and Savior, Christ Jesus;"
Hebrews 9:28-"so Christ . . . shall appear a second time
for salvation without reference to sin, to those who eagerly
await Him." James 5:7-9-"Be patient, therefore, brethren,
until the coming of the Lord. . . . for the coming of the Lord
is at hand. . . . behold, the Judge is standing right at the
door." 1 Peter 1:13 -"fix your hope completely on the
grace to be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ."
Jude 21-"waiting anxiously for the mercy of our Lord Jesus
Christ to eternal life." Revelation 3:11; 22:7, 12, 20-
-
- "'I am coming quickly!'" Revelation 22:17, 20-"And
the Spirit and the bride say, 'Come.' And let the one who hears
say, 'Come.'" "He who testifies to these things says,
'Yes, I am coming quickly.' Amen. Come, Lord Jesus." It
is significant that all of the above passages relate to the rapture
and speak of the Lord's coming as something that could occur
at any-moment, that it is imminent. This is why believers are
waiting for a person-Jesus Christ-not an event or series of events
such as those related to the tribulation leading up to Christ's
second advent in which He returns to the earth and remains for
His millennial reign.
-
- IMMINENCE AND PRETRIBULATIONISM
-
- As we consider the above passages, we note that Christ may
come at any moment, that the rapture is actually imminent. Only
pretribulationism can give a full, literal meaning to such an
any-moment event. Other rapture views must redefine imminence
more loosely than the New Testament would allow. Dr. Walvoord
declares, "The exhortation to look for 'the glorious appearing'
of Christ to His own (Titus 2:13) loses its significance if the
Tribulation must intervene first. Believers in that case should
look for signs."3 If the pre-trib view of imminence is not
accepted, then it would make sense to look for signs related
to events of the tribulation (i.e., the anti-christ, the two
witnesses, etc.) and not for Christ Himself.
-
- But the New Testament, as demonstrated above, uniformly instructs
the church to look for the coming of Christ, while tribulation
saints are told to look for signs. The New Testament exhortation
to be comforted by the Lord's coming (John 14:1; 1 Thess. 4:18)
would no longer have meaning if believers first had to pass through
any part of the tribulation. Instead, comfort would have to await
passage through the events of the tribulation. No, the church
has been given a "Blessed Hope," in part, because our
Lord's return is truly imminent.
-
- MARANATHA!
-
- The early church had a special greeting for one another,
as recorded in 1 Corinthians 16:22, which was "Maranatha!"
Maranatha consists of three Aramaic words: "Mar" ("Lord"),
"ana" ("our"), and "tha" ("come"),
meaning "our Lord, come." As with other New Testament
passages, Maranatha only makes sense if an any-moment or imminent
coming is understood. Such an understanding supports the pre-trib
position. No wonder these ancient Christians coined such a unique
greeting which reflects an eager expectation of the Blessed Hope
as a very real presence in their everyday lives. The life of
the church today could only be improved if "Maranatha"
were to return as a sincere greeting on the lips of an expectant
people. Maranatha!
-
- ENDNOTES
- 1 Renald Showers, Maranatha Our Lord, Come!
A Definitive Study of the Rapture of the Church (Bellmawr, N.J.:
The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry, Inc., 1995), pp. 127-28.
- 2Arthur T. Pierson, Our Lord's Second Coming
as a Motive to World-Wide Evangelism (published by John Wanamaker,
n.d., cited in Showers, Maranatha, p. 127.
- 3 John F. Walvoord, The Rapture Question:
Revised and Enlarged Edition (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1979),
p. 273. http://www.novia.net/~todd/tt7.html
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