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There are six occurrences of the word rapture in The Bible;

Psalms 28:7, Psalms 45:15, Psalms 51:8, Proverbs 5:19, Song of Songs 2:3 and Luke 1:67.

Each of these is making reference to "rapture" in the context of joy and delight. The original root word for rapture meant to be carried away. Theologians have used rapture to describe the taking up of the faithful in Revelation though the word itself does not appear there.

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Q: Does the bible ever say that the coming of christ is to be called the rapture?
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The rapture of the church?

There is no "rapture" of the church, as this is not in the Bible. The rapture is a man made teaching that is based upon the words "caught up" in the book of Thessalonians. (1 Thess. 4) The belief is that the church will be raptured away to heaven before the second coming of Christ Jesus. The problem is, the verse they base this rapture theory on IS describing the physical second coming of Christ. It is AT the second coming of Christ Jesus that the church is "caught up" to meet Jesus in the air, NOT before.


What are the events that signal the rapture?

None. The word Rapture is not in the Bible. On the other hand, the Bible does say that Christ will return "like a thief in the night." The parable of the 10 virgins (or unmarried women) tells of the groom coming in secret at night, at any time, to take his betrothed away. Many Biblical scholars see this as a parable describing the Rapture. The answer is the same, though: there are no events that "signal" the Rapture even in this context.


What is the lds interpretation to the rapture?

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (commonly called the "Mormon" church) does not mention the rapture because it is not a Biblical concept. There are no Bible verses to support the rapture. In fact, the concept of the rapture was first intruduced by the Puritan preacher Cotton Mather in the early 1700's. This is why Catholics, Orthodox, Anglicans, and other traditionally "European" Christian groups have no doctrine of the rapture either. A popular phrase in the Church is "Endure to the End", which references to Matthew 10:22, Matthew 24:13, and Mark 13:13. It reminds members to continue in faith, looking forward to the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.


What is the Christ holy book used for?

The holy book of Christ is called the Holy Bible. It is used to minister to people the coming of the Messiah and how to conduct oneself as a Christian.


What do Pentecostals believe about the Rapture?

Pentecostals generally believe the rapture will take place soon, the dead in Christ shall rise to heaven first, then to follow those that are alive, and all raptured will be with Jesus forever.


Will there be a rupture?

Yes, I believe there will be a rapture absolutely. The Bible speaks of "the second coming" of Christ and the calling out of the saints repeatedly, which gives proof to the reality of this event. The rapture will be a glorious event, though it will happen in the time it takes for an eye to twinkle. When the angel blows the trumpet and calls the saved ones home, immediately all saved people will join The Father in Heaven. No one knows exactly when the rapture will occur, but the Bible gives us clues as to when the end times will be. Many of these signs can be found in the Books of Daniel and the Revelation.


Where in the bible can you find the word rapture?

The word - rapture - does not appear in the King James version.


What is the order of rapture as written in the Bible?

The word rapture is not used in the bible but in revelations it mentions for all Christians to be "took up" which is is close to its real meaning "to be took up"............................and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.........(and only god knows when it will happen)


Where does the Bible speak on Christ calling the saints home before the rapture?

I hate to rain on your parade, but there is not such thing as the rapture. It is unbiblical, and is as recent as the 19th century. Perpetuated by the Roman Catholic Church, there is no biblical basis for this fallacy. Please, read your King James Version Bible, it is the purest translation and the closest we will get to the original Greek and Hebrew text.


How many raptures are in the Bible?

A:The 'rapture' is a fairly recent theological invention developed John Nelson Darby, founder of the Plymouth Brethren, in the nineteenth-century. Barbara R. Rossing (The Rapture Exposed) says that it has its origins in the nineteenth century beginning, according to one critic, with a young girl's vision. In 1830, in Port Glasgow, Scotland, fifteen-year-old Margaret MacDonald attended a healing service. There, she was said to have seen a vision of a two-stage return of Jesus Christ. The story of her vision was adopted and amplified by John Nelson Darby, a British evangelical preacher and founder of the Plymouth Brethren.Darby's new teaching was that Christ would return twice. The first return would be in secret, to "Rapture" his church out of the world and up to heaven. Christ would return a second time after seven years of global tribulation for non-believers, to establish a Jerusalem-based kingdom on earth (called the "Glorious Appearing" - a phrase from Titus 2:13). Although Darby and later proponents selectively use biblical references such as Titus 2:13 and 1 Thessalonians 4:16-17 as evidence for the coming Rapture, these were not really about the rapture. Apart from the well-known Second Coming of Jesus, there is nothing in the Bible that supports the 'rapture'.


Where can you find information of the rapture in the Bible?

The so-called 'Rapture' is not in the Bible, as the early Christians believed in the Second Coming but had no idea of this concept. The Rapture has its origins in the nineteenth century with John Nelson Darby, a British evangelical preacher and founder of the Plymouth Brethren. Although few people belong the the Plymouth Brethren Church, many Christians believe in its founder's most enduring theological creation, the Rapture.Darby combed the Bible looking for isolated passages that could be used to support or prove the Rapture. As part of his hypothesis, John Darby invented "dispensations" - intervals of time ordering God's grand timetable for world events. Proponents admit that the dispensationalist system is not spelled out in any single passage in the Bible. Nevertheless they insist that a comprehensive system is necessary and that Darby's dispensationalism, with its divisions of history and its two-stage future return of Christ, is "the only system" that can make sense of otherwise contradictory biblical passages. Lindsey (The Rapture: Truth or Consequences, p57) argues that otherwise, "The Bible cannot be understood as a consistent and cohesive whole. The only alternative is to allegorize large portions of scripture . . . in order to keep the Bible from contradicting itself." .Darby relied on 1 Thessalonians 4: 16-17 as evidence for the coming Rapture: "For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord." Here, Paul was not writing about "Rapture", but about the resurrection of the dead at Christ's second coming, as the Thessalonians feared that some family members would be left in their graves when he returned, an event Paul expected to occur within his own lifetime. Other isolated passages that supposedly refer to the Rapture are in Isaiah and Revelation.An important tool for popularising Darby's system was the Scofield Reference Bible, a best-selling work published in 1909. It has been called "perhaps the most important single document in all fundamentalist literature." With sales in the millions, it became the version of the Bible through which Americans read their scriptures throughout much of the twentieth century. Scofield's notes and headings were woven in with the biblical text itself, elevating Darby's theology to a level of biblical authority that no previous writing had.


What year is the rapture?

There is no definitive answer to when the rapture may occur as it is a topic of theological debate among some Christian denominations. Different interpretations of biblical scripture have led to varying beliefs regarding the timing of the rapture.