There is no Hebrew word for rapture. The closest you can come is the borrowed word ek-stah-see-yah, which means ecstasy. It is spelled אקסטיה
There is no Hebrew word for rapture. The closest word to rapture would be אֶקְסְטָזָה pronounced eks-tah-see-yah, and meaning ecstasy.
There is no such word in Hebrew. It is usually translated modern literature as ×קסטזיה (ecstazia) which is just the English word, "ecstasy" borrowed into Modern Hebrew.
There is no such word in Hebrew. It is usually translated as ×קסטזיה (ex-TAH-zee-yah) which is just the English word, "ecstasy"
a plane flight = tisá (טיסה)a bird's flight = t'ufá (תעופה)
Flight- Tisa (טיסה)
As a noun: (Gk) Έκσταση > ecstasy
Pitsuts (פיצוץ)
Original answer: "No, the word Rapture is not in the Bible, but it is the word we use for catching away which is found in the bible. It is our descriptive and is valid to use."The word "rapture" is not found anywhere in the EnglishBible, but it is found in the Vulgate, the Latin translation of the Bible, where it is translated from the Greek Word that means "caught up, swept away". That's where the term is found.
The word - rapture - does not appear in the King James version.
In the King James version the word - rapture - does not appear at all.
love, beauty, and sexual rapture
Yes, In Greek mythology, Aphrodite is the goddess of love, beauty and sexual rapture.
rapture
A:No. The word 'rapture' is not in the Bible, nor is the modern concept of a "Rapture" of Christians mentioned or discussed. Rapture is a theological creation of John Nelson Darby, the nineteenth-century founder of the Plymouth Brethren. Interestingly, although few people belong the the Plymouth Brethren Church, many Christians believe in its founder's most enduring theological creation, the Rapture.
It should be. It's usually okay to say words like hell and rapture. If you say, "go to hell", or something then it's a bad word. But if you say, "I don't want to go to hell", or "I won't die in the rapture", then it should be okay.
All those who live by the word will go. The rapture is a fancy way of saying meeting the Lord.
Another answer from our community:I search the KJV Bible for the word "Rapture" and it's nowhere to be found. So there's no explanation of the word "Rapture", except maybe it's an invention of some delusional mind.
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.
No, Jews do not believe in the rapture. They do not believe Jesus was the Messiah, therefore, they do not believe the New Testament is accurate or part of God's word. The concept of the rapture was created by Christianity and does not exist anywhere in Jewish teachings.