Well, the Rapture has been PREDICTED several times in history, but there (is due to the idea of the Rapture being based on a false faith) not ever going to be a rapture, and you would be better off spending your time enjoying your life as opposed to wasting it following an ancient desert person's false accusations.
Chaos will roam the streets for 1000 years and then the end of time will happen after those years!
The majority of children born will not be white -APEX
The word - rapture - does not appear in the King James version.
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 is the result that you think will happen as the outcome of an experiment. It is the same as the "expected result", which is usually denoted as E(x)=xp(x).
The timing of the rapture, according to various religious beliefs, is not definitively known or can be predicted. It is often described as a moment when believers will be taken up to heaven, but the exact time is considered to be known only by God.
A:John Nelson Darby, a British evangelical preacher and founder of the Plymouth Brethren, invented the Rapture theology back in 1830. John Nelson Darby sank into obscurity, apart from his followers in the Plymouth Brethren, but the Rapture, his most enduring creation, still lives on in the minds of millions of Christians. In 2011, Harold Campling predicted the Rapture in May of that year, then in October of the same year. .It is one thing to predict the Rapture, it is an entirely different thing to demonstrate that it will ever happen. Although Darby's scheme continues to be believed by some, Harold Campling has admitted failure, so these predictions should no longer be taken seriously. There was no Rapture in 2011 because the very idea of the Rapture came from the imagination of a nineteenth century preacher.
There is no way to predict the exact date of the rapture as it is a belief rooted in Christian theology. Different interpretations and views exist on when the rapture will occur, but many Christian denominations believe that it is not predetermined and will happen at an unknown time in the future.
Enrapture, rapture.Rapture. Rapture is a predicted event in certain systems of Christian eschatology. Wikipedia it.
The mid-tribulation rapture theory is a belief that the rapture of Christians will occur halfway through the seven-year period of tribulation described in the Bible. This theory differs from other rapture theories, such as pre-tribulation and post-tribulation, which posit that the rapture will happen before or after the tribulation period, respectively.
may 21st 2011 said Harold camping
This depends on which version of the Rapture you decide to believe in. The Rapture was a theological invention of to John Nelson Darby, a nineteenth-century British evangelical preacher and founder of the Plymouth Brethren. John Nelson Darby has sunk into obscurity, apart from the Plymouth Brethren and his predictions.Those who still believe in the rapture hold different views, including a 'pre-tribulation' rapture, a 'post-tribulation' rapture and even a 'mid-tribulation' rapture. Similarly, they hold a wide range of opinions about when it will happen or what signs will precede the rapture. You can only be certain it will not happen in your lifetime or the lifetimes of your children or grandchildren.
A:John Nelson Darby, a British evangelical preacher and founder of the Plymouth Brethren, first predicted the Rapture in 1830 when he invented the Rapture theology. In 2011, Harold Campling predicted the Rapture in April of that year, then in October of the same year. There have been various other predictions over the nearly two hundred years between those two events.Barbara R. Rossing (The Rapture Exposed) says that according to one critic, the Rapture has its origins 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 Darby.The belief that Jesus will come again was not new, and Christians have always taught that Jesus will return to earth and that believers should live in anticipation of his second coming. Darby's new teaching was that Christ would return twice, first in secret to "Rapture" his church out of the world and up to heaven, then a second time after seven years of global tribulation for non-believers, to establish a Jerusalem-based kingdom on earth. .It is one thing to predict the Rapture, it is an entirely different thing to demonstrate that it will ever happen. There is no good reason to believe there will ever be a Rapture or that the church and its members will be taken bodily up into heaven. John Nelson Darby has sunk into obscurity, apart from his followers in the Plymouth Brethren, and Harold Campling has admitted failure, so these predictions should no longer be taken seriously.
Chaos will roam the streets for 1000 years and then the end of time will happen after those years!
The word "predicted" in science means a statement of what will happen in the future. Also a prediction is like a conclusion through a process of thinking. In your mind it could mean what you thought could happen or what you knew what was gonna happen
it is predicted that or it is hypothesiesed that.........( write what you think will happen and how it would happen)
The rapture will happen on the Jewish holiday, Rosh Hashanah. The holiday first consists of someone "keeping watch" for the new moon, "for they did not know the day or hour" to start the holiday. When the Jewish people celebrate the holiday, they perform a reenactment of a Jewish wedding, which is exactly what "The Marriage Supper of The Lamb" is in the book of Revelations. After a Jewish couple "shuts their door" to their abode "and hide themselves for a little while" to consummate their marriage, the door stays shut for seven days. God said he would give us a year for a day, which is exactly how long the great tribulation is supposed to last, seven years.