A:
The Rapture has not happened and will, in fact, never happen. Barbara R. Rossing (The Rapture Exposed) says the 'Rapture' is a theological invention of John Nelson Darby, the nineteenth-century 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.
Rossing 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 (called the "Glorious Appearing" - a phrase from Titus 2:13).
John Nelson Darby has sunk into obscurity, apart from his followers in the Plymouth Brethren, and so should his theology. The Rapture has no genuine biblical support, so 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 to heaven.
A:Clearly not. The Rapture is a theological invention of John Nelson Darby, the nineteenth-century founder of the Plymouth Brethren. Darby did not predict a specific date for his 'Rapture', instead inventing 'dispensations' - intervals of time ordering God's grand timetable for world events, but allowing that the Rapture could occur at any future time. There will be no Rapture and therefore no timescale for the Rapture. John Nelson Darby has sunk into obscurity, apart from his followers in the Plymouth Brethren, and so should his theology.
It hasn't happened yet.When John Nelson Darby created the idea of the Rapture, in 1830, he was careful not to state when it would actually happen. Hal Lindsey, author of The Late Great Planet Earth and one of the principal modern proponents of the Rapture, decided that biblical prophecy required that it would occur within one generation, or forty years, of the founding of the state of Israel in 1948. Barbara R. Rossing (The Rapture Exposed) says that as 1988 approached, with no sign of the Rapture to come, Lindsey began to back off from that statement. Another proponent of the Rapture, Harold Campling, pinned down the actual date of the Rapture, in May 2011. When this month came and went, Campling changed his prophecy to October 2011. But still no Rapture.No, the Rapture hasn't happened yet. But hey, it was only an idea.
The boy is in rapture when he is with his girlfriend.
Yes Rapture is Today May 21 2011 but were are still here so No Rapture
who rote the song rapture
Rapture - song - was created in 1980.
No Divine Rapture was created in 2004.
Rapture in the Chambers was created in 1988.
Careless Rapture was created in 1936.
Rapture Ready was created in 1995.
Waiting for the Rapture was created in 2008.
The Rapture - album - was created in 1993.