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Part 2: • Is the Rapture a Biblical Promise or a The... Michael opens by leading a prayer for clarity, deepened commitment to biblical truths, renewed energy to apply them charitably, then dives into tonight's topic—the timing of the rapture—framed by contrasting the core hope of various eschatological systems to include even non-rapture believers. He previews a brief end-of-talk summary of his convictions on end-times (some firm, some tentative), core scriptural ideas for building upon, and extra Q&A time. Starting with pretrib premillennialism (most common evangelical view), he sketches its timeline: imminent rapture (no preceding signs, defining true imminence) now-ish, followed by a 7-year tribulation (Daniel's 70th week), second coming, 1,000-year millennial kingdom, then eternal state/new heavens and earth—the blessed hope being rapture-removal from tribulation wrath. Midtrib places rapture at the 7-year midpoint (signs detectable for 3.5 years prior, calculable timing); prewrath (newer, e.g., Marv Rosenthal) has rapture sometime post-midpoint after abomination of desolation triggers shorter "great tribulation" (not full 7 years) amid extreme persecution, before second coming/kingdom; posttrib crams rapture (meet in air) and second coming back-to-back at 7-year end. All "splitter" rapture views assume two distinct Christ's-coming events, Daniel's literal 70th week as tribulation, linear Revelation judgments (seals/trumpets/bowls, with debate on overlaps/sequence), and a future millennial kingdom, differing only in rapture placement relative to tribulation/judgments. Contrasting non-rapture "joiner" views: historic premillennialism hopes solely in single second coming event (flexible pre-period, no precise 7 years), then kingdom/eternal state; amillennialism similarly awaits second coming straight to eternal state (no literal millennium; current church age fulfills kingdom language). Key assumptions across rapture positions include splitting second-coming passages, Old Testament tribulation prophecies (esp. Daniel 9:24-27, "determined upon thy people [Jews] and thy city [Jerusalem]"), church's absence in Revelation 4-18 (post-church messages in 1-3, transitioning via 4:1), and Revelation's linear future chronology (non-linear readers tend amill/historic premill, ruling out rapture). Timing factors: tribulation as Jew-focused judgment (church exempt or partial?); 70th week-church link; Revelation church presence; Matthew 24 chronology (rapturists split events to fit 1 Thess 4/1 Cor 15; non-rapturists see single second coming). He spotlights church removal pre-wrath (pretrib/prewrath emphasis), unpacking 1 Thess 1:10 ("delivers us from/out of the wrath to come"—preposition ambiguous, wrath possibly tribulation or final judgment/hell) and 5:9 ("not destined us for wrath, but to obtain salvation"—similarly flexible, urging consistency across verses to avoid selective theology). The video cuts off amid audience interaction on interpretive consistency, emphasizing no doctrine hinging solely on prepositions while acknowledging wishful theologies tempt all sides. #drmichaelheiser #michaelheiser #Rapture #EndTimes #Eschatology #Tribulation #Premillennialism #Amillennialism #Posttribulation #Midtribulation #Prewrath #SecondComing #Imminence #Daniel70Weeks #Revelation #Prophecy #EschatologyDebate #BiblicalStudies #ChristianTheology #OlivetDiscourse #1Thessalonians #kingdomofgod