THE ORINGINATION OF THE PRE-TRIBULATION “ANY MOMENT
RAPTURE” THEORY
John N. Darby 1800-1882 born
in London, a contemporary of Charles H Spurgeon and Charles Finney, is
sometimes credited with originating the "secret rapture" theory
wherein Christ will suddenly remove His bride, the Church, from this world
before the judgments of the tribulation. He believed he had come up with a
better understanding and interpretation of the scriptures than those who had
come before, including Jesus, the apostles, and the early church fathers
Irenaeus and Hippolytus.
Darby, like Calvin and other
protestant reformers before him, believed some long lost truth needed to be
restored to the church before true believers could become what God intended
them to be. Like other early reformers, Darby believed he understood what truth
the church had lost. What Darby lacked, in comparison to other reformers, was
the desire to use the clues as to what
the church had lost, by searching the writings of the early church fathers and
comparing them to the scriptures. Most reformers went back to before the time
of Augustine to understand what the church had lost. They wanted to restore
those lost truths in accordance to/or witness with the scriptures--not find
something “new”. They felt the church had deviated sometime after the Apostolic
period, and sought to restore the basic truths in the Bible.
Darby took a different
approach. He not only discarded the early father’s writings, but interpreted
the scriptures as he thought they should read. He thought his understanding was
vastly superior and did not need confirmation with the early fathers and
scripture lining up together. Darby, in fact, said this: “None are more
untrustworthy on every fundamental subject than the mass of primitive fathers.”
The Collected Writings of J.N. Darby, 1971
Clarence B. Bass, a Scottish
Theologian, wrote in 1960 that; “Darby’s writings stand in sharp contrast with
traditional views on eschatology. His spirit of independence from the
scholarship of the past is best reflected by one of the opening statements in
his prophetic writings….” Here is what Darby says: “For my own part, if I were
bound to receive all that has been said by millenarians (includes early church
fathers such as Irenaeus and Hippolytus), I would reject the whole system: but
their views and statements weigh with me not one feather. But this does not
hinder me from inquiring by the same teaching of the same spirit…what God has
with infinite graciousness revealed to me concerning His dealing with the
Church….”
Personal revelation is
good and necessary, but it must confirm and witness to what is already written!
It is not something new! The only
new thing God is doing and has done is to give us a new heart--a heart of flesh
and not of stone. Otherwise, there is nothing new under the sun! The word says
in the mouth of two or three witnesses a thing is decided. It is the same with
the word. Revelation must witness and confirm what is already
written. We will see that a pre-tribulation rapture is not scriptural.
DARBY’S HISTORY
Darby graduated from Trinity
College Dublin in 1819 and practiced law for awhile before being ordained as a
deacon in the Anglican Church in 1825. The following year he became a Anglican
priest. In 1828 he left the Anglican Church seeking something more satisfying
than the dead orthodoxy he found there.
He found what he sought by
meeting with a group of disaffected members of the Church of England who some
years earlier had started the Brethren movement. This group would later become
the Plymouth Brethren. Darby’s main interest was developing his own views
concerning the future of the church as that was the issue of his day. What
he would come up with was not--and still is not--concerned with the structure
of church government, the nature of God, man, sin, or salvation. It’s main
concern is eschatology. This has allowed for his eschatology to be assimilated
into the Christian church at large over recent decades. It is Satan’s ultimate
deception--easily accepted by the majority--because ultimately-- it is exactly
what most people want to hear. As we will see, however, it is not supported by
Jesus, scripture, Paul, or the early fathers.
This poison has thoroughly
infiltrated the church and has literally “disarmed” believers into a comfortable
stage of lukewarmness. They are neither “hot or cold”, but observe life with no
worry about future events. Why should they worry or think about these things?
They won’t be here! Besides, talking about it just causes division among us and
destroys our unity. Once we die, they say, it won’t matter anyway. We’ll all be
in heaven laughing about the issue. Yeah, I’ve heard Christians say this. NEWSFLASH!
Jesus never told us we would be “raptured out” of this coming time of
trouble. He said, “The servant is not above his master, if they persecuted me,
they will persecute you.”
By 1840 when Darby published,
“The Hopes of the Church of God”, he was recognized as a leader among the
Plymouth Brethren. Everywhere he went he promoted his views of the future of
Israel and the church. The pre-tribulation rapture “at any moment” was becoming
mainstream. It should be noted here that many in the mainstream church
disagreed, including Charles H. Spurgeon, pastor of the
Metropolitan Tabernacle and renowned preacher:
"With
the deadly heresies entertained and taught by the Plymouth Brethren, in
relation to some of the most momentous of all the doctrines of the gospel, and
to which I have adverted at some length, I feel assured that my readers will
not be surprised at any other views, however unscriptural and pernicious they
may be, which the Darbyites have embraced and zealously seek to
propagate."
JAMES BROOKS AND THE
NIAGRA BIBLE CONFERENCE
During the period between
1864 and 1897, James H. Brooks, who served as a pastor at two large
Presbyterian churches in St. Louis, Missouri, became a strong advocate of the
pre-tribulation theory. He helped organize the Niagara Bible Conference (NBC)
which regularly brought together those who believed, preached, and taught this
doctrine. Slowly this idea began to infiltrate the mainstream churches and
become their doctrine.
Brooks served as president of
the NBC from it’s inception in 1878 until his death in 1897. Three years later
in 1900 the organization closed it’s doors forever. The NBC had a great
influence in promoting this doctrine as it gained acceptance in the evangelical
church.
ARNO C GAEBELEIN AND CYRUS
SCOFIELD
After the NBC disbanded, Arno
C. Gaebelein, a Methodist minister in America, started the Seacliff Bible Conference.
This conference would not allow anyone to speak at the conference unless they
adhered to the “any moment” pre-tribulation rapture theory. This conference
continued for a few years.
During this time a well known
speaker on the Bible Conference circuit was a pastor and theologian named Cyrus
Scofield. He would become the man who would publish the well known Scofield
Reference Bible! This book would be responsible for the “any moment”
pre-tribulation rapture becoming the bedrock doctrine it now is.
Arno Gaebelein and other
businessmen of the time financed the printing of Scofield’s bible in 1909. Over
the next thirty years it sold over two million copies. This Bible allowed
Darby’s idea to gain widespread recognition among laypeople to the extent that
it has become the doctrine of the vast majority of Christians today. Satan’s
deception has been brilliantly integrated into the minds of countless believers
throughout the world. Unfortunately this particular belief has become a deadly
poison to the church. These believers are being set up for the greatest
deception Satan has ever perpetuated on the earth.
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