Posts Tagged ‘#EndTimesTeaching’


Part One

There comes a moment when every generation must decide whether it will be governed by Scripture or by the traditions it inherited. Not every tradition is false, and not every theological framework is automatically corrupt. But every doctrine must eventually stand beneath the searching light of the Word of God. If it cannot survive the testimony of Scripture, it must not be allowed to rule the conscience of the Church.

This is where we must begin the conversation concerning what is commonly called “the Rapture.”

For many believers, the word itself carries deep emotional weight. It has been preached through charts, movies, novels, prophecy conferences, timelines, fear-based altar calls, and countless sermons warning the Church of sudden disappearance, global chaos, and an escape from tribulation. Many sincere believers have built their entire understanding of the end times around this doctrine. Others have never studied it deeply but assumed it must be biblical because it was handed to them by trusted voices.

But sincerity does not make a doctrine true. Popularity does not make a teaching apostolic. Repetition does not turn assumption into revelation. The real question is not, “What have we always heard?” The real question is, “What does the text actually say?”

That question must govern this entire series.

The issue before us is not whether Jesus Christ is returning. He is. The testimony of Scripture is clear, glorious, and immovable. Christ will return bodily, visibly, triumphantly, and in power. The kingdoms of this world will become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ. The dead in Christ will be raised. The living faithful will be gathered. The enemies of God will be judged. Creation itself will witness the unveiling of the sons of God and the full manifestation of the reign of Christ.

The issue is also not whether the saints will be gathered unto the Lord. Scripture plainly speaks of a gathering. The Lord Himself taught that He would send His angels to gather His elect. Paul wrote of the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together unto Him. The resurrection, the appearing of Christ, and the gathering of His people are biblical realities.

The question is whether the modern secret-escape doctrine accurately reflects the testimony of Scripture.

That is where the dividing line must be drawn.

Modern Rapture teaching often presents the return of Christ in separated stages: first, a secret coming for the Church, where believers vanish from the earth before tribulation; then later, a public coming with the saints to establish His Kingdom. This framework has become so embedded in certain circles that many now read it back into the Bible without realizing they are doing so.

But when we come to Scripture, we must be careful not to force the text to serve a system. The Word of God must be allowed to speak for itself. Doctrine must be born from Scripture, not imposed upon Scripture. The people of God are not called to protect prophecy charts; we are called to contend for truth.

The biblical writers did not present the return of Christ as an escape fantasy for a defeated Church. They proclaimed it as the triumphant appearing of the King. They did not call the faithful to abandon the battlefield. They called them to endure, overcome, watch, remain sober, stand firm, and be found faithful at His appearing.

Jesus never trained His disciples to expect evacuation from trouble. He prepared them to overcome it. In John 17:15, He prayed, “I do not pray that You should take them out of the world, but that You should keep them from the evil one.” That prayer does not sound like a theology of escape. It sounds like a theology of preservation, victory, and faithful witness in the midst of a hostile world.

This does not mean the people of God are appointed to wrath. They are not. Paul clearly said that God has not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ. But tribulation and wrath are not the same thing. The faithful have always faced tribulation, persecution, pressure, and warfare. The wrath of God is reserved for the rebellious, the unrepentant, and the systems of darkness that oppose His Kingdom.

The modern error is often found in confusing tribulation with divine wrath. Because of that confusion, many have assumed that if God loves His people, He must remove them before the hour of pressure. But Scripture shows something different. God does not always remove His people from the fire; He often reveals His glory through them in the fire.

Noah was preserved through the flood. Israel was preserved through the plagues in Egypt. Daniel was preserved in Babylon. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were preserved in the furnace. The early Church was preserved in witness through persecution, not by escape from it. The pattern of Scripture is not the removal of the faithful from every conflict, but the keeping power of God in the midst of conflict.

That distinction matters.

When Jesus spoke of the end of the age in Matthew 24, He warned of deception, wars, persecution, false prophets, lawlessness, and endurance. He said, “He who endures to the end shall be saved.” He did not say, “He who escapes before trouble begins.” He then declared that this gospel of the Kingdom would be preached in all the world as a witness to all nations, and then the end would come.

The emphasis of Jesus was not abandonment of mission. It was endurance in mission.

That alone should make us pause.

If our end-time doctrine produces fear, passivity, escapism, and disengagement from Kingdom assignment, we must ask whether it carries the same spirit as the words of Christ. If our theology teaches the Church to wait for removal instead of preparing for maturity, dominion, holiness, witness, and victory, then something has been misaligned.

The return of Christ is not a doctrine of panic. It is the hope of the faithful.

The appearing of Christ is not meant to produce spiritual retreat. It is meant to produce purity, courage, and steadfastness. John wrote that everyone who has this hope in Him purifies himself, just as He is pure. The blessed hope is not a license to abandon cultural responsibility or prophetic assignment. It is a holy expectation that the King will come, that righteousness will prevail, and that the faithful must be found ready.

Readiness, biblically, is not mere curiosity about timelines. Readiness is faithfulness.

This is why we must separate the biblical gathering of the saints from the modern secret-escape doctrine. The biblical gathering is tied to the visible coming of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, the sound of the trumpet, the appearing of the Son of Man, and the consummation of the age. It is majestic, public, cosmic, and victorious.

The modern secret-escape doctrine often places the gathering before the final conflict, before the public appearing, and before the full unveiling of Christ’s victory in the earth. It can unintentionally train believers to see tribulation as something the Church must avoid rather than something the faithful must overcome through Christ.

But the book of Revelation does not say, “To him who escapes.” It repeatedly says, “To him who overcomes.”

That word must return to the center of our theology.

The faithful are not called to be fear-driven spectators of the end times. We are called to be witnesses, watchmen, sons and daughters, priests and kings, ambassadors of the Kingdom, and a holy people who refuse to bow to the spirit of the age. The end-time Church is not portrayed as weak, confused, and waiting helplessly for extraction. The faithful are called to endure with the testimony of Jesus, the commandments of God, and the faith once delivered to the saints.

This does not mean every believer who holds to a Rapture view is rebellious or deceived. Many love Jesus deeply. Many are sincere. Many have simply inherited a framework and never questioned it. This series is not written to mock people, dishonor believers, or attack the Body of Christ. It is written to call us back to the authority of Scripture.

Truth does not fear examination.

If a doctrine is biblical, it can withstand the full weight of biblical scrutiny. If it is not biblical, then we must love Christ enough to let it fall. The Church cannot afford to build its hope on assumptions, no matter how popular they have become. Our hope must be anchored in the testimony of Christ, the apostles, and the prophets.

The foundation of this series is simple: Scripture must govern doctrine.

We are going to examine the major passages commonly used to support the modern Rapture doctrine. We are going to ask what they actually say in context. We are going to look at the language, the audience, the flow of thought, and the larger biblical witness. We are going to distinguish between the public return of Christ, the resurrection of the righteous, the gathering of the saints, the wrath of God, the endurance of the faithful, and the Kingdom hope proclaimed by Jesus and the apostles.

We are not beginning with fear. We are beginning with Scripture.

We are not beginning with charts. We are beginning with the text.

We are not beginning with what modern prophecy culture has told us. We are beginning with the voice of the Word.

The Church must become noble like the Bereans, who searched the Scriptures daily to see whether the things they were taught were true. That is not rebellion. That is spiritual maturity. That is not dishonor. That is faithfulness to God.

The Lord is not intimidated by our questions when our questions are submitted to His Word. He is not offended when His people test doctrine by Scripture. In fact, He commands us to test all things and hold fast to what is good.

So let us begin there.

Let us lay down inherited fear. Let us lay down religious pressure. Let us lay down the intimidation that says we are not allowed to question what has been handed to us. Let us come humbly, boldly, and honestly before the Word of God.

Christ is returning.

The saints will be gathered.

The dead in Christ will rise.

The faithful who remain will be caught up together with them to meet the Lord.

The Kingdom will come in fullness.

The glory of the Lord will cover the earth.

But the question we must answer is this: does the modern secret-escape Rapture doctrine truly reflect the testimony of Scripture, or has it reshaped the biblical hope into something the apostles never preached?

That is the journey before us.

And if we are willing to let Scripture speak, we may find that the hope of the Church is far greater, far stronger, and far more victorious than the doctrine of escape has allowed many to see.

Stay tuned, the journey continues…..

A voice of fire to the Remnant,

— Dr. Russell Welch

Dr. Russell Welch is a published author, prophetic teacher, apostolic builder, and founder of faith-driven publishing and media initiatives. He is known for crafting bold, Kingdom-centered messages that call the Ecclesia into maturity, doctrinal clarity, and governmental authority. With a passion for equipping the Remnant and honoring generational legacy, Dr. Welch writes and teaches at the intersection of Scripture, history, and spiritual governance, challenging believers to live as sons and daughters who legislate Heaven on earth through truth, holiness, and unwavering fidelity to Christ.

Be sure to check out his book, The Vanishing Gospel: Exposing False End‑Time Doctrine and Restoring the Kingdom Gospel, available exclusively on Amazon.

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