A { text-decoration: none; color: #464feb; } tr th, tr td { border: 1px solid #e6e6e6; } tr th { background-color: #f5f5f5; }Rapture: Cutting Through The Chaos Of End-Times Hype challenges one of the most widely accepted teachings in modern Christianity by asking a simple yet unsettling question: Is the popular idea of the rapture actually taught in Scripture? Drawing carefully from the biblical text, this book examines where rapture theology came from, how it developed, and why it became so influential-despite the word "rapture" never appearing in the Bible.
Rather than denying the return of Christ, the book affirms it as a single, visible, and climactic event, just as the early church understood it for centuries. By tracing historical beliefs, examining key passages, and separating tradition from text, Rapture invites readers to rethink what they've been taught and to rediscover what Scripture actually says about Christ's return, endurance, and the hope of restoration
A { text-decoration: none; color: #464feb; } tr th, tr td { border: 1px solid #e6e6e6; } tr th { background-color: #f5f5f5; }Rapture: Cutting Through The Chaos Of End-Times Hype challenges one of the most widely accepted teachings in modern Christianity by asking a simple yet unsettling question: Is the popular idea of the rapture actually taught in Scripture? Drawing carefully from the biblical text, this book examines where rapture theology came from, how it developed, and why it became so influential-despite the word "rapture" never appearing in the Bible.
Rather than denying the return of Christ, the book affirms it as a single, visible, and climactic event, just as the early church understood it for centuries. By tracing historical beliefs, examining key passages, and separating tradition from text, Rapture invites readers to rethink what they've been taught and to rediscover what Scripture actually says about Christ's return, endurance, and the hope of restoration