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originally posted by: intrptr
originally posted by: dashen
just wearing us down for the REAL end.
by then well be like "meh, finally"
The only thing that is finally going to end is the current hegemony.
Yah, "finally".
originally posted by: dashen
originally posted by: intrptr
originally posted by: dashen
just wearing us down for the REAL end.
by then well be like "meh, finally"
The only thing that is finally going to end is the current hegemony.
Yah, "finally".
Which hegemony?
trump? the derp state? the illuminaughty? the CFR pervs? the aliums?
who we talkin bout here?
originally posted by: UnBreakable
a reply to: ketsuko
Sorry, it is new to me. I don't study scripture nor have I heard of this event happening.
It's a bit astonishing to me how well it has flown under the radar, even here given how much attention it has received on places like YouTube, especially recently.
originally posted by: DAVID64
a reply to: ketsuko
It's a bit astonishing to me how well it has flown under the radar, even here given how much attention it has received on places like YouTube, especially recently.
I think it's that people are so jaded about doom porn. I mean, we had 2012 and nothing came of that, even though it was hyped to the eyeballs and someone is always coming up with another "The World Will End On [ pick a date ]" and nothing comes of that, then you have the religious types, who forever seem to be spreading doom, gloom, hellfire and damnation and astrology fans come up with their fare share of doom porn which fizzles and so you can understand how so many of us just go "We're doomed? Ok, but can we not do on that date? It's the weekend I planned to go fishing."
The rapture was popularized in the 1970s by Hal Lindsey’s writings ( The Late Great Planet Earth, etc.) and more recently by Jim Jenkins and Tim LaHaye in their Left Behind fictional books and films. But where did the idea of the rapture originate?
The origin of the rapture theory
Credit for its origin generally goes to John Nelson Darby, a 19th-century theologian.
Darby believed, rightly, that Jesus Christ would return to earth to establish and rule over the Kingdom of God. Darby was a premillennialist.
But in his zeal for countering error, he added another—the rapture theory. He believed he understood a new truth, an idea that had not been taught in the history of Christendom. While he was most likely sincere, sincerity alone does not make one right.
www.ucg.org...
originally posted by: ADSE255
Im feeling something with Jupiter, something significant. Call it Intuition. Call it what you want. This rapture thing though, not so much. I don't think it's even biblically supported.
originally posted by: Rapha
originally posted by: ADSE255
Im feeling something with Jupiter, something significant. Call it Intuition. Call it what you want. This rapture thing though, not so much. I don't think it's even biblically supported.
Do you have a creative talent ?
Something might happen soon where everyone who uses their creative talent to create their desired future, might very well become real in 3 weeks time.
So if many people want to exit this hell-hole, they might write a short story where a hero enters a new world. Then with that in mind, the author exits this world and vanishes. This might very well seem like the Rapture.
Artists might paint a picture of a mystical world.
A singer writes a song about another paradise like 'Stairway to Heaven'.
A blacksmith forges a silver belt buckler of angel wings that gets them out of this world.
Just a crazy idea as to how this 'Vanishing' could be accomplished.
Biblically supported where Jesus takes the 5 brides who still wield lit lamps. In other words, everyone who preaches the Gospel vanishes to safety with Jesus Christ.
So maybe His followers just vanish or go 5th Dimension and cannot be seen by the 3D people left behind.