G
guanophore
Guest
We just understand it differently.The opening posts from this thread seem to indicate that Catholics do NOT believe in the Rapture: Did I mis-understand those posts?
Not really, no.so you donāt believe in a pre-tribulation, or mid-tribulation rapture, but you believe in in a post-tribulation rapture?
It would be more accurate to say that the whole āLeft Behindā conception of the tribulation and rapture is the 20th century invention.Now Iām told that āTribulationā is a 20th century inventionCode:First I'm told that the rapture was an invention: yet Catholicisms believe that "Then we ho are alive and remain will be** caught up (RAPTURED)** together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air,"
yet
Matthew 24:20 Pray that your flight may not be in winter or on a Sabbath. 21** For then there will be great tribulation,** such as has not been from the beginning of the world until now, no, and never will be. 22 And if those days had not been cut short, no human being would be saved. But for the sake of the elect those days will be cut short
Mark 13
24 āBut in those days, after that tribulation, the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, 25 and the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken.
Revelation 7:
14 I said to him, āSir, you know.ā And he said to me, āThese are the ones coming out of the great tribulation. They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.
**
How can you say that āTribulationā is a 20th century invention ?**
It would be more accurate to say that Catholics donāt have a need for the wild speculation, fantasy, fiction, etc, that has emerged around the word.so Catholics do believe in a rapture: they just donāt like the word; Even though the word can be traced to the Latin Vulgateā¦Code:""With respect to the rapture,** Catholics certainly believe that the event of our gathering together to be with Christ will take place,** though they do not generally use the word "rapture" to refer to this event (somewhat ironically, since the term "rapture" is derived from the text of the Latin Vulgate of 1 Thess. 4:17ā"we will be caught up," [Latin: rapiemur]). "
We consider it to be the parusia.
The common current meanings of it certainly are. It has become a wide spread evangelical phenomena.IOW a rapture is not a āmodern day inventionā and the āgathering together to be with Christā was taught prior to the 1800s
We are not dispensationalists.
All of these scriptures are written by, for, and about Catholics. What we disagree with is the dispensationalist interpretation of them.???
I quoted Scripture without any commentary:shrug:
please explain what is it you disagree with
It is even possible that the reference in Revelation has already taken place with the persecution of Christians by early Roman Emperors
Letās be practical, alwayswill. We interpret everything we read and hear. This is how the human mind functions.I quoted ScriptureCode:I did not interpret it
Catholics interpret through the lens of Sacred Tradition (the teaching that was handed down by the Apostles.
You are interpreting it through the Calvanistic lens that was created at the Reformation.
Yes the way the term is currently used in Evangelical circles. Catholics do not understand the scripture referenced to āTribulationā according to the dispensationalist model.Code:Re : Tribulation> the quote was "Catholic theology has no "Tribulation". That is a 20th century invention of C.I. Schofield and dispensationalism"
Not the way it is commonly taught now and understood in the Left Behind series.It also was not taught by anybody prior to the 1800s.Code:regarding rapture> the quote was>
Asking the question ādo Catholics believe inā¦ā requires certain meaning be assigned to the words. The meaning we assign to them is different than yours.Code:**No where in this thread have I interpreted anything:**:shrug:
Even though I think the book of Revelation may refer to persecution that has already occurred, I donā t see the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem meeting the criteria specified by Christ. I know many of those who have lived in war torn countries, though, that would say it describes their experience well. Your mention of the Jewish holocaust spared only a few of the Jews left in Europe.Do Catholics believe in a future tribulation?Code:Lets get straight to the point
Yes. At least, those who are still alive and remain when He comes.Code:Do Catholics believe that believers will be caught up (raptured) in the clouds with the Lord?