The Rapture Could Not Have Happened before the Book of Revelation in AD 95: ‘You must prophesy again’

Bible Prophecy Daily - A podcast by Eschatos Ministries

Dr. Alan Kurschner gave two quick announcements before he started talking about today's topic: (1) Register for the upcoming Ark Encounter & Bible Prophecy Event. (2) and if you are not subscribed to it, the next issue of Biblical Prophecy Magazine is coming out next month! Dr. Kurschner talked about a predicted prophecy event that must take place before the rapture. In this case, it took place before AD 95. Then the voice I had heard from heaven began to speak to me again, “Go and take the open scroll in the hand of the angel who is standing on the sea and on the land.” So I went to the angel and asked him to give me the little scroll. He said to me, “Take the scroll and eat it. It will make your stomach bitter, but it will be as sweet as honey in your mouth.” So I took the little scroll from the angel’s hand and ate it, and it did taste as sweet as honey in my mouth, but when I had eaten it, my stomach became bitter. Then they told me: “You must prophesy again about many peoples, nations, languages, and kings.” (Rev 10:8–11) John is given a commission that he "must" (δεῖ) "prophesy" (προφητεύω) again about what will happen to “many peoples, nations, languages, and kings.” John is commissioned to prophesy about the contents of this scroll. Exactly what the “sweet” and “bitter” refers to is debated among interpreters. The bitterness likely refers to the judgment that will fall upon the nations. Nevertheless, the point I want to highlight is that John is told to prophesy again. Whether the book of Revelation was written in AD 95, which is much more likely, or before AD 70 is not relevant. The point is that Jesus’s return to rapture the church could not have happened before John would carry out God’s plan of prophesying. Jesus’s return was not imminent before the book of Revelation was written and circulated and read among the seven churches: Write in a book what you see and send it to the seven churches—to Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and Laodicea. . . . Therefore write what you saw, what is, and what will be after these things. (Rev 1:11, 19; cf. Rev 4:1) Many pretribulation interpreters have read these verses multiple times in their lifetime not realizing that the teaching therein contradicts imminence theology, because these events would have to occur before Jesus returns. This is another prophecy among others recorded in the Bible that must happen in the lives of the apostles, in this case, the apostle John. Once again, imminence theology is found wanting.