There are two 
                    popular phrases people use in connection with the End Times 
                    to discourage speculation about just when the Rapture might 
                    take place.  One 
                    is “like a thief in the night”, and the other is “no one 
                    knows the day or the hour”.  
                     
                    It's been 
                    suggested from time to time that I'm sometimes “overly 
                    specific” in my teaching on the subject of End Times 
                    prophecy (even though I've never proposed either a day or an 
                    hour) so I've undertaken a study of these two phrases to see 
                    if I'm guilty as charged.  
                     
                    Let me say 
                    from the outset that I don't believe the day or hour of the 
                    Rapture can be known in advance by anyone on Earth because I 
                    don't believe it's set to happen on any specific day or at 
                    any specific hour.  
                    I believe it's set to happen when a specific number 
                    of born again believers is reached, and  I base that 
                    conclusion on my understanding of Romans 11:25. 
                     
                    I do not 
                    want you to be ignorant of this mystery, brothers, so that 
                    you may not be conceited: Israel has experienced a hardening 
                    in part until the full number of the Gentiles has come 
                    in.
                    There are 
                    two Greek words in this verse that lend critical support to 
                    a proper understanding. The first is translated "full 
                    number".   
                    It's a nautical term that describes the 
                    pre-determined number of sailors necessary to operate a 
                    ship. Until the ship had its full number of crew members, it 
                    could not sail. This is why ship captains sometimes got 
                    unsuspecting  men drunk and kidnapped them late at 
                    night and then set sail immediately.  And the second, 
                    translated "come in" is also a nautical term that described 
                    the ship's arrival at its intended destination.
                    By using 
                    these terms, Paul was saying that the hardening of Israel's 
                    heart will not be fully removed until the Church reaches its 
                    pre-determined number and has been taken to heaven.  There's nothing 
                    arbitrary about God's action here.  He has already 
                    determined the number and will take the Church to its 
                    intended destination as soon as that number is reached.  But as far as I can 
                    tell no one on Earth knows either the full number or the 
                    current number.  
                    All we can know is that we'll be Raptured when the 
                    full number of Gentiles has come in  and it could 
                    literally happen on any given day.  Then we'll 
                    disappear, the blinders will come off Israel and the 
                    70th Week will commence. 
                    Now, back to 
                    the topic at hand.  
                    What do these two phrases mean and are they intended 
                    to discourage speculation about the timing of the 
                    Rapture?  
                                 
                    Like A Thief 
                    
                    This phrase 
                    appears 4 times in the New Testament.  Let's look at each 
                    one and see what it's telling us. 
                     
                    Now, 
                    brothers, about times and dates we do not need to write to 
                    you, for you know very well that the day of the Lord will 
                    come like a thief in the night. While people are saying, 
                    "Peace and safety," destruction will come on them suddenly, 
                    as labor pains on a pregnant woman, and they will not 
                    escape. But you, brothers, are not 
                    in darkness so that this day should surprise you like a 
                    thief. (1 Thes. 5:1-4)
                     
                    This is 
                    Paul's only use of the phrase.   It's clear He 
                    was speaking of the day of the Lord, and that while it will 
                    come as a surprise to unbelievers, events leading up to it 
                    should not surprise us.  He made no mention 
                    of the Rapture here. 
                     
                    But the day 
                    of the Lord will come like a thief. The heavens will 
                    disappear with a roar; the elements will be destroyed by 
                    fire, and the earth and everything in it will be laid bare. 
                    (2 Peter 3:10)
                     
                    Here's 
                    Peter's only use of the phrase, and again the reference is 
                    to the End Time Judgments, not to the Rapture.  
                     
                    Remember, 
                    therefore, what you have received and heard; obey it, and 
                    repent. But if you do not wake up, I will come like a thief, 
                    and you will not know at what time I will come to you. 
                    (Rev. 3:3)
                     
                    "Behold, I 
                    come like a thief! Blessed is he who stays awake and keeps 
                    his clothes with him, so that he may not go naked and be 
                    shamefully exposed." (Rev. 16:15)
                     
                    John used the 
                    phrase twice, both times quoting the Lord.  In Rev. 3:3 
                    He was criticizing the Church in Sardis, who in my opinion 
                    represents the mainline Protestants of today.  He was reminding 
                    them that they've gotten away from His word and had better 
                    wake up and get back into it.  Otherwise they won't 
                    know when He will come to them.  Notice the 
                    wording.  In the 
                    Rapture He comes for us, not to us, and we meet Him in the 
                    air.  The people 
                    He's talking to will not go in the Rapture, and if they 
                    don't wake up, even the 2nd Coming will take them 
                    by surprise.  
                    (In verse 4 we see that not everyone in Sardis is 
                    asleep.  There 
                    are a few among them who will be ready for the Rapture and 
                    will walk with Him in robes of white.)
                     
                    In Rev. 
                    16:15 the world is well into the Great Tribulation, so 
                    the Lord's warning is for Tribulation believers who will be 
                    responsible for keeping themselves saved during the most 
                    terrifying and dangerous time the world has ever known. When 
                    used symbolically, as it is here, clothing always stands for 
                    righteousness, and tribulation believers will be responsible 
                    for maintaining theirs.    
                                 
                    Day and 
                    Hour
                    Now we'll 
                    look at that other popular phrase, “No one knows the day or 
                    the hour”.
                    "No one knows 
                    about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor 
                    the Son, but only the Father. As it 
                    was in the days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the 
                    Son of Man. (Matt. 24:36-37)
                     
                    After the 
                    Great Tribulation ends (Matt. 24:29) there will be 
                    various signs in the heavens.  The sun and moon 
                    will go dark and the stars will fall from the sky.  Then the sign of the 
                    Son of Man will appear and all the nations will mourn. After 
                    that they'll see Him coming in the clouds with power and 
                    great glory, having gathered His elect from all over Heaven 
                    to join Him (Matt. 24:30-31).   This is 
                    confirmed in both Rev. 18:14 and Rev. 19: 
                    11-14.  From 
                    both the context and the passage itself it's clear that the 
                    Lord was referring to the day and hour of the 2nd 
                    Coming when He'll be coming with us not for us. 
                     
                    "Therefore keep watch, because you do 
                    not know on what day your Lord will come. But understand 
                    this: If the owner of the house had known at what time of 
                    night the thief was coming, he would have kept watch and 
                    would not have let his house be broken into. So you also 
                    must be ready, because the Son of Man will come at an hour 
                    when you do not expect him. (Matt. 24:42-44)
                     
                    A few verses 
                    later, the Lord repeated the same thought, again in the 
                    context of the 2nd Coming.  
                     
                    The master of that servant will come 
                    on a day when he does not expect him and at an hour he is 
                    not aware of. He will cut him to 
                    pieces and assign him a place with the hypocrites, where 
                    there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. (Matt. 
                    24:50-51)
                     
                    And another 
                    few verses later.  
                    There's no way this can refer to the Rapture  because the things 
                    He described will not be done to unbelievers at the 
                    Rapture.  He's 
                    speaking of the judgments that follow the 2nd 
                    Coming.  
                     
                    “Therefore 
                    keep watch, because you do not know the day or the hour.” 
                    (Matt. 25:13)
                     
                    For the 
                    fourth time in  
                    28 verses the Lord has said that believers on Earth 
                    at the time of the 2nd Coming will not know the 
                    day or hour of His return.  This one is in the 
                    context of the parable of the 10 bridesmaids.
                     
                    In previous 
                    studies I've shown that this parable can't be about the 
                    church. The Church is the Bride, not a bridesmaid, there's 
                    only one bride, not 10, and the banquet follows the wedding, 
                    it doesn't precede it.  
                    There's no way a newly married bride can be excluded 
                    from her own wedding banquet by a husband who claims he 
                    doesn't know her.  
                    The parable is about tribulation survivors,  5 of whom are saved 
                    and enter the Kingdom and 5 who are not and don't.  
                                 
                    What's The Point? 
                    
                    Now there is in store for me the crown 
                    of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will 
                    award to me on that day—and not only to me, but also to all 
                    who have longed for his appearing.(2 Tim. 4:8)
                    
I've searched the 
                    Scriptures in vain trying to find either phrase used in 
                    connection with the Rapture. But no where can I find a 
                    single verse prohibiting or even discouraging speculation 
                    about its timing.  
                    
                     
                    On the 
                    contrary, I find that the Lord rebuked the religious leaders 
                    of His time for not expecting Him, and in doing so 
                    encouraged us to be aware as well.  For example, 
                    commanded us to understand Daniel's 70 weeks prophecy 
                    (Matt. 24:15), He criticized the Pharisees for not 
                    being able to read the signs of the times (Matt. 
                    16:2-4), and had Jerusalem destroyed for not recognizing 
                    the clearly foretold time of His visitation (Luke 
                    19:41-44).  
                    Paul warned us not to let events leading up to the 
                    Day of the Lord take us by surprise (1 Thes. 5:4), 
                    and as we see above promised that the Lord would award a 
                    crown to those who longed for His appearing.  How many more 
                    reasons do we need?
                     
                    So where did 
                    this idea come from? It appears that some of it can be 
                    blamed on theologians who misinterpreted the 2nd 
                    Coming parables in Matt. 24 & 25.  Apparently they 
                    didn't realize that when the Lord coined the phrase, “No one 
                    knows the day or hour”  
                    He was talking about His 2nd Coming, not 
                    the Rapture.  
                    But even then it's the disobedient who are caught by 
                    surprise in these parables, not the faithful. 
                     
                    Some of it is 
                    also due to the fact that for generations church leaders 
                    have actively discouraged the study of prophecy for fear 
                    that focusing on the Lord's return would make members less 
                    enthusiastic about funding their buildings and other Earth 
                    centered programs. They developed interpretations that 
                    allegorized it all away, making it seem like a fairy tale 
                    that no body really believes.  I remember when I 
                    began to take Bible prophecy seriously my pastors warned me, 
                    “Don't become so heavenly minded that you're no earthly 
                    good.” These are the scoffers Peter warned about, who say, 
                    “Where's the Coming He promised?” (2 Peter 3:4) 
                     
                    But there's 
                    still more.   
                    Even among pre-trib believers, there is a fear of the 
                    rapture because of false doctrines they've been exposed 
                    to.  The 
                    “partial rapture” hypothesis holds that only the truly 
                    worthy will be taken, while the rest of the Church will be 
                    left behind to clean up their act during some or all of the 
                    End times judgments.   Others say 
                    believers who are not also “overcomers” will be cast into 
                    the Outer Darkness at the rapture and excluded from the 
                    Millennium.  
                    These opinions erode our assurance by concluding that 
                    we won't know if we're good enough until it's too late, and 
                    make us fearful that we won't  qualify.
                     
                    Then there 
                    are the “secular Christians” who don't want their so-called 
                    good life to end before they've had a chance to experience 
                    it all.  Yes, 
                    they want the Lord to come, but not yet, not now. 
                     
                    And finally 
                    there are those who know that if the Lord came for us today, 
                    members of their family and circle of friends would be left 
                    behind.  They 
                    don't want the Lord to come until they know everyone they 
                    love will be taken too.
                     
                    For all these 
                    reasons and more, being faced with the idea that the Rapture 
                    could be very close is not a comforting idea for lots of 
                    believers.  
                    Suggesting time frames makes it all seem too real, so 
                    they don't like it.         
                    
                                 
                    Be Quiet.  You'll Scare Them 
                    Away.
                    Well intended 
                    people incorrectly say that talking about the End Times 
                    frightens new believers, so we shouldn't do it.  What if we get them 
                    all excited and then it doesn't happen? they ask.   It's no secret 
                    that the church is populated by a lot of folks who have zeal 
                    without knowledge and are easily taken in by anything that 
                    promises to either make their life easier (prosperity 
                    gospel) or help them  
                    escape it altogether (rapture mania).  When I came to the 
                    Lord in the mid 1980's  
                    a book titled 88 Reasons Why The Rapture will take 
                    place in 1988 triggered some rapture mania.  A year ago the so 
                    called  “Blood 
                    Moon Scenario” had folks looking for the rapture during the 
                    fall feasts. And there have been several others in 
                    between.  In 
                    every case a couple of hours of study proved the theories 
                    false. 
                     
                    Paul called 
                    the Bereans noble because they searched the Scriptures daily 
                    to verify what he taught them (Acts 17:11)   And that's the 
                    Biblically correct response to these claims.  It's not to take 
                    other verses out of context in an effort to silence them. 
                    That only introduces another false teaching.  And worse, it 
                    encourages the Church to go back to sleep. 
                     
                    When we hear 
                    someone suggest or even insist on this time or that one, our 
                    response should not be to automatically condemn the person 
                    for “date-setting”.  
                    It should be to “search the Scriptures daily to see 
                    if those things be true” before making a decision about it. 
                    
                     
                    Personally I 
                    would much rather see the Church engaged in a lively 
                    discussion about the nearness of end times events than to 
                    see us trot out the old  “No one knows the 
                    day or hour” line while sticking our heads back in the 
                    sand.  What 
                    subject is a more important topic for discussion today?  And think of all the 
                    extra crowns the Lord would have to order.  Besides, people 
                    don't fall away when dates come and go because if they're 
                    saved they can't fall away. If they fall away they weren't 
                    saved to begin with.  
                    The Lord doesn't miss opportunities to save people 
                    because of mistakes men make.  He knew those who 
                    are His before He laid the Earth's foundations, and promised 
                    not to lose even one of us.  
                     
                    So come on 
                    Church.  Let's 
                    get back to our job.  
                    The Bible warns us that there'll be false teachers 
                    and says they'll be held accountable.  But it also 
                    admonishes us to do our homework so we'll know one when we 
                    see one.  Selah 
                    09-05-09