An Interpretation of Matthew 24—25 – Part XXIX :: by Thomas Ice

“And He will send forth His angels with a great trumpet and they will gather together His elect from the four winds, from one end of the sky to the other.”

– Matthew 24:31

Many non-pretribulationists contend that Matthew 24:31 teaches a posttribulational rapture. All agree that this passage teaches a return of Christ. This means that the question revolves around whether Matthew 24:31 and Mark 13:27 are references to the rapture. I contend that the rapture is not in view in this passage.

Posttribulational Position Posttribulational radio personality, Irwin Baxter, believes that the rapture and the second coming ” are the same event” in Matthew 24:31.[1] ” Matthew 24:29 teaches that the coming of the Son of man and the rapture are the same event,” contends Baxter. He arrives at this conclusion by comparing Matthew 24:29-31 to Christ’ s return in Revelation 19. In the discussion cited, Baxter does not refer to 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18, the undisputed rapture passage, as a baseline for defining the rapture.

Posttribulational rapture scholar, Dr. Robert Gundry, also equates the rapture with the second coming in Matthew 24:31. ” Posttribulationists,” contends Gundry, ” equate the rapture with the gathering of the elect by angels at the sound of the trumpet (Matt. 24:31).” [2] Unlike Baxter, Dr. Gundry does interact with the rapture passage (1 Thess. 4:13-18). He says, ” If we define the rapture strictly as a catching up, only one passage in the entire New Testament describes it. That passage is 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18.” [3]

Definition of the Rapture Baxter does not even attempt to define the rapture. Apparently this allows Baxter flexibility to find the rapture in Matthew 24:31. Dr. Gundry includes in his definition of the rapture ” a catching up” from 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18. Dr. Gundry wants to ” broaden the definition to include a gathering or reception” from Matthew 24:31, etc.[4] Since the present debate is whether or not Matthew 24:31 is a rapture passage, it would beg the question to include Matthew 24:31 in an a priori definition of the rapture.

1 Thessalonians 4:17 is the only undisputed passage describing the rapture event. Only in this passage is the Greek word harpaz™ (” caught up” ) used, from which the English word rapture descends. Whatever else the rapture may include in 1 Thessalonians 4:17, it clearly consists of a translation of living believers.

Comparison of PassagesIn an attempt to equate Matthew 24:31 and 1 Thessalonians 4:17 as referring to the same event, Dr. Gundry notes ” parallel terminology in Paul’ s Thessalonian discussion of the Church’ s rapture, where we read of a trumpet, clouds, and a gathering of believers just as in the Olivet Discourse.”[5] Indeed, there are some similarities between the rapture and the second coming. There are also some similarities between Christ’ s first advent 2,000 years ago and His second advent. But they are not the same events. We know they are not the same because of the differences. It is the differences that are important when comparing Matthew 24:31 and 1 Thessalonians 4:17. Enough differences exist between the two passages to clearly conclude that they must be separate events.

Dr. Steven McAvoy notes that ” the differences between Paul’ s Thessalonian statements and Matthew 24:30-31 far outweigh any alleged similarities.” [6]He says:

Sproule asks,

Where does Paul mention the darkening of the sun (Matt. 24:29), the moon not giving its light (Matt. 24:29), the stars falling from the sky (Matt. 24:29), the powers of the heavens being shaken (Matt. 24:29), all the tribes of the earth mourning (Matt. 24:30), all the world seeing the coming of the Son of Man (Matt. 24:30), or God sending forth angels (Matt. 24:31)?[7]

Feinberg also notes the dissimilarities between the two accounts:

Notice what happens when you examine both passages carefully. In Matthew the Son of Man comes on the clouds, while in 1 Thessalonians 4 the ascending believers are in them. In Matthew the angels gather the elect; in 1 Thessalonians the Lord Himself (note the emphasis) gathers the believers. Thessalonians only speaks of the voice of the archangel. In the Olivet Discourse nothing is said about a resurrection, while in the latter text it is the central point. In the two passages the differences in what will take place prior to the appearance of Christ is striking. Moreover, the order of ascent is absent from Matthew in spite of the fact that it is the central part of the epistle.[8] [9]

In addition to the above differences, the order of events are different between the two passages. In 1 Thessalonians 4 believers are gathered in the air and taken to heaven, while in Matthew 24 they are gathered after Christ’ s arrival to earth. ” In order for Gundry to establish his view that Matthew 24:31 refers to the rapture, he must reconcile the dissimilarities; not simple point to a few similarities.” [10] Thus, the differences in the two passages support the contention that they speak of two distinct events.

Who are the Elect?I believe the elect in Matthew 24 is a reference to the Jewish remnant who will come to faith in the Messiahship of Jesus during the tribulation period. Commentators generally recognize that ” elect” ” may refer to Israel, to the Church, or to both.” [11] The context is the determinative factor in any attempt to discover which nuance the author intended. The contextual usage of Matthew supports the elect as a reference to Israel because of the Jewish orientation of the passage. ” Such terms as the gospel of the kingdom (24:14), the holy place (24:15), the Sabbath (24:20), and the Messiah (24:23-24) indicate that Israel as a nation is in view,” [12] observes Dr. Stanley Toussaint. Dr. Renald Showers provides a more focused explanation:

The elect are the faithful, believing Israelite remnant in contrast with the unbelieving sinners within the nation. In Isaiah 65:7-16 God drew a contrast between these two groups and their destinies. In verse 9 He called the believing remnant ” mine Elect,” and in verses 17-25 He indicated that in the future Millennium His elect remnant of the nation will be blessed greatly on the earth.[13]

Since the term ” elect” is used three times in Matthew 24 (verses 22, 24, 31; see also Mark 13:20, 22, 27), it is most likely that the author uses it to refer to the same entity all three times. Dr. McAvoy says, ” The rule of context precludes understanding ‘ elect’ in 24:22, 24 as referring to Israel and then nine verses later as referring to the church. Without some indication of transition from one intended meaning to another ‘ elect’ in 24:21 must mean the same as it does in 24:22, 24.” [14]

The Angelic GatheringTo me, the most convincing reason why Matthew 24:31 is not a rapture statement is found in the fact that this verse includes citations from Old Testament passages, specifically Deuteronomy 30:4. These references clearly support the notion that this angelic gathering, which was predicted in the Older Testament, references a regathering of saved Jews who need to be returned to the land of Israel in which they will live for a thousand years during Christ’ s Kingdom. Instead, of using El Al airlines, the Lord will use angelic carriers to transport His people back to their land. What is the support for this view? Dr. Arnold Fruchtenbaum tells us the following about the use of Old Testament citations in Matthew 24:31:

The Matthew passage is a rather simple summary of all that the prophets had to say about the second facet of Israel’ s final restoration. Its purpose was to make clear that the world-wide regathering predicted by the prophets will be fulfilled only after the second coming.[15]

Dr. Renald Showers has done an excellent job collecting evidence and arguing for this view.[16] After noting that ” from the four winds, from one end of the sky to the other” means that ” the elect will be gathered from all over the world at Christ’ s coming,” [17] Dr. Showers provides three lines of proof for his view as follows:

First, because of Israel’ s persistent rebellion against God, He declared that He would scatter the Jews ” into all the winds” (Ezek. 5:10, 12) or ” toward all winds” (Ezek. 17:21). In Zechariah 2:6 God stated that He did scatter them abroad ” as four winds of the heavens.” . . . God did scatter the Jews all over the world.

Next, God also declared that in the future Israel would be gathered from the east, west, north, and south, ” from the ends of the earth” (Isa. 43:5-7). We should note that in the context of this promise, God called Israel His ” chosen” (vv. 10, 20).

. . . Just as Jesus indicated that the gathering of His elect from the four directions of the world will take place in conjunction with ” a great trumpet” (literal translation of the Greek text of Mt. 24:21), so Isaiah 27:13 teaches that the scattered children of Israel will be gathered to their homeland in conjunction with the blowing of ” a great trumpet” (literal translation of the Hebrew). . . .

Gerhard Friedrich wrote that in that future eschatological day ” a great horn shall be blown (Is. 27:13)” and the exiled will be brought back by that signal. Again he asserted that in conjunction with the blowing of the great trumpet of Isaiah 27:13, ” There follows the gathering of Israel and the return of the dispersed to Zion.”

It is significant to note that Isaiah 27:13, which foretells this future regathering of Israel, is the only specific reference in the Old Testament to a ” great” trumpet.

Although Isaiah 11:11-12 does not refer to a great trumpet, it is parallel to Isaiah 27:13 because it refers to the same regathering of Israel. In its context, this passage indicates that when the Messiah (a root of Jesse, vv. 1, 10) comes to rule and transform the world as an ” ensign” (a banner), He will gather together the scattered remnant of His people Israel ” from the four corners of the earth.” [18]

What Jesus describes in Matthew 24 and Mark 13 is the Jewish ingathering that will fulfill the prophetic aspects of the Feast of Trumpets for the nation of Israel. In fact, a prayer for this regathering of the children of Israel appears to this day in the Jewish Daily Prayer Book.[19]

ConclusionIt is quite clear that since the church is not mentioned in Matthew 24, then verse 31 cannot be a reference to the rapture of the church. Instead, as one studies the context and Old Testament references that our Lord alludes to, it becomes quite clear that He speaks of an end time regathering of elect Israel in order to return them to the land for the Millennium. At Christ’ s first coming he wept over Jerusalem and expressed His desire to gather Israel to Himself ” the way a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you were unwilling” (Matt. 23:37). At His second coming, elect Israel will look upon Him whom they have pierced (Zech. 12:10) and say, ” Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!” (Ps. 118:26; Matt. 23:39). Maranatha!

(To Be Continued . . .)

 

Endnotes
[1] This information is take from the web site of Irwin Baxter atwww.endtime.com, under the Question and Answer section dealing with the rapture. All subsequent quotes from Baxter are from the same source.

[2] Robert H. Gundry, The Church and the Tribulation (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1973), p. 135.

[3] Robert H. Gundry, First the Antichrist: Why Christ Won’ t Come Before the Antichrist Does (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1997), p. 71.

[4] Gundry, First the Antichrist, p. 71.

[5] Gundry, The Church and the Tribulation, p. 135.

[6] Steven L. McAvoy, ” A Critique of Robert Gundry’ s Posttribulationalism,” Th. D. dissertation, Dallas Theological Seminary, 1986, p. 136.

[7] John A. Sproule, ” An Exegetical Defense of Pretribulationism,” Th. D. dissertation, Grace Theological Seminary, 1981, p. 53.

[8] Paul D. Feinberg, ” Response: Paul D. Feinberg,” in The Rapture: Pre-, Mid-, or Posttribulational? by Richard R. Reiter, (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1984), p. 225.

[9] McAvoy, ” Critique of Gundry,” p. 137.

[10] McAvoy, ” Critique of Gundry,” p. 138.

[11] Gundry, The Church and the Tribulation, p. 135.

[12] Stanley D. Toussaint, Behold The King: A Study of Matthew (Portland: Multnomah, 1980), p. 277.

[13] Renald Showers, Maranatha: Our Lord, Come! (Bellmawr, NJ: The Friends of Israel, 1995), p. 182.

[14] McAvoy, ” Critique of Gundry,” pp. 140-41.

[15] Arnold Fruchtenbaum, The Footsteps of the Messiah (San Antonio: Ariel Press, 1982), p. 299.

[16] For more information supporting this view see Showers, Maranatha, pp. 181-84.

[17] Showers, Maranatha, p. 182.

[18] Showers, Maranatha, pp. 182-83.

[19] For this prayer see Showers, Maranatha, p. 183.

An Interpretation of Matthew 24—25 – Part XXVIII :: by Thomas Ice

“And He will send forth His angels with a great trumpet and they will gather together His elect from the four winds, from one end of the sky to the other.”

– Matthew 24:31

We have seen that the return of Jesus to planet earth is said to be ” on the clouds of the sky” and will be accompanied ” with power and great glory.” In the process of that return, apparently as our Lord descends, He will then send out His angelic company to gather in the Jewish, believing remnant that He will rescue from the danger of all the world’ s armies who have gathered by the anti-Christ in an attack upon Israel and Jerusalem. The passage before us now, Matthew 24:31, describes this event.

An Angelic Gathering

In Matthew 23:37 Jesus weeps over Jerusalem as He pronounces the a.d. 70 judgment and declares, ” How I wanted to gather your children together, the way a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you were unwilling.” Now in chapter 24, this same Jesus is returning after at least a couple thousand years at a future time when Jerusalem is again in peril. But this time the Jews respond positively to the Messiahship of Jesus, so our Lord sends out his angels to gather His elect (saved Jews at the end of the tribulation) from around the world and bring them to Jerusalem, instead of scattering them as in a.d. 70 (Luke 21:24). Just such a regathering was predicted in the Old Testament.

” So it shall be when all of these things have come upon you, the blessing and the curse which I have set before you, and you call them to mind in all nations where the Lord your God has banished you, and you return to the Lord your God and obey Him with all your heart and soul according to all that I command you today, you and your sons, then the Lord your God will restore you from captivity, and have compassion on you, and will gather you again from all the peoples where the Lord your God has scattered you. If your outcasts are at the ends of the earth, from there the Lord your God will gather you, and from there He will bring you back.” (Deuteronomy 30:1- 4)

And He will lift up a standard for the nations, and will assemble the banished ones of Israel, and will gather the dispersed of Judah from the four corners of the earth. (Isaiah 11:12)

The only thing missing from the Old Testament that our Lord expands upon in His Discourse is that He will use the agency of angels to bring Jews to Israel, instead of El Al airline as they come and go today from the modern state of Israel. Deuteronomy 30:1- 4 reveals an important covenantal promise made by the Lord to His people Israel. Matthew 24:31 reveals that our Lord, the same One who made the promise in Deuteronomy will fulfill His promises in history, even if it requires a miraculous solution.

Surely no one would object to the supernatural implications of angels gathering human beings and returning them to Israel! We know that Elijah was translated to heaven without dying. 2 Kings 2 records this interesting event with an emphasis upon the mode of Elijah’ s transportation to heaven. 2 Kings 2:1 says he was taken ” by a whirlwind to heaven.” In 2:11 the whirlwind is further described as ” a chariot of fire and horses of fire.” No doubt this was an appearance of the Shechinah glory of God since Hebrews 1:7 says, ” and of the angels He says, ‘ Who makes His angels winds, and His ministers a flame of fire.’ ” An individual, Elijah, was taken to heaven by angels (mere human messengers could not accomplish such a task), why not have a group operation? This is exactly what we find in conjunction with an important event like Christ’ s second advent.

The Deuteronomy passage also provides an answer for why our Lord used the term ” elect” in Matthew 24:31 to characterize His people. It is because at this pivotal point in history, the Jews will fulfill the requirements of Deuteronomy 30:2 and will turn ” to the Lord your God and obey Him with all your heart and soul according to all that I command you today.” This was also our Lord’ s own requirement for the second coming in Matthew 23:39. The passage makes great sense with such a futuristic interpretation and is also in harmony with clear Old Testament teaching about Israel and that wonderful day when they will be converted to Messiah and receive in history their long awaited blessing. Fruchtenbaum says,

In the New Testament, the final regathering revealed by the Old Testament prophets is summarized in Matthew 24:31 and Mark 13:27. In this passage, Jesus stated that the angels will be involved in the final regathering and they will bring the Jews back into the land. As to locality, the emphasis is on the world-wide regathering. The two passages are a simple summary of all that the prophets had to say about the second facet of Israel’s final restoration. The Matthew passage is based on Isaiah 27:12 13 and the Mark passage is based on Deuteronomy 30:4. Its purpose was to make clear that the world-wide regathering predicted by the prophets will be fulfilled only after the second coming.[1]

Isaiah 27:12- 13 teaches exactly what Fruchtenbaum says and it is clear that Christ had it in mind in Matthew 24:31. It reads as follows:

And it will come about in that day, that the Lord will start His threshing from the flowing stream of the Euphrates to the brook of Egypt; and you will be gathered up one by one, O sons of Israel. It will come about also in that day that a great trumpet will be blown; and those who were perishing in the land of Assyria and who were scattered in the land of Egypt will come and worship the Lord in the holy mountain at Jerusalem.

The Isaiah passage has emphasis upon a regathering of the Jewish remnant that is not in the land of Israel and restoring them back to their homeland. This is one of the reasons why Matthew 24:31 emphasizes a global regather of saved Jews in conjunction with the return of Jesus to the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem.

Fruchtenbaum tells us the following:

The Matthew passage is a rather simple summary of all that the prophets had to say about the second facet of Israel’ s final restoration. Its purpose was to make clear that the world-wide regathering predicted by the prophets will be fulfilled only after the Second Coming.[2]

The Feast of Trumpets

Dr. Renald Showers has done an excellent job collecting evidence and arguing for this view.[3] After noting that ” from the four winds, from one end of the sky to the other” means that ” the elect will be gathered from all over the world at Christ’ s coming,” [4] Dr. Showers provides three lines of proof for his view as follows:

First, because of Israel’ s persistent rebellion against God, He declared that He would scatter the Jews ” into all the winds” (Ezek. 5:10, 12) or ” toward all winds” (Ezek. 17:21). In Zechariah 2:6 God stated that He did scatter them abroad ” as four winds of the heavens.” . . . God did scatter the Jews all over the world.

Next, God also declared that in the future Israel would be gathered from the east, west, north, and south, ” from the ends of the earth” (Isa. 43:5-7). We should note that in the context of this promise, God called Israel His ” chosen” (vv. 10, 20).

. . . Just as Jesus indicated that the gathering of His elect from the four directions of the world will take place in conjunction with ” a great trumpet” (literal translation of the Greek text of Mt. 24:21), so Isaiah 27:13 teaches that the scattered children of Israel will be gathered to their homeland in conjunction with the blowing of ” a great trumpet” (literal translation of the Hebrew). . . .

Gerhard Friedrich wrote that in that future eschatological day ” a great horn shall be blown (Is. 27:13)” and the exiled will be brought back by that signal. Again he asserted that in conjunction with the blowing of the great trumpet of Isaiah 27:13, ” There follows the gathering of Israel and the return of the dispersed to Zion.”

It is significant to note that Isaiah 27:13, which foretells this future regathering of Israel, is the only specific reference in the Old Testament to a ” great” trumpet.

Although Isaiah 11:11-12 does not refer to a great trumpet, it is parallel to Isaiah 27:13 because it refers to the same regathering of Israel. In its context, this passage indicates that when the Messiah (a root of Jesse, vv. 1, 10) comes to rule and transform the world as an ” ensign” (a banner), He will gather together the scattered remnant of His people Israel ” from the four corners of the earth.” [5]

What Jesus describes in Matthew 24 and Mark 13 is the Jewish ingathering that will fulfill the prophetic aspects of the Feast of Trumpets for the nation of Israel. In fact, a prayer for this regathering of the children of Israel appears to this day in the Jewish Daily Prayer Book.[6]

The Elect

The term ” elect” in Matthew 24:31 refers to those Jewish individuals who will become believers in the Messiahship of Jesus by the time the second advent occurs. As a reference to Jewish individuals who are destined to become believers is the same way that the term is used in the previous two references in Matthew 24 (verses 22, 24). In fact, when you look at Daniel 12:1, which is set within the same context of the tribulation period and reads as follows:

” Now at that time Michael, the great prince who stands guard over the sons of your people, will arise. And there will be a time of distress such as never occurred since there was a nation until that time; and at that time your people, everyone who is found written in the book, will be rescued.”

This passage in Daniel uses the phrase ” everyone who is found written in the book,” to refer to Jewish individuals who will come to faith in Christ during the tribulation period, which is the context of this passage. Christ, who apparently has this passage from Daniel in mind shortens the phrase ” everyone who is found written in the book,” to ” the elect.” So elect is an excellent term that refers to an individual, in this context a Jewish person, whom the Lord knows will come to faith in Christ. That this is not just any individual who will come to faith in Christ during the tribulation is noted by the context in which it is clear that they are Jewish people. This is supported in Daniel 12:1 by the modifier ” your people” that appears just before ” everyone who is found written in the book.” Who are ” your people?” In the context it can only refer to Daniel’ s people, the Jewish people.

We see that this passage teaches that in conjunction with Christ’ s return to planet earth, He will have His angels gather all saved Jews (the remnant) and bring them to Israel. This will be so that they will be back in their homeland in preparation to dwell there during the one thousand year reign of Christ upon earth. Maranatha!

(To Be Continued . . .)

 

Endnotes
[1]Arnold Fruchtenbaum, Israelology: The Missing Link In Systematic Theology, rev. ed. (Tustin, Calf.: Ariel Ministries Press, 1992), pp. 798- 99.

[2] Arnold Fruchtenbaum, The Footsteps of the Messiah, 2nd edition (San Antonio: Ariel Press, 2003), p. 425.

[3] For more information supporting this view see Renald Showers,Maranatha: Our Lord, Come! (Bellmawr, NJ: The Friends of Israel, 1995), pp. 181-84.

[4] Showers, Maranatha, p. 182.

[5] Showers, Maranatha, pp. 182-83.

[6] For this prayer see Showers, Maranatha, p. 183.