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The False Prophet - Skolfield
Last Trumpet
CHAPTER 16

When thou art in tribulation,
and all these things are come upon thee,
even in the latter days,
if thou turn to the LORD thy God,
and shalt be obedient unto His voice;
(For the LORD thy God is a merciful God)
He will not forsake thee, neither destroy thee,
nor forget the covenant of thy fathers
which He sware unto them..
DEU 4:30-31

But we are all going to be raptured out before the real bad times come,
right? Let’s make a little agreement between you, the Lord, and me.
Let’s take all our commentaries and set them aside for a minute. Then
let’s take the Bible, and only the Bible, and see what it has to tell us
about the final sequence of events.
       Please be patient with me for making this a kind of nit-picking
chapter. The I’s are dotted and the T’s are crossed because if the
Scripture verses quoted below really mean what they say, then ALL of
our current end-time ideas will need rethinking. Let’s begin with a quote
that is familiar to almost every Christian:

1Th 4:16-17 For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with
a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God:
and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and
remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet
the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
 
Last Trumpet 173

All agree that those verses refer to the so-called “rapture” of the
Church.1 In fact, 1 Th 4:16-17 is one of the central passages in Scripture
that supports the physical return of the Lord Jesus to this Earth. Note the
WE. Paul was speaking to the Church of which he was part and we have
every scriptural reason to believe that we also includes us. You and I and
the rest of the church are the WE of 1 Th 4:16-17. That’s relatively
simple, isn’t it?
       Also note that Jesus is returning with the “trumpet of God.” Now the
Bible is full of trumpets, including seven in Revelation, so the next
logical question is this: Which biblical trumpet is this one? Of all the
trumpets in the Bible, at which one is the Church taken to be with the
Lord?

1Co 15:51-52 Behold, I shew you a mystery; we shall not all sleep,
but we shall all be changed, In a moment, in the twinkling of an
eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead
shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.2

       Ah, and there it is, the last trumpet! We are taken to be with the
Lord at the last trumpet. That trumpet is singular, so no other trumpets
are blown with it. Also, there are no modifiers such as, “except the
trumpets of judgment,” or “except the trumpets in Revelation.” That
needs to be emphasized:

       There are NO exceptions! Not one Bible trumpet is left out!
________________________________

1 “Rapture” is in quotes because the author does not find the return of the Lord for the
saints so characterized anywhere in Scripture. It is believed to have come from the Latin
Vulgate’s “raptao” in reference to this event. By definition, the word “rapture” seems
more suitable for the mystery religions than it does for sober Christians looking forward
to the most awesome event in all history, the return of Jesus. The whole “Rapture” concept
may have been brought into the church by the publicists of Margaret Macdonald’s vision.
See Dave MacPherson, The Rapture Plot, (Simpsonville, SC, Millennium III)
2 Compare this 1Co quote with the 1Th quote above it. In both, the dead in Christ are
raised, and in both, trumpets are blown. Notice also that there are three more we’s. Here
is the point: If the we Paul was speaking of in 1Th 4:17 includes us, then so do the we’s
in 1Co 15:51-52. Believe it or not, there are those who claim that 1Th 4:16-17 is for the
Church, while 1Co 15:52 is for the great tribulation saints. Nonsense! There are we’s in
both passages! Either both verses are for us, or neither are. We can’t go arbitrarily picking
through the we’s in the Bible on the basis of some doctrine we wish to defend.
_______________________________
 
Last Trumpet 174

GRAPH NUMBER 20


       Recognizing that the church will be taken to be with the Lord at the
one and only last trumpet of all time simplifies a doctrinal point the
Church has been arguing about for over 100 years.

Mat 24:21 For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since
the beginning of the world to this time.
Mat 24:29 Immediately after the tribulation of those days ... the
powers of the heavens shall be shaken:
Mat 24:31 And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a
trumpet [a great trumpet, NASB], and they shall gather together his
elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other.

Note the sequence of events:
(1) Tribulation.
(2) After the tribulation.
(3) Great trumpet.
 
Last Trumpet 175

       So isn’t it obvious that the last trumpet comes after the tribulation?1
Sure, and since the church is taken up at the last trumpet, the only way
to defend the pre-trib rapture is to rewrite Scripture and put verse 31
before verse 21.2
       No matter what our doctrines may have been in the past, the Bible
states that our trumpet is the last, and the last trumpet does not blow
until Rev 11:15, after the six other trumpets in Revelation have blown.3
So the last trumpet is solid scriptural evidence that the Church will be on
earth through the trumpets of Revelation. Now Brethren, that isn’t just
another irrational end-time theory. If we have ears to hear it, that is what
the Word of God proclaims, straight out.
       The last Bible trumpet blows in Rev 11:15, but the conditions
surrounding that trumpet blast are described in chapter ten:

Rev 10:6-7 ... that there should be time no longer: But in the days
of the voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the
mystery of God should be finished, as he hath declared to his
servants the prophets.

       What tremendous verses. If there is a central Scripture about the
chronology of the Lord’s return, Rev 10:6-7 is it. As is true of every
other creation of this present age, when the seventh trumpet sounds, it
also appears that time itself will come to an end.4 That’s important,
____________________________

1 Some believe the Church is “raptured” at the end of Rev 3 because “church” (the Greek
word Ýêêëçóßá, usually rendered church), does not appear after Rev 3. Some logic. That’s
like saying Esther didn’t believe in God because the word “God,” does not appear in the
book of Esther. But the main problems with their view are still the seven trumpets of
Revelation chapters 9 - 11.
2 Dave MacPherson writes, “Over the years I’ve privately contacted hundreds of the bestknown
evangelical scholars in regards to their prophetic views. The vast majority . . .
harmonizes 1 Thessalonians 4's coming with Matthew 24's coming, but the general public
doesn’t know this. If just a minority . . . were to publicly reveal their positions, pretrib
dispensationalism would receive a death blow.” The Rapture Plot (Simpsonville, SC,
Millennium III Publishers), p.233
3 There are some denominational theologians who declare that this last trumpet does not
include the seven trumpets in Revelation. Unbelievable as it may sound, they theorize that
Revelation’s seven trumpets are “special” trumpets of judgment excluded from the firm
mandate of 1Co 15:52. There is absolutely no Scripture for their view, and it is counter
to the plain testimony of the Bible: the declaration that we are taken to be with the Lord
at the last trumpet!
4 The correct definition of the Gr. ÷ñüíïl (chronos) is “time,” and it is so translated in the
KJV. The modern translation of chronos as “delay” is probably invalid. Greek has several
words for delay, including ÷ñïíßæù (chronizo) from the same root. If the Lord had
intended delay, then He chose the wrong Greek word to express it. Though chronos
appears 53 times in the NT, only in Rev 10:6 have modern translators taken the liberty of
rendering chronos as delay. Strong defines ÷ñüíïl G5550, as a space of time, season,
space, time, while. Chronos represents “delay” only by implication.
_____________________________
 
Last Trumpet 176

because understanding that time will come to an end affects our end time
doctrine.1
       The “mystery of God” is the Church in Christ Jesus.2 So the Church
as a betrothed body of believers on Earth will be concluded at this
trumpet.
       “As He hath declared to His servants the prophets.” Which prophets
is the Lord speaking of? We don’t see any excluded, so these prophets
are all the prophets in the Bible, both Old Testament and New. All
prophecy will be fulfilled at this trumpet. Of course, this does not
include those few verses which refer to the eternal Kingdom of God.
That timeless state continues into infinity.
       Let’s look at the verse where that trumpet blast sounds. The 7th
trumpet is blown right in the middle of Revelation, after the Seven
Churches, after the Seven Seals, after six other trumpets, and after the
Two Witnesses:

Rev 11:15 And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great
voices in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become
the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for
ever and ever.

       The 7th angel sounds, and the Lord reigns forever. Right then,
forever! After that trumpet blows, there won’t be time for a tribu-lation,
or for a 1000-year millennium. We will be going straight into the eternal
Kingdom of God when that last trumpet sounds. Despite differing
doctrines, that is the chronological picture as declared in the Bible.
______________________________________

1 If there is no more time after the 7th trumpet, there isn’t any more time for another
trumpet to blow. So our trumpet couldn’t come after this 7th trumpet. Second, our trumpet
can’t come before this 7th trumpet either, or our trumpet would not be the last. So the 7th
trumpet of Revelation is our last trumpet. It is the very trumpet at which we, the Church,
are taken to be with the Lord! Neither is the last trumpet going to sound over
several years. The phrase “when he shall begin to sound” tells us so. At the very first peep
out of that trumpet, there will be no more time! Time as a natural phenomenon will cease
to exist, and we will be in the eternal Kingdom of God. This puts to rest the idea that the
seventh trumpet could be blowing throughout a seven-year tribulation.
2 Rom 16:25, Eph 1:9, 3:4, 3:9, 5:32, Col:1:27, 2:2.
____________________________________
 
Last Trumpet 177

GRAPH NUMBER 21


       So when is the great tribulation? Matthew 24:21 tells us there was
going to be one. Well, the Greek word for tribulation is thlipsis, also
translated affliction and trouble. Thlipsis, used 37 times in the New
Testament, almost always refers to the suffering of the saints. Here are
a couple of very familiar verses:

Joh 16:33 These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might
have peace. In the world ye shall have [thlipsis] tribulation: but be
of good cheer; I have overcome the world.
Rom 12:12 Rejoicing in hope; patient in [thlipsis] tribulation;
continuing instant in prayer.
2Th 1:4 So that we ourselves glory in you in the churches of God
for your patience and faith in all your persecutions and [thlipsis]
tribulations that ye endure.

       Generally speaking, the unsaved don’t go through thlipsis; they are
destined for orgy or thumos, God’s wrath.1 Orgy and thumos are the two
Greek words for wrath. So we saints will suffer tribulation during the
Christian Era, but we are not destined unto a final wrath, but unto eternal
______________________

1 Rom 9:22, Eph 5:6, 1Th 1:10, Rev 16:19.
______________________
 
Last Trumpet 178

salvation.1 The wicked are destined unto final wrath, the judgment of the
Great White Throne, and the second death. So when is “the great
tribulation”? John tells us:

Rev 1:9 I John, who also am your brother, and companion in
tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ, was in
the isle that is called Patmos, for the word of God, and for the
testimony of Jesus Christ.

       The tribulation of the saints began during John’s time. May God
forgive us for forgetting the terrible suffering the saints of the past have
endured. Between two and twenty million Christians were killed by the
Roman Empire in tortures unimaginable. The Catholic church killed up
to twelve million more during the middle ages. In our own generation
alone, the Nazis murdered six million Jews, and several million
Christians. The Moslems have killed millions as well. We don’t read The
Pilgrim Church, Fox’s Book of Martyrs, or Martyrs Mirror anymore, so
we have lost our sense of history. We have lost all memory of sufferings
of our forefathers:

Mat 25:29 For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall
have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away
even that which he hath.

       The Lord has permitted the enemy to blind our eyes and we have
lost sight of God’s big spiritual picture. The Great Tribulation of the
Church began with the stoning of Stephen, and continued until the time
of the Gentiles ended. From the Scriptures we have been looking at, it
is obvious that all defined biblical times have been fulfilled in new
Israel. As a result, the Great Tribulation is probably an epochal time that
has been running throughout the Christian Era. In fact, since the true
saints have suffered terribly ever since the cross, the “Great Tribulation”
that Jesus spoke of may be His name for the Christian Era.

Arutz Sheva Israel National Radio, 11/12/2001, 1.09pm
_________________________

1 The “but unto salvation” of 1Th 5:9 is much beloved by pre-trib rapturists as proof of
their position. However, that phrase is not about a tribulation period at all, but about the
eternal salvation of the saints. The verse must be read carefully if we are to grasp what it
really teaches.
_________________________
 
Last Trumpet 179

Aaron Ussishkin, 50, the security officer of Moshav Kfar Hess, was
shot dead by an Arab terrorist last night. He was alerted to the
presence of a suspicious man at the entrance to the community,
within pre-1967 Israel, about six kilometers northwest of PAcontrolled
Kalkilye and six kilometers northeast of Raanana. He
ran to the site, and managed only to ask the Arab what he was
doing there before the man shot him. Two other Israelis were wounded in the attack, and the murderer escaped.

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