The Maturing Body of Christ: From Ephesians 4:13 to the Blessed Hope

The church is not a static institution. She is a living, growing organism—the body of Christ—indwelt by the Holy Spirit, equipped with gifts, and moving inexorably toward a corporate maturity that will be fully revealed only when the Lord Himself descends to catch her up.

Paul captures this destiny in Ephesians 4:13:

 “…until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a “mature man”, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.”

The Greek is singular: ἄνδρα τέλειον—a “mature man”, not countless separate perfect individuals. This is the church collectively growing into the fullness of Christ her Head (vv. 15–16). Each part doing its share causes the growth of the body for the building up of itself in love. This maturity is real and progressive now, yet its ultimate consummation—perfect unity, undimmed knowledge, complete conformity to Christ’s stature—remains eschatological.

The Church’s 2,000-Year Growth: Seasons of a Living Tree

From her small beginnings in Jerusalem, the body has grown through seasons—like a living tree.

Springs of vibrant awakening and fruitfulness. Summers of expansion. Harsh winters of dormancy and darkness (the so-called Dark Ages). Fierce storms that shook the branches and threatened to uproot. Fungal diseases and pests that scarred the leaves, blighted the fruit, and tested the very vitality of the trunk. Droughts of spiritual barrenness and floods of persecution.

Yet through every trial, fresh buddings burst forth—the Reformation’s doctrinal renewal, the Renaissance’s rediscovery of truth, the explosive fire of global missions in the 19th and 20th centuries. Today, the church is more globally diverse than ever, with vibrant communities in Africa, Asia, and Latin America carrying the faith forward while parts of the West face secular winters.

The tree continues to grow—taller, wider, deeper-rooted—because the sap of the Holy Spirit has never ceased to flow. All those centuries of pain, pruning, and patience were not wasted. They were the hidden work of the Gardener preparing His tree for greater glory.

The Restrainer and the Impossibility of Light Coexisting with Unrestrained Darkness

The church is the “pillar and buttress of the truth” (1 Tim 3:15), the temple of the living God (Eph 2:21–22), the corporate expression of “the fullness of Him who fills all in all” (Eph 1:23). Where she stands, darkness is restrained.

2 Thessalonians 2:6–8 is clear: something (or someone) actively holds back the full revelation of the man of lawlessness “until he is taken out of the way.” That restrainer is the Holy Spirit working through His temple—the church. The Spirit Himself is omnipresent and will continue convicting the world during the Tribulation, but the unique restraining ministry of this age operates through the body. When the church is removed, the restraint in its present form is lifted, and evil is unleashed for its brief season.

Light and deep darkness cannot permanently share the same canopy (Gen 1:4). Their present overlap is temporary, gracious delay. Once the light is gathered to its Source, the night falls fully—yet only for a moment.

The Pre-Tribulation Hope: Deliverance from the Wrath to Come

Scripture repeatedly promises that the church is “not appointed to wrath” (1 Thess 5:9; 1:10; Rom 5:9). Revelation 3:10 pledges to keep the faithful church “out of” the hour of trial itself. No biblical pattern exists for God pouring out destructive wrath on the righteous together with the wicked:

– Noah lifted above the flood.

– Lot removed before fire fell.

– Israel shielded by the blood while plagues struck Egypt.

The Tribulation is the specific “wrath of the Lamb” (Rev 6:16–17) on a world that rejected the grace offered through the church. To leave the bride in that hour would be unthinkable.

Paul’s words in 1 Corinthians 15:51–52 seal the timing:

“We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed—in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye.”

This assumes a significant number of living believers instantly transformed. Yet Jesus warns that the great tribulation will be so severe that, unless shortened, “no flesh would survive” (Matt 24:22). If the rapture were at the end, the “we who are alive and remain” would be a tiny, battered remnant—if any. The pre-tribulation gathering preserves both the plain promise and the sudden, glorious transformation of a thriving church.

Thus the body attains its “mature manhood” at the outset of the rapture—glorified, unified, presented faultless—completing what growth began in this age.

Israel’s Redemption: Decisively Accomplished, Climactically Displayed

Salvation is from the Jews (John 4:22). The Messiah came through Israel. The apostles were Jews. The first myriads of believers were Jews (Acts 2:41; 4:4; 6:7; 21:20—thousands of priests obedient to the faith), including the scattered Jewish believers addressed as “the twelve tribes in the Dispersion” in the Epistle of James (James 1:1). Without their initial reception of the gospel, Gentiles could not have been grafted in.

Romans 11 is unequivocal: God has not cast away His people (v. 1–2). There has always been a remnant according to grace (v. 5), and that remnant has continued unbroken—messianic believers from Pentecost to today. Through their transgression salvation came to the Gentiles (v. 11); how much more will “their full inclusion” bring (v. 12).

The Deliverer came out of Zion at the cross, turning ungodliness away from Jacob through His atoning blood. “And in this way all Israel will be saved” (Rom 11:26)—the corporate reality already decisively accomplished in the pierced Messiah and initiated through the believing Jewish remnant. The 144,000 sealed from every tribe (Rev 7:4–8) symbolize the covenant wholeness of that holy root. The two witnesses and the angelic gospel (Rev 11; 14:6–7) provide the final prophetic testimony, capping the process and displaying God’s irrevocable faithfulness to the patriarchs (Rom 11:28–29) before the kingdom is fully established.

The church returns “with” Him (Col 3:4; Jude 14; Rev 19:14), not as Him. The elect gathered in Matthew 24:31 are the Tribulation saints who endured to the end, not the church already glorified.

Conclusion: Lift Up Your Heads

The body of Christ—Jew and Gentile as one new man—is growing, primed, and restrained by the Spirit until the Head calls her home. Her removal triggers the final events: restraint lifted, wrath poured, the full display of Israel’s accomplished redemption, the kingdom established.

The subtle sign of this transition is in the air already—the post-COVID season feels uniquely Spirit-led: a holy withdrawal, a pruning, a time of self-examination, repentance, and listening prayer. Programs quieted, illusions of institutional strength were exposed, and the church was driven to depend on Christ alone. She is being made leaner, humbler, more desperate for God Himself—preparing for what lies ahead, whether renewed outpouring or sudden translation.

This is the blessed hope (Titus 2:13). This is the comfort Paul commands us to speak (1 Thess 4:18). The night is far spent; the Day is at hand.

Straighten up and lift up your heads—your redemption draws near (Luke 21:28)—decisively purchased at Calvary, experienced by the first-century remnant who looked on the pierced One, and soon consummated for the whole body at His return.

The God who visited and redeemed His people at the first coming (Luke 1:68) will complete what He began in glorious display.

Maranatha. Come, Lord Jesus.

 

If Anyone Does Not Love the Lord Jesus Christ: The Forgotten Anathema of 1 Corinthians 16:22

In the final lines of his first letter to the Corinthians, Paul delivers one of the most solemn and unsettling statements in all of Scripture:

“If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be Anathema. Maranatha.”

(1 Corinthians 16:22, KJV)

After teaching on the resurrection of the dead, the collection for the Jerusalem saints, and sending greetings from fellow workers, Paul suddenly pronounces a curse. The Greek word anathema is not a mild disapproval or a gentle warning. It is the strongest term Paul ever uses for spiritual condemnation—something or someone devoted to destruction, set apart under the judgment of God. The Aramaic cry that immediately follows, Maranatha—“Our Lord, come!”—only heightens the intensity. The return of Christ is the blessed hope of those who love Him and the day of terror for those who do not.

This verse is almost never preached today. It is too severe, too uncompromising, too far removed from the tone of modern, seeker-friendly, positive Christianity. Yet it stands in the canon, untouched and unflinching. What does Paul mean when he says someone “does not love the Lord Jesus Christ”? And what does this warning mean for the church in our time?

Jesus Himself Defined What Love for Him Looks Like

Jesus answered the question long before Paul wrote it. In the upper room, on the night He was betrayed, He spoke plainly to His disciples:

“If anyone loves me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him. Whoever does not love me does not keep my words. And the word that you hear is not mine but the Father’s who sent me.”

(John 14:23–24, ESV)

One of the most sobering realities of Paul’s warning is that he is not addressing unbelievers or atheists. He is writing to the church — to people who already profess faith in Christ, who have been baptized, who partake of the Lord’s Supper, and who call Jesus “Lord.” Yet within that very church, he pronounces this anathema.

Most Christians today instinctively assume, “This can’t be about me — it must be about those who don’t believe.” But Paul does not say, “If anyone does not believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be anathema.” He says, “If anyone does not love the Lord Jesus Christ…”

And love, as Jesus defined it, is not mere intellectual assent or a one-time confession. It is obedience, submission, and loyalty to His lordship. The verse is aimed squarely at those who claim to know Him but deny Him by their lives — through persistent sin, lukewarmness, self-seeking, or refusal to submit to His word. The Lord detests lukewarm believers (Revelation 3:15–16), and Paul’s warning makes it clear: even those inside the church are not exempt.

The writer of Hebrews echoes this same sobering reality when he warns of those who have been enlightened, tasted the heavenly gift, shared in the Holy Spirit, and tasted the goodness of the word of God — yet fall away. For such people, he says, it is impossible to renew them again to repentance, since they are crucifying once again the Son of God and holding Him up to contempt (Hebrews 6:4–6). This is not a description of unbelievers who never truly came to Christ — it is a warning to those who have experienced the reality of the gospel but do not persevere in love and obedience. The trajectory is the same as Paul’s: those who do not continue to love the Lord Jesus Christ by keeping His word stand under the most serious judgment.

No wonder Paul himself instructs the Corinthians:

“Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves. Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?” (2 Corinthians 13:5, KJV).

The very apostle who pronounces the anathema commands believers to test the authenticity of their faith and love for Christ — lest they prove to be reprobate.

Paul gives a similar warning to Gentile believers in Romans 11:

“If you have been cut off from what is by nature a wild olive tree and grafted, contrary to nature, into a cultivated olive tree, how much more will these, the natural branches, be grafted back into their own olive tree… Do not be arrogant… if God did not spare the natural branches, neither will he spare you. They were broken off because of unbelief, but you stand fast through faith. So do not become proud, but fear. For if God did not spare the natural branches, neither will he spare you if you do not continue in his kindness” (Romans 11:20–22).

The message is unmistakable: even those grafted in by faith can be cut off if they do not persevere in faith and obedience.

In the very same letter to the Corinthians, Paul uses Israel in the wilderness as a stark example:

“Now these things took place as examples for us, that we might not desire evil as they did… Now these things happened to them as an example, but they were written down for our instruction, on whom the end of the ages has come. Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall” (1 Corinthians 10:6, 11–12).

The Israelites had been delivered from Egypt, baptized into Moses, ate the manna, drank from the rock (Christ), yet most were destroyed in the wilderness for idolatry, immorality, testing God, and grumbling. Paul’s point is clear: those who have experienced God’s grace can still be destroyed if they do not continue in love and obedience to the Lord.

And earlier in the same discourse:

“If you love me, you will keep my commandments.”

(John 14:15)

For Jesus, love for Him is not primarily an emotional experience or a warm feeling. It is obedience, submission, and loyalty to His lordship. Where there is no keeping of His word, there is no genuine love. Paul’s anathema in 1 Corinthians 16:22 is not an addition to Jesus’ teaching — it is the apostolic application of it, delivered with the full weight of his authority.

The Marks of a Life That Does Not Love the Lord

Scripture paints a clear and sobering portrait of what a life that “does not love the Lord Jesus Christ” looks like. These are not occasional failures that believers repent of and turn from. They are persistent patterns that reveal a heart that has not truly submitted to Christ’s lordship.

Persistent, unrepentant sin

“No one who abides in him keeps on sinning,” John writes (1 John 3:6). A life marked by willful, ongoing rebellion against God’s commands shows that the person is not abiding in Christ. When sin becomes a lifestyle rather than a struggle, it is evidence of a heart that does not love the Lord.

This includes maintaining a loving heart toward the brethren — for hatred, backbiting, discord, quarrels, and fights among God’s people are equally clear signs of not remaining in the Lord. “Whoever hates his brother is in the darkness and does not know where he is going,” John declares (1 John 2:11). Love is the crux of the Christian life: “Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins” (1 Peter 4:8). Where there is persistent division and lack of love for the brethren, there is no genuine love for Christ.

Taking grace for granted / absence of the fear of the Lord

“Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means!” Paul exclaims (Romans 6:1). Those who presume upon God’s grace, who treat it as a license to sin without reverence or awe before a holy God, show contempt for His holiness. “Our God is a consuming fire,” Hebrews reminds us (Hebrews 12:29), and those who lack the fear of the Lord despise both His mercy and His justice.

Disregarding or disobeying the word of God

“Whoever says ‘I know him’ but does not keep his commandments is a liar,” John declares (1 John 2:4). To ignore, twist, or disobey Scripture is to reject Christ’s authority as Lord. Those who approach God’s word without trembling, who engage in eisegesis to bend it to their own desires or agendas, lack the fear that is the beginning of wisdom (Proverbs 1:7; Isaiah 66:2). “The ignorant and unstable twist [the Scriptures] to their own destruction,” Peter warns (2 Peter 3:16).

Hating the brethren / sowing division and discord

“Whoever hates his brother is in the darkness,” John writes, and “Whoever hates his brother is a murderer” (1 John 2:9; 3:15). Hatred among professing believers, gossip, slander, and the sowing of division prove there is no love for God. “If anyone says, ‘I love God,’ and hates his brother, he is a liar” (1 John 4:20).

Self-serving ministry / exploiting the sheep

“They are shepherds who feed only themselves,” Jude laments (Jude 12). Ministers who use the flock for personal gain, reputation, or power—rather than caring for them as Christ the Chief Shepherd—do not love Him. They are hirelings who flee when danger comes (John 10:12–13) and wolves who devour the sheep (Acts 20:29–30).

Friendship with the world / spiritual adultery

“Friendship with the world is enmity with God,” James declares (James 4:4). Those who coalesce with the spirit of this age, who love its values, its entertainment, its philosophies, and its morality, declare themselves enemies of God. “Do not love the world or the things in the world,” John warns (1 John 2:15).

Loving and pursuing mammon

“You cannot serve God and money,” Jesus said plainly (Matthew 6:24; 1 Timothy 6:11). Greed, the pursuit of wealth, status, or power, is idolatry (Colossians 3:5). When someone’s life is driven by the love of money rather than the love of Christ, they have chosen a different master.

Dragging souls after themselves instead of after Christ

“From among your own selves will arise men speaking twisted things, to draw away the disciples after them,” Paul warned the Ephesian elders (Acts 20:30). Personality cults, manipulation, control, and the building of empires around a human name steal the allegiance that belongs to Jesus alone. True shepherds point people to Christ; false ones draw people to themselves. Men of corrupt minds, and destitute of the truth, supposing that gain is godliness – 1 Timothy 6:5; Mark 13:22.

Denying Christ in word or deed

“Whoever denies me before men, I also will deny before my Father who is in heaven,” Jesus said (Matthew 10:33). A life that refuses to confess Christ’s lordship in practice—whether through cowardice, compromise, or open rejection—stands condemned.

All of these are not mere imperfections or “struggles” in believers. They are marks of a life that does not love the Lord Jesus Christ in the biblical, covenantal sense. Paul’s warning is not an overstatement. He repeats the same curse in Galatians 1:8–9 against those who preach a false gospel. In both cases, the root issue is the same: rejection of Christ’s lordship. The result is the same—separation from God’s covenant blessings and exposure to final judgment.

The Weight of the Warning and the Cry of Maranatha

Paul does not pronounce this anathema lightly. The immediate follow-up, Maranatha—“Our Lord, come!”—makes the stakes clear. The return of Christ is the blessed hope of those who love Him and the day of terror for those who do not.

That is why Paul writes elsewhere, “knowing the terror of the Lord, we persuade others” (2 Corinthians 5:11, KJV). This terror of the Lord is not just the dread of giving an account at the judgment seat — it is the fearful reality of final condemnation for those who do not truly love and obey Christ. It is the very foundation of New Testament ministry and Christian living, driving Paul to warn and plead with urgency.

One of the most terrifying realities of this warning comes from the lips of Jesus Himself in the Sermon on the Mount. On the day of judgment, many will say to Him, “Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?” But He will declare to them, “I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness” (Matthew 7:21–23). These are people who professed faith, performed religious acts, and even claimed to serve Christ — yet they are cast into eternal fire. Their entire Christian profession was for nothing because they never truly loved Him; they never truly submitted to His lordship. They were never abiding in Him.

A Call to Examine Ourselves

This is not a message to despair over every sin or moment of doubt. Scripture distinguishes between those who stumble but repent (1 John 1:9; 2:1) and those who persist in rebellion with no fruit of genuine faith (Matthew 7:19–23; 1 John 3:9–10). The difference is repentance, humility, and a life that increasingly bears the marks of true love for Christ.

But it is a solemn call to self-examination:

“Examine yourselves, to see whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves. Or do you not realize this about yourselves, that Jesus Christ is in you?—unless indeed you fail to meet the test!” (2 Corinthians 13:5)

Do we truly love the Lord Jesus Christ?

Do we keep His word?

Do we fear Him?

Do we love His people?

Do we point others to Him alone?

Conclusion

The church today is filled with noise, platforms, programs, and personalities. Yet Paul’s final word in 1 Corinthians cuts through it all like a sword:

If anyone does not love the Lord Jesus Christ—let him be anathema. Maranatha.

Therefore, let us offer to God acceptable worship, with reverence and awe, for our God is a consuming fire. (Hebrews 12:28–29)

And if you call on the Father who judges impartially according to each one’s deeds, conduct yourselves with fear throughout the time of your sojourning. (1 Peter 1:17)

He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. (Revelation 3:22)

Come, Lord Jesus.

And may He find a people who truly love Him—not with lip service, but with lives surrendered, obedient, humble, and wholly devoted to His name alone.

Three Keys the Spirit Revealed: Raising the Body From the Dead

(How to Quicken Your Earthly Tent When Doctors Have Run Out of Answers)

Early one morning, Nov 2025, the Spirit of the Lord woke me with fire in my bones and said,

“Write this for the one who has prayed and fasted and still cannot rise from the bed. Write it for the one whose child is sick. Write it plain so My people can live.”

So I’m obeying. This is not theory. This is not another health blog.

This is Spirit-breathed, battlefield-tested revelation “for the last days when the love of many is waxing cold and bodies are breaking because souls first broke.”

There are exactly "THREE PRONGS" the Lord showed me.

Miss one and you stay sick. Walk in all three and even what doctors called “incurable” begins to reverse.

1. Return to the Original Fuel God Put in the Garden

2. Detect & Destroy Every Hidden Deficit

3. Make Your Soul Prosper in Christ

Do them in this order. Do them together. Watch God be God in your flesh.

LEGAL DECLARATION                                       

bvthomas.com claims no liability.This is my God-given right to relay what was shown me in the Spirit. This is NOT medical advice, diagnosis, or prescription.Check everything with a qualified functional medicine practitioner, especially if you are on medication.        
FIRST: SEE HOW THE ENEMY GOT IN 

The Spirit showed me two armies clashing inside every sick person:

THE ENEMIES – man-made poison disguised as food.

THE SOLDIERS – five early-warning systems God placed as your first line of defence.

When the enemies win, the soldiers collapse, and disease marches straight in.

The five soldiers that break FIRST: 

1. Insulin signalling

2. Gut wall integrity

3. Microbiome balance

4. Mitochondria (your cellular power plants)

5. Cortisol rhythm

The enemies that kill them: 

– Refined carbs & hidden sugars

– Industrial seed oils

– Ultra-processed foods & additives

– High-fructose corn syrup

– Alcohol & chemical-laden meats

– Artificial sweeteners & emulsifiers

One mouthful of the enemies = one bullet into your soldiers.

PRONG 1 – RETURN TO THE ORIGINAL FUEL 

(Drive the enemies out with the food from the Garden)

Genesis 1:29 and Genesis 9:3 — that’s the original diet. Everything else is a deviation that opened the door.

Stop feeding on the curseEat only: 

– Vegetables and fruits straight from the dirt (especially bitter greens, beets, berries, avocados, olives)

– Clean pasture-raised eggs, limited clean meat/fish (Leviticus 11 list)

– Raw honey, cold-pressed olive oil, coconut oil, grass-fed butter/ghee

– Herbs, spices, fermented foods, tiny amounts of sprouted ancient grains if tolerated

Two warnings from the Spirit: 

– Stop spraying perfume directly on your neck and thyroid — you are poisoning your hormones.

– Stop gorging on spinach, beet greens, and rhubarb — the oxalates will form crystals in your kidneys and you’ll wonder why healing is blocked.

30–90 days eating ONLY the original fuel and many “incurable” labels fall off.

PRONG 2 – DETECT AND DESTROY EVERY HIDDEN DEFICIT 

(Precision tracking + targeted supplementation)

Even eating perfectly today, most of us inherited depleted soil and toxic bloodlines.

You must find the leaks.

Do these two tests (the Spirit keeps highlighting them): 

1. Hair Tissue Mineral Analysis (HTMA) – use Trace Elements Inc. or Analytical Research Labs (no blood, just hair)

2. DNA Methylation / Genetic Testing – Gary Brecka’s 10X Health test or equivalent

You will see copper/zinc imbalances, heavy metals, thyroid/adrenal collapse, “and critical SNPs like MTHFR” that stop you using normal B-vitamins.

Then supplement like a sniper, not a shotgun — under guidance. 90 days of the right fuel in the right amounts and people literally feel ten years drop off.

PRONG 3 – MAKE YOUR SOUL PROSPER 

(The prong the church almost completely forgot)

“Beloved, I wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in health, even AS thy soul prospereth.” (3 John 2)

“It shall be health to thy navel, and marrow to thy bones.” (Proverbs 3:8)

I don’t care if you eat organic kale grown by angels and swallow 50 supplements a day —

if you are walking in bitterness, unforgiveness, lust, fear, or pride, you are quenching the Spirit who wants to quicken your mortal flesh (Romans 8:11).

Get alone with God and let the searchlight in: 

– Who have I not forgiven from my heart?

– Am I entertaining sexual sin in image or thought?

– Am I walking in love or offence?

– Which wisdom am I yielding to — wisdom from above or wisdom that is earthly, sensual, demonic? (James 3:15-17)

– Am I fully submitted or still the boss of my own life?

Repent. Forgive. Renounce. Speak the Word. Pray in tongues until the atmosphere shifts.

When the soul lines up, the body has no choice but to follow.

“If this word just set you on fire but you don’t know where to start, I made three simple guides for you. Click below — they’re free.”

[Guide 1] First 7 Days Eating the Original Fuel 

[Guide 2] How to Order & Understand Your Two Tests ← Global version (default) 

[Guide 2 Europe Edition] How to Order Your Tests – EUROPE / UK EDITION ← Europe version    – “← If you live in the UK or Europe, click here for your local, faster, cheaper labs (including Body Fabulous UK)”

[Guide 3] 40-Day Soul Prosperity Prayer Plan

The Narrow Gate: Why Most Churchgoers Will Not Inherit the Kingdom

Look around your church this Sunday.
Look at the worship team, the elders, the smiling faces in the seats, the people posting Scripture memes and “Jesus is King” captions.

Now hear the words of the King Himself:

“Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.” (Matthew 7:13–14)

Jesus did not say “some.” He did not say “a troubling minority.”
He said most.

And He was talking about the very people who thought they were on their way to heaven.

It’s evident that many who profess to know God in Christ do not even in the remotest way resemble the Spirit of Christ. They lack the divine imprint. They possess a different spirit and a different wisdom — earthly, sensual, devilish — and from within them flows muddy water and bitter fruit (James 3:15–17). They sing about the blood of Jesus while stabbing brothers in the back. They preach grace while living in greed, lust, and pride. They are tares dressed up as wheat, goats wearing sheep’s clothing.

And one day Jesus will look them in the eye and say, “I never knew you; depart from Me, you workers of lawlessness” (Matthew 7:23).

“And Such Were Some of You”… Or Were You?

Paul wrote to a church full of people who thought they were safe:

“Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.

And such were some of you.
But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.” (1 Corinthians 6:9–11)

Notice the past tense: were.
True conversion is not a prayer you prayed once. It is a radical, irreversible transformation. You do not just get a new label — you get a new heart, a new spirit, a new Master. The old man dies. The new man lives.

Yet look again at the average church.

Where is the evidence of this washing? Where is the sanctification?          Where is the fear of God?

  • People shack up and call it “love.”
  • Greed is called “blessing.”
  • Gossip and slander are called “prayer requests.”
  • Hatred for a brother is called “discernment ministry.”
  • Pornography is winked at while the preacher yells about politics.

John could not be clearer:

“Whoever says ‘I know Him’ but does not keep His commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him”    (1 John 2:4).

“Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him” (1 John 3:15).

If you hate a brother or sister in Christ — if bitterness and unforgiveness live in your heart — John says you do not have eternal life. Period.

The Terrifying Marks of False Profession

False Professor (Never Truly Born Again)

True Child of God (Imperfect but Real)

No real grief over sin — only damage control when caught

Ongoing brokenness and hatred of sin

Fruit is consistently bitter: division, pride, sensuality, greed

Fruit of the Spirit grows: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness…

Loves the praise of men more than the praise of God

Loves God and loves the brethren, even when it costs

Can quote Scripture while living in rebellion

Trembles at God’s word and obeys, even imperfectly

Eventually falls away or hardens under trial

Perseveres through fire because God keeps His own

Paul told Titus:

“They profess to know God, but they deny Him by their works. They are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good work” (Titus 1:16).

That is not a description of a “carnal Christian.” That is a description of a lost person play-acting faith.

Do Not Be Deceived

The most dangerous lie in the church today is this:
“You can live however you want and still go to heaven because you prayed a prayer in 1997.”

That is a demonic lie straight from the pit.

Grace is not a license to sin. Grace is the power that kills sin.

If your life does not look increasingly like Jesus — if there is no war against the flesh, no growing love for holiness, no supernatural affection for God’s people — then the Bible says you have every reason to fall on your face and cry out for mercy while mercy can still be found.

The Good News for Today

The narrow gate is still open.
The blood of Jesus still cleanses the worst sinner who truly repents.

The same Paul who wrote the terrifying list also wrote:
“And such were some of you. But you were washed…”

Today — right now — if you hear His voice, do not harden your heart.
Run to Christ.

Confess every sin.
Forsake every idol.
Plead for the new birth that only the Spirit can give.

Because one day the door will close.
And most who thought they were inside will find themselves on the outside, forever.

The narrow gate is narrower than you think.
Make sure you have entered it — truly entered it — while there is still time.

“Examine yourselves, to see whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves.” (2 Corinthians 13:5)

The King is coming.
Be ready.
Be real.
Be found in Him.

Maranatha. 🔥

 

The Church HOLDS BACK the DARK: Why the RAPTURE Comes First

Introduction: The Unseen Anchor

Picture a dam—sturdy, unyielding—holding back a torrent that churns to swallow the earth. That’s the church, not a metaphor but a reality etched in God’s word. “What is restraining him now… until he is out of the way” (2 Thessalonians 2:6-7)—Paul’s riddle pulses with truth: the church stands as God’s sentinel, bottling lawlessness. Crack it, and the flood breaks—chaos, wrath, the end. This isn’t guesswork; it’s scripture’s heartbeat, throbbing through time. The church isn’t just a light flickering in the dark—“the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14)—it’s the clamp on a world gone mad. Its rapture isn’t an afterthought; it’s the trigger—unleashing what it restrains, yet sparing its own from the fire, “not destined for wrath” (1 Thessalonians 5:9). Debates swirl—pre-, mid-, post-tribulation?—like storms obscuring the sun. Post-tribulationists meld Christ’s comings into one loud clash; pre-wrath bends timelines to dodge early fury. But truth sits plain: the church bolts first, gathered to the barn (Matthew 13:30), safe before the furnace roars. We’ll unearth this—two restrainers, discipline not wrath, a harvest before ruin—burying doubters under scripture’s weight. The church’s heft holds the cosmos; its exit births collapse. Joel 2:31 tolls—“the great and terrible day of the Lord”—a shadow we won’t tread. This isn’t theory spun from thin air; it’s a clarion call, sharp and urgent. The dark presses; the light blazes now—seize it while it stands.

1. The Unsung Restrainer: The Church’s Hidden Power

Who stems the flood of evil surging through this age? Not governments—those tottering thrones of men, buckling under pride and decay. Not angels alone, tethered to tasks too narrow for this global storm. It’s the church—God’s silent titan, veiled in meekness, mighty in truth. Paul names it “the pillar and foundation of the truth” (1 Timothy 3:15)—not a fragile prop, but the bedrock of God’s order, unshakeable. Look at history: it carved the West’s soul—justice flowing from its courts, mercy from its hands, dignity into laws—all sparks from its fire as “the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14). Even a child could see it: where the church stands, lawlessness stumbles, retreats, dares not rise. Yet, cracks multiply across the landscape—recently, we’ve seen a rampant tide of hatred sweep through universities, with places like Columbia in the United States serving as stark examples, where Jewish students faced harassment and vitriol even death threats while administrations stood silent, only curbed when the Trump administration stepped in. This isn’t isolated; it’s a ubiquitous shadow creeping across institutions, a sign of lawlessness rising where Christendom’s grip weakens. Imagine the rage, the hatred, the chaos if the law upheld by Christendom were not at the helm—a state the modern generation pursues, the very mark of the Antichrist, “the lawless one” (2 Thessalonians 2:8).

Since the recent pandemic, we’ve witnessed the church being slowly eased from her entitled position—not a sign of weakness, but the preparatory work of God to remove her wholly from the world. She’s vacated grand buildings, preserved now in what seems like hiding, yet perfecting herself for her wedding day, ready to “meet the Lord in the air” (1 Thessalonians 4:17) before “gross darkness” falls on the wicked and unbelieving (Isaiah 60:2). In her stead, the spirit of antichrist and his ministers—drag queens, false prophets, groomed beforehand—now lead many local churches, usurping her place. The true church isn’t entirely gone; her total sway, though, has dwindled. The world totters and swaggers—lawlessness in the streets surges, instilling fear where freedom once reigned. Cities once relished for safe passage now bristle with dread, a foretaste of the deluge when her restraint lifts fully. This fading isn’t defeat; it’s divine choreography, aligning with Scripture’s pulse: “until he is out of the way” (2 Thessalonians 2:7), the church’s exit nears.

The world teeters with evil, and Israel now strives to defend itself, sealing every loophole, purging its borders of threats to protect its heart. It’s a thorough cleansing, a natural reflex against encroaching darkness. But as one predicts weather in the natural, so too can we discern the spiritual climate of the world. This is a coil winding tight, poised to unwind with ferocity once the release lock lifts. You can only wind so far, right? That lock is the restraining forces of God—the church, the substance of the Western world’s foundation. When they’re removed, imagine the wrath unleashed. The Western world, built on Christendom’s light and power, underpins both global order and Israel’s shield. Remove that bedrock, and the world and Israel lose their restrainer’s might—chaos coils, ready to spring. This isn’t mere geopolitics; it’s the spiritual prelude to the rapture, where the church’s exit triggers the unwinding, a flood no dam can hold.

Daniel peered beyond the veil—“the prince of Persia withstood me,” an angel groaned, “and Michael… came to help” (Daniel 10:13); “the prince of Greece will come” (10:20). Kingdoms aren’t mere flesh—spiritual powers grip them, yet “the Most High rules the kingdom of men” (Daniel 4:17). I’ve felt it: in a Soviet shadow—dry, hard, godless—a murderous spirit loomed, its grip icing my bones. My voice failed, but my spirit cried Jesus—a sword unsheathed, steel sang, slicing the dark; a voice roared, “Michael, the archangel.” The church holds, but God’s hosts war unseen. Scripture warns: “the spirit of antichrist” is already at work (1 John 4:3), a breath from his revelation as a false Messiah, restrained only by Christendom. But the water rises above the dam’s brim—the church, God’s sentinel—and it must someday give way, raptured in force (1 Thessalonians 4:17). Then, as Daniel foretells, “the prince who now sits must stand up” (Daniel 12:1)—removed from protecting Jerusalem—leaving Jews and professing Christians behind, the husk split, the cream gathered (Matthew 13:30), the rest trampled and burned (Matthew 13:42).

Paul decodes the mystery: “What is restraining him now”—the lawless one—“until he is out of the way” (2 Thessalonians 2:6-8). That “he” isn’t Michael alone, who guards Israel and God’s people (Daniel 12:1), nor frail rulers—it’s the church, the Body of Christ, united by His Spirit (Ephesians 4:16), God’s dam against global chaos, working in tandem with Michael’s watch until raptured—“caught up in the air” (1 Thessalonians 4:17). Then the Antichrist emerges, “weeds” of Matthew 13:41 run rampant as Michael shifts to Israel’s refining crucible (Daniel 12:1). Post-tribulationists falter, pinning it all on Michael—he’s not the world’s sole brake; the church holds that line. Pre-wrath dims early wrath, yet the lawless one’s rise post-rapture affirms the church’s exit as the trigger. The church, Christ’s salt (Matthew 5:13), preserves until “the twinkling of an eye” (1 Corinthians 15:52); salt gone, “strong delusion” grips (2 Thessalonians 2:11-12). A swelling tide of hostility on campuses—not just Columbia, but countless enablers—the church’s retreat since the pandemic, and Israel’s coiled defense all signal this: where Christendom weakens, hatred, deception, and chaos surge, tempered only by a fading godly remnant and Michael’s narrowed guard. Scripture proclaims it loud: the church isn’t passive—it’s God’s bulwark, one with its Head, restraining alongside Michael ‘til its exit ushers in reckoning. “Who is she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners?” (Song of Solomon 6:10)—radiant, fierce, a partner in holding back a truth too long silenced.

2. The Dual Shift: Church Out, Michael Up

The church doesn’t stand solo in this cosmic fray. Enter Michael—“the great prince who has charge of your people” (Daniel 12:1)—keeper of all God’s own, sword drawn. Two forces lock the end at bay: the church, “the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14), clamps global lawlessness—“the mystery of iniquity” (2 Thessalonians 2:7)—while Michael guards God’s people, the church, and Israel alike (both political and spiritual Israel). Scripture reaps it sharp: Rapture strikes—“caught up… in the clouds” (1 Thessalonians 4:17)—light lifts, “gross darkness” falls (Isaiah 60:2), the lawless one steps forth (2 Thessalonians 2:8).

Then Michael “stands up” (Daniel 12:1)—stepping back, loosing foes on Israel as “a time of trouble” crashes, “such as never has been” (Daniel 12:1). Jerusalem burns—“a furnace” where “I will melt you” (Ezekiel 22:18-20)—Israel endures “the time of Jacob’s trouble” (Jeremiah 30:7), some spared in Petra, “a place prepared by God” (Revelation 12:6), for 1,260 days, ‘til they “look upon me whom they have pierced” (Zechariah 12:10), refined in tears; a brand plucked out of the fire—Zechariah 3:2. Church to the barn (Matthew 13:30), Israel through the fire—God’s plan forks clear.

Post-tribulationists shout, “Michael restrains alone!”—but Daniel 12:1 ties him to God’s people, not just Israel; the church holds the world’s line (Genesis 1:4). Pre-wrath stalls tribulation’s flood, yet “in the twinkling of an eye” (1 Corinthians 15:52) and the lawless one’s rise scream pre-trib. Light’s exit—births/unleashes the Antichrist—Michael’s shift narrows to Israel’s crucible, not all saints. Single-restrainer tales crack under this duet: church, Spirit-led, departs; Michael steps back for Israel’s refining. Deliverance for us—“not destined for wrath” (1 Thessalonians 5:9)—refining/furnace for Israel (Zechariah 12:10; Ezekiel 22:20), wrath for “weeds” (Matthew 13:42). Look closer: light and darkness don’t mix—church gone, darkness reigns in person. Truth breaks free: God’s endgame splits—church safe in glory, Israel pierced in pain—pretribulation’s double beat, loud and sure.

3. Discipline Now, Wrath Later: Jesus Took It

Does the church taste wrath now? No—it’s fire of a different kind. “When we are judged by the Lord, we are disciplined so we may not be condemned with the world” (1 Corinthians 11:32)—Paul’s words cut deep. This isn’t punishment to destroy, but a Father’s rod to refine. Look: “Some are weak and sick, and some sleep” for Supper sins (1 Corinthians 11:30)—discipline, not doom. Hebrews unpacks it: “The Lord disciplines the one he loves” (Hebrews 12:6), trials forging holiness (12:5-11)—sanctification, not tribulation’s furnace. Ministers stumble—“wood, hay, straw” flare in scandal (1 Corinthians 3:12)—think fallen legacies—yet “he himself will be saved, through fire” (3:15). No tears beyond—“He will wipe every tear” (Revelation 21:4)—the test burns here. Post-tribulationists dread a Bema Seat of grief, but it’s joy—“Well done, good and faithful servant” (Matthew 25:21)—not despair.

Wrath? Jesus drank it dry—“the punishment that brought us peace was upon him” (Isaiah 53:5). “Since we have been justified… we shall be saved from wrath through him” (Romans 5:9)—Paul’s promise stands. “God has not destined us for wrath, but to obtain salvation” (1 Thessalonians 5:9)—we dodge the furnace whole. Unto them that are contentious and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and wrath, Tribulation and anguish, upon every soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and also of the Gentile; But glory, honor, and peace, to every man that worketh good, to the Jew first, and also to the Gentile – Romans 2:8-10. The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, in flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ (2 Timothy 1:8). This is the wrath of the Lamb – Revelation 6:16. Post-tribulationists blur this—“the wrath of the Lamb” (Revelation 6:16–17) crashes mid-seals, they say, fusing discipline with doom. Scripture slices them apart—“their wrath has come” (Revelation 6:17) hits later; we’re gone. Pre-wrath softens early seals, but wrath’s there—church spared, weeds burn (Matthew 13:42). Discipline now—pruning us for glory—wrath later, for a world unbowed. Jesus paid; we rise—a hope alive, “born again to a living hope” (1 Peter 1:3)—pretribulation’s song.

4. The Barn Before the Burning: God’s Pattern

Is the rapture random? No—it’s God’s script, etched in time. Jesus lays it bare: “First collect the weeds and bind them… then gather the wheat into my barn” (Matthew 13:30)—church to safety, weeds to fire (13:42). It is the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together unto him—2 Thessalonians 2:1. Paul echoes: “caught up… to meet the Lord in the air” (1 Thessalonians 4:17), “in the twinkling of an eye” (1 Corinthians 15:52)—pre-trib shines clear. Isaiah whispers it—“the righteous is taken away from evil” (Isaiah 57:1); for God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus—1 Thessalonians 5:9; the Psalmist sings, “The Lord preserves thee from all evil” (Psalm 121:7). Patterns pile: Lot fled Sodom—“I can do nothing till you arrive” (Genesis 19:22)—God’s hand stayed ‘til safety locked. The residue of Israel hides in Petra—“a place prepared by God” (Revelation 12:6)—tribulation’s remnant spared. Safety first, wrath follows—God’s rhythm beats steady.

Christ’s break splits tight. First, for us—“like a thief” (1 Thessalonians 5:2), “caught up in the air” (1 Thessalonians 4:17), “in a moment” (1 Corinthians 15:51-52). That’s “the blessed hope” (Titus 2:13), “a living hope” (1 Peter 1:3)—swift, ours. Then, WITH us—“with ten thousands of his saints, to execute judgment” (Jude 1:14), “glorious appearing” (Titus 2:13), “a second time… to save” (Hebrews 9:28); behold, he cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him—Revelation 1:7. The Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory (Matthew 25:31); and then shall they see the Son of man coming in a cloud with power and great glory (Luke 21:27).

Coming FOR us: And at midnight there was a cry made: Behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him (Matthew 25:6). Μέσης δὲ νυκτὸς’ (mesēs de nyktos), ‘and at midnight,’ a ‘κραυγὴ γέγονεν’ (kraugē gegonen), ‘cry was made,’ splitting the dark—‘Ἰδού, ὁ νυμφίος ἔρχεται’ (idou, ho nymphios erchetai), ‘behold, the bridegroom comes’—and ‘ἐξέρχεσθε’ (exerchesthe) isn’t a casual stroll but a sharp command, a herald’s shout as he nears, allowing no lingering, driving us with *ἐκ* (ek, ‘out of’) from sleep, apathy, or the world ‘εἰς ἀπάντησιν αὐτοῦ’ (eis apantēsin autou, ‘to meet him’), echoing the rapture’s call in 1 Thessalonians 4:17 to meet the Lord in the air. Rapture first, wrath second—two cuts, one key.

Hark—King Ahasuerus shadows Christ, Esther the bride, purified twelve months (Esther 2:12) as the church, a chaste virgin (2 Corinthians 11:2), cleansed by His blood (1 John 1:7), Word (Ephesians 5:26), and Spirit (1 Peter 1:2), guided by Mordecai, the Holy Ghost’s echo, pacing daily; seven maidens—seven churches (Revelation 1:4)—shine as He, in 3½ years (Luke 3:23), perfects her with apostles and prophets (Ephesians 4:11), presenting a glorious bride, spotless, unwrinkled (Ephesians 5:27)—no tortured wreck, but radiant for the Lamb’s wedding (Revelation 19:7).

Post-tribulationists pin rapture after the storm—“after tribulation… he will gather his elect” (Matthew 24:30-31). Who’s that? Tribulation saints—not the church, barn-bound, “not overtaken” (1 Thessalonians 5:4). But “like a thief” (1 Thessalonians 5:2) fits no loud blaze—“as lightning from east to west” (Matthew 24:27)—and “you will not be overtaken” (1 Thessalonians 5:4) vows we’re gone, not waiting. They stumble, fusing trumpets—claiming Paul’s “last trumpet” (1 Corinthians 15:52) is John’s seventh (Revelation 11:15). No—Paul’s lifts us pre-trib, swift and silent; John’s seventh tolls mid-trib judgment, loud with doom. Pre-wrath bends—wrath’s early; “their wrath has come, who can stand?” (Revelation 6:17) strikes at the seals, not delayed—church gone, “not destined for wrath” (1 Thessalonians 5:9). Two breaks, one hope—church cut, judgment falls. Truth? We’re keyed for joy—“you shall laugh” (Luke 6:21)—pretribulation’s turn. Lot’s flight, Israel’s refuge, wheat’s harvest—God extracts before He executes. “I will come again and take you to myself” (John 14:3)—pretribulation’s core, unshaken, unveiled.

5. The Lawless Abyss: Christendom’s Collapse

Rapture cuts “the salt of the earth” (Matthew 5:13), and collapse crashes—“no repentance of murders, sorceries, immorality” (Revelation 9:21). “Strong delusion… pleasure in unrighteousness” (2 Thessalonians 2:11-12)—Paul saw a world unbound, drowning in rot. Christendom—“the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14)—snaps: laws rust, ethics bleed, conscience dies. Today’s decay—abortion’s blood, corruption’s reek, relativism’s haze—is a preview, amped post-rapture to a flood. I’ve tasted it: a prince of darkness (Daniel 10:13), murder in its claws, froze me in a Soviet night—breath stolen, death near—‘til Michael’s blade slashed through, his voice thundering his name under God’s reign (Daniel 4:17). That grip’s real; it stalks now. Princes of Persia and Greece (Daniel 10:20) coil in shadows, checked by the church’s light and Michael’s guard—but rapture lifts the leash. “The great and terrible day” (Joel 2:31) storms—war (Revelation 6:4), famine (6:6), Antichrist’s grip (Revelation 13:7). Weeds reign (Matthew 13:41), chaos unbound feasts.

Post-tribulationists miss the church’s clamp—its break’s a deluge, not a drip. Pre-wrath mutes tribulation’s roar, but seals howl wrath (Revelation 6). Salt loosed, collapse reigns—“the pillar” (1 Timothy 3:15) crumbles, chains off. Look now: moral rot signals the break—post-rapture, it’s a torrent. Truth unbarred? Our grip holds the flood—freed, and ruin rages.

Joel tolls—“the great and terrible day” (Joel 2:31)—war thunders (Revelation 6:4), famine stalks (6:6), the Antichrist reigns (Revelation 13:7). “The weeds” rule (Matthew 13:41)—nations craving dark drink deep. Post-tribulationists miss the scale—the church’s exit isn’t subtle; it’s seismic, “the pillar” (1 Timothy 3:15) toppled, roof caved. Pre-wrath hushes tribulation’s roar, but seals scream wrath (Revelation 6)—church gone, abyss birthed. Look now: moral rot hints the end—abortion’s toll, truth’s death—mere shadows of the flood to come. “The day of the Lord will come” (2 Peter 3:10)—rapture sparks it. Truth unbarred? Our light leashes the world—lose it, and darkness devours, unrestrained, ravenous.

6. Two Comings, One Hope: For Saints, With Saints

Does Christ return once, or twice? Scripture splits it sharp. First, for us—“the day of the Lord will come like a thief” (1 Thessalonians 5:2), “caught up in the air” (1 Thessalonians 4:17), “in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye” (1 Corinthians 15:51-52). That’s no loud clash—it’s sudden, ours, “the blessed hope” (Titus 2:13), “a living hope” (1 Peter 1:3). Then, with us—“with ten thousands of his saints, to execute judgment” (Jude 1:14), “the glorious appearing” (Titus 2:13), “a second time… to save those who are eagerly waiting” (Hebrews 9:28). Rapture first—church snatched; wrath second—judgment falls.

Post-tribulationists jam it—“after tribulation… he comes” (Matthew 24:30-31). But “thief” fits no public blaze—“as lightning from east to west” (Matthew 24:27)—and “you will not be overtaken” (1 Thessalonians 5:4) vows escape. Their trumpet meld—1 Corinthians 15:52 with Revelation 11:15—cracks: Paul’s calls us home; John’s seventh tolls wrath. Pre-wrath hedges—wrath’s early, “who can stand?” (Revelation 6:17)—church long gone. Two comings: “I will come again and take you” (John 14:3)—then, “every eye will see him” (Revelation 1:7). One hope—church aloft, judgment lands. “Blessed are those who mourn… you shall laugh” (Luke 6:21)—pretribulation’s pulse beats joy, not dread, for saints awaiting glory.

Conclusion: The Light Before the Dark

The church holds the dark—God’s restrainer (2 Thessalonians 2:6), barn-bound (Matthew 13:30), wrath-free—“not destined for wrath” (1 Thessalonians 5:9). Michael shifts—“stands up” (Daniel 12:1)—tribulation thunders, weeds blaze (Matthew 13:42). Discipline now—“he disciplines the one he loves” (Hebrews 12:6)—hope near—“the blessed hope” (Titus 2:13)—pretribulation roars true. Opposition fuses comings, falters on trumpets; truth stands firm—church restrains, exits, rests in glory. “The Lord preserves thee from all evil” (Psalm 121:7)—Joel’s “terrible day” (Joel 2:31) skips us, reserved for the lost. See it unfold: pillar now—“foundation of the truth” (1 Timothy 3:15)—barn soon, “caught up” (1 Thessalonians 4:17). The dark looms—lawlessness unbound, wrath unleashed, collapse complete—yet light blazes first. “You are the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14)—shine it, for the rapture draws close, the dam’s edge trembles.