DAILY ARTICLE - 5/9/07
The
Holy Spirit & the
Pre-Tribulational Rapture
by
Thomas
Ice
One of the
most compelling, yet often misunderstood, arguments for
pretribulationism relates to the Holy Spirit's role to the church and
the tribulation period. Most holding to the pre-trib position believe
that 2 Thessalonians 2:6-7 refers to the restraining ministry of the
Holy Spirit through the agency of the Church. Thus, when the church is
raptured before the tribulation, that ministry of the Holy Spirit will
be removed as well. If this interpretation is correct, then it is a
strong argument for pretribulationism.
I have been building a theological case for the pre-trib rapture. I
presented the four foundational issues: consistent literal
interpretation, premillennialism, futurism, and a distinction between
God's plan for Israel and the church. Next, I brought forth six reasons
for pretribulationism: contrasts between comings, an interval needed
between comings, imminency, nature of the tribulation, nature of the
church, and finally the work of the Holy Spirit in this article. In
future installments I will present some concluding arguments and show
the practical implications that flow from pretribulationism.
The Holy
Spirit as Restrainer
Second Thessalonians 2:1-12 discusses a man of lawlessness being held
back until a later time. Interpreting the restrainer of evil (2:6) as
the indwelling ministry of the Holy Spirit at work through the body of
Christ during the current age, supports the pretribulational
interpretation. Since "the lawless one" (the beast or
Antichrist) cannot be revealed until the Restrainer (the Holy Spirit) is
taken away (2:7-8), the tribulation cannot occur until the church is
removed. Of all the rapture positions, only the pre-trib position can be
harmonized when we understand that the Restrainer is referring to the
Holy Spirit.
I believe the correct interpretation of this passage understands the
restrainer to refer to the Holy Spirit as He functions during the
present church age through the baptism of the Holy Spirit and indwelling
of believers. This cryptic reference to the Holy Spirit's present work
explains the unusual grammar employed in the passage. In verse six
"the restrainer" is in the neuter gender (to katéchon) while
in verse seven "the restrainer" is masculine (o katechôn).
The significance of this grammar and how it relates to the Holy Spirit
and the rapture is explained by Dr. Robert Thomas below.
Key to the above scenario is whether the Holy Spirit is the restrainer.
After surveying various interpretations of the passage, Dr. Thomas
concludes:
To one familiar with the Lord Jesus' Upper Room Discourse, as Paul
undoubtedly was, fluctuation between neuter and masculine recalls how
the Holy Spirit is spoken of. Either gender is appropriate, depending on
whether the speaker (or writer) thinks of natural agreement (masc.
because of the Spirit's personality) or grammatical (neuter because of
the noun pneuma; see John 14:26; 15:26; 16:13, 14) . . . This
identification of the restrainer with deep roots in church history . . .
is most appealing. The special presence of the Spirit as the indweller
of saints will terminate abruptly at the parousia as it began
abruptly at Pentecost. Once the body of Christ has been caught away to
heaven, the Spirit's ministry will revert back to what he did for
believers during the OT period . . . . His function of restraining evil
through the body of Christ (John 16:7-11; 1 John 4:4) will cease
similarly to the way he terminated his striving in the days of Noah
(Gen. 6:3). At that point the reins will be removed from lawlessness and
the Satanically inspired rebellion will begin. It appears that to katechon
("what is holding back") was well known at Thessalonica as a
title for the Holy Spirit on whom the readers had come to depend in
their personal attempts to combat lawlessness (1 Thessalonians 1:6; 4:8; 5:19;
2 Thessalonians 2:13).
Dr. Gerald Stanton cites six reasons why this passage should be
understood to refer to the Holy Spirit's restraining ministry through
the church.
(1) By mere elimination, the Holy Spirit must be the restrainer. All
other possibilities fall short of meeting the requirements of one who is
to hold in check the forces of evil until the manifestation of
Antichrist. . .
(2) The Wicked One is a personality and his operations include the realm
of the spiritual. The restrainer must likewise be a personality and of a
spiritual order, to resist the wiles of the Devil and to hold Antichrist
in check until the time of his revealing. . .
(3) To achieve all that is to be accomplished, the restrainer must be a
member of the Godhead. He must be stronger than the Man of Sin, and
stronger than Satan. . .
(4) This present age is in a particular sense the "dispensation of
the Spirit," for He works in a way uncommon to other ages as an
abiding Presence within the children of God. . .
(5) The work of the Spirit since His advent has included the restraint
of evil. The Spirit is God's righteous Agent for the age, and there are
many reasons to be grateful for His restraining hand upon this world's
iniquity. None but the Lawful One could restrain this world's iniquity.
. .
(6) It is not difficult to establish that although the Spirit was not
resident on earth during Old Testament days, whatever restraint was
exerted was by the Spirit. . . (Isaiah 59:19). . . The wickedness of
Noah's day and the fact that life went on as usual in blindness to
impending destruction is used of the Spirit in vivid portrayal of
careless and wicked men upon whom Tribulation judgment shall fall. . .
In light of this Scriptural parallel, it is exceedingly significant that
in the days immediately preceding the destruction of the flood, the
restraining work of the Spirit is emphasized. . . .
Present
Work of the Holy Spirit in the Church
The church began on the Day of Pentecost with a visitation of the Holy
Spirit as recorded in Acts 2. The church ends at the rapture with the
translation of living saints and the resurrection of those who have died
in Christ (1 Thessalonians 4:13-18). Until the rapture God is gathering out
from the Gentiles a people for His name (Acts 15:14) and combining them
with the elect remnant of Israel (Romans 11:5) into one new body called
the church (Ephesians 2:11-3:13). This great task is accomplished by a unique
ministry of the Holy Spirit only during the church age called the
baptism of the Holy Spirit. Paul taught in 1 Corinthians
12:13,
"For by one Spirit were we all [Jewish and Gentile Believers]
baptized into one body, whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free,
and we were all made to drink of one Spirit." This work of the Holy
Spirit is only for the church. Therefore, it is not surprising that
since the tribulation cannot start until after the church is completed
and taken to heaven in the rapture that the man of lawlessness is
restrained through the presence of the Holy Spirit on earth indwelling
church age Believers. This current work of the Holy Spirit is unique to
the church. Dr. John Walvoord explains,
We search the prophetic Scriptures in vain for any reference to baptism
of the Spirit except in regard to the church, the body of Christ (1
Corinthians
12:13). While, therefore, the Spirit continues a ministry in the world
in the tribulation, there is no longer a corporate body of believers
knit into one living organism. There is rather a return to national
distinctions and fulfillment of national promises in preparation for the
millennium.
The Work of
the Holy Spirit in the Tribulation
Those who do not hold to pretribulationism often mischaracterize our
view of the Holy Spirit in the tribulation. They often say that we do
not believe that the Holy Spirit will be present during the tribulation.
This is not what we are saying. We do believe that the Holy Spirit will
be present and active during the tribulation. We do believe the Holy
Spirit will not be carrying out His present unique ministry related to
the church since all members of that body will be in heaven. Further, we
are saying that the Holy Spirit will be present in His
transdispensational ministry of bringing the elect of the tribulation to
faith in Christ, even though they will not be part of the body of
Christ-the church. The Holy Spirit will also aid tribulation Believers
as they live holy lives unto the Lord. The Holy Spirit will also
function to seal and protect the 144,000 Jewish witnesses for their
great evangelistic ministry as noted in Revelation 7 and 14 and the two
witnesses of Revelation 11.
Even though pretribulationists believe that many unique aspects of the
current work of the Holy Spirit will cease at the rapture, it is not
correct to say that we believe the Holy Spirit will not be present
during the tribulation. Just as the Holy Spirit will engage in some
ministries during the tribulation, relating to the 144,000 witnesses and
the two witnesses, that are not occurring during the current church age,
so there will cease certain ministries unique to the church which will
enable the man of sin to come onto the stage of history.
SOURCE: Prophecy Update