A FORCEFUL STATEMENT OF THE POSTTRIBULATION POSITION
George Eldon Ladd (1911-1982) was a Baptist minister and professor of New Testament exegesis and theology at Fuller Theological Seminary; he wrote many other books such as 'The Last Things: An Eschatology for Laymen,' 'The Presence of the Future,' 'I Believe in the Resurrection of Jesus, etc.
He wrote in the Introduction to this 1956 book, "The present book has been written because a number of Christian leaders have expressed the need for a fresh statement ... which would consider both points of view [about the Rapture]. There are many Christians... who ... wish to hear what can be said for the other side for they are not satisfied with the usual pretribulationism.
"The central thesis of this book is that the Blessed Hope is the second coming of Jesus Christ and not a pretribulation rapture... Many who hold a pretribulation rapture feel that the coming of Christ cannot be a Blessed Hope if the Church must go through the Great Tribulation... The question is not, what do we want, but, what does the Word of God teach? No one WANTS to take the Church through the Tribulation." (Pg. 11) He adds, "the Blessed Hope is the coming of the Lord, whether that glorious event occurs before or after the Tribulation." (Pg. 12)
He points out, "For the most part, the Word of God is not explicit about the order of events. Matthew 24 says nothing about the resurrection; the book of Revelation says nothing about the Rapture of the Church; Paul's epistles say nothing about the resurrection of the unrighteous. Our problems arise when we begin to ask questions which were not in the minds of the authors.' (Pg. 13)
He states, "All of these promises [1 Pet 1:7, 1:13, 4:13] direct our hope of the fulness of our salvation not to the Rapture but to the Revelation of Christ. If these two events are one and the same, these verses are full of meaning. If, however, these blessings are not received at the Revelation but at an earlier Rapture, these verses are quite perplexing and difficult. It is difficult to see how a distinction can be made between these two events. The Revelation is continually made the object of our hope; the Rapture must therefore occur at the Revelation of Christ. The Scripture nowhere asserts that there is a Rapture which will take place before the Revelation." (Pg. 67)
He adds, "Such things as the apostasy and the appearance of the Man of Lawlessness could only have an academic interest for the Thessalonians if they were to be caught up from the earth before these events took place." (Pg. 74) He argues, "Surely Paul's warning to believers [1 Thess 5] to be prepared for the day of the Lord means that they will SEE that day but will not be surprised and dismayed by it. The warning is without point unless believers are to see that day; and if so, the day of Christ and the day of the Lord are synonymous." (Pg. 93)
He says, "It is frequently said that since the saints must appear before the judgment seat of Christ to receive rewards for the things done in the body before they come to earth with Him, there must of necessity be an interval of time between the Rapture and the Revelation for this judgment to take place... if a period of time must intervene for this judgment to take place, will seven years be enough? It is estimated that there are two hundred million living Christians. In seven years, there are just over two hundred million SECONDS. How much of a fraction of a second is necessary for the judgment of each believer? If an interval of time is needed, then far more than seven years will be required." (Pg. 102-103)
He acknowledges, "Let us admit at the outset that if we take these verses [Mk 13:33-37, Mt 24:42-44, Lk 12:37-39] out of their setting and read them superficially, they give the impression that the event described is to take place without any warnings or signs to indicate that it is near... We must, however, study every command in the Word of God within its own context. When this is done, it becomes immediately apparent that no teaching of an any-moment rapture ... can be built upon these exhortations. For the fact is, all of these exhortations have reference to the glorious appearing of the Son of man at the end of the Tribulation." (Pg. 112)
Whether one agrees with all of his viewpoints or not, Ladd's book is one of the finest statements of the postribulation position, and should be studied by all those studying biblical prophecy.