This is a "What If" scenario intended to generate discussion and alternative analysis.
First let's go through a few established known truths:
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The apostle John wrote Revelations while exiled on Patmos
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John was a beloved apostle and was an eyewitness to the teachings and miracles of Jesus
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John was a faithful apostle and reliable
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Revelations is particularly difficult to understand given the imagery and symbolism
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Revelations basic message is that GOD is in control and his Victory is assured. All who believe and trust in Jesus Christ will be saved
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Revelations closes human history in the same way Genesis opened it--- in Paradise
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Genesis describes the introduction of evil to humans, Revelations describes the annihilation of evil for forever
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We've been taught that Revelations describes the end of humanity
So what if Revelations is describing the end of the World as we know it... Not the end of Earth literally?
What if Revelations is a message to the cabal directly... telling them how their rule ends?
What if eradicating the luciferians is literally the eradication of evil forever?
What if when Q uses the word biblical -- it's a reference to the book of Revelations and the last epic battle between Good and evil?
What if the "panic" that Q describes is literally their hysteria and panic knowing that their world is coming to an end?
Call it intuition or a gut feeling.....but my entire life I've been taught that Revelations describes an end to humanity. One week ago it occurred to me that this could be just another misunderstood concept. When I dig in and apply the Q context to Revelations......it makes sense to me that we're witnessing it happen and it's not our destruction that John described. He described THEIR destruction.
Then again... I could be wrong.
Rapture of the church is false.
Was Noah and his family swept off the Earth? No. Only the wicked.
And God's word says it will be the same way in the end.
God wins.
Post-millennialism not Preterism dude.
Enoch was raptured before the flood, symbolizing the Church. Noah represents Israel, going through the flood, but being preserved while the others who were left behind died from God's judgment.
I couldn't disagree more.
The ark represented salvation and the only door to the ark represented Jesus Christ. The flood was the judgment and the sweeping away of all that had it reached salvation through Christ alone.
Just like the wheat and the chaff.... When God's fiery judgment comes the wheat goes through it but is unharmed.
God wins.
The Protestants founded this nation held to my position, not yours. You're 200-year-old interpretation of eschatology is a tradition that you're raising above the word of God. I believe Jesus had something to say about that.