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Holy Scripture forewarns the church of Jesus Christ that
she will suffer great tribulation in the days
that lie ahead. Tribulation is suffering that a man endures
because he confesses Jesus Christ by word and by
life. It is suffering inflicted on the members of Jesus' Church
by the ungodly, unbelieving men who
persecute them.
In the future, there will arise a great kingdom headed by
a mighty leader which the Scriptures name
Antichrist (Rev.13; II Thess.2:3-12; I John 2:18). This man
and his kingdom will gain the allegiance, for a
time, of all the nations of the world. Because this world
power is motivated by hatred for God and God's
Christ, it will persecute the church of God. This coming persecution
will be the worst that the people of
God have ever experienced in all the history of the world.
This persecution will be the "Great Tribulation."
Jesus Himself foretold all of this in Matthew 24, as He answered
the disciples question, " . . .
when shall all these things be? And what shall be the sign
of thy coming, and of the end of the world"
(vs.3)? In verse 21, He said, "For then shall be great tribulation
such as was not since the beginning of the
world to this time, no, nor ever shall be." As is true generally
of what Jesus says in this chapter, He refers,
first, to the destruction of the city of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 by
the Romans and to the suffering that it brought
on the inhabitants of Jerusalem. But at the same time, Jesus
refers to the event of which the destruction of
Jerusalem was a type, namely, the affliction of the church in the
days that immediately precede the return of
Jesus from heaven and the end of the world at His coming.
It is a characteristic of prophecy that the
prophet foretells one great event, which is nevertheless made up
of a type and a reality, a typical fulfillment
of the prophecy and a final "real" fulfillment. That Jesus,
in Matthew 24, prophesies a great tribulation at
the very end of world history is evident from the fact that He is
answering the disciples' question, "what
shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?"
This is also evident from the fact that in verse
29, 30 Jesus states that the tribulation will be followed immediately
by astounding catastrophes in the
heavens and by the literal, personal return of Jesus Christ in the
clouds of heaven.
One of the signs, therefore, of the imminent coming of Jesus
Christ and of the end of the world will
be a future "Great Tribulation."
The people who will endure suffering in the great tribulation
will be the believers, the true and
faithful members of the Church of Jesus Christ. Jesus calls
them "the elect" in Matthew 24:22: "for the
elect's sake those days will be shortened." The elect are
those persons whom God has eternally chosen in
Jesus Christ out of all nations, Jews and Gentiles, to be members
of Jesus' Church and to enjoy God's
gracious gift of salvation. They show themselves in the world
as those who testify of Jesus Christ and keep
the commandments of God (Rev.12:17). Scripture does not comfort
the true Church of the elect child of
God by promising us that we will not have to go through the distress
of the last days. What the Lord said to
the early Christian Church of Smyrna holds for the Church also at
the end of the ages. Christ told the
church that persecution was impending. The persecution, instigated
by the Devil himself, would be severe,
for the believers would be imprisoned and some would die.
"Ye shall have tribulation," Christ told the
Church. Their consolation was not that they would escape tribulation,
but that the sovereign Christ is Lord
also of persecution and that He rewards His people with heaven's
life and glory, when they faithfully endure
tribulation. The Word of Christ to the Church in the world,
then and now, is the announcement that she will
have tribulation, and the solemn call to her to be faithful in that
tribulation, even unto death (see
Rev.2:8-11).
It is not at all strange that the Church will pass through
great tribulation at the end of the ages. The
people of God have suffered persecution for Christ's sake in all
ages. Hebrews 11:23-26 says of Moses that
his choice to ally himself with the people of God was, by virtue
of that fact, a choice "to suffer affliction."
It was true already in the Old Testament that to show oneself as
a child of God meant bearing "the reproach
of Christ." Hebrews 11 continues with a description of the
tribulation of Old Testament believers:
"mockings and scourgings . . .bonds and imprisonment . . .destitute,
afflicted, tormented . . ." (vs.36-38). It
is the same regarding the church of the New Testament. Jesus
describes the lot of the Church in the world
always in John 16:33: "In the world ye shall have tribulation."
Paul preached to the newly established
churches that "we must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom
of God" (Acts 14:22). To
Timothy, Paul wrote, "all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall
suffer persecution" (II Timothy 3:12).
The great tribulation of the Church at the end will not be a new
thing. Its only exceptional characteristic
will be its severity, its greatness.
Some might suppose that the church does not have tribulation
in our time, at least, not the Church
in the United States. But this is a mistaken notion.
If the Church purely preaches the gospel of God's
gracious salvation in Jesus Christ alone and condemns every form
of man's attempt to save himself, whether
by his own saviors or by his own good works or by his alleged free
will, the Church will be hated today. If
the Church insistently calls men to a holy life and condemns all
unholiness as God does in the Bible, the
Church will be reproached today. For example, if the Church
condemns as sin all divorce, except that due
to adultery of one's mate (Matthew 5:31,32); all remarriage while
an original partner lives (Mark 10:11,12;
Luke 16:18; I Cor.7:39); all revolution against the civil government
(Rom.13:1-7); all abuse of the worker
by the employer (I Peter 2:18-25), the Church will experience great
tribulation in A.D. 2000, as she did in
A.D. 70.
Why must the people of God, the church, endure the great
tribulation at the end of the world? One
can just as well put the question this way: Why must the believing
church always enter the kingdom
through much tribulation (Acts 14:22)? She must! But
why? Suffering tribulation is a necessity, first,
because the Devil's hatred for God is always directed against those
who love and worship God. the Devil,
with those men whom he has blinded (II Cor.4:3,4), makes war on
the true Church. This warfare will
climax at the end of the world in the Great Tribulation (see Rev.
12). In all times, and also at the end, the
only way in which the Church can escape the persecution is the way
of denying Christ and worshipping the
Devil (see Rev.13:4,15). Suffering tribulation is a necessity, secondly,
because of the sovereign will of God.
God leads the church through tribulation. He does so for the
church's good. By tribulation, God chastises
His beloved children (Heb.12:1-14). He tries the Church, so
that she may be purified and made ready for
her eternal home with Him (I Peter 1:7). Thus, the tribulation
of the church serves the glorifying of God.
The church is faithful in tribulation, sealing her confession of
God's glory and grace with blood. Therefore,
the church must not desperately long to evade tribulation. She ought
to consider it a privilege and a gift
from God to suffer for Christ's sake (Philippians 1:29).
Although we know that we will suffer in the approaching tribulation,
we are not terrified. The little
flock of Christ is comforted by the assurance that the Great Shepherd
will be with her in the deepest depths
of the valley of the shadow of death (Psalm 23:4). She trusts
the sovereign grace of God in Christ to keep
her faithful in the hour of trial. And all the while she has
her hope securely fastened on Christ's return and
the life and glory which she will then enjoy forever. In addition,
the Lord has promised to shorten the days
of the tribulation for our sakes (Matt. 24:22). He, and not
the Devil, will rule at that time, and He will cut
short the oppression of His people by His personal, bodily coming
in the clouds of heaven (see Matt.
24:29,30; II Thess. 1). When the Great Tribulation comes upon
the Church, she will know that her
redemption is at hand.
It is important that the Church now live in the awareness
of the coming tribulation and its severity.
It must not fall upon her unexpectedly. The Church must be
prepared. The practical purpose of the Holy
Spirit revealing the great tribulation to the Church in Scripture
is that we may prepare ourselves. We do
this by taking heed, more and more, to the Word of God, the Scriptures;
by being diligent and fervent in
prayer to God for His Holy Spirit and grace; and by removing our
hope from all things earthly and setting it
on our Lord Jesus Christ and His coming.
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