THE SECOND PART: A BIRD’S-EYE VIEW OF THE NEW TESTAMENT

The Gospel according to Luke
Message Five—The Rapture of the Overcomers

Scripture Reading: Luke 9:23-25; 14:26-35; 17:26-36; 21:34-36

I. If we want to save our soul-life, we will lose it, but if we lose our soul-life for the Lord’s sake, we will save it— Matt. 10:39; Luke 9:23-25; 14:26-35: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

A. In 9:23-25 the Lord Jesus taught the disciples to take up their cross and follow Him by denying their soul-life: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

1. To save the soul-life is to allow the soul to have its enjoyment and to escape suffering; to lose the soul-life is to cause the soul to lose its enjoyment and thereby to suffer—Matt. 16:25. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

2. To lose the soul-life is to lose the enjoyment of the soul, and to save the soul-life means to preserve the soul in its enjoyment—Mark 8:35. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

3. To deny the self is to reject the soul’s desire, preference, and choice—Luke 9:23. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

4. We must deny our soul, our soulish life, with all its pleasures in this age, so that we may gain it in the enjoyment of the Lord in the coming age—1 Pet. 1:9. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

5. If we allow our soul to suffer the loss of its enjoyment in this age for the Lord’s sake, we will cause our soul to have its enjoyment in the kingdom age; we will share the Lord’s joy in ruling over the earth—Matt. 25:21, 23. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

B. In Luke 14:26-35 the Lord teaches us to be absolute in following Him and to hate everything, even our own soul-life, that distracts, hinders, and frustrates us from following Him faithfully: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

1. As the salt of the earth (Matt. 5:13), the believers’ taste depends on their renouncing of the earthly things—Luke 14:33-34. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

2. Believers may lose their taste—their function in the kingdom of God—by not being willing to renounce all the things of the present life—v. 34. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

3. If the believers lose their taste, their function, they will be f it neither for the land, signifying the church as God’s farm (1 Cor. 3:9), which issues in the coming kingdom (Rev. 11:15), nor for the manure pile, signifying hell, the filthy place in the universe (21:8); having been saved from eternal perdition but being unfit for the coming kingdom, they will be thrown out from the glory of the kingdom in the millennium and be put aside for discipline—Luke 14:35. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

II. If we lose our soul-life, we may participate in the rapture of the overcomers—17:26-36; 21:34-36: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

A. In order to participate in the rapture of the overcomers that we may enjoy the Lord’s parousia (presence, coming) and escape the great tribulation, we must overcome the stupefying effect of man’s living today—17:26-30: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

1. The conditions of evil living that stupefied the generation of Noah before the deluge and the generation of Lot before the destruction of Sodom portray the perilous condition of man’s living before the Lord’s parousia and the great tribulation—Matt. 24:3, 21. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

2. As followers of the Lord Jesus, we need to overcome the stupefying effect of the world’s indulgent living by losing our soul-life in this age—Luke 17:31-33. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

B. Preserving the soul-life is related to lingering in the earthly and material things—vv. 31, 33: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

1. We linger in the earthly things because we care for our soul’s enjoyment in the present age—cf. 2 Tim. 4:10. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

2. Lot’s wife became a pillar of salt because she took a lingering look backward at Sodom, indicating that she loved and treasured the evil world that God was going to judge and utterly destroy—Luke 17:32: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

a. She was rescued from Sodom, but she did not reach the safe place that Lot reached—Gen. 19:15-30. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

b. Although she did not perish, she was not fully saved, but, like the salt that becomes tasteless (Luke 14:34-35), she was left in a place of shame; this is a solemn warning to the world-loving believers—1 John 2:15-17. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

3. Lingering in the earthly things for the sake of our soul’s enjoyment will cause us to lose our soul; that is, our soul will suffer the loss of its enjoyment in the coming kingdom age—Luke 17:33. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

C. Luke 17:31-36 speaks of our reaction to the rapture call: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

1. These verses depict the soul-life in its engagement not with sinful things but with the things of earth; the Lord’s charge here is related to the believers’ overcoming in their practical life—vv. 34-36. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

2. Whether or not the living believers participate in the rapture of the overcomers depends on their reaction to the call to go; the rapture will occur secretly and unexpectedly—v. 31: (2008 ST, msg. 10)

a. This call will not produce a miraculous lastminute change in us that has no relation to our previous life with the Lord. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

b. In that moment we will discover our heart’s real treasure; if this treasure is the Lord Himself, there will be no backward look—v. 32. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

3. Certain ones are taken because they have overcome the stupefying effect of self-indulgent living in this age to be raptured into the enjoyment of the Lord’s parousia—vv. 26-30, 34-36. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

D. In 21:34-36 the Lord Jesus warns us to take heed to ourselves and to be watchful at every time, beseeching that we would “prevail to escape all these things which are about to happen and stand before the Son of Man”:(2008 ST, msg. 10)

1. Prevail here means to have strength and ability; the strength and ability to escape the great tribulation come from watching and beseeching—v. 36. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

2. Escape refers to being raptured before the great tribulation— Matt. 24:21. (2008 ST, msg. 10)

3. All these things which are about to happen are all the things of the great tribulation.

4. Stand before the Son of Man corresponds with standing in Revelation 14:1, indicating that the raptured overcomers will stand before the Savior on Mount Zion in the heavens before the great tribulation. (2008 ST, msg. 10)