The Great Gathering
The saints will be assembled before Jesus on the Last Day, and the wicked will be collected for judgment and cast from his presence.
On the Last Day, the righteous and the
unrighteous are “gathered” before Jesus, the former for
vindication and salvation, and the latter for condemnation. This event is
linked in the New Testament to Christ’s “arrival” at the end
of the age. On that day, he will resurrect the dead, judge the dead and living,
terminate the “Last Enemy, Death,” and consummate the Kingdom of God. After
that, “God will be all in all.”
In the ‘Wheat and Tares’ parable, Jesus
pictured the final harvest when he will send the “reapers to gather up
first the tares and bind them in bundles to burn them but gather the wheat into
my barn.” He located this at the “end of the age.”
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[Photo by Ambitious Creative Co. - Rick Barrett on Unsplash] |
The “reapers” represent angels sent to “gather all things that cause stumbling” out of his Kingdom and cast them into the “furnace of fire.” In contrast to the wicked, the righteous will “shine forth as the sun” - (Matthew 13:30, 13:40-43).
In his ‘Olivet Discourse,’ he
describes his ‘Parousia’ or “arrival” when the nations of the Earth will
see the “Son of Man coming on clouds.” On that day, he will send his “angels
with a great sound of a trumpet, and
they will gather together [‘episunagô’]
his Elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other” –
(Matthew 24:27-31).
In his parable
of the ‘Sheep and Goats,’ Jesus illustrates the judgment that will occur on
that day. When the “Son
of Man comes in his glory,” he will be accompanied by “all the angels,”
and take his seat on the “throne of his glory.”
All nations
will be “gathered before him” for judgment. He will separate the “sheep”
from the “goats.” The “sheep” will inherit the Kingdom, but the “goats”
will receive “everlasting punishment” - (Matthew 25:31-46).
ACCORDING TO PAUL
Likewise in Paul’s writings. In his first
letter to the Thessalonians, he described the ‘Parousia’ or “arrival”
of Jesus when faithful believers become the Apostle’s “crown
of glorying.” He prayed for God to establish their hearts “blameless
in holiness before our God and Father at the arrival of our Lord Jesus with all
his saints” – (1 Thessalonians 2:19, 3:13).
When Jesus “arrives,”
the righteous dead will be resurrected and reunited with those still alive, and
together they will be “caught up in clouds” and “meet” Jesus as
he descends from Heaven. He will be accompanied by the “voice of an
archangel and the trumpet of God.” At the sound of the “trumpet” the
“dead in Christ” will rise from their graves – (1 Thessalonians
4:13-18).
In his second letter, Paul describes the “revelation of the Lord Jesus from
heaven with the angels of his power.” On that day,
he will “render vengeance to them that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus,”
and they will suffer “everlasting destruction.” In contrast, Jesus will
be “glorified in his saints and marveled at in all those who believe” - (2
Thessalonians 1:5-10).
In the next
chapter, Paul explains the “Day of the Lord” and Christ’s “arrival”
or ‘Parousia’. It will mean “our gathering together unto him.”
His statement echoes the saying in the ‘Olivet Discourse’ about the “gathering
together of his elect.”
In his Corinthian
correspondence, Paul declares that just as “in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be
made alive, but each in his order, Christ the first fruits, then they that are
Christ's, at his arrival [‘Parousia’]” – (1 Corinthians 15:20-28).
Paul again connects the resurrection of the righteous to the “arrival” of Jesus as he did in 1 Thessalonians. Not only so, but that event will mean the termination of death itself and the consummation of God’s Kingdom. Thus, “God will be all in all.”
At the “last trumpet,”
the dead will be raised and those believers still alive will be transformed.
Mortal men will “put on immortality,” and “death will be
swallowed up in victory” - (1 Corinthians 15:51-57).
The New Testament paints a consistent picture. The
“arrival” of Jesus will be accompanied by angelic activity and the “trumpet.”
The righteous dead will be resurrected and gathered to him along with those
saints who remain alive, and each of us will be transformed and receive our immortal
bodies.
At the same time, the wicked will be gathered for
judgment. The righteous will inherit the Kingdom and immortality, but the
wicked will receive “everlasting punishment from the face of the Lord.” Moreover,
in each passage, the New Testament refers to one and only one “coming”
or “arrival” of Jesus to gather his saints. Thus, his return is foundational to our salvation hope.
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SEE ALSO:
- Vindication or Condemnation - (The arrival of Jesus will mean vindication for the righteous, but the judgment and condemnation of the wicked)
- Just Judgment - (The arrival of Jesus will mean vindication and rest for the righteous, but everlasting loss for the wicked - 2 Thessalonians 1:5-10)
- Rumors and Disinformation - (Rumors about the Day of the Lord caused alarm and confusion in the Thessalonian congregation – 2 Thessalonians 2:1-2)
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