January 27, 2026

January, 27, 2026
January 27, 2026

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Why Knowing The Imminency Of The Rapture Is So Critical For Believers

Jonathan Brentner

Imminency. It tells us we live on the edge of eternity. The Rapture might happen at any moment.

However, as the moments become days and then weeks, months, and years, we struggle to maintain our eager anticipation of Jesusโ€™s appearing. Many of us wonder how much closer we will get to the start of the Tribulation before He comes for us. We see so many biblical signs of the end times and yet we wait and wait. I know itโ€™s not easy, not at all.

The silence in most churches regarding our โ€œblessed hopeโ€ makes our expectation all the more difficult to maintain. On top of that, many of our Christian friends and family members believe itโ€™s irrational to regard the Rapture as something that might happen anytime soon or even in our lifetime. Many in our churches think we are crazy for believing that there is such a thing as the Rapture or a seven-year Tribulation.

In spite of the long wait and scoffing that comes my way, I remain convinced that imminency is not only incredibly important for today, but also an essential aspect of our walk with the Savior.

I say this for a variety of reasons.

Imminency Copies The Expectancy Of The New Testament Saints

When we view the Rapture as something that can take place at any time, we imitate the expectations of the New Testament saints. Just a cursory sampling of verses from the epistles confirm that they lived sense of imminency:

  • โ€œFor the coming of the Lord is at handโ€ (James 5:8).
  • โ€œFor our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christโ€ (Philippians 3:20, LSB).
  • โ€œSo that you are not lacking in any gift, eagerly awaiting the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christโ€ 1 Corinthians 1:7, LSB).
  • โ€œFor they themselves report concerning us the kind of reception we had among you, and how you turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God, and to wait for his Son from heavenโ€ (1 Thessalonians 1:9-10).
  • โ€œHe who bears witness to these things says, โ€˜Yes, I am coming quickly.โ€™ Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.โ€ (Revelation 22:20).

Early in his ministry, Paul believed that the Rapture might happen in his lifetime (1 Thessalonians 4:17; 1 Corinthians 15:52). How is that possible apart from believing it could happen at any moment?

We also see this any moment expectation of Jesusโ€™ return for His Church reflected in The Didache, a short document from the early church. Scholars believe its words date back to the first century AD, but believe someone around AD 300 first compiled then into its current form.

Imminency Results In A Closer Walk With Jesus

The awareness that Jesus might come for us at any time results in a closer walk with Him. The Apostle John alludes to how this works in the words below:

Whatโ€™s the encouragement here for continuing to โ€œabideโ€ in Jesus? Itโ€™s the awareness that at any second we might find ourselves into the presence of our righteous Savoir. Does this not motivate us to promptly deal with bitterness, unforgiveness, anger, and other sins rather than let them gain a foothold in us (i.e., Ephesians 4:26-27)?

Just a couple verse later, John writes that a focus on Jesus appearing produces greater purity in us:

We wonโ€™t arrive at sinless perfection in this life, but the recognition that Jesus might come for us at any moment keeps us close to the Savior and quickly brings us back to Him when we stray from Him.

This incentive is just one of the many benefits of watching for Jesusโ€™ appearing as though it could happen at any minute.

Imminency Helps Us Maintain An Eternal Perspective

I remember waiting for Metro trains to arrive in Washington, D.C. Once the countdown for the next trainโ€™s arrival neared zero, I fixed my eyes on the tunnel at the end of the platform watching for its light to shine through the darkness.

Likewise, the awareness that the Rapture might occur at any moment sets our hopes on eternal realities as nothing else can. Paul describes this perspective for us in 2 Corinthians 4:17-18: “For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.”

Imminency provides us with an ongoing reminder that the things of this life are temporary and causes us to place a greater value or importance on eternal realities.

The โ€œno Raptureโ€ message of our day harms many saints because it leads to a strictly earthbound perspective. As a result, believers plan years and even decades in advance with no thought that Jesus might intervene, or even that He might have other plans for them (see Proverbs 27:1; James 4:13-17). The setting of oneโ€™s future aspirations solely on earthly outcomes intensifies oneโ€™s feelings of frustration with the disappointments that surely from living in this vale of tears.

Another benefit of living with a sense of imminency is that it puts our service for the Lord in a proper perspective. The thought that I might soon appear before the judgment seat of Christ provides the best remedy for my tendency to emphasize numbers over faithfulness. For me, thereโ€™s no better cure from adapting the worldโ€™s standards of success than my desire to hear these words in the near future, โ€œWell done, thou good and faithful servant.โ€

Imminency Assures Us That God Will Judge The Wicked

Because the imminency of the Rapture focuses my attention on Jesusโ€™ appearing, it provides assurance that He will swiftly and justly deal with the wickedness and lawlessness that defines our world. Judgement will fall on the wicked shortly after Jesus takes us out of this world.

It does not matter if the Lord calls me home before He comes for His saints; the fact that He will justly deal with the rabid violence, lawlessness, and overwhelming government corruption of our day calms my soul. I could not cope with the news that comes my way apart from knowing that He sees and will soon intervene in our world.

One of the greatest illusions of our day is that of thinking the perpetrators of the prevalent anarchy and bloodshed of our day will escape accountability. The Rapture is coming soon and as a result, many of them will live to experience the Lordโ€™s wrath both in this life as well as after they perish.

Imminency. Itโ€™s become lost amid the popular โ€œno Raptureโ€ teaching the emanates from most pulpits today. As a result, a great many saints lack the needed eternal outlook to cope with the perilous times in which we live.

Todayโ€™s rejection of the thought that the Rapture can happen at any time also makes believers easy prey for unbiblical motivations for walking closely with the Lord. Social media is full of works-based incentives for the Christian life. The lie that believers can walk away from their faith and thus lose their salvation is one such fashionable way of making the Christian life about the Law rather than grace.

Our regeneration is permanent; it can never be undone by us or any other force. Itโ€™s God who declares us forever righteous. Who can bring any evidence before Him of which He did not know when He pronounced His verdict of โ€œnot guiltyโ€ over our entire lives? As eternally secure saints, we have many reasons to maintain a close walk with our Savior of which imminency is not the least of such incentives.

We truly live on the edge of eternity. The multitude of signs we see today cannot be mere coincidences. Jesus is coming soon and after He takes us safely to glory, His wrath will fall on todayโ€™s perpetrators of the ungodliness thatโ€™s running rampant in our world.


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The LGBT Worldview Is Permeating Our Schools… Should We Send Our Children Into This Anti-Christianย System?

The LGBTQ worldview is permeating our secular schools (and, sadly, even some โ€œChristianโ€ schools). Secular schools (e.g., public schools in the USA) are not neutral. The Bible says youโ€™re either for Christ or against. And when you build your thinking on manโ€™s word instead of Godโ€™s Word, then ultimately anything goes. And weโ€™re seeing that happen now throughout the secular anti-God education system.

Will Graham Leads Prayer, Shares The Gospel With South Dakotaโ€™s Government Leaders

Will Graham, who was invited to speak and lead a prayer, took the opportunity to share the Gospel with anyone who didnโ€™t yet have a relationship with Christ. He told the story of Nicodemus, a religious leader in the Bible.ย โ€œYou can do good things, you can serve your community, but that doesnโ€™t make you right in Godโ€™s eyes. You may look like you have it all together, but on the inside youโ€™re far from God.โ€

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In An Ever Darkening World, We Can Find Solace In Bible Prophecy

The bright side of the growing evil in the world is that it is a sure sign that we are living in the season of the Lordโ€™s return. If you will check Genesis 6, you will find that Noahโ€™s society was characterized by violence and immorality. This is the reason that the great pastor, Adrian Rogers (1931-2005), once said, โ€œThe world is growing gloriously dark.โ€ How can the acceleration of evil be considered โ€œgloriousโ€? Because it is a sign of the imminent return of Jesus.

ABC's of Salvation

Decision

UTT

untitled artwork

Israel My Glory

Jonathan Brentner

Imminency. It tells us we live on the edge of eternity. The Rapture might happen at any moment.

However, as the moments become days and then weeks, months, and years, we struggle to maintain our eager anticipation of Jesusโ€™s appearing. Many of us wonder how much closer we will get to the start of the Tribulation before He comes for us. We see so many biblical signs of the end times and yet we wait and wait. I know itโ€™s not easy, not at all.

The silence in most churches regarding our โ€œblessed hopeโ€ makes our expectation all the more difficult to maintain. On top of that, many of our Christian friends and family members believe itโ€™s irrational to regard the Rapture as something that might happen anytime soon or even in our lifetime. Many in our churches think we are crazy for believing that there is such a thing as the Rapture or a seven-year Tribulation.

In spite of the long wait and scoffing that comes my way, I remain convinced that imminency is not only incredibly important for today, but also an essential aspect of our walk with the Savior.

I say this for a variety of reasons.

Imminency Copies The Expectancy Of The New Testament Saints

When we view the Rapture as something that can take place at any time, we imitate the expectations of the New Testament saints. Just a cursory sampling of verses from the epistles confirm that they lived sense of imminency:

  • โ€œFor the coming of the Lord is at handโ€ (James 5:8).
  • โ€œFor our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christโ€ (Philippians 3:20, LSB).
  • โ€œSo that you are not lacking in any gift, eagerly awaiting the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christโ€ 1 Corinthians 1:7, LSB).
  • โ€œFor they themselves report concerning us the kind of reception we had among you, and how you turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God, and to wait for his Son from heavenโ€ (1 Thessalonians 1:9-10).
  • โ€œHe who bears witness to these things says, โ€˜Yes, I am coming quickly.โ€™ Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.โ€ (Revelation 22:20).

Early in his ministry, Paul believed that the Rapture might happen in his lifetime (1 Thessalonians 4:17; 1 Corinthians 15:52). How is that possible apart from believing it could happen at any moment?

We also see this any moment expectation of Jesusโ€™ return for His Church reflected in The Didache, a short document from the early church. Scholars believe its words date back to the first century AD, but believe someone around AD 300 first compiled then into its current form.

Imminency Results In A Closer Walk With Jesus

The awareness that Jesus might come for us at any time results in a closer walk with Him. The Apostle John alludes to how this works in the words below:

Whatโ€™s the encouragement here for continuing to โ€œabideโ€ in Jesus? Itโ€™s the awareness that at any second we might find ourselves into the presence of our righteous Savoir. Does this not motivate us to promptly deal with bitterness, unforgiveness, anger, and other sins rather than let them gain a foothold in us (i.e., Ephesians 4:26-27)?

Just a couple verse later, John writes that a focus on Jesus appearing produces greater purity in us:

We wonโ€™t arrive at sinless perfection in this life, but the recognition that Jesus might come for us at any moment keeps us close to the Savior and quickly brings us back to Him when we stray from Him.

This incentive is just one of the many benefits of watching for Jesusโ€™ appearing as though it could happen at any minute.

Imminency Helps Us Maintain An Eternal Perspective

I remember waiting for Metro trains to arrive in Washington, D.C. Once the countdown for the next trainโ€™s arrival neared zero, I fixed my eyes on the tunnel at the end of the platform watching for its light to shine through the darkness.

Likewise, the awareness that the Rapture might occur at any moment sets our hopes on eternal realities as nothing else can. Paul describes this perspective for us in 2 Corinthians 4:17-18: “For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.”

Imminency provides us with an ongoing reminder that the things of this life are temporary and causes us to place a greater value or importance on eternal realities.

The โ€œno Raptureโ€ message of our day harms many saints because it leads to a strictly earthbound perspective. As a result, believers plan years and even decades in advance with no thought that Jesus might intervene, or even that He might have other plans for them (see Proverbs 27:1; James 4:13-17). The setting of oneโ€™s future aspirations solely on earthly outcomes intensifies oneโ€™s feelings of frustration with the disappointments that surely from living in this vale of tears.

Another benefit of living with a sense of imminency is that it puts our service for the Lord in a proper perspective. The thought that I might soon appear before the judgment seat of Christ provides the best remedy for my tendency to emphasize numbers over faithfulness. For me, thereโ€™s no better cure from adapting the worldโ€™s standards of success than my desire to hear these words in the near future, โ€œWell done, thou good and faithful servant.โ€

Imminency Assures Us That God Will Judge The Wicked

Because the imminency of the Rapture focuses my attention on Jesusโ€™ appearing, it provides assurance that He will swiftly and justly deal with the wickedness and lawlessness that defines our world. Judgement will fall on the wicked shortly after Jesus takes us out of this world.

It does not matter if the Lord calls me home before He comes for His saints; the fact that He will justly deal with the rabid violence, lawlessness, and overwhelming government corruption of our day calms my soul. I could not cope with the news that comes my way apart from knowing that He sees and will soon intervene in our world.

One of the greatest illusions of our day is that of thinking the perpetrators of the prevalent anarchy and bloodshed of our day will escape accountability. The Rapture is coming soon and as a result, many of them will live to experience the Lordโ€™s wrath both in this life as well as after they perish.

Imminency. Itโ€™s become lost amid the popular โ€œno Raptureโ€ teaching the emanates from most pulpits today. As a result, a great many saints lack the needed eternal outlook to cope with the perilous times in which we live.

Todayโ€™s rejection of the thought that the Rapture can happen at any time also makes believers easy prey for unbiblical motivations for walking closely with the Lord. Social media is full of works-based incentives for the Christian life. The lie that believers can walk away from their faith and thus lose their salvation is one such fashionable way of making the Christian life about the Law rather than grace.

Our regeneration is permanent; it can never be undone by us or any other force. Itโ€™s God who declares us forever righteous. Who can bring any evidence before Him of which He did not know when He pronounced His verdict of โ€œnot guiltyโ€ over our entire lives? As eternally secure saints, we have many reasons to maintain a close walk with our Savior of which imminency is not the least of such incentives.

We truly live on the edge of eternity. The multitude of signs we see today cannot be mere coincidences. Jesus is coming soon and after He takes us safely to glory, His wrath will fall on todayโ€™s perpetrators of the ungodliness thatโ€™s running rampant in our world.


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Of News Events Around The World.

The LGBT Worldview Is Permeating Our Schools… Should We Send Our Children Into This Anti-Christianย System?

The LGBTQ worldview is permeating our secular schools (and, sadly, even some โ€œChristianโ€ schools). Secular schools (e.g., public schools in the USA) are not neutral. The Bible says youโ€™re either for Christ or against. And when you build your thinking on manโ€™s word instead of Godโ€™s Word, then ultimately anything goes. And weโ€™re seeing that happen now throughout the secular anti-God education system.

Will Graham Leads Prayer, Shares The Gospel With South Dakotaโ€™s Government Leaders

Will Graham, who was invited to speak and lead a prayer, took the opportunity to share the Gospel with anyone who didnโ€™t yet have a relationship with Christ. He told the story of Nicodemus, a religious leader in the Bible.ย โ€œYou can do good things, you can serve your community, but that doesnโ€™t make you right in Godโ€™s eyes. You may look like you have it all together, but on the inside youโ€™re far from God.โ€

untitled artwork 6391

In An Ever Darkening World, We Can Find Solace In Bible Prophecy

The bright side of the growing evil in the world is that it is a sure sign that we are living in the season of the Lordโ€™s return. If you will check Genesis 6, you will find that Noahโ€™s society was characterized by violence and immorality. This is the reason that the great pastor, Adrian Rogers (1931-2005), once said, โ€œThe world is growing gloriously dark.โ€ How can the acceleration of evil be considered โ€œgloriousโ€? Because it is a sign of the imminent return of Jesus.

ABC's of Salvation

TV AD

worldview matters

Decision Magazine V AD

Decision

Jan Markell

Israel My Glory

Erick Stakelbeck

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YOU CARE ABOUT

BIBLICAL TRUTH.

SO DO WE.

Together, We Can Deliver A Biblical Understanding Of News Events Around The World And Equip The Church To Stand With A Biblical Worldview.

Israel My Glory

untitled artwork

YOU CARE ABOUT

BIBLICAL TRUTH.

SO DO WE.

ย 

Together, We Can Deliver A Biblical Understanding Of News Events Around The World And Equip The Church To Stand With A Biblical Worldview.