rapture - significado y definición. Qué es rapture
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Qué (quién) es rapture - definición

IN SOME FORMS OF PROTESTANTISM, AN ESCHATOLOGICAL EVENT WHEN ALL ALIVE TRUE BELIEVERS WILL RISE ALONG WITH THE RESURRECTED DEAD BELIEVERS INTO HEAVEN AND JOIN CHRIST, BASED ON 1 THESS. 4:17
The Teaching of the rapture; Pre Tribulation; Midtribulationism; Pretribulationism; Pre-tribulational; Prewrath rapture; Pre-wrath rapture; Pre-wrath; Pre-tribulation; Harpazo; Pre-tribulation rapture; Mid-tribulation rapture; Pretribulation rapture; Midtribulation rapture; The Rapture; Rapture (Protestant belief); Pre-trib; Pretribulationistism; Antichrist's reign; Midtrib; Midtribulation Rapture; Missing the rapture; Prewrath

rapture         
¦ noun
1. a feeling of intense pleasure or joy.
2. (raptures) the expression of intense pleasure or enthusiasm.
3. (the Rapture) N. Amer. (according to some millenarian teaching) the transporting of believers to heaven at the second coming of Christ.
Phrases
rapture of the deep informal nitrogen narcosis.
Origin
C16 (in the sense 'seizing and carrying off'): from obs. Fr., or from med. L. raptura 'seizing', partly influenced by rapt.
Rapture         
·noun A spasm; a fit; a syncope; delirium.
II. Rapture ·noun A seizing by violence; a hurrying along; rapidity with violence.
III. Rapture ·vt To transport with excitement; to Enrapture.
IV. Rapture ·noun The state or condition of being rapt, or carried away from one's self by agreeable excitement; violence of a pleasing passion; extreme joy or pleasure; ecstasy.
rapture         
n.
1) complete, total, utter rapture
2) in rapture over

Wikipedia

Rapture

The rapture is an eschatological position held by some Christians, particularly those of American evangelicalism, consisting of an end-time event when all Christian believers who are alive, along with resurrected believers, will rise "in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air." The origin of the term extends from the First Epistle to the Thessalonians in the Bible, which uses the Greek word harpazo (Ancient Greek: ἁρπάζω), meaning "to snatch away" or "to seize". This view of eschatology is referred to as premillennial dispensationalism, a form of futurism that considers various prophecies in the Bible as remaining unfulfilled and occurring in the future.

The idea of a rapture is used frequently among fundamentalist theologians in the United States. Rapture has also been used for a mystical union with God or for eternal life in Heaven.

Differing viewpoints exist about the exact timing of the rapture and whether Christ's return would occur in one event or two. Pretribulationism distinguishes the rapture from the second coming of Jesus Christ mentioned in the Gospel of Matthew, 2 Thessalonians, and Revelation. This view holds that the rapture would precede the seven-year Tribulation, which would culminate in Christ's second coming and be followed by a thousand-year Messianic Kingdom. This theory grew out of the translations of the Bible that John Nelson Darby analyzed in 1833. Pretribulationism is the most widely held view among Christians believing in the rapture today, although this view is disputed within evangelicalism. Some assert a post-tribulational rapture.

Most Christian denominations do not subscribe to rapture theology and have a different interpretation of the aerial gathering described in 1 Thessalonians 4. Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, Lutherans, Anglicans, Episcopalians, Presbyterians, the United Church of Christ, most Methodist and Reformed Christians, Unity Church, Latter-day Saints, etc. do not generally use rapture as a specific theological term, nor do they generally subscribe to the premillennial dispensational views associated with its use. Instead these groups typically interpret rapture in the sense of the elect gathering with Christ in Heaven after his second coming and reject the idea that a large segment of humanity will be left behind on earth for an extended tribulation period after the events of 1 Thessalonians 4:17.

Ejemplos de uso de rapture
1. Football rapture is a strange spectacle in a devastated city.
2. But, alas, the rapture isn‘t on the cards just yet.
3. Poets rapture Carol Ann Duffy has been awarded the T.
4. When things get really bad the rapture will happen.
5. The French crowd was in hysterical rapture at England‘s ineptitude.