Thursday, 30 April 2026

Until He Comes: The Rapture and the Duty of a Steward

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This describes Section 4 of my book, titled "The Great Reset VS. The Greatest Revival," which has not reached all the churches and Christians to whom it is addressed. I hope this video will stir a desire to read it and take action, evoking a sense of duty.  I offer my book for free. You will find the link below.


Until He Comes, Be watchful. Be ready. Be working.


The imminent return of Jesus Christ is among the most precious promises in all of Scripture. It is our blessed hope — the anchor that holds when everything around us shifts. And in an era of growing darkness and uncertainty, it is no surprise that interest in end-times prophecy has surged. Books, podcasts, films, and ministries devoted to the subject have multiplied, and many believers find genuine comfort and encouragement in studying what God has revealed about the age to come.

 

This is good and right. Jesus Himself told His disciples to be watchful, to be ready, to keep their lamps burning (Matthew 25:13). The study of prophecy is not a distraction from faithful living — it is meant to fuel it. When we truly believe that Jesus is coming again, it should make us more urgent in sharing the gospel, more diligent in our discipleship, and more courageous in our public witness.

 

"Then He said to His disciples, 'The harvest truly is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.'" Matthew 9:37–38

 

But there is a temptation that can accompany a strong focus on the rapture — and it must be named honestly. When the return of Christ becomes primarily a reason to disengage from the world rather than to engage it more faithfully, something has gone wrong. If the prospect of being taken out of this world leads us to stop caring about what happens in it — to stop fighting for justice, to stop speaking for the voiceless, to stop making disciples — then we have misunderstood the very hope we are celebrating.

 

Consider the great stewards of God throughout history. Enoch walked with God for three hundred years before he was taken. Noah preached righteousness and built the ark for one hundred and twenty years. The reformers — Wycliffe, Huss, Luther, Calvin — laboured for decades, facing imprisonment and death, convinced that Christ could return at any moment and equally convinced that their work mattered until He did. None of them sat with their arms folded, waiting.

 

"Work, for I am with you," said the Lord. That word was given to Zerubbabel and Joshua — and it applies to us today. (Haggai 2:4)

 

The simple truth is this: no one knows the day or the hour. Not the angels, not the most learned scholar of eschatology, not the most gifted prophet. What we do know is that until that day comes, we have been given work to do. We have been entrusted with the gospel — the most important message in human history — and we will give an account for what we did with that trust.

 

There are many sincere Christians who hold different views on the timing of the rapture — pre-tribulation, mid-tribulation, post-tribulation, or no rapture at all in the traditional sense. These are genuine theological questions worthy of thoughtful study. But they are secondary to the question that matters most: are we, right now, living as faithful stewards of what God has given us?

 

Whether Christ returns tomorrow or in fifty years, the call is the same. Be watchful. Be ready. Be working.

 

"Blessed is that servant whom his master, when he comes, will find so doing." Matthew 24:46

 

The Duty of Pastors and Teachers

To those who shepherd the flock of God in Canada — this section is written with deep respect and genuine love. The pastoral calling is among the most demanding and most honourable in human society. You carry burdens that most of your congregation will never fully see. You pray over the sick, comfort the grieving, counsel the struggling, and stand week after week before your people with a word that you must trust God to make alive. You are not thanked nearly enough. And you are not supported nearly enough.

 

But love requires honesty. And the honest word to the Canadian pastoral community — spoken not in anger but in the grief of a fellow believer — is this: too many of our pulpits have gone quiet on the very questions that are destroying the families sitting in the pews.

 

There are reasons for this silence, and some of them are understandable. The charitable tax exemption creates real legal constraints. The fear of dividing the congregation is genuine. The desire to be welcoming, to avoid alienating seekers, to keep the peace — these are not wicked motives. But when these considerations cause a pastor to soften, omit, or avoid the full counsel of God's Word, something precious is lost — and the flock is left defenceless.

 

"And He Himself gave some to be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, and some pastors and teachers, for the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ." Ephesians 4:11–12

 

The pastor's calling is not to manage a congregation — it is to equip them. To build them up in the truth. To prepare them for a world that will challenge their faith, test their convictions, and press them at every point. A congregation that has never heard their pastor speak about the sanctity of life, the nature of marriage, the rights of parents, or the claims of Christ over every area of life is a congregation that is not equipped for the world they actually live in.

 

The great reformers understood this. Martin Luther did not confine his proclamation to the safe and the uncontroversial. He addressed the political, the theological, and the cultural crises of his day with the full weight of Scripture — and it cost him dearly. But it also changed the world.

 

"Because the Preacher was wise, he still taught the people knowledge... The words of the wise are like goads, and the words of scholars are like well-driven nails." — Ecclesiastes 12:9–11

 

To the pastors who have been faithful — who have spoken the truth at personal cost, who have kept their doors open, who have stood with their people through the storms of recent years — thank you. You are not forgotten. God sees every faithful sermon, every private prayer, every difficult conversation, every sacrifice made in obscurity. Do not grow weary. Do not lose heart.

 

And to those who feel the prompting of the Holy Spirit to speak more boldly — take courage. Your congregation needs to hear from you. They are confused, they are frightened, they are looking for a shepherd who will tell them the truth. You do not have to have all the answers. You simply have to open the Word and trust the Spirit to do what only He can do.

 

"Preach the word! Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching." 2 Timothy 4:2

 

The Duties of Every Member of the Body

The responsibility for the Church's renewal does not rest on the pastor alone. Every member of the body of Christ has a role to play — and that role is not passive attendance, not the annual offering, not a quiet nod of agreement with the sermon on Sunday morning.

 

The New Testament picture of the Church is of a living body, every part contributing, every member gifted and called and needed. Paul writes that God has appointed in the Church apostles, prophets, teachers, workers of miracles, healers, helpers, administrators, and those who speak in various kinds of tongues (1 Corinthians 12:28). The point is not the specific list — it is the breathtaking diversity of callings, and the equally breathtaking truth that all of them matter.

 

You do not need a pulpit to be a witness. You do not need a theological degree to share what Jesus has done in your life. You do not need a platform to love your neighbour, to speak the truth in your workplace, to pray for your city, to support a family in need, to write a letter to your member of parliament, or to show up at a school board meeting.

 

"For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes." — Romans 1:16

 

Here are three simple principles to carry forward — what this book calls the Three Bs:

 

Be Watchful. Pay attention to what is happening in your community, your schools, your government. The people of God should not be the last to notice when something is wrong. Ask questions. Read broadly. Cultivate discernment through prayer and the study of God's Word.

 

Be Ready. Know what you believe and why you believe it. Be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you for the reason for the hope that is in you — with gentleness and respect (1 Peter 3:15). You do not need to win every argument. You need only to plant a seed, clearly and lovingly.

 

Be Working. Give your time, your talents, and your treasure to the things that matter. Support your pastor — not only financially, but with your prayers, your encouragement, and your active participation. Get involved in your community. Vote according to your convictions. Parent with intentionality and courage. Care for the poor, the lonely, the orphan, the widow — the people Jesus said would define what we did for Him (Matthew 25:40).

 

"Pure and undefiled religion before God and the Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their trouble, and to keep oneself unspotted from the world." James 1:27

 

The greatest revival in history will not be announced on a billboard. It will be built one opened door at a time, one honest conversation at a time, one act of faithful obedience at a time. It is already beginning — in homes and churches and workplaces across this country and around the world. The question is whether you will be part of it.

 

Last Call

Do you remember the last call at a bar — that final announcement before closing time, the bartender's voice cutting through the noise: last orders? There is something urgent about it. Something that forces a decision.

 

We are living in a last-call moment for the Canadian Church.

 

Not because God has given up on Canada — He has not. Not because revival is impossible — it is not. But because the hour is late, the stakes are high, and the cost of continued silence is being borne, every single day, by the most vulnerable among us: children whose minds are being shaped by values that contradict everything their parents believe; elderly parents dying alone because a government policy kept their families at bay; teenagers struggling without the anchor of truth in a culture that offers them a hundred identities and no foundation; families crushed under economic pressure with no community of faith to catch them.

 

The wrath of God, Scripture tells us, is revealed against those who suppress the truth (Romans 1:18). This is not a comfortable verse. But it is a clarifying one. The call to speak, to stand, to be salt and light — it is not optional. It is not for the especially bold or the especially gifted. It is for every person who has heard the truth and been changed by it.

 

"For everyone to whom much is given, from him much will be required." Luke 12:48

 

There is a common and tragic misreading of the Laodicean letter — the idea that lukewarm believers are simply condemned and left to their fate. But read the passage again. Jesus is not walking away. He is knocking. He is calling out. He is offering gold refined in fire, white garments, eye salve for blindness. He is offering restoration, fellowship, transformation. He is offering Himself.

 

"As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten. Therefore be zealous and repent. Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and dine with him, and he with Me." Revelation 3:19–20

 

This is grace. This is the character of the God we serve. He does not abandon the lukewarm. He pursues them. He disciplines the ones He loves. And He keeps knocking — on the door of the individual heart, on the door of the local church, on the door of a nation that was once built in His name and can be again.

 

The last call is not a threat. It is an invitation. And it is being extended to you, right now, wherever you are reading these words.

 

"Will you not revive us again, that Your people may rejoice in You? Show us Your mercy, Lord, and grant us Your salvation." — Psalm 85:6–7

 

Conclusion: Jesus Would — and Already Did

At the end of all the analysis — the politics, the history, the spiritual diagnosis, the calls to action — we arrive at the only answer that has ever truly worked.

 

Who would lay down their life for a nation that has forgotten God? Who would sacrifice comfort, security, reputation, and safety for people who may not even want to be saved? Who would love a world that has turned its back on its Creator, that mocks the truth, that chooses darkness over light?

 

Jesus would. And He already did.

 

Everything in this book — every concern about the Church's silence, every grief over the erosion of rights and freedoms, every call to faithful engagement in public life — flows from this single, world-altering reality: the Son of God loved this world enough to die for it. He did not wait for the world to deserve His love. He came while we were still sinners (Romans 5:8). He knocked on the door of a humanity that was not looking for Him, and He offered life to anyone who would open the door and let Him in.

 

"Jesus said to him, 'I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.'" John 14:6

 

That is the message the Church has been entrusted with. Not a political agenda. Not a cultural programme. Not a set of moral guidelines for a better society — though faithful Christian witness does, over time, produce better societies. The message is a Person: Jesus Christ, crucified for our sins, risen from the dead, reigning at the right hand of the Father, and coming again.

 

Everything else in this book is downstream of that truth. The call to civic engagement matters because our neighbours — the ones whose children sit next to ours in school, the ones who live on our street, the ones who work beside us — are loved by God and deserve to hear the truth. The call to parental sovereignty matters because children are not the property of the state — they are gifts from God, entrusted to parents to raise in the fear and instruction of the Lord. The call to the Church to wake up matters because the Church carries within it the only message that can genuinely heal a broken world.

 

"The Lord your God in your midst, the Mighty One, will save; He will rejoice over you with gladness, He will quiet you with His love, He will rejoice over you with singing." — Zephaniah 3:17

 

So here is the final word, offered not with the authority of a theologian or a minister or a politician, but with the simple conviction of a fellow traveller who has spent a lifetime learning to take God at His word:

 

Open the door.

 

Let Jesus in — not just into your private spiritual life, but into your home, your workplace, your community, your politics, your parenting, your conversations, your choices. Let Him into every room. Let the truth of who He is and what He has done reshape the way you see everything.

 

And then — with whatever time and talent and treasure you have been given — get to work. Pray. Speak. Love. Vote. Give. Stand. Defend the vulnerable. Tell the truth. Plant seeds. Trust God with the harvest.

 

The greatest revival in the history of the Church is not a distant dream. It is a door that is open, a Voice that is calling, and a King who is coming.

 

Will you answer?

 

"He will bring justice to the poor of the people; He will save the children of the needy, and will break in pieces the oppressor." Psalm 72:4

 

A Prayer for Canada

Father, deliver us from evil — from the lies and the deceptions. Let Your kingdom come. Let Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Revive us again, that Your people may rejoice in You. Show us Your mercy, Lord, and grant us Your salvation. Amen.

 

 


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