The Nature and Purpose of the Tribulation
Why is God going to pour out His wrath during the Tribulation?
Dr. David R.
Reagan
The unparalleled horror of the Tribulation is
spelled out in detail in both the Hebrew Scriptures and
the New Testament. Isaiah wrote that it will be a day of
"the terror of the Lord" when "the pride of men will be
abased" (Isaiah 2:10,17,19). Zephaniah proclaimed that
it will be a "day of wrath," "a day of trouble and
distress," and "a day of destruction and desolation"
(Zephaniah 1:15). Men will stumble around like they are
blind and "their blood will be poured out like dust"
(Zephaniah 1:17).
This dreary picture is echoed in the New Testament.
Jesus said it will be a time of tribulation "such as has
not occurred since the beginning of the world until now,
nor ever shall" (Matthew 24:21). In fact, Jesus said it
will be so terrible that if it were not stopped at the
end of seven years, it would result in the destruction
of all life (Matthew 24:22). The Apostle John states
that the chaos will be so great that the leaders of the
world will crawl into caves and cry out for the rocks of
the mountains to fall upon them (Revelation
6:15-16).
The Purpose
Wat's it all about? Why is there going to be such
carnage? How could a God of grace, mercy and love allow
such an outbreak of unbridled terror and bloodshed?
One reason is to satisfy the justice of God. Yes, God
is characterized by grace, mercy and love, but He is
also a God of perfect justice, righteousness, and
holiness. Therefore, He must deal with sin. His justice
demands it. Even His love compels it. How could a God of
true love simply overlook the actions of a murderer or a
pedophile?
The prophet Nahum understood the true nature of God.
He wrote that "The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day
of trouble, and He knows those who take refuge in Him"
(Nahum 1:7). That is the love and mercy of God. But the
same prophet wrote (Nahum 1:2-3);
A jealous and avenging God is the Lord; The Lord
is avenging and wrathful. The Lord takes vengeance
on His adversaries, And He reserves wrath for His
enemies. The Lord is slow to anger and great in
power, And the Lord will by no means leave the
guilty unpunished.
Truly, the Lord is "slow to anger." He allows the
iniquities of Mankind to accumulate over long periods of
time because He does not wish that any should perish (2
Peter 3:9). His desire, instead, is that all should come
to repentance. But there is always a day of reckoning,
just as there was in the days of Noah, and such a day
has been set for this age. Paul referred to it in his
sermon in Athens when he said, "He [God] has fixed a day
in which He will judge the world in righteousness" (Acts
17:31).
A second reason for the Tribulation is to bring
people to salvation. Amazingly, even when God pours out
His wrath, His fundamental purpose is not to destroy but
to save. Isaiah 26:9 explains it this way: "When the
earth experiences Your judgments, the inhabitants of the
world learn righteousness."
The brutal fact is that God often has to hit us over
the head with a two-by-four in order to get our
attention and motivate us to repentance. The equally
brutal fact is that most people respond to such
discipline by either cursing God or continuing to ignore
Him (Revelation 9:20-21). But some people always respond
in humility and are saved. As Billy Graham has put it:
"The same sun that melts the butter, hardens the
clay."
When God's wrath is poured out during the
Tribulation, some hearts will be melted, but most will
be hardened, illustrating once again that nothing is as
"deceitful" and "desperately sick" as the heart of Man
(Jeremiah 17:9).
Man is frivolous about sin. God is serious. The
Tribulation will be a graphic expression of how serious
God is about Mankind's rebellion against Him.
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Original article: Lamb & Lion Ministries
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