“Yet faith may triumph o’er the
grave,
And trample on the tombs;
My Jesus, my Redeemer, lives;
My God, my Savior, comes.”
As you can
clearly see from the first line of the second verse, Watts writes about his
faith overcoming the grave. This points to the belief that Watts and many
others held to that the Church would be raptured and the dead in Christ would
be risen again.
Nathaniel
Holmes (1599–1678) a Puritan theologian and writer is said to have promoted and
believed in the pre-trib rapture of the church. William C. Watson wrote about
this in his 2015 book, Dispensationalism Before Darby:
Seventeenth-century and Eighteenth-century English Apocalypticism.
To say that
J. N. Darby invented the doctrine and that no-one believed in the pre-trib
before him is not true. There are numerous believers in the pre-trib rapture
before Darby. To credit Darby with the invention of the doctrine is the same as
crediting Luther with the doctrine of justification by faith. Luther did not
create the doctrine of justification by faith, the teaching was always in the
Bible. All what Luther did was teach what the Word of God had always taught in
an age where the doctrine was not widely taught. Darby did the same with the
doctrine of the pre-trib rapture, he taught what the Word of God has always
taught.
“But we do
not want you to be uninformed, brethren, about those who are asleep, so that
you will not grieve as do the rest who have no hope. For if we believe that
Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who have
fallen asleep in Jesus. For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we
who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those
who have fallen asleep. For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a
shout, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet of God, and the
dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive and remain will be caught
up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we
shall always be with the Lord. Therefore comfort one another with these words.”
(1 Thessalonians 4:13–18)
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