“Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man.”
— Luke 21:36 (KJV)
There are many today who speak of escaping the coming troubles of this world. Entire prophetic systems have been built around the hope that the Church will suddenly disappear before tribulation, persecution, and suffering come upon the earth.
I will be honest. I hope they are right.
I would rejoice if the LORD were to call His Church home before the darkest days arrive upon the nations. There is nothing in my heart that desires suffering, persecution, famine, or tribulation.
But as I read the Scriptures, I cannot ignore the repeated warnings given to believers to prepare spiritually for hardship.
Jesus never promised His followers exemption from trial. He promised victory through it.
“In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.”
— John 16:33 (KJV)
The modern Church has often been taught to expect escape from suffering, while the early Church expected to endure suffering faithfully.
The apostles were persecuted.
The prophets suffered.
The early Christians faced imprisonment and death.
Believers throughout history have endured tribulation for the name of Christ.
Why should we believe the final generation of believers will face less testing than those who came before us?
The Bible repeatedly compares faith to gold refined in fire.
“That the trial of your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire…”
— 1 Peter 1:7 (KJV)
Gold is purified in the furnace.
The impurities rise to the surface under intense heat.
The fire reveals what is genuine.
I believe the Church may soon enter such a refining fire.
The world is changing rapidly before our eyes:
wars and rumors of wars,
economic instability,
fear among nations,
moral confusion,
deception,
persecution growing against true biblical faith,
and societies increasingly hostile toward Christ.
Jesus called these things “the beginning of sorrows.”
The danger is not merely physical hardship. The greater danger is spiritual collapse.
Many who claim the name of Christ may fall away when faith becomes costly.
Jesus warned:
“And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold.”
— Matthew 24:12 (KJV)
That is why Luke 21:36 speaks so powerfully to me.
The escape may not be escaping hardship itself. The true escape may be escaping deception, apostasy, fear, compromise, and spiritual destruction.
The believer who remains faithful through trial has escaped the greatest danger of all.
The three Hebrew children were not removed from the fiery furnace.
Daniel was not removed from Babylon.
Noah was not removed from the flood.
Israel remained in Egypt during the plagues.
God preserved His people through judgment and tribulation.
Perhaps we too must prepare for such an hour.
This is why spiritual preparation matters so much.
A shallow faith will not survive deep waters.
A compromised Church will not stand in fierce persecution.
A prayerless believer will struggle when fear grips the world.
The hour is growing late, and many Christians are spiritually asleep.
Yet Scripture tells us:
“But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief.”
— 1 Thessalonians 5:4 (KJV)
Children of the day should recognize the signs and prepare their hearts.
This is not a call to panic.
It is a call to readiness.
We must:
deepen our prayer life,
know the Scriptures,
strengthen our families,
stand in holiness,
encourage one another,
and learn to trust God completely.
If harder days come, only a genuine faith will endure.
Yet there is hope even in tribulation.
The fire that destroys the worldliness of the flesh also purifies the saints of God.
Job declared:
“But he knoweth the way that I take: when he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold.”
— Job 23:10 (KJV)
That is the cry of the faithful believer.
Not confidence in earthly systems.
Not trust in governments.
Not dependence upon comfort and prosperity.
But confidence that Christ will sustain His people through whatever lies ahead.
Whether the LORD calls His Church home before tribulation or carries us through it, our responsibility remains the same:
watch,
pray,
remain faithful,
and stand firm.
The true escape is not merely avoiding suffering.
The true escape is remaining faithful enough to stand before the Son of Man when this present world passes away.
May God help us become a people whose faith survives the fire.