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    It's easy to see that these verses, alone, are susceptible to any interpretation one would like to attach to them. But that's not how the Bible is written. The Word of God will not contradict itself.
    (There is a primary rule to follow in studies of the scriptures: No matter what conclusion you reach when reading any particular passage, it MUST AGREE with the rest of the Book! If it does not do this, then your conclusion is wrong!)
    Let's look at more scriptures and try to piece the puzzle together. Here is Luke, Chapter 17...
34.
    These are tares who are removed during the tribulation. How do we know?...Read on...
Luke 17:37, And they answered and said unto him, where, Lord? And he said unto them,
    So the next question is: where are the eagles gathered? the Book of Job, Chapter 39, verses 28
through30 tells us...
28. She dwelleth and abideth on the rock, upon the crag of the rock, and the strong place.
    So where are they taken?... to where the slain are, where the Eagles (the biblical word for vultures) are gathered together. That certainly doesn't sound like heaven to me. Can we prove this?... Read Matthew 13, beginning with verse 24...
......Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, the kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in his field:
    Verse 30 states that the tares are gathered first. If there is any question about when this takes place, it is answered in Matthew 13, beginning with
verse 37, Jesus' own explanation of the parable of the tares.
37. He answered and said unto them, He that soweth the good seed is the Son of man.
    So we see then that the tares are taken out first. But out of where? Are they removed from the earth? Well, let's look and see. Jesus said, they are taken out from the wheat. In other words, they are separated from the Christians. They are gathered in bundles to be burned. How is this done?
    Consider the scripture in Revelation 9 and 4.
    There you have a picture of the tares, and how they are bundled to be burned. They have not the seal of God in their foreheads. We know that the sealing takes place during the Great Tribulation, That's how the tares are separated from the wheat. But when does the burning take place?
    If we refer again to Revelation, chapter 6, we find that it takes place after the Tribulation period, when the
sixth seal is opened, the heavens rolled back, and Jesus returns. Note the passage in verse 17... "For the great day of his wrath is come"...
    Does the picture begin to clear up now? During the Great Tribulation the condition of not being able to buy or sell separates the tares from the wheat. Christians will place themselves in the hands of God, and refuse the mark of the Beast. But the tares, not knowing God, will rely on the mark to keep them alive, allowing them to buy and sell and not be persecuted by the Beast and his "World Church". From that point, they are irrevocably lost. They have separated themselves from the wheat; they are "taken out", and they are bundled to be burned.
    So then, according to the correlation of the scriptures, when the heavens depart as a scroll when it is rolled together, that's when the tares are burned and the wheat is gathered into the barn. You will note that the tares have already been taken out (from among the wheat, not from the earth).
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