Recently I wrote about a pastor on TV discussing "End of Times" theory. See HERE.
I have discussed this with my friend Father Francis Maple. This is what he said:
Thank you for such a thoughtful and important question. It is one that many Catholics quietly wonder about.
First, let me gently say that what you heard on television — the Rapture, a seven-year Tribulation, a political Antichrist ruling the world, a literal thousand-year earthly reign of Christ — is not the way the Catholic Church understands the Book of Revelation.
Let me try to answer your “WHY?” step by step.
1. Why not the Rapture and Millennium scenario?
The Book of Revelation is written in apocalyptic language — symbolic, poetic, full of imagery. It is not meant as a chronological newspaper forecast of future events.
The Church teaches:
- There is no secret Rapture.
- There is no literal political 1,000-year earthly reign of Christ.
- The “millennium” (Revelation 20) symbolically refers to the present age of the Church — the time between Christ’s Resurrection and His Second Coming.
Christ
will return once, publicly and
gloriously.
There will be:
- The resurrection of the dead
- The General (Final) Judgement
- The renewal of creation
That is all.
So your instinct is correct: the Catholic understanding is indeed simpler — and deeper.
2. Particular Judgement and Final Judgement — Why Both?
You have stated Catholic teaching beautifully.
At death:
- The soul undergoes Particular Judgement.
- Heaven, Purgatory, or Hell.
At the end of time:
- The body is raised.
- There is a General Judgement.
Now your question: Why a General Judgement if we are already judged?
Because salvation is not merely private.
Our
lives affect others.
Our sins affect others.
Our hidden goodness affects others.
At the Final Judgement:
- God’s justice will be publicly revealed.
- The full truth of every life will be shown.
- The hidden workings of grace will be made known.
It
is not to re-judge us.
It is to reveal the glory of God's justice and mercy
before all creation.
3. Why Do We Need New Bodies?
This is the most beautiful part.
We are not angels.
Angels
are pure spirits.
Human beings are body and soul together.
God
did not create us as souls trapped in
bodies.
He created us as embodied persons.
Death is unnatural. It tears apart what God joined.
Resurrection is God repairing what death destroyed.
Christ
rose bodily.
He ate fish.
He showed His wounds.
He could be touched.
Yet He was glorified.
Our risen bodies will be like His.
Not subject to:
- Suffering
- Decay
- Death
But fully alive.
4. What Will We “Do” in Heaven?
We must be careful here.
Heaven is not:
- An eternal picnic
- Nor clouds and harps
- Nor endless church services
Heaven is the Beatific Vision — seeing God face to face.
Scripture speaks of:
- A “new heaven and a new earth”
- A wedding feast
- A city
- Joy
- Communion
Will we “eat”? We won’t need to. We will be fully alive persons.
5. Why Does God Do It This Way?
Because God does not abandon creation.
He redeems it.
If salvation were only about souls escaping earth, then creation would be a failure.
Instead:
- Creation is fulfilled.
- The body is restored.
- History is brought to completion.
- Justice is revealed.
- Love triumphs.
It is not a complicated divine drama for its own sake.
It is the completion of a love story.
6. One Final Clarification
You wrote:
“Peter and the rest of the Apostles and Saints… are souls in Heaven.”
Yes — but they are incomplete in one sense.
They await the resurrection of the body.
Even the saints are waiting for the fullness.
That is how important the body is.
In Summary
The Catholic view is:
- No secret Rapture.
- No earthly political millennium.
- One Second Coming.
- Resurrection of the body.
- Final Judgement.
- New creation.
And the “WHY?” is this:
Because
God saves the whole person.
Because justice must be revealed.
Because creation is meant for glory.
Because love finishes what it begins.
You are right — the Catholic vision is simpler.
And in my view, far more beautiful.
God bless,
Fr. Francis
I hope this helps.

This is really interesting! I'm not a part of the Catholic Church, but I find different religious views really interesting and those pieces of them definitely resonate with me. Thank you so much for sharing and helping me learn!
ReplyDeleteThank you Alex. It is nice to see you visiting my Blog here; please call again. Also visit The Christian Lounge - a place where Christians of different denominations share their stories and views. Click on the badge/icon on the top of the right hand column.
DeleteGod bless you.
I BELIEVE! I do not understand. I was raised in a preacher's home. Fundamental, Pentecostal, dedicated Christian man who loved everyone. With a 3rd grade education, he was about as wise as Father Ignatius. He preached the Love of Jesus. Of course I heard of the Lord's return to earth. AS I got older I have learned ALL Christians do not think alike nor agree on 'Prophecy' in scripture . I also learned that even members of the Roman Catholic Church can be Christians. ;-). After meeting and knowing several dedicated Catholic men. I even had the privilege of a few beers with my friend in PA and his Priest. My daddy would have frowned on that for sure.
ReplyDeleteI have decided to live the best I can according to His Teachings. I try to love my neighbor as myself. Having met you on-line my friend, I believe you too are a dedicated Christian, just maybe a little more Christian than I. :-O
Sending the best your way, with Love and Thanks for the prayers.
One thing I know for sure, Jack: Jesus was not a Catholic.
DeleteI find it sad that after so many years since His teachings to love one another, many Christians still argue about their differences rather than rejoice in what unites us - One God, One Son Jesus and The Holy Spirit.
Praying for you always my friends. God bless you and Sherry.
Thanks, Fr. Francis, for your beautiful explanation here!!! It made so much sense of how God wishes to redeem all of His creation, body and soul. Like Jack, I don't understand it, but I have faith. Blessings, Victor!
ReplyDeleteThanx Martha. I am grateful for Father Francis' explanation. I find all this difficult to understand; and I doubt Saint Peter will make us sit a test before we enter Heaven.
DeleteGod bless you.
Interesting perspective. Based on my reading of Revelation/Daniel, I’ve landed on a different view.
ReplyDeleteBut I think we all can agree on the most important part—that Jesus wins in the end! My husband says jokingly that he's Pan-Trib - it will all pan out at the end. 🤔
I guess your husband is right, Debby. Indeed, Jesus is victorious over death and sin. He has redeemed us with His death and sacrifice.
DeleteGod bless you both.
Since I was raised in an evangelical Baptist church, our beliefs are not in total agreement. BUT I do believe we are in agreement on the most important thing and that is our need to believe Jesus Christ came to earth to pay the price for our sins and we can be absolutely sure of our salvation if we believe He has redeemed us.
ReplyDeleteThank you for these thought-provoking articles.
I agree with you 100% Barbara. The important thing is that Jesus came to earth to redeem us from our sins. I have just written on this on The Christian Lounge.
DeleteGod bless you.
Thank you for going to all that effort to teach us the truth and the way. I loved it. Deep though. So what do you think about cremation?
ReplyDeleteMany thanx Sandie. I am grateful to Father Francis for his explanation.
DeleteI've no particular thoughts about cremation either for or against. I believe it does not affect the soul and God is capable of resurrecting the body from ashes when the time comes. However, I feel it is important to treat the body before cremation with respect. A proper church service/Mass should take place and the ashes buried respectfully not kept at home in an urn on display like an ornament. Also, I would not agree with ashes being scattered to the winds as this in my view is not respectful.
This is just a personal view. I do not believe that burial or cremation will affect the soul's eternal destination at judgement by God.
God bless you always.
I am a cradle Catholic and I learned some things from your post. Thank you Father Francis Maple!
ReplyDeleteThank you Kathy. God bless you.
DeleteWhat a speedy response. Thank you, Fr. Maple!
ReplyDeleteLike your latest book (which just recently arrived), I want to save this post and savor it slowly like one would a fine port.
Many thanx, Mevely.
DeleteI am grateful for a full and speedy response from Fr Francis about this subject. As you say, it is worth copy/pasting his explanation for future reference.
I hope you enjoy my latest book "CHRISTIAN QUESTIONS" Please let me know what you think of it when you've read it.
God bless, my friend.
This is a very good explanation, thanks for the follow up!
ReplyDeleteMany thanx my friend.
DeleteGod bless you, Mimi.
Well said Victor! This is solid Catholic teaching.
ReplyDeleteThanks to Father Francis for writing this post for me.
DeleteGod bless, Manny.