Rapture Flight to Heaven

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Pre-Tribulation Rapture Forum ​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

In Loving Memory
  April 29, 1947 - September 5, 2020



Update: On Saturday, September 5th, 2020, the founder, administrator, and head moderator of this forum, Valerie S., went Home to be with the Lord.  Her obituary can be found on https://memorials.demarcofuneralhomes.com/valerie-skrzyniak/4321619/index.php.

This posting is dedicated to the forever memory and honor of Valerie, who was the founder of, and the inspiration for, this Web site.  The Web site will continue to operate in Valerie's remembrance, as requested by her family.  God bless!

Dedicated to God  the Father, Son, & Holy Spirit​​​​​​​
1 Thessalonians 4:15-18

   For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep.  For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first:  Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air and so shall we ever be with the Lord.  Wherefore comfort one another with these words.     

​​​​​​​2 Timothy 4:7-8
For I am already being poured out as a drink offering, and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Finally, there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give to me on that Day, and not to me only but also to all who have loved His appearing
.

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A Country Heaven

I was so thrilled to see the testimony of Hillary Williams who died in a car wreck and upon entering heaven saw her grandparents, Audrey and Hank Williams. There with them were Merle Kilgore and June and Johnny Cash. Thanks to Calvin for finding the 700 club clip and posting it.

When someone you love to hear sing passes away, like Johnny Cash, you hope they made it to heaven, but isn't it awesome to KNOW that he did.

As always use discernment. Here is the link to the video:

Fair use for information and discussion purposes.

http://pub37.bravenet.com/forum/static/show.php?usernum=3138553015&frmid=8832&msgid=1226715&cmd=show

And here are some great old hymns by country singers:

FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

GEORGE JONES - "HOW BEAUTIFUL HEAVEN MUST BE"



FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

ALAN JACKSON - "I WANT TO STROLL OVER HEAVEN WITH YOU"

Re: A Country Heaven

Hank Williams on early TV. The video quality is poor since it is such an old film. The girl dancing in the center next to Hank is June Carter and the lead singer, none other than Roy Acuff!

FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

"I SAW THE LIGHT"



FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

JUNE & JOHNNY CASH - "GOSPEL MEDLEY"



FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

PATSY CLINE - "LIFE'S RAILWAY TO HEAVEN"

Re: A Country Heaven

FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

ROY ACUFF - "I'LL FLY AWAY"



FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

PORTER WAGGONER - "THE GATHERING IN THE SKY"

Re: A Country Heaven

"FOR YOUR DISCERNMENT!!!"
"Fair Use for Information or Discussion Purposes"


The Old Rugged Cross-Johnny & June Carter Cash.wmv



Johnny Cash sings "How Great Thou Art"

Uploaded by abargle on Dec 2, 2009

From the August 30, 1969 episode of "The Johnny Cash Show," Cash delivers a knock-out performance of the classic hymn, "How Great Thou Art" backed up as usual by the Carter Family and the Statler Brothers.



Johnny Cash: Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord)

Uploaded by abargle on May 3, 2009

The show-closer from the Sept. 6, 1969 episode of "The Johnny Cash Show," Johnny, the Carter Family (featuring Anita Carter) and the whole ensemble bring down the house with "Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord)."

Re: A Country Heaven

Calvin, love these songs!! What a great find. Thanks so much for sharing them. Imagine that we get to hear Johnny and June sing in heaven soon.

Re: A Country Heaven

FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

EMMYLOU HARRIS - "WHO WILL SING FOR ME"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTWXbr39CAk&feature=related

No embedded video, just click the link above.

FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

FLATT & SCRUGGS - "I'M ON MY WAY TO CAANAN LAND"

Re: A Country Heaven

I wonder if Elvis Presley made it to heaven; & to being reunited with his mother, grandparents, etc.?

He too, is noted for singing gospel music.

Maranatha!
Tammy

Re: A Country Heaven

Tammy..

"Fair Use for Information & Discussion Purposes"


By Steve Beard -- Risen Magazine

As a young man, Presley was raised in poverty and southern Pentecostalism. He attended a conservative Assemblies of God church, but would often sneak off in the middle of the service to listen to the preaching and singing at a black church less than a mile away. Elvis loved gospel music and dreamed of singing it professionally before his own career took off in the mid 1950s.

“We used to read the Bible every night, if you can believe that-he used to read aloud to me and then talk about it," testifies Dottie Harmony, who dated Elvis in 1956. "He was very religious-there was nothing phony about that at all."

"I never expected to be anybody important. Maybe I'm not now, but whatever I am, whatever I will become will be what God has chosen for me," he told Photoplay magazine in 1957.

After the Easter service at First Assembly of God in Memphis in 1958, the Rev. James Hamill says that Elvis told him, "Pastor, I'm the most miserable young man you've ever seen. I've got all the money I'll ever need to spend. I've got millions of fans. I've got friends. But I'm doing what you taught me not to do, and I'm not doing the things you taught me to do."

This struggle hounded Elvis throughout his life. No less than the Apostle Paul spoke of it this way: "For what I do is not the good I want to do; no, the evil I do not want to do-this I keep doing" (Romans 7:19).

Elvis told his friend Pat Boone, "I wish I could go to church like you." After Boone told him he could, Elvis replied, "No, they wouldn't leave me alone. I would distract the minister."

Acknowledged that potential difficulty, Boone assured Elvis that "if they see that you are coming for the same reason that they are, all of that would ease away and you could actually worship freely like everybody else. And it would do you a world of good, Elvis." According to Boone, Elvis "felt like he couldn't go anywhere in public. So he was sort of inprisoned. I felt like he lived like Public Enemy #1 instead of the King of Rock 'n' Roll. It stunted his social and spiritual growth."

Spiritual exploration in the 1960s


Like so many other young Americans during the 1960s, Elvis explored exotic Eastern religions and experimented with drugs while reading Timothy Leary's Psychedelic Experience. He was, by all accounts, an eccentric religious seeker on turbodrive. He seemed to have every earthly pleasure at his disposal, yet he had an insatiable intellectual and spiritual hunger for the mystical and supernatural.



One man who seemed to tap into that spiritual desire was a 24-year-old hairdresser named Larry Geller who told Elvis that he was most interested in discovering "where we come from, why we are here, and where we are going."

Elvis saw through the shallowness of stardom but was a prisoner to his own success. He hungered for more out of life and became obsessed with his destiny and purpose.

Under the tutelage of Geller, Elvis began to devour books on Hinduism, Judaism, numerology, Theosophy, positive thinking, the new-age, meditation, and Christianity. This sent Elvis off into a whole different spiritual direction and it did not sit well with those in his inner circle.

Although Elvis explored and researched many different religions and practices, he never abandoned or rejected his beliefs about Christianity. He was a true believer, but he also had the appetite of a spiritually-starved seeker. In one conversation with Geller, Elvis stated, "All I want is to know the truth, to know and experience God. I'm a searcher, that's what I'm all about."

Throughout Presley's life, gospel music was the constant element of solace to man who was burning the candle at both ends in the fast lane of international celebrity. The only Grammy Awards that Elvis earned were with his gospel records. To many fans, he is as well known for "How Great Thou Art" as he is for "Blue Suede Shoes."

Elvis owed a lot to gospel music and was stubbornly adamant about showing his gratitude. He was one of the only rock and roll stars who recorded religious music-crossing back and forth over the divide between the secular and the sacred. He insisted on singing "Peace in the Valley" on the Ed Sullivan Show for his mother and even took gospel music into the International Hotel in Las Vegas, despite protests from the management.

Glimpses of the sacred in Vegas


It was the Vegas years in the 1970s, however, that seemed to drain so much of Elvis's vibrancy. Presley struggled with womanizing, pill-popping, reclusivity, and uncontrollable weight gain. He turned to uppers, downers and pain killers to dull the ache of depression and loneliness. Fame was a harsh taskmaster and Elvis and his entire entourage knew it.



As if to reconnect with his childhood faith, Elvis hired gospel groups such as the Imperials, the Sweet Inspirations, and J.D. Sumner and the Stamps to sing back-up for him while he was in Las Vegas. Surrounded by all of the glittery temptations that Vegas had to offer, Elvis seemed to be seeking to provide a glimpse of the sacred--for his audience, as well as for himself.



It would be a mistake to describe what went on in the Vegas shows as a revival meeting under neon lights. Nevertheless, Presley appeared to be hungering for the security and peace that he found in the faith of his childhood and was persistent to use his stature to ensure that he was able to play by his own rules.



Gospel singer J.D. Sumner recalls a woman approaching the stage in Vegas with a crown sitting atop a pillow and Elvis asking her what it was. She answered, "It's for you. You're the King." Elvis took her hand, smiled, and told her, "No honey, I'm not the King. Christ is the King. I'm just a singer."

…………………………………………………………..

In December 1976, Elvis requested that television evangelist Rex Humbard and his wife Maude Aimee meet with him backstage in Las Vegas in between sets. "Jesus is coming back really soon, isn't he, Rex?" Elvis said as he began quoting all kinds of Scriptures about the Second Coming. "It really shocked me that Elvis knew all of those Scriptures from the Old and New Testaments about the Lord's return," Humbard told me in an interview.



Elvis, Maude Aimee, Rex and J.D. Sumner were sequestered into a large closet in order to have some privacy and speak about spiritual matters. "I could see he was reaching back to his childhood when he used to play his guitar and go to church and sing church songs," recalled Humbard. "And I could see he was reaching back to the past--that spirituality, that feeling that he had years and years before that had been planted in his heart."



What really shook Elvis up during their time together was when Maude Aimee told Elvis about her prayer that he would become a "bell sheep" for God. As Elvis asked her about what that meant, she explained: "In the Holy Land, they put a bell on one sheep and when it moves all the rest of the flock moves with him. I have been praying for years for you, Elvis, that you would become a bell sheep. If you fully dedicated your life to God you could lead millions of people into the kingdom of the Lord." According to Humbard, "Elvis went all to pieces. He started crying. She shook him up by that statement."



As the four of them held hands and prayed, "he rededicated his heart to the Lord," recalled Humbard. "I asked God to bless him and to send His spirit into his heart and meet his every need." Right after their prayer time, Maude Aimee went to the hotel gift shop and purchased a symbolic bell with a little diamond in it. During the evening's second show, Elvis held up the small bell and smiled to Maude Aimee and then dedicated "How Great Thou Art" to the Humbards.

…………………………………………………………………….

The prayers of Elvis's final days
"Elvis recommitted his life to Jesus Christ on that night," says Rick Stanley, Elvis's stepbrother. "Elvis knew the Lord. He was a modern day King David," he told me in an interview. Stanley believes that, like King David of the Bible, Presley was a man who pursued God, yet stumbled often into the sins of the flesh.



On the day before Presley died, Stanley told Elvis that a friend of his was telling him about Jesus and how she was praying for him. "Elvis Presley, at 42 years old, looked at me and said, 'Ricky, she's telling you the truth.' Then he said, 'People who talk to you about Jesus really care.' I talked with Elvis for a while … then left to run an errand." When he returned to Graceland, Elvis was dead.



On the night of his death, Elvis prayed, "Dear Lord, please show me a way. I'm tired and confused, and I need your help." A few minutes later, he looked at Stanley and said, "Rick, we should all begin to live for Christ." On the previous day, Stanley heard Elvis praying, "God, forgive me for my sins. Let…people…have compassion and understanding of the things I have done."



Elvis was not a saint, and no one knew that better than Presley himself. He was an enigma who touched a nerve in American culture. There is, of course, no one on the planet that can attract 70,000 fans to his gravesite to recognize the 25th anniversary of his death. While there, fans recited the Lord's Prayer, repeated the 23rd Psalm, and joined together in singing "How Great Thou Art."



Can 70,000 fans be wrong? Sure, but these fans were not. Granted, there are small numbers of fanatics who decorate their houses with black velvet Elvis paintings and ceramic busts of The King. Nevertheless, the vast majority of fans are simply people who are grateful for the joy that Presley was able to bring into their lives through his movies and music.



Did he stumble and fall? Yes, quite often. Like so many other famous men of his era such as Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy, Presley was tempted by the devil in the wilderness. Unlike Jesus, they were not able to resist the lures of the flesh, but we should not dismiss their contributions. Admittedly, it is sometimes easier to judge someone according to an offending snapshot of their life than to view it as an entire movie, filled with triumphs and failures.



Each one of us, who are not afforded the smorgasbord of temptation that a man like Elvis faced, must endeavor with fear and trembling to be in the world and yet not of it--no small challenge.



Throughout his career, Elvis was a seeker after God. Sometimes that journey led him into more confusion, but he hungered to know God and experience his love. And he prayed with contrition. Not bad lessons of us.

When he died, Elvis had 14 different drugs active in his system. There are plenty of lessons to be gleaned from Elvis's tragic life but they should be absorbed through the prism of sorrow and grace.



If one looks at Elvis as a prodigal son, there is good reason to believe that he died on his journey back to the Father's House.

At the funeral for Elvis Presley, the main address was given by the Rev. C.W. Bradley, minister of the Wooddale Church of Christ in Memphis. He spoke of Elvis's determination, decency, and his love of family. Bradley also acknowledged that Elvis was a "frail human being" and that "he would be the first to admit his weakness. Perhaps because of his rapid rise to fame and fortune he was thrown into temptations that some never experience. Elvis would not want anyone to think that he had no flaws or faults. But now that he's gone, I find it more helpful to remember his good qualities, and I hope you do too."



The way in which a person dies is not always the best way to remember the contribution he or she made while they lived. All of us have seasons of our lives that we would sooner forget--whether we were on drugs, in prison, or living the life of a prodigal. It is a worthwhile endeavor to work on extending mercy to others in the same way that we trust the good Lord will extend it to us. We could all use a little trip to "graceland," even when we are remembering Elvis.

Re: A Country Heaven

Sandy, that is quite a story about Elvis. I had never read some of those things before. It is an excellent article. Thanks for sharing it with us.

Re: A Country Heaven

And I thank you too, Sandy, for that article on Elvis. I'm sooo glad to know that when we get to heaven, we'll also get to meet him there.

As well as say "Hi!" again to Andy Griffith too.

Maranatha!
Tammy

Re: A Country Heaven

FAIR USE FOR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION PURPOSES

ELVIS PRESLEY & THE JORDANAIRES - "HE TOUCHED ME"



Some may know this and some not, but Elvis started singing in the early 50's at country venues like the Louisiana Hayride radio program, and Red Foley's radio show. He sang at the Grand Ole Opry once but no one seemed to care much for his music and didn't think he would go far. What a surprise for them when Elvis became the biggest name in music ever.

Re: A Country Heaven

Tammy and TSue..

I am glad you enjoyed the article..I did too..when Tammy wondered if Elvis was a Christian, I had thought I read once that he was and decided to check and see if I could find anything about it, and found that article..I was also amazed at what I found and decided to post the whole article..

Glad you enjoyed it..