Last trump
One view is that the last trump of 1 Corinthians 15.52
must be identical to the seventh of the seven trumpets in Revelation 11.15.
Here are some differences between the two trumpets.
- The trumpet of the church age is called the "trump of God" 1 Thessalonians 4.16.
- The trumpet of Revelation is the trumpet of the seventh angel Revelation 11.15.
- The trumpet of the church age is singular.
- There is no mention of a series of trumpets.
- The trumpet of Revelation is the seventh of seven.
The phrase, last trump, has a different significance
In 1 Thessalonians 4, the trumpets calls the dead to life.
The seventh trumpet of Revelation occurs after a resurrection occurs Revelation 11.12.
The trumpet of the church age comes as a blessing.
The trumpet of Revelation comes with judgment and is called the third woe Revelation 11.14.
The trump of the church age sounds in "a moment, in the twinkling of an eye" 1 Corinthians 15.52.
The seventh trumpet of Revelation sounds for "days" Revelation 10.7.
Simply put, there is no real connection between the "last trump" and the seventh trumpet.
In Numbers 10.1-10, the Lord gives Moses the laws concerning the use of trumpets.
They were used to call the assembly together,
to announce the time to begin their journeying,
to go to war, and other various purposes.
Numbers 10.5-6 tell of the use of the trumpets to command the Israelites
to go forward when they were to take their journeys in the wilderness.
These verses mention that the camps on the east side go first
and the camps on the south side go second.
The other camps are not mentioned here, but they are mentioned in Numbers 2
all of the tribes of Israel are placed around the tabernacle in four camps.
The order given is east first, south second, Levites and the tabernacle third,
west fourth, and north last.
The first camps of Numbers 2 match the two camps mentioned in Numbers 10.5-6.
The Numbers 10.5-6 passage is obviously an abbreviation
for the calling of all the camps to go forward.
Although the phrase, last trump, is not mentioned in Numbers,
the trumpet that sounded to call the last camp (the north camp) to go forward
would be the last trump.
The last trump indicated that the entire congregation was now on the move.
Just as the last trumpet call in the wilderness meant
that the entire congregation was on the move,
so the last trump at the time of the rapture will indicate
that all of the saints are called up:
both the living and the dead 1 Thessalonians 4.15-16