Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Rapture is a 1991 drama film written and directed by Michael Tolkin. It stars Mimi Rogers as a woman who converts from a swinger to a born-again Christian after learning that a true Rapture is upon the world.
A Thief in the Night is an evangelical Christian film series about the rapture and the Tribulation.It consists of four films: A Thief in the Night (1972), A Distant Thunder (1978), Image of the Beast (1981), and The Prodigal Planet (1983).
Films about the rapture, an eschatological theological position held by some Christians, particularly within branches of American evangelicalism, consisting of an end-time event when all Christian believers who are alive, along with resurrected believers, would rise "in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air."
A Thief in the Night presents a pre-tribulational dispensational futurist interpretation of Christian eschatology and the rapture popular among U.S. evangelicals, but is generally rejected by Roman Catholics, [2] Orthodox Christians, [3] Lutherans, and Reformed Christians. [4]
The Movie (2000) Left Behind II: Tribulation Force (2002) Left Behind: World at War (2005) Left Behind (2014) Left Behind: Rise of the Antichrist (2023) Vanished – Left Behind: Next Generation (2016) Rayford Steele: Brad Johnson: Nicolas Cage: Kevin Sorbo: Chloe Steele: Janaya Stephens: Cassi Thomson: Sarah Fisher Cameron "Buck" Williams ...
The Rapture (1991) Apocalypse (1998) Apocalypse II: Revelation (1999) Apocalypse III: Tribulation (1999) End of Days (1999) The Moment After (1999) The Omega Code (1999) The Apocalypse (2000, TNT Bible Series) Left Behind: The Movie (2000) (V) Apocalypse IV: Judgment (2001) Megiddo: The Omega Code 2 (2001) Left Behind II: Tribulation Force ...
Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie (October 4) Time Changer (October 25) Left Behind II: ... Origins of the Christian Film Industry (New York University Press, 2007)
In the Blink of an Eye was released to DVD on November 17, 2009. A week before the release, Pastor John Hagee (who is mentioned in the film) aired a special broadcast of his daily television program to discuss the importance of the film's message.