The Smoking Furnace and the Burning Lamp
Genesis 15 is one of the strangest and most important passages in the Old Testament.
God has just promised Abraham a son, descendants like the stars, and a land. Abraham asks: "Lord GOD, whereby shall I know that I shall inherit it?" (15:8). God instructs him to prepare animals, cut them in half, and lay the pieces opposite each other. Abraham falls into a deep sleep. And then, in the dark:
"And it came to pass, that, when the sun went down, and it was dark, behold a smoking furnace and a burning lamp that passed between those pieces." (15:17)
In the ancient Near East, covenant ratification ceremonies required both parties to pass between the cut animals, signaling that each was binding themselves to the terms under penalty of becoming like the slaughtered animals. God instructs Abraham to prepare the covenant ceremony — and then puts Abraham to sleep and passes through alone.
This is a unilateral, unconditional covenant. God is binding himself to the promise without requiring Abraham to co-sign. And the form he takes is fire passing through the darkness — hidden, mysterious, present, sovereign. This is Thread 6's anchor: the God who is hidden in his covenant activity, binding himself to his people in a way they cannot fully see or comprehend, but which is absolutely certain.
The Tabernacle Thread
The most sustained image of Thread 6 in the Old Testament is the Tabernacle.
Exodus 25:8 — "And let them make me a sanctuary; that I may dwell among them." The Hebrew is shakan — to dwell, to tabernacle. God's presence locating itself in a specific place among his people. The Mishkan — the tabernacle — is the dwelling-place of the holy God in the midst of an unholy people. Every piece of furniture, every fabric, every measurement speaks of the one who would come and fulfill what the Tabernacle pointed toward.
The trajectory: - Exodus 25:8 — YHWH tabernacles in a physical structure - John 1:14 — "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt (eskēnōsen) among us." The verb is from the same root as shakan — tabernacled. The eternal Word tabernacled in a body. - Colossians 1:19 — "For it pleased the Father that in him should all fullness dwell." All the fullness of the Godhead in Christ. - 1 John 2:27 — The anointing "abideth in you." The Messiah's own anointing in each believer. - Revelation 21:3 — "Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them." The entire new creation becomes the dwelling place of God.
Structure → Body → Son (cosmic) → Each Believer → All Creation. The Tabernacle thread traces the movement of God's dwelling presence from an external structure to the whole of the new creation. Thread 6 is the progressive interiorization of the divine presence, culminating in the new Jerusalem where God and the Lamb are the temple (Revelation 21:22).
Chuck Missler's canonical integration method made this trajectory visible across the whole Bible. He traced the shakan/Mishkan thread from Sinai to the new creation as evidence of the integrated design that could only originate from outside the time domain.
In Christ: The New Testament Heart of Thread 6
The phrase "in Christ" (en Christō) appears approximately 164 times in Paul's letters. It is the most important two-word phrase in the New Testament.
It describes a union — not merely a position, not merely a legal status, but a genuine participation in the life, death, resurrection, and exaltation of Jesus Christ. The person who is in Christ has been crucified with him (Galatians 2:20), buried with him (Romans 6:4), raised with him (Colossians 3:1), seated with him in heavenly places (Ephesians 2:6), and hidden with him in God (Colossians 3:3).
Colossians 3:3 is Thread 6's summary verse: "For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." The believer's true life is hidden — not visible to the world, not yet fully visible to the believer — because it is located inside the risen Christ who is himself at the right hand of God. The "hiding" is not concealment but protection. Safe, secured, beyond reach of any force that would undo it.
The unveiling — the moment when what is hidden becomes visible — is the Second Coming: "When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with him in glory" (Colossians 3:4). Thread 6 moves from hiddenness to revelation, from the smoking furnace of Genesis 15 to the appearing of Christ in Revelation 19.
The Rapture: Thread 6's Consummation in This Age
Thread 6 has a specific event that marks the end of the current administration and the revelation of what has been hidden throughout the Church Age: the Rapture.
1 Thessalonians 4:16-17 — "For the Lord himself shall 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 (harpazō) together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air."
Harpazō — the Greek word translated "caught up." Latin: rapturus (from which "rapture" comes). It describes a sudden, violent seizing. The same word is used for the Spirit catching Philip away (Acts 8:39), for Paul being caught up to the third heaven (2 Corinthians 12:2), and for the male child being caught up to God in Revelation 12:5.
The Rapture is the moment when Thread 6's hiddenness ends. The life that was "hid with Christ in God" is revealed. Those who have been seated in heavenly places in Christ (Ephesians 2:6) are actually transported to where they have already been positioned. The Bride is taken to the Bridegroom's house — the Father's house of John 14:2 — before the Tribulation falls on the world.
This is the pre-tribulational Rapture in its biblical logic: the Church's position is heavenly, not earthly (Ephesians 2:6; Philippians 3:20; Colossians 3:3). The Church is not appointed for wrath (1 Thessalonians 5:9). The Tribulation is Israel's time — Daniel 9:24 makes this explicit. The Church must be removed before Israel's final dispensational chapter begins.
Darby's discovery in his 1827 convalescence was essentially a Thread 6 discovery: the Church's true position is in heavenly places in Christ, and a body positioned in heaven is not the body that experiences earthly tribulation.
Scholars Who Anchor This Thread
Chuck Missler — His Tabernacle studies and integrated canonical approach trace the shakan/Mishkan trajectory across the whole Bible. His insight that the integrated design originates "from outside the time domain" is Thread 6 made explicit.
Darby — His two 1827 exegetical discoveries were both Thread 6 discoveries: the Church's heavenly position (Ephesians 2:6) and the future dispensation (Thread 5). His pre-trib framework flows directly from Thread 6's logic.
John Walvoord — The Rapture Question provides the most comprehensive defense of the pre-tribulational Rapture, engaging every alternative position with the Greek texts.