The “Parable” of the Trumpet and the New Testament

by Chris

Introduction

Up to this point, the Old Testament foundation has shown that the trumpet consistently functions as an instrument of divine warning, presence, or action, never as the identity of a human messenger. This section now turns specifically to the New Testament passages Shincheonji commonly appeals to in order to justify the claim that “trumpet = messenger.” The intent here is narrower and more focused: to examine whether the New Testament itself ever supports the idea that a trumpet symbolizes a human revealer of God’s word.

This matters because Shincheonji often argues that even if the Old Testament trumpet imagery refers to alarms or judgment, the New Testament “reveals” a deeper, fulfilled meaning where the trumpet becomes a person who proclaims revelation. Passages such as 1 Corinthians 14:8, 1 Thessalonians 4:16, 1 Corinthians 15:52, and Revelation 8–11 are used to support this shift. The following analysis will show that these verses do not redefine the trumpet as a human messenger. Instead, they intensify its original function. In the New Testament, the trumpet is consistently tied to God’s direct action, the return of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, and heavenly judgment — realities that explicitly exclude human intermediaries. Far from supporting “trumpet = messenger,” the New Testament closes that door entirely by locating the trumpet firmly in the realm of divine initiative, not human authority.

Be aware that groups like Shincheonji often respond to criticism by subtly adjusting their doctrine—a common tactic involving denial, adaptation, and manipulation; is a common tactic among high-control organizations. They may gather information on critics and “flip the script,” portraying exposure as persecution or misinformation. It’s essential to carefully observe doctrinal shifts rather than accepting new explanations at face value. Stay vigilant against gaslighting through evolving teachings designed to counter today’s realities and criticisms. (Read More)

1 Corinthians 14:8

“For if the trumpet gives an uncertain sound, who will prepare for battle?”

In 1 Corinthians 14:8, Paul writes, “For if the trumpet gives an uncertain sound, who will prepare for battle?” This statement appears within a sustained argument about clarity and intelligibility in Christian worship. Paul draws on a familiar military image: a trumpet blast signals soldiers to act, but only if the sound is clear and recognizable. The emphasis of the analogy is not on who blows the trumpet, but on whether the sound communicates anything meaningful. An unclear signal fails its purpose because it does not prompt a proper response.

The context of the passage makes Paul’s intent unmistakable. The Corinthian church was misusing the gift of tongues by speaking in ways that others could not understand, turning worship into confusion rather than edification (1 Corinthians 14:6–12). Paul contrasts unintelligible speech with prophecy and teaching that can be understood and therefore builds up the church. Within this argument, the trumpet functions as a metaphor for speech. An “uncertain sound” represents confusing or meaningless language, while a clear trumpet represents intelligible instruction that enables listeners to respond appropriately. Paul is addressing communication effectiveness, not prophetic identity or eschatological fulfillment.

Shincheonji’s claim fails because it misreads a rhetorical comparison as a symbolic code. Paul is not redefining the trumpet as a human messenger or introducing a hidden layer of prophetic meaning. He is using a common analogy to illustrate why clarity matters in corporate worship. The subject matter is pastoral instruction, not Revelation, end-times prophecy, or a chain of divine revelation through a specific individual. To turn Paul’s metaphor into evidence for a future “trumpet messenger” is to impose an entirely foreign category onto the text. First Corinthians 14:8 teaches that speech in the church must be clear and edifying. It does not support the idea that a trumpet represents a person who reveals hidden truth, and it offers no foundation for identifying the trumpet in Revelation with a human messenger.

Category Biblical Context Shincheonji’s Claim Why the Claim Fails
Passage purpose Illustration about clarity in communication Hidden prophecy about a messenger The verse is an analogy, not a prophecy
Immediate context Disorder caused by unintelligible tongues (1 Cor 14:6–12) Discussion of fulfillment and revelation Context is worship practice, not eschatology
Trumpet imagery Military signal that must be clear Symbol of a person proclaiming revelation Focus is on sound clarity, not identity
“Uncertain sound” Confusing or meaningless speech Lack of fulfillment understanding Paul defines uncertainty as unintelligibility
“Clear sound” Edifying, understandable instruction New teaching revealed by a pastor Adds meaning foreign to Paul’s argument
Role of the speaker Any believer speaking in worship A singular promised messenger No individual is singled out
Genre Didactic teaching with rhetorical analogy Symbolic prophecy Category error
Theological focus Edification and order in the church Revelation authority Shifts from pastoral instruction to authority claim

1 Corinthians 15:50–55

“I tell you this, brothers: flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable.
Behold! I tell you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed.
For this perishable body must put on the imperishable, and this mortal body must put on immortality.”

First Corinthians 15:50–55 stands at the climax of Paul’s teaching on the resurrection and leaves no room for symbolic reinterpretation. Writing to believers (“brothers”), Paul explains that “flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God” and that both the dead and the living must undergo a transformation. This transformation occurs “in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.” The language is concrete and physical. The dead are “raised imperishable,” the living are “changed,” and death itself is “swallowed up in victory” (v. 54). Nothing in the passage points to intellectual awakening, doctrinal understanding, or spiritual metaphor. Everything points to the bodily resurrection and the final defeat of death at Christ’s return.

The broader context of 1 Corinthians 15 confirms this interpretation. The entire chapter is devoted to defending the reality of bodily resurrection against those who denied it (vv. 12–19). Paul grounds the hope of believers in the historical, physical resurrection of Jesus, declaring Christ to be “the firstfruits” of those who have fallen asleep (vv. 20–23). The passage culminates in verses 50–55, where Paul describes the final transformation that occurs when Christ returns. The “last trumpet” is not an abstract idea or a metaphor for preaching. It is the divine signal that marks the end of redemptive history. This same event is described elsewhere as the visible descent of Christ “with the trumpet of God” (1 Thessalonians 4:16), the gathering of the elect “with a loud trumpet call” (Matthew 24:31), and the proclamation of Christ’s eternal reign at the sounding of the seventh trumpet (Revelation 11:15). In every case, the trumpet is heavenly, supernatural, and tied directly to Christ’s return, not to the speech of a human messenger.

Shincheonji’s interpretation fails because it requires a complete inversion of Paul’s argument. By redefining the “last trumpet” as a human messenger revealing fulfillment, SCJ turns a cosmic, supernatural event into a sermon. By redefining resurrection as “understanding revelation,” they replace the physical transformation of the body with cognitive enlightenment. By redefining “mystery” (μυστήριον) as secret knowledge given to a modern leader, they sever the term from Paul’s consistent usage, where it refers to God’s redemptive plan revealed in Christ (Ephesians 3:4–6; Colossians 1:26–27). The result is not a reinterpretation of 1 Corinthians 15, but a denial of its central claim. Paul’s gospel stands or falls on the bodily resurrection of the dead. Any system that allegorizes this hope replaces Christ’s power with human authority and undermines the very foundation of the Christian faith.

Category Biblical Context Shincheonji’s Claim Why the Claim Fails
Audience “Brothers” — believers in the church End-time audience receiving fulfillment The passage addresses all believers
Topic Bodily resurrection and transformation Spiritual enlightenment Context is resurrection, not knowledge
“Last trumpet” Divine signal marking Christ’s return A human messenger proclaiming revelation Redefines a supernatural event as a sermon
Nature of the event Instantaneous, cosmic transformation Gradual understanding of doctrine “In a moment… in the twinkling of an eye”
Result for the dead “Raised imperishable” Spiritually awakened Explicitly physical resurrection
Result for the living “We shall be changed” Receive correct teaching Bodily transformation, not cognition
Meaning of “mystery” (μυστήριον) God’s redemptive plan revealed in Christ Hidden knowledge given to a pastor Paul’s usage consistently centers on Christ
Defeat of death “Death is swallowed up in victory” Ignorance overcome Reduces victory over death to education

1 Thessalonians 4:16

“For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first.”

First Thessalonians 4:16 presents one of the clearest descriptions of Christ’s return in the New Testament, and its language leaves no room for symbolic reinterpretation. The subject of the passage is explicit: “the Lord Himself.” The action is equally clear: He “will descend from heaven.” Paul then lists the accompanying signs — a cry of command, the voice of an archangel, and the trumpet of God — all of which belong unmistakably to the realm of the supernatural. The result of this event is not instruction, enlightenment, or organizational change, but resurrection: “the dead in Christ will rise first.” Every element of the verse points to divine initiative and cosmic intervention, not human mediation.

The context of the passage confirms this reading. Paul is writing to Thessalonian believers who were anxious about fellow Christians who had died before Christ’s return. His purpose is pastoral and consoling, not speculative or symbolic. He assures them that death does not exclude believers from Christ’s coming kingdom, because God Himself will act decisively to raise the dead. The genre is apostolic eschatological teaching, grounded in the historic Christian hope of bodily resurrection. Within this framework, “the trumpet of God” functions as a divine summons, calling the dead to life and marking the moment of Christ’s visible return. This imagery echoes earlier biblical theophanies, such as the trumpet at Sinai announcing God’s presence (Exodus 19:16–19) and the “great trumpet” gathering God’s people in Isaiah 27:13. In every case, the trumpet accompanies God’s direct action, not the speech of a human figure.

Shincheonji’s interpretation collapses because it contradicts the explicit claims of the text. Paul does not say that Jesus works invisibly through a promised pastor, nor does he describe an ongoing spiritual process. He says “the Lord Himself will descend,” and he ties that descent to the physical resurrection of the dead. Recasting the trumpet as a human messenger replaces a one-time, cosmic act with organizational teaching and strips the passage of its comforting purpose. Paul’s entire argument is built on the certainty of Christ’s personal, visible return and the resurrection it brings. To substitute that hope with a sermon delivered by a man is to erase the very promise Paul is affirming. First Thessalonians 4:16 proclaims the supernatural return of Jesus Christ — the climax of redemptive history — and the trumpet of God announces His reign, not the authority of a human intermediary.

Revelation 10:7

“But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he is about to sound, the mystery of God would be finished, as He announced to His servants the prophets.”

Revelation 10:7 states, “In the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he is about to sound, the mystery of God will be finished, as He announced to His servants the prophets.” The observations from the text are straightforward. The subject is the seventh angel, not a man, and the timing is explicitly tied to the imminent sounding of the seventh trumpet, which is fulfilled in Revelation 11:15. The event described is the completion of “the mystery of God,” and the text itself defines this mystery as something already announced through the prophets. The verse does not introduce a new revealer or a hidden figure. It points to the fulfillment of what God has already promised throughout redemptive history.

The literary and narrative context reinforces this meaning. Revelation 10 functions as an interlude between the sixth and seventh trumpets, a pause that heightens anticipation before the final consummation. John sees a mighty angel descending from heaven, holding a little scroll that is distinct from the sealed scroll of Revelation 5. The angel swears by God that “there will be no more delay” (v. 6), signaling that God’s redemptive plan is reaching its appointed completion. This scene unfolds entirely in the heavenly realm and centers on divine action. Nothing in the passage suggests a human intermediary or an earthly proclamation of new doctrine.

Scripture consistently uses the term “mystery” (mystērion) to describe God’s redemptive plan revealed in Christ, not secret information disclosed through a later individual. Paul speaks of “the mystery of His will” as God’s purpose to unite all things in Christ (Ephesians 1:9–10), a mystery once hidden but now made known through the gospel (Romans 16:25–26; Colossians 1:26–27). In this light, the “mystery of God” being finished in Revelation 10:7 refers to the consummation of that same redemptive plan as Christ’s kingdom is fully revealed. Shincheonji’s claim fails because it redefines “mystery” as new knowledge, inserts a human figure where the text names a heavenly angel, and relocates a supernatural heavenly announcement into an earthly organizational fulfillment. Revelation 10:7 does not predict the appearance of a Promised Pastor. It announces that God’s work in Christ, long proclaimed by the prophets, is about to reach its final and complete fulfillment.

Category Biblical Context Shincheonji’s Claim Why the Claim Fails
Subject The seventh angel (heavenly being) Spiritual angel working through Lee Man-hee Inserts a human intermediary not named in the text
Timing “When he is about to sound” — just before Rev 11:15 Ongoing era of fulfillment Text places event at the brink of final consummation
Setting Heavenly, apocalyptic vision Earthly proclamation through an organization Reverses location and speaker
Event described “The mystery of God will be finished” Revelation of hidden parables Completion, not disclosure
Definition of “mystery” What God “announced to His servants the prophets” Previously unknown truth revealed now Mystery is already revealed, now fulfilled
Meaning of mystērion God’s redemptive plan in Christ (Eph 1:9–10; Col 1:26–27) Special knowledge given to a pastor Shifts mystery from Christ to information
Role of prophets Earlier proclamation of the same plan Partial or corrupted understanding Contradicts explicit continuity in the text
Nature of fulfillment Consummation of redemption Doctrinal explanation Reduces divine completion to human teaching
Relation to Rev 11:15 Prepares for Christ’s universal reign Establishment of SCJ Heaven declares Christ’s kingdom, not an organization

Revelation 8:6 -7 

Revelation 8:6–7 introduces the first of the trumpet judgments with explicit clarity about who acts and what occurs. The text states that seven angels prepare to blow their trumpets, and the first angel sounds his trumpet. What follows is not teaching, proclamation, or revelation, but immediate judgment: hail and fire mixed with blood are thrown upon the earth. The result is catastrophic and physical—one-third of the earth, one-third of the trees, and all green grass are burned. The scope of the event is global and cosmic, affecting creation itself. There is no human messenger in view, no new doctrine being taught, and no parabolic language suggesting internal or symbolic fulfillment within a religious organization.

The literary and theological context reinforces this reading. Revelation 8 follows the opening of the seventh seal, where the prayers of the saints rise before God and are answered with judgment poured out from heaven (8:3–5). The trumpet judgments that follow function as divine responses to those prayers. Genre-wise, this is apocalyptic symbolism—vivid imagery communicating real divine judgment rather than hidden instruction. The trumpets announce partial judgments meant to warn the world before the final consummation at the seventh trumpet (11:15). The imagery is intentionally rooted in the Exodus plagues. Hail and fire recall the seventh plague on Egypt (Exodus 9:23–25), while blood echoes the first plague when the Nile was turned to blood (Exodus 7:20–21). The repeated use of “one-third” signifies restraint. God is judging, but not yet destroying completely, leaving space for repentance.

Shincheonji’s interpretation fails at every interpretive level. By redefining the seven angels as pastors or eras of testimony, they override the text’s explicit identification of heavenly beings. By redefining the trumpets as preaching events, they strip the imagery of its judgmental force and sever its connection to the Exodus. By treating hail, fire, and blood as “spiritual events” within church history, they replace supernatural, heaven-initiated judgment with organizational storytelling. This approach collapses apocalyptic genre into allegory, distorts basic lexical meaning, and inverts the narrative direction of the text. Revelation 8:6–7 depicts God acting from heaven through His angels to judge the earth. It does not describe human messengers proclaiming revelation, but divine intervention warning the world before final judgment.

Category Biblical Context Shincheonji’s Claim Why the Claim Fails
Who acts Seven angels (heavenly beings) Seven pastors or eras of testimony The text explicitly identifies angels, not humans
Action Angels blow trumpets Humans proclaim revelation Trumpets trigger judgment, not teaching
Result Hail, fire, and blood strike the earth Spiritual events in church history Concrete, creation-level judgment
Scope Global and cosmic Internal, organizational Narrative affects the physical world
Imagery source Exodus plagues (Exod 7; Exod 9) Symbolic church corruption Ignores deliberate OT judgment parallels
“One-third” Partial, restrained judgment Some believers falling away No biblical basis for this reassignment
Function of trumpets Divine warnings before final judgment Preaching periods Trumpets execute judgment, not sermons
Narrative direction Heaven → Earth (God initiates) Earth → Heaven (man testifies) Reverses the flow of the text
Genre Apocalyptic judgment vision Church-history allegory Genre collapse
Role of humanity Receives judgment Produces fulfillment Shifts agency from God to man

Revelation 9:13–15

“Then the sixth angel blew his trumpet, and I heard a voice from the four horns of the golden altar before God,

saying to the sixth angel who had the trumpet, ‘Release the four angels who are bound at the great river Euphrates.’

So the four angels who had been prepared for the hour, the day, the month, and the year were released to kill a third of mankind.”

Revelation 9:13–15 describes the sixth trumpet judgment in explicitly heavenly and supernatural terms. The subject of the action is the sixth angel, one of the seven angels who stand before God. When the trumpet is blown, a voice issues from the four horns of the golden altar before God, giving a command. This detail is crucial: the instruction originates from God’s presence, not from any human initiative on earth. The command is to release four angels bound at the great river Euphrates, and once released, these angels bring about catastrophic judgment, resulting in the death of a third of mankind. The scale, setting, and outcome of the event are unmistakably cosmic and apocalyptic. There is no reference to a man, a preacher, or an organization. Everything unfolds in the heavenly realm and affects the world through divine judgment.

Interpreting the passage within its literary and theological context confirms this reading. Revelation 9 is part of the broader trumpet sequence in chapters 8–11, which depicts partial judgments that precede the final consummation. These judgments are warnings, not revelations of new doctrine. The imagery of the Euphrates draws on Israel’s historical memory, where the river marked the boundary from which major enemies such as Assyria and Babylon invaded. The four angels bound at the Euphrates represent destructive powers held in restraint until God’s appointed time, emphasizing divine sovereignty over both the timing and extent of judgment. The reference to “the hour, the day, the month, and the year” underscores that nothing happens by chance. Judgment is precisely governed by God. The repeated fraction “a third” signals limitation and restraint, showing that these acts are warnings intended to lead humanity to repentance rather than immediate total destruction.

Shincheonji’s interpretation fails because it requires a complete reversal of the text’s meaning and purpose. By redefining the sixth angel as a human messenger and the four bound angels as evangelists or pastors, SCJ replaces a scene of cosmic judgment with an institutional narrative. By transferring the divine voice from the heavenly altar to a human mouthpiece, they shift authority away from God and toward a man. Most decisively, by redefining death and destruction as “spiritual enlightenment” or internal division, they nullify the moral weight of the passage. Revelation 9 itself explains the purpose of these judgments: despite them, humanity still refuses to repent (9:20–21). The sixth trumpet is therefore a warning of divine wrath and a call to repentance, not a description of progressive revelation through human teachers. The trumpet sequence consistently portrays God acting from heaven to judge the world, and it culminates not in the rise of a new messenger, but in the declaration of Christ’s eternal reign from heaven in Revelation 11:15.

Category Biblical Context Shincheonji’s Claim Why the Claim Fails
Subject Sixth angel — heavenly being Human messenger revealing new word Text explicitly identifies an angel before God
Source of command Voice from the golden altar before God Heaven speaking through a pastor Transfers divine authority to a human
Action taken Four angels bound at Euphrates released Evangelists or pastors released to preach Replaces cosmic judgment with organizational activity
Nature of event Heaven-initiated judgment Earth-based testimony Spatial inversion of the scene
Scope of effect One-third of mankind killed Spiritual enlightenment or division Explicitly describes death and destruction
Timing Fixed by God — “hour, day, month, year” Gradual doctrinal spread Removes divine sovereignty and precision
Symbolism of Euphrates Boundary of historic enemies (Assyria/Babylon) Undefined symbolic location Ignores historical-theological background
Purpose of judgment Warning leading to repentance (Rev 9:20–21) Proof of fulfillment Moral purpose erased
Genre Apocalyptic judgment vision Church-history allegory Genre collapse
Narrative trajectory Heaven → Earth (God acts) Earth → Heaven (man testifies) Reverses agency of the text

Conclusion

Across every New Testament passage Shincheonji appeals to, the pattern is consistent and unmistakable: the trumpet is never a human messenger. In didactic teaching (1 Corinthians 14), the trumpet functions as a simple analogy for clarity in communication, not prophetic identity. In resurrection theology (1 Corinthians 15; 1 Thessalonians 4), the trumpet is explicitly the trumpet of God, accompanying Christ’s personal descent, the bodily resurrection of the dead, and the defeat of death itself. In apocalyptic vision (Revelation 8–11), trumpets are sounded by heavenly angels, unleashing divine judgments, not sermons, and announcing the consummation of God’s redemptive plan in Christ. At no point does the New Testament redefine the trumpet as a man, a pastor, or a revealer of hidden doctrine. Instead, it intensifies the Old Testament meaning: the trumpet belongs to heaven, signals God’s action, and marks decisive moments in salvation history.

Shincheonji’s interpretation fails not because it lacks creativity, but because it requires systematic violations of context, genre, language, and theology. It turns analogies into prophecies, judgments into teachings, angels into pastors, resurrection into “understanding,” and Christ’s return into organizational fulfillment. Most critically, it transfers divine authority away from God and Christ and places it onto a single human figure. The New Testament will not support that move. From Paul’s letters to John’s apocalypse, the trumpet consistently announces what God does, not what man explains. The final trumpet does not reveal a pastor; it reveals a kingdom. It does not produce new knowledge; it raises the dead. And it does not exalt an organization on earth; it declares that “the kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ.” Any theology that turns the trumpet into a human voice does not deepen biblical meaning—it replaces it.

You may also like

You cannot copy content of this page