Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Luke 17:34
I tell you, in that night there shall be two [men] in one bed; the one shall be taken, and the other shall be left.
34. two men in one bed ] Not necessarily men; but human beings, e.g. man and wife. The numerals are of course masculine, because the man might be either the one ‘taken’ or the one ‘left.’
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
See the notes at Mat 24:40-41.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Luk 17:34
The one shall be taken, and the other shall be left
One taken, and the other left
Every great act of God has the effect of dividing, separating, and judging men.
So great are the diversities among men, so various their characters, so various by nature, and so endlessly varied by education and habit, that, when God acteth before them in any great or signal way, forthwith those who seemed to be much alike, are found to be really very different. The mercy that is balm to one, is poison to his next neighbour; the trial, which to one is easy and simple, is to his neighbour destruction and inevitable woe. To be born in a Christian country, to be the son of careful and godly parents, to be baptized in infancy, to be trained in the knowledge of God, to have natural abilities, to have education, to have station, or wealth, all these things have this effect of dividing men, and trying their hearts. To those who are obedient, and endeavour to please God, all these things are high blessings, choice gifts of God. Each of them enables a man to render God better service, to please Him better, to do more good, and to make higher attainments of holiness and happiness. But to the disobedient they are all so many downfalls. Every such thing brings out more, and makes more conspicuous and hopeless the inner disobedience; each one of them exhibits more strikingly the spirit of inward rebellion, which, but for these things, might have been comparatively unseen. Illness tries us; health tries us; every day, as it passes, tries us in innumerable ways; tries, and trains us; tries what we are now, and tries whether we will be better; furnishes matter for our judgment, and gives us the means of improvement, so that judgment may not be our ruin. And so we go on being tried, being balanced, and sifted, and searched, thousands of times, many times more than we suppose or conceive, every day of our life. We think of the great trials, but the little ones, which we do not think of, try us still more. It is very observable that, in the account given of the judgment-day by our Lord in the Gospel of St. Matthew, the doom of the righteous and wicked is made to depend on grounds wholly unexpected by each. They are alike represented as exclaiming, in astonishment and surprise, Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, or athirst, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison? Full of fears, no doubt, and hopes about things which they do remember, nothing doubting that this or that great act (as they think it), is to be the one on which everything is to turn, for weal or woe, they seem alike struck with astonishment to find that things which they have wholly forgotten, which they neither observed when they happened, nor can recall since, have been laid up in the mind of the Judge, to be the ground of their last and inevitable doom. Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, or athirst, or sick, or in prison, and ministered, or ministered not unto Thee? this, I say, is one of the striking things revealed of that awful time. And another is, the alteration which that day shall make; when last shall be first, and first last; when not only the ranks of the earth shall be in many instances reversed, but when the estimations of the earth shall be found to be entirely mistaken; apparent saints taking their place among the hypocrites departing to everlasting fire; publicans and sinners, purified by repentance, their robes washed in the blood of the Lamb, entering, among the blessed, into the joy of their Lord. And the text teaches us a third and different lesson still; how those who have been side by side upon earth, alike in condition, opportunity, and encouragement, to all human sight much alike in mind or temper; not much unlike, perhaps, in apparent earnestness and spiritual attainment, shall then be found, one on the right hand, and one on the left hand; one be taken, taken to joy, caught up to meet the Lord in the air, so as to be ever with Him; and the other left, to woe and despair for ever. Children of one family, bred alike, and taught alike, who have learned to say the same infantine prayers, have known the same friends, read the same books, loved the same pleasures; if one is earnest in his prayers, and, in his secret obedience, serves God faithfully, and the other persists in unfaithfulness and disobedience,–shall it not surely be so with them, that one shall be taken in that day, and the other left? What, then, shall we do? With this reality of trial on us, and this reality of judgment before us, the one more searching than we can trace, the other likely to be more unexpected than we can foresee, how are we to walk to be safe? how to pass through the present trial, how to meet the future judgment? Simply by turning with all our hearts and souls to our duties, and our prayers. We do not need any particular excitements of mind, or any particular glow of sentiments; we want to be in earnest, and the good Spirit of our God, by which we were sealed in baptism unto the day of our redemption, will help us to our safety. (Bishop Moberly.)
The great division
1. The meaning of the text being established, we have next to inquire what the lessons are which it is designed to teach us. When it is considered in relation to its context, it becomes plain that the primary intention of the passage is to denote the suddenness with which the day of the Lord will come upon the inhabitants of the earth. Of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but My Father only. There will be no perceptible check or change in the current of human affairs to warn us of its coming. Men will be engaged to the very last in the ordinary occupations of life, as in the days of Noe and as in the days of Lot, eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage. Nor shall the great and final partition of good and evil be preceded or prefigured by any partial and gradual severance. Men and women shall be united in their daily tasks, and even in the most familiar intercourse of domestic life, between whom there shall be a great gulf fixed in that day.
2. There is a further lesson which may be derived from the text, and which it is also without doubt intended to convey. It is one which is set forth more or less plainly in other places of Holy Scripture. The children of this world and the children of light cannot be absolutely distinguished, so long as we see through a glass, darkly. Our estimate of anothers character is after all nothing better than an inference from phenomena, and our powers of inference are at least as fallible in this as in all other matters. The warmest friendships, the most endearing ties, can afford us no unmistakable guarantee that those with whom we are thus outwardly united, are both almost and altogether such as we are.
3. There is, however, a third inference to which we are naturally led by the words before us, and to which I desire particularly to direct your attention at present. However closely and undistinguishably men are mingled together in this world, however various, minute, and delicate are the shades of character by which they are severally differenced, however hopeless it may appear, I will not say for man, but for Absolute Wisdom and Absolute Justice, to draw a broad line between the children of this world and the children of light, the text seems to imply, what we are elsewhere taught, that they will ultimately be divided into two and only two classes. But I think the text goes beyond this, at all events in the way of implication. For it not only tells us that such a sharp line as I have described will ultimately be drawn between the evil and the good, but it seems also to tell us that the line exists already, although we may be unable to discern it. For inasmuch as it represents the day of judgment as coming upon men unprepared, discovering them in the midst of their daily avocations, finding persons of the most opposite characters united in the closest intercourse without a suspicion of their incompatibility, and then at once awarding to every man his everlasting doom; is it not reasonable to infer that the grounds of that award exist already, although they are not in every instance cognizable by us? At this point, however, we are met by a difficulty. Our experience of the world and of human life appears to teach us a different lesson. No doubt there are good men and there are bad men on the face of the earth–good men who are acknowledged to be so even by those who are farotherwise, and bad men who are confessed to be so even by themselves. But the great mass of mankind seems to belong to an intermediate and indifferent body, consisting of those who are neither saints nor reprobates, neither fit for eternal life nor deserving of eternal death. The longer the world lasts, the more complicated the developments of society become, the more does this appear to be the case. The visible confusion of the moral world may only serve to cover a clear and well-defined line of demarcation. And, as much, on the one hand, that is outwardly and materially honest, and just, and pure, and lovely, and of good report, when traced to its true source would be found to be of the earth, earthy; so we must remember that the Lord knoweth them that are His; that, the kingdom of God, which is within us, cometh not with observation; and that as the wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, or whither it goeth; so is event one that is born of the Spirit. But we shall do well to recollect, in addition, that we see men ordinarily in a transitional and undeveloped state. The good or the evil that is in them may not have had time to come to a head, or may be over shadowed by old habits which hang about a man like parasites, but which can hardly be said to form a part of his proper self. But as each mans probation draws near its close, it may be that his character is altogether simplified and stereotyped. Then it is that the awful decree goes forth: He that is unjust, let him be unjust still. Mere experience, then, can decide nothing against the teaching of holy Scripture on this point, although it may not actually confirm it. On the other hand, it is worthy of observation, that a great thinker, whose name marks an era in the history of modern philosophy, in endeavouring to frame a religious system a priori, was led to a result altogether coincident with the doctrine under consideration. After raising the two following questions: first, Whether man can be neither good nor evil? and then, Whether man can be partly good and partly evil? he decides against the former, in opposition (as he confesses) to the prima facie dictates of experience, upon the ground that moral neutrality in any voluntary act is an impossible conception; and he disposes of the latter, by observing that no act has any intrinsic moral worth, unless it spring from a deliberate adoption of the moral law as our universal principle of action. I have cited this writers testimony mainly because he cannot be accused of any undue partiality towards the distinctive peculiarities of the Christian system. But it is not difficult to translate his arguments into Scriptural language. For, on the one hand, it is our Lord Himself who proposes the dilemma, Either make the tree good, and his fruit good; or else make the tree corrupt, and his fruit corrupt: and, on the other, His apostle tells us that Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all. (W. B. Jones, M. A.)
Divine sovereignty in the death of men
I. WHAT IS IMPLIED IN GODS ACTING AS A SOVEREIGN.
1. His acting as a sovereign implies that He always acts after the counsel of His own will, without consulting the will, or pleasure, or counsel of any other being.
2. His acting as a sovereign implies that He always acts not only without the counsel, but without the control, of any created beings.
II. IN WHAT RESPECTS HE ACTS AS A SOVEREIGN IN TAKING AWAY THE LIVES OF MEN. Here it may be observed–
1. That He acts as a sovereign in respect to appointing the time of every ones death.
2. God acts as a sovereign in determining not only the time, but the place of every ones death.
3. God acts as a sovereign in respect to the means of death.
4. God acts as a sovereign in regard to the circumstances of death. He takes one, and leaves another, under the very same circumstances. He takes one, and leaves another, according to the order in which He has been pleased to place their names in deaths commission, regardless of all exterior circumstances or distinctions.
5. God acts as a sovereign in calling men out of the world, whether they are willing or unwilling to leave it.
6. God displays His awful sovereignty by calling men out of time into eternity, whether they are prepared or not prepared to go to their long home.
III. WHY GOD ACTS AS A SOVEREIGN IN THIS VERY IMPORTANT CASE. Several plain and pertinent reasons may be mentioned.
1. Because He has an independent right to act as a sovereign in taking away the lives of men. He is the former of their bodies, and Father of their spirits. In Him they live, and move, and have their being.
2. God acts as a sovereign in the article of death, because He only knows when and where to put a period to human life.
3. Another reason why God disposes of the lives of men as a sovereign, in all those respects which have been mentioned, is because He is under indispensable moral obligations to dispose of His own creatures in the wisest and best manner.
Application:
1. If God acts as a sovereign in taking away the lives of men, then the aged have great reason of gratitude for the continuance of life.
2. If God acts as a sovereign in taking away the lives of men, then they ought to maintain a constant and realizing sense that their lives are uncertain.
3. If God acts as a sovereign in taking away the lives of men, then they ought to avoid every mode of conduct which tends to stupify their minds, and create an insensibility to the uncertainty of life.
4. If God acts as a sovereign in taking away the lives of men, then it is not strange that He causes so many sudden and unexpected deaths.
5. It appears from what has been said that there is a solid foundation for the most cordial and unreserved submission under the heaviest bereavements. They come from the hand and heart of a holy, wise, and benevolent Sovereign, who has a right to take one, and leave another, and who never afflicts willingly, or grieves the children of men. (N. Emmons, D. D.)
Eternal separation
The Rev. Dr. Witherspoon, formerly president of Princeton College, America, was once on board a packet-ship, where, among other passengers, was a professed atheist. This unhappy man was very fond of troubling every one with his peculiar belief, and of broaching the subject as often as he could get any one to listen to him. He did not believe in a God and a future state, not he! By and by there came on a terrible storm, and the prospect was that all would be drowned. There was much consternation on board, but not one was so greatly frightened as the professed atheist. In this extremity he sought out the clergyman, and found him in the cabin, calm and collected in the midst of danger, and thus addressed him: Oh, Doctor Witherspoon! Doctor Witherspoon! we are all going; we have but a short time to stay. Oh how the vessel rocks! We are all going! Dont you think we are, doctor? The doctor turned to him with a solemn look, and replied in broad Scotch, Nae doubt, nae doubt, man, were a ganging; but you and I dinna gang the same way. (W. Baxendale.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 34. – 36. On the subject of these verses see Mt 24:40-41. The 36th verse Lu 17:36 is, without doubt, an interpolation; see the margin. It was probably borrowed from Mt 24:40. The whole verse is wanting in – ABEGHKLQS, more than fifty others, the Coptic, AEthiopic, Gothic, Slavonic, and many of the fathers: Griesbach has left it out of the text. Well might our translators say in the margin, This 36th verse is wanting in most of the Greek copies. Griesbach thinks it might have been omitted on account of the similar ending, (see the preceding verse,) or that it was borrowed from Mt 24:40.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
See Poole on “Mat 24:40-41“. These verses seem to respect the day of judgment, and that dreadful separation which shall be in that day between the sheep and the goats. It is true also of Christs day in the preaching of the gospel; but that seemeth not to be the sense of this text. They can hardly be applied to the destruction of Jerusalem; it was so universal as hardly any were there left.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
34. two in one bedtheprepared and unprepared mingled in closest intercourse together inthe ordinary walks and fellowships of life, when the moment ofseverance arrives. Awful truth! realized before the destruction ofJerusalem, when the Christians found themselves forced by theirLord’s directions (Lu 21:21)at once and for ever away from their old associates; but most of allwhen the second coming of Christ shall burst upon a heedless world.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
I tell you, in that night,…. Of affliction and calamity, that shall be upon the Jewish nation, and which is before called that day, Lu 17:31 and therefore is not to be understood literally of the night:
there shall be two [men] in one bed; this is said agreeably to the time, the night before mentioned, that being the time to be in bed, at rest and asleep; for they that sleep, sleep in the night; and still suggests the security the people of the Jews would be in, at the time of their destruction. The word “men” is not in the text, it is only, “there shall be two in one bed”; and may as well be understood of a man and his wife, since it is not so usual for two men to lie in one bed; and this the rather more strongly expresses the distinguishing providence of God in saving one, and suffering the other to be taken and lost: the words may be rendered, “there shall be two upon one couch”: that is, sitting together at supper, which was also in the night season: it was the custom of the ancients to sit upon beds, or couches, at meals; and they had a bed, or couch, which held two persons only, and was called Biclinium h: and so this likewise intimates, that the destruction of the Jews would be at a time when they were thoughtless of it, and were eating and drinking, as in the days of Noah and of Lot, Lu 17:27.
The one shall be taken; by the Roman soldiers:
and the other shall be left; being, by one providence or another preserved; which is mentioned, to show the distinction God will make in his providence, and to encourage believers to trust in it.
h Vid. Alstorph. de Lectis Veter. c. 15. p. 90, 91.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
In that night ( ). More vivid still, “on this night,” when Christ comes.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
1) I tell you,” (lego humin) I tell you all,” as faithful disciples, as my “little flock” who shall carry on my work, Luk 12:32; Mat 28:18-20.
2) “In that night there shall be two in one bed;” (taute te nukti esontai duo epi klines mias) “in this night (of his coming) there will be two men upon one couch,” resting or sleeping, apparently in the open field.
3) “The one shall be taken,” (ho eis paralemphthesetai) “The one will be taken,” up and away, Mat 24:40. The one who is prepared and watching shall be taken, Heb 9:28.
4) “And the other shall be left.” (kai ho heteros aphethesetai) “And the other, of a different kind (of man), will be left.” Mat 24:40; And that one who watches not shall be left behind, for the great tribulation.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
(34, 35) Two men in one bed.See Notes on Mat. 24:40-41. The one to be taken is probably here, as there, the man who is rescued from destruction. Here there is a variation enough to prove independence, the two in one bed being prefixed to the examples given in St. Matthew as an instance of even closer companionship.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
“I say to you, In that night there will be two men on one bed, the one will be taken, and the other will be left.”
We now have a final statement of the climactic events which will take place, and typically of Luke, one refers to men and one to women. They equally participate in both blessing and judgment.
The first example is of two men, probably father and son, or two brothers, sharing a mattress, which was a common feature of those days when shared warmth could be important and space was lacking. They would, however, each be covered by their own cloaks. On that night one would be taken and the other left. Here we have a vivid example of what is described in 1Th 4:16-17 and of the division in families described in Luk 12:52-53. The Lord has come for His own.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Luk 17:34-35 . But the decision at the Parousia , what a separation it will be! a separation of those who are in the temporal life united in a perfectly common position. This is symbolically represented in two examples. Comp., moreover, on Mat 24:40 f.
] which Bengel, in opposition to the context, explains: in this present night, is neither to be interpreted in tempore illo calamitoso (Kuinoel, who says that the night is imago miseriae ; Mic 3:6 ; comp. Grotius and Bleek), nor to be pressed to the conclusion that the Parousia is definitely ordained to take place by night (de Wette, who finds the ground for this view in the comparison of the Messiah with a thief in the night), in respect of which the following grinding at the mill as an occupation of the day-time is held as left standing inappropriately from Matthew, but the horror of the night belongs to the imagery of the concrete representation. [221] At Luk 17:35 , however, there is again a departure from this feature, because a graphic touch of a different kind is added to the idea. Day and hour, even the Son knoweth not, Mat 24:36 ; comp. Act 1:7 .
] not in general: they shall be bed-fellows (Lange), but, according to the words and the concrete representation: they shall find themselves on one bed . A warning against precipitate separation of mingled domestic relations (Lange) is altogether foreign to this passage.
[221] It is not on account of the example of the two in bed together that the night is named (Hofmann, Schriftbew . II. 2, p. 626), but conversely the idea of the night-time suggested that illustration.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
(34) I tell you, in that night there shall be two men in one bed; the one shall be taken, and the other shall be left. (35) Two women shall be grinding together; the one shall be taken, and the other left. (36) Two men shall be in the field; the one shall be taken, and the other left. (37) And they answered and said unto him, Where, Lord? and he said unto them, Wheresoever the body is, thither will the eagles be gathered together.
In these figures, the Lord very plainly and fully confirms his doctrine of distinguishing grace. And everything in life as decidedly answers to our Lord’s discourse. What a blessed account of it Jesus hath given! Mat 11:25-26 . And what a testimony the experience of God, in all ages, bears to it! 2Ti 2:19 . Reader! let not you or I put the unnecessary question, Where, Lord? For everywhere, and in all things, where the carcase of the ungodly is, destruction, like the eagle, will smell the scent afar off: and wheresoever Jesus is, thither will his people fly, as doves to their windows. Isa 60:8 .
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
34 I tell you, in that night there shall be two men in one bed; the one shall be taken, and the other shall be left.
Ver. 34. See Mat 24:40-41 . See Trapp on “ Mat 24:40 “ See Trapp on “ Mat 24:41 “
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
34 36. ] See on Mat 24:40-41 . Here, there are two references: (1) to the servants of the Lord in the midst of the world out of which they shall be separated: (2) to the separation of the faithful and unfaithful among themselves .
Luk 17:34 indicates a closer relationship than that of mere fellow-workmen, and sets forth the division of even families in that day.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Luk 17:34-37 . The final separation (Mat 24:40-41 ).
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Luk 17:34 . . . , on that night ; day hitherto, the Jewish day began with night (Hahn), and the reference to night suits the following illustration. No need to take night metaphorically = imago miseriae (Kuinoel). ., in one bed; in the field in Mt.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
two men: i.e. two persons.
in = upon. Greek. epi. App-104.
and. The 1611 edition of the Authorized Version omitted this “and”. other. Greek heteros. App-124.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
34-36.] See on Mat 24:40-41. Here, there are two references: (1) to the servants of the Lord in the midst of the world out of which they shall be separated: (2) to the separation of the faithful and unfaithful among themselves.
Luk 17:34 indicates a closer relationship than that of mere fellow-workmen, and sets forth the division of even families in that day.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Luk 17:34. , in this night [not as Engl. Vers. in that night]) He does not say, in that day, comp. Luk 17:31 : Mat 26:31 [ , All ye shall be offended because of Me this night]. There are in our own day, saith He, persons who shall reach those times so widely different. Comp. the here in ch. Luk 9:27 [There be some standing here, etc., speaking of an event about to happen presently]. The event followed in the same generation: Mat 24:34 [This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled].-) [the one]. So very many MSS.: and the expression, – , is used just as – [the one-the other], ch. Luk 16:13; and – in Mat 25:2.[192] Presently after, in Luk 17:35, Mill has omitted to notice, that in Luk 17:35 has also been omitted before , and that too in the text of Stephens Edition.[193]
[192] The one set of five-and the other set of five. So Scholz reads, ; but Lachm. and Tisch. omit .-E. and T.
[193] In Luk 17:34 AD read . B (judging from the silence of the collations) and Rec. Text, . In Luk 17:35 ALX read : and so Tisch. BD and Rec. Text (Elzev.), : and so Lachm.-E. and T.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
I tell: Luk 13:3, Luk 13:5, Luk 13:24, Isa 42:9, Mat 24:25, Mar 13:23, Mar 14:29
in: Mat 24:40, Mat 24:41
two: Psa 26:9, Psa 28:3, Jer 45:5, Eze 9:4-6, Mal 3:16-18, Rom 11:4-7, 1Th 4:16, 1Th 4:17, 2Pe 2:9
Reciprocal: Jer 6:11 – for even Jer 16:16 – every mountain Luk 23:39 – General
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
6
For the meaning of this paragraph, especially on the words taken and left, see the comments at Mat 24:40-41.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Luk 17:34. I say unto you. Solemn introduction.
In that night. Night is the time of surprise and terror, and the return of the Lord had already been set forth figuratively as occurring at night (chap. Luk 12:35-39); but Luk 17:35-36, refer to the day-time.
Two men on one bed. Peculiar to Luke. Illustrating the separation of those previously closely associated together. Husband and wife are not referred to, however. There will be a separation between the faithful and the unfaithful, as well as a gathering of the elect out of the world. This illustration gives prominence to the former idea, the next to the latter.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
THE RAPTURE OF THE SAINTS
Luk 17:34-35. I say unto you, That night two men shall be on one couch; one shall be taken, and the other left. Two women shall be grinding together; the one shall be taken, and the other shall be left. As the coming of the Lord will be simultaneous to all the world, the sun shining on one hemisphere and the night enveloping the other, you see the night, here specified as the time of His coming, must have a symbolic signification, typifying the sudden surprise which will light on the whole world when that most notable of all events shall transpire, as if all were lying wrapped in lethean slumber. It is really wonderful how the customs and popular habits stand still in the Bible lands, the people still sickling their wheat and barley and treading it out with cattle, and the women grinding it with their little hand-mills, sitting on either side, the one turning and the other feeding and taking out the flour. There is a deeply significant providence in this strange immutability of Oriental customs. These women are still holding on to the hand-mill, waiting for the Lord to come, and take one and leave the other. This is a clear reference to His pre-millennial coming to take away His bride, as it can not refer to the final judgment, as at that time all will be taken and none left. (Rev 20:11-15)
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
The parable of the one taken and the one left 17:34-36
The point of these examples is that when Jesus returns He will separate people, even those who are intimate companions. The unstated reason is implicit, namely, to judge some and not the others. Some will be ready for His return and others will not. The idea of sudden destruction resulting in judgment runs through the entire passage.
The presence of two men in one bed may be another indication of the moral condition of that time. The Greek masculine gender could describe a man and his wife, however. But the main idea is their close association. It was common for a mother and daughter or two female friends to grind grain together in Jesus’ day (cf. Mat 24:41). Perhaps Jesus intended the fact that one separation takes place at night and the other during daytime to reinforce the fact that He could return at either time. Of course, whenever He returns some people on earth will be sleeping and others will be awake. Those taken will experience punishment and will die while those left will enter the kingdom since they will be believers. This is the opposite of what will happen at the Rapture (cf. 1Th 4:13-17). Then Jesus will take the godly into heaven and will leave the unbelievers on earth to enter the Tribulation. [Note: See Renald E. Showers, Maranatha: Our Lord, Come! A Definitive Study of the Rapture of the Church, pp. 176-91, for a discussion of the differences in the biblical descriptions of the Rapture and the Second Coming, which argue for a pretribulation Rapture.]
A scribe probably inserted Luk 17:36 (cf. Mat 24:40). It is absent in the best ancient Greek manuscripts.