THE VERY STONES - PART 4: Rapture Sequence Written in Stone & Your Body
The most essential part of the temple... wasn't even IN the temple.
Before construction could begin, God required an operational altar built from ugly, unpolished fieldstones-stones cast out in fields, exposed to wind and rain, cursed by farmers as obstacles.
Those rejected, heavy stones had to be transported to the temple site, splashed with blood, with fire burning on them constantly.
That's what God required FIRST.
This is not metaphor. It's a resume.
And if you've been through the kind of fire that should have destroyed you but somehow you made it, God does not waste His refining fire.
This post reveals the stunning difference between altar stones (unhewn, no tools allowed) and building stones (hewn at the quarry with iron tools).
Why does God forbid iron tools on altar stones but require them for building stones?
Because iron represents the beast system - the crushing authority of tribulation.
The quarry IS the tribulation period where building stones are shaped by iron before entering God's presence.
We'll discover how both stone types respond to fire differently: altar stones are consumed WITH the offering (becoming one with the sacrifice), while building stones scatter under direct flame.
How souls under the altar in Revelation 6 are stored there waiting for temple construction - because the altar goes up FIRST, before the building can be erected.
How the heart must beat first before the body can develop the same pattern across biology, architecture, and prophecy.
You'll trace the pattern through Adam's sleep when Eve was taken from his side, through the disciples' sleep in Gethsemane, through Laodicea's lukewarm slumber.
Extraction happens while the body sleeps.
Wake-up is traumatic.
Confusion and scattering precede resolution.
But both stone types end up in the same eternal temple - different functions, different positioning, different timing, but same destination, same God, same forever.
And we'll discover what the Hebrew word TSELA actually means (not 'rib") - and what God took from Adam's SIDE to build Eve.
Chapter 1: The Most Essential Part Wasn't IN the Temple
The most essential part of the temple wasn't even in the temple.
Before construction could even begin, God required an operational altar, built from ugly, unpolished fieldstones. Stones that had been outcast in fields, exposed to wind and rain, cursed by farmers as obstacles, stumbling blocks.
And then those rejected heavy stones had to be transported to the temple site, splashed with blood, and have fire burning on them constantly.
That is what God required first.
Not the beautiful carved stones, not the protected interior, not the ornate walls and floors, but the cast out, beaten, blood covered, fire tested stones. And that is not a metaphor.
That's a resume.
And if you've been through the kind of fire that just should have destroyed you, but somehow you made it. God doesn't waste his refining fire. And you're about to find out why.
So everything we've talked about so far in this series, the very stones, has focused on what kind of stones?
That's right. altar stones unhewned, natural, ready as is. No tools, just presented as they are. But here's what's fascinating.
The temple structure had other stones, building stones of course, wall stones, foundation stones, and God's requirement for those stones completely different.
Chapter 2: 1 Kings 6:7 - Iron Tools Required vs. Forbidden
First Kings 6:7.
When the house was built, it was prepared with stones prepared at the quarry, so that neither hammer nor axe nor any tool of iron was heard in the house while it was being built.
Now, wait, hang on. Didn't God just say in Exodus 20 that if you use a tool on altar stones, you profane them?
Iron tools defile the altar, right?
They make it unsuitable for God's presence. Iron tools are absolutely forbidden on those stones. But now for the building stones, what does First Kings chapter 6 say?
Tools are not just allowed, they're required. See these stones must be cut, shaped, huned, worked with iron implements.
So help me out here. How do we reconcile this? Same God, same temple complex.
Two completely opposite requirements.
Altar stones, iron forbidden, defiles them. Building stones, iron required, prepares them. What's the difference?
Well, remember First Kings 6:7. Stone prepared at the quarry. Where does the work happen?
It's not at the temple site, right? It's not in God's presence. Not where the altar stands, but where?
At the quarry away from the actual temple site.
And during a preparation period, the stones are cut, shaped, and finished with iron tools. And then they're brought to this temple site already completed so that no sound of hammers or chisels disturbs the holy ground of the temple site.
Now think about this with me.
Both stone types are holy and part of God's house. But what's different about them? Different prep requirements, different functions, right?
Different paths and timing to their final positioning. 1 Peter 2:5, "You also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ."
So if believers are living stones and apostle Peter just told us that we're living stones being built into a spiritual house, then here's my question.
Who are the altar stones?
And who are the building stones?
Because the building stones are different than altar stones, right?
Well, to answer that, we need to understand tooling because the building stones are shaped with quarry.
Chapter 3: What Does Iron Represent in Scripture?
But what are they shaped with? That's right, iron. Iron tools. In fact, the Bible specifically mentions hammer and chisel, both are iron implements.
So, does anyone know what iron represents in scripture? Let's walk through this together.
Daniel chapter 2, Nebuchadnezzar's dream. You know this one, a statue with different metals representing different kingdoms throughout history. Gold, silver, bronze.
And then what's the fourth kingdom? Iron.
Daniel 2:40.
And the fourth kingdom shall be as strong as iron. In as much as iron breaks in pieces and shatters everything, and like iron that crushes, that kingdom will break in pieces and crush all the others.
See, iron breaks in pieces. Iron shatters. Iron crushes. What kingdom is that?
Yeah, Rome. The Iron Empire. And prophetically projecting forward to the revived Roman Empire, the beast system of the end times.
Now, let's jump to Revelation 9 with the demonic locustes being released. Revelation 9:9. They had breastplates like breastplates of iron.
Now, when are these guys released and during what period of time? Yeah, during the tribulation.
And what do they wear? Iron again.
Protection for the forces of darkness during the tribulation. Now, let's look at Revelation chapter 2.
Revelation 2:27.
And he shall rule them with a rod of iron. Jesus speaks of ruling the nations with an iron scepter.
And iron represents authority, power, and in the negative sense, crushing oppression. Whether wielded by God or by the enemy, iron is force. Iron is power. Iron is crushing pressure.
Chapter 4: Where Is the Quarry? When Is the Quarry?
So now let me ask you again if the building stones are shaped with iron tools away from the temple during a preparation period before they can enter into God's presence and iron represents the beast system crushing power and tribulation authority.
Where is the quarry? When is the quarry?
Do you see it?
The quarry is not just a generic place of difficulty, is it?
The quarry is the tribulation period under the iron rule of the beast system, the first three and a half years of Daniel's 70th week before God's wrath begins.
And remember, the church is promised protection from wrath, but not from tribulation.
First Thessalonians 5:9, for God has not appointed us to suffer wrath, but to obtain salvation through ,right? They're out in the field where the treasure finder finds them like Boaz finding Ruth. You just gather them up and set them in place.
But quarry stones, they're still embedded in the world's system, still fused to the bedrock, still locked into the formation. What do they need?
The iron chisel to cut them loose. Now, think about believers. You know, some might have attachments to this world, right? They love Jesus. They're genuine believers, but they're also deeply invested in what? career advancement, , retirement portfolios, maybe real estate holdings, social status, political outcomes, the comfort and stability of spiritual Egypt's economy.
And if gentle leading won't separate them from Egypt, then what will?
Egypt's rejection of them.
And if prosperity won't turn their hearts toward him, what might? The removal of prosperity. Now listen carefully.
This is not punishment. This is precision.
God uses what works. He's not cruel. He's effective.
But here's something most people miss about temple design.
Chapter 6: Where Was the Altar Positioned?
Where was the altar positioned?
Outside the temple building in the courtyard.
The altar wasn't inside the temple building itself, was it? It wasn't part of the building walls at all. It stood separate out in the open air under heaven's direct gaze.
But was it part of the temple complex?
Absolutely. Same holy ground, same worship system. In fact, the temple couldn't be built until the altar was already established in its place.
That's how essential to temple function the altar actually is. It's what sanctifies the entire grounds, including the temple building itself.
The altar is architecturally separate.
And that separation is not a glitch.
It's the design because the altar's function required separation. It had to stand between the people and God's presence. It had to bear direct fire contact and it had to present offerings upward to the throne. And you can't do that from inside a building. You have to be outside it because of fire and the need for the offering smoke to rise to the throne.
Now something else about temple architecture is the volume difference.
The altar, even a substantial bronze altar like the one God prescribed, occupied maybe what 15t by 15 ft, 20 by 30ish at the most.
But the temple building is absolutely massive. Walls extending dozens of cubits high, foundations deep and wide, rooms upon rooms, chambers and courts, all kinds of space.
The altar was absolutely tiny compared to the building's mass. But which one had to be there first? Which one sanctified the grounds?
Which one made the building possible in the first place? The few fieldstones of the altar, right?
Same pattern with the bride. A remnant, a small group, vastly outnumbered by the building stones, but positioned first, essential for what comes after.
It is not about size, it is about sequence and function.
Now think about the bride and the church. Same body, same redemption, same salvation with different positioning. The bride is not drawn out to be better than the church. She is drawn out to serve the church by presenting the church to Christ and being one with him.
Just like the altar served the building by presenting offerings to God.
Now before anyone misunderstands, Christ is the sacrifice that saves.
That work is finished, is complete.
But apostle Paul himself said in 2 Corinthians 11:2 that he would present believers as a pure virgin to Christ.
And we know that the altar is the place of presentation, the meeting point between God and man.
Christ saves, his blood covers, and the altar presents.
Christ and his bride unified but two different functions.

