Are There Foolish Virgins in Every Age or Only the Last Age?
Direct answer:
They are manifested at the end. The parable of the ten virgins points to the last church age when the Bridegroom comes and the final separation takes place. While that same kind of believer—clean, church-going, but without the oil of the Holy Ghost—has appeared in every age, the Scripture applies the name “foolish virgins” to those at the time of the Bridegroom’s coming.
Scriptural explanation:
- Matthew 25:1-13 says, “Then shall the kingdom of heaven be likened unto ten virgins… at midnight there was a cry made… they that were ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door was shut.” Notice “Then”—it follows the end-time signs of Matthew 24. The midnight cry is a final call. The shutting of the door is a single closing, not a repeating event in every age.
- Revelation 3:14-22 shows the last age (Laodicea): lukewarm, self-sufficient, and the Lord outside knocking. “Buy of me gold tried in the fire… and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve.” You see the language of buying and lacking—just like the foolish virgins who “went to buy,” showing an end-time condition.
- Revelation 19:7-9 shows the Wife has made herself ready and goes to the marriage—those are the wise with oil.
Simple clarifying logic:
- Oil represents the Holy Ghost. The wise had it before the cry; the foolish tried to get it after the cry. The marriage call and the shut door happen once—at the end—so the formal separation of wise and foolish virgins belongs to the last age.
- If it were every age, when did the door shut and the midnight cry sound again and again? The Bible shows one final cry and one closing.
Short reinforcement:
So, the condition existed in all ages, but the parable’s foolish virgins are identified at the end-time. The Bride, with oil, goes in; the foolish, without oil, miss the rapture and are dealt with in the tribulation.