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N.T. Wright interprets this passage quite differently from the usual "rapture theology" popular in our day. First of all, he reminds us that Paul's expression of the Lord descending and the living saints being snatched up in the air is a rich metaphor and not to be taken literally.
Wright goes on to explain the meaning of this metaphor by telling a story about the way people related to the Roman emperor in the time of Jesus. When the emperor would visit a colony or a province, the citizens of the country would go to meet him at some distance from the city. They didn't want the emperor to arrive at their gates without being greeted properly. Once they had greeted him they would escort him royally into the city itself. In other words, unlike the "rapture theology" the believers would not rise up in the air, but rather they would escort the emperor back to the place from whence they came.
Wright goes on to explain the meaning of this metaphor by telling a story about the way people related to the Roman emperor in the time of Jesus. When the emperor would visit a colony or a province, the citizens of the country would go to meet him at some distance from the city. They didn't want the emperor to arrive at their gates without being greeted properly. Once they had greeted him they would escort him royally into the city itself. In other words, unlike the "rapture theology" the believers would not rise up in the air, but rather they would escort the emperor back to the place from whence they came.

