Look how you are arguing, though. That's not a valid argument. You are arguing something that did not involve a time of trouble with something that does involve a time of trouble.
Unbelievable! If I told you 1 + 1 = 2, you would find some way to make it equal 3 because you will go out of your way to disagree with me no matter what I say. Are you kidding me?!
So, you are the one who decides for everyone how the time of trouble should be understood? You are the one who decides how long that time of trouble lasts? Who put you in charge of that?
Daniel 12:1 And
at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and
there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time: and
at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.
What basis is there for thinking this is referring to a time period of 3.5 or 7 years as you probably believe? Whatever "time of trouble" this is talking about it also says "at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.". So, the duration of time of trouble is not alluded to here! Can you acknowledge that? It could be a very short amount of time. I think it hints at that by saying "
at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.
I see no reason whatsoever that this can't be referring to the time when Jesus comes and delivers everyone who has their names written in the book of life (1 Thess 4:14-17) and then burns up the heavens and the earth (1 Thess 5:2-3, 2 Peter 3:10-12).
What was the time of trouble the earth was experiencing at the time leading up to the flood?
The time of trouble was the time during which the earth was being flooded. Your doctrinal bias is very evident here! Try interpreting scripture objectively for once and see what you discover.
None of that involved tribulation, let alone great tribulation. Why can't you see that a time of trouble involves persecuting and killing someone you dislike, for example? No one was doing that leading up to Noah's flood.
Why can't you see that there is more than one way that a time of trouble can occur and the amount of time can differ? It can be a short amount of time, a medium amount of time or a long time. The duration of the time of trouble is not indicated in Daniel 12:1. Can you humble yourself for just a second and admit that? It's debatable how much time it's talking about because that is not specified in the verse. I have no problem admitting that. Do you?
Noah's flood had zero to do with tribulation.
This is the most doctrinally biased statement imaginable. Are you kidding me??? Do you somehow not know that God's wrath can also be called tribulation?
Romans 2:9
Tribulation and anguish, upon every soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and also of the Gentile;
It had to do with judgment,
It was tribulation for those being judged! I'd like to see you try to tell them that what they experienced "had zero to do with tribulation". Wow.
the same way when the day of the Lord begins in the final days of this age. Tribulation will be in the past at that point. The day of the Lord involves judgment, great tribulation doesn't, unless you are wrongly applying it to 70 AD.
Do you really not know what I believe well enough by now to know how I interpret Daniel 12:1-2? How many times have I told you that I see Daniel 12:1 as global tribulation and Matthew 24:15 as local tribulation? Many times. And you still don't know what I believe?
In that case it would involve judgment.
Say what now? Are you saying that you would call what happened in 70 AD great tribulation in the form of judgment but you can't allow that Daniel 12:1 could be understood similarly in terms of great tribulation in the form of judgment when Jesus returns?
But if it is involving the church in the final days of this age being persecuted and killed on a global scale, no one would insist that involves the judgment of God. The judgment of God follows that, not parallels it.
Where does Matthew 24:15-21 say anything about persecution against believers? Since when are believers told to flee persecution rather than stand up to it? Imagine Stephen just running away when he was being persecuted by the religious Jewish leaders of his day. Is that what you think Jesus was telling His people to do? To do something that Stephen would laugh at if someone told him to do that?