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Aunt Gives Niece $40K Before The Rapture, Then Regrets It When Heaven Doesn’t Call

by Leona Pham
October 25, 2025
in Social Issues

What happens when the end of the world meets a bank account balance? One Reddit user found out the hard way when her deeply religious aunt, convinced that the rapture would happen “on Tuesday”, handed her over $40,000 in cash. The aunt’s reason? She “wouldn’t be needing it” once she floated off to heaven.

But when Tuesday came and went (and everyone was still very much earthbound), the niece was left with a heavy question: should she return the money or see it as karmic repayment for a lifetime of verbal abuse?

The internet had thoughts, lots of them. Ready for a story that’s part family drama, part apocalyptic comedy? Let’s dive in.

One Redditor found herself in an unexpected windfall after her deeply religious aunt gave her $40,000, convinced the Rapture was coming that week

Aunt Gives Niece $40K Before The Rapture, Then Regrets It When Heaven Doesn’t Call
not the actual photo

'WIBTA if I don't give back the 40k dollars my heavily-Christian aunt gave to me, since she "won't be needing it when the rapture comes"?'

For those who are unaware, there's a faction of Christians out there who believe that the rapture is going to happen on Tuesday.

My aunt is one of those people, and she has been going around, telling everybody how people will float into the sky and whatnot.

I'm queer and agnostic, and while I was raised loosely Christian, I haven't identified with the religion since I was in 5th grade.

Most of my family on my mother's side, except for my aunt, are Christian,

but not particularly devout, and certainly not as much as her, nor do they believe in the rapture.

She apparently became very very involved in the religion at some point in college.

Basically my entire life, I have been ridiculed by my aunt for being queer, since I came out at a young age.

Most of my family was very kind, accepting and understanding, except for her.

I spent every family gathering getting basically cornered, bullied, harassed, called slurs and preached at by a grown woman for my sexuality.

It got to the point that my mother had to have SEVERAL sit-down conversation with her to essentially tell her to quit harassing me.

This endured for a long time, and while my parents would always tell her to knock it off, she never would.

But one day my mother seriously put her foot down against her.

She made it clear that my family accepted me, and if she wouldn't tone it down, she would no longer be welcome in our home or around me.

During this conversation, my aunt allegedly called my family bad Christians for not sending me to conversion therapy,

and that they would regret not making me repent once the 'rapture was upon us'.

But, that was a few years ago, and ever since then,

I mostly just get sideways glances from her at family events and the occasional bible verse text from her, which I can manage.

I am now an adult, 19 and in college, and I was recently contacted by my aunt to meet up with her for lunch.

I assumed that maybe she had a change of heart and wanted to apologize for how she treated me. This was not the case.

When we met up, she essentially went on a long-winded spiel about how she pities me and feels so sorry that I never repented,

and how I, and the rest of my family, will be left behind because we never fully "gave our lives to Christ".

At the end of her monologue, she pulled out a stack of cash, all in 100 dollar bills,

and handed it to me, telling me that 'she wanted to give away her savings to those less fortunate,

since she wouldn't be needing it when the rapture comes and delivers her to the lord'.

I tried to talk her out of it, but she insisted, and practically forced the money into my hands, before abruptly walking away.

I counted it when I got home, and it was slightly over 40k in cash.

Here's where I think I would be the ah. When the rapture inevitably doesn't happen, I have no plans of giving the money back to her.

I know she's been going through some kind of long enduring religious psychosis,

but I could honestly really use this type of cash to put me through college and handle other expenses, and she gave it to me willingly.

WBITA if I didn't give her back the money when the rapture doesn't happen?

OP later edited the post to add some information

Edit: my parents are now aware of this because she apparently decided to try to gift my younger sister a car (her relatively new, nice ford bronco.)

I told my parents about the money, and my mother (who is also Christian) told me that it would be the most ethical thing to do

if I gave it back to her, and that I need to be empathetic to the struggles she's clearly going through.

My dad, however, thinks that if she was stupid enough to give away her life savings on a whim,

the money is better off going towards my education anyways.

I'm still torn.. edit/update 2: just wanted to clarify a few things:

1. I am a bisexual woman, and a few people here thought I was a man

2. I have no idea why she would want to give me, of all people, the money; I'm just as confused as the rest of you.

From what I grasped, it seemed as though it was some 'final act of kindness' towards somebody she takes great pity on?

I don't know LMFAOAO

As a few of you said, I should probably leave some kind of trail to prove this was freely given

and I didn't steal from her, so there are no legal repercussions

(should I choose to keep it, I'm still not sold on any course of action yet, especially because it's not Wednesday yet.)

So I sent her an email thanking her for the gift and reiterating that I did not originally want it,

but it was just OH SO very gracious of her to give money to a poor sinner like me.

I don't want to take advantage of the mentally ill, but the selfish part of me sees this as reparations for all the torment I endured when I was younger.

I've heard a few people say to invest the money instead of immediately putting it towards college, and if I keep it, that will definitely be considered.

I don't expect to update again until the 'rapture'has passed, but I will update once that rolls around.

mini edit: doing my own research on the current rapture craze going on,

they think the rapture will happen either Tuesday 23rd or wed 24th, so I will update on Thursday.

Thursday Update:. Hi all, it's Thursday, so as promised, here's the update everyone wanted, and I will make it brief.

1. No, my aunt did not get raptured.

2. No, I will not be keeping the money, which I know will upset some of you.

3. No, my sister did not get to keep the car (as I know some people were wondering)

Essentially, as a lot of you predicted, once the rapture didn't happen, my aunt kept moving the goalpost.

It went from happening on Tuesday, to happening Wednesday "because it's still Tuesday for some parts of the world", to happening sometime this month.

I decided not to keep the money, and it's not for any of the reasons I initially thought it would be.

Trying to give me money and giving my sister a car were not the only things that she did because she thought the rapture was coming.

She quit her job as well, and I found out just this morning that she also allegedly confessed to her husband

that she was having an affair with her co-worker/fellow churchgoer (she works in admin for a megachurch in our area).

I think the reason she was doing all of this was to 'get right with god' before the rapture?

Buy her way into heaven and have no secrets laying on her chest?

Idk I can't pretend to understand the logic of somebody thats a rapture-believer.

And since, yknow, the rapture did not happen, her husband wants to file for divorce.

I'm not particularly worried about her job, working for the church and all.

I'm pretty convinced they will take her back without a fuss because of how enshrined she was in the community, but

1. I read a lot of your comments, and I don't want to prove her right about how 'wicked' queer people and agnostics/atheists are by keeping it, and

2. She will definitely need it for her upcoming legal fees.

I'm unsure if this is her ENTIRE life savings, but regardless, after letting my emotions cool a bit I know I wouldn't feel right to keep it.

Regardless, my mom approved of my decision, my dad was a bit disappointed,

but mostly because he was excited to potentially not have to spend any more money on me for college lmao.

Oh, and, she has not explicitly asked for it back yet.

I imagine it's because everything that's happened has her feeling defeated or just generally in a low place.

But, even if she doesn't, I plan on giving it back to her when I can

(I'm a full time student with a part time job, I don't have a whole lot of free time, but I'll find a way to get it to her.)

Yeah sorry this isn't the update I know a lot of people wanted.

If anyone says they want to hear about the conversation when I give her the money, I'll make that update,

but if not this will likely be the last time I update this post. Thank you everybody for all your advice! :3

Religious delusions around apocalyptic events aren’t new, but when they collide with family trauma and money, the situation turns complex.

According to Dr. Joseph Pierre, a psychiatrist specializing in delusional belief systems at UCLA, “End-times prophecies often resurface during periods of global uncertainty. For believers, these are attempts to find meaning or control in chaos.”

For the Redditor’s aunt, the Rapture wasn’t just a belief, it was a coping mechanism. By giving away money and confessing secrets, she was seeking purification before what she thought was divine judgment.

Dr. Steven Hassan, an expert on religious influence, notes that apocalyptic groups can trigger “spiritual urgency syndrome,” where followers act impulsively in hopes of spiritual safety.

But from an ethical standpoint, this story hits a grey zone. Ethicist Dr. Manuel Velasquez from Santa Clara University explains, “Moral responsibility depends on autonomy if someone acts without full rational capacity, their consent may not be valid.”

In simpler terms, if the aunt’s decision was driven by delusion, keeping the money may feel like taking advantage, even if legally sound. Yet, there’s also the principle of emotional restitution. This was someone who had caused real psychological harm to a child for being herself. So, is accepting that money exploitation or poetic closure?

Ultimately, the Redditor’s decision to return the money after realizing her aunt’s deteriorating state reflects emotional maturity. It’s rare to see someone respond to lifelong mistreatment with empathy instead of revenge. In a world where family wounds often fester, that’s its own kind of grace.

Check out how the community responded:

These Redditors joked about pranking the aunt after the failed rapture, suggesting pretending to be “raptured” or acting like she’d been left behind

lantana98 − If she contacts you, it would be fun to exclaim, “What are you doing here?! So many people I know are gone! They just disappeared!”

jb4380 − Or just disappear and when she asks, have someone tell her you were swept up in the clouds and your Aunt must have been left behind instead. Lol

Careless_Author_2247 − When she asks for the money back tell her, "I will not be fooled by you, devil, My TRUE aunt was raptured to heaven. BEGONE!"

MRSRN65 − If she tries to ask for it back, pretend like she isn't there. You don't see her. She's gone.

This group supported keeping the money, saying it was a willing gift and better spent on education than returned to someone delusional

Remote_Practice_5864 − NTA she gave it to you willingly, after years of mistreating you.

It’s not your job to manage her choices, and using it for your education is a far better outcome than letting her throw it away.

My_friends_are_toys − I'm with dad. If she gave it to a charity or church, would they give it back? Nope.

Monachikos02 − Keep the money. If she doesn't know how to read the bible to understand,

according to the bible (see below), no one knows when the second coming is.

Well, tough shite for your Aunt. A fool and their money are soon parted, or something like that.

"Yes, the Bible says we do not know the day or hour of the Rapture.

In Matthew 24:36, Jesus explicitly states, "But about that day or hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father".

The Bible encourages believers to live alert and ready at all times,

as the event will be sudden and unexpected, but it does not provide a way to predict its exact timing."

These commenters urged caution or returning the cash, noting that while the aunt acted irrationally, keeping her life savings felt unethical or risky

Cool_Hand7435 − I'll be the voice of dissent because I think that YWBTA.

Not because she deserves her money back, but because she's clearly insane and idk I feel like ethically speaking, it's not great to take away someone's life savings.

Like if she were a freaking millionaire, sure, keep the money. If it's all she's got... Idk, it feels icky.

DisembarkEmbargo − I honestly would give it back. Not because it's the right thing to do but she is batshit crazy.

She is going to stalk you until she gets that money back and might make threats on your life with some stupid Christian logic.

Of course, don't offer to give it back because she might forget about the money in some sort of psychiatric breakdown.

Wait until the weekend to spend any of that dough.   Edit: I also want to know if your sister ended up getting the car.

Edit on Friday: I think it's a good idea that you are giving it back. You are a bigger person than me giving the money back before she even ask...

I hope college goes well!

This user shared a similar rapture-related family story, warning that returning such “gifts” often ends in drama once the giver regrets it

chtmarc − Nope NTA. Back in 1978 my great aunt did this same s__t. Rapture coming blah blah blah.

Gave away her property, money, furniture and even all her clothes.

Rapture didn’t happen and she was screaming at people for not giving it back and how unchristian they were. F that mess

In the end, the niece chose grace over grievance. She gave the money back, not because her aunt deserved it, but because doing the right thing felt lighter than revenge. And perhaps that’s the real takeaway: when someone’s world ends, literally or metaphorically, you can either stand above them or stand beside them.

Would you have returned the $40K or kept it as karmic justice? Let’s hear your thoughts. Would morality or survival win out in your version of the rapture?

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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