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Free Online Books/MP: Peter J. Leithart - The Promise of His Appearing (2004) FULL BOOK at Google Books 'Leithart gives a preterist reading of 2 Peter. He defines preterism as "the view that prophecies about an imminent "day of judgement" scattered throughout the New Testament were fulfilled in the apostolic age by the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, the event that brought a final end to the structures and orders of the Old Creation or Old Covenant.”
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The Return of Christ Fulfilled Andy Benderson
I prefer not to hold dogmatically to either full preterism (all fulfilled) or partial preterism (most fulfilled, Second Coming and resurrection yet to be fulfilled), at least in this stage of my studies in eschatology. That there was A coming of Christ in judgment against His enemies in AD 70, I am absolutely Biblically sure of. But that there was THE one and only Second Coming of Christ in AD 70, along with a general judgment and resurrection, I am just not Biblically sure of yet. I do not want to make a rash judgment by blindly rushing to one camp without thorougly and prayerfully searching the Scriptures to see if these things are so. There are certainly problems with both the full and partial positions, but at this point, I would lean towards the full preterist view. But I will not "officially" adopt full preterism until some things, mainly the resurrection, can be explained from Scripture as being fulfilled in AD 70. Enjoy the study.
Prophecy always excites our interest, as theologian Philip Mauro explains "because [it] appeal[s] to the element of curiosity which is prominent in our human nature…" Because of this, often interpretation of Biblical prophecy can become sensational, especially evidenced in the evolution of the dispensational premillennialist view of prophecy over the years. This futurist view has been the reigning eschatological view for over 150 years, began by an Englishman named John Nelson Darby and popularized by an American named C.I. Scofield (he produced the famous Scofield Reference Bible). The dispensationalist view has seen considerable change from its original form, but nevertheless, it has fallen short. Futurists have been predicting that the Second Coming was imminent for centuries and centuries, and yet He has never come. These false hopes have been causing Christians disillusionment and mockery from unbelievers. The various futurist views such as dispensational premillennialism have failed for a number of reasons, but mainly because they fail to understand the historical and cultural context in which the end time prophecies were given. Many Christians are looking for more a reasonable answer to the age old question, "Are we in the last days?"
What is the Preterist view? The term "preterist" essentially means "past in fulfillment". A preterist basically believes that most or all Biblical prophecy has been fulfilled in the first century, up to the year AD 70. This view, as strange as it may sound, is not new and is absolutely compatible with all essentials of the Christian faith. The opposite of preterism, of course, is what most Christians believe: futurism. Preterists are divided into two major groups: partial preterists and full preterists. Partial preterists believe that some Biblical prophecy was fulfilled in the First Century. Full preterists believe that all Biblical prophecy (including the Second Coming, the Judgment, and the Resurrection) was fulfilled in the first century. This view, of course, does not say that we have nothing to look forward to. Full preterism affirms that some prophecies have an ongoing fulfillment as the Kingdom of God expands. This study will take the full preterist view.
Literal vs. Figurative Language in Prophecy Most futurists argue that they hold to a literal interpretation of Scripture, while charging that their theological opponents (e.g., preterists) have a tendency to "spiritualize" prophetic passages. I would answer that claim by saying that often futurists "literalize" too many passages. The literal method originally referred to a grammatical/historical method of interpretation (which is the best way of interpretation), but now it is believed to mean the direct opposite of symbolism (the wrong way of interpretation). Instead, the literal method should recognize the fact that Biblical prophecy is often written in figurative, poetic language. The people of Jesus’ day, like many prophecy "experts" of today, many times missed the symbolic meaning behind Jesus’ words. Nicodemus thought being born again meant to literally enter a second time into his mother’s womb (John 3:4). When Jesus spoke of the Temple of His body (John 2:21), the Jews thought he was talking of the physical Temple in Jerusalem, and sought His death because of this (Matt. 26:61). The Samaritan wanted a literal drink of water from Jesus’ fountain of eternal life (John 4:10-15). The truth is that, for the most part, both camps believe that Scripture should be interpreted literally at times and symbolically at other times, depending on the context of the passage and intent of the author. What we disagree on is which passages should be recognized as symbolic.
An Air of Expectancy (prophetic time statements) Most Biblical scholars will readily admit that there is a prevalent, pervasive sense of contemporary expectancy in New Testament. This expectancy has been called the "imminency factor". What the imminency factor tells us it that the first century apostolic church clearly expected the fulfillment of end times prophecy in their lifetime. The strange thing is that Jesus and His Apostles didn’t reject the early church’s expectancy. In fact, a close look at certain passages in the New Testament reveal that Jesus and His Apostles were the source of it. Because of the imminency factor, many critics of Christianity have attempted to discredit Christ and the Bible. After all, if these end times events are still in our future, Christ and the Apostles were dead wrong in saying that they were near. How could the early church expect to see events that were to happen some 2,000 years in the future? Here is a quote from a renown atheist and opponent of Christianity, Bertrand Russell in his book Why I Am Not a Christian :
Russell concludes that Jesus was not God but a fool or insane because His supposedly infallible prediction didn’t occur. Russell came to this conclusion primarily because of this verse (which C.S. Lewis called "the most embarrassing verse in the Bible"):
In Matthew 24:34, the Greek word for "generation" is genea. Genea in the New Testament always, always, always means "generation". Thayer’s Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament maintains that genea in Matthew 24:34 means "The whole multitude of men living at the same time." Arndt-Gingrich’s Greek Lexicon defines the word as such, "basically the sum total of those born at the same time, expanded to include those all living at a given time. Contemporaries." Generally, a Biblical generation is considered 40 years. Christian scholars of the Greek language are painfully aware that Bertrand Russell, in a sense, is right: Jesus was speaking of His generation, i.e. the people then living. Many futurists will attempt to explain away the word genea by saying that it actually means "race", not "generation". In fact, "race" is suggested as an alternate meaning in the margins of many Bibles. It is suggested that Jesus was really speaking of the Jewish race, that the Jewish race would not pass until they saw the fulfillment of the end. The fact is that "race" cannot be a possible meaning, and this is easily proved by looking at many other verses in the Gospel’s that contain genea (for instance, see Matthew 1:17). Genea is always translated "generation", not "race". Thus Matthew 24:34 is a very pivotal verse, not only for Biblical prophecy, but also for the integrity of Jesus Christ Himself. We basically have two choices:
Here are some other verses in the New Testament which affirm that Jesus, the Apostles, and the early church believed that Christ would return in their generation. Please note the specific time references in them and you will grasp what the imminency factor actually is (this is not a complete list of all imminency verses) :
Can God Tell Time? So, what will we do with the above verses that clearly demonstrate the imminency factor? Many futurists will say that prophetic time statements in Biblical prophecy are relative, not absolute. This is tantamount to saying that God cannot tell time! If God told us in these verses when certain events would occur, and they didn’t, God can’t tell time! The words of preterist scholar Don Preston come to mind, "If God cannot tell time, there is no such thing!". The Bible was communicated by God to humans with human language and human concepts. God also used man’s concept of time in communicating to him. I am saying this because many times people will appeal to the fact that God is above time, so His statements about the imminency of the end times are relative because they were written from His eternal point of view. I do not deny that God is above time. In fact He created time. (Psalm 90:2, Isaiah 9:6-9). This, however, is irrelevant to our discussion. God knows we cannot understand His eternal point of view, so He wrote to us using our temporal (limited by time) point of view. So, when God says through His prophets that the time is "at hand" (near in proximity of time), it is really "at hand". It can’t be any more simple than that. Can God communicate to us understandably, or does He purposely speak in mystical, ambiguous ways in order to confuse us? "At hand" means near and ready, not some 2,000 years in the future! Another objection set forth by many is the dispensationalist claim that God was unable to fulfill His end times agenda as promised in the first century because of Jewish unbelief. I don’t care how obstinate a people can be against God’s will, God’s will always accomplishes exactly what it wants to do when it wants to do it! If it’s true that God did abandon His prophesied end times plan for the first century, how can we even be assured of ANY of His promises? The Lord is not slow in fulfilling His promises:
When God wants us to know a fulfillment is a long time in the future, He tells us in simple language:
Why didn’t God say this about the Second Coming if it was to be 2,000 years in the future? Instead, He told the church that it was "at hand". It is interesting to note here a very strange thing about the book of Daniel and the book of Revelation. God specifically tells Daniel that his book of prophecies about the end times (the book of Daniel) should be sealed up, whereas God specifically tells John that his book of prophecies about the end times (the book of Revelation) should NOT be sealed up:
Daniel was told to seal his book "even to the time of the end" (because from Daniel’s perspective, the end was NOT at hand) , whereas John was told NOT to seal his book, specifically because God said "the time is at hand". God knows what He is talking about; He would not command His prophets to do such things if His time statements were "relative".
The End? Now we come to the question, what is the END that the Bible has in mind? Is it the end of the world, or is it the end of the age? When the Bible seems to speak of "the end of the world", it is actually a poor translation. The Greek word aion can is often incorrectly translated "world" in the context of "the end". Aion means in this context "age" (see Matt.13:39-40, 49; 24:3; 28:20; I Cor. 10:11; Heb. 9:26), and most Bibles translate it thus. So, what is the end of the age? A proper understanding of the end of the age is absolutely crucial to the understanding of Biblical prophecy. For the Jews, history was to be divided into two distinct ages : the Premessianic age and the Postmessianic age (Thayer’s Greek-English Lexicon of the NT):
Jesus and the writers of the NT considered themselves to be at the termination point of these two ages, but they considered the two ages to be the Age of the Law (Mosaic) and the Age of Grace (Messianic). In their writings, we have two ages in contrast: "This age" and "The age to come". They were in the last days of "this age", awaiting eagerly "the age to come". The early church knew that they were in a transition period between these two ages, waiting for Christ to come back and begin "the age to come". "This age" was the age of the ethnic nation of Israel, and "the age to come" was to be the age of the church. These two ages are spoken of in terms of covenant, i.e. the Old Covenant and the New Covenant. John describes the people of the Old Covenant (Israel) as a Babylonian whore (Revelation 17-18), who God was to bring charges against because of spiritual adultery (Jeremiah 2:9, Micah 6:2); whereas John describes the people of the New Covenant (the church) as the true bride of Christ (Revelation 21:2), who Jesus was to marry when He returned in AD 70 (this date will be explained in detail later). The Heavens and the Earth: Old and New When discussing "the end of the world", it is also necessary to explain what the Apostle Peter means when he writes the following:
Jesus also speaks of a passing of the heavens and earth in relation to the Old Covenant Law:
Has the Old Covenant been fulfilled in Christ? I don’t know of any Christians who would say that every single Old Testament ceremonial law is still currently in force. Yet Jesus said that heaven and earth absolutely had to pass away before the slightest letter of the Law could be fulfilled. Thus, if the Law has been fulfilled, the heaven and earth Jesus spoke of must be already taken out of the way. We can tell that Jesus obviously was NOT speaking of the literal earth He was standing on and the literal heavens He was standing under. If we understand heavens and earth in that passage to be physical, then the Law is still in effect and we are all going to hell without the atonement of Christ. If we understand heavens and earth as figurative, then it is possible that they have passed along with the Law. Perhaps a look at the Old Testament terminology of "heavens and earth" would be appropriate here. God in Isaiah describes the old heavens and earth in a covenantal sense (the Old Covenant was Israel’s heavens and earth) :
Perhaps these heavens and earth—the Old Covenant and Law—were the "heavens and earth" Jesus was talking about. Jesus does not have the still existing physical heavens and earth in view. And Jesus knew as Isaiah prophesied, that these heavens and earth (the Old Covenant) must be destroyed so that the new heavens and earth, the New Covenant of Christ could be established (the same as the vision at the end of Revelation). Please note in the first passage WHY the creation was to be destroyed:
The writer of Hebrews also bears this idea out, and prophesies the passing of the Old Covenant as a destructive shaking of the heavens and earth (Heb. 12:18-28). This study of heavens and earth could go on forever, so to make a long story short, Jesus was to return in His generation in order to fulfill the Old Covenant of Israel (make the old heavens and earth pass away) and bring in the New Covenant of the Church (create the new heavens and earth, Rev. 21). If you believe that we live under the New Covenant, then you should believe that we live in the new heavens and earth. That is, if you don’t have a literalistic/physical mindset.
So, what happened in AD 70??? The coming of the New Covenant was not only described in the terminology of heavens and earth, it was also described in terms of the Holy City, Jerusalem. The Old Covenant’s city was the old, earthly Jerusalem; and the Temple was the central image and symbol of the Old Covenant. Jesus prophesies the end of the earthly Jerusalem and it’s Temple in connection to His Second Coming, and John prophesies the coming of the heavenly New Jerusalem. Closely compare the imagery of these two passages. You will find the destruction of an old physical Jerusalem and Temple, the passing away of an old creation, and a coming of a new creation and New Jerusalem:
So, finally, what happened in AD 70? This year saw the desolation and destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple by the Roman Empire. And this all happened within Jesus’ generation’s lifetime, within a Biblical generation, 40 years later (Matthew 24:34)! AD 70 was the end of the Old Covenant age, the passing of the Old Creation, and the Coming of the New Creation. AD 70 was the date of Jesus’ coming back for His bride, the church, the New Jerusalem! To Israel, If their Temple was still standing, it was a sign that all was good with God in the land (see Psalm 48:9). But if their Temple was destroyed, it meant to them that God was angrily judging Israel, His presence leaving the Holy Place and the land of Israel (see the book of Lamentations, written after the first Temple was destroyed). The Temple signified the Old Covenant world of the Jews, and when it was destroyed in AD 70 as Jesus prophesied the end of the Old Covenant and the coming of the New. The date of God’s judgment against unbelieving Israel, AD 70, then, is the most important date in this preterist study of Biblical prophecy...
Matthew 24 : The Return of the Messiah in AD 70 Matthew chapter 24 (and its parallels in Mark 13 and Luke 21) is Jesus’ outline of the end times and His Second Coming. Only by understanding this chapter, often called by theologians "the Olivet Discourse" will we be able to understand the prophetic teaching of the Apostles and the bizarre imagery of the book of Revelation.
The Context of Matthew 24 Matthew 24 is not just a collection of unrelated teachings or sayings of Jesus. It is a unified discourse about the end of the age and the Second Coming, and its central images are the city and Temple of Jerusalem. Looking at the context of the chapter, starting all the way back in chapter 22, is very important in understanding our Lord’s prophecies. Matthew 22 begins with the Parable of the Wedding Feast. This parable is the story of a king (representing the Father) who arranges a wedding feast for his son (Jesus). The king sends his servants (the Prophets and the Apostles) to invite the people (the Jews), but the people would not come. The people mocked the king’s servants and put them to death. Notice what the king does when he hears of the murders:
Isn’t this strikingly similar to the rejection of the Gospel by the first century Jews and the destruction of Jerusalem by Roman armies in AD 70? The rest of chapter 22 concerns Jesus defending His ministry from the criticism of the Jewish religious authorities. Jesus became extremely angry when the Pharisees question His Lordship and authority (v. 41-45). Matthew 23 is a very angry chapter, in which Jesus pronounces the "woes" upon the Jewish religious authorities. Especially important is the following judgment of Christ upon them:
In other words, Jesus was holding that generation of Jews responsible for the murders of all the righteous people on earth, from the murder of Abel by Cain to the murder of last Old Testament prophet. Israel was to soon fill up the measure of their fathers’ guilt by murdering Christ and the rest of His prophets. The judgment for this was to come in AD 70. The last indictment of Israel came when Jesus began to weep over this coming fate of Jerusalem, and it was an indictment against the Temple:
In saying that the Temple was left to them desolate, Jesus meant that the very presence of God had left the Temple. All was ready for the destruction of the Temple in AD 70. Jesus summed up the nature of the last days of Israel and its Temple thus:
Jesus declares that the says He was living in, the last days before His coming (see context of Luke 21), were the days when the blood of the righteous would be finally avenged. Notice Jesus says ALL THINGS written by the prophets would be absolutely fulfilled in those days, culminating in the destruction of the Temple in AD 70.
Jesus’ introduction to the end times
This prophecy sets that backdrop of the whole chapter and was fulfilled in AD 70, when the Roman general (and later Emperor) Titus ordered the burning and wholesale destruction of the Temple. Emperor Nero ordered Roman armies sent in order to put down a violent Jewish Zealot revolution. In this siege, the city of Jerusalem was literally burned to the ground. All of the Jews were either killed by the sword, starved, burned to death, or taken captive and sold as slaves. Early Christian historian, Eusebius, however says that the Christians in Jerusalem escaped before the destruction took place (this escape will be discussed later).
The Disciples Respond The disciples are obviously horrified by Jesus’ prophecy, and ask Him three things:
So they ask three things, assuming that the destruction of the Temple is connected to the Second Coming and the end of the age:
False Christs, Wars, Famines, Earthquakes, and Persecution Jesus begins to answer the questions of signs. First, He prophesies the rise of false teachers:
John in one of his epistles reports the fulfillment of Jesus’ words:
Specific examples of false Christs recorded by Scripture include Barjesus the Sorcerer in Acts 13:6-9 (who sought to lead Christians away from the faith) and Simon Magus in Acts 8:9-24 (who bewitched the people of Samaria by performing signs and was called the "Great Power"). Extra-Biblical history records many other false Christs, such as Dositheus the Samaritan (who thought he was the Messiah foretold by Moses) and Theudas (who lead multitudes to the Jordan River for "deliverance"). In fact, first century historians tell us that in the reign of Nero, cultic leaders and imposters were so frequent that they were apprehended and killed almost every day.
Wars and Rumors of Wars
The wars and rumors of wars Jesus spoke of were fulfilled in the first century, but they are especially significant because they occurred in the age of Roman peace, Pax Romana, which was inaugurated in 17 BC by Augustus Caesar. History tells us that towards AD 70 this Roman peace was becoming fragile in the Empire. The Jews were revolting violently against the tyranny of Rome. The Syrians were fighting the Jews for control of Caesarea, a war which resulted in some 20,000 deaths and the destruction of whole major Syrian cities. Similar events occured between Alexandria and Damascus, in which some 60,000 people were slaughtered. In the city of Rome, officials fought violently for control of the Empire, creating many civil wars which caused the deaths of four Roman emperors in the space of two years.
Nation Against Nation, Famine, and Earthquakes In addition to wars between nations, Jesus also speaks of horrible famine and earthquakes:
In Acts 11:28, a Christian prophet named Agabus prophesied that a great famine would come involving the whole Roman Empire (or the whole known world to them), and the famine did come to pass. The Jewish historian Josephus also records that there was a severe Jewish famine leading up to AD 70, which even led some to cannibalism of their own children. Widespread famine breeds widespread pestilence (i.e. plagues, sickness), and multitudes of deaths have been recorded as occurring as a result of this empire-wide hunger. Josephus also records that there was a major earthquake in Judea in AD 70, and other historians record that earthquake activity was severely heightened leading up to AD 70. Several major earthquakes occurred mostly in places where Jews lived (Judea, Crete, Smyrna, Miletus, Chios, Samos, Laodecea, Hieropolis, Colosse, Campania, and several in Rome). And then of course, there was the violent earthquake that freed the Apostle Paul and Silas from prison (Acts 16:26).
Signs in the Heavens Luke, unlike Matthew, here records another prophecy of Jesus foretelling that there would be great signs in the skies leading up to the end. The appearance of comets and other anomalies in the sky were thought in Jesus’ time to be a warning of coming calamity:
History verifies that unprecedented celestial phenomena occurred leading up to AD 70. In AD 60, during the reign of Nero, a comet appeared over Rome. Because of this, rumors of Nero’s downfall became widespread, and Nero himself took the rumors seriously. In order to secure his position as Emperor of the Roman Empire, he starved and poisoned his family to death. Although he seemed to have survived this comet, but another comet appeared in AD 66. Two years later, while the siege of Jerusalem was taking place, Nero was killed (presumably suicide). This comet that appeared that appeared in AD 66 is known to us today as Halley’s Comet. Issac Asimov (an atheist) comments on the supposed significance of the appearing of the comet in Jerusalem:
In addition to natural celestial phenomena like comets, history also records some strange, unexplained supernatural phenomena that occurred directly over Jerusalem in AD 70. These sources are reputable early sources, secular and unbiased:
The Tribulation of the Saints, Falling Away, and Lawlessness
The book of Acts contains many accounts of the persecution and martyrdom of God’s saints caused mostly by the Jewish religious leaders, in direct fulfillment of Jesus’ words to the Pharisees in Matthew 23:
Saul (Paul before he became a Christian) was one of the most notorious persecutors of Christianity. He was directly behind the murder of the first Christian martyr, Stephen, and helped to scatter the church at Jerusalem:
In addition to the fierce persecution by the Jews, history tells us that Nero Caesar, one of the most hated tyrants ever, started the first organized persecution of Christianity. Both the Jewish and Roman persecutions combined caused the deaths of the apostles (except John, who was exiled to Patmos, where he wrote Revelation) and many other prominent Christians, all before AD 70:
Because of the fierce persecution, many Christians fell away from the faith and became lawless like the rest of the world. Many went back to Judaism under the influence of the cult-like Judiazers, who according to Paul preached another gospel (Gal. 1:6-19, Acts 15). Specific examples of Christians who fell away are Phygetus and Hermogenes (who turned the Asian church away from Paul, II Tim. 1:15), and Demas (who betrayed Paul and loved the world, II Tim. 4:10). Paul also records that many others deserted him and turned away from the gospel (II Tim. 4:16). The Roman historian Tacitus records that most Christians who were arrested by Nero denied Christ and betrayed their fellow Christians by revealing where secret churches were. As a result, multitudes of Christians were discovered and slaughtered. The secular world became increasingly lawless under the control of the emperors Caligula and Nero (whose names were almost synonymous with "lawlessness"). Even the church was becoming more and more lawless as the end drew nearer. The sin and sensuality of the Roman world invaded churches such as the Corinthian church, who were plagued with sexual immorality. The opening chapters of the book of Revelation show that the Asian churches were being bombarded with immorality as false teachers arose.
The "Worldwide" Spread of the Gospel Before the End
Many people regard this verse as the Achilles Heel (greatest weakness) of preterism. It is said that the end could not have been in AD 70, because the gospel could not have been preached in all the world before the end came. After all, how could the apostles have preached in America before it was even discovered? The answer to this hard question lies in the original Greek of the passage. Since most English-speaking Christians are unaware of the actual Greek words as they read the Bible, it is understandable that such mistakes can be made. An investigation into the Greek word for "world", oikoumene, is absolutely crucial in understanding Matthew 24:14. Jesus said that the gospel must be preached in all the [oikoumene] before the end came. Oikoumene means "the inhabited earth", or in other words, the known earth at that time. Sometimes, depending on the context, translators will translate oikoumene as "the Roman Empire". America and the Western Hemisphere was not in view; it was not believed to be part of the known, inhabited earth at that time! Look how Luke uses the word oikoumene in Luke 2:1:
If you maintain that oikoumene in Matthew 24:14 means the whole globe, then you are also logically bound to believe that Caesar wanted to register every single person on the entire globe, including the natives in unknown America! This is clearly preposterous! Some Bible translations translate oikoumene in Luke 2:1 as "empire" or even "Roman empire". Jesus, when he said the gospel must be preached in all the world, meant the known inhabited earth, or in other words, the Roman Empire. If Jesus meant the whole entire globe, the Greek word should have been kosmos (the globe, or "the circle of the earth"), not oikoumene! But was the whole Roman Empire even preached to? This is still an overwhelming task, but Paul seems to be confident when he wrote even in the 60’s that it had already been fulfilled! Paul has the oikoumene in mind when he makes the following statements:
How could this be? The book of Acts tells us that there were Jews as Pentecost "from every nation under heaven (Acts 2:5), who brought the gospel back to their own nations. History tells us that the Apostles had been very successful in their world missions. According to Phillip Doddridge, the following Apostles and Christians went to the following places with the Gospel (all before AD 70):
The Abomination of Desolation and Escape
Jesus’ words reflect that the progression towards the end and His coming would become very urgent. When THEY (the people actually listening to Jesus then, not us 2,000 years in the future) saw something called "the abomination of desolation" prophesied by Daniel, they were supposed to flee Jerusalem and the whole land of Judea in order to escape the coming wrath. Luke records an additional sign that was to warn the Christians:
When they saw the Roman armies surrounding the Holy City, it was a sign that God’s judgment was near. They weren’t going to have any time to take possessions form their homes or even grab their clothes if they were naked. Like Lot’s wife, they were not to look back at the coming destruction of a generation worse than even Sodom and Gomorrah (Matt 11:24). So, what is the abomination of desolation? A better rendering of the phrase would be "the abomination that makes desolation" in the Temple. This refers to the sins of the first century Jews that were making their Temple desolate (deserted by God). Jesus pronounced this desolation to the Pharisees as if it was already a reality: Matthew 23:38, "See! Your house [the Temple] is left to you desolate..." The primary abomination that caused the desolation Jesus was speaking of is referred to as the abomination of bloodletting—or the rejection of the atoning blood of the true Lamb, the Messiah, Jesus Christ. Instead of accepting the sufficiency of Christ’s shed blood in atoning for sins, the Jews continued to sacrifice animals detestable in God’s sight:
As a result of God’s desolation of the Temple, a Jewish revolutionary political faction called the Zealots invaded the Temple in AD 67 and took it over for political uses in its fight against the Roman Empire. The Zealots murdered the high priests inside the Temple and even committed grave blasphemy against God by roaming freely within the Holy Place. In fact, one of the Zealot leaders, John Levi of Gischala, even sat in the Temple proclaiming himself the ultimate authority of the Temple (compare with II Thessolonians 2:4). After the Zealots were defeated, the Roman legions began to set fire to the Temple, and as they were watching it burn, they set up Roman idols around it and sacrificed to them. Josephus, a Jewish historian who was an eyewitness to the destruction of the Temple wrote:
The Gentile worship of pagan gods near the Temple was a sure sign to the Jews that God had left the Temple desolate because of their sin. To the Christians, this abomination that made the desolation of the Temple was their cue from Jesus that they must flee Judea immediately. And according to historian Eusebius, they did obey Jesus in fleeing Judea to a place called Perea.
The Great Tribulation
Jesus’ claims that the tribulation before His coming would be the worst tribulation in history is strikingly similar to Josephus’ secular eyewitness assessment of the Jewish was in AD 70, which he called:
Expositor’s Bible Commentary, sharing Josephus’ sentiments, in explains the horrors of the siege of Jerusalem in AD 70:
The Nature of Christ’s Coming Jesus, after foretelling the escalating horrors of the Great Tribulation, begins speaking of His Second Coming (in context of the whole chapter’s subject of the fall of Jerusalem). First, He demonstrates the nature of His coming:
Jesus here foretells that false prophets would come—but notice what He said they would say. Jesus said not to believe them if they said He was "here... or there", "in the desert", or "in the secret chambers". Why? If Jesus was to come physically like many today claim, why would this be a bad thing for a person to say (providing of course that Christ really was there like they said)? Christ here is demonstrating that His Second Coming would not be necessarily bodily or physical, or in other words, it wouldn’t be physically "here or there"! Christ then proceeds to compare the nature of His Second Coming to lightning. He said that it would be just like lightning that appears in the east sky and is seen even in the west sky. What is it about lightning that He is trying to convey? Jesus is trying to say that His Coming would be an instantaneous phenomena that would be recognized by even those who were far away. Another interesting thing about lightning that shines from the east to the west is that it never touches the ground! It stays in the clouds!
The Event of Christ’s Second Coming and the Gathering
Christ’s coming like lightning would be immediately after the tribulation of the days He was speaking of (the days of vengeance they were living in, Luke 21:22), the dreaded and at the same time blessed event of the Second Coming would occur, accompanied by the shaking of the heavens. It is interesting to note here that these words of Jesus here are taken almost verbatim from the words of the Old Testament prophets (see for instance Isaiah 13:10, Zecheriah 12:11, and Daniel 7:13-14)! Jesus was prophesying in the same verbal tradition that the prophets before Him had. This verbal tradition is called by theologians "apocalyptic language". Dr. L. Michael Hall comments on apocalyptic language:
A prime textbook example of apocalyptic language lies in Psalm 18:
David here is actually describing a historical event in an apocalyptic, symbolic manner. The historical event described is his flight from the anger of King Saul. And, yet, when the Bible describes this event in literal terms, none of the things that David described happened! Why? Because David is not describing it in a literal manner! The Lord did not aid David by physically riding down from heaven on an angel, breathing smoke and fire. It is meant to be symbolic, or apocalyptic. Once again, Jesus’ description of His coming is in the same genre, apocalyptic literature. He describes His Second Coming in much the same was David described God’s intervention in delivering him from Saul. Jesus, in Matthew 24, describes Himself as "coming in the clouds". Clouds, in apocalyptic language, denote God’s presence (like the Shekinah glory cloud in the Temple), and many times they denote a coming in judgment on a rebellious nation. A prime example of this is found in Isaiah:
This, too, is a description of a historical event, when God judged Egypt. Yet, consider how God accomplished it: He sent the foreign Assyrian army to destroy Egypt. God did not actually ride in on a physical cloud! That would be absurd. Jesus’ coming in the clouds was in the same manner: He sent the Roman armies to destroy Jerusalem. Matthew 24:29-30 also describes celestial disaster—the darkening of the sun and moon, the falling of the stars, and the shaking of the heavens. This, too, is apocalyptically (symbolically) described. In fact, the Old Testament often speaks of the fall of nations as a shaking of the heavens or a fall of celestial bodies (see the prophecies for the fall of Babylon, Is. 13:9-10; the fall of Egypt, Ez. 32:7-8; and an earlier fall of Israel, Amos 8:9). A literal interpretation of Jesus’ words about celestial disaster would not only be absolutely absurd and scientifically impossible, but it would be absolutely destructive to the intended meaning of the prophecy. Thomas Scott comments on this prophecy:
Another event Christ associates with His return in Matthew 24:29-31 is the gathering of His elect "from the four winds". This verse is commonly used to support the idea of a future rapture of believers. This gathering is seen by preterists, though, as a spiritual fulfillment that was accomplished in AD 70. Instead of rapture, this gathering of the elect speaks of the spread of the gospel to the nations of the world. The word "angels" in this passage is angelos, in addition to referring to actual supernatural angels, can also mean simply "messengers", like John the Baptist, Haggai, and Malachi. (see II Chron. 26:15, Hag. 1:13, Mal. 2:7, Matt. 11:10, James 2:25). Thus, it is possible that the angels Christ referred to in His prophecy of the gathering are simply the Apostles and first century evangelists. Concerning the Great Trumpet that is used in gathering the elect, Gary De Mar comments:
The Fig Tree and This Generation
Jesus now begins to reveal the time of His Second Coming to the disciples. He teaches them that they will know the nearness of His coming by studying the times and seasons—like someone observing a fig tree could know that summer is near if they see newly grown leaves. The disciples were to be watchful, and even though they couldn’t know the exact time, date, or hour (Matthew 24:36), they could know its nearness by observing the world around them. However, Jesus does give them a definite time indicator. He presents them with a very simple time frame within which the fulfillment of "all these things" He described would take place. It was to be within that generation. And it did happen, within 40 years (a Biblical generation) of Jesus’ prophecies. This is one of the most striking vindication of Jesus’ Godhood and reliability I have ever come across—and yet so many Christians deny these incredible fulfillments!
Conclusion: So, where are we now? The most common objection to the full preterist position is that it seems to reduce the period after Christ’s coming to a kind of limbo of eternal non-fulfillment. Full preterism, they say, allows for no final conclusion to history. It is a given both by preterists and futurists alike that we will live in an eternal state after the Second Coming (so this point does not need to be proved). Full preterists believe that, since the Second Coming has already occurred and redemption is complete, we have an indefinitely long period ahead of us. We now live in the presence of Christ forever (both partly in this world and fully when we get to heaven):
This belief is based upon Moses’ and David’s statements that God keeps His covenants unto a thousand generations (Deuteronomy 7:9, Psalm 105:8). When Christ came, he brought in the New Covenant and He now dwells with us in this covenant world (the New Heavens and Earth and the New Jerusalem). If we take Moses’ and David’s statements literally, how long would 1,000 generations be? 40,000 years? Most likely they meant it as an understatement. Either way we have a long future ahead of us. Ed Stevens comments:
This is absolutely unfathomable for us to fully comprehend right now. But let it not be said that this period will be a "limbo of eternal non-fulfillment." Ed Stevens again comments:
Preterists do not believe in some pessimistic, escapist view of prophecy. Instead, based on passages such as Ezekiel 47, there is reason to believe that the Gospel will be successful in transforming the world ("the healing of the nations", Revelation 22:2). The gates of the New Jerusalem will always be open, welcoming people into eternal life:
Some will ask at this point, "Has God taken sin and death and sickness out of the world yet?" This is a good question and it is based partly on this verse:
Notice that this verse speaks of the passing away of death, sorrow, crying, and pain in the New City (the covenant dwelling of the Church); yet it doesn’t speak of the passing away of sin out of the world. Instead, Revelation affirms that the world after the Second Coming will certainly have sinners outside of the New City that will never enter because their names are not in the Lamb’s Book of Life, i.e. sinners outside of the faith of Christ (Revelation 21:27, 22:14-5). The literalist will still cry foul at this point saying that death, as well as pain and sorrow, still exist. After all, people still die, and get hurt, and get sad, don’t they? This would be a gross misunderstanding of Revelation 21:4. The death, pain, and sorrow in view here are not physical, or of this world. They are spiritual. Inside the covenant city of God, there are none of these maladies, because they are spiritual problems that Christ has already taken care of. We will never see death or pain or sorrow, we have eternal life! However, outside of the city, Revelation says that the nations experience death, pain, and sorrow because they still live in sin. If there was to be no more death or pain anywhere, why should there even be a healing of the nations?:
I will close with a quote from Ed Stevens:
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