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24:1-3 -- Christ announces that the second Temple, God's dwelling
place among mankind, would soon be destroyed and earthly Jerusalem
made desolate. The Jewish followers of Christ, as citizens of the
Old Covenant dispensation, inquire as to the future of their nation,
having just been informed that the end of that age would be accompanied
by the annihilation of the Mosaic Temple system and state.
These disasters came to pass in their generation, in accordance with the prophecies of
Christ. The Jews launched the Great Revolt against Rome in AD 66 under the Zealot messianic
king, Menahem (Josephus, Wars of the Jews, 2:17)--the
Holy Temple was destroyed by war and fire at the desolation of Jerusalem at AD 70 (Josephus, Wars,
6:2:9; 6:3:5; 6:4:5; 6:6:2). At the end of this tribulation period, Roman
armies dismantled the Jerusalem Temple stone-by-stone to obtain the gold
that melted between the cracks during the fire, and to
remove the headquarters of the revolt. The Temple vessels and
utensils were plundered and taken to Rome by General Titus (Josephus,
Wars, 7:5:5-7).
Matt 24:4
-- Shaken by the prophesy of the destruction of the Holy Temple,
and knowing that the destruction of Solomon's Temple 600 years prior marked God's visitation to them (Jer 7:1-20,29-34),
the apostles ask:"When will these things be?" and "What
sign signifies thy coming at end of the age?" The questioning
highlights the fact that the parousia and the end of the Old Testamental
age would be discerned and comprehended in the passing of calamitous
signs.
Matt 24:4-5
-- Christ predicts the intensification of false messianic movements
within Israel and around the empire. First-century examples: Dositheus
the Samaritan (Origen: Contra Celsum, VI, ii; Hom. xxv in Lucam;
Contra Celsum, I, lvii), Simon Magus (Acts 8:9-24) who was deified
in Rome, Theudas (Acts 5:36-37), Judas the Galilean (Acts 5:37),
Herod Agrippa (Acts 12:20-23), Menahem (Josephus: War of the Jews;
2.433-450). Under the government of Felix, deceivers rose up daily
in Judea and persuaded the people to follow them into the wilderness,
assuring them that they should behold conspicuous signs and wonders
performed by the Almighty. Felix, from time to time, apprehended
many and put them to death. During this period (AD 52-58) arose
a celebrated Egyptian deceiver (Acts 21:38), who collected thirty-thousand
followers and persuaded them to accompany him to the Mount of Olives,
telling them that from there they would see the walls of Jerusalem
fall down at his command as a prelude to the capture of the Roman
garrison and their obtaining the sovereignty of the city (Josephus:
War of the Jews, 2.259-263; Antiquities of the Jews 20.169-171).
Such messiahs and magicians were often as powerful in the display
of miracles as were the apostles (see: Simon of Samaria in Acts
8:9-11; Apollonius
of Tyana). Partial list of first-century false messiahs: Judas,
son of Hezekiah (4 BC); Simon
of Peraea (4 BC); Athronges,
the shepherd (4 BC); Judas,
the Galilean (6 AD); the Samaritan
prophet (36 AD); King Herod
Agrippa (44 AD); Theudas
(? AD); the Egyptian
prophet (52-58 AD); anonymous
prophet (59 AD); Menahem,
the son of Judas the Galilean (66 AD); John
of Gischala (67-70 AD); Vespasian
(67 AD); Simon
bar Giora (69-70 AD). Related link: Livius.org
- Messiah Overview.
Matt 24:6-8
-- Jesus promises His apostles that they will have famines,
wars and rumors concerning wars. This prophecy had special significance
during that period of the great Pax Romana ("Roman Peace"),
when the outbreak of these wars transpired: Claudius' Roman war
with Britain/East Anglia; at least three Jewish insurrections against
Rome prior to the 60s AD (one violently put down by Cuspius Fadus);
the Jewish/Alexandrian revolt upon Caligula's death; Claudius declares
martial law in Palestine after the Jewish insurrection at the death
of Agrippa I; the Germanic tribes in present-day Belgium and Germany
made perpetual trouble for the legions throughout the reign; a smoldering
Balkan war was in continuous progress. As these conflagrations escalated,
Rome started its own civil wars in 68-70 that nearly toppled the
empire. As Tacitus writes, "Four princes [Galba, Otho, Vitellius,
Domitian] killed by the sword; three civil wars, several foreign
wars; and mostly raging at the same time. Favorable events in the
East [the subjection of the Jews], unfortunate ones in the West.
Illyria disturbed, Gaul uneasy; Britain conquered and soon relinquished;
the nations of Sarmatia and Suevia rising against us; the Parthians
excited by the deception of a pseudo-Nero." For more on wars of
this time and false prophets, see: Josephus: Antiquities, 20:5:1-4;
20:8:5-10; Wars, 2:10:1; 2:13:4-7; 6:5:2. As for famines, Acts 11:28
records a worldwide famine. Josephus reports famines in Jerusalem
in the 60s AD which killed hundreds of thousands during the Jewish
War (AD 66-70). There were accounts of infanticide and cannibalism
(as foretold in Deuteronomy 28:53,57) -- Jewish women cooked and
ate their babies (Josephus; Wars 6:3:3-4; Wars 5:1:4). Concerning
earthquakes, Seneca writes: "How often have cities in Asia, how
often in Achaia, been laid low by a single shock of earthquake!
How many towns in Smyrna, how many in Macedonia, have been swallowed
up! How often has Paphos collapsed! Not infrequently are tidings
brought to us of the utter destruction of entire cities" (Seneca
Ad Lucilium Epistulae Morales, trans. Richard M. Gummere, vol. 2,
437). Josephus says of Jerusalem, "the city was besieged on
both sides...there broke out a prodigious storm in the night, with
the utmost violence, and very strong winds, with the largest showers
of rain, with continued lightnings, terrible thunderings, and amazing
concussions and bellowings of the earth, that was in an earthquake.
These things were a manifest indication that some destruction was
coming upon men, when the system of the world was put into this
disorder; and any one would guess that these wonders foreshowed
some grand calamities that were coming" (Wars, 4:4:5).
Matt 24:9-10
-- Jesus foretells the persecution of the early church by the Jews
and later by Nero, who falsely blamed the Christian sect for burning
up to half of Rome. This persecution went on the entire AD 30-66
by the Jews, and Nero's persecution was precisely 3.5 years, from
64-68AD. It is essential to note that Matthew 24:9-13 is exactly
parallel to Matthew 10:16-23, a passage which all scholars assign
to a first-century fulfillment. Jesus predicts the civil wars of
the Jews (Matt 24:10; 10:21), and the great Jewish civil war occurred
in 66-69AD (Josephus; Wars, 2:17:1-10; 2:18:1-11; 4:6:2-3; 5:1:2-5;
5:6:1; 5:13:6; 6:2:1).
Matt 24:11-13
-- Jesus teaches more on false prophets, emphasizing their key role
in the delusion of the nation, as described at 2 Thess 2:7-11 (see also:
Antiquities, 20:8:6; Wars, 6:5:2). Josephus says false prophets
were related to the messianic movement of the seditious Zealots,
who promised a redemption for the Jewish rebels at the Temple but
met final destruction at the hand of the Romans. In Matthew
24:13 Jesus holds out hope for the believers who might endure to
the end. (Verses 24:12-13 are parallel to Matthew 10:21-22.)
Matt 24:14
-- A key sign of the end of the Jewish age was the gospel's rapid
proclamation to the whole world (Greek: "oikoumene" = "inhabited
earth;" "Roman Empire" -- Strong's # 3625). This
sign was rapidly fulfilled in the apostles' generation, especially
through Paul's ministry (Col 1:23, Col 1:5-6, Romans 10:14-18, Romans
16:26, 1 Tim 3:16; Acts 13:47). The "whole world" spoken of in the
Bible pertained to the extent of the Roman Empire (compare the geographic
boundaries of the "whole world" in Matt 24:14 with that of the same
"whole world" in Luke 2:1, Acts 11:28, Acts 2:5, Romans
1:8 and and 2 Chronicles 36:23). The use of the Greek word "oikoumene"
(Strong's #3625) in Matt 24:14 speaks of the Roman Empire -- the
"whole world" ("oikoumene") of the scriptures was contextually
centered in the area of the Ancient Roman Empire (see: Luke 2:1).
Early Church fathers including Clement of Rome, Eusebius, and Chrysostom
say Matthew 24:14 was fulfilled in the apostles' generation. The
immediate and rapid spread of the Christian faith throughout the
entire Empire signified a covenantal shift to a new dispensation,
wherein all nations participate equally in the blessing of Abraham
through faith (Gen 12:1-3; Gal 3:6-9,14,29).
Matt 24:15-20
-- Christ tells of His nation's Great Tribulation (cf. Luke 21:20-23).
The famous historic account of the exodus of the Jerusalem Church
in AD 66-67 is recorded by Eusebius (Ecclesiastical History, iii.v.).
The Judean remnant saw the armies of Cestius Gallus in 66AD surrounding
Jerusalem (and Vespasian's shortly thereafter; compare to the parallel
account in Luke 21:20-24). At the same time, The Temple was captured
by the Jewish Zealots as Paul had foretold (2 Thess 2:4-7). Messiah-King
Menahem and the Zealots turned the temple into a military outpost,
defiled it with murderous blood, and made evil of their own high
priest while launching the Great Revolt. During this time, the daily
sacrifices offered to Rome were ended, which was a declaration of
war against the Roman Empire. These events signaled the faithful
Jewish remnant to flee according to our Lord's commands to them
in Matthew 24:16-20 and Luke 21:20:23. Just after they escaped the
city, the Zealots seized the city, guarded the gates, and prevented
all escape. Eusebius writes, "But the members of the Church in Jerusalem,
having been commanded before the war in accordance with a certain
oracle given by revelation to the men of repute there to depart
from Jerusalem and to inhabit a certain city of Peraea called Pella,
all the believers in Christ in Jerusalem went thither; and when
now the saints had abandoned both the royal metropolis itself and
the whole land of Judaea, the vengeance of God finally overtook
the lawless persecutors of Christ and His apostles." At the end
of the great tribulation the Romans made sacrifices to their standards
at the Temple (Josephus, Wars, 4:5:1; 5:1:2,3,5).
Matt 24:21-24
-- Jesus tells more about Israel's Great Tribulation (also: Luke
21:20-24; Josephus, Wars of the Jews, entire). The Roman Jewish
war is the documented history of the Great Tribulation. Josephus
declares that the war with the Romans was "the greatest of all ever
heard of" (see: Matthew 24:21). Josephus writes, "the war which
the Jews made with the Romans hath been the greatest of all those,
not only that have been in our times, but, in a manner, of those
that were ever heard of" (Wars of the Jews, preface, section 1;
Wars, 5:10:5). Jesus calls this time the "Days of Vengeance" (Luke
21:20-22; Isaiah 61:2/Jer 46:10; Matt 23:31-38; Luke 19:40-44; Matt
21:40-22:7), and "wrath and distress upon this people" (Luke 21:23;
see also Josephus, Wars, 2:10:1; 2:22:1; 6:3:3-4; 6:9:2-4; 7:1:1).
Lakes of blood and fires (Wars, 2:18: 4:5:1; 5:1:2-5; 6:4:6; 6:5:1,2;
6:8:5). Jerusalem divided into three (Rev 16:19; see also Wars,
5:1:1,4). Genealogical records destroyed (Wars, 6:6:3; 6:9:1). God
took the Kingdom away from them (Matt 21:40-45; see also Josephus,
Wars, 6:8:4:; 6:9:1,4). Jerusalem called "That Great City" and "Sodom"
(Rev 11:8; Rev 18:21-24; see also Josephus, Wars, 5:10:5; 5:13:6;
7:8:7). Jews sold into slavery (Luke 21:24; see also Josephus, Wars,
preface, section 11; Wars 6:8:2; 6:9:2-4). City of Jerusalem is
leveled (Matt 24:2 and Luke 19:40-44; see also Josephus, Wars, 7:1:1;
7:8:7). Jesus warns his generation: "You serpents, you brood of
vipers, how will you escape the sentence of gehenna? Therefore,
behold, I am sending you prophets and wise men and scribes; some
of them you will kill and crucify, and some of them you will scourge
in your synagogues, and persecute from city to city, so that upon
you may fall the guilt of all the righteous blood shed on earth,
from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah, the
son of Berechiah, whom you murdered between the temple and the altar.
Truly I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation.
Jerusalem, Jerusalem, who kills the prophets and stones those who
are sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together,
the way a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you were unwilling.
Behold, your house is being left to you desolate (Matt 23:33-38).
Matt 24:25
-- Jesus explicitly tells the apostles that these dire events will
be experienced by them (as also in Matt 24:33-34). They will be
the generation to see these things Jesus is describing come to pass
(not some distant future generation). By comparing Matt 24:25 with
similar statements in John 14:28, John 13:19 and John 16:4, we see
that they all signal events in the apostles' near future. Christ
always told his apostles things they would need to know beforehand,
that it could be to their benefit when the things came to pass before
their eyes.
Matt 24:26-28
-- Jesus forewarns them not to follow false messianic movements
in the desert or in the Temple chambers, which had precise first-century
relevance for them (Antiquities of the Jews, 20:8:6; Wars, 6:5:2).
The desolation is like lightning over the whole land from east to
west, and where the carcasses are strewn, there will be the Roman
Eagles (i.e, the infamous Eagle Ensigns of the Roman armies that
were planted all over Jerusalem during the Roman Jewish war). The
Roman eagle ensigns served as a symbol of the Jews' defeat at the
hand of their enemies. Most commentators believe this war and passage
also was the fulfillment of Moses' predictions in Deuteronomy 28:49
and the verses following. All this came to pass in 66-70AD (see
also: Josephus, Wars, 4:5:1; 5:1:2,3,5).
Matt 24:29-31
-- Christ speaks of the end signs. This passage hinges upon the
apocalyptic language of the great prophets Isaiah, Ezekiel, Hosea,
David, etc. in exactly the same way they used such language for
God's judgments against nations and individuals in their own times.
Compare Christ's words with God's coming to O.T. Babylon in 539BC
(Isa 13:10-13, 13:1, and 13:17), God's coming to Edom in 703BC (Isa
34:3-5), God's coming to Egypt in 572BC (Ez 32:7-11), God's coming
to Nineveh in 612BC (Nahum 1). So, in like manner, Jesus Christ
is now also seen as coming in that same glory of the Father (cf.
Matt 16:27; John 17:5). Jesus came to first-century Israel and demolished
it in the same glory as the Father's cloud-comings in the OT era
(cf. Isaiah 19:1-2). Thus, this passage speaks of Christ's full
equality and oneness with Jehovah. The Parousia of Christ is signified
by the fall of Jerusalem and the Holy Temple. Many cosmic signs
were also witnessed in that period: the angels, voices, and glorious
brightness of God are witnessed at the temple and around Jerusalem
as recorded in Josephus, Tacitus, and the Midrash (Josephus, Wars,
6:5:3; 2:22:1-2; 4:4:5; 6:5:2-3; Tacitus, Histories, v. 13; Midrash,
Lam 2:11). All torah-observing, Messiah-rejecting Jews were gathered
into Jerusalem from all over the world at Passover Feast in 67AD
and were shut in by the Zealot and Roman armies. Now, locked in
the giant furnace of the city, millions were destroyed (see: Matt
13:40-43, Luke 19:40-44, Matt 23:33-38, Luke 23:28-31; Matt 21:40-45).
It is no surprise that rabbis today call 70AD the "end of biblical
Judaism." Indeed, the faithful and newly consummated Church-bride
was gathered and spared God's desolations and wrath. The Church-nation
of Christ, thus fully built and established, is never to be destroyed.
The Church becomes the eternal Temple and Priesthood of God (2 Cor
6:16; Eph 2:19-22; 1 Peter 2:9). Christianity emerges distinct from
Judaism and becomes the universal and one true Faith of the Living
God and the Holy Nation. Christ's followers were destined to occupy
all nations to gather the elect from all peoples into Abraham's
blessing (Gal 3:7-9.14,16,26-29; Gen 12:1-3). The teachings and
prophecies of Christ and the apostles are fully and historically
vindicated by this historic destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple
in AD 66-70.
Matt 24:32-33
-- To mark the time of his parousia to them, Jesus gives the apostles a parable about trees and their seasons (cf.Luke 21:29-31).
The shooting forth of leaves signals that summer is near at
hand; Jesus says the natural phenomena is analogous to his apostles at
the end of the age: "So likewise you [the apostles],
when you shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at
the door." Christ is declared "at the door" mere decades later in the 60s AD, as confirmed by the apostle James (James 5:8-9) and the apostle John (Rev 3:20). In Luke's parallel account, Christ's
promise to the apostles is as follows: "So also you, when you see
these things come to pass know that the kingdom of God is near at
hand" (Lk 21:31).
Matt 24:33-34
-- In this passage, the climax of the Olivet Discourse, Jesus promises
his apostles that they will see all these signs come to pass, as
well as His glorious return in judgment, within their generation: "So likewise
you, when you shall see all these things, know that it is near,
even at the doors. Verily I say unto you, this generation shall
not pass, till all these things be fulfilled."
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