Let me begin with a disclaimer: Berean Bible Church is
not all about Preterism, we are a Bible teaching ministry. We have been
talking about eschatology for the past six weeks, and we will be talking
about it for a few more. I'm taking my time with these verses, because it
is important that we understand what Jesus is saying. When Jesus stops talking
about eschatology, so will we. We just deal with the subject matter of the
verses at hand. I'm not ashamed of my eschatology, nor do I try to hide it,
but eschatology is just one branch of my theology. I want to preach the whole
counsel of God. I am not a Preterist preacher, I'm a preacher whose eschatology
is Preterism.
I want to begin this morning with a profound quote from J. I. Packer.
This quote is worth our understanding and meditation. To understand this
quote is to gain a huge advantage in your study of the Bible:
We do not start our Christian lives by working out our
faith for ourselves; it is mediated to us by Christian tradition, in the
form of sermons, books and established patterns of church life and fellowship.
We read our Bibles in the light of what we have learned from these sources;
we approach Scripture with minds already formed by the mass of accepted
opinions and viewpoints with which we have come into contact, in both the
Church and the world. . . . It is easy to be unaware that it has happened;
it is hard even to begin to realize how profoundly tradition in this sense
has molded us. But we are forbidden to become enslaved to human tradition,
either secular or Christian, whether it be "catholic" tradition, or "critical"
tradition, or "ecumenical" tradition. We may never assume the complete rightness
of our own established ways of thought and practice and excuse ourselves the
duty of testing and reforming them by Scriptures. (J. I. Packer, Fundamentalism
and the Word of God, [Grand Rapids, MI, William B. Eerdmans Publishing
Co., 1958], pp. 69-70.)
Believer, we must test everything we believe by the text. The beliefs
you hold must come from the text. And we must be open to allowing the text
to shatter our false ideas.
We are working our way through Marks' account of the Olivet Discourse.
We must remember that in this discourse the Lord is answering the disciples'
questions about the destruction of the Jewish Temple. As we work our way
through this discourse, we must fight the temptation to read this as if it
was written to us in the twenty first century. Jesus is speaking to His disciples
in the first century, and we must study it in that context. Audience relevance
is something we must always keep in mind as we read and study the Bible;
what did this mean to the original audience? Do you know of any book in
the Bible written to the saints in Tidewater, Virginia? I don't. The Scriptures
are not written to us! They are for us,
but they were not written to us.
All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable
for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness;
17 that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work.
(2 Timothy 3:16-17 NASB)
The Scriptures are God-breathed and profitable for us, but they
are not written to us. Thus, we must understand the original intent before
we apply them to our lives. Now, as I'm sure you understand, it is not always
easy to find out exactly what the original intent of the author was; we
are separated from the original audience by thousands of years, by culture,
by history, and by language. But if we do our homework and compare Scripture
with Scripture, we can get a good idea of the authors' original intent.
We saw in our last study that our Lord told the disciples that
they would see the "Abomination of Desolation" spoken of by Daniel, which
Luke explained as Jerusalem surrounded by armies, and when they did, there
would come a time of "Great Tribulation":
"For those days will be a time of tribulation
such as has not occurred since the beginning of the creation which God created,
until now, and never shall. (Mark 13:19 NASB)
We looked at this verse in depth last week, and
we saw that the "Great Tribulation" is past. Sorry to disappoint you, but
it is over, it happened 2,000 years ago. It was the destruction of Jerusalem,
as the context of this and the parallel Gospel accounts makes abundantly
clear. According to Luke's record, Jesus said:
because these are days of vengeance, in order
that all things which are written may be fulfilled. (Luke 21:22 NASB)
This is a very significant verse. Jesus tells us here that ALL
things which are written will be fulfilled in the destruction of Jerusalem.
What does He mean by that? "All things which are written,"
refers to all prophecy. All prophecy
was to be fulfilled in the destruction of Jerusalem. This makes the destruction
of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 a very significant event for all Christians. Everything
that was ever prophesied to happen was fulfilled in Jerusalem's fall. Please
consider the weight of this statement!
Jesus said that there will never be anything to equal this tribulation
that was soon to come upon Jerusalem. Our Savior wept at the foresight of
these calamities, and as we read the accounts of Josephus, it is almost
impossible to keep from weeping ourselves. Josephus said,
"To speak in brief, no other city ever suffered such things, as no other
generation from the beginning of the world was even more fruitful of wickedness."
"And unless the Lord had shortened those days,
no life would have been saved; but for the sake of the elect whom He chose,
He shortened the days. (Mark 13:20 NASB)
Josephus computes the number of those who perished in the siege
at eleven hundred thousand, besides those who were slain in other places;
and if the Romans had gone on destroying in this manner, the whole nation
of the Jews would certainly, in a little time, have been eliminated. The
word "saved," here is not a reference to eternal life,
but to physical deliverance. Had the war gone on much longer, no one would
have been left alive. "But for the sake of the elect whom He
chose, He shortened the days." The word "elect" here is from
the Greek word eklektos, which means: "picked out, chosen." And
the word "chose" is the Greek word eklegomai, which means: "to pick
out, choose, to pick out or choose out for oneself." This seems rather redundant
unless God is trying to make a point. The point being that God chooses men
and women to be objects of His mercy.
The doctrine of election is hard for man to accept. It's hard
for man to acknowledge that his salvation is an act of God. In his fallen
state, he wants to assume some responsibility, even if it's a small responsibility,
for having believed. He wants some credit for having made
the right choice. The doctrine of election is repulsive to proud man because,
by our standards, it seems unfair that God should, out of all the human
beings, choose some at His own discretion to be saved and not the rest. Man,
in his fallen state, wants a part because he wants to exercise his pride!
Calvin says, "We shall never be clearly persuaded, as we ought
to be, that our salvation flows from the wellspring of God's free mercy
until we come to know His eternal election, which illumines God's grace by
this contrast: That He does not indiscriminately adopt all into the hope
of salvation but gives to some what He denies to others."
Election is a doctrine taught all through the Scriptures. God chose
Israel. God wasn't sitting up in heaven saying, "I hope some nation will
believe in me and choose me." God says, "I chose you because I love you":
"For you are a holy people to the LORD your God;
and the LORD has chosen you to be a people for His own possession out of
all the peoples who are on the face of the earth. (Deuteronomy 14:2 NASB)
The nation, Israel, was elect, chosen by God. Why?
Because God willed to. Do you have a problem with that? Why Abraham? Did
God choose him because he was a godly man? No! Abraham was a pagan moon worshiper
when God called him. Why did God choose you? I cannot, no matter how
hard I look, discover any kind of reason in myself why I should be a partaker
of Divine grace. I am a Christian only because Christ Jesus chose me and
drew me to Himself. It was His will, not mine, that made me His child. The
"why" rests in God's will. God doesn't call the good people,
because there aren't any.
I believe the doctrine of election, because I am quite certain
that if God had not chosen me, I should never have chosen Him; and I am
sure He chose me before I was born, or else He never would have chosen me
afterwards; and He must have elected me for reasons unknown to me, for I
never could find any reason in myself why He should have looked upon me with
special love.
It is clear from the Scriptures that the nature of our election
rests in God's sovereign choice. If you are a Christian, it is because God
has chosen you to be a recipient of His marvelous grace. God's choice is
based only on His will and not anything that we do or have done. Romans
nine makes this clear:
For He says to Moses, "I WILL HAVE MERCY ON WHOM
I HAVE MERCY, AND I WILL HAVE COMPASSION ON WHOM I HAVE COMPASSION." 16
So then it does not depend on the man who wills or the man who runs, but
on God who has mercy. (Romans 9:16 NASB)
Who do we thank for our salvation?
But we should always give thanks to God for you,
brethren beloved by the Lord, because God has chosen you from the beginning
for salvation through sanctification by the Spirit and faith in the truth.
(2 Thessalonians 2:13 NASB)
We thank God because it is because of His choice that we are Christians.
God gets all the glory.
Let's go back to Mark:
"And unless the Lord had shortened those days,
no life would have been saved; but for the sake of the elect whom He chose,
He shortened the days. (Mark 13:20 NASB)
"The elect" is a well known designation
in Scripture for Christians. God shortened the days of vengeance for the
Christians' sake. Through the fury of the zealots on one hand, the hatred
of the Romans on the other, and partly through the difficulty of enduring
in the mountains without houses or provisions, everybody would have been
destroyed either by the sword or by famine, if the days had not been shortened.
But, providentially, the days were shortened.
Joseph us said:
Titus himself was desirous of putting a speedy end to
the siege, having Rome, and the riches and the pleasures there, before his
eyes. Some of his officers proposed to him to turn the siege into a blockade,
and since they could not take the city by storm, to starve it into a surrender:
but he thought it not becoming to sit still with so great an army and he
feared lest the length of the time should diminish the glory of his success;
every thing indeed may be effected in time, but speed contributes much to
the fame and splendor of actions.
The Jews, too, helped to shorten the days by their divisions and
mutual slaughters; by burning their own provisions, which would have lasted
for many years; and by deserting their strong holds, where they could never
have been taken by force, but by famine alone. By these means "the days
were shortened." Otherwise Jerusalem could never have been taken in such
a short time; it was well fortified and able to sustain a longer siege.
The Romans could hardly ever have prevailed but for the factions and seditions
within. Titus himself ascribed his success to God as he was viewing the fortifications
after the city was taken. His words to his friends were very remarkable:
"We have fought," he said, "with God on our side; and it is God who hath
pulled the Jews out of these strong holds; for what could the hands of men
or machines avail against these towers?" God, therefore, in the opinion of
Titus, as well as the inspired writers, "shortened the days."
It wasn't in Jerusalem alone, but all over the country that the
war waged, and, had it gone on, many of the Christians who fled to the outlying
areas would also been in danger.
"And then if anyone says to you, 'Behold, here
is the Christ'; or, 'Behold, He is there'; do not believe him; (Mark
13:21 NASB)
Jesus had cautioned His disciples against false Christs and false
prophets before, but He gives a more specific caution against them about
the time of the siege and destruction of Jerusalem:
for false Christs and false prophets will arise,
and will show signs and wonders, in order, if possible, to lead the elect
astray. (Mark 13:22 NASB)
We learn from Joseph us that many such impostors did arise about
that time and promised deliverance from God, being persuaded by the tyrants
or governors to prevent the people and soldiers from deserting to the Romans;
and the worse the Jews situation, the more open they would be to listen
to these deceptions, and the more ready to follow the deceivers. Hegesippus,
too, in Eusebius, mentions the coming of false Christs and false
prophets about the same time.
These false Christs and prophets were so convincing that if it
were possible, they would have even deceived the elect. Dositheus was reputed
to work wonders according to Origen; Barchoebebas, too, who Jerome saith
pretended to vomit flames.
"But take heed; behold, I have told you everything
in advance. (Mark 13:23 NASB)
Christ had warned them about the coming of these false Christs
and false prophets, so when it happened, they would not be deceived.
Now please notice carefully the next two verses:
"But in those days, after that tribulation, THE
SUN WILL BE DARKENED, AND THE MOON WILL NOT GIVE ITS LIGHT, 25 AND THE STARS
WILL BE FALLING from heaven, and the powers that are in the heavens will
be shaken. (Mark 13:24-25 NASB)
Modern commentators generally understand this and what follows
as the end of the world; but the words "in those days," show, that
he is not speaking of any distant event, but of something immediately following
the tribulation just mentioned, and that must be the destruction of Jerusalem.
We have seen that the tribulation happened in A.D. 67-70 with the destruction
of Jerusalem, so what ever this verse is referring to happened "in those
days."
How are we twenty first century Christians to understand
these words? What is the first thing we must understand in order to interpret
these words correctly? CONTEXT!
Context is king! So what is the context? Is Jesus talking about
the end of our solar system? NO! Whatever He is talking about happens in
"those days, after that tribulation," which
we now know is talking about the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. How could
anyone get an end of the solar system scenario out of this context?
People come up with an end of the solar system scenario because
Jesus talks about the sun, moon, and stars going out. And because we are
so unfamiliar with the first three-fourths of the Bible, we take this language
literally. All the language that Jesus and the writers of the New Testament
use comes from the Hebrew Scriptures, unfortunately known as the Old Testament.
The Mosaic covenant is OLD, meaning replaced by the NEW. But the first
three quarters of our Bible are not OLD; meaning: "replaced and irrelevant"
and, therefore, should not be called OLD. Everything taught in the New Testament
comes from the First Testament. Paul said:
"And so, having obtained help from God, I stand
to this day testifying both to small and great, stating nothing but what
the Prophets and Moses said was going to take place; (Acts 26:22 NASB)
Notice carefully what Paul is saying here. He said that He was,
"stating nothing but what the Prophets and Moses said was
going to take place." Paul is saying everything I am preaching
comes from the Hebrew Scriptures, so if you want to understand Paul or any
New Testament writer. you MUST understand the Hebrew Scriptures, the
first three quarters of our Bible.
If you are not familiar with the apocalyptic language
of the Scriptures, you will not understand what Christ is saying here. If
you approach the New Testament's apocalyptic language without recognizing
it for what it is, and do not know how to deal with its tone, images, and
symbols, you are sure to go astray. Notice the use of apocalyptic language
in:
When Israel went forth from Egypt, The house of
Jacob from a people of strange language, 2 Judah became His sanctuary, Israel,
His dominion. 3 The sea looked and fled; The Jordan turned back. 4 The mountains
skipped like rams, The hills, like lambs. (Psalms 114:1-4 NASB)
Did the mountains literally skip? No! This is apocalyptic language.
In apocalyptic language, great commotions and judgments upon earth are often
represented by commotions and changes in the heavens. This language is
not to be taken literally.
So let's go to the Scriptures and see how sun, moon, and stars
are used other than in a literal way. Where do we start? How about Genesis?
Now he had still another dream, and related it
to his brothers, and said, "Lo, I have had still another dream; and behold,
the sun and the moon and eleven stars were bowing down to me." (Genesis
37:9 NASB)
Is Joseph's dream about the literal sun and moon and stars bowing
to him? How would the sun bow? This may confuse us, but Joseph's father
knew exactly what he was saying:
And he related it to his father and to his brothers;
and his father rebuked him and said to him, "What is this dream that you
have had? Shall I and your mother and your brothers actually come to bow
ourselves down before you to the ground?" (Genesis 37:10 NASB)
Jacob, Joseph's father, interprets this dream as referring to himself,
his wife, and their sons, who were the heads of the twelve tribes identified
as the sun, moon, and stars, respectively. They represented the foundation
of the whole Jewish nation. When Jesus, therefore, spoke of the sun being
darkened, the moon not giving its light, and the stars falling from heaven,
He was not referring to the end of the solar system, but of the complete
dissolution of the Jewish state.
This apocalyptic language is common among the Hebrew prophets.
This idea is seen clearly as we look at passages where mention is made of
the destruction of a state and government using language which seems to
set forth the end of the world:
The oracle concerning Babylon which Isaiah the
son of Amoz saw. (Isaiah 13:1 NASB)
In this chapter God is talking about the judgement that is to fall
upon Babylon. The word "oracle" is the Hebrew word massa. which means:
"an utterance, chiefly a doom." This introduction sets the stage for the
subject matter in this chapter. and if we forget this, our interpretations
of Isaiah 13 can go just about anywhere our imagination wants to go. This
is not an oracle against the universe or world, but against
the nation of Babylon.
Wail, for the day of the LORD is near! It will
come as destruction from the Almighty. (Isaiah 13:6 NASB)
Behold, the day of the LORD is coming, Cruel,
with fury and burning anger, To make the land a desolation; And He will
exterminate its sinners from it. 10 For the stars of heaven and their constellations
Will not flash forth their light; The sun will be dark when it rises, And
the moon will not shed its light. 11 Thus I will punish the world for its
evil, And the wicked for their iniquity; I will also put an end to the arrogance
of the proud, And abase the haughtiness of the ruthless. 12 I will make
mortal man scarcer than pure gold, And mankind than the gold of Ophir. 13
Therefore I shall make the heavens tremble, And the earth will be shaken
from its place At the fury of the LORD of hosts In the day of His burning
anger. (Isaiah 13:9-13 NASB)
Now remember he is speaking about the destruction of Babylon, but
is sounds like world wide destruction. The terminology of a context cannot
be expanded beyond the scope of the subject under discussion. The spectrum
of language surely cannot go outside the land of Babylon. If you were a
Babylonian, and Babylon was destroyed, would it seem like the world was destroyed?
Yes! Your world would be destroyed.
Behold, I am going to stir up the Medes against
them, Who will not value silver or take pleasure in gold, (Isaiah 13:17
NASB)
This is a historical event that took place in 539 B.C. When the
Medes destroyed Babylon, the Babylonian world came to an end. This destruction
is said, in verse 6, to be from the Almighty, and the Medes constitute the
means that God uses to accomplish this task. This is apocalyptic language.
This is the way the Bible discusses the fall of a nation. This is obviously
figurative language. God did not intend for us to take this literally. If
we take this literally, the world ended in 539 B.C.
In Isaiah 34 we have a description of the fall of Edom,
notice the language that is used:
So their slain will be thrown out, And their corpses
will give off their stench, And the mountains will be drenched with their
blood. 4 And all the host of heaven will wear away, And the sky will be
rolled up like a scroll; All their hosts will also wither away As a leaf withers
from the vine, Or as one withers from the fig tree. 5 For My sword is satiated
in heaven, Behold it shall descend for judgment upon Edom, And upon the people
whom I have devoted to destruction. (Isaiah 34:3-5 NASB)
This is Biblical language to describe the fall of a nation. It
should be clear that it is not to be taken literally. Let's look at another
use of this language:
The oracle of Nineveh. The book of the vision
of Nahum the Elkoshite. 2 A jealous and avenging God is the LORD; The LORD
is avenging and wrathful. The LORD takes vengeance on His adversaries, And
He reserves wrath for His enemies. 3 The LORD is slow to anger and great
in power, And the LORD will by no means leave the guilty unpunished. In
whirlwind and storm is His way, And clouds are the dust beneath His feet.
4 He rebukes the sea and makes it dry; He dries up all the rivers. Bashan
and Carmel wither; The blossoms of Lebanon wither. 5 Mountains quake because
of Him, And the hills dissolve; Indeed the earth is upheaved by His presence,
The world and all the inhabitants in it. (Nahum 1:1-5 NASB)
The subject of this judgement is Nineveh, not the physical world.
This is the way God describes the fall of a nation. If this language describes
the judgement of God on nations, why, when we come to the New Testament,
the fourth quarter of the Bible, do we make it be the destruction of the
universe? It is only because we do not understand
how the Bible uses this apocalyptic language in the first three quarters
of the book.
Ezekiel speaks in the same manner of Egypt:
"And when I extinguish you, I will cover the heavens,
and darken their stars; I will cover the sun with a cloud, And the moon shall
not give its light. 8 "All the shining lights in the heavens I will darken
over you And will set darkness on your land," Declares the Lord GOD. (Ezekiel
32:7-8 NASB)
The prophet Daniel speaks in the same manner of the slaughter of
the Jews by the little horn, the power of the Romans:
And it grew up to the host of heaven and caused
some of the host and some of the stars to fall to the earth, and it trampled
them down. (Daniel 8:10 NASB)
In the apocalyptic language, great commotions
and revolutions upon earth are often represented by commotions and changes
in the heavens. None of these things literally took place!
Peter used very similar words in Acts 2. Here we find a profound
statement made by Peter (a Jew) to a multitude of Jews out of every nation:
But Peter, taking his stand with the eleven, raised
his voice and declared to them: "Men of Judea, and all you who live in Jerusalem,
let this be known to you, and give heed to my words. 15 "For these men are
not drunk, as you suppose, for it is only the third hour of the day; 16 but
this is what was spoken of through the prophet Joel: 17 'AND IT SHALL BE
IN THE LAST DAYS,' God says, 'THAT I WILL POUR FORTH OF MY SPIRIT UPON ALL
MANKIND; AND YOUR SONS AND YOUR DAUGHTERS SHALL PROPHESY, AND YOUR YOUNG
MEN SHALL SEE VISIONS, AND YOUR OLD MEN SHALL DREAM DREAMS; 18 EVEN UPON
MY BONDSLAVES, BOTH MEN AND WOMEN, I WILL IN THOSE DAYS POUR FORTH OF MY
SPIRIT And they shall prophesy. (Acts 2:14-18 NASB)
Let me ask you a couple of questions here. Who
is Peter talking to? The answer is: men of Judea and all who dwell in Jerusalem.
When did Peter say this? He said this in the first
century. Peter explicitly says, "This is what was spoken of
through the prophet Joel." He then explains that what this
multitude of Jews was experiencing was the fulfillment of the prophecy in
Joel. Peter is telling this multitude that they (first century Jews) were
in the last days and would see the judgement of God:
'AND I WILL GRANT WONDERS IN THE SKY ABOVE, AND
SIGNS ON THE EARTH BENEATH, BLOOD, AND FIRE, AND VAPOR OF SMOKE. 20 'THE
SUN SHALL BE TURNED INTO DARKNESS, AND THE MOON INTO BLOOD, BEFORE THE GREAT
AND GLORIOUS DAY OF THE LORD SHALL COME. (Acts 2:21-20 NASB)
Notice how this corresponds to what Jesus said in:
"But in those days, after that tribulation, THE
SUN WILL BE DARKENED, AND THE MOON WILL NOT GIVE ITS LIGHT, 25 AND THE STARS
WILL BE FALLING from heaven, and the powers that are in the heavens will
be shaken. (Mark 13:24-25 NASB)
Peter and Jesus use the same language as Joel to speak about God's
judgement against the nation Israel.
Milton Terry said, " From these quotations it is apparent that
there is scarcely an expression employed in Matthew and Luke which has not
been taken from the Old Testament Scriptures. Such apocalyptic forms of
speech are not to be assumed to convey in the New Testament a meaning different
from that which they bear in the Hebrew Scriptures. They are part and parcel
of the genius of prophetic language."
Samuel Hinds (1829) wrote, "It requires but a slender acquaintance
with the writings of the Old Testament prophets to enable us to observe
the peculiarity. It is not only figurative, but the figures are of the boldest
kind, involving analogies so remote, as in some instances to be scarcely
discoverable. If revolutions in empires be the subject, the prophetic representation
is filled with disturbance of the laws of the natural world, and the sun,
moon, and stars, are exhibited in commotion. If a deliverer is promised
to the Jews, the prophet expresses the promise by the rising of a star,
and the like" (Hinds, pp. 209-210)
Dr. John Owen (1721) said, "Not to hold you too long upon what
is so plain and evident, you may take it for a rule, that, in the denunciations
of the judgments of God, through all the prophets, heaven, sun, moon, stars,
and the like appearing beauties and glories of the aspectable heavens, are
taken for governments, governors, dominions in political states, as Isa.14:12-15;
Jer 15:9, 51:25. Isaiah 13:13; Ps. 68:6; Joel 2:10; Rev. 8:12; Matt. 24:29;
Luke 21:25; Isa 60:20; Obad. 4; Rev 8:13; 11:12; 20:11." (vol. 8, p. 255,
a sermon entitled "Shaking and Translating of Heaven and Earth," preached
on April 19, 1649)
We see this apocalyptic language used all through the book of Revelation.
I believe that the book of Revelation is an expanded version of the Olivet
Discourse. Notice how John used apocalyptic language:
and the stars of the sky fell to the earth, as
a fig tree casts its unripe figs when shaken by a great wind. 14 And the
sky was split apart like a scroll when it is rolled up; and every mountain
and island were moved out of their places. 15 And the kings of the earth
and the great men and the commanders and the rich and the strong and every
slave and free man, hid themselves in the caves and among the rocks of the
mountains; 16 and they said to the mountains and to the rocks, "Fall on us
and hide us from the presence of Him who sits on the throne, and from the
wrath of the Lamb; 17 for the great day of their wrath has come; and who
is able to stand?" (Revelation 6:13-17 NASB)
Is this talking about the end of the world in our future? NO! John
is dealing with Jerusalem's destruction in A.D. 70. We can prove this by
looking at what Jesus said as He was on His way to be crucified:
But Jesus turning to them said, "Daughters of
Jerusalem, stop weeping for Me, but weep for yourselves and for your children.
29 "For behold, the days are coming when they will say, 'Blessed are the
barren, and the wombs that never bore, and the breasts that never nursed.'
30 "Then they will begin TO SAY TO THE MOUNTAINS, 'FALL ON US,' AND TO THE
HILLS, 'COVER US.' (Luke 23:28-30 NASB)
Jesus was telling the women of His day to weep for THEMSELVES because
judgement was going to come upon THEM. In Revelation 6 during the great tribulation,
which happened in A.D. 67-70, we see them crying out for the mountains to
fall on them just as Jesus said they would. This language is picturing the
response of sinful man to the awful judgement of God.
The Biblical evidence is overwhelming, the Olivet Discourse in its entirety
is speaking of the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. The only thing that
would make us push any of these things into the future are our own presuppositions.
In this vivid picturesque language, Jesus is describing Jerusalem's destruction.
In A.D. 70 the son, moon, and stars went out in Israel for good. When the
tribulation was over, physical Israel ceased to exist. God's people were
no longer distinguished by physical birth, but by spiritual birth alone.
The Old Covenant was over and the New fully instituted.
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