QUESTION:
Matt 24:29 “But immediately after
the tribulation…” In this passage it is clearly said
that Christ would come immediately after the
tribulation, but in 2 Thess. 1:6-8 it is
shown that it is his coming “from heaven
with his angels” that is causing the tribulation!
How can this be explained?
ANSWER:
You are correct in pointing out that the word
“tribulation” (Gr. thlipsis) is found in both
passages. Both passages harmonize well. In Matthew 24,
there is a great tribulation (persecution) of the saints
which is followed immediately by the coming of Christ,
which causes the heavens & earth to be shaken and
all the tribes of the earth to mourn (Matt.24:30). In 2
Thess. 1:6-10, we see the same scenario. The saints were
being persecuted. Christ would come and give them
relief, and at the same time give affliction to their
persecutors. We are talking about two different phases
of the tribulation, with Christ’s return in the middle
(the first against the saints, and the second against
their persecutors). Both passages (in their contexts)
deal with both phases. -Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Luke 21:8 “..many shall come
in my name, saying…, the time is at hand; go ye not
after them.” (ASV) Why not go after them, was not the
time AT HAND?
ANSWER:
In Luke 21:9 (the very next verse), Jesus said the
reason his disciples should not pay attention to anyone
saying “the time is at hand” in those days was because
the other signs he gave them had not happened yet. Jesus
gave enough signs that they could not miss it. When
compared with the parallel accounts in Matthew and Mark,
this is even more apparent. For instance, if Jesus had
given them 30 signs to look for and only 5 of them had
taken place, it wouldn’t make much sense to believe that
the end was immediately at hand. But if all 30 had taken
place (by the year 66 AD), they could be sure the end
was indeed at hand. There is another reason also. The
people who were trying to lead away the brethren were
probably caught up in the nationalistic mindset and
looking for a materialistic kingdom or paradise, or they
were Judaizers. To follow them would have been fatal in
view of what happened to such zealots at 70 AD. -Edward
E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Lk. 21:29-31 – Did the fig
tree refer to Israel becoming a nation again?
ANSWER:
There really is no indication that the budding of the
fig tree in Lk. 21:29-31 referred to Israel becoming a
nation in 1948 (or in any other year). Verse 29 shows
that the fig tree is not the only thing that sprouts
leaves when summer is near. Jesus said, “Watch the
fig tree and all the trees”. If
we are to take the budding fig tree to mean Israel
becoming a nation, then we must take all the other
budding trees to refer to all the other nations in the
world somehow becoming nations. But this would not make
any Biblical sense.
Jesus did at other times use a fig tree to illustrate
fleshly Israel. Once was when he cursed a fig tree on
His way to Jerusalem (Matt. 21:19). After He cursed it,
He said to it, “Let there be no more fruit from you
forever.” This indicated the
cutting off of fleshly Israel as God’s chosen nation
forever. Today Christ’s Kingdom is God’s Nation, and all
physical Jews are welcomed to become citizens of that
nation along with all other nationalities. But fleshly
Israel will never again, according to Jesus, produce
fruit as God’s chosen nation. That holy duty and
privilege belongs to Christ’s followers both now and
forever (cf. Lk. 13:7-9; Rev. 6:13). The fig tree was
not the main symbol of Israel anyway. Instead, it was
the olive tree. – David A. Green
QUESTION:
Does Matthew 24 refer only to
the period of 40 years from the cross to the
destruction of Jerusalem?
ANSWER:
Yes. Let’s look at some of the factors in the Olivet
discourse that definitely point to the conclusion that
Matthew 24, Mark 13, and Luke 21 were all fulfilled by
A.D. 70.
First, when Jesus’ disciples asked Him, “What is
the sign of Your coming and of the end of the age?” (Matt.
24:3), they must have had in mind the destruction of the
temple; Jesus had just told them that the temple was
going to be completely destroyed (Matthew 24:2). For the
disciples, the destruction of the Holy Temple would have
been viewed as nothing less than a massive upheaval or
end of their entire religious/political world. So it’s
not surprising they would connect the destruction of the
temple with the final coming of the King and with the
end of the age (cf. Isa. 66:6).
Jesus said, “Many false christs will rise up, and
false prophets” (Matt. 24:24). The rising up of
many impostors was a sign that the last days had
arrived. The apostle John understood that this was being
fulfilled in the first century A.D. when he said, “…it
is the last hour, and as you heard that the antichrist
is coming, even now many antichrists have risen up; by
this you know that it is the last hour” (I John
2:18). John told his readers in this verse that they
could know it was “the last hour” (the last hour of
Biblical Judaism) because “many antichrists” had risen
up. In other words, since Jesus said that many false
christs and false prophets would appear in the last
days, John and the other Christians knew the end was
indeed near for them because many of the deceivers had
already appeared.
Jesus said, “And this gospel of the kingdom will
be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all
nations, and then the end will come” (Matt.
24:14). The good news had been preached to all the world
by the time the book of Romans and the book of
Colossians were written in the first century. Romans
10:18, “Their voice (the voice of those preaching
the good news) has gone out into all the earth, their
words to the ends of the world”. Col. 1:23, “This…gospel…has
been proclaimed to every creature under heaven”.
And shortly after the good news was preached in the
whole world in the first century, the end of the Old
Testament world came in fiery judgment in A.D. 70, at
the destruction of Christ’s enemies.
Finally, in Matthew 24, Jesus said, “This
generation will in no wise pass away until all these
things have happened.” “This generation” means
the same thing here as it does in most other places in
the NT. It speaks of those living at that time. So all
of Matthew 24 was indeed fulfilled within the forty year
period between the cross and the destruction of
Jerusalem, including the parousia and the end of the
age. – David A. Green
QUESTION:
Matt. 28:19, 20 “..lo, I am
with you always, even unto the end of the world.”
(AGE) Does this imply that he was “with them” always,
or only until 70 AD?
ANSWER:
The Greek here is very interesting. Literally
translated, it reads, “…and behold I am with you all the
days until the consummation of the age.” There is an
unfortunate translation here. It should say, “the whole
time” (lit. “all the days”) rather than “always.” He
would be with them the whole time they were announcing
the coming of the kingdom, down to the very consummation
of that age. He was simply telling them they would not
be alone during this period when the great commission
was being accomplished (from 30 to 70 AD). He would be
Spiritually present with them (through the work of the
Holy Spirit) to see them through to the very end of that
old Jewish age. At 70 AD Christ Himself returned to put
down His final enemies and give His saints their kingdom
inheritance. They had only a temporary and partial
“pledge, earnest or seal” of that inheritance from 30 to
70 AD. At 70 AD He returned to dwell with the saints
forever onwards. -Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Did Jesus Christ return in 70
AD without fanfare?
ANSWER:
I wouldn’t exactly call the destruction of Jerusalem in
70 AD an event “without fanfare.” Jews today still
commemorate it in some fashion in almost every joyous
occasion they celebrate (the shattered goblet at Jewish
weddings, and a special fast day every year in August
are two ways in which they still remember the
destruction). One of the chief rabbis from Connecticut,
in the opening remarks of his lecture on “Post-Biblical
Judaism,” commented that he would begin the study of
post-Biblical Judaism with “the end.” Then he said, he
would begin with 70 A.D., because 70 AD was “the end of
Biblical Judaism”. Josephus, a Jewish priest and one of
the ten Jewish generals who started the war with Rome in
66 A.D., gives his eyewitness account of that gruesome
judgment which Jesus said was, “such as has not occurred
since the beginning of the world until now, nor ever
shall.” (Matt. 24:21) A few days later Jesus (at His
trial) said the High Priest & the Sanhedrin, “shall
see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of power,
and coming on the clouds of heaven.” (Matt. 27:64)
Josephus, Tacitus, Eusebius and the Talmud all record
the FACT that God’s presence was perceived at that
awesome destruction. They even record that angelic
armies were seen in the clouds. -Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Did Jesus return corporately
and visibly at 70 AD?
ANSWER:
He returned in clouds of judgment just like He said He
would, and just like the OT prophets always spoke of
God’s visitation (riding a swift cloud in judgment upon
the enemies of His people). Those who understood the
issue of God’s kingdom perceived God’s presence in those
events at 70 AD, to judge the enemies (the unrepentant
Jews) and vindicate the righteous (Christians). -Edward
E. Stevens
QUESTION:
How did Jesus reveal himself
to the world at his 70 AD coming?
ANSWER:
The Jews knew who was judging them and why. Josephus
stated that he felt that the judgment fell upon the Jews
directly because of their persecution of the Christians.
Even the Roman General Titus recognized that God was the
one who delivered the Jews into His hand, and that
without God’s help he would never have been able to
conquer the Jews. The Christians knew Christ returned to
give them relief from the persecution. The whole Roman
world saw God’s righteous judgment and dispensing of
universal salvation then. Christ’s identity and the
nature of the spiritual kingdom was revealed at 70 AD. -Edward
E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Did the signs of his second
coming (Mt. 24:27-30) already take place and nobody
noticed them?
ANSWER:
Eusebius and other historians mention that the
Christians definitely saw the signs and left Jerusalem.
The Jews saw the signs too (acc. to Josephus and
Tacitus), but they refused to acknowledge them as
portending calamity for them. They stubbornly believed
that God was about to establish a literal, physical
Golden Age of the Messiah. So, the Jews stayed in
Jerusalem and Judea to fight the war, believing God
would somehow miraculously deliver them and give them
their physical kingdom over Rome and the whole world. -Edward
E. Stevens
QUESTION:
If Jesus Christ came back in 70 AD—corporately,
invisibly, symbolically, spiritually or however—why
didn’t anybody notice? Why hasn’t history recorded
this cosmic event?
ANSWER:
They did notice. It has been recorded. The problem is,
no one reads history with spiritual perception. We are
making the same mistake the Jews did. They were looking
for a physical king and materialistic kingdom. They
missed the spiritual kingdom Christ established. People
today are missing the spiritual kingdom for exactly the
same reason: they are looking for a physical paradise
and fleshly, materialistic fulfillments. The kingdom is
here now, we just need to open our eyes and realize it.
-Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Is it really clear that the
New Testament writers thought Jesus would return in
their life-time?
ANSWER:
Yes. Rom. 13:12, “The night is nearly over; the day
is almost here.” Rom. 16:20, “The God of
peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.” I
Cor. 7:29 and 31, “The time is short. This world in
its present form is passing away.” I Cor. 10:11,
“These things happened to them as examples and were
written down as warnings for us, on whom the
fulfillment of the ages has come.” I Thess.
5:23, “May your whole spirit, soul and body be kept
blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.” I
Tim. 6:14, “Keep this command without spot or blame
until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Hebrews 10:37, “In just a very little while, He who
is coming will come and will not delay.” James
5:7, “Be patient until the Lord’s coming.” James
5:8, “The Lord’s coming is near.” James 5:9,
“The judge is standing at the door.” I Peter
4:7, “The end of all things has drawn near.” Jude
4,14,17-19, “Certain men whose condemnation was
written about long ago have secretly slipped in among
you. Enoch, the seventh from Adam prophesied about
these men: ‘See, the Lord is coming with thousands
upon thousands of his holy ones to judge everyone, and
to convict all the ungodly of all the ungodly acts
they have done in the ungodly way, and of all the
harsh words ungodly sinners have spoken against him.’
Remember the apostles foretold that in the last times
there will be scoffers who will follow their own
ungodly desires. These are the men who divide you, who
follow mere natural instincts and do not have the
Spirit.” – David A. Green
QUESTION:
Why didn’t Jesus himself say
he had returned?
ANSWER:
All the books of the NT were written before 70 AD, so
there is no record of His statements after 70 AD. But He
gave us enough information that we can know that He kept
His promise to come soon after the book of Revelation
was written (cf. Rev. 22:6, 7, 10, 12, 20). Josephus,
Tacitus, Eusebius and the Talmudic writings record more
than enough information to prove that Jesus returned at
70 AD. -Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
1 Thess. 4:16-18 says “the
Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout,
with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of
God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first; then we
which are alive and remain shall be caught up together
with them in the air; and so shall we ever be with the
Lord.” How could this be fulfilled already?
ANSWER:
One thing that needs to be mentioned right up front is
that there is a tremendous similarity between the
language here in this context (1 Thess. 4, 5) and Matt.
23-25 (esp. Matt. 24:29-31). There was a great article
on this similarity in one of the past issues of Kingdom
Counsel. The angels, trumpet and gathering are mentioned
in Matt. 24. The angels, trumpet and catching-up are
mentioned in 1 Thess. 4. We should always use the easier
passages on a subject to help interpret the more
difficult ones. In this case, Matt. 24 is the easier
one. It is a matter of historical record (Josephus,
Eusebius, Tacitus and the Talmud) that the trumpets,
voices of angels and angelic activity were seen and
heard in the time leading up to and during the
destruction of Jerusalem. Unfortunately many Christians
are just not aware of this. They are not being taught
this by current (predominantly-futurist) clergy. The
“catching-up” (1 Thess. 4:17) or “gathering” (Matt.
24:31) was accomplished when the faithful remnant of
Jewish believers with the in-grafted Gentiles were
transformed (and transferred) into Christ’s new
spiritual Israel. This was accomplished at the same time
the old fleshly-based Israel was dissolved at A.D. 70.
The meeting-place is the heavenly places in Christ – the
spiritual kingdom.
The word ‘shout’ as used in 1 Thess. 4:16 carries the
meaning of a command, or order. When God’s wrath was
poured out on fleshly Israel, the command went forth in
heaven for the Lord Jesus to return even as He had
promised He would. That there was also an earthly
‘shout’ is undoubtedly more than mere coincidence!
“… Nor can one imagine anything either greater or
more terrible than this noise; for there was at once a
shout of the Roman legions, who were marching all
together, and a sad clamor of the seditious, who were
now surrounded with fire and sword. The people also
that were left above were beaten back upon the enemy,
and under a great consternation, and made sad moans at
the calamity they were under; the multitude also that
was in the city joined in this outcry with those that
were worn away by the famine, and their mouths almost
closed, when they saw the fire of the holy house, they
exerted their utmost strength, and broke out into
groans and outcries again; Perea did also return the
echo, as well as the mountains round about the city,
and augmented the force of the entire noise…”
(Josephus – see 2 Peter 3:10).
The ‘trump’ of God is thus defined (Strong’s Exhaustive
Concordance – Greek Dictionary of the New Testament), as
a vibration, reverberation, or ‘shaking’. This kind of
language was used in the OT prophets quite often of
God’s judgment being poured out on wicked nations. This
time the judgment of God was poured out on the Old
Covenant world, and shook its institutions to the ground
and replaced them with the real spiritual things that
had only been prefigured and foreshadowed by the Jewish
temple system.
Therefore I will shake the heavens, and the earth
shall remove out of her place, in the wrath of the
LORD of hosts, and in the day of his fierce anger. (Isaiah
13:13)
The LORD also shall roar out of Zion, and utter his
voice from Jerusalem; and the heavens and the earth
shall shake: but the LORD will be the hope of his
people, and the strength of the children of Israel.
(Joel 3:16)
For thus saith the LORD of hosts; Yet once, it is a
little while, and I will shake the heavens, and the
earth, and the sea, and the dry land. (Haggai
2:6)
Whose voice then shook the earth: but now he hath
promised, saying, Yet once more I shake not the earth
only, but also heaven. (Hebrews 12:26)
The vibrations of the destruction of O.T. Jerusalem
reverberated throughout not only the kingdoms, nations
and empires of the earth, but the heavens also (where
the angels, principalities and powers are).
It is worth noting some more of Josephus’ statements in
regard to the tremendous significance of this disruption
in the affairs of the world:
“This was the end which Jerusalem came to by the
madness of those that were for innovations; a city
other wise of great magnificence, and of mighty fame
among all mankind.”
“…it had so come to pass, that our city Jerusalem
had arrived at a higher degree of felicity than any
other city under the Roman government, and yet at last
fell into the sorest of calamities again. Accordingly
it appears to me, that the misfortunes of all men,
from the beginning of the world, if they be compared
to these of the Jews, are not so considerable as they
were.”
“Where as 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 ever were heard of; both of those wherein
cities have fought against cities, or nations against
nations.”
“That neither did any other city ever suffer such
miseries, nor did any age ever breed a generation more
fruitful in wickedness than this was, from the
beginning of the world.” (Matt. 24:21; and Mk. 13:19).
QUESTION:
First Thessalonians says we
should comfort one another with the knowledge of a
coming rapture. If the Lord has already come, and this
is the “new earth”, I don’t find much comfort in that
passage. The world, and living in it, is too nasty to
warrant such comfort.
ANSWER:
It amazes me how Christians never seem to realize the
predicament we are in if Christ has not already come and
fulfilled all these promises. Not only do we have all
the NT time statements pointing to an imminent
fulfillment in their generation, but we have all the OT
prophets pointing to these things also being consummated
“in those days,” making no distinction between two
different time periods separated by some long period of
delay. The Jews use these OT passages to prove Jesus
could not be their Messiah unless He fulfilled all those
things “in those days” of His generation just like the
OT prophets predicted. And they expect a literal
fulfillment just like the futurists of today. And that
is why they missed the significance of Christ’s
spiritual kingdom, and it is why many Christians today
are missing it as well. How much comfort does it give us
if Jesus failed to come when He said He would, and if He
failed to accomplish all that the OT prophets said He
would “in those days.” Are we saying that we are more
comforted by a still-future hope than by a realized one?
Which would you rather have – the spiritual blessings
now, or still waiting for our enemies to be conquered?
The comfort is in a realized eschatology, not in an
unrealized one!
Those who focus merely on the physical realm here below
and do not set our minds on the things above will miss
the fulfillment of these things. What is mankind’s worst
enemy? Physical death or spiritual death? What did
Christ come to conquer? Just physical death? Or
spiritual death as well? When was the last ultimate
enemy (spiritual death) finally conquered? Is it still
unconquered? Has Christ restored His tree of life to us?
Have we been gathered into His heavenly kingdom? Do we
now have the fullness of spiritual life, or are we still
in death’s grip? Has Christ conquered, or are the Jews
correct in pointing out that Jesus must not be the
Messiah since He failed to bring physical peace and an
end to physical death?
Many churches/religions have taught an ‘escapist’
doctrine, whereby God’s people have been led to believe
that we will one day be evacuated from all that is
unpleasant and ungodly. This is not the doctrine of
Scripture. The escapist mentality often leads to
disappointment in God for ‘leaving us here’ through all
the ups and downs of mankind’s governments, economies,
societies, etc. Our pain and suffering in the world
becomes a matter of endurance, rather than
identification with Christ in His suffering, an exercise
in crucifixion of the flesh, as taught in the Word of
God. Yet Jesus prayed:
I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the
world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the
evil. (John 17:15)
He hath remembered his covenant for ever, the word
which he commanded to a thousand generations. Which
covenant he made with Abraham, and his oath unto
Isaac; And confirmed the same unto Jacob for a law,
and to Israel for an *everlasting* covenant: (Psalms
105:8-10)
I am sure that those to whom Paul wrote in 1 Thess. 4,
who were living in the day of God’s wrath upon
fleshly-oriented Israel, who remembered Jesus’ words and
fled into the hills to escape the destruction, took
great comfort in those precious words of hope. (see
Matt. 24:15-21) They did not want to forsake their being
gathered together into the heavenly kingdom.
QUESTION:
Was the “man of lawlessness’’
(2 Thess. 2:3) a contemporary of Apostle Paul. Did he
also come and go without notice?
ANSWER:
There are many passages (in Revelation and elsewhere)
which indicate that the “anti-Christ” was actually the
anti-Christian spirit which motivated the Jewish (and
Gentile) persecutors who worked against the church in
the period before 70 AD. Notice these passages in
particular: 1 Jn. 4:3; cf. 1 Jn. 2:17, 18; and 2 Thess.
2:7. Whatever this “man of lawlessness” was, it was
already at work during the time Paul wrote, and was
evidently at its worst when John wrote, since he says,
“Children, it is the last hour; and just as you heard
that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists
have arisen; from this we KNOW it is THE LAST HOUR.”
(emphasis mine, ES). And, it is not just preterists who
suggest the “man of lawlessness” was something other
than an individual. Several of the amillennial and
post-millennial theories suggest the same. As far as
“antichrists” are concerned, some have suggested the
four messianic contenders during the war with Rome
(Menachem, John of Gischala, Simon ben Giora, or
Eleazar), Yohanan ben Zachai (the great rabbi who
founded the school in Yavneh after the war), one of the
other messianic figures during the period (such as
Eleazar ben Yair, the leader at Masada), or the High
Priest. The Judaizers could easily qualify as
“antichrists” as well. -Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
2 Thess. 2:1-4 says “that day”
(the coming of Christ) “shall not come, except there
come a falling away first, and that man of sin be
revealed, the son of perdition; who opposeth and
exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that
is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple
of God.” How can we possibly be living in the “new
earth” the Bible speaks of since the “falling away”
has obviously not happened yet?
ANSWER:
The falling away was in progress as the last few NT
books were written. One only needs to read things like
the books of Hebrews, James, 1 & 2 Peter and 1-3
John to see this. The falling away coincided with the
great persecution and tribulation that descended on the
church just before the Jewish revolt (@ A.D. 63-66).
During this persecution James, Peter and others (such as
Paul) were killed (A.D. 63). And it was probably about
this same time that John was exiled to Patmos. The NT
writers during this time of persecution were bravely
challenging their fellow-saints to persevere. The
faithful remnant did. But many others forsook the
“better things” in Christ and returned to Judaism’s
things that were “fading away” and about to be
destroyed. The “falling away” and “the coming of the man
of sin” were first century events. They occurred in
connection with the persecution of the church just
before the Jewish revolt in A.D. 66. The destruction and
defilement of the temple at Jerusalem is one of the
major themes in the passing of the Old Covenant world,
and the coming of the New. While 2 Thess. 2:1-4 is
usually associated with “THE” Antichrist, we need to
remember that the anti-Christian spirit was already at
work in the first century:
For the mystery of iniquity doth already
work: only he who now letteth will let,
until he be taken out of the way. (2 Thess. 2:7)
The Jewish persecution was already underway when Paul
wrote these words. The Holy Spirit was restraining its
effect until the church reached a mature-enough
condition to persevere. There was a close connection
indeed between the tribulation and the apostasy. The
anti-Christian forces were persecuting the church to get
them to fall away. Several other NT passages allude to
this warfare that was being waged:
Little children, it is the last time: and as ye
have heard that Antichrist shall come, even now are
there many Antichrists; whereby we know that
it is the last time. (1 John 2:18)
Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the
Christ? He is Antichrist, that denieth the Father and
the Son. (1 John 2:22)
And every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus
Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is
that spirit of Antichrist, whereof ye have heard that
it should come; and even now already is it in
the world. (1 John 4:3)
For many deceivers are entered into the world, who
confess not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh.
This is a deceiver and an Antichrist. (2 Jn.
1:7)
That the abomination of desolation happened in/to the
temple is perhaps nowhere more clearly recorded than in
the writings of Josephus, who was an
eyewitness to the horrible tribulation (see his Jewish
Wars and Antiquities of The Jews).
Here are some excerpts:
In A.D. 66-67, the armies of Idumaea were called to
Jerusalem by a band of murderous Zealots who had
captured the Temple, fortified within it, and defiled it
with all manner of abominations. But the people of the
city who opposed the Zealots did not allow the Idumaeans
to enter the city; and so the Idumaean army stayed
outside the walls of Jerusalem that night.
And “there broke out a prodigious storm in the
night, with the utmost violence, and very strong
winds, with the largest showers of rain, with
continual 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 anyone would guess that these wonders
foreshowed some grand calamities that were coming”.
During that remarkable disruption of the order of
things that night, some of the Zealots in the temple
managed to go out unnoticed, and open the city gates to
the Idumaeans. The zealots and the Idumaeans then joined
together and during the upheaval attacked their
opponents who were guarding the temple. “And now
the outer temple was all of it overflowed with blood
(see Rev. 11:2) and that day, as it came on, saw
8,500 dead bodies there” (see Rev. 11:13).
“The death of Ananus was the beginning of the
destruction of the city, and from [that] very day may
be dated the overthrow of her wall, and the ruin of
her affairs, whereon they saw their high priest, and
the procurer of their preservation, slain in the midst
of their city. …[Ananus and Jesus, who] a little
before had worn the sacred garments, and had presided
over the public worship, …were cast out naked, and
seen to be the food of dogs and wild beasts.”
During the civil conflicts in those final days of
Old-Testament Jerusalem, “many of the priests” were
killed “as they were about their sacred ministrations”.
Those who came into the temple court were “often
destroyed by this sedition; for those darts that were
thrown by the engines (which were made from the sacred
material in the temple) came with [such] force, that
they …reached as far as the altar, and the temple
itself, and fell upon the priests, and those that were
about the sacred offices; insomuch that if any persons
came …to offer sacrifices, …they fell down before
their own sacrifices themselves, and sprinkled that
altar, …with their own blood; till the dead bodies of
strangers were mingled together with those of their
own country, and those of profane persons with those
of the priests, and the blood of all sorts of dead
carcasses stood in lakes in the holy courts
themselves.”
“…As for that House, God had for certain long ago
doomed it to the fire; and now that fatal day was
come, according to the revolution of ages; it was the
tenth day of the month Lous [Ab], upon which it was
formerly burnt by the king of Babylon.”
“As the flames went upward the Jews made a clamor,
such as so mighty an affliction required, and ran
together to prevent it; and now they spared not their
lives any longer, nor suffered anything to restrain
their force, since that holy House was perishing….”
“As for the seditious, they were in too great
distress already to afford their assistance [towards
quenching the fire]; they were everywhere slain, and
everywhere beaten; and as for a great part of the
people, they were weak and without arms, and had their
throats cut wherever they were caught. Now, round
about the altar lay dead bodies heaped one upon
another; as at the steps going up to it ran a great
quantity of their blood whither also the dead bodies
that were slain above [on the altar] fell down.”
“And now the Romans, upon the flight of the
seditious into the city, and upon the burning of the
holy House itself, and of all the buildings round
about it, brought their ensigns to the temple, and set
them over against its eastern gate; and there did they
offer sacrifices to them….”
“Now, as soon as the army had no more people to
slay or to plunder, because there remained none to be
objects of their fury (for they would not have spared
any, had there remained any other such work to be
done), Caesar gave orders that they should now
demolish the entire city and temple [except some
towers and part of the wall on the west side of the
city], …but for all the rest of the wall, it was so
thoroughly laid even with the ground by those that dug
it up to the foundation, that there was left nothing
to make those that came thither believe it had ever
been inhabited.”
QUESTION:
The second coming is supposed
to be an event that we as believers can look forward
to. It is a time when our battles with the flesh, with
sin and death, are supposed to be over (1 Corinthians
15:51-55). This battle is still going on is it not?
ANSWER:
If the battle is still going on, Jesus hasn’t really
saved us yet. His victory is not complete. We are only
partially saved. And then the Jews would be right in
their suggestion that Jesus is not the Messiah since He
hasn’t really fulfilled all OT prophecy yet and proven
that He is the Messiah. His failure to fulfill all those
things in a physical literal way is the reason many Jews
rejected Him. It was not physical battles that He fought
for us. His kingdom is not of this world, else His
servants would fight with physical weapons in physical
battles. His warfare was spiritual and His weapons were
spiritual. And those final ultimate conflicts have been
engaged and settled. Christ has conquered. The kingdom
is ours. Satan’s dominion over us has been shattered and
crushed.
We need to remember what kind of death is our worst
enemy (spiritual death) and what kind of resurrection is
the “better resurrection” (spiritual life). Has Christ
conquered? Or are we still waiting for Him to prove His
Messiahship? Do the Jews have a justifiable excuse for
refusing to accept Jesus as Messiah simply because He
hasn’t fulfilled the promises physically-literally? Or
were those prophecies dealing with the spiritual
realities of the kingdom? Did Jesus promise us a
physical paradise with no physical pain or suffering
(like the Jews expected)? Or did He promise us spiritual
victory? In Luke 21:16-19 Jesus said that in the
soon-to-come tribulation some of them would be “put
to death,” but also that “not a hair of your
head will perish.” Is this contradictory, or was
He speaking spiritually of their soul’s preservation
through the coming persecution? Verse 19 says it all: “By
your perseverance you will win your souls.” Jesus
never promised them a physical paradise and
materialistic, sensual delights. He promised soul
salvation. That is here now. It is reality. When these
physical bodies die we continue on in His presence in
our spiritual body.
The wages of sin is death. Is this “death” physical or
spiritual? It could not be physical death however, since
we all die a physical death, righteous and sinner alike.
The cost of sin is spiritual death, for which
Christ paid the price for all those who are His. We need
to start putting our spiritual glasses on and setting
our minds on the things above in the heavenly places.
The heavenly kingdom cannot be entered or lived in by
sensual and materialistically-oriented folks.
Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood
cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth
corruption inherit incorruption. (1 Cor. 15:50)
We have inherited that kingdom. The final enemy
(spiritual death) has been defeated. All enemies raised
up against Christ and His people have been conquered.
The battle is over!
QUESTION:
Scripture seems to have dual
meanings: i.e. Husband-wife/ Jesus-church,
Night-day/evil-good. Couldn’t the “coming” of Christ
in A.D. 70 be a type of a final, future Second Coming?
ANSWER:
The dual meanings which are found throughout the holy
writings are a testimony to the typical and symbolic
nature of the Old Testament. Double references abound in
the Old Testament books because all that was written and
done in those days merely foreshadowed the future
reality of Christ. Almost everything, if not everything,
in the OT somehow pointed to or foreshadowed Christ.
But when the New Testament writings appeared, the
shadows and types were being done away with by the
coming realities of Christ Jesus. No longer would God’s
people need the school master (the law with all of its
symbolic regulations and rituals), for their faith and
love in Jesus was fulfilling the entire law, and was
hastening the day when Christ’s loving Presence in His
Church would be complete, and the termination of the
fleshly Jewish covenant would finally be revealed.
Jesus did not die and rise from the dead to end one age
of shadows and symbols, only to begin another age of
shadows and symbols. Christianity (Christ) is the
reality, whereas Judaism was the shadow. There is
not much of the double-fulfillment spirit to be found in
the New Testament writings because The New Testament
speaks only of Christ being the fulfillment and end of
redemptive history. – David A. Green
QUESTION:
What evidence is there for a
pre-70 date for the book of Revelation?
ANSWER:
The 96 AD date is the most common view today, though it
wasn’t that way a century ago. The late 96 AD date has
been shown by several writers to rest on very unstable
ground. A lot of influential English and German (and a
few American) scholars in the 1800’s and early 1900’s
believed quite strongly that the book was written (and
mostly or completely fulfilled) before A.D. 70. There
are a few contemporary American theologians who believe
and teach the early date as well (Max King, Jay Adams,
Foy Wallace, Jr.; Franklin Camp; etc.). These are
especially good sources. I highly recommend Milton S.
Terry’s book Biblical Hermeneu-tics and J. S.
Russell’s The Parousia. The comments in my
book, What Happened In 70 AD? are pretty
persuasive for an early date (at least that’s what a lot
of people keep telling us). There is a good list and
bibliography of other good sources in that booklet.
There is a lot of internal evidence for an early date.
Some of the passages in Revelation which point clearly
to a date before A.D. 70 are Rev. 11:1, 2; 11:8 and
18:24.
Rev. 11:1, 2 seems to indicate that the Temple in
Jerusalem was still standing when the book was written.
It wouldn’t make much sense otherwise.
Rev. 11:8 indicates that “The Great City” was Jerusalem
(“where also their Lord was crucified”). Jerusalem was
also quite often compared “mystically” to Sodom and
Egypt, by the Prophets, by Jesus, and by John as well.
And their dead bodies will lie in the street of the
great city which mystically is called Sodom and Egypt,
where also their Lord was crucified. (Rev. 11:8)
And, the statements in Rev. 18:24 seem to identify the
Great City even more clearly:
And in her was found the blood of prophets and of
saints and of all who have been
slain on the earth. (emphasis mine, E.S.)
When this verse is compared to Luke 13:33ff, it is
obvious that Jerusalem is the Great City under
discussion here. It wouldn’t fit Rome or any other city.
There is so much internal as well as external evidence
for a pre-70 date. I also highly recommend reading Ken
Gentry’s new book, Before Jerusalem Fell, for
additional evidence of the pre-70 date. -Edward E.
Stevens
QUESTION:
Rev. 1:1,3; 22:6,7,10,12,20 –
“Behold I come quickly”- What does it mean in God’s
time frame, not man’s?
ANSWER:
There is no question that “time” is nothing to God. A
thousand years are like yesterday to Him (Psa. 90:4).
But time is nothing only to God. When
God communicates time to man, He reasons with His
creation in a way that man can understand Him. While it
is feasible from a literary standpoint that words such
as “soon” and “near” may be figurized to mean long spans
of time, it is not their normal sense. To use an
exceptional case to interpret all other occurrences in
not good hermeneutics. For “soon” and “near” are not the
only terms used to indicate a first century date for
Christ’s second coming. In Matt. 16:28; Mark 9:1, Jesus
said, “Some who are standing here will not taste death
before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom”
[and] “the Kingdom of God come with power”. This first
century coming of Christ and His Kingdom can refer only
to the second coming, not to the transfiguration or
Pentecost because it is described in the preceding verse
of Matthew as the time when the Son of Man would come in
His Father’s glory with His angels, and reward each
person according to what he had done (Matt. 16:27). This
description can refer only to the second coming. –
David A. Green
QUESTION:
Is the book of Revelation
entirely symbolic?
ANSWER:
Do Chapters 20 and 21 describe a future hope for the
church? The entire book of Revelation is not symbolic.
There is language that is meant to be taken
physically-literally, as well as language meant to be
taken figuratively, apocalyptically and allegorically.
Chapter 20 describes the transition from the Old System
to the New, and 21 presents in figurative terms the
spiritual nature of things we now have in Christ’s
kingdom. I have often said that Josephus and Eusebius
describe in physical terminology what the book of
Revelation portrays apocalyptically. -Edward E.
Stevens
QUESTION:
Have all prophetic
events—Daniel’s seventieth week, the second coming,
the New Jerusalem, the new heavens and new earth, the
judgment seat of Christ, the great white throne, the
condemnation of the beast, false prophet, dragon and
harlot, the seal, trumpet and bowl judgements . . . in
fact all judgements—already taken place, or are they
symbolic and have not and will not be literally
fulfilled?
ANSWER:
They WERE fulfilled in the first century. Some of them
were physically-literally fulfilled in the physical
events surrounding the destruction of Jerusalem, others
were fulfilled in the heavenly realm where the departed
spirits were raised out of Hades and gathered into the
Kingdom. But, whether physically or heavenly, the events
actually, literally occurred and were fulfilled. -Edward
E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Is there no millennium? Never
was, never will be?
ANSWER:
If you believe the millennium had to be a literal
1000-year period, then your statement would be correct.
But many postmillennialists and all the amillennialists
hold the idea that the millennium was/is/will be a
period of indeterminable length and not merely a
literal thousand years. It could symbolize a period of
completeness, fullness, finishing. In Second Peter,
chapter 3, Peter says God was not hasty in bringing the
then-imminent judgment upon that generation. He waited
until the harvest was ripe before treading the
winepress. He had already said in his first
epistle that it was time for that judgment to begin
(1 Pet 4:7, 17). So I believe the millennium was the
period from Christ’s first coming until His Second
Coming. It was what the rabbis referred to as the “Days
of the Messiah,” which was a “transitionary period
between this world (age) and the world to come (age to
come). They referred to it as the Messiah’s millennium
also. And they debated how long those “Days of the
Messiah” would last. There were three rabbis in the
first century who taught that the Messiah’s millennium
would be a period of forty years, just like the
transitionary period between the exodus and the entrance
into the promised land. The term “thousand years”
(millennium) would then simply refer to the period of
time while the Church or Kingdom was being built (cir.
AD 30-70), while Christ was reigning in His millennial
reign to put down all of His enemies (1 Cor
15:25). Jesus said in Matthew 24 that no man knew the
day or the hour. All they could know was that it was
getting close, by the signs He told them to watch for,
and by His further revelation to them, in the book
of Revelation, saying that all these events were
“about to be” fulfilled (including the end of the
millennium and the arrival of the New Heavens and
Earth). If any those prophecies in the book of
Revelation have not been fulfilled yet,
then the persecuted saints who derived hope from
those promises were deluded. They
hoped for a relief from the persecution,
rescue out of the tribulation, and reward in His
Presence, before they tasted of death (Matt 16:27-28).
Did they get it? If not, then John was a false prophet,
and Christianity is a hoax. – Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
Has Satan already been cast
eternally into the lake of fire? In the newsletter,
Don Preston uses Rom. 16:20 as evidence that Paul
believed in the imminent return of Christ. If Satan
has been crushed, as is evidently the case from
Preterist eschatology, why is he so active today? In
fact, if I understand Preterism correctly, you have a
lot of problems with Satan. I have the sneaky
suspicion that you think he’s not really a person or a
fallen angel, but rather an influence or inclination
toward evil within each of us like the (gasp) liberals
believe?
ANSWER:
Make no mistake about Preterism. The preterist view is
the ONLY eschatological position which challenges the
liberal school of thought consistently. The whole
futurist network has surrendered to the liberals on
numerous inconsistent fronts. The futurists have more
problems dealing consistently with Satan than the
preterists. I do not speak for other preterists, but I
see no problem either way. We could personify our lusts
(James 1:13-15) and call them the influence of Satan, or
we could actually believe that there is a fallen angel
(Satan) who spiritually fathered the Jews (Matt. 3:7;
23:33; Jn. 8:44) and influenced them to reject Christ
and persecute the Christians. Who was it that tempted
Christ in the wilderness (Matt. 4:1ff)? I would have a
hard time believing he is not an actual angelic being.
But, like we said in reference to sin above, existence
is one thing, reign is another. The “ruler of this
world” was cast out and his dominion taken away. So what
if he still exists? He has no real spiritual power over
us now. It is our own lusts that affect us today
(Jas.1:13ff). One final point that can be made here is
that no where in the Bible is it said that Satan must
exist in order for there to be evil in the world. When
Sin/Satan reigned, evil threatened the scheme of
redemption, but now through Christ, Satan and Sin no
longer reign. -Edward E. Stevens
QUESTION:
If Jesus Christ has returned,
why is sin still rampant?
ANSWER:
Jesus conquered the REIGN of sin over us, not the
EXISTENCE of sin. Sin will always exist, but it no
longer is master over us. The Last Enemy (spiritual
death, condemnation, or separation from God’s
fellowship), which is the result of Sin’s reign over us,
has been conquered. We now have access to the presence
of God. Even though we may still sin, it now can no
longer hold us in its web. Christ has set us free. Death
and Hades have been done away with. -Edward E.
Stevens
QUESTION:
What does the future now hold
for the church, the unbelieving world and creation,
according to the Preterist view?
ANSWER:
I’m not totally comfortable using the word “church” in
reference to the Kingdom of God today. The word “church”
just might refer to the “calling-out” process of the
transitional period from 30-70 AD when Christ was
building His Kingdom. The Kingdom is the repository of
all those who were “called out” of the dominion of
darkness. The Kingdom of Christ is here now. We enjoy
all the spiritual blessings that were promised in the
prophets. Since the Kingdom is here now in its fullness,
we must live accordingly. What this means is that we
live spiritual lives, governed by the law of the spirit,
rather than by the law of the letter (legalism).
I also believe there is a long future ahead of us on
this planet. I do not believe it is just about over. The
sun has many millions of years left to burn. We have
only just begun to achieve the purposes for which God
planted us here. I saw an interesting comment along
these same lines in Jim Jordan’s Biblical Horizons
(Tyler, Texas), where he said:
“I personally agree with the great Presbyterian
theologian B. B. Warfield, who held that we are still
living in the early Church, with thousands of years
ahead of us. I expect future generations will be better
able to answer some of these questions than I am.“
[Biblical Horizons Occasional Papers No.4, page 16]
In regard to our destiny after physical death, we no
longer go to Hades to await a resurrection and judgment.
Death and Hades were done away with at 70 A.D. when the
“death” that reigned over man (Rom.5:14) was reversed by
the eternal “life” provided through Christ
(Rom.5:17,21). Hades was a conscious waiting place for
the biologically dead. At the 70 A.D. resurrection,
souls in Hades were resurrected out of that waiting
state, the righteous into the presence of Christ in His
kingdom, and the wicked to eternal punishment. Since
then, when the righteous die biologically, they continue
living in the presence of God, while the wicked go away
to eternal punishment. -Edward E. Stevens
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‘What Happened’ Book Reprinted
WHAT HAPPENED IN A.D. 70?
By Edward E. Stevens – Now available in its
sixth edition, with significant enhancements
and a new cover design. It shows the
historical fulfillment of the first century
Return of Christ. The Matthew 24-Luke
17 chart, list of fulfillments in Josephus,
chart on the intensification of the TIME
statements in the last NT books, plus the
annotated bibliography of preterist writings
make this short book “a
good basic introduction” to
the Full Preterist view (Walt Hibbard). It
affirms the completion of all NT books by
the time Jerusalem was destroyed in AD 70.
There are both a printed edition
and an electronic edition
of the book available. Only 64 pages.
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