Paul gave Titus the "blessed hope" he didn't give it to us. What hope would there be for Titus if Christ didn't return for 2,000+ more years? In 1 Thes 5 Paul tells them to "watch and be sober." Watch for something 2,000 + years away? Let's say something really big is going to happen in the year 4018 and I know about it. Would I be running around all crazy telling everyone to watch for it? Everyone would tell me to "shut up" and "who cares?"
In Mat 24, they start out talking about 70 AD events, right? Where does anyone say, "but a long time will past before the rest of this happens?" There is no gap of any sort found in Mat 24.
You mention other appearances of Christ and you are correct. We also find the presence of God coming close to man repeatedly in the OT. When his people were being good, He was present blessing them. When they were really bad, He turned His face away from them. When they were really bad, His presence would come and He'd kick their butt. This was the point I was trying to make to End. A monumental event like the destruction of God's people and temple we should expect God to be involved in that in a very personal and up-close way.
In Mat 24:29, the sun and moon darken and stars fall from the sky, right? These astral omens are very similar to the heavenly signs said to accompany the fall of Judah (Jer 4:23-26), the fall of Egypt (Ezek 32:7-9), the fall of Babylon (Isa 13:9-13), and the fall of Edom (Isa 34:4-5) all of which happened in the 6th century BC. Thus the 6th century BC was a century of divine intervention, if you will. Just as various heavenly omens marked a great slaughter, at the fall of these once great nations, the same thing is foretold and should be expected at the fall of Israel in 70 AD. If you read Josephus, they certainly knew they were being punished. This punishment was predicted and foretold by nearly every OT prophet, including NT prophets like John the Baptist, Jesus Himself, Paul, Peter and lastly John.
The fall of Jerusalem and Israel at the end of the age was such a monumental event, wouldn't you expect it to receive more than a footnote? After the first 6 chapters in Genesis, the Bible chronicles the history of the Jewish people and it ends with the end of that nation.
The 1.1 million estimated Jews that perished in the war were wicked. They were the "perverse and faithless generation" that Jesus loathed. According to Titus, they were the most wicked people he had ever encountered, this from a Roman?? Titus felt he was doing God's work in destroying them - he was right!! Anyway, Christ return served two purposes, punish and destroy the wicked, reward the righteous. Both happened. The wicked were "swept away" like the flood while the righteous were "gathered into His barn." The barn is the Kingdom of God.
The Kingdom of God comes without observation, (Lk 17:20) right? So why are people expecting to see the Kingdom come? Is the Kingdom Coming a future event or has it happened? I'm saying it happened in 70 AD. All believers were gathered to Christ in the spirit and we are still "with" Him today. The Jewish War and destruction of the Temple was a sign to the world that a new way of salvation had come and was available to all who believed. This is when Christianity spread like wildfire throughout the known earth.
[SUP]20 [/SUP]Now when He was asked by the Pharisees when the kingdom of God would come, He answered them and said, “The kingdom of God does not come with observation;
[SUP]21 [/SUP]nor will they say, ‘See here!’ or ‘See there!’ For indeed, the kingdom of God is within you.”
Brother PW,
Yes, you are right, except that 70 ad was not the end of Israel.
All these things that you are repeating were acceptable until Israel was restored to Jerusalem. That changed the interpretation of the time line because the thought was that Israel would never be restored.
The viewpoint that you are taking is RCC teaching. The teaching says that the RCC is now Israel, basically.
There are issues that are still not resolved using this viewpoint. Although most things seem to have an answer, the theory does have it's problems. You and I have exchanged ideas on some issues.
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The interpretation of the statue in Daniel 2 is one place.
The stone striking cannot be the establishment/beginning of the kingdom. That happens just after the iron begins.
The clay cannot be Israel, unless you can support it with scripture.
When the stone strikes, the statue of the nations is destroyed. Since the nations still exist, the stone has not struck yet.
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I have been down this road before. The theory will not fit into the overall time line and still has too many problems.