Destruction of the temple.
What do you think?
I think not. We all agree that there was an Abomination set up by Antiochus in 167 BC. This prompted the Maccabees Revolt. After 2,300 days the temple was cleansed as the Maccabees defeated Antiochus' army and destroyed the Idols/Abominations. Daniel 8 documents this.
12 Because of transgression, an army was given over to the horn to oppose the daily sacrifices; and he cast truth down to the ground. He did all this and prospered.
13 Then I heard a holy one speaking; and another holy one said to that certain one who was speaking, "How long will the vision be, concerning the daily sacrifices and the transgression of desolation, the giving of both the sanctuary and the host to be trampled under foot?"
14 And he said to me, "For two thousand three hundred days; then the sanctuary shall be cleansed."
The
Maccabean Revolt was a conflict, lasting from 167 to 160 BC, between a
Judean rebel group known as the
Maccabees and the
Seleucid Empire. In the narrative of
I Maccabees, after
Antiochus issued his decrees forbidding Jewish religious practice, a rural Jewish
priest from
Modiin,
Mattathias the
Hasmonean, sparked the revolt against the Seleucid Empire by refusing to worship the
Greek gods. Mattathias killed a
Hellenistic Jew who stepped forward to offer a sacrifice to an idol in Mattathias' place. He and his five sons fled to the wilderness of Judah. After Mattathias' death about one year later in 166 BC, his son
Judah Maccabee led an army of Jewish dissidents to victory over the
Seleucid dynasty in
guerrilla warfare, which at first was directed against Hellenized Jews, of whom there were many. The Maccabees destroyed pagan altars in the villages, circumcised boys and forced Jews into outlawry.[SUP]
[1][/SUP] The term Maccabees as used to describe the Jewish army is taken from the Hebrew word for "hammer".[SUP]
[2][/SUP]
The revolt itself involved many battles, in which the Maccabean forces gained notoriety among the Seleucid army for their use of
guerrilla tactics. After the victory, the Maccabees entered Jerusalem in triumph and ritually cleansed the
Temple, reestablishing traditional
Jewish worship there and installing
Jonathan Maccabee as high priest. A large Seleucid army was sent to quash the revolt, but returned to Syria on the death of Antiochus IV. Its commander Lysias, preoccupied with internal Seleucid affairs, agreed to a political compromise that restored religious freedom.
The temple was destroyed in AD 70. There was no Abomination of Desolation set up then.