Did Jesus Return in
AD 70?
Recently there has been
a resurgence in the doctrine that Jesus’ second and
final return was in 70 A.D., at the same time as the destruction of
If the Bible teaches this view, even though it is contrary in so many ways to
what most have believed over the years, it should be fully accepted. If, on the
other hand, it is not in harmony with plain and clear passages, it should be
firmly and completely rejected, no matter how sincere its advocates.
This study will first give a brief statement of this belief so the reader will know the basic elements of the view being studied. Then, we shall present six reason why we reject this belief as out of harmony with the scriptures.
Since I have found no statement in the books I have read by the adherents of this view which clearly summarizes it, I have, from their writings, developed a chart to aid in understanding the view. Note that 70 A.D. is the date for the second coming which, they teach, is the time when the Law was finally removed and the new covenant fully established.

At the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D., the following are said to happen simultaneously: the end of the age (Matt. 28:20), the perfect has come (I Cor. 13:10), the end of all things (Matt. 5:16-17), the restoration of all things (Acts. 3:19-21), all things are made new (Rev. 21:5), the end of the miraculous age, the consummation of the age (Matt. 28:20), all things are fulfilled (Luke 21:20-22), Israel is regathered (Isa. 11:10-12), Israel is planted in their own land (Ezek. 36:24), the old heavens and earth burn up (the ending of the Jewish system not the end of our world), the new heavens and new earth come (the new kingdom is fully established) (II Peter 3), the death of Judaism and the resurrection (new covenant is fully established).
I believe this view is not a correct understanding of the scriptures and wish to present six reasons why I consider it to be false. 1. The 70 A.D. view is wrong because it makes figurative events the Bible intends literally. Thus, the corruptible body of I Cor. 15 is said to be the fleshly or carnal system of Judaism and the resurrection of I Cor. 15 is the rise of Christianity. The "world" or "fleshly" is redefined to mean the "Jewish age," while the "spiritual" refers to the Christian age. The old heaven and earth is Judaism and the new heaven and earth are Christ’s kingdom. Such meanings are not the interpretation which the passages where these terms are found would suggest. In fact, it does an injustice to the Christian system to suggest that it is the resurrection of dead Judaism. While the Law of Moses was the "tutor" to bring us to Christ and while it had to die when the new system came, Christ’s plan for redemption is not a resurrection of the Law and does not spring forth out of its death. The Law was a preliminary measure to prepare the way for the plan God set in motion before the foundation of the world.
We shall look in detail at two passages frequently cited by those holding the 70 A.D. view to see the error of this figurative or "spiritualizing" approach.
I Corinthians 15. Here Paul refers to the burial and
resurrection of a physical body, not to burying the Jewish system and the rise
of Christianity. To show this is true, let us step through various portions of
this chapter. Paul begins by referring to the resurrection of Christ’s body and
tells of those who personally saw the resurrected body. Surely Paul speaks here
of a literal body and with this the parties on both side of this issue agree.
Then he moves to discuss some in
Notice further that Paul says, "If the dead [plural] are not raised, neither has Christ been raised" (verse 16). Thus, if other dead ones are not raised bodily, neither can Christ have been raised bodily. It would be beside Paul’s point here to say, "If the dead [the Jewish system] has not been raised [the Christian system], neither has Christ been raised." What would be the connection with what precedes and why would he use the plural "dead ones" instead of the singular? But it certainly does make his point to say that if you do not believe dead bodies come out of graves, then you will have to deny that Christ’s dead body came out of the grave.
As corroboration of this view, consider I Corinthians 6:13-14. Here Paul makes much the same point. He warns against the immoral use of our bodies for fornication and urges that we use our bodies, rather, for the Lord. What body does he mean? A body that can engage in a sexual act. He adds that not only is this body "for the Lord," but "the Lord is for the body and God both raised the Lord and will raise up us through his power." So the same body which has sexual capability is the body which we give to God and which then God raises up, even as He did the body of Christ. So in both I Corinthians 6 and 15, Paul speaks of not only the resurrection of Christ’s physical body but of the like resurrection of other physical bodies as well.
Then, Paul writes in 15:22 that Christ is the "firstfruits" of them that are asleep. In other words, the same thing that happened to Him, a bodily resurrection, will later happen to us, a bodily resurrection. Paul then comments (vss. 30-34) that to put your life in jeopardy or to deny yourself the pleasures of life would make no sense unless there is a resurrection of the dead when even greater joys will be known. Still, in this section of I Corinthians 15, then, the message is about a bodily resurrection.
Next, in
verses 35 through 49, Paul addresses the question that would naturally arise,
"If there is a resurrection of a dead body, what will the new body be like?" Just as a seed is planted and produces
something based on itself but not identical to itself, he says, even so will
our bodies be planted in the grave and from them will come forth something from
them but not like them. The new body, for both the righteous and the wicked,
will be a body that does not die again--an eternal body, a body fit for the
spirit realm not the earthly. That Paul still has in mind here a physical body
here is clear from his reference to different types of flesh and then to
different types of bodies--both terrestrial and celestial. Then he says
"it is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption; it is sown in
dishonor; it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power;
it is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body." "It,"
here, refers to the same entity in each of its uses: the physical body--"it"
is planted and "it" is raised. The nature of that body will be
different when it is raised, but Paul still refers to what was planted as that
which is raised, even though it will be in a transformed state. Would any in
To conclude his discussion, verses 50 to 58) Paul says that "as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly." Notice "we." Human beings not covenants. Then he continues, "we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed." Note several points from these verses in opposition to the "spiritualized" approach. v (1) Paul speaks of "we," living human beings in the plural, and he contrasts those alive at any point in time ("we") with those who have already died at any point in time ("they"). He speaks pointedly to real people and real circumstances. This is no figurative reference to a theological question.
(2) Some die and are raised, others do not die and are changed. If the resurrection of the dead is the coming of Christianity out of the grave of Judaism, what, in such a figure, are those who do not die? What do they represent? To restate, in Paul’s description are three conditions: (a) those who are dead, (b) those who have been dead and are then raised anew, and (c) those who do not die and are transformed. If "death" refers to the end of Judaism and the "resurrection" refers to the coming of Christianity, what is represented by those who do not die at all? It is evident that it is a mistake to make this passage represent any thing other than physical death, a literal resurrection of the bodies of those who have died, and the transformation of those who are alive at Christ’s coming.
(3) And when is all of this done? At the last trumpet sound. Could 70 A.D. be the time of the last trumpet sound? Surely "last trump," while figurative, must be intended to bring to our minds the last moment of recorded time, not an event which happened thousands of years before the time is over.
(4) And as
a final piece of evidence that Paul here speaks of the resurrection of a
physical body and not the end of one covenant and the start of another, notice
what comes to a final end and total defeat when these events take place--death.
When the bodies spoken of are raised, "death is swallowed up in
victory." Victory over death is achieved only when all who have died are
raised, not when the covenant with
Our point in this study of I Corinthians 15 is two-fold: (1) the subject under consideration here is that of a bodily resurrection just as Christ experienced rather than a reference to the death of the covenant through Moses and the beginning of the covenant through Christ and (2) the figurative or allegorical interpretation of the 70 A.D. advocates gives passages a meaning that was not intended by the writer.
II Peter 3:3-12. This second passage we will examine to consider the figurative approach of the 70 A.D. advocates, speaks of the following events which shall happen at His coming: (1) the heavens shall pass away with a great noise; (2) the elements shall melt with fervent heat; (3) the earth and all the works in it shall be burned up. The 70 A.D. advocates say that this statement applies to the destruction of the Jewish system and not to the actual earth and heaven. Such, however, is not in harmony with the passage. What are the scoffers mentioned deriding? That the physical universe, that which has existed since creation, is still here even though God has said it would be destroyed. They were not scoffing because they had not seen the end of Judaism. According to the 70 A.D. advocates, Peter should have said to tell them they were looking for the wrong kind of fulfillment of the promise of the end of the world. Peter does not, however, take such an approach. Rather, he says those who scoff because His coming has not happened yet, should be reminded that God did once destroyed the physical earth--by water. Thus Peter confirms that they were wondering about the right type of destruction--a physical one. With the physical destruction of Noah’s day offered as a similar event, it is clear that the heaven and earth mentioned in the same context are also the physical heaven and earth.
Peter’s point, then, is that those who scoff should be reminded that God does keep His promises to destroy. He once promised that He would destroy the earth by water and while it was over a hundred years before He did it. He kept His word. In a similar way, He has said He would bring the world to an end and, while some may scoff because God chooses to wait, He will keep this promise too. Only the next time it will not be just starting over with a new family on the same earth, this time all physical things will be destroyed to be replaced with a "heaven and earth" of a different type.
One writer favoring the 70 A.D. coming says that since, after the flood God promised not again to "smite any more every thing living, as I have done," (Genesis 8:21), then Peter could not be referring to a final end when God will destroy all physical things. But in the very next verse of Genesis 8, verse 22, the writer continues the quotation from God saying, "While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease." This promise is "while the earth remaineth." II Peter 3 speaks of the time when the entire physical universe shall cease. God does not tell Noah that he will never bring the earth to an end but that he will not again wipe out virtually all human beings as long as He is going to let life continue on the earth.
These efforts to make the death of I Corinthians 15 and the destruction of the world of II Peter 3 to be the end of Judaism are not within the range of acceptable interpretations of these passages. To view the resurrection of I Corinthians 15 to be the full establishment of a Christianity which had been begun earlier but was not complete, is also do violence to this passage. Treating what the scriptures teach as literal to be figurative is not an acceptable view.
2. The 70 A.D. view is wrong because it is out of harmony with Bible teaching on Christ’s second coming.
a. Events said to occur with the second coming did not happen in 70 A.D. If they did not, then whatever happened in 70 A.D. it was not the second coming of the Lord. Below are listed passages all would agree speak of Christ’s second coming. Those events said to accompany His return are underlined. As you read this list, ask yourself if you can believe that all of these, or any of these, happened in 70 A.D.
Matthew 16:27--The Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and then he shall reward every man according to his works. Is there any record of Jesus’ return with angels in 70 A.D.? At that time, He could not have rewarded "every man according to his works" because every man had not yet lived to perform works by which to be judged.
Matthew
25:31-32--Jesus says, "But when the Son of man shall come in his glory,
and all the angels with him, then shall he sit on the throne of his glory: and
before him shall be gathered all the nations: and he shall separate them one
from another, as the shepherd separates the sheep for the goats." In 70
A.D. Jesus did not come with all His angels nor did He gather all people of all
nations before Him and judge them. That this was a judgment on Jews only does
not fulfill "all the nations" being gathered before Him. Moreover,
this judgment ends in a final separation into heaven and hell (Matthew 25:41,
46). Max King, on the other hand, says it occurred when
Acts 1:11--Jesus is observed with human eyes ascending into heaven and those who watched are told, "This same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven." There is no record of a visible coming of the Lord in 70 A.D. Surely if an event such as this had taken place it would have been noted.
I Corinthians 15:22-26--This passage is a most important one for telling us what will happen when the Christ returns: (1) those who are Christ’s will be raised; (2) then comes the end when Christ will deliver the kingdom back to God; (3) all rule and authority shall be abolished; and (4) death, the last enemy, shall be abolished. If Christ came in 70 A.D., then all the righteous (as well as all others) had to be raised like Christ was since he is the "firstfruits," thus indicating that his resurrection is the first of a kind with others like it to follow. But there is no record of any bodily resurrections taking place in 70 A.D. John 5:28-29 teaches that "all [plural] that are in the tombs shall come forth." Those people who are in the tombs shall come out of them. Although earlier in John 5 Christ uses "dead" in a spiritual sense, in these verses He clearly means the literal dead for He speaks of tombs and says this resurrection is followed by our going to our eternal destinies.
I Corinthians 15 also teaches that at Christ’s return, He will complete His reign as king not start a new reign. According to the 70 A.D. view, Jesus’ coming in 70 A.D. is the time when His kingdom, although begun on Pentecost, is fully established. I Corinthians 15:22-26, however, says His return is the time when He concludes His reign. His reign is over then because with the resurrection of dead bodies, He conquers His last enemy, death, and so death is abolished. But how many have continued to die after 70 A.D.? Surely death was not abolished then. With death overcome with the resurrection which accompanies His return, Jesus can return the kingdom to God because He has finished His work as king: all His enemies have been conquered.
Philippians 3:20--Paul writes that we look for the Christ to come from heaven to change our vile bodies into a body like His glorious body. The 70 A.D. advocates not only do not produce any evidence of such as transformation in 70 A.D., they deny that any such transformation of vile bodies into glorious bodies takes place. They believe, rather, that the resurrection of which the Bible speaks is the transformation of the "dead law" of Judaism into the "living body" of Christianity. So, when people die, they go directly to their eternal abode in the state of souls, but not in resurrected bodies. Philippians 3:20 says, however, that our "vile bodies" shall be "fashioned anew" into bodies like Christ’s glorified body. I John 3:2 says that when Christ is "manifested" [comes again] we shall be like Him. So as Christ’s dead body was buried but came forth as a new body, so we shall all die and be buried, but then these bodies shall be resurrected as new bodies.
I Thessalonians 3:13--When Christ returns, He shall come "with all his saints." Thus, those who have died already are seen as accompanying Jesus in His victory because they have returned with Him. There is no indication that in 70 A.D. there was any such return of saints with Christ.
I Thessalonians 4:15-17--When Christ returns, dead Christians will be raised from the dead in new bodies and living Christians shall be changed into the same kind of bodies. Again it is stated that our resurrection will be like Jesus’ resurrection "For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also that are fallen asleep in Jesus will God bring with him" (verse 14). As Jesus rose again--"even so" shall God bring Christians to be with Jesus. After this change of living and dead bodies, both groups shall go up into the air and be with Him forever. This word of comfort was given about "them that fall asleep," again a plural number, not about a dead Judaism. These deaths were occurring then and Paul deals with how to comfort those who are separated from Christians they love through death. Paul answers that those who are alive when the Lord returns will not have any advantage over those who have died because both will be transformed into new bodies and then will go together to meet Jesus. To make this passage, which is so specific about Christians who die, to be a theological discussion about the end of the law of Moses and the "full establishment" of Christ’s covenant is to read into the passage what the author never intended. No person in Thessalonica reading the message as received from Paul would ever have dreamed that this passage was not given to comfort those whose loved ones had died in the faith.
II
Thessalonians 1:7-10--"when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven
with his mighty angels , in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not
God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ." Certainly no
such spiritual judgment took place in 70 A.D. and to push this passage into being
a figurative reference to the end of the Jewish nation is to go beyond the
limits of acceptable exegesis.
II
Thessalonians 2:3-8--Before the Lord comes must be a falling away led by
"a man of perdition." At His coming, the Lord will reveal this wicked
person (or entity) and shall destroy him. The church had not experienced a
major departure by 70 A.D. The Jewish leaders, destroyed in the fall of
II Timothy 4:1--Paul writes that at His coming, Jesus shall judge the living and the dead. In 70 A.D. there was not a general judgment of all who have lived, whether they were still living or, by that time, dead. While the destruction of the Jewish system in 70 A.D. was certainly a judgment of the Lord on those who had rejected prophets and finally the Son of God, such a judgment does not qualify as the general judgment on all the living and dead.
II Peter 3:4-13--Considered in detail earlier, this passage is added to this list to remind that at the coming of the Lord or the day of the Lord "the heavens shall pass away with a great noise and the elements shall be dissolved with fervent heat." As shown earlier, this does, indeed, refer to the physical earth and heaven and, therefore, when this event happens, the earth as we know it will be burned up.
I John 3:2-3--In this passage, John says that "when He shall be manifested, we shall be like him." So when Jesus returns we shall be transformed into the same type of body He has--and this did not happen in 70 A.D.
We have studied passages that speak clearly of the second coming and of events which shall accompany that coming. We have one of three choices in interpreting these passages: (1) that the events which are said to accompany the second coming literally took place in 70 A.D. but we have no record of it; (2) that since these events did not take place in 70 A.D. (or since) that we are to continue to look for Jesus’ coming when they will take place, or (3) that there is a figurative meaning hidden in these passages about the end of the Jewish law and the beginning of the Christian system. We clearly reject option one because had such spectacular events have taken place, we certainly would have some record of it. Option three is the view of those believing Jesus returned in 70 A.D., but to hold this view they must allegorize these passages when there is no justification for doing so. The context and language describes real events which are to be expected to occur. Moreover, John, writing after 70 A.D., still speaks of the coming as future.
b. The New Testament gives clear indications that the return of Christ would not be as early as 70 A.D.
When some
in the first century began to be too specific about the time of Christ’s
return, they were rebuked by apostolic authority. Paul wrote in II
Thessalonians 2:2 that the Thessalonians should not think that this even is just
at hand. They should not expect the second coming to be immediate. II
Thessalonians was written in 51-52 A.D. and the Thessalonians are told that a
major departure from the faith would have to occur before the second
coming--something that would likely take more than twenty years. And Peter, in
II Peter 3, also warns that those who scoff because the Lord has not come yet
should not deter Christian from believing He will come because with the Lord
"a thousand years is as a day." They should not, then, be surprised
if He does not come as soon as some might think. II Peter was probably written
about 66 or 67 A.D., only a short time before the fall of Jerusalem in 70 A.D.
Peter, moreover, was told by Jesus the manner of death he would die, so Peter
knew the Lord’s coming would not be before his own death (John 21:19).
Paul,
writing at the end of his life and but a very few years before 70 A.D., warned
Timothy that "the time will come when men will not endure the sound
doctrine" (II Timothy 4:3). Thus Paul again predicts a falling away is
coming but that could hardly have been fulfilled before the fall of
And in I John 3:2-3, we have this statement from John: "when
he shall be manifested, we shall be like him." John, then, is still
looking forward to the coming of Christ. But virtually all scholars date the
epistles of John after the destruction of
The teaching of the New Testament about the second coming of Christ, then, relates to it many events which did not happen in 70 A.D. Those writing just before 70 A.D., moreover, suggest that things will happen before the second coming that did not have time to happen by 70 A.D. and John, writing after 70 A.D. still looks to the coming of Christ as still to happen.
3. The 70 A.D. view is wrong because there is a better explanation of the passages they say require a first century second coming.
This is a
very key point. The beginning point of this theory seems to be that some New
Testament passages seem to teach that Christ would return in the first century
and, if so, then a 70 A.D. coming is the best explanation of them. The
adherents of this view believe that we either must accept a 70 A.D. coming or
must admit that inspired writers were wrong when they wrote verses they say
teach a first century second coming. If a meaning other than a first century
return of Christ is a legitimate possibility for these passages, however, then
we have another alternative. We shall look at the most often used passages of
this type and shall ask if a meaning other than a first century return is
possible and even likely. If other meanings are found, then we do not have to
choose between the inspired writers being wrong and a 70 A.D. coming of Christ.
Philippians 4:5. In this passage, Paul says to rejoice and let your forbearance be known unto all men because "the Lord is at hand." Note first that Paul does not say that the Lord’s coming is at hand, only that He is near. The word used for "at hand" is a word that means "near" either in time or in space. Certainly the meaning here can easily be that the Philippians are to be patient with others because the Lord is close by them. Nothing in this passage requires the second coming to be in the first century.
Matthew
26:64. Jesus is being tried before the Jewish High Priest who asks Jesus if he
is the Christ, the son of God. Jesus answers in the affirmative and then adds,
"Henceforth ye shall see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of
Power, and coming on the clouds of heaven." Here Jesus tells the High
Priest that he will see Him both "sitting at the right hand of Power"
and "coming on the clouds of heaven." The most obvious question is
how the High Priest could see Jesus sitting at the right hand of
power--obviously a reference to His being seated at the right hand of God?
Jesus would not have been visible to the human eye while sitting in heaven
except by a miracle such as occurred when Stephen saw Jesus standing at the
right hand of God. We have, then, two possibilities for this part of Jesus’
statement: (1) the High Priest (and others present who heard) would be given a
similar miracle to the one given Stephen, or (2) the High Priest (and others
present) would see some event which would demonstrate that Jesus was seated at
the right hand of power.
Since we
have no record of the first, we ask whether some event could have demonstrated
that Jesus was seated at God’s right hand. The answer would seem to be that His
prediction of the destruction of
But what of the second part of the statement: "coming on the clouds of heaven?" Is this a statement from Jesus to the High Priest that the High Priest (and other within hearing) would see Jesus coming on the clouds for His second advent?
The phrase
"coming on the clouds" is an interesting one. Isaiah 19:1 uses this
expression in speaking of Jehovah coming on the clouds to destroy
Three times in the New Testament does the expression "coming on the clouds" appear: (1) in Matthew 24:30 (and the parallel passages in Mark and Luke) which will be studied later in this paper, (2) in the passage we are considering about the High Priest, and (3) in Revelation 1:7. Many passages in the New Testament speak of Jesus’ coming, but only these speak of His "coming on the clouds." Is there some special significance to this? Why this wording? From the two Old Testament uses it is clear that "coming on the clouds" was an expression that referred to the movement of deities within the heavenly realm to carry out some action. It does not mean, in either of its Old Testament uses, the actual coming of deity to earth.
Would we
not, then, look first to that possibility for the New Testament uses? When this
possibility is applied in Matthew 26:64, it certainly offers a good meaning.
Jesus, thus, says to the High Priest and those standing by: you will see the
Son of man sitting at the right hand of power when you recognize that the
destruction of Jerusalem comes as I have predicted publicly and, at the same
time, you will see the Son of man coming on the clouds because you will know
that He is the one who, although still in heaven, is carrying out His promise
of the destruction. The passage says, "Ye shall see me sitting . . . and
coming," and speaks of these as happening at the same time. He could sit
and come simultaneously because he was "sitting" on the right hand of
God while "coming" in a figurative sense to carry out what He had
said He would do.
As we will
show later, the other two New Testament uses of "coming on the
clouds" also speak of "coming" in a special sense--to carry out
a predicted destruction and not to come in a physical presence.
I John 2:18. In this passage John is warning about the anti-christ, that is "he that denieth the Father and the Son" ( I John 2:22-23) and who "confesses not that Jesus Christ cometh in the flesh" (II John 7). John says that "it is the last hour" because there the anti-christs are already at work. What, then, does the expression "last hour" mean?
J.W. Roberts, in his commentary on the letters of John, explains the Greek construction: "In Greek neither occurrence of the term last hour in this verse has the definite article ‘the.’ By this use of the noun and modifier without the article, John emphasizes that he is speaking in a qualitative or categorical way and not of a definite last hour, as one might suppose from the English translation. He means that this is a ‘last-hour’ kind of situation or time. In line with John’s use of ‘hour’ in the Gospel, where the word means a decisive time in the history of the world, a time of importance created by the appearance of Christ into the world (John 4:21, 23; 5:25, 28; 16:2, 4, 25, 32), the writer in this present passage refers to a time of stress or danger related to the history of salvation. . . . Thus the term ‘last hour’ in John does not refer to a segment of time as the culmination of a series in which time approaches an end."
From this statement by Roberts, an outstanding Greek scholar, we understand that John was not saying, "This is the last hour of time" but rather this is a "critical time." If he meant that "the last hour of recorded time is soon upon us because the anti-christs are here," then he was wrong because that point in time was not even close to the last hour of recorded time. Over 17 million hours have passed since then so, if he literally meant the last hour of time is soon to come, he was wrong.
We must,
then, look to some meaning other than a strictly literal one and the Greek
makes clear that John referred to a critical hour because of the false prophets
who were there. Those believing that John is referring to the destruction of
Jerusalem with his comment about a critical hour are mistaken because (1) John
was living in Ephesus by this time and had little contact with Jerusalem and
(2) the on-set of this critical hour is brought about by the Gnostics who
taught that Jesus had not come in the flesh and not by a Roman attack on
Jerusalem. And as mentioned earlier, I John was written years after the
destruction of
The passage in I John 2:18, then, cannot be used as evidence requiring a first century coming of Christ. It is not a reference to a second coming at all and its use of "last hour" is best explained in other ways than a reference to a first century return of Jesus.
I Peter 4:7. Peter declares in this passage that the Christians to whom he is writing ought to live good lives because "the end of all things is at hand." Notice that Peter does not specifically mention the coming of Christ. The "end of all things" has several possible meanings.
(1) Those
holding the 70 A.D. return believe that Peter was warning that the second
coming would be soon and it was because it came in 70 A.D., not long after
Peter wrote these words. This view cannot be the correct one, however, because
the end of
(2) Another option is that Peter is saying that Christians should live good lives because the "end of all things" (end of time) is imminent. "At hand" could be taken in the sense that it might happen at any moment. Jesus and many other New Testament writers have spoken of how Jesus’ return will be like a "thief in the night," that is, it will come unexpectedly. In this view of the passage, the end of the world is always "at hand" because it could happen at any time. This is certainly a possible meaning because Peter is urging the "end" of which he speaks as motivation for faithful living. The coming end of the world, at any time, is surely such motivation.
(3) A
third possibility is that Peter could be speaking of the "end" for
each one individually. For every person, the end of things (for him) could be
at any moment. It may be that we die or it may be that Christ will return. In
either case, we are to live each moment as if it might be our last--for indeed
it might. We are not required by this passage, then, either to place the second
coming in the first century or declare Peter mistaken because there are other
views which can fit the passage. Besides, Jesus told Peter the manner of death
he would die, as noted earlier, so Peter knew the Lord would not come during
his lifetime.
Hebrews
10:37. The writer of Hebrews here quotes a passage from Habakkuk 2:3. He uses
it as a means of encouraging the Hebrews just as Habakkuk had encouraged the
people of his day. First, what did Habakkuk mean when he wrote: "For yet a
very little while, He that cometh shall come, and shall not tarry. But my
righteous one shall live by faith: And if he shrink
back, my soul hath no pleasure in him." Habakkuk had previously said that
God would use the Babylonians as his agent to punish
The writer
of Hebrews appropriates the language of Habakkuk to make a similar use. He,
also, is seeking to encourage a discouraged people; he also is seeking to get
those who are growing weak to hold on until some event which is soon to come
and which would strengthen them. For the people of Habakkuk’s day, the event
soon to come was the fall of
The
passage in Hebrews 10:37-38, then, is a first century re-application of
Habakkuk’s message to the people of his day. To the discouraged Hebrews among
God’s new people, Christians, the writer says, just as the prophet of old
encouraged God’s people to hang on because God would one day bring down their
persecutor so the writer here says to God’s new "nation" that they
should hang on because God will soon bring down their persecutor. Who was the
persecutor of the Hebrew Christians in the time of this writing, the 60’s A.D.?
It was, of course, the Jews and the reference is to the coming destruction of
James 5:8. This passage says, "You also be patient. Establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand." The whole thrust of this passage is for Christians to be patient--to endure --because Christ’s coming is near. This passage could mean: (1) don’t give up now because Christ will return in a short time; or (2) be patient because Christ’s return is always "at hand" and could happen at any moment, or (3) be faithful because the destruction of Jerusalem [but not the second coming] will soon happen and that will give you relief from some of the trials you are under. Since either the second or third options are possibilities, we are not forced to accept, on the basis of this passage, a first century coming.
Revelation 1:7. John writes: Behold, he cometh with the clouds; and every eye shall see him, and they that pierce him; and all the tribes of the earth shall mourn over him." And in Revelation 22:7, "Behold, I come quickly." Now the question here is whether the coming mentioned in these passages is Christ’s second coming. If so, then Christ told first century Christians he would come soon.
To get the
full context of these verses, one would have to study the entire Book of
Revelation because these passages are related to the basic meaning of the book.
Such is, of course, beyond the scope of this paper. A brief resume of the book
will, however, be helpful. John wrote Revelation while on the
You, as a
Christian in
The Book
of Revelation, then, is written to Christians in a Roman province where
persecution from
The harlot
of Revelation is another symbol of interest in this connection. In Revelation
17, she is introduced as riding on the back of the seven-headed beast (the
Two more
comments about
A second
added comment is about Revelation 11:8, a passage often cited by those who
believe the book of Revelation is about the fall of
The first verse of the first chapter says, "The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show unto his servants, even the things which must shortly come to pass." And verse three says, "the time is at hand." Clearly Revelation is to be about things that will begin soon. In Revelation 22:6, John is told that the things he has been told about "will shortly come to pass" and in the next verse, "Behold, I come quickly."
But now
back to the question of what "coming" He speaks? The coming quickly
is a coming to carry out the prophecies written in the book. Just as Isaiah
19:1 speaks of the Lord "coming" to carry out his promise to
overthrow
The
references to Christ’s coming in Revelation 1:7 and 22:7 and similar passages
in the book, then, are not to Christ’s final return, but, rather, are His
assurance that He will "come" to carry out the promise of this book.
The message given in the Book of Revelation will begin to unfold soon after the
time it is written resulting eventually in the final overthrow of
We have now examined carefully those passages cited by the advocates of the return of Christ in 70 A.D. which, they say, require a first century second coming. In each case, however, we have seen that the passage not only does not require a first century return but that the best explanation of the passage is some other meaning. In view of this, we do not have to have a return of Christ in 70 A.D. in order to fulfill the meaning of these passages and one cannot successfully argue that other passages in the Bible must be interpreted in a way to harmonize with a first century coming.
4. The 70
A.D. view is wrong because Jesus did "completely establish" His new
covenant before 70 A.D. In the King-McGuiggan debate,
Max King affirmed the proposition that "The New Covenant was not
completely established until the fall of the Jewish commonwealth in A.D.
70." King stated that he believed the new covenant began to be established
with the death of Christ and the proclamation of the gospel on Pentecost but
that it was not fully established until 70 A.D. Along with this, King says that
the Jewish law was not taken away until the fall of Jerusalem and, thus, that
Jews were to keep the law until that time.
Do the scriptures teach a forty year transition period during which the law of Moses was still in force and the law of Christ was beginning but not yet fully established? Max King suggests that the law remained in full operation until 70 A.D. but that the new covenant was not fully established until that same date because then Christ returned to receive His kingdom. Can we believe that the Law was in full operation after the cross but the gospel was not? There are many passages which demonstrate the error of this view.
a. Hebrews 9:16 states that at the death of a "testator" his will takes effect. The inspired writer applies this to the death of Christ and the beginning of His covenant. So at Christ’s death, His will went into effect--the gospel was preached, sinners were called to salvation, and the church was begun. Let those who say Christ’s covenant was not yet full established tell us what spiritual benefits were available after 70 A.D. under the "fully established covenant" that were not available after Pentecost but before the destruction of Jerusalem. When a will goes into effect, all its provisions are in force and there is no indication in the scriptures that the covenant Christ established with His death would take effect gradually. It is true that not all details of Christ’s plan were revealed on the day of Pentecost but there is a difference in when a will is in full effect and when all its provisions are known. How congregations were to be organized with elders and deacons, for example, was not revealed on Pentecost because it was not needed yet, the apostles being present with the believers to give them guidance. But this unfolding of such details as they became needed in no way means that the covenant was not in full force at the death of Christ.
b. Hebrews
4:14, 8:1, and many other passages in Hebrews, teach that Christ was completely
active as a high priest at the time of the writing of that epistle, before 70
A.D. He had already offered Himself, He had already entered the
The Jews
continued to observe the law after Christ’s death because they did not believe
it had been changed. After the fall of
c. Romans 7:1-7 is also a significant passage in this study. It likens the Jews and their relationship to the law to a woman and her husband. Without being an adulteress, she cannot be joined unto a second husband until the first husband is dead. The point here is specifically made that "if the husband die, she is free from the law [of that husband], so that she is no adulteress, though she be joined to another man." According to Max Kings’s view, however, Jews were allowed to be joined to Christ while their first husband, the Law of Moses, was still alive.
The truth is that the Law of Moses died when Christ died for "he hath taken it out of the way, nailing it to the cross" (Col. 2:14). Had it not been so, the new covenant could not have begun to be in force. That some continued to follow the Law is not surprising for they did not understand that it had been abolished. When as tax law is changed, some still file their taxes as if it still existed for they do not understand the change. But that does not keep the new law from being fully established.
But let us
ask, if the Law of Moses was still in force after Christ’s death, who was
subject to it? Gentiles never were so they were not under it. Jews who had become
Christians certainly were not under it for Paul said that if they went back to
the law after being joined to Christ they were severed from Christ (Gal. 5:4).
They could keep some of their national customs, such as circumcision, if they
wanted to and they were obliged to keep some principles that pre-dated the law
such as not eating blood or worshipping idols. They were not, however, to
consider themselves as subject to the law. This leaves only the Jews who did
not become Christians as being subject to the law. If they were following a law
that was acceptable, then why evangelize them, as Paul and others did, asking
them to leave the Law of Moses and follow the law of Christ? If their service
through the law was acceptable, why would Paul have offered to become anathema
from Christ if it would mean their acceptance of Christ (
Finally, on this point, is it in harmony with the scriptures for Christ to return, whether in A.D. 70 or any other time, and receive a kingdom when He returns? I Corinthians 15:22-26 makes it very clear that Christ will not return to earth to receive a kingdom but, rather, when He returns the second time He will end His reign, turn the kingdom back to the Father, and usher in the new age with no death. Peter declared that Jesus was Lord and Christ, sitting at the right hand of God at the time of Pentecost (Acts 2:36). And in Daniel 7:13-14, one like a son of man comes to the Ancient of Days to receive a kingdom which shall not be destroyed. Thus Christ is pictured as coming to God in heaven to receive the kingdom, not returning to the earth to receive it.
These passages, and many others to which reference could be made, demonstrate that Christ fully established His law and His kingdom at the time of His death, burial, and resurrection and that the apostles began, a few days later to "read the will" by preaching the gospel. There is nothing that became available under this law after 70 A.D. that was not available before that and so the covenant was fully established at Christ’s death. Moreover, the Law of Moses had to end in order for Christ’s law to take effect.
5. The 70 A.D. view is wrong because the resurrection of the dead described in the scriptures did not occur in 70 A.D. We have earlier discussed the meaning of I Corinthians 15 to show that the resurrection promised in the scriptures is not the coming of Christianity after the fall of Judaism but, rather, that the resurrection of the New Testament is a resurrection of the body from the grave. Let us carry this point a step further, however, by showing that the resurrection of the scriptures could not have occurred in 70 A.D.
a. In John 6:40, Jesus said that He would raise those who believe on Him "at the last day." In verses 44 and 54 of John 6, Jesus repeats the same words. What does He mean that He will raise the righteous "at the last day?" Does He mean that He will raise dead bodies in 70 A.D.? Not only did He not do this, but no one contends that He did. The 70 A.D. advocates suggest that the only resurrection of the New Testament, besides that of Jesus, is the "resurrection" of the kingdom. But surely Jesus is not saying that the kingdom, the new covenant will be raised up on the "last day" of time? That would not give long for the gospel to be preached.
The 70 A.D.
advocates say that Jesus’ reference to the "last days" is the same as
the term "last days" and make it apply to the period between
Pentecost and 70 A.D. (King, Spirit of Prophecy, p. 222.) Certainly there is a
difference between "last day" and "the last days"--a phrase
with a variety of meanings in the scripture. And "last day" cannot
mean the day
b. In I Corinthians 15:22-26, Jesus says He will raise the dead and then give the kingdom back to God because all His enemies, including death, will have been conquered. But if the resurrection of which Paul here speaks does not occur on the last day of time, and there are other deaths that follow, then Jesus did not complete His work of destroying death when He came. Since the resurrection of this passage cannot be followed by more human deaths, then, it cannot have been in 70 A.D.
c. In John 5:25-29, Jesus refers to death in two ways. First there are the spiritually dead and these can pass out of death into life through hearing Jesus’ words and believing them. The time for this kind of resurrection, Jesus says, is at the very moment He is speaking. "The hour cometh, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God; and they that hear shall live." Even as He spoke, those who heard and obeyed would be able to enter the new kingdom in a very short time. But He speaks next of the dead who are "in the tombs." Of this resurrection, Jesus says "The hour cometh." Nothing about its being "now," for Jesus knew this was still future. From this resurrection, those who have done good will go away "unto the resurrection of life and those who have done evil will go away "unto the resurrection of judgment." Jesus here speaks of a resurrection of those in the tombs--not of the death of Judaism and a coming of the kingdom, and the result of this resurrection will be that some will go into life while others will go into judgment or having been judged as unworthy.
So the resurrection of the New Testament is not a figurative pronouncement about the death of Judaism and the rise of Christianity, but is rather a presentation of the real resurrection of the dead. And of this, Jesus says it will occur on the last day, that it will bring bodies out of the tombs, and that it will bring all before the judgment of God.
6. The 70
A.D. view is wrong because it does not correctly use Matthew 24 and 25. Max
King, for example, says that in Matthew 24:3, "Jesus joined the end of the
world (or consummation of the age) with the fall of
We need to
be more concerned, however, about Jesus’ inspired answer than with the
apostle’s uninspired question. In Jesus’ answer, He does speak of both the fall
of
Having
seen the question which began Jesus discourse in Matthew 24 and 25, let us now
study it further because it is such a key passage in the whole question under
consideration. Our study of these chapters falls into ten segments. a. The
occasion (Matthew 23:29-24:2). Jesus here condemns the scribes and Pharisees
for their hypocrisy and says that the retribution of the blood of all the slain
prophets will come upon "this generation," those hearing him, who
would slay the son of God. At this point Jesus weeps over
b. The
question (Matthew 23:4). As mentioned above, the apostles asked Jesus when such
destruction would come and what would be the signs by which to tell it was
coming. According to Matthew, they may also have asked about the end of the
world although this part of the question may simply be a different way of
asking about the signs for an event which they would have considered to be the
end of their world (or age).
c. The possibly misleading and preliminary signs (Matthew 24:4-14). Notice that as Jesus begins His answer to the questions raised, He says, "Take heed that no man lead you astray" or "Be careful lest someone mislead you on this matter." Jesus will tell his disciples in verse 34 that everything he is saying before that verse will happen during the lifetime of "this generation." Think of what this means. He has told them that the temple will be completely destroyed--not one stone left upon another--and that it will happen while the generation to whom he is speaking is still alive. What he wants to prevent is their thinking that every time they hear of a problem somewhere in the world that such is a sign that the temple’s destruction is upon them.
If, for
example, a prophet told you your house would be destroyed before ten years
passed, then every time you heard a tornado warning or of the possibility of a
flood or even about an international crisis, you would think, "This is
it." So Jesus begins His discussion of this topic by listing some things
that will be happening during the times of that generation but from which they
cannot draw any conclusions about when the fall of
So, He
says, do not be misled to the conclusion that the destruction will be soon just
because you hear of people claiming to be the Christ, or of wars or rumors of
wars, or of famines or earthquakes. Do not even conclude that the fall of
d. The real sign (Matthew 24:15). In this verse Jesus tells His disciples exactly how they can know that the destruction of Jerusalem is immediately at hand--"When, therefore, ye see the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of through Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place" then you will know that the time has come. In the parallel passage as Luke records this same sermon Jesus says, "But when ye see Jerusalem compassed with armies, then know that her desolation is at hand" (21:20). So Jesus interprets Daniel’s "abomination of desolation" as a foreign army coming to surround and eventually to destroy the city. So, Jesus says when you see a foreign army coming to surround the city, then you will know that the time of the destruction is near and you should do something about it.
e. What to
do when the sign comes (Matthew 24:16-20). We can learn much about the subject
Jesus is discussion here by noting carefully what He tells His disciples to do
when the sign appears. He says those in
f. The nature of the coming event (Matthew 24:21-28). The time will be one of great suffering when deceivers would try to give a false hope to many. From historical records we know that the people did suffer tragically and the description here of their pain is accurate. Jesus states, in this section, that if someone comes claiming to be the Christ, they should know immediately that such a claim is false. How would they know? When Christ returns, Jesus says, it will not be in secret but as public as the lightning which strikes in the eastern sky and is seen even to the west. This statement is a clear warning to any who would say, ever, that Christ has come and it was not so public as to be known to all.
g.
Striking events to follow immediately (Matthew 24:29-31). Jesus next explains
events which will happen immediately. If we have been correct about the prior
verses predicting the fall of
Admittedly
there are some expressions here that are difficult to interpret, but it is
certainly possible to understand their meaning, particularly when we study
similar phrases that are used elsewhere in scripture.
The first
four listed are that the sun and moon shall be darkened, the stars shall fall,
and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken. Similar expressions occur in
such Old Testament passages as Isaiah 13:10; 34:4-5; Ezekiel 32:7-8; and Joel
2:28-32. In these places such expressions are used to underscore the great
importance of an event, particularly the end of a nation. We might say, for
example, that some event was "earth-shaking," without actually meaning
that the earth would be literally shaking. In a similar way, Bible writers
sometimes underscore the importance of an event by saying "the sun will be
darkened" or "the stars will fall." None of the scriptures
mentioned above which use such phrases is speaking of the end of the world so
these expressions are not to be understood to mean that. What Jesus means to
convey, then, is that the fall of
Then comes the statement, "then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven." Note carefully what is said--not that the Son of man shall appear but that His sign shall appear while He remains in heaven. One of Jesus most specific and striking predictions was of the fall of Jerusalem and when it came to pass, one of His most important signs or miracles was done--thus, this sign appeared.
"All of the tribes shall mourn." "Tribes" usually refers to tribes of the Israelites and certainly when their city was destroyed they would mourn.
"And
they shall see the Son of man coming on the clouds of heaven with power and
great glory." As we have studied earlier, whenever Christ is said to move
"on the clouds" the reference is not to a physical presence but to a
spiritual one. Just as God "came on the clouds" to
destroy
"He shall send forth his angels " to "gather together his elect." The word "angel" means messenger and is applied in the scriptures to both human and heavenly messengers. The expression here, then, may mean either (1) that Christ has sent His human messengers throughout the earth to spread the call of the gospel with less hindrance from the Jews than before or (2) that in some way He has sent heavenly messengers. The former meaning certainly fits with the context of the passage as we have explained it and seems to be the best choice of the possible meanings.
So all of
these striking events did take place immediately following the fall of
h. "In this generation" (Matthew 24:32-35). When a
fig tree begins to put out leaves, Jesus says, you know that summer is coming.
In the same way, when you see the sign I have told you about the coming armies,
you will know that the destruction of
i. "But of that day and hour" (Matthew 24:36-40). Having passed verse 34, we would naturally expect that the subject may change because we are no longer in the section which concludes with "this generation shall not pass away until all these things be accomplished." Before verse 34, also, Jesus uses the plural "days" to speak of the event while after He uses the singular "day." Such a change in terminology suggests a change in theme. Also the parallel passage in Luke ends at this point. It is also of interest that He begins verse 36 with the word "but," which sets up a contrast.
But not only are there these indications of a change, the message is definitely different, too. Jesus had spoken at first of an event about which He knew. He knew the sign which would show its approach and He knew when it would happen for He said it would be in their lifetimes. Of the new event introduced in verse 36, however, Jesus says, "But of that day and hour knoweth no one, not even the angels of heaven, neither the Son, but the Father only." Jesus knew of the first, but He did not know of the second. Clearly we are introduced to a different event and this event is called "that day." In Matthew 7:22, Jesus used the expression "that day" to mean the day of judgment: "Many will say to me in that day, Lord did we not prophesy in thy name. . ."
In Matthew
24:37, the very next verse, Jesus Himself names the event to which He is
referring: "the coming of the Son of man." So now we are in a section
of Matthew 24 which is not predicting the fall of Jerusalem but which is
speaking of the second coming--and the two events are clearly distinguished.
Notice the great differences suggested in Matthew 24-25 about the two events.
Of the fall of
To summarize, then. The fall of
Some say
that the fall of
j.
"Watch therefore" (Matthew 24:41-25:46). The concluding part of
Matthew 24 and all of Mathew 25 are centered around
the theme of being prepared for the Lord’s return. Just as a servant who does
not know when his master may return should be constantly ready, so Christians,
who do not know when Jesus will return, should live in a state of constant
readiness. Even into chapter 25, still a part of the same discourse, Jesus
speaks first of the foolish virgins who were not ready and then of the servants
who were given talents (money) to invest until their Lord returned. Then in
verse 31, Jesus speaks directly again of His coming and of the judgment when
"all the angels" will be with him and He shall "sit on the
throne of His glory and before Him shall be gathered all the nations: and he
shall separate them one from another, as the shepherd separateth
the sheep from the goats." Such an event did not happen in 70 A.D. Then
Jesus did not sit on the throne of His glory with all His angels and gather all
the nations before Him. So this description is of what will happen at His
second coming but is not of the destruction of
In sum, a careful study of Matthew 24 and 25 do not support the view of it taken by those who hold a 70 A.D. return of the Lord. Conclusion:
A complete study of all aspects of the 70 A.D. theory would have to be more extensive than the topics covered here for it reaches into many elements of basic Christian beliefs. The topics covered here, however, are sufficient to show its fallacy because if this paper is correct on the points covered, then the heart is taken from the theory and it will not stand.
Summarizing, then, the matters covered:
1. the "spiritual" or "figurative" treatment given to a number of biblical concepts such as the resurrection, the new heaven and earth, and the world are not borne out by careful study.
2. a study of the second coming shows that what the Bible teaches will happen when Christ returns did not happen in 70 A.D. and the intent of the passages was that they would literally happen.
3. the passages given by 70 A.D. advocates to show that Christ’s return had to be in the first century do not support that view.
4. the covenant Christ came to make was fully established at His death and the Law of Moses was taken out of the way then.
5. the resurrection of the dead did not occur in 70 A.D. for the passages that teach about the resurrection show it will be on the "last day" and give details about it which did not happen in 70 A.D. Christ did not come back to earth to receive His kingdom, rather He received it when He ascended to His place at the right hand of God following His resurrection and when He returns He will give the kingdom back to God for His last enemy, death, will have been destroyed by the resurrection of all the dead.
6. the view of 70 A.D. advocates on the Book of Revelation and Matthew 24-25 are not in harmony with the proper understanding of those passages.
In view of these findings, it is necessary to reject the view that Christ returned in 70 A.D., raised the dead and carried out judgment and received His kingdom at that time.