WHEN DOES CHRIST RETURN?
Part 1
Part 2
In
Part 2 of this series, we saw that
several of Christ’s disciples were very concerned about the statements Jesus
made in regard to the temple being destroyed.
It is evident by their questioning about when this destruction would
take place that they were seeing this destruction within a time frame that also
included Christ coming and the end of the age.
Christ answers their concerns by providing an overview of events that
would take place leading up to what He revealed as “the time of punishment in
fulfillment of all that has been written” (Luke 21:21-22).
History shows that the temple was
destroyed in A.D. 70. This was a
catastrophic destruction that resulted in
The historian Josephus was an eyewitness
to the events that led to the destruction of the temple and the Jewish society.
Josephus, who was a Jew, was taken prisoner in the battle of Jotapata and then
gave himself up to the Romans. He predicted that Vespasian and Titus would
become emperors of
It would take many pages of narrative to
describe the events that led to the destruction of
THE ROMAN-JEWISH WAR:
The first stage of the war directly
involving
Cestius Gallus attacked
In February of A.D. 67, Nero sent
General Vespasian to Judea and by October,
Because of the events in
Matthew 24:23-25: At that time if
anyone says to you, look, here is Christ, or, there He is, do not believe it.
For false christs and false prophets will appear and perform great signs and
miracles to deceive even the elect, if that were possible. See I have told you
ahead of time.
Remember that Christ is addressing his
disciples that were there with Him at the time. He is telling them ahead of
time what was soon to occur. Christ goes on to say,
Matthew 24:26-28: So if anyone tells
you, ‘There he is,’ out in the desert, do not go out; or ‘Here he is, in the
inner rooms,’ do not believe it. For as the lighting comes from the east and
flashes to the west, so shall the coming of the Son of Man be. Wherever there
is a carcass, there the vultures will gather.
Christ makes the point that His coming
will not be in secret but very obvious. In An exposition of the New Testament,
John Gill refers to false christs, “It was usual for these imposters to lead
their followers into deserts, pretending to work wonders in such solitary
places.” Gill then goes on to tell about Simon, the son of Giora, who collected
together many thousands in the mountains and deserts of
Christ now says something very
interesting, “Immediately" after the distress of those days, the sun will
be darkened, and the moon will not give her light. The stars will fall from the
sky and the heavenly bodies will by shaken” (Matthew 24:29). Here Christ dates the
period he is talking about by saying, “Immediately (Greek entheos, which means
“at once,” or “soon,” “forthwith,” etc.) after the distress of those days.”
What days? If we are to follow the flow of His prophecy and the history of the
time, the days Christ is talking about are those days he has just described.
The days Christ is talking about would be when armies would come against
In
a book written in 1838 entitled, The Pilgrim Soul, the author, John Philip
Schabalie, wrote; “Though corpses lay so thick in the street, the besieged had
for some time thrown them over the walls in such numbers, as filled the
ditches, to breed a pestilence in the Roman army. Out of only one gate were
carried 115,000 corpses, exclusive of those thrown over the walls, of which
every day saw a great number.”
These were the days that Christ was
referring to in Matthew 24:21 when He said, “For then there will be great
distress, unequaled from the beginning of the world until now—and never to be
equaled again.” Daniel speaks of such a distress in his prophecy dealing with
the time of the end. What end is being referred to and what does Christ mean by
the various signs in the sun, moon and stars? Is this to be taken literally or
is this typical apocalyptic language that is so commonly used by the
prophets? How did the Old Testament
prophets use such phraseology? Let’s take a look! In Isaiah 13:9-10, in
prophesying the destruction against
"See, the day of the Lord is coming, a
cruel day with fierce anger, to make the land desolate and destroy the sinners
within it. The stars of heaven and their constellations will not show their
light. The rising sun will be darkened and the moon will not give its
light.”
In
prophesying against
Ezekiel 32:7-8: When I snuff you
out, I will cover the heavens and darken their stars. I will cover the sun with
a cloud and the moon will not give its light. All the shining lights in the
heavens I will darken over you. I will bring darkness over your land, declares
the Sovereign Lord.
In a prophecy against
Did the entire starry host actually
fall? Was the sky actually rolled up like a scroll? Of course not. This is a
sample of the hundreds of these types of apocalyptic utterances found
throughout the scriptures. There is every scriptural reason to believe that
Christ is using the same apocalyptic language so common to the prophets.
Apocalyptic language uses a lot of hyperbole (rhetorical exaggeration) in
describing the actions of God’s intervention in the affairs of men. Christ was
just continuing this prophetic method of expression. This is not different from
saying, “It’s raining cats and dogs.” Obviously it doesn’t rain cats and dogs.
This is just an expression to emphasize that it is raining hard. We use these
kinds of expressions all the time. Now let’s see what happens next.
Matthew 24:30: At that time the sign
of the Son of Man will appear in the sky, and all the nations of the earth will
mourn. They will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of the sky, with power
and great glory.
Is the coming of Christ on clouds to be
taken literally? How is this expression used in scripture? In Isaiah 19:1, in a
prophecy concerning
Let’s now return to the actual history
of what transpired in
Luke 19:43-44: The days will come
upon you when your enemies will build an embankment against you and encircle
you and hem you in on every side. They will dash you to the ground, you and the
children within your walls. They will not leave one stone on another, because
you did not recognize the time of God’s coming to you.
In August of A.D. 70 the Romans entered
the temple grounds and set fire to the temple and totally destroyed it.
Josephus wrote, “While the holy house was on fire, everything was plundered
that came to hand, and ten thousand of those that were caught were slain.”
Nearly 100,000 Jews were taken captive and sold into slavery and over one
million people perished during the siege of
It is interesting to note that in all
the wars that our nation has been involved in, beginning with the revolutionary
war and going through all the Indian wars, civil war, world wars, Korea,
Vietnam, etc., it is estimated that between one and one-half million and two
million Americans have been killed. This spans a period of over 200 years. In
just a period of four to five years a million people perished in the siege of
In a work entitled, The Early Days of
Christianity, written in 1882 by F.F. Farrar, the author wrote,
"Fanatically relying on the visible
manifestation of Jehovah, while they were infamously violating all His laws,
the Zealots rejected with insult every offer of terms. At last Titus drew a
line of circumvallation round the doomed city, and began to crucify all the
deserters who fled from him. The incidents of famine, which then fell on the besieged,
are among the most horrible in human literature. The corpses bred pestilence.
Whole houses were filled with unburied families of the dead. Mothers slew and
devoured their own children. Hunger, rage, despair, and madness seized the
city. It became a cage of furious madmen, a city of howling wild beasts, and of
cannibals,—a hell. Disease and slaughter ruthlessly accomplished their work. At
last, amid shrieks and flames, and suicide and massacre, the temple was taken
and reduced to ashes. The great altar of sacrifice was heaped with the slain.
The courts of the temple swam deep in blood. Six thousand miserable women and
children sank with a wild cry of terror amid the blazing ruins of the
cloisters. Romans adorned the insignia of their legions on the place where the
holiest had stood."
This account by the historian F.F.
Farrar supports well the statements of both Christ and Daniel about this being
a time of great distress. Remember Christ said that this generation was like a
man possessed of demons. Now Christ gives an object lesson and makes a very
telling statement.
Matthew 24:32-34: Now learn the
lesson of the fig tree: As soon as its twigs get tender and its leaves come
out, you know that summer is near. Even so, when you see all these things, you
know that it is near, right at the door. I tell you the truth; this generation
will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.
Here Christ uses an object lesson to
demonstrate to His disciples that when they see come to pass all the things He
had just predicted; the wars, famines, earthquakes, the gospel going to the
world, etc., His coming would be at hand. Christ said just as they would know
that summer is near when they see leaves come out on a fig tree, so they would
know that the end was about to occur when they see all these events taking
place. Christ then dates the events He is discussing by saying that the
generation He was addressing would not pass until all the things He was
speaking of would come to pass. All “these things” included His return (verse
30). What generation is Christ addressing? To what time was He dating these
events?
WHAT GENERATION IS CHRIST
ADDRESSING?
To arrive at a scriptural understanding
of what Christ meant by “this generation,” let us first look at the Greek word
genea which is translated “generation” in Matthew 24:34, and many other New
Testament scriptures. In the Arndt, Gingrich and Bauer Greek lexicon, genea is
shown to have the general meaning of, “the sum total of those born at the same
time, expanded to include all those living at a given time.” The meaning can
apply to all those descended from a common ancestor. Thayer’s Greek lexicon
provides similar meaning by defining genea as “that which has been begotten of
the same stock, all having similar characteristics.” Genea can also refer to a
particular age or time.
It is interesting to note that genea is
not defined as a specific number of years but relates to a group of people
living at the same time, whereas our English usage tends more toward assigning
a specific number of years to the word. Webster shows it to be around 30 years
or the period of time between the birth of one generation and the birth of
another generation.
Now let’s look at how genea is used in
context in the New Testament Scripture involving the sayings of Christ. In
Matthew 23:34-36, in speaking to the Pharisees, Christ said that all the
righteous blood that has been shed on the earth would “come upon this
generation,” referring to the generation of Pharisees He was addressing at the
time. In Matthew 16:1-4 the Pharisees and Sadducees came to Christ and asked
for a sign. Christ addressed them as a wicked and adulterous generation (GR.
genea). In Matthew 11:11-19, Christ is speaking about Himself and John the
Baptist in relation to their generation (same Greek word). In Luke 17:25,
Christ speaks of having to suffer many things of “this generation,” referring
to the generation of His time (same Greek word).
In every place where the authors of the
New Testament show Christ using the word which they translated into the Greek
genea, the context shows Christ using this word to refer to the people He was
addressing at the time. Therefore, there is no scriptural justification to say
that Christ is using genea in some other way in Matthew 24:34. Christ did not
say that generation or some other generation, He said this generation. To try
and make this saying of Christ apply to a generation far out into the future is
totally inconsistent and incompatible with the manner in which He used this
word in His various conversations as recorded in the New Testament. It may be
helpful to look at a few other translations relative to Matthew 24:34.
New English Bible: I tell you this: the
present generation will live to see it all.
Today’s English Version: Remember this!
All these things will happen before people living now have all died.
Moffatt’s Translation: I tell you truly,
the present generation will not pass away, until all this happens.
The Scholar’s Version: I can promise you
that some of the people of this generation will still be alive when all this
happens.
The New Life Testament: The present
generation shall not pass till all these things happen.
Tyndale’s New Testament: even the present
generation will not have passed away, till all these things have taken place.
A quote from David Chilton’s book, The
Great Tribulation, is instructive.
"Some have sought to get around the
force of (Mt. 24:34) by saying that the word generation here really means race,
and that Jesus was simply saying here that the Jewish race would not die out
until all these things took place. Is that true? I challenge you; get out your
concordance and look up every New Testament occurrence of the word generation,
and see if it ever means “race” in any other context. Not one of these
references is speaking of the entire Jewish race over thousands of years; all
use the word in its normal sense of the sum total of those living at the same
time. It always refers to contemporaries. In fact those who say it means ‘race’
tend to acknowledge this fact, but explain that the word suddenly changes its
meaning when Jesus uses it in Matthew 24! We can only smile at such a
transparent error."
Some have interpreted Christ’s reference
to “this generation” as meaning the generation existing at the time when all
the things Christ prophesied would take place. As already documented in this
book, the things that Christ prophesied in the Olivet Discourse clearly took
place in the events leading up to the destruction of the temple in A.D. 70.
There is no reason or need to believe that Christ was referring to events
thousands of years into the future when the historical evidence shows their
occurrence in the first century. There simply is no contextual or grammatical
justification for concluding that Christ is referring to a generation thousands
of years future from the time He made this statement in the Olivet Discourse.
In Matthew 23 we hear Christ proclaiming judgment upon the generation of
religious leaders He was addressing at the time. Did Christ suddenly change the
meaning of generation a few hours later when He was answering His disciples’
question about when the temple would be destroyed and His return would occur?
It must be remembered that Christ is
addressing His disciples in the Olivet discourse. He is answering their
questions about when the temple will be destroyed and His return will take
place. In addressing His disciples, He says to them, “Even so, when you see all
these things, you know that it is near, right at the door.” Christ then makes
the statement about their generation not passing until all these things are
fulfilled. The “you" Christ is addressing are his disciples. Christ is not
addressing us or anyone else. It must be understood that when we read the
Olivet discourse, we are reading a record of Christ addressing His disciples.
When Christ tells them “when you see all these things,” He is telling them that
it is they who will see all these things, not others living thousands of years
into the future.
A good example of how a reference to the
generation being addressed at the time is contrasted with some other generation
being addressed is found in the letter to the Hebrews.
Hebrews 3:7-10: So, as the Holy
Spirit says: ‘Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts as you
did in the rebellion, during the time of testing in the desert, where your
fathers tested and tried me and for forty years saw what I did. That is why I
was angry with that generation, and I said, ‘Their hearts are always going
astray, and they have not known my ways.’
Here we see the Holy Spirit using the
word “that” in reference to a generation other than the generation being
addressed at the time. Christ, who also spoke by the Holy Spirit, never spoke
in terms of “that” generation. Such a usage would have connoted a past or
future generation depending on the context. We plainly see such usage in the
passage in Hebrews quoted above. Christ never used the word “that” to modify
the word generation. He always used the term “this generation” which connoted
the generation He was addressing at the time.
A striking example of Christ’s use of
“this generation” being associated with the audience He was addressing at the
time is found in Mark the eighth chapter.
Mark 8:34-38: Then he called the
crowd to him along with his disciples and said: ‘If anyone would come after me,
he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever wants to
save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me and for the
gospel will save it. What good is it for a man to gain the whole world, yet
forfeit his soul? Or what can a man give in exchange for his soul? If anyone is
ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, the Son of
Man will be ashamed of him when he comes in his Father's glory with the holy
angels.’
In this passage it should be very
apparent that Christ is using generation to signify the audience He was
addressing at the time He made these statements. In several other scriptural
passages we find Christ referring to His generation as sinful and adulterous.
What is of even greater significance in this passage is that Christ made this
statement in the context of His coming in His Father’s glory with the holy
angels.
Had I been standing in that crowd
listening to Christ refer to my generation as adulterous and sinful and then
proceed to say that if I am ashamed of Him He will be ashamed of me when He
comes in the glory of His Father, I would not have understood that coming to be
2,000 years into the future and counting. I would have understood Christ to be
referring to an event that was not very far off. When Christ addressed His
disciples in the Olivet Discourse, He said, “this generation will certainly not
pass away until all these things have happened.” All “these things” included His
coming in power and glory with the holy angels.
Let’s consider a present day parallel to
what Christ was doing in the Olivet discourse. Let’s pretend that Christ is
presently living in
It should be apparent that Christ was
referring to the generation He was associated with at the time He made the
statements recorded in the Olivet Discourse. It would be that first-century
generation of Jews that would experience the coming of Christ in judgment and
to gather His elect. Christ said that generation He was addressing at the time
would not pass until these events occurred. These events included His coming in
the clouds. Was this the second coming? Do the scriptures teach another coming?
Let’s take a look.
IS THERE A COMING OF CHRIST BEYOND
THE FIRST CENTURY?
Some Christians believe that Christ is
speaking of a first-century return in judgment up to Matthew 24:1-35 of the
Olivet Discourse, but He then shifts to discussing a final coming at the end of
the world or the end of time beginning with verse 36. With the birth of Christ
being His first coming, His coming in judgment in A.D. 66 to 73 would
constitute a second coming. A future coming would amount to a third coming. Is there
justification for a third coming? The disciples asked Christ basically one
question. When will the temple be destroyed and what will be the sign that will
tell them when this event will take place.
There is nothing in their question or in
Christ’s answer to their question to suggest that the end of the world or the
end of time is being addressed. Nowhere in Scripture is the end of time
addressed. What is addressed is the time of the end. There is significant
difference between addressing the end of time and the time of the end. The
context of the Olivet Discourse is the time of the end. The destruction of the
temple, and all the events leading up to that destruction, is the end being
addressed. The
Much of New Testament Scripture relates
to the ending of the Old Covenant age of which the destruction of the temple
was a significant dynamic. I repeat, the end of time is not being addressed
here. What is being addressed here is the end of a covenant age, an age that
had begun thousands of years earlier at the foot of
In the Olivet Discourse, Christ
explained to the disciples what signs to look for relative to the destruction
of the temple. His return in power and glory through the vehicle of the Roman
armies led directly to the temple’s destruction. The temple’s destruction was
the final dynamic in the covenantal change that was taking place. With the
temple’s destruction, the Old Covenant age had come to an end.
This is the end of the age that the
disciples were inquiring about and not some age thousands of years into the
future and counting. The whole focus of the New Testament is covenantal change.
The New Testament is largely a history of the dynamics that led to that change.
The very phrase New Testament means New Covenant. Christ returned in power
through the human instruments of the Roman armies to bring to an end the age of
the Old Covenant. This is the end being addressed. This will become abundantly
clear as we proceed with our investigation.
After Christ explains that all these
things would happen before the generation He was addressing would pass, He then
goes on to explain that the exact time that this would take place was known
only to the Father. While the exact time of these events would not be known by
the disciples, the general time could be known by watching the events unfold
that Christ said would precede His return. That is why Christ tells His
disciples to watch. The general population of
There is no break in focus between
Matthew 24:35 and the rest of the chapter. Christ didn’t suddenly change the
subject from his return in the first century to a return thousands of years
into the future and counting. Instead, he repeatedly exhorts the disciples to
be alert and watch. Watch what? Watch for those events that He just described
to them so that they could escape what would be coming to pass. Let’s look at
more of the dynamics surrounding the return of Christ.
Luke 17:26-37: Just as it was in the
days of Noah, so also will it be in the days of the Son of Man. People were
eating, drinking, marrying and being given in marriage up to the day Noah
entered the ark. Then the flood came and destroyed them all. It was the same in
the days of
Christ explains that it will be as in
the days of Noah and
Matthew 24:37-44: As it was in the
days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the Son of Man. For in the days
before the flood, people were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in
marriage, up to the day Noah entered the ark; and they knew nothing about what
would happen until the flood came and took them all away. That is how it will
be at the coming of the Son of Man. Two men will be in the field; one will be
taken and the other left. Two women will be grinding with a hand mill; one will
be taken and the other left. Therefore keep watch, because you do not know on
what day your Lord will come. But understand this: If the owner of the house
had known at what time of night the thief was coming, he would have kept watch
and would not have let his house be broken into. So you also must be ready,
because the Son of Man will come at an hour when you do not expect him.
Matthew 24:17: Let no one on the roof
of his house go down to take anything out of the house. Let no one in the field
go back to get his cloak.
Christ is speaking of a physical escape
from destruction and death. He exhorts His listeners to watch and be ready.
When they see the destruction coming, they are not to turn back as did
What is meant by two women grinding at
the mill? If this passage of Scripture is connected with a still future return
of Christ, how would this apply? In ancient times, a mill consisted of an upper
stone and a lower stone. The upper stone was fitted with a wooden upright peg
near the outer edge so that the stone could be rotated in a complete circle.
Two women would work the mill by sitting opposite each other, and each would
turn the upper stone through half a revolution (
It should be noted that Luke speaks of
not coming down from the rooftops in the same context of these days being as
the days of Noah and
What’s of additional interest in the
Luke 17:26-37 passage is that Christ is asked where these things would be
taking place and He answers, “Where there is a dead body, there the eagles
(Greek aetos) will gather. Christ is making this statement
in the context of this time being as in the days of Noah and
There is no scriptural reason to believe
that Christ taught two different comings in the Olivet Discourse. The prophecy
contained in this discourse is one continuous description of what would occur
relative to the destruction of the temple. This discourse identified the
dynamics involved in that destruction. Those dynamics included the return of
Christ, and events associated with that return.
In part four of this series, we will
consider additional scriptural evidence which clearly identifies the time frame
when the events described by Jesus Christ would occur.