Posts Tagged ‘ desolation ’

Tweets & Rants 10 March 2013: Matthew 24:15-35

has but one word of caution to the church when reading Matthew 23-24 and that is to heed the warning of Romans 11:21-22! @WeeManWest

Matthew 24:16 We cannot miss the specificity of this command. Those who are in Judea. That is a specific place in which Jerusalem and the Israelites lived in Jesus’ day. This enforces the context from Matthew 23 and Matthew 24:1 that Jesus was speaking to His disciples about the coming destruction of Jerusalem that they would indeed see happen in 70AD.

Matthew 24:18 Jesus’ instruction was that when these things begin to occur in Jerusalem the only option will be to flee for their lives. They will have to forsake everything if they hope to survive.

Such isn’t a bad principle to apply to ourselves today. Would we be able to leave all of our possessions behind if our lives depended on it?

Matthew 24:27 Jesus is talking about His coming in covenant judgment against Israel and Jerusalem. He is not speaking of His return. The Roman armies invaded from the east, instead of the more natural west.

Matthew 24:28 Two notes here. Jesus is prophesying the destruction of Jerusalem. He is letting His listeners know that indeed Jerusalem would be full of corpses and that that vultures/birds of prey.

However, another note is that the word in the Greek used here is the word for eagle. Eagles don’t happen to go after carrion, yet the eagle was the Roman Military standard. The “eagles” on the roman standards (flags) would surround Jerusalem before it would be destroyed. Luke says this very thing in his account of Jesus teaching.

Matthew 24:29 After the tribulation of those days, the days of vengeance in which Jerusalem would be left desolate and full of corpses surrounded by birds of prey, we immediately see a reference to both a literal and symbolic understanding.

The sun, moon, and stars would be blotted out by the fire that would engulf Jerusalem as Rome burned Jerusalem to the ground. Anyone who has been close to a fire at just one location should be acquainted with smoke’s ability to block out the sun. I recall how dark it was in New York City in the days that followed 9/11 as that cloud of smoke covered the city.

Imagine what impact the smoke of an entire city being burned down would have on the sky. Enough of an impact that the sun, moon, and stars would be unseen until the city was burned down.

The symbolic reference requires us to understand the symbolism in Scripture of the sun, moon, and stars. In order to get this understanding we must return to the book of beginnings, the book of Genesis.

When God created the ‘lights in the expanse of the heavens’ He designed them to “be for signs’ (Genesis 1:14) and they were also to ‘give light upon the earth’ (Genesis 1:15) so we should recognize the immediate symbolism.

Then two great lights are made, a greater one to ‘rule the day’ and a lesser one to ‘rule the night’ (Genesis 1:16) and a reason for their ‘rule’ is given in that they are to (Genesis 1:18) ‘rule over the day and over the night, and to separate the light from the darkness.

What we see is the symbolic picture presented to us in the sun, moon, and stars as the religious authorities put in place so ‘rule’ and ‘separate the light from the darkness’.

Then we arrive at Joseph’s story.

Joseph dreamt that the sun, moon, and 11 stars bowed before him. Jacob (Israel) realized the dream represented himself, his wives, and his children bowing before Joseph.

Israel, given authority by God to shine its light in the world, lost its place of authority in the kingdom and was shaken and darkened in its day of covenant judgment in 70AD.

Matthew 24:30 The sign of the Son of Man appears. What is the sign? It is the great cloud of smoke raised up as Jerusalem is burned to the ground. He is coming on the clouds of judgment. Those clouds are dark clouds of billowing smoke as the city was burned to the ground by the Roman armies in 70AD.

At this billowing plume, all the tribes of the land, specifically the tribes of Israel, will mourn when they realize their day of judgment has come.

Matthew 24:31 He will send out His messengers with a loud trumpet. This is the dispersion that would take the church OUT of Jerusalem and into the nations. We are part of His messengers still today gathering His elect from the four winds.

Jesus was stating emphatically that the new age, the Gospel age, was soon to come upon the entire earth. However, the Law age had to come to an end, and it did so decisively in 70AD.

Matthew 24:32 As if anyone had missed the point that this was about Israel, Jesus brings in the fig tree which is one of Israel’s national symbols.

Matthew 24:34 Jesus repeats Himself from Matthew 23:36 so that it couldn’t be more clear. The very generation Jesus was speaking to was indeed going to see Jerusalem destroyed and desolate suffering covenant vengeance, the coming of the Son of Man on the clouds of judgment. He could not have been any more clear!

His word came to pass, 40 years later (a generation, i.e. the wilderness wandering) Jerusalem would lie desolate.

Tweets & Rants 9 March 2013: Matthew 24:1-14; Romans 6:15-23; Psalm 56; Numbers 21-22

thinks Balaam is probably best described as a prophet for profit who made a donkey of himself! Num 22:32 #itscheesyIknow @WeeManWest

believes the context of “these things” is the desolation and destruction of Jerusalem that Jesus had just prophesied. Mat 24:1 @WeeManWest

Matthew 24:3 The “things” the disciples are asking Jesus about pertain to the context. Jesus had just prophesied the blood vengeance upon Jersusalem, its desolation, and the destruciton of its temple. They want to know when it is going to happen.

Jesus’ coming and Jesus’ return are two separate Scriptural concepts of which one cannot differentiate without understanding the writings of the prophets.

Jesus’ coming is about His vengeance, His judgment, which He had just prophesied was going to come to Jerusalem.

Jesus’ return will occur at the last day of His and the Final Judgment will occur at that point.

The end of the age? What age? This is not pointing to the end of time but rather the end of the age they were in that was dominated by the Law and the Temple in Jersualem. When would that age end? 70 AD!

Matthew 24:14 After giving the disciples a series of signs that have been obeserved in every generation since, He gives them a very specific sign. Gospel proclamation in all nations.

The early church was able to achieve this feet, though on a limited scale, as Paul quotes in Romans.

I do believe that before the end of this age, the age that began with the cross, we will again encounter…and hopefully be a part of…a final great movement of the gospel.

Romans 6:16 This rule applies not only in the realm of sin and righteousness but also in the realm of life. Where is your obedience? If you are obeying God you will be clean and clear from obedience to the many forms of idolatry in our day.

We are a slave to whomever we choose to obey. May we choose obedience to Christ.

Romans 6:22 Our life focus becomes Christ Jesus and living out His righteousness in this dark world. Such is the best fruit imaginable.

Psalm 56:1 We desperately need the grace of God at work in our lives. We are trampled and attacked yet God is graciously working out things in this world for our everlasting benefit in the age to come.

Psalm 56:9 What greater assurance can we have than this, that in all the trials we face, God is for us. Even if the trial takes our very lives we know two things: #1 He will have His day of judgment and vengeance; #2 He is our reward.

Numbers 21:5 They loathed the food of God. How rebellious we are?

Numbers 21:9 God allowed a plague of serpents to come among the people. If they were bitten they died. When they plead for mercy God instructs Moses to put a bronze serpent on a staff and to tell the people to simply look upon the bronze serpent when they are bitten and they will live.

We are all bitten by the serpent and sin is killing us. Yet, we simply look to the cross in which Jesus Christ hung the serpent and we will live!

Numbers 22:22 God was angered because Balaam went. Balaam knew that God was not going to allow him to curse Israel. Balaam went because he thought that surely he could turn a profit out of this venture.

Numbers 22:31 Balaam was blind to God’s interference in his journey. God had to allow a donkey to speak to him to deliver him from his maddening quest for wealth. Balaam could now see the angel of the Lord standing with his sword drawn to strike him down.

Balaam had thought his donkey was making a mockery of him, yet his donkey was merely trying to spare his life. It was Balaam who was making a donkey out of himself.

Numbers 22:32 Balaam was a prophet for profit. He was perverse in his quest for wealth.

Numbers 22:35 Balaam was permitted to go, yet he was only allowed to speak to them what he is told by God. Balaam will break this covenant chasing wealth as we will see.