God's glory is that He controls all things and can tell the end from the beginning. Isaiah 46:10, 45:21, 44:7, 41:22,23. Reggie Kelly, "Doc" and others have labored long and hard to put together a clear concise view of the end times. I am so grateful for this part of it that was recently shared.
Firstly,
we know that the great tribulation cannot start until the necessary
preliminary conditions are in place. Breaking the deadly peace
arrangement, the Antichrist descends suddenly upon an unsuspecting
Israel that is resting in a false sense of security (Isa 28:15, 18;
Dan 8:25; 9:27; 11:23-24; 1Thes 5:3). Sweeping away all opposition
(Dan 11:31; Rev 13:4), he forcibly enters the rebuilt temple of God
which must again stand in Jerusalem ('the holy place' in 'Judea'; Mt
24:15-16; 2Thes 2:4; Rev 11:1-2). He then stops the regular (morning
and evening) sacrifice that has been only recently reinstated (Isa
63:18; Dan 8:13-14) and places the abomination that triggers the
great tribulation (Dan 11:31; 12:1-2, 11; Mt 24:15-16, 21; 2Thes
2:4). It's that simple. It was meant to be for our protection.
It
is fitting that God would make it plain so that we would not be
deceived by false reports and premature excitements to the contrary.
There is only one antidote to end times deception: "But take ye
heed! Behold; I have foretold you all things" (Mt 24:25: Mk
13:23). And, "Let no man deceive you by any means, for that day
shall NOT come, except there come a falling away FIRST, and that man
of sin be revealed ..." (2Thes 2:3-4).
Jesus
does not give all the details that are needful for His people's
knowledge of the end. Rather, He sends His disciples to Daniel's
prophecy to identify and understand the key event that signals the
beginning of the tribulation (Mt 24:15-16, 21). If we would only
follow His clear command, we would save ourselves a lot of abuse and
needless diversion from the false alarms of prophetic speculation. By
His interjection, 'let the reader understand' (to paraphrase, "pay
attention to Daniel!"), Jesus is directing us to search Daniel's
prophecy for this event, and to read with "understanding"
(a word that appears with significant frequency all throughout the
book).
We
find that the abomination that brings the final desolation of
Jerusalem is mentioned four times (Dan 8:11; 9:27; 11:31; 12:11).
Jesus knew that when we would carefully observe what leads up to this
event and mark what follows from it, we would not be so easily
mistaken or deceived concerning the time of His return, nor without
understanding of the nature and meaning of the tribulation that must
immediately precede (Mt 24:29). This should be the beginning point of
any study of prophecy, since it is exactly where Jesus tells His
disciples to begin, a divine directive that has been far too little
emphasized.
Contrary
to many prophecy scenarios, the abomination of desolation cannot be
separated in time from the stopping of the daily sacrifice. Both
are equally 1290 days before the end (Dan 12:11). I agree this would
seem obvious, but many false views of prophecy live and thrive by
separating the inseparable. For example, some insist that Christ
stopped the sacrifice by His death, but move the abomination up
another 40 years to 70 A.D or some other more distant place in church
history. Then, contrary to the clearest of evidence from the
most simple comparison of scripture with scripture, they boldly
proceed to disconnect these inseparable events from Paul's
description of the man of sin who enters the temple of God just
shortly before his destruction by Jesus' return (2Thes 2:1-9). These
things cannot be split up and placed at different points in history!
Many
of the false systems of prophecy can only be sustained by either
separating the sacrifice from the abomination by either decades or
centuries, or by spiritualizing one or both. Invariably, the temple
must also be spiritualized, so that the temple that Paul mentions in
2Thes 2:4 (see also John's reference in Rev 11:1-2) is usually
considered to be representative of world Christendom. It is
disconnected entirely from the temple mentioned by Jesus in His
Olivet prophecy (Mt 24:15). And yet, both Jesus and Paul are clearly
citing the words of Daniel to describe the same man who enters and
defiles the temple of God to begin the unequaled tribulation (Dan
11:31, 36-37; 12:1, 11 with Mt 24:15-16, 21; 2Thes 2:3-4, 8).
What
temple and where? How could Paul, without further qualification, have
expected the Thessalonians to imagine any other 'temple of God' than
the one that was standing in Jerusalem as a wonder of the ancient
world when Paul was writing his epistle? What powerful
presuppositions must be at play for interpreters to insist that
Paul's reference to the temple of God in 2Thess 2:4 is an entirely
different kind of temple, separate in time, meaning, and location
from the temple that Jesus refers to in Mt 24:15-16. This is
especially awkward when both passages are so manifestly speaking of
the same event that signals the great apostasy and and final
tribulation.
If
we will carefully compare Paul's wording in 2Thes 2:4 with the
identical language of Daniel's prophecy in Dan 11:36-37, it cannot be
missed that the same person is in view. It should be obvious that
this is the same man who places the abomination of desolation only
five verses earlier in Dan 11:31, the event which Jesus references
using precisely the same language in Mt 24:15.
Notice
too that Rev 12:7-14 puts the 'short time' of Satan's rage as
following immediately upon Michael's heavenly victory over Satan.
This is exactly what we see in Dan 12:1-2. Michael stands up and then
begins the unequaled trouble (Jacob's trouble; Jer 30:7) that ends
with the deliverance of Daniel's people and the resurrection. In such
a context, it would be a violence against plain language to separate
these events, whether by decades or centuries. No, the abomination is
placed at the same time the sacrifice is removed in the middle of
Daniel's 70th week, precisely 1290 days before "the end",
i.e., the end that accomplishes the final salvation of Israel in
connection with the resurrection (Dan 9:27; 12:1-2, 11-13). That end!
The text could hardly be plainer, and if a plain reading of plain
language is not a sufficient ground for interpretation, then the
sky's the limit!
With
the temple spiritualized to stand for the church, the man of sin
becomes a symbol for either a long line of Roman emperors or more
commonly, the succession of popes, spanning, not a short period of
approximately 3 1/2 years, but many centuries, as each of the days of
Daniel's half week (1260, 1290, 1335; Dn 9:27; 12:11-12; Rev 11:3,
12:6) is understood to represent a year. This is the presupposition
of the so-called 'historicist' interpretation that has been the
dominant view since the Reformation until modern times and remains
prevalent today among both Reformed and Seventh Day Adventists.
In
this view, the sacrifice of Dan 12:11 is either put in the past or
spiritualized. It cannot conceivably refer to a literal sacrifice
that is being offered in a literal Jewish temple in a Jewish
Jerusalem that will be stopped by the Antichrist just 3 1/2 literal
years before the end. Why? Because this would require a prophetically
significant reconstitution of the Jewish nation, such as we see
before our eyes.
(Note:
The so-called 'year day theory' has been a principal cause of most of
the failed dates for Christ's return, most notably Jehovah's
Witnesses and Seventh Day Adventists).
The
end result of all is to transfer prophecy out of its original Jewish
context into a more symbolic and spiritualized fulfillment in the
church. The rule seems to be (I've heard it stated) that the original
and literal Jewish context must be abandoned if any progress is to be
made in prophetic interpretation.
It
is the separating of what God has joined that brings all the error
and confusion. Keep these few events together and in their manifest
relationship and alignment, and you'll be much better prepared to
detect any deviations from the basic criterion (plum line) that Jesus
gives in His Olivet prophecy as safeguard against deception.
Failure
to hold these inextricable parts together has led to many
disappointed expectations that have notoriously discredited prophecy
all throughout the history of the church. The net result is to create
what I like to call, the 'wolf! wolf! syndrome' that has led many to
conclude that nothing definite or certain can or 'should' be known
concerning the time of the Lord's return, whether now or at some
point in the future. In this way, many have been diverted from
the specific instruction that Jesus presents as His provision against
a deception that will particularly concern the time and manner of His
return (see Mt 24:23-29; Mk 13:21-23; 2Thes 2:3). The urgency of the
language that both Jesus and Paul uses to warn and correct of any
deviation from this basic criteria may prove much more decisive when
the time comes than we can presently conceive.
Recently
I was sent something from a youtube clip of the Jim Bakker show where
someone was on declaring that "we missed the 5th trumpet."
But as I mentioned, a careful comparison of Rev 8:12-13; 9:12-13 with
Rev 11:11-14, in their contexts, should put beyond question that the
5th trumpet is the first woe. The 6th trumpet which is also the
second woe coincides with the great earthquake that attends the
ascension of the two witnesses. Manifestly, this is close to the end
of the tribulation. Then, with the passing of the second woe in the
aftermath of the ascension of the witnesses (Rev 11:14), announcement
is made that the third woe is coming quickly. According to Rev 8:13
with Rev 9:12, the third woe is manifestly the 7th trumpet that
finishes the mystery of God with the Lord's return to judge the
wicked and reward the righteous (Rev 10:7; 11:15-18).
The
tribulation is sufficiently defined that no believer who regards the
plain meaning of scripture can miss it. I believe a clear case can be
made from scripture that all 7 of the trumpets are within the last 3
1/2 years, but what is clear beyond any reasonable dispute is the
impossibility that we missed five trumpets so that only one more
remains between us and Christ's return at the 7th trump. That such a
ludicrous proposal could get to first base is sad commentary on how
vulnerable we are to deceptions of a much more serious nature.
As
for the ever present threat of upheavals and disasters and judgment
upon nations, Jesus says we are not to be troubled (in the sense of
distracted or moved off course; compare 2Thes 2:2). Regardless of
what we see, until we have seen the abomination of desolation spoken
of by Daniel the prophet; the end is not yet! This is very important,
as apocalyptic enthusiasm will grow ever more distracting and
misleading with premature announcements of an imminent end. By such
false alarms, the really significant events that do indeed mark the
time with clarity and final certainty are lightly regarded or
dismissed. Thus it is that despite the most prolific and visible
display of prophecy in human history, that day is able to come upon
the world completely unawares. That's amazing; but it also removes
all excuse.
It
is a sobering paradox that despite the great clarity of at least the
most important sign events that Jesus gives, the angelic messenger
can say to Daniel, "the wicked shall do wickedly and none of the
wicked shall understand" (Dan 12:10). That is very sobering. How
else could such manifest fulfillment overtake the world as a thief?
Finally,
I think the great question is what does all of this confusion mean?
Why are things as they are? I believe the answer lies in what the
Lord did at His first coming. Concealed within the prophetic writings
was a mystery that was not to be revealed until the appointed time
(Mk 5:43; 8:30; 9:9; 1Cor 2:7-8; Ro 16:25-26; 1Pet 1:10-12). All
things were indeed foretold, albeit in such a way that for some, it
would be a trap and snare, a stone of stumbling and rock of offense
(Isa 8:14-18; Lk 2:34-35), designed by God to elude carnal
confidence, while for babes, God Himself would undertake to reveal
His hidden wisdom, ordained to their glory (Mt 11:25-26; Jn 15:15;
1Cor 2:7; Rev 10:7 with Amos 3:7).
All
things were being tested by the mystery that confronted the nation in
the person of Jesus. It will be so again at the end. God intends that
the world be confronted with a mystery that is designed to test and
search the depths of every heart. By their nature, the prophetic
scriptures are designed to elude the pride of human self reliance,
not because they are difficult or clouded in mystery; quite the
contrary, they are plain and simple to the plain and simple. That is
to say, they are clear and transparent to plain persons of simple
trust who have been emptied of their own self sufficiency to know
anything of themselves. Such find their only hope in a trembling
dependency on the Holy Spirit, and in the reliability God's plain use
of plain words for plain, everyday people. Everything will try to
move us from the simplicity and clarity of what Jesus gave us to
protect us from the subtleties of well meaning religious zeal, "But
take heed; see, I have told you all things beforehand.
Therefore, if they say to you ... (any deviation) ... believe it
not!"
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