MATTHEW 24

CHAPTER 24

24:1-14 Signs of Christ’s return

Mark 13 and Luke 21 comment on the beautiful stones in Herod’s temple. 

AI: “Herod’s Temple, or the Second Temple, was a massive expansion of the Jewish temple in Jerusalem begun by Herod the Great around 19 BCE. It served as the focal point of Jewish worship and the three major pilgrimage festivals until it was completely destroyed by the Roman army in 70 CE.

History and Construction

Following the return of the Jewish people from the Babylonian exile and the destruction of the First Temple (built by Solomon), the Second Temple was constructed around 516 BCE. Seeking to legitimize his rule and honor the Jewish faith, Herod the Great initiated a massive renovation and expansion project in the 1st century BC.

  • The Temple Mount: Herod greatly expanded the flat esplanade of the Temple Mount by building monumental retaining walls and filling in the surrounding terrain, creating a massive, nearly 35-acre platform.
  • Engineering Feats: The construction involved massive stones, some weighing hundreds of tons, which were maneuvered and set using advanced ancient techniques. 
  • Timeline: While the main sanctuary took about 18 months to build, expansions and subsidiary additions continued for decades. It was frequently under construction during the time of Jesus’s ministry.

Architecture and Layout

The temple complex was renowned for its beauty and grandeur, and the Talmud noted that “he who has not seen the Temple of Herod has never seen a beautiful building”. 

  • The Sanctuary: The temple building itself was faced with white marble and overlaid with gold, reflecting the sunlight so brightly that it was hard to look at directly.
  • The Courts: The esplanade was surrounded by magnificent colonnades. On the southern side stood the Royal Stoa, a grand basilica used for civic and commercial purposes. Other sections included the Court of the Gentiles, the Court of the Women, and the Court of the Priests.
  • The Antonia Fortress: At the northwest corner of the complex sat the Antonia Fortress, a Roman military garrison that overlooked the temple courts.

Significance and Destruction

Herod’s Temple was the epicenter of religious, cultural, and national life for the Jewish people. Complex sacrifices and rituals were performed there, and it was the destination for required annual pilgrimages.

  • Destruction: In 66 CE, the First Jewish-Roman War broke out. In 70 CE, Roman legions under the command of Titus besieged and conquered Jerusalem. The Romans set fire to the temple and completely leveled it, leaving not one stone standing upon another, as prophesied in Christian scriptures.
  • Modern Surviving Remains: The Temple building itself was entirely lost. However, the colossal retaining walls Herod built to support the Temple Mount esplanade survived. The most famous and holiest remaining section of this structure is the Western Wall (or Wailing Wall) in Jerusalem, which continues to be a sacred site of prayer for the Jewish people. 

But Jesus said to the disciples, “Not one stone will be left on another”. The disciples  would never have expected such  a prediction of the destruction of God’s holy temple. The Babylonians destroyed it in 586 BC. The Jews rebuilt it, although not as grandeur as Solomon’s first temple, in 516 BC on the first return from Babylonian captivity. Herod then made it a beautiful structure by the time of Jesus. 

The disciples then asked a question with two parts.” 1) When will that happen? 2) What will be the sign of Christ’s coming and the end of the age. They had heard Jesus predict that he would come back within that generation (Matthew 10:23; 16:27,28). They assumed that the 2nd coming would bring about the end of the Jewish Age and usher in the beginning of the Messianic Age. The prediction of the destruction of the temple had to confound and disturb. Maybe they are thinking that Christ will return, destroy the temple, rebuild a 3rd temple, which is what a lot of Christians think today. 

AI: “In Matthew 24:3, the disciples asked Jesus about the “end of the age”. To the 1st-century Jewish mind, this was not the end of the physical planet, but the end of the Old Covenant era—the age dominated by the Jerusalem Temple and Roman oppression. They expected the Messiah to trigger an apocalyptic transition, overthrow the Roman Empire, and establish a permanent, glorious Kingdom of Israel.

Key Jewish expectations regarding the “end of the age” included:

  • The Messiah’s Glorious Reign: They expected the Messiah to literally “come” (as inquired in verse 3) to sit on a physical throne, judge the wicked, and restore national sovereignty to Israel.
  • The Resurrection and Judgment: Rooted in passages like [Daniel 12:1-13], they anticipated a final resurrection of the dead and a vindication of the righteous.
  • The Passing of “This Age”: Jewish theology divided history into two periods: “this present evil age” (characterized by sin, suffering, and foreign domination) and “the age to come” (characterized by righteousness and the visible presence of God).

When Jesus prophesied the destruction of the Temple (v. 2), the disciples naturally assumed this catastrophic judgment would signal the arrival of the Messiah’s kingdom and the dawn of the “age to come”.”

So the disciples are looking for “when” the temple will be destroyed and for the “signs” that would precede the 2nd coming and end of the age. Jesus then names several things that will happen that will not be signs (wars, etc.). He gives a “when” answer in Matthew 24:14 This gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all the nations, and then the end will come.”” The preaching of the gospel to the whole Roman Empire would have to happen first and the end of the age would follow right after that. The apostles fulfilled that by 70 AD (Colossians 1:23) when the temple was destroyed. 

Daniel 9:24-27 had predicted the abomination and destruction of the temple in the 70 week prophecy. Daniel 12 also predicted the abomination of desolation to occur at the “end”, the “end time”, and the “end of the age”. That would be where the Jews got the idea of the “end of the age”. Jesus said that the abomination of desolation predicted by Daniel would occur after the gospel was preached to the whole world (Matthew 24:15). When would that be? In Matthew 24:34 Jesus said 34 Truly I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place.” The Greek word genea in the New Testament always means a 40 year period or the people living in a 40 year period. So the abomination of desolation of the temple had to occur within about 40 years of when Jesus said that. That means that he must be predicting the destruction of the temple by the Romans in 70 AD since he made that prediction in about 30 AD.

Luke 21 describes it differently and adds that Jerusalem itself will be trampled under foot by Gentiles (Romans) and destroyed: 21:20 “But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then recognize that her desolation is near. 21 Then those who are in Judea must flee to the mountains, and those who are inside the city must leave, and those who are in the country must not enter the city; 22 because these are days of punishment, so that all things which have been written will be fulfilled. 23 Woe to those women who are pregnant, and to those who are nursing babies in those days; for there will be great distress upon the land, and wrath to this people; 24 and they will fall by the edge of the sword, and will be led captive into all the nations; and Jerusalem will be trampled underfoot by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled.” But Luke puts the same time limit for the event to happen: 21:32 Truly I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all things take place.” Indeed the Romans did surround Jerusalem and siege it for 5 months before finally breaking through the 3 walls and destroying the city and the temple under Titus. 

Luke also adds, 21: 22 because these are days of punishment, so that all things which have been written will be fulfilled.” All Old Testament prophecies had to be fulfilled by 70 AD, and that would include Daniel’s predictions about the abomination of desolation and the end of the Age. 

Jesus adds a few warnings for the inhabitants of the city to flee hastily to the mountains when they see this sign coming true. He predicted a tribulation of the Jews like had never occurred. That tribulation would happen at the same time as the abomination of desolation. Matthew 21:21 For then there will be a great tribulation, such as has not occurred since the beginning of the world until now, nor ever will again.” Daniel 12:1-2 also predicted this AD 70 tribulation that would occur at the end of the age in 70 AD. Many use this verse to predict a tribulation of Christians at some time in our future, but that is totally incorrect. The tribulation Jesus spoke of occurred in the suffering and killing of Jews by the Romans in the Wars of the Jews (66-70 AD) and In the siege and destruction of the temple in 70 AD. 

Jesus then predicts his 2nd coming that the disciples had asked for a sign of when that would happen (24:3). 24:29 “But immediately after the tribulation of those days the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will fall from the sky, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken. 30 And then the sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of the sky with power and great glory. 31 And He will send forth His angels with a great trumpet blast, and they will gather together His elect from the four winds, from one end of the sky to the other.” Notice that this 2nd coming would occur “immediately after the tribulation”. If the tribulation occurred in 70 AD, then the 2nd coming would be immediately after that, also in 70 AD. Jesus had already predicted that his 2nd coming would be within the lifetime of those he was talking to (Matthew 10:23; 16:27,28) so this prediction agrees with earlier predictions. He even said that some of those he was talking to would still be alive to see his 2nd coming in his kingdom (Matthew 16:28). He said in 24:30 that this 2nd coming would happen within that generation. Jesus had ascended in the clouds (Acts 1:9-11) and two angels told the apostles that he would return in the same way. Matthew 24:30 confirms that he came “on the clouds” in 70 AD. “Every eye will see him”: Revelation 1:7 describes the Second Coming of Jesus, stating: “Behold, he is coming with the clouds, and every eye will see him, even those who pierced him, and all tribes of the earth will wail on account of him.” Matthew 24:30 “they will see” Jesus when he would come in 70 AD at his 2nd coming. Did every eye on the planet see Jesus coming in 70 AD? No, but the first century Jews saw that 70 AD was Jesus coming on the clouds to judge the Jews, especially those who crucified him, who would be killed by the Romans in 70 AD. The bottom line is that Matthew 24:30-34 said that they would see Jesus coming on the clouds at the 2nd coming within that generation, fulfilling the prediction that every eye will see him coming on the clouds.

But what about “the stars will fall from the sky” if this prediction in 70 AD? Did that happen literally in 70 AD. Of course not. But such figurative language was used often in the Old Testament describing judgments of nations. Isaiah 13 uses the same type of figurative language to describe the judgment of Babylon. Isaiah 13:10 “the stars will not flash their light, the sun will be dark when it rises, and the moon will not shed its light”. So the stars falling was fulfilled figuratively in the 2nd coming in 70 AD. Many think that the stars will have to fall literally at some future 2nd coming but that is false. 

In Matthew 24:36-41 Jesus compares this imminent 2nd coming with the judgment of the world in the days of Noah. Just like the wicked before the flood, the wicked Jews would not heed Jesus’ warning about 70 AD. 24:37 For [ab]the coming of the Son of Man will be just like the days of Noah.” This is the same 2nd coming in 70 AD that he had just predicted. Many agree that up to verse 35 is predicting AD 70 but then they say verses 36-41 is predicting a 3rd coming that is still in our future. Where would such a new prediction of a 3rd coming come from since we now have 3 predictions (Matthew 10:23; 16:27,28; 24:30-34) by Jesus that his 2nd coming would be within that generation? Not only that, he says that, just like the flood, “two men will be taken and one left”. So who was “taken” at the flood? It was the wicked taken and the righteous (Noah and his family) that were left. This is totally opposite of what futurists teach will happen at some “rapture” at some future 2nd coming. They say the righteous will be taken and the wicked left, which is the opposite of what Jesus said would happen in 70 AD. Matthew 24 is predicting only one 2nd coming in 70 AD Even Jesus did not know the exact time and date, but he gave the signs to look for so the righteous Jews could escape the city before it was too lat. According to Eusebius, they Jewish Christians in the city did heed Jesus’ warnings and fled to Pella before 70 AD. 

This discussion of Matthew 24 doesn’t deal with every detail, but I hope it does correctly interpret Jesus’ comments. Some say that it does predict AD 70 but that it has a double fulfillment of a 3rd coming in our future, but such double fulfillments would make the original prediction meaningless. The prediction was that the 2nd coming would occur within that generation and that can’t be fulfilled a 2nd time going on 2000 years later. Some use this chapter to predict nothing but a future 2nd coming that is yet to happen, but that is false also. They say that the “generation” in Matthew 24:34 is some future “terminal generation, the last generation before the 2nd coming, instead of the generation living when Jesus spoke this. That is false also. I heard on TV preacher use 24:34 to say that the 2nd coming was imminent at the time he was speaking b/c he said it had to happen “within this generation” of about 40 years, i.e. the period the preacher was living in. If it meant that when the preacher lived, why did it not mean that when Jesus spoke it? 

AI: Associated with Daniel’s prophecies, this is widely viewed as a future, literal event where an ultimate world leader (the Antichrist) desecrates a rebuilt Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.” Of course, for Matthew 24 to be fulfilled in our future, a 3rd temple would have to be built and many expect that to happen.

AI:”Beliefs about a Third Temple on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem are rooted in Jewish eschatology and Christian end-times prophecy. Specific groups hold varying views on its construction:

  • Orthodox Judaism: Many believe a literal Third Temple will be built, and animal sacrifices will be reinstituted in the Messianic era. Organizations like the Temple Institute have actively prepared for this by recreating ritual objects and priestly garments. Traditional views dictate that this Temple will be built by the Messiah himself or descend miraculously from heaven. They do not expect this 3rd temple to be defiled or destroyed, as Christians believe, b/c they do not accept Jesus as the true Messiah and therefore reject his teachings in Matthew 24. 
  • Evangelical and Dispensational Christians: Many Christians (particularly premillennialists) believe a literal Third Temple must be built in Jerusalem prior to the Second Coming of Jesus Christ. They interpret biblical prophecies as foretelling that the Antichrist will allow the Temple to be built, only to defile it mid-way through a seven-year tribulation period. They believe that 3rd temple will be destroyed. 
  • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: Also known as the LDS Church, they believe that a Jewish temple will be built in Jerusalem in the last days, in addition to another temple to be built in Missouri.”

That just amazes me these groups all agree that a 3rd temple will be built but totally disagree on what will happen after that. The orthodox Jews believe that the temple will not be destroyed but will resume animal sacrifices and convert Gentiles to Judaism. They get this from Jeremiah 33:17 For this is what the Lord says: ‘David shall not lack a man to sit on the throne of the house of Israel; 18 and the Levitical priests shall not lack a man before Me to offer burnt offerings, to burn grain offerings, and to prepare sacrifices continually.’” That does sound like what will happen if this was to be fulfilled literally. But if you are a Christian and believe in the New Testament, then you know that is not going to happen. The book of Hebrews clearly states that the animal sacrifices have ceased and we are saved by the blood of Jesus. God would never have us go back to animal sacrifices and Levitical priests like in the Old Covenant. All Christians are priests in the new covenant and not just one tribe of Judah who can’t even prove their genealogy today. So Jeremiah 33:17-18 is fulfilled figuratively and not literally in the new covenant. The sacrifices Christians offer as spiritual priests are praise, thanksgiving, and sharing with others instead of animal sacrifices. 

Then there are the Christians who mistakenly say Matthew 24 is still in our future, that a 3rd temple will be built and destroyed, and that Jesus’ 2nd coming will convert the Gentiles and Jews to Christianity. But they think the nation of Israel is somehow part of this happening so they promote the support of Israel. But God said that he was taking the kingdom from Israel and giving it to the spiritual kingdom, the church (Matthew 21:43). God wants all Jews to be saved by belief in Jesus but he is through with Israel as a nation. Strange bedfellows, the Jews and the Christians. Raising money together to build a 3rd temple but totally different plans for that temple and two totally different plans of salvation (one with Jesus and one with a future Messiah to come). Of course the Mormons have their cultish believe in two temples, one in Jerusalem and one in Missouri (why not Utah?) 

Let’s thrown in another kink. AI: “Shia Muslims do not believe that Jesus will rebuild the Jewish temple but they do believe that Jesus is coming back with the Imam Madhi. In Shia eschatology, the primary goal of Jesus’s return is to support the Imam Mahdi (the twelfth, hidden Shia Imam) in establishing global justice and to unite believers under Islam.

Key aspects of these beliefs include:

  • The Role of Jesus: Jesus (known as Isa in Islam) is a highly revered prophet and the Messiah. Upon his return, he is expected to pray behind Imam Mahdi, demonstrating the finality of Prophet Muhammad’s message and the leadership of the Imam.
  • Focus on Existing Holy Sites: Rather than building a new Jewish temple, the returned Jesus and Imam Mahdi are focused on defeating evil and restoring righteous rule and the conversion of all peoples and religions other Islam. The site of the former Jewish temple in Jerusalem is currently home to the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock, which are deeply sacred in Islam.
  • Islamic Prophecy: According to traditional Islamic sources, Jesus will fulfill his role by correcting misunderstandings about his life, confirming his status as a messenger, and guiding Christians and Jews to recognize the truth of Islam. He will tell Christians that they have been misled into believing that Jesus was the Son of God when he was just another prophet, not even the last prophet (Muhammed was the last prophet). Muhammed was very clear in the Koran that God did not have a Son and that the Christians had been deceived to believe that Jesus was the Son of God. 

MATTHEW CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 3. I would encourage you to pull up Matthew chapter 3 as you read this article and study questions.

1 How many years did John preach before he baptized Jesus?

AI: John the Baptist preached for about six months before he baptized Jesus. Historically and biblically, John was six months older than Jesus. According to tradition and Levitical principles, religious teachers began their public ministries around the age of 30. Consequently, John likely started his preaching and baptismal ministry in the wilderness at age 30, preceding Jesus’s own baptism by about half a year.

2 Is 40:3 is a predictive prophecy only fulfilled in John? The voice of one calling out, “Clear the way for the Lord in the wilderness; Make straight in the desert a highway for our God.

3 Did John do miracles? John 10:41-42 Many came to Him and were saying, “While John performed no sign, yet everything John said about this Man was true.” And many believed in Him there.

4 Why did so many Jews believe that John was a prophet even though he did no miracles to confirm that he was a prophet?

Matthew 21:23 When He entered the temple area, the chief priests and the elders of the people came to Him while He was teaching, and said, “By what authority are You doing these things, and who gave You this authority?” 24 But Jesus responded and said to them, “I will also ask you one [z]question, which, if you tell Me, I will also tell you by what authority I do these things. 25 The baptism of John was from what source: from heaven or from men?” And they began considering the implications among themselves, saying, “If we say, ‘From heaven,’ He will say to us, ‘Then why did you not believe him?’ 26 But if we say, ‘From men,’ we fear the people; for they all regard John as a prophet.” 27 And answering Jesus, they said, “We do not know.” He also said to them, “Neither am I telling you by what authority I do these things.

AI: “Many first-century Jews viewed John the Baptist as a prophet—despite his lack of miracles—due to a “400-year drought” of prophecy, his compelling Elijah-like persona, and widespread spiritual readiness for an apocalyptic messenger.

Historically, this belief was driven by several distinct factors:

  • The Prophetic Drought: Prophecy was believed to have ceased in Israel centuries earlier with Malachi. When John appeared in the wilderness calling people to repentance, the sheer return of a bold, uncompromising prophetic voice electrified a weary populace. 
  • The “Elijah” Archetype: John dressed in camel’s hair with a leather belt—the exact attire of the prophet Elijah. The Jewish people expected Elijah to return before the Messiah, and John’s location at the Jordan River matched these messianic expectations. Micah 4:“Behold, I am going to send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and terrible day of the Lord. He will turn the hearts of the fathers back to their children and the hearts of the children to their fathers, so that I will not come and strike the land with complete destruction.”
  • Anointed Preaching: On Christian forums such as Christianity.StackExchange, users and theologians agree that his powerful, spirit-anointed speech convicted listeners’ hearts. His boldness in calling out the sins of everyday people and religious elites resonated deeply in a time of political and spiritual tension. 
  • The Symbolism of Baptism: Rather than requiring miracles, John’s introduction of mass ritual immersion in the Jordan River for the forgiveness of sins was seen as a potent sign of spiritual cleansing and national renewal. 
  • Vindication by Historical Events: According to the Jewish historian Flavius Josephus, when King Herod Antipas executed John and later lost a military battle to an enemy, the Jewish populace saw the military defeat as divine punishment for executing a holy man.”

5 What was John’s message?

Repent for the kingdom of heaven is near. Near: eggizó: To draw near, to approach, to come near. Is this near in God’s time frame? Notice “repent” is tied to “kingdom is near”. What does that imply about the meaning of “near”? The urgency. Study hard b/c I’m giving you a test soon. If the kingdom was not established soon after John and Jesus predicted that then they were false prophets. 

6 What was this kingdom of heaven that was near? 

Jesus also predicted that the kingdom of heaven was near: Mark 1:15 “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent and believe in the gospel.”Daniel 2 had predicted that God would set up His kingdom in the days of the 4th empire, the legs of iron on the stature, which would be Rome, so the kingdom had to be established while Rome was still in power (Rome fell in 450 AD). Rome was ruling at the time John preached. That kingdom and long awaited Messiah and King would establish a spiritual kingdom. John 18:36 My kingdom is not of this world. That kingdom would be the church (church and kingdom are synonymous in Matthew 16:16-18).      Colossians 1:13 believers were translated into the kingdom of Jesus (the church).        Revelation 1:6 God made believers into a kingdom of spiritual priests. 

7 What was the baptism of John for? Mark 1:4: “John did baptize in the wilderness, and preach the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins” (KJV). Luke 3:3: “And he came into all the country around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of repentance for the remission of sins.

8 How long would it be used and valid? As of Matthew 28:18-20; Acts 2:38 the baptism of the new covenant after Jesus died was in the name of Jesus. Acts 19:1-10 there were 12 disciples who were baptized with John’s baptism after it was no longer valid. Apollos (Acts 18:24-28) was a Christian preacher but for some reason was still preaching the baptism of John after it was no longer valid so he probably baptized these 12 disciples. Paul re-baptized the 12 men in the name of Jesus. Did those baptized with John’s baptism before Acts 2, before the new baptism started, have to be re-baptized in the name of Jesus? Surely some of those 3,000 baptized in Acts 2 in the name of Jesus had been baptized with John’s baptism? 

9 Who did John rebuke harshly and why?

AI: John the Baptist’s rebuke was specifically directed at the Pharisees and Sadducees , not the entirety of the Jewish population. In the biblical accounts, he condemned these specific religious leaders for hypocrisy, self-righteousness, and lack of genuine repentance.

The historical context and exact details of his message clarify this distinction:

The Metaphor of “Vipers”

  • Nature of the Term: John called them a “generation” or “brood of vipers” (poisonous snakes).
  • Theological Meaning: In biblical tradition, serpents and vipers were associated with deceit, danger, and Satan. John used this metaphor to highlight that these religious leaders bore evil, satanic qualities despite their outward appearance of righteousness. 
  • Scholarly Consensus: Scholars agree that John was directly condemning the hypocrisy of these leaders, who sought baptism not out of a repentant heart, but to maintain their status and escape God’s judgment. 

The Warning Against False Lineage

  • Relying on Heritage: The Pharisees and Sadducees believed they were secure in God’s favor simply because they were physical descendants of Abraham. 
  • John’s Rebuttal: John told them not to rely on their lineage, warning that God could “raise up children to Abraham from these stones”. He demanded that they produce “fruit in keeping with repentance”, meaning their inner faith had to be backed by righteous actions.

Who He Preached To

  • The General Crowds: In Luke 3:7-14, large crowds of regular Jewish people, tax collectors, and soldiers came to hear John and asked him, “What should we do then?” Instead of calling them vipers, John instructed them to share their resources, act with integrity, and avoid extortion.
  • The Opponents: The harsh judgment was reserved for the unrepentant leaders who opposed his message of humility and actively misled the people.

10 What do you admire about John the Baptist? His courage, humility (willing to play 2nd fiddle to Jesus), dedication to his calling, sacrifice (tough lifestyle), perseverance, he was beheaded for condemning a marriage. What if God called you to such a job? Do we need some of John’s preaching today for America, for the church? 

11 What was the “wrath to come” he warned them about? Was that AD 70 and the judgment on the Jews that killed one million Jews? The “axe already at the root of the Jews” also indicates imminency. 

12 What was the baptism of the Spirit that Jesus would baptize with?

Acts 1:Gathering them together, He commanded them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait for what the Father had promised, “Which,” He said, “you heard of from Me; for John baptized with water, but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.” What did they receive? Miraculous speaking in tongues in Acts 2.    Acts 2:33 Therefore, since He has been exalted at the right hand of God, and has received the promise of the Holy Spirit from the Father, He has poured out this which you both see and hear.” Baptism is immersion. The HS was “poured out” in Acts 2, immersing (baptizing) the apostles in the HS. Acts 2:17 Joel had predicted that the HS would be poured out on all believers in the last days (30-70 AD), referring to the miraculous gifts (again, immersing them in the HS). 

Cornelius also received the baptism of the HS. Acts 10:45 All theJewish believers who came with Peter were amazed, because the gift of the Holy Spirit had also been poured out on the Gentiles.” Acts 11:15 And as I began to speak, the Holy Spirit fell upon them just as He did upon us at the beginning. 16 And I remembered the word of the Lord, how He used to say, ‘John baptized with water, but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit.’ 17 Therefore, if God gave them the same gift as He also gave to us after believing in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I that I could stand in God’s way?”

The fact that the HS was to be poured out on all believers in the last days indicates to me that the baptism of the HS was the pouring out of the HS miraculous gifts during the last days. The apostles received a greater miraculous portion of that pouring out. They received inspiration. I don’t believe that we have the baptism of the HS today after 70 AD.

13 What was the baptism of fire that Jesus would baptize with? Hint: 3:10 mentioned trees being cast into the fire. 3:12 the chaff were burned up with fire. The baptism of fire was the judgment on the Jews in 70 AD killing one milliion wicked Jews. Some groups taught that the baptism of fire was a good thing:

AI: Pentecostals & Holiness Groups: Many denominations within the Holiness and Pentecostal movements (such as the International Pentecostal Holiness Church) explicitly teach that the baptism with the Holy Spirit and fire is an empowering, sanctifying experience that comes after water baptism. They associate this “fire” with intense spiritual zeal and often link it to the outward sign of speaking in tongues as recorded in Acts 2.

Charismatics: Contemporary Charismatic groups often emphasize a “baptism of fire” as a refining process that burns away worldly habits and empowers believers to boldly preach and serve.

Historical Church Fathers: In the early Church, theologians like Origen and Gregory of Nyssa taught that God’s fire was restorative. They viewed the baptism of fire as a necessary, loving purification of the soul—either in this life or the afterlife—to purge away sin and reconcile all people to God.”

This pouring out of the HS on believers was promised in Isaiah 43:3 For I will pour water on the thirsty land And streams on the dry ground; I will pour out My Spirit on your offspring, And My For I will pour water on the thirsty land And streams on the dry ground; I will pour out My Spirit on your offspring.”

14 Why was John so reluctant to baptize Jesus? How long had he known Jesus? He was Jesus’ second cousin and roughly 6 months older. While they likely knew of each other as family, John did not fully recognize Jesus’ divine identity until Jesus’ baptism when he saw the Spirit descend on Jesus. . 

John 1:29 The next day he *saw Jesus coming to him, and *said, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world! 30 This is He in behalf of whom I said, ‘After me is coming a Man who has proved to be my superior, because He existed before me.’ 31 And I did not recognize Him, but so that He would be revealed to Israel, I came baptizing in water.” 32 And John testified, saying, “I have seen the Spirit descending as a dove out of heaven, and He remained upon Him. 33 And I did not recognize Him, but He who sent me to baptize in water said to me, ‘He upon whom you see the Spirit descending and remaining upon Him, this is the One who baptizes in the Holy Spirit.’ 34 And I myself have seen, and have testified that this is the Son of God.”Their active ministries overlapped for roughly 1 to 3 years before John was imprisoned and beheaded.”

Apparently John knew Jesus’ upright character and didn’t think that Jesus even needed a baptism for repentance and remission of sins. Have you ever known someone that you think is flawless? 

15 Why did Jesus insist on John baptizing him? He said it was to “fulfill all righteousness”. What does that mean?

16 What did Jesus receive when he was baptized by John? 

Isaiah 42:1: Records God’s promise: “I will put My Spirit upon Him; He will bring justice to the nations” Isaiah 61:1: Foretells that the “Spirit of the Lord GOD” is upon the Anointed One.  Acts 10:38 You know of Jesus of Nazareth, how God anointed Him with the Holy Spirit and with power, and how He went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with Him. He received miraculous power. He did no miracles until he was baptized.

17 What miracles did the apocryphal 2nd century Infancy Gospel of Thomas claim that the boy Jesus did?

At age 5, Jesus shaped twelve sparrows from soft clay on the Sabbath. When criticized, he clapped his hands, gave the birds breath, and told them to fly away. He resurrected playmates who had died from falls or fatal illnesses, and once commanded a dead workman to stand up and continue his labor. Jesus healed the foot of a young woodcutter who had severed it with an axe, and also cured his brother James from a venomous snakebite. To assist Joseph with his carpentry, Jesus miraculously stretched a short piece of wood to the exact length Joseph required.Jesus planted a single grain of wheat that yielded an impossible 100 bushels of grain. Unlike the canonical Gospels, the Infancy Gospel also includes darker miracles. When angered, young Jesus cursed a boy who knocked over his play pools causing him to wither and die, and temporarily blinded parents and community members who criticized his actions.

IS CONDEMNATON OF HOMOSEXUALITY BASED ON FAULTY TRANSLATIONS OF GREEK WORDS???????

A friend and fellow believer asked me to do a blog article on the same sex issue, so here it is. She commented that the LGBTQ advocates keep talking about the mistranslation of words that supposedly condemn homosexuality. There are two of Paul’s passages that conservatives say condemn homosexuality. 1 Corinthians 6:’Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived; neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals (arsenokoites: Homosexual, sodomite, a male who lies with a male as with a female. Thayer’s Greek Lexicon),  10 nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor those habitually drunk, nor verbal abusers, nor swindlers, will inherit the kingdom of God.” 1 Timothy 1:realizing the fact that law is not made for a righteous person but for those who are lawless and rebellious, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and worldly, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers, 10 for the sexually immoral, homosexuals (arsenokoites: Homosexual, sodomite), slave traders, liars, perjurers, and whatever else is contrary to sound teaching.”

In all openness, here is the pro LGBTQ argument that Paul is not condemning homosexuality, but instead certain typed of deviant sexual behavior. Their argument is based on what they say the original meaning of the Greek word Arsenokoitai (ἀρσενοκοῖται) was.

LGBTQ supporters and progressive theologians argue that New Testament Greek words historically translated as “homosexual” actually condemned exploitative practices like pederasty, temple prostitution, or abusive sexual acts rather than consensual same-sex relationships. This historical debate centers heavily on the word Arsenokoitai found in the writings of the Apostle Paul (in 1 Corinthians 6:9,10 and 1 Timothy 1:9-10).

1. Arsenokoitai (ἀρσενοκοῖται)

  • Literal Meaning: A compound of arsen (male) and koite (bed/sex), literally meaning “men who lie with a male”.
  • LGBTQ Perspective: Scholars argue this term is a Jewish-Greek adaptation of Leviticus prohibition language (Greek Septuagint). They contend it originally referred to specific abusive acts like pederasty (relations between older men and young boys), male prostitution, or economic exploitation, rather than a modern, loving gay relationship.
  • Historical Note: Critics of the traditional translation frequently cite the 1946 release of the Revised Standard Version (RSV) as the first major Bible translation to use the word “homosexual” for arsenokoitai, a term that did not exist in the English language until the late 19th century. Prior to 1946, it was often translated as “abusers of themselves with mankind,” “sodomites,” or “boy molesters”.

3. The Overall Consensus
While conservative theologians and certain translation committees maintain that the original Greek terms broadly encompass all same-sex sexual activity, many scholars agree that the cultural, ethical, and historical context of the ancient world is fundamentally different from modern understandings of LGBTQ identities and marriage. Determining the exact original intent of these words remains an active area of linguistic and historical research.”

I am not a Greek scholar. I rely on Thayer’s Greek Lexicon to tell me what the word originally meant, and Thayer’s says that it meant “homosexual; a male who lies with a male as with a female”. But let’s suppose we can’t be sure about what it meant in the first century. Is there any other way to determine if Paul is saying that homosexuality is a sin? Yes. The answer to that is found in Romans 1:26 For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature: 27 And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet.” To me, this is clear. There are no Greek words to quibble over. There is nothing in this text about the forbidden sin being men with boys: this is men with men, women with women. How can advocate of homosexuality argue around this? So how do pro homosexual advocates explain this text? AI: “Homosexual advocates and affirming theologians interpret Romans 1:26–27 as a condemnation of unrestrained lust, pagan idolatry, and exploitative practices (like adult men having sex with boys) rather than a universal prohibition against loving, monogamous same-sex relationships.” I’m sorry but that explanation is putting a twist on the text that is just not there. Again, Paul clearly condemns sex between men with men and women with women. Paul calls this homosexual relations “changes the natural use into that which is against nature”. I know that the pro homosexuality advocates will say “there are many examples in nature of what looks like homosexual activity”. That might be true, but “in nature, reproduction strictly requires both male (sperm) and female (egg) genetic contributions. Because standard homosexual sex cannot produce both types of gametes, two males or two females cannot naturally bear offspring together” (AI). So what is the natural use of the sex organs that God created males and females with? So what is the God given model for sexual relations? A man with a woman. I mean you only have to look at the sex organs of a male and a female to figure that out! The male sex organ fits into the female sex organ. That is nature as God designed it. That is why God designed marriage in Genesis 2:24 For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother, and be joined to his wife; and they shall become one flesh.” What does “become one flesh” mean? 1 Corinthians 6 says that is sex between two people. 6:16 Or do you not know that the one who joins himself to a prostitute is one body with her? For He says, “The two shall become one flesh.” (quoting Genesis 2:24).

Often the conservatives will quote the Old Testament condemnation of homosexuality. Leviticus 18:22: “You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination.” Leviticus 20:13: “If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall be put to death, their blood is upon them.” But many argue that these verses target specific ancient practices—such as cultic prostitution, pederasty, or violations of societal honor—rather than modern, loving same-sex relationships. I’m sorry, but again: ” a man lies with a man as with a woman” looks pretty clear to condemn homosexuality. But then the homosexual advocates make this argument: passages like Leviticus 19:19 say that it is condemned to wear a garment of two kinds of material mixed together (like my polyester/cotton shirt), and yet Christians don’t believe that we have to obey that under the new covenant. They argue, “why would you enforce the law against homosexuality and not enforce the law about a mixed material garment? They argue that conservatives just pick and choose which verses in the Old Testament are binding on us today. I feel that there is a big difference between not wearing a shirt with mixed material and men having sex with men. But for the sake of argument, we don’t need the old covenant Law of Moses condemnation of homosexuality to argue that homosexuality is a sin. Romans 1:26-27 is sufficient.

Isn’t Romans 1:26-27 clearly condemning homosexuality? Does’t Paul clearly call homosexuality “degrading passions” (1:26), and “depraved minds” (1:28)? Paul is saying that homosexuality was maybe the final depraved sin that caused God to give the Gentiles over to their degrading pasions. Adultery (sexual immorality where marriage is involved) is wrong. Fornication (sexual immorality where marriage is not involved) is wrong. But homosexual sex is crossing a bigger more serious line. It shows that not just the passions are degraded but the mind is degraded b/c it says that homosexuality is not even a sin. That’s where our cultrue is today!

I hope this article has been a fair discussion, even giving the opposing views on homosexuality. The last debate might be over whether Paul was speaking by inspiration the words of God through the Holy Spirit or was he jsut expressing his homophobic opinions on the matter. In other words, do we have to obey what Paul wrote in Romans 1:26-27 even if we conclude that he is condemning homosexuality? Paul has been recognized as an apostle by Christians, churches, and church fathers since the first century. One of the requirements to be an apostle was to have seen the resurrected Jesus (Acts 1:21-22) and Paul saw the resurrected Jesus on the road to Damascus to imprison Jewish Christians (Acts 9). Seeing the resurrected Jesus is the only thing that could have changed Paul from being a persecutor of Christans to an apostle to the Gentiles who was martyred for his testimony of the resurrection. He had nothing to gain by becoming an apostle; instead, he lost everything he had in Judaism. Paul said in 2 Corinthians 12:12 The distinguishing marks of a true apostle were performed among you (by me, Paul) with all perseverance, by signs, wonders, and miracles.” Apparently all the churches accepted Paul as a true apostle. Not one of the original 12 apostles, but a true apostle to the Gentiles. Some Jewish Christians tried to discredit his apostleship, but he defended his apostleship quite well. Then there is the affirmation of the apostle Peter. Surely all Christians believe that Peter was a true apostle (some even think he was the first Pope). Read what Peter said about Paul’s writings in 2 Peter 3:15 just as also our beloved brother Paul, according to the wisdom given him, wrote to you, 16 as also in all his letters, speaking in them of these things, in which there are some things that are hard to understand, which the untaught and unstable distort, as they do also the rest of the Scriptures, to their own destruction.” Notice that Peter is saying that Paul’s letters are Scripture. That’s the word used many times of the old testament inspired writings. Peter is putting the letters of Paul on the same authority as old testament scripture. So if someon accepts Peter as an apostle, which most everyone does, then they should accept Paul’s letters as inspirred by the Spirit.

I thnk that wraps it up. Thanks for reading. I hope the arguments are clear and logical. I hope they are truth.

PONDERINGS ABOUT THE BIRTH OF JESUS FROM MY WIFE!!! VERY, VERY GOOD!!!

The following was written by my wife and is super good. She is much, much more verbal, creative, etc. than I am (as you will see when you read it). My blog on Matthew chapter 1 was on the birth of Jesus.

“Ponderings on the birth of Jesus – How might conversations have gone?
Here’s a young Jewish girl, Mary, probably about 14 or 15 years old, when one day an angel
named Gabriel appears to her and announces a message from God. God calls her “highly
favored” and says has chosen her – out of all the women in Judah – a teenager – to conceive
and bear the Son of God, Savior of the world. She is afraid, incredulous, very troubled at his
words – “How can this be? I am a virgin”. Gabriel reassures her that she has favor with God and
that she will indeed bear His son. The Son who will reign on the throne of David and whose
kingdom will never end. Gabriel also announces to Mary that her relative Elizabeth is going to
bear a son in her old age. “Nothing is impossible with God” says Gabriel. Mary finally says, “I am
the Lord’s servant. Let it happen to me just as you have said.” Gabriel leaves her. What is she
thinking right now?


Mary is pledged to be married to Joseph. Probably within the year. Maybe they have already
seen the rabbi and set a date for the ceremony? What will she say to Joseph? When does she
tell him about Gabriel’s words to her? Does she tell her mother and father? What will they
think? Will they believe her?


It appears her parents sent her off the be with Elizabeth at this point. Maybe they were thinking
some time should go by and maybe Mary would change her story? Maybe they hoped she
would miscarry and avoid all the complications of an “unplanned” pregnancy? At any rate,
Mary goes to the hill country and spends the next three months with her cousin Elizabeth who
has conceived a child in her old age who will become John the Baptizer. And Elizabeth confirms
what the angel Gabriel has told Mary – the tiny embryo growing inside her womb is indeed the
son of God, divine in every way yet human as well.


Mary returns home to Nazareth after John’s birth, now 3 months pregnant – maybe just
beginning to show a little “baby bump.” Has she felt the flutter of the little feet kicking yet?
She must tell Joseph. Face to face. What will he say? How will he react? She knows he is a good
man – if God has chosen her to be the mother of the Messiah, surely, He chose Joseph as well to
be his earthly father.


Who knows? Perhaps the conversation went something like, “Joseph, you know I love you very
much. Do you think we can move up the wedding a few months? – Why? – Well, you probably
won’t believe this, but, and angel of God, he said his name was Gabriel, appeared to me and
told me something incredible. You know how our women through the ages have hoped to be
mother of the promised Messiah? – Yes, it would be the highest honor for a woman. – Well,
this Gabriel told me that I am chosen. – Chosen?? – Yes, chosen to bear the Son of God, the
Messiah we have all been waiting for. I am still in shock. – You are in shock? What about me?
What does this mean?


I don’t know Mary – that sounds far-fetched. How do you know this person was telling the
truth? Where did he go? I want to talk to him. – Joseph, I don’t know where he is now, but my
parents are willing to move the date up – they don’t want a lot of talk.

Joseph may have said, “Let me go home and think this out – it’s going to be a scandal. A good
girl from a good family – pregnant before marriage? How does that make me look? What
shame on my family? I don’t know, Mary, this is not a good way to start out – the whole village
will gossip. This is not good.”


Mary may have replied, “But Joseph, how can we not obey God? You said yourself just now that
it is an honor for a woman to be chosen as the mother of our Messiah – and as unbelievable as
it sounds, I did see an angel, he told me his name was Gabriel, and he did speak those words to
me – “You are highly favored of God” – You will bear a son – and Joseph, we are to name him
JESUS, Gabriel said.”


“I’ll be back tomorrow – let me sleep on this – it’s a lot to take in, Mary.” Joseph goes home,
heavy hearted. How could Mary do this to him and his family? Has she really been with another
man? What is this business about an angel? I just don’t know about that that incredible story
she has told. An angel told her she would be the mother of the promised Messiah. Really? Even
if I believe it, certainly no one else will. What will the elders of our village say? What are we
going to do?


His heart very troubled, Joseph decides that he will divorce sweet Mary quietly, not wanting to
cause her shame or worse. However, that night Gabriel appears to Joseph in a dream and tells
him not to be afraid to take Mary as his wife; that her child is indeed the son of God, conceived
by the Holy Spirit, and he confirms that all Mary has told him is true. Joseph, a righteous man
who loves God, joyfully returns to Mary’s house in the morning and arranges to marry her right
away.

Thoughts – Jesus became human so that we could see God. The God of creation has always
been unapproachable by humans, so the incarnate son of God, Jesus, not only came to redeem
humanity, but also to allow humanity to touch God. To converse with God. To have a personal
relationship with the Creator. To eat and drink with him. To have complete fellowship. To be
comforted by and guided by him. To have him not only as redeemer but as a friend. A brother.
The unapproachable became approachable. God came near.


For centuries God has been ‘far away’ – a rule maker, a deity to be appeased with sacrifices,
someone to be obeyed at cost of life…now, with the coming of Jesus, God is still to be obeyed
but because we want to, not because we must. Because of Jesus’ love for us, we willingly give
our lives as a sacrifice of love, not of compulsion or rule keeping. We can enjoy a relationship
with God, Paradise restored in a way; the Garden that was lost after Adam and Eve sinned is
now ours, and we can walk and talk with God in full fellowship because of Jesus.


What a beautiful plan – no wonder angels longed to know God’s plan for humanity.” (End of her article).

Wow! Good stuff. AI: The method of putting yourself in the emotions and situations of biblical characters is most commonly referred to as imaginative identification, experiential reading, or Ignatian contemplation. Sounds like what she did. I should start letting her write my blog articles. Don’t comment on that comment.

MATTHEW CHAPTER 2: STUDY QUESTIONS

CH 2

1 What do you know about Herod, King of the Jews? Show incredible journey video.    Was he really capable of slaughtering the babies in Bethlehem? 

Watch The incredible journey 28 min video of King Herod

2 Why was “all Jerusalem” troubled by news of birth of Jesus? 

AI: Jerusalem was troubled by Jesus’ birth primarily because the Magi’s announcement of a newborn “King of the Jews” directly threatened the rule of King Herod the Great and raised widespread fears of retaliatory violence and political upheaval. 

The joint anxiety of King Herod and the people of Jerusalem stemmed from a few key factors:

  • Herod’s Paranoia and Loss of Power: Herod held his throne by Roman decree, not through legitimate Jewish lineage. Historically, he was incredibly ruthless and paranoid, famously executing members of his own family and inner circle if he perceived them as threats to his power. The news of an prophesied, rightful “King” put him on high alert. 
  • Fear of Bloody Retaliation: The citizens of Jerusalem were terrified because they knew that when Herod panicked, mass bloodshed and instability usually followed. The populace knew that a threatened king often meant violence, a fear that was later realized in the Slaughter of the Innocents
  • Disruption of the Status Quo: The religious and political leaders in Jerusalem had built their security on maintaining favor with Herod and Rome. A new Messiah could spark Roman intervention, war, or an uprising, all of which jeopardized their positions of power

Two types of fulfillment of OT prophesy: Predictive (one and only one event predicted and fulfilled). Analogy: An event in the NT similar to an event in OT (Hosea 11:1). 

Micah 5:2 is predictive. Such predictions were used to proved Jesus as Messiah.

Can you name some other such prophecies that Jesus fulfilled proving that he was the Messiah?

These are the prophecies that Paul used in the synagogue in Thessalonica in Acts 17 showing the prophecies and then showing how Jesus fulfilled every one of them.

Acts 17:1 Now when they had traveled through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where there was a synagogue of the Jews. And according to Paul’s custom, he visited them, and for three Sabbaths reasoned with them from the Scriptures, explaining and giving evidence that the Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead, and saying, “This Jesus whom I am proclaiming to you is the Christ.” “Christ” is the Greek translation of the Hebrew word “Messiah”. “Giving evidence” in the Greek is paratithémi: To place beside, to set before, to entrust, to commit. It is listing the OT Messianic predictions and then “placing beside” that list the fulfillment of each prediction by Jesus.

3 What does it tell you about the collection of OT scrolls that had been collected by the time the scribes searched for the birthplace of Jesus? There had been a 400 silent year period of no prophets and no inspired writings, but this shows that all the 39 OT books were collected by about 400 BC. 

4 Who were these magi from the east? 

AI: The Magi were ancient scholars, often believed to be Persian or Babylonian astronomers and priests. The Bible does not state their number, but early traditions claim three. The origin of the “star” is heavily debated, with theories ranging from a supernatural light to rare planetary alignments.

Who Were the Magi?

  • Scholars & Astrologers: The term Magi refers to a class of highly educated wise men from the ancient East. They were likely a hereditary caste of priests or astrologers from ancient Persia or Babylon (modern-day Iran and Iraq).
  • Not Kings: The Bible refers to them as “wise men,” not kings. The tradition that they were kings arose later from interpretations of Old Testament prophecies about nations bringing gifts to a ruler.
  • The Number Three: Tradition assumes there were three Magi, which stems directly from the mention of three specific gifts: gold, frankincense, and myrrh.
  • Why They Traveled: Because these scholars also studied ancient history and literature, it is highly likely they had access to Jewish writings from the time when Jews were exiled in Babylon hundreds of years prior. This gave them an understanding of prophecies regarding the birth of a Jewish king. Maybe they studied Numbers 24:17 (the 4th of Balaam’s prophecies)

5 What was that star that led them to Jerusalem and then to Bethlehem? 

AI: Because the “star” of Bethlehem performed unusual actions (e.g., appearing, disappearing, and moving to hover over a specific house), theologians and historians generally attribute its origin to one of three possibilities: 

  • A Supernatural Phenomenon: The most common view among Christians is that the star was a miraculous, divinely created light meant specifically to guide the Magi to Jesus.
  • Planetary Conjunction: Astronomers have long hypothesized that the star was actually a rare, highly visible conjunction of planets (such as Jupiter and Saturn in 7–6 BC). To astrologers of the ancient world, this type of celestial event would have held profound cosmic significance.
  • A Comet or Supernova: Another popular theory is that the Magi observed an exploding star (supernova) or a bright, slow-moving comet, both of which would have been dramatic enough to prompt a months-long journey across the desert.

6 Why did the star not lead them directly to Bethlehem instead of Jerusalem first? Would that not have saved all the babies killed in Bethlehem? Could God have avoided this? Why didn’t he?

7 How do you think the wise men felt when they found baby Jesus? Would you like to have been one of the 3 magi? Where was the baby when they found him? Was he in the stable where he was born? Were there shepherds there? So how accurate is the typical nativity scene? 

God warned Joseph to take his family to Egypt but God allowed Herod to kill all the 2 and under babies in Bethlehem. What kind of a God would do that? ‘

8 How long did Joseph stay in Egypt? 

AI: The exact duration of the Holy Family’s stay in Egypt is not specified in the Bible, but most biblical scholars estimate it lasted between a few months and about three years They fled to escape King Herod’s massacre and stayed until they received word of Herod’s death in 4 BC. 

Different traditions offer varying timeframes for the sojourn: 

  • Biblical Scholars: Generally agree the exile was relatively short—typically from a few months to around two years, as Jesus was still a young toddler. 
  • Coptic Tradition: Suggests a longer stay, with the Coptic Orthodox Church traditionally commemorating the stay at about three and a half years. 
  • Apocryphal Texts: Ancient writings offer estimates spanning anywhere from one to seven years

9 Was Jesus born in the year 0?

AI: Historically and chronologically, Jesus was not born in the year zero  In fact, there is no year zero in our standard calendar system; the calendar goes directly from 1 BC to 1 AD. 

Scholars and historians widely agree on the following key points regarding the timeline:

  • Likely Birth Window: Modern historians and biblical scholars calculate that Jesus was actually born between 6 BC and 4 BC.
  • The Reason for the Error: The AD/BC calendar was devised in 525 AD by a Roman monk named Dionysius Exiguus. He attempted to calculate the year of Christ’s birth to establish a “Year of Our Lord”. However, he made a miscalculation, basing his math on the reign of King Herod the Great, who is now known to have died in 4 BC. Since Herod was alive during the biblical infancy narratives, Jesus had to be born before 4 BC. 
  • No Year Zero: Dionysius did not include a year zero because the number zero did not exist in Roman numerals. Therefore, time transitions directly from 1 BC to 1 AD in the traditional calendar system. 

Because of these discrepancies, many modern academic and historical texts use BCE (Before Common Era) and CE (Common Era) to denote time, which avoids the inaccuracies and religious implications of the traditional system. 

10 Was Hosea 11:1 a predictive or analogy prophecy? Read Hosea 11. It is obviously talking about Israel coming out of Egyptian slavery. Therefore Joseph bringing Jesus out of Egypt must just be an analogy, similar event to Israel coming out of Egypt. It was not a direct prediction of Joseph and Egypt.

11 Why did Herod choose the babies 2 and under based on the time the magi came? 

Many estimate that the baby Jesus was 6 months old when the magi found him in a house (not a stable). Herod found out that they had deceived him and left to go back to the East. So he would have estimated baby Jesus to be less than a year, but to make sure he was killed, Herod killed all the children under 2.

12 Was Jeremiah 31:15 of Rachel’s weeping a predictive or analogy fulfillment? 

AI: Jeremiah 31:15 is an Old Testament lament where the symbolic mother of Israel, Rachel, weeps inconsolably for her lost and exiled children. The verse illustrates deep, agonizing grief but serves as an emotional backdrop for God’s impending promise of redemption, comfort, and eventual restoration. 

Historical & Symbolic Meaning (Old Testament)

  • The Context: The prophet Jeremiah spoke this message to the people of Judah before they were exiled to Babylon by King Nebuchadnezzar. 
  • Who is Rachel? Rachel was a beloved matriarch of Israel (mother of Joseph and Benjamin). Her historical burial site was located near Ramah and Bethlehem. 
  • The Symbolism: Jeremiah personifies Rachel rising from her grave to weep bitterly as she watches her descendants (the Israelites) being captured, enslaved, and torn from their homeland. She refuses to be comforted because her children are “no more”.
  • The Hope: Although verse 15 focuses on unimaginable tragedy, the verses immediately following (Jeremiah 31:16-17) shift to a message of comfort. God promises Rachel that her weeping will end and that her children will eventually return from “the land of the enemy”.

Prophetic Fulfillment (New Testament)

  • Matthew 2:16-18: In the New Testament, the Gospel of Matthew quotes this exact verse. 
  • The Context: Matthew applies the verse to the “Massacre of the Innocents”. When King Herod ordered the execution of all male toddlers in and around Bethlehem in an attempt to destroy the infant Jesus, the mothers of Bethlehem experienced inconsolable grief.
  • The Connection: Matthew uses Jeremiah’s lament to show that Rachel’s ancient weeping is echoed in the horrific suffering of the Bethlehem mothers, linking the historical sorrow of exile with the tragic sacrifices surrounding the birth of the Messiah. 

13 How was the land divided among the sons of Herod after he died? Archelaus got control of Judea.

14 What OT prophecy predicted that Jesus would be called a Nazarene?

AI: There is no single verse in the Old Testament that directly states, “He shall be called a Nazarene.” In fact, Nazareth is never mentioned in the Old Testament.

When Matthew writes in Matthew 2:23 that Jesus lived in Nazareth “so that what was said through the prophets might be fulfilled,” biblical scholars broadly agree that he is summarizing a prophetic theme rather than quoting a single text.

The main theories explain what Matthew might have meant:

  • The Messianic “Branch” (Netser): The Hebrew word for “Branch” or “sprout” is netser, which sounds very similar to Nazareth in Aramaic and Hebrew. This concept of the Messiah as a branch shooting up from the stump of Jesse is found in prophecies like Isaiah 11:1. 
  • The “Despised” One: First-century Judeans generally looked down on the region of Galilee, and especially the obscure, tiny village of Nazareth. Can anything good come out of Nazareth? (Nathaniel) Calling Jesus a “Nazarene” carried a stigma of being insignificant or scorned. Matthew links this to Old Testament prophecies where the Messiah would be rejected and despised by his own people, such as Psalm 22:6-7 and Isaiah 53:3.

Jesus not only identified with humanity by coming to our world; He also identified with the lowly of this world. His upbringing in an obscure and despised town served as an important part of His mission. Jesus identified Himself as “Jesus of Nazareth” during His encounter with Saul on the road to Damascus (Acts 22:7–8). After his conversion, Paul mentioned Jesus of Nazareth (Acts 26:9). One of the names of the early Christians was “Nazarenes” (Acts 24:5), and the term Nasara, meaning “Nazarene,” is still used today by Muslims to identify a Christian.

15 Where did Joseph and Mary live during the betrothal period?

AI: Joseph and Mary lived in the Galilean town of Nazareth during their betrothal. In first-century Jewish tradition, a betrothal was a legally binding contract, but the couple did not yet live together. Consequently, Mary resided at her parents’ home in Nazareth, while Joseph likely lived with his parents or prepared their future home. So after they left Egypt, they went back to where they lived during the betrothal period.

16 Did Joseph and Mary find out about the slaughter of the babies? If so, how did they feel? 

17 What does Luke add about the birth of Jesus that is not found in Matthew?

Luke’s Gospel provides a much more detailed historical narrative of the birth of Jesus. His unique additions include the annunciation to Mary, the worldwide Roman census, the journey to Bethlehem, the manger birth, the angelic appearance to the shepherds, and Jesus’ dedication at the Temple. 

Specific details found only in Luke include:

  • The Announcement to Mary: The angel Gabriel appears to Mary in Nazareth to announce she will conceive. (Matthew focuses solely on the angel appearing to Joseph in a dream.) 
  • The Roman Census: Mary and Joseph travel from Nazareth to Bethlehem to register for a decree by Caesar Augustus. 
  • The Manger & Inn: Because there was no room at the inn, Jesus is laid in a manger after birth. 
  • The Shepherds: An angel and a heavenly host announce the birth to local shepherds, who then visit the infant. 
  • Temple Dedication: Mary and Joseph take Jesus to the Jerusalem Temple for purification 8 days after birth (where Simeon and Anna praise the baby). 
  • The Magnificat: Mary’s famous song of praise (Luke 1:46-55).
  • The Birth of John the Baptist: Luke dedicates his opening chapter to the miraculous conception and birth of John the Baptist, Jesus’ cousin. 

MATTHEW 1. DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:

I am teaching a class on Wednesday night studying the gospel of Matthew using my combination of study/discussion questions and a lot of AI research. So I thought it might be good for blog readers to start following this study of all 28 chapters of Matthew chapter by chapter. So today I start with my chapter 1 questions and notes. I suggest that you have Matthew 1 open to read as you go through this.

MATTHEW DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

CH 1 

1 Why were the genealogy tables so important to the Jews?

AI: Genealogies were incredibly important to Matthew because they provided legal and theological proof that Jesus was the promised Jewish Messiah. By tracing Jesus’ lineage back to Abraham and David, Matthew anchored Christianity in concrete history and demonstrated that Jesus fulfilled centuries of Old Testament prophecy. Matthew’s genealogy served four main purposes:

  • Messianic Legitimacy: To claim the throne of Israel, a claimant required a verifiable royal lineage. Matthew traced Jesus through the kingly line of David (via Solomon) to show that Jesus held the legal right to be the Messiah.
  • Connection to the Covenants: By tracing the lineage to Abraham, Matthew highlighted that Jesus was the ultimate fulfillment of God’s promise to bless all nations through Abraham’s seed.
  • Theological Structure: Matthew arranged the genealogy into three distinct sets of 14 generations (14 being the numerical value of the Hebrew letters for “David”). This mathematical symmetry acted as a “sermon” to his primarily Jewish audience, visually demonstrating that history was tightly ordered by God, moving perfectly from Abraham to the monarchy, to the exile, and finally to Christ.
  • A Gospel for All People: Matthew intentionally included four women (Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, and Bathsheba) in his list—a highly unusual practice for ancient patriarchal records. These women included Gentiles and those with complicated pasts. This signaled immediately that Jesus’ kingdom would include outcasts, Gentiles, and be open to the whole world

2 How long were the generations in the 42 generations in Matthew 1?

AI: God renamed Abram, who was born in 2167 BC, “Abraham” in 2068 BC when he was “ninety-nine years old” (Genesis 17:1); David was crowned king in 1010 BC; the southern kingdom of Judah was deported to Babylon in 586 BC; and Jesus was born about 6 BC (see When was Jesus born?). This means that the first set of “fourteen generations” in Matthew 1:17 covered 1,058 years (2068 BC to 1010 BC), the second set of “fourteen generations” covered 424 years (1010 BC to 586 BC), and the third set of “fourteen generations” covered about 580 years (586 BC to 6 BC).

So 1,058 + 424 + 580 =2,062 years from Abraham to Jesus. An average of 2,062/42 = 50 year generations although the 2nd and 3rd 14 were shorter and averaged 1,004/28 = 36 year generations.

3 What did a Jewish betrothal involve?

AI: In traditional Jewish law, a betrothal (kiddushin) is the legally binding first stage of marriage, establishing the couple as husband and wife While modern engagements are merely social promises, historical Jewish betrothal required a formal legal act.

A Jewish betrothal traditionally involved three binding legal and financial components:

  • The Act of Acquisition (Kiddushin): The groom gave the bride an object of value, such as a coin or the traditional wedding band, or a formal written document (shtar), accompanied by the declaration: “You are hereby consecrated to me with this ring according to the law of Moses and Israel”.
  • The Marriage Contract (Ketubah): Signed before or during the ceremony, this document served as a binding prenuptial agreement detailing the husband’s financial obligations to his wife. It guaranteed her financial support during the marriage and specified a settlement to be paid in the event of divorce or the husband’s death.
  • Conditions of the Engagement (Tena’im): Separate from the ketubah, these terms were the stipulations laid out between the two families. They outlined the dowry, wedding date, and financial penalties to be paid if either party broke the engagement before the final wedding ceremony (nissuin).

In antiquity, the betrothal lasted about a year, during which the groom prepared a home for the couple. Although legally married, the couple could not live together or consummate the marriage until the final nissuin ceremony took place. Because the betrothal was legally binding, dissolving it required a formal religious divorce (get), even if the marriage had never been consummated.

4 What were the emotions that Joseph had during this?

5 What were the emotions Mary had? 

6 How long from the conception of Mary by the Holy Spirit until Joseph married her?

7 How many months of the one year betrothal had passed before the conception?

8 Did Mary tell Joseph about her pregnancy before or after the 3 month visit to Elizabeth

It is possible that 6 months of the one year betrothal had passed before the conception. And then after the 3 months with Elizabeth, Mary then tells Joesph she is pregnant. And Joesph immediately marries her while she is 3 month pregnant barely showing Which might help with the reaction of relatives and friends not knowing Mary conceived before marriage. .

9 How much did her friends and relatives know about the conception before marriage? 

It seems that Joseph married her quickly after the angel appeared to him, and it would have been strange if he married her months before the one year ended. Did Mary tell her parents she was pregnant? Did they send her away to Elizabeth? 

10 Was the prophecy of the virgin birth in Isaiah 7:14 only fulfilled in Jesus’ birth?

Review the history of the virgin birth prophecy from Isaiah 7-8. 

The prophecy in Isaiah 7:14 originates during the Syro-Ephraimite crisis (circa 734–732 BC), when the Kingdom of Judah was threatened by an invading alliance of Israel and Syria.

AI: The Historical Context (8th Century BC)

  • The Crisis: King Rezin of Aram (Syria) and King Pekah of Israel launched a joint military campaign to siege Jerusalem. Their goal was to overthrow Judah’s King Ahaz, who refused to join their coalition against the expanding Assyrian Empire.
  • The Fear: King Ahaz and the people of Judah were terrified, believing their utter destruction was imminent.
  • The Message of Reassurance: God sent the prophet Isaiah to tell Ahaz to remain calm, promising that the enemy coalition would fail.
  • The Sign: To prove this, Isaiah offered King Ahaz a miraculous sign. When Ahaz hypocritically refused to ask for one, God provided one anyway: “Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign: The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel” (Isaiah 7:14, NIV).

The Near-Term Fulfillment

Scholars debate the exact identity of the child in Isaiah’s time, but the prophecy carried an immediate message of timekeeping:

  • Timeline Marker: The sign stated that before this newly conceived child reached the age of knowing right from wrong (weaned, age 2 or 3?), the northern threats to Judah would be completely dismantled.
  • Historical Result: This came to pass just a few years later when the Assyrian Empire intervened, destroying Damascus and conquering the Northern Kingdom of Israel. This coincided with the birth of a child to Isaiah by a prophetess. We assume he married a prophetess and it was a natural birth. 

The Original Hebrew Word: ‘Almah

A major point of historical and theological debate centers on the Hebrew word used in the original text: ‘almah.

  • In ancient Hebrew, ‘almah translates to “young woman” or “maiden”. While young unmarried women in that culture were presumed to be virgins, the word itself does not strictly denote virginity (the distinct Hebrew word for a literal virgin is betulah). But the prophecy of the birth of a child to a “maiden” in 7:14 was made before Isaiah married a prophetess and had a child by natural birth. So young maiden who most likely was a virgin when the prophesy was made then married and had a child by natural birth. 
  • Thus it appears that Isaiah 7:14 was only predicting the birth of Isaiah’s child. So in Matthew 1 says 22 Now all this [u]took place so that what was spoken by the Lord through the prophet would be fulfilled and then he quotes Isaiah 7:14.
  • This is a fulfillment by analogy. There are two ways OT prophecy was fulfilled:    1) A one and one only event like Micah 5:2           2) Fulfilled by analogy: a similar event to the OT event, such as Hosea 11:1 “When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son.” Historically, this refers to God rescuing the nation of Israel from slavery in Egypt during the Exodus. Yet Matthew 2:15, Matthew applies this verse to the infant Jesus returning from Egypt after escaping King Herod’s massacre. The prophet Hosea was looking backward at the nation of Israel’s history; he was not making a predictive statement about the future Messiah.
  • You can see the analogy and how Matthew could say that Jesus was born to a virgin (parthenon in the Greek always meant a virgin). The maiden (almah) in Isaiah’s day was probably a virgin when the prophesy was made, and Mary was a virgin when she conceived, but the difference was that Mary did not have sex before the child was born as the maiden in Isaiah 7 did. But the analogy of the virgins is clear and the prophecy was fulfilled by analogy. 
  • The name of the child to be born to Isaiah would be Immanuel, which means “with us is God”. It would not imply that the child born to Isaiah was God in the flesh. It would just mean the presence of God was with the people through the birth of the child.
  • Isaiah 8 shows that the child born to Isaiah was called Immanuel: Again the Lord spoke to me further, saying, “Inasmuch as these people have rejected the gently flowing waters of Shiloah And rejoice in Rezin and the son of Remaliah; Now therefore, behold, the Lord is about to bring on them the strong and abundant waters of the Euphrates River,That is, the king of Assyria and all his glory;And it will rise over all its channels and go over all its banks. Then it will sweep on into Judah, it will overflow and pass through,It will reach as far as the neck;And the spread of its wings will fill the expanse of your land, Immanuel. “Be broken, you peoples, and be shattered; And listen, all remote places of the earth. Get ready, yet be shattered; Get ready, yet be shattered. 10 Devise a plan, but it will fail; State a proposal, but it will not stand, For God is with us.”

So in Matthew 1, the child born to the virgin Mary is called Immanuel b/c the birth of Jesus showed God’s presence among His people. He was even God in the flesh, but Isaiah was obviously not predicting a child in Isaiah’s time that would be God in the flesh incarnation like Jesus was.  So the name “Immanuel” is not only used of Jesus as God.

AI: The Shift to “Virgin Birth” (2nd Century BC)

  • The Septuagint Translation: Centuries later, when Jewish scholars translated the Hebrew Old Testament into Greek (a version known as the Septuagint), they translated the Hebrew word ‘almah‘ into the Greek word ‘parthenos’.
  • Strict Meaning: Unlike the Hebrew term, the Greek word ‘parthenos’ explicitly and exclusively means “virgin”.

The Christian Fulfillment

The Gospel of Matthew applied Isaiah 7:14 directly to the birth of Jesus Christ (Matthew 1:22-23). Matthew used the Greek Septuagint’s wording (parthenos) to highlight that Mary’s miraculous, non-sexual conception of Jesus by the Holy Spirit was the ultimate, spiritual fulfillment of the prophecy (but only by analogy).

11 How important is it that someone believe in the virgin birth of Jesus? Can someone deny the virgin birth and still be a Christian? 

The Unitarians, liberal branches of the Episcopal and Presbyterian church, the Christodelphians, and United Church of Christ all deny the virgin birth.  Historically, this ancient Jewish-Christian sect the Ebionites in the early centuries of the Church viewed Jesus as the natural human son of Joseph and Mary who was “adopted” by God at his baptism

12 What are the Catholic doctrines about the virgin Mary?

Catholic doctrines about the Virgin Mary emphasize her unique role in God’s plan of salvation. These teachings are built upon four core Marian dogmas that define her sinless nature, divine motherhood, perpetual virginity, and bodily assumption into heaven.

AI: The Four Marian Dogmas

  • Mother of God (Theotokos): Defined at the Council of Ephesus (431 AD), this doctrine asserts that Mary is truly the “Mother of God” because she gave birth to Jesus, who is both fully human and fully divine.
  • Immaculate Conception: Defined by Pope Pius IX in 1854, this teaching states that, by a special grace from God, Mary was preserved free from original sin from the very moment of her own conception.
  • Perpetual Virginity: This doctrine holds that Mary was a virgin before, during, and after the birth of Jesus, remaining a virgin her entire life. They say that the named brothers of Jesus were spiritual brothers or sons of Joseph from a previous marriage.
  • Assumption: Defined by Pope Pius XII in 1950, this teaches that at the end of her earthly life, Mary was taken up (assumed) bodily and spiritually into heavenly glory.

Other Core Teachings

  • Veneration, Not Worship: Catholics do not worship Mary (a privilege reserved for God alone). Instead, she is given hyperdulia—an extraordinary level of honor due to her unique role as the Mother of Christ.
  • Intercession: Catholics pray to Mary in the sense of asking her to intercede on their behalf, meaning she brings their prayers to her Son, Jesus.
  • Spiritual Motherhood: Catholics view Mary as the spiritual mother of all Christians, a title rooted in Jesus’ words on the cross (John 19:26-27).
  • The New Eve: In Catholic theology, Mary is seen as the “New Eve” whose faithful obedience reversed the disobedience of the first Eve, helping to bring about salvation for humanity.

That’s chapter 1. Unless I change my mind, I will continue with blog articles on chapters 2-28, chapter by chapter. I hope this is beneficial to your private or group study.

IS THE CHURCH JUST A SUBSTITUTE FOR A POSTPONED PHYSICAL KINGDOM THAT JESUS WAS TRYING TO SET UP IN THE FIRST CENTURY????

The question is simple: Did Jesus come the first time to set up a physical kingdom on earth? Many believe that he did. So when the Jewish leaders and most of the Jews rejected him as the Messiah, “they” say that he postponed the establishment of a physical kingdom until his 2nd coming. “They” say that, as a result of this postponement, he established the church as a “backup plan”, a “substitute”, a “stop-gap measure” until his 2nd coming when he will set up that physical kingdom. The church age is seen in this view as a “parenthesis” between the 1st and 2nd coming, but not what Jesus planned to set up to begin with.

The Bible teaches that Jesus did not come the 1st time to set up a physical kingdom. John 18:36 Jesus answered, “My kingdom is not of this world. If My kingdom were of this world, My servants would be fighting so that I would not be handed over to the Jews; but as it is, My kingdom is not of this realm.” This statement by Jesus destroys the idea of Jesus setting up a physical kingdom at his 1st or 2nd coming. It refutes the idea of a postponed physical kingdom. Period.

So did Jesus set up a kingdom in the 1st century? Yes. Jesus predicted that the establishment of his kingdom was “near”. Mark 1:14 Now after John was taken into custody, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, 15 and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent and believe in the gospel.” The Greek word for “near” is eggizó: To draw near, to approach, to come near. It occurs 14 times in the Greek perfect tense (indicative mood) in the NT which expresses “extreme closeness, immediate imminence, whether in distance (as Jesus came “near” to Jerusalem) or time (the Passover was “near”). If Jesus did not set up his kingdom within the next soon after making this prediction, then he is a false prophet.

So if he did set up his kingdom soon in the first century, did he set up a physical kingdom? Of course not. Did he plan to set up a physical kingdom but postponed it? Nowhere does Jesus or the New Testament writers teach that. So if he did set up his kingdom in the first century and if it wasn’t a physical kingdom, then what type of kingdom did he set up. He set up a spiritual kingdom, the church. That is why the church is synonymous with the kingdom in Matthew 16:18 And I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades will not overpower it. 19 I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall have been loosed in heaven.” When did Peter use those “keys” to open up the door into the kingdom of Jesus? In Acts 2 Peter preached the completed plan of the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus to those who crucified Jesus. He told them to repent and be baptized for the remission of sins (2:38). 3,000 people obeyed Peter’s message and were saved that day. Acts 2:47 And the Lord was adding to their number day by day those who were being saved.” The church is the spiritual body of Jesus of which he is the head. It consists of all who have been saved by Jesus. Acts 2 is the record of the establishment of the church. Notice the connection with the kingdom: when Peter used those gospel “keys” in Acts 2, he opened the door into the kingdom, a spiritual kingdom, the church. The saved are in Jesus’ kingdom. Colossians 1:13 For He rescued us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son, 14 in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.” Revelation 1:5 To Him who loves us and released us from our sins by His blood— and He made us into a kingdom, priests to His God and Father—to Him be the glory and the dominion forever and ever. Amen.

The church was not a substitute for a failed physical kingdom set up. It was a spiritual kingdom that God and Jesus planned to set up all along. In Ephesians 3 the apostle Paul said that he and the other apostles revealed God’s mystery plan of salvation, i.e. how God united Jew and Gentile believers into one body, the church. He added, Ephesians 3:To me, the very least of all saints, this grace was given, to preach to the Gentiles the unfathomable riches of Christ, and to enlighten all people as to what the plan of the mystery is which for ages has been hidden in God, who created all things; 10 so that the multifaceted wisdom of God might now be made known through the church to the rulers and the authorities in the heavenly places11 This was in accordance with the eternal purpose which He carried out in Christ Jesus our Lord.” The church was part of God’s eternal plan of salvation and the means of spreading that message. It was not an “after-thought” or “unplanned substitute” for a failed physical kingdom plan.

So why does this matter? It matters because putting emphasis on a future physical kingdom takes away from the value of the church as part of God’s eternal plan. God is to be glorified in this spiritual body, the church. Ephesians 3:21 to Him be the glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations forever and ever. Amen.” The value of the church is minimized if it is not the “real thing” but a substitute for the real thing that will only come later at the 2nd coming. My kids are notorious for telling me on my birthday, “here is a little gift but the main gift is in the mail to be given to you later”. That minimizes the value of the little gift.

It is important to clarify what the church is. As stated, it is simply the saved of all nations all over the world. God is glorified when sinners are saved by the gospel and are added to Jesus’ church. Those saved then follow Acts 2:42 They were continually devoting themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.” In the first century, they did this in house churches. In persecuted countries like China, they still do it in house churches. God is glorified in those house churches as believers of all races come together to live for Jesus and spread the gospel to others. The confusion comes in when we ask, “is God glorified by all that is done in the name of “church” today”? Unfortunately not. To begin with, any church today that does not support and teach the basic truths of God’s word is not glorifying God. Paul said, 1 Timothy 3:14 I am writing these things to you, hoping to come to you before long; 15 but in case I am delayed, I write so that you will know how one should act in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and support of the truth.” The LGBTQ supporting churches are not glorifying God, but their own false teaching. The churches that deny the deity, virgin birth, and miracles of Jesus (the Unitarian Universalists, the Jehovah’s Witnesses, the United Churches of Christ, the liberal wings of the Episcopal and other Protestant churches) are not glorifying God. The Roman Catholic Church was not glorifying God when it set up its empire. AI: “From an institutional and historical standpoint, the Roman Catholic Church functioned as both a spiritual entity and a physical, temporal kingdom. Over centuries, this fusion of worldly power and religious authority led to documented periods of systemic corruption, financial excess, and political manipulation.” Even the doctrinally conservative churches that spend 80% of contributions on staff and buildings are not honoring how God would want money donated in the name of Jesus to be spent. It is the “church business” that gets the honor with their beautiful, comfortable buildings and paid preachers that draw in members. Sure, they still do a lot of good but are they really honoring God’s wishes on spending his money? Are they setting up what Jesus wanted or are they setting up church businesses that glorify their own denominations and churches?

In conclusion, Jesus will not establish a physical kingdom at his 2nd coming. That was never his plan and will not be part of some future eschatological plan. All the churches and their preachers who put emphasis on a future physical kingdom (and the role of Israel in that kingdom) are distracting people from the here-and-now spiritual work of the true church. It’s like saying, “what we have in the church is not the real thing”. Much money and time is spent promoting pre-millennial and dispensational views of how that physical kingdom will be set up, all of which are false teaching if Jesus never intends to set up a physical kingdom. One last thought: if full preterism is true, then the 2nd coming happened in 70 AD and there is no future coming back of Jesus (I wrote many articles on that in my blog if you care to research that). If there is no future coming of Jesus, then obviously there is no future establishment of a physical kingdom.




HAS ISRAEL BEEN RESTORED TO THE LAND AS THE PROPHETS PREDICTED?

The Bible contains numerous verses where God promises and describes the “promised land” of Israel as a place of ultimate security, physical abundance, and rest. Deuteronomy 33:28 “So Israel lives in security, The fountain of Jacob secluded, In a land of grain and new wine; His heavens also drip down dew. Deuteronomy 12:10: “But you will cross the Jordan and settle in the land the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, and he will give you rest from all your enemies around you so that you will live in safety.” Deuteronomy 8:7-9: “For the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land—a land with brooks, streams, and deep springs gushing out into the valleys and hills; a land with wheat and barley, vines and fig trees, pomegranates, olive oil and honey; a land where bread will not be scarce and you will lack nothing. Leviticus 26:6: “I will grant peace in the land, and you will lie down and no one will make you afraid. I will remove wild beasts from the land, and the sword will not pass through your country.”

Notice the key words for what was promised Israel in the promised land of Canaan: security, rest, safety, peace, abundance. Those promises to Israel were conditional: they would lose all of them and the land if they disobeyed God. For example, God sent the Babylonians to remove Judah from the promised land for 70 years as a result of Judah’s continued sins.

The prophets anticipated Israel losing the land but then being restored to dwell in the land when the Messiah would come. Jeremiah 30:For behold, days are coming,’ declares the Lord, ‘when I will restore the fortunes of My people Israel and Judah.’ The Lord says, ‘I will also bring them back to the land that I gave to their forefathers, and they shall take possession of it.’” We know that promise would be fulfilled when the Messiah would come. 30:9  But they shall serve the Lord their God and David their king, whom I will raise up for them.” Anytime the prophets predicted a time when David would be the king of Israel, it is always figurative representing Jesus. When would that happen? 30:24 In the latter days you will understand this.” The phrase “the latter years” or “last days” predicted by the prophets always referred to the last days of the Jewish Age (from 30-70 AD). So Israel would be restored to their land before the end of the “latter years”, i.e. before 70 AD.

Another similar prediction: Ezekiel 36:24 For I will take you from the nations, and gather you from all the lands; and I will bring you into your own land.” When would that one be fulfilled? 36:27 And I will put My Spirit within you and bring it about that you walk in My statutes, and are careful and follow My ordinances. 28 And you will live in the land that I gave to your forefathers; so you will be My people, and I will be your God.” It would be fulfilled when God would pour out His Spirit on Israel. That was, again, in the last days of the Jewish Age beginning in Acts 2 when Joel’s prophecy of pouring out the Spirit on all believers in Jesus began to be fulfilled. The pouring out of the Spirit would continue throughout the 40 year last days from 30-70 AD. Anytime the prophets predicted the pouring out of the Spirit on Israel it always was predicting the pouring out of the miraculous in the last days of the Jewish Age from 30 to 70 AD. For example, Joel 2:38-32; Isaiah 44:3; Ezekiel 39:29. So the promise to bring Israel back to their land in Ezekiel 36:24 had to be fulfilled by 70 AD during the days of the pouring out of the miraculous Spirit on believers.

Another one: Ezekiel 37 and the valley of dry bones that come to life when God pours out His Spirit on them. Ezekiel 37:12 Therefore prophesy and say to them, ‘This is what the Lord God says: “Behold, I am going to open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves, My people; and I will bring you into the land of Israel. 13 Then you will know that I am the Lord, when I have opened your graves and caused you to come up out of your graves, My people. 14 And I will put My Spirit within you and you will come to life, and I will place you on your own land. Then you will know that I, the Lord, have spoken and done it,” declares the Lord.’” Again, Israel would be placed on their land when God would put His Spirit on them, which would be fulfilled in the last days. Ezekiel 37 ends with another “David will be their king” passage, which again as in Jeremiah 30:9 refers to Jesus. Ezekiel 37:24 “And My servant David will be king over them, and they will all have one shepherd; and they will walk in My ordinances, and keep My statutes and follow them. 25 And they will live on the land that I gave to My servant Jacob, in which your fathers lived; and they will live on it, they, and their sons and their sons’ sons, forever; and My servant David will be their leader forever. 26 And I will make a covenant of peace with them; it will be an everlasting covenant with them. And I will place them (i.e. place them on their land, 37:14) and multiply them, and set My sanctuary in their midst forever. 27 My dwelling place also will be among them; and I will be their God, and they will be My people. 28 And the nations will know that I am the Lord who sanctifies Israel, when My sanctuary is in their midst forever.”’”

Notice how all these predictions end with “I will be their God and they will be My people”. Ezekiel 37 adds a new prediction that God would set His sanctuary in their midst forever. Or Ezekiel 43:7“This is the place of my throne and the place of the soles of my feet, where I will dwell in the midst of the people of Israel forever.” The Hebrew word for sanctuary is miqdash or miqqedash: Sanctuary, holy place. It was used of the tabernacle in the wilderness and of the temple built by Solomon later. It was figuratively where God dwelt in the Holy of Holies although technically God dwells everywhere! The New Testament Greek equivalent of that word is naos: Temple, sanctuary and is used often of the 2nd temple that was still standing in Jerusalem when the New Testament books were written. This is the Greek word used twice in Revelation 21:22 I saw no temple (i.e. no physical temple) in it (i.e. in the New Jerusalem, the bride of Christ, the spiritual temple, the church), for the Lord God the Almighty and the Lamb are its temple (i.e. the dwelling of God in believers through the Holy Spirit makes them the new covenant spiritual temple). Paul says that the Spirit dwells in believers making them the temple of God, the dwelling place of God: 1 Corinthians 3:16 Do you not know that you are a temple of God (also 1 Corinthians 6:19). Another Greek equivalent for the Hebrew sanctuary is skéné: Tent, Tabernacle, Dwelling. That is the word used in Revelation 21:And I heard a loud voice from the throne, saying, “Behold, the tabernacle (skene) of God is among the people, and He will dwell (skenoo) among them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself will be among them. The Greek word for “dwell” is skénoó: To dwell, to tabernacle, to pitch a tent (derived from the word skene). That is the word for “dwell” in Revelation 21:3. It is the same word used in John 1:14 And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us.” Of course that refers to the Word Jesus making his dwelling or tabernacling among men for 30 years.

Technically, the tabernacle where God dwells is in heaven. That is where Jesus went into the Holy of Holies in heaven into the presence of the Father to offer His blood as the sacrifice for sins. Hebrews 8:1 Now the main point in what has been said is this: we have such a high priest, who has taken His seat at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens, a minister in the sanctuary and in the true tabernacle, which the Lord set up, not man.” The old tabernacle was a type of the real true tabernacle where God dwelt in heaven. Revelation 11:19 And the temple of God which is in heaven was opened; and the ark of His covenant appeared in His temple. Revelation 15:After these things I looked, and the temple of the tabernacle of testimony in heaven was opened,” So the true tabernacle or temple of God is in heaven where He dwells, but He set up a siritual temple or tabernacle or sanctuary on earth in the church where He dwells figuratively in believers.

The last Old Testament prediction of Israel being restored to their land is Amos 9:14 I will also restore the fortunes of My people Israel, and they will rebuild the desolated cities and live in them; They will also plant vineyards and drink their wine, and make gardens and eat their fruit. 15 I will also plant them on their land, and they will not be uprooted again from their land which I have given them,”says the Lord your God.” We know this was fulfilled by the time the Jerusalem conference met in Acts 15. Amos 9:11 also predicted, ““On that day I will raise up the fallen shelter of David.” In Acts 15:14-16 James says that the fallen tabernacle of David prophesy had been fulfilled by the time he spoke, allowing the Gentiles to enter the church. That would mean that Amos 9:14-15 had been fulfilled.

So my belief is that all the Old Testament prediction of Israel being restored to the land had been fulfilled in the first century by 70 AD. But Israel did not receive the promised land literally when the Messiah Jesus came. A million wicked Jews who rejected Jesus as the Messiah were killed by the Romans in 70 AD when they destroyed the temple and Jerusalem. So the predictions were not fulfilled literally by 70 AD, but they were fulfilled figuratively. How so? Again, notice the key words for what was promised Israel in the promised land of Canaan: security, rest, safety, peace, abundance. The believing remnant of the Jewish nation did receive a spiritual kingdom of security, rest, peace, spiritual blessings. The question might be, “Where did the Jewish church dwell?” What is this spiritual, figurative land that they received in the first century? In John 10 Jesus said, “27 My sheep listen to My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me; 28 and I give them eternal life, and they will never perish; and no one will snatch them out of My hand. 29 My Father, who has given them to Me, is greater than all; and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father’s hand. 30 I and the Father are one.” The believing remnant found peace, security, rest and spiritual blessings dwelling figuratively in the hands of Jesus and the Father.

A key in this discussion is recognizing that the prophets predicted that the believing remnant would get the land, and not the whole nation. The majority of the nation recieved judgment and death in 70 AD. Romans 9-11 deals with this issue. Paul argues that it might look like God did not fulfill His promises to Israel, but that He did fulfill all HIs promises. But the caveat was that he only made those Messianic spiritual promises to the remnant who would accept Jesus and not to the whole nation. Those Old Testament promises and predictions symbolized the Kingdom of God, spiritual rest, and the ultimate reward of eternal life.

So, in conclusion, the Old Testament predictions of Israel being restored to their land was not fulfilled, as many teach today, in1948 AD when the U.N. gave Israel statehood and a large portion of Palestine. There was no event that happened past 70 AD that fulfilled those predictions.

I close with a quote from Alex Polyak who has a great website called thebiblefulfilled.com (I highly recommend you go to that site and read his articles and watch his videos. “This video takes a deep dive into the biblical land promise to Abraham and shows from Scripture how that promise was already fulfilled in Israel’s history (Joshua 21:43-45 says that under Joshua’ leadership the Isreeal received “all the land God had promised them”) and ultimately completed in Jesus Christ. Many Christians today believe the modern return to Palestine in 1948 and future expansion of Israel’s borders are prophetic fulfillments—but the Bible itself tells a different story. By examining key passages from Genesis, Joshua, Nehemiah, Hebrews, and the New Testament, this teaching explains how Israel did receive the physical land (i.e. under Joshua), how that land served as a type and shadow, and how Christ brought believers into the true promised land—the heavenly Jerusalem and the spiritual rest promised to Abraham’s seed.”

I SAW IMAGES OF JESUS AND THE FATHER TODAY

I had a thought that encouraged me this morn. I’m on our back porch listening to some acapella praise songs and starting my prayer time. I’m looking out over a patio down the steps from the porch. On the back line of our lot here is a solid row of very tall evergreens that hide the houses behind our lot, so it feels a little like nature even though it is in a suburban subdivision. Above the evergreens I see the sky which is cloudy this morning with a slight chance for rain later today. I always start my prayer time picturing the throne scenes in Revelation 4 and 5. First, the angels and 4 living creatures are praising the Father on the throne. Then Jesus, the Lamb standing as if slain, appears at the right hand of the Father and the praise is directed toward the Son. The scene closes with praise for both the Father and the Son on the throne.

As I begin my prayer with those images, another image comes to mind. I can see the face of Jesus in those clouds above the evergreens. I don’t know what form Jesus has taken since he ascended to the Father’s right hand after the resurrection. But I assume that He can take any form He wants and appear to people today. Many converted Muslims claim to have seen Jesus as part of their conversion. How can I doubt that? So I see Jesus’ face in the clouds and he looks at me. He knows all the little secrets I am hiding from people. I can open up and confess those things, which is humbling, and ask forgiveness. That’s kinda like when Jesus was on trial in the high priest’s palace and Peter is outside warming up by the fire, denying 3 times that he even knows Jesus. Luke 22:61 In this verse, right after Peter denies Jesus for the third time and the rooster crows, the Bible notes: “The Lord turned and looked straight at Peter”. This gaze caused Peter to remember Jesus’ prophecy that he would deny Him three times, prompting Peter to leave the courtyard and weep bitterly. Only Luke records that and he got that from some eyewitness (Luke 1:1-4). I wonder who he got that very private information from. Luke wrote his gospel probably late 50’s AD, so maybe he got it from Peter who died in the mid 60’s. It is interesting that neither Matthew nor Mark record that moment. The critics say that Luke and Matthew copied a lot of their gospels from Mark, but here is something that Luke has that is not in Mark, which makes us think Luke did not copy from Mark. He did his own investigative reporting.

But as I look at the face of Jesus staring at me, it makes me think about what happened after He looked at Peter. Jesus would go from the high priest to Pilate and be crucified by 9 AM that morning. So the face of Jesus then fades off onto a cross in the back corner of our lot. I see him suffering and dying for my sins and it helps me focus on the things that really matter today as I go about my business and pleasure. But wait, another image appears in the sky while Jesus is on that cross on the back corner of my lot. It is the face of a white haired, ancient looking father figure, the Father. He looks at me, and then he looks at his Son Jesus on the cross, and then He looks back at me. I can see His tears of love for His Son and for me. I get the sense that He is telling me that He loves me and is in control and that I need to quit worrying about things all the time, that I need to trust Him, to “let go and let God”.

One last image this morning on my porch. I am kinda making up and adding a few images but the ones about the face of Jesus and the face of the Father were real to me this morning. One last image that I add is Jesus being taken off that cross, buried on the opposite corner in the back of the lot, and then I imagine Him being raised from the dead and ascending to the Father. So my images end with the face of the ascended Jesus looking at me now, which was the very first image I saw this morning, telling me to go find someone to love, to help, to share His story with. So that is what I am going to try to do.

I hope this helps you see the face of the Father and Son in your prayer life. Too often we just say words, even praise, but don’t see anything. It helps to see the Father and Son.

“TIME STATEMENTS” IN THE NEW TESTAMENT

I realize that my Bible interpretation of prophecies relies heavily on the “time statements”, such as “near”, “at. hand”, “soon”, mellot (“about to be “), etc. These time statements are made about the kingdom (the kingdom is “at hand” Mark 1:15), the 2nd coming of Jesus (James 5:8 the coming of the Lord is “near”), the “end of all things” is “at hand” (1 Peter 4:7), the events predicted in Revelation that included the coming of Jesus in the clouds in Revelation 1:7; 22:12,20) that will happen “soon” or “near (Revelation 1:1-3; 22:6-11), the 2nd coming that was “about to be” (mello, Matthew 16:27: Jesus even said that some of those listening to him would still be alive when that would happen), the destruction of the temple and the 2nd coming of Jesus would happen within the lifetime of that generation (Matthew 24:15,30-34). Another critical time limiting fulfillment passage is Luke 21:22 where Jesus said that all Old Testament Scripture would be fulfilled within that generation (Luke 21:32).

A common rebuttal is that “soon” could be soon in God’s time frame, which could be thousands of years or more. Often 2 Peter 3:8 “with the Lord a day is like a thousand years” is used to support that rebuttal. Or maybe even someone says, “soon” could be figurative. Of course, if that rebuttal is valid, then all of my interpretations of prophecies is not valid and scholars are free to understand the fulfillment of prophecies to be thousands of years after the first century. So how do I answer that rebuttal?

AI gives 2 very good logical reasons for arguing that the time statements should be taken as imminent in the lifetime of those to whom they were made:

The Audience Expectation or Relevance: Proponents argue that because New Testament authors—such as Paul, John, and Jesus himself—addressed their immediate, contemporary listeners, words denoting time must be read in a plain, human sense rather than as time-delay semantics.
The “This Generation” Debate: This interpretation leans heavily on statements like “this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened” (Matthew 24:34), viewing the prophecies as referring to specific, near-term events like the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in AD 70.”

Audgience Relevance: Passages like 2 Thessalonians 1 promise relief to Jewish Christians at the 2nd coming, and then 2 Thessalonians 2 goes on to say that the 2nd coming will occur within the lifetime of those reading that letter from Paul. What relevance is that promise if it never happened within their lifetime? Revelation 1:3 gives an urgency for the readers to read, hear, and keep the words of the prophecies in the book b/c “the time is near”. What relevance would that warning have to them if “shortly” could be thousands of years later? Mark 1:15 “Repent for the kingdom of heaven is ‘at hand’.” What was the urgency of repenting? B/c the kingdom was at hand. The coming of the church kingdom that began in Acts 2 in 30 AD with the baptism of 3,00. It would continue as the apostles preached the gospel to the entire Roman Empire from 30-70 AD. Those who repented and accepted Jesus as the Messiah during that transition period would receive eternal life, but those who rejected Him would be judged in 70 AD when the Romans killed one million wicked Jews when they destroyed the temple and the city of Jerusalem. That’s why Peter told those listening in Acts 2:40 “Be saved from this perverse generation.” James Stewart Russell in his book The Parousia keeps trying to get readers to examine every passage in light of audience relevance. What did it mean to those reading? What promises or warnings were specifically tied to the context?

This generation (the Greek word genea): Some want to translate this word as the “Jewish race” and say that Matthew 24:34 is just saying that “the Jewish race would not pass away till the predictions in Matthew 24 would be fulfilled”. But Strong’s says that the word genea means either 1) the period of about 30-33 years or 2) the people living together during that 30-33 years. Matthew 1 demonstrates the meaning of “generations” aa there are 42 generations from Abraham to Jesus, which was about 2,000 years. The word genea is used 43 times in the New Testament, and it always means the people living in a 40 year period or a time period of 40 years. Often he spoke of the “evil and perverse generation” of Jews living in the first century. Matthew 23:36 Truly I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation.” It is just like we use the word “generation” with the baby boomers, the X, or the Z generations. If that isn’t enough proof, Matthew 16:28 Jesus said that some would still be alive when he came in his kingdom (which would have to be the 70 AD 2nd coming). That fits the idea of His 2nd coming within that next 40 years after he made those predictions.

Why did early Christians expect the 2nd coming to happen within their lifetime? James Stewart Russell said in The Parousia that it is obvious to anyone who reads the New Testament with an open mind that the early Christians expected Jesus to return within their lifetime. “Why did they they expect that? B/c Jesus and the apostles told them to expect that!” If Jesus’ 2nd coming did not happen within their lifetime then Jesus was a false prophet, which is exactly what atheist, Muslims, and unbelieving Jews say about Jesus.

Maybe He did predict an imminent 2nd coming but “delayed” it? That is a common teaching among those who will at least admit that Jesus did predict an imminent 2nd coming, but don’t believe that the 2nd coming fulfilled that in 70 AD. They say that he delayed that predicted imminent 2nd coming. In the late first century and 2nd century many Christians living then still thought that Jesus’ delayed 2nd coming would still happen in their lifetime, but that 2nd century 2nd coming did not happen. But there are no passages suggesting a delay in the fulfillment of the prediction of an imminent first century 2nd coming. To the contrary, Hebrews 10:37 refutes any delay in the 2nd coming: “For yet in a very little while, He who is coming will come, and will not delay.” Others say that His teachings were intentionally ambiguous to foster readiness rather than precise date-setting. But his predictions clearly stated a time limitation for the 2nd coming. He did not give a precise date, such as August, 70 AD, but He did set a limit of one generation or 40 years for that 2nd coming to happen. He obviously did not set a precise date b/c people would try to take advantage of that by continuing to live in sin up until 70 AD and then repent right before the precise date. Others try to use 2 Peter 3 to say that Jesus delayed his predicted imminent 2nd coming to give more time for people to repent. 2 Peter 3:The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not willing for any to perish, but for all to come to repentance.” By about 62 AD when 2 Peter 3 was written, some were mocking the predicted imminent 2nd coming had not happened yet. Peter explained that any slowness to fulfill that prediction was to give more people time to repent, but he never said that the 2nd coming would not be within that generation or that Jesus was delaying his prediction. Jesus’ 2nd coming would be about 8 years later in 70 AD which would still make it within their lifetime.

I have taught a lot of math in times past. Suppose I tell my math students, “You need to do your homework and study hard each night b/c you are going to have a test soon.” Isn’t it obvious that soon would be soon in their time frame or else the warning would have no relevance to them? That same logic would apply to the time statements on predicted prophecies in the New Testament. I hope this article shows why time statements must be taken at face value.