This is the final installment of our series
entitled Seven Things You Have To Know To Understand End Times
Prophecy. It begins with item five on our list of seven.
5) Conditions Surrounding The 2nd Coming
A couple of days before He was arrested,
Jesus had a private conversation with four of His disciples, His
inner circle. They were Peter and Andrew, and James and John,
two pair of brothers. The purpose of the conversation was to
answer questions they had asked Him about the 2nd Coming and the
End of the Age. They were confused because according to the
prophecy of Daniel 9:24-27 these events were only seven years
away, and yet Jesus had just told them the Temple and all the
surrounding buildings would be torn down so completely that not
one stone would be left standing on another.
He had told the crowds the same thing on Palm Sunday and
said it was going to happen because the nation hadn’t recognized
the time of His coming to them (Luke 19:44).
His response to the disciples’ questions is
contained in Matt. 24-25, Mark 13, andLuke 21.
Theologians call it the Olivet Discourse because the
conversation took place on the
Mt.
of Olives.
For this study, we’ll only summarize it, focusing on the
parts that help us identify what the Lord had to say about the
conditions surrounding the 2nd Coming.
In Matthew’s account, the most detailed,
Jesus included several specific geographic and time references
in His answer. He
did this so His readers wouldn’t get confused as to who and when
He was talking about.
Having commanded us to understand this passage in Matt.
24:15, He wanted to make sure we got it right.
We’ll use these references to get a clear understanding
of His target audience and the timing of events.
His answer to their questions begins in
Matt. 24:4 with a general overview.
He said false Messiahs would deceive many and that there
would be wars and rumors of war, but they wouldn’t be signaling
the end. He
characterized them, along with famines and earthquakes in
various places, as the beginning of birth pangs.
Birth pangs tell an expectant mother the labor and
delivery are coming, but don’t say exactly when they’ll take
place. It’s the same
with these signs.
He said they (the Jews) would be persecuted
and put to death and hated by all nations, causing many to turn
away from the faith and even betray each other, but those who
stand firm to the end would be saved. Then He finished His
summary in Matt. 24:14, saying the gospel would be preached in
all nations and then the end would come.
(According to Rev. 14:6-7, this prophecy will be
fulfilled by an angel shortly after the Great Tribulation
begins.)
“So when you see standing in the holy place
‘the abomination that causes desolation,’ spoken of through the
prophet Daniel—let the reader understand— then let those who are
in Judea flee to the mountains. (Matt. 24:15-16)
These two verses give us the first specific
clues as to both the intended audience and the timing of His
answer. The
Holy Place is the Jewish Temple and
as we learned in Part 2, the abomination that causes desolation
is a specific defilement that makes it unfit for further use.
The last
Temple to stand in Israel was destroyed in 70 AD before
this prophecy could be fulfilled.
The nation itself ceased to exist about 135 AD and didn’t
reappear until 1948. But because there’s still no
Temple
there, the prophecy remains unfulfilled.
Also it’s directed to those who are in Judea, the
Biblical name for Israel. The Lord
was warning people in Israel
who will be alive when a
Temple
is being built there to watch for this, and when they see it to
flee immediately.
Pray that your flight will not take place
in Winter or on the Sabbath. For then there will be a great
tribulation, such as has not occurred since the beginning of the
world until now, nor ever will. (Matt. 24:20-21)
The mountains of Judea
are treacherous in the winter, and
Jews are forbidden under the Law to travel more than 1000
paces on the Sabbath for any reason. This confirms that the
warning is intended for latter-day Israel, back in
its Old Covenant relationship at the beginning of the Great
Tribulation, 3½ years from the Second Coming. The Church will
already be gone.
Then in Matt 24:29 He said that immediately
after the tribulation ends, the sun will be darkened, and the
moon will not give its light; the stars will fall from the sky,
and the heavenly bodies will be shaken. When they see these
signs they’ll know that The Great Tribulation has ended.
Matt 24:30 has people on Earth seeing the
Sign of the Son of Man in the sky, and then His visible return
to Earth with power and great glory. This will cause all the
peoples of the Earth to mourn.
It’s now too late for them to be saved and they
intuitively realize it. This is the Lord’s Second Coming.
Matt 24:36 begins with “No one knows about
that day or hour …” What day? What hour? According to Matt.
24:37 and 39 it’s the day and hour of the Second Coming.
Remember to stay in context. That’s been His subject since verse
30. I believe the reason He said “day or hour” is so we would
know for sure that He was talking about the actual day and hour
of His Coming, not the general time.
The specific timing of the 2nd coming is shrouded in
mystery. No less
than 4 times within a span of 27 verses Jesus said the people
alive on Earth at the time will not know the day or hour of His
coming in advance (Matt. 24:36, 42-44, 50, Matt. 25:13).
In fact the only time He used the day and hour phrase was
in conjunction with His 2nd Coming.
This lends support to the idea that the 2nd
Coming will likely take place on the Feast of Trumpets.
It was called the feast where no one knows the day or
hour because it came on a new moon, which was very difficult to
see in the night skies.
Add to that the fact that immediately after the Great
Tribulation the Moon will go dark entirely (Matt. 24:29) and it
makes a difficult
task all but impossible.
Matt 25 begins with the phrase “At that
time, …” which is the time immediately following the 2nd Coming,
and contains three illustrations the Lord used to describe
judgments He’ll conduct after He returns.
I’ll just high light what they reveal about the identity
of their intended recipients.
The Parable of 10 Virgins
The first one is the Parable of 10 Virgins
(Matt. 25:1-13). It’s a story about 10 young women waiting for a
bridegroom to come.
All have oil lamps but because they’ve been waiting a long time,
five have run out of oil and are trying to buy more when he
arrives. Lacking oil they’re denied entry into the Wedding
Banquet. This
parable is sometimes used to illustrate the precarious position
of “backsliders” in the Church, but even if you disregard the
problem with timing almost everything about that interpretation
is wrong.
First, if oil is being used symbolically
here, as I believe it is, then the principle of Expositional
Constancy demands that it represent the Holy Spirit. This
principle says that when things are used symbolically in
Scripture, the symbolic use is consistent.
For example yeast (leaven) always symbolizes sin, and oil
always symbolizes the Holy Spirit.
Can the Church lose the Holy Spirit, or exhaust our
supply of Him? Ephesians 1:13 and 2 Cor. 1:21-22 both say that
the Holy Spirit has been sealed within us as a guarantee of our
inheritance, and that it happened solely because we believed the
Gospel message. There’s nothing anyone anywhere can do to change
that.
But no such guarantee is indicated for
Tribulation believers. In fact Rev. 16:15specifically warns them
to stay awake and maintain their righteousness, symbolized by
keeping their clothes with them. (Clothing is often used to
represent righteousness, as inIsaiah 61:10). Rev. 16:15 implies
that Tribulation believers are responsible for remaining
steadfast in their faith to avoid losing their salvation. Matt.
25:8 agrees, telling us that all 10 virgins had oil in their
lamps at the beginning, but the five foolish ones didn’t have
enough to carry them through. Remember, all 10 virgins are
caught sleeping when He returns.
It’s the oil that distinguishes one group from the other,
not their behavior.
Second,
these 10 women are called virgins or
bridesmaids, but never the Bride. Conversely, the Church
is the Bride, and is never called a bridesmaid! And when did you
ever hear of a bride having to plead with the groom for
admission to her own wedding banquet?
Third, it looks like these young women are
trying to get into the Seudas Mitzvah (wedding feast) a banquet
that follows the wedding ceremony.
If so, none of them made it to the actual marriage
ceremony, oil or not, so none of them can be the bride. In fact
there’s no bride mentioned anywhere in this parable.
These virgins aren’t the Church. They
represent Tribulation survivors trying to get into the
Millennial
Kingdom. Five were saved
in the time between the Rapture and the end of the Great
Tribulation (signified by the oil), remained steadfast, and are
welcomed in. The five without oil when He arrived did not remain
steadfast and lost their place.
This parable teaches that the Lord’s return
signals the deadline after which even the request to be saved
and receive the Holy Spirit will be denied. The door to the
Kingdom will be closed, and the Lord will deny knowing those
who’ve come too late.
The Parable Of The Talents
In Matt 25:14, at the beginning of the
Parable of the Talents, the word “again” means he’s giving
another illustration from the same time period as the parable of
the 10 Virgins, the Day of His Coming.
Though our use of talent as being a gift or
ability derives from this parable, a talent was a Greek unit of
measure, usually monetary.
The key to interpreting a parable is knowing that
everything is symbolic of something else, so in this parable a
talent represents something valuable to the Lord that he wished
to have invested on His behalf.
Upon his return, He asks those to whom he had entrusted
it what they’ve accomplished.
Those who teach that the talents are gifts
given to the Church to be used wisely, producing a measurable
return, haven’t read the last verse of the parable. The servant
who buried his talent in the ground and produced nothing with it
was thrown into the outer darkness, the destiny of unbelievers.
Is the Lord teaching a works based salvation here?
Threatening us with the loss of our salvation if we don’t
produce enough with the gifts He gave us?
Of course not.
Reading the Bible, it’s clear that money
isn’t important to the Lord. But Psalm 138:2says that He values
His Word above all else. I believe the talents represent His
Word. Those who sow it into the hearts of others find that it
multiplies in new believers. Those who study it find that their
own understanding grows, multiplying their faith.
But those who ignore His word find that
it’s like burying it in the ground. Out of sight, out of mind,
until what little they began with is lost to them. This proves
it never held any value for them, and condemns them as
unbelievers, to be cast into the outer darkness. They had heard
the truth and ignored it. Now it’s too late. In 2 Thes. 2:10
Paul describes them as those who perish because they refused to
love the Truth and so be saved. Some will bear the further
responsibility of having led their followers astray by their
refusal to teach the truth.
In His Word, the Lord laid out every action
He would take regarding His plan for Planet Earth. “Surely the
Sovereign LORD does nothing without revealing his plan to his
servants the prophets,” He said (Amos 3:7).
He did this so man would never have to wonder what He was
up to. And where the End of the Age is concerned He had more to
say than about any other subject. No one can plead ignorance.
Again the point is that some who survive the Great Tribulation
will be welcomed in to the Kingdom and some won’t, and faith is
the determining factor.
The Sheep And Goat Judgment
Matt. 25:31 leaves no doubt as to its
timing. It begins
“When the Son of Man comes … ” and goes on to talk about the
Lord setting up His throne on Earth after His return for the
judgment of the nations, actually a judgment of Gentile
tribulation survivors. The Lord doesn’t judge nations in the
eternal sense, only individuals. The Greek word here is ethnos,
and means “people of every kind.” They’ll be judged by how they
treated “His brothers” during the Great Tribulation. It’s called
the Sheep and Goat judgment, with the sheep being those who
helped His brothers through the horrific times just past and
goats being those who didn’t.
Some say His brothers are believers,
whether Jew or Gentile, and others say they’re specifically
Jews, but the most important point is that these tribulation
survivors aren’t being judged by their works. Their works are
being cited as evidence of their faith, as inJames 2:18. To give
aid to a believer, especially a Jew, during the Great
Tribulation will take even more courage than it did in Hitler’s
Germany, and according to some
will be an offense punishable by death. Only a follower of
Jesus, certain of His eternal destiny, would dare do it or even
want to. Those who helped “His brothers” will have demonstrated
their faith by their works and will be ushered live into the
Kingdom. Those who refused to help will have condemned
themselves to the outer darkness by this evidence of their lack
of faith.
All three illustrations teach the same
lesson. Surviving believers go live into the Kingdom. Some will
have relied exclusively on the Holy Spirit’s gift of faith, as
in the Parable of the 10 Virgins. Others will have multiplied
their faith by studying and sharing His word, as in the Parable
of the Talents. Still others have put their faith into action,
risking their lives in the bargain. They’re the Sheep of the
Sheep and Goat Judgment. But just like it’s been throughout
history, all are saved by faith.
Where’s The Rapture?
The Sheep and Goat judgment is actually an
expansion of Matt. 24: 40-41 “One taken and the other left … ”
Because of the timing problem, these verses can’t be describing
the Rapture. But there’s more.
The Greek word translated taken in verses 40 and 41 means
“received.” Captains choosing up sides in a sandlot baseball
game point to someone and say, “I’ll take you.” It means, “Come
over here. You’re on my team.” No problem so far, the Lord is
taking some but not others.
But the primary meaning of the word
translated left is “to send away” as a divorcing husband would
“send away” his wife. In those days wives had no rights and
except in very unusual circumstances didn’t own property. The
marriage home was the husband’s property, usually built on his
family’s land. If he divorced his wife, he sent her away to live
somewhere else, excluding her from his presence. Unbelievers
won’t be sent away in this manner at the Rapture. They’ll be
left in place to endure the judgments.
This passage isn’t describing the Rapture.
The timing, the context, and the disposition of the parties are
all wrong. It’s a summary of the Sheep and Goat judgment. Those
taken (received) go live into the Kingdom in their natural
bodies and help to re-populate the Earth, while those left (sent
away) are put into the Outer Darkness, forever banned from the
presence of God.
As it was in the days of Noah so shall it
be at the coming of the Son of Man (Matt. 24:37) Let’s back up
now and address this overview statement. In the days of Noah the
people of Earth could be separated into three groups. There were
the unbelievers who perished in the Flood, Noah and his family,
who were preserved through the Flood, and Enoch who was taken
from Earth before the Flood. (Enoch was translated in Genesis 5.
That means that God took him live into Heaven. The Flood came in
Genesis 6.)
In The Time Of The 2nd Coming the people of
Earth will also fall into three groups.
The unbelieving world will perish in the End Times
judgments, Israel will be preserved through the
judgments, and The Church will be taken from Earth before the
judgments.
There are some interesting similarities
between Enoch and the Church. His name means “teaching,” one of
the primary roles of the Church. Jewish tradition holds that
Enoch was born on the 6th day of Sivan.
The 6th of Sivan is the day in the Hebrew Calendar on
which the Feast of Pentecost is celebrated. It’s the day the
Church was born. I
think Enoch makes a good model of the Church. But you say,
“Enoch was only one body.”
So is the Church.
At the 2nd Coming the door to salvation
will be closed. The
surviving people of Earth will be judged and those who’ve become
believers will be welcomed into the Kingdom.
Unbelievers will be taken off the planet, deprived of the
Lord’s presence forever.
They wanted the Lord out of their lives, and now they’ll
get what they wanted.
6) The Duration and Purpose of the
Millennium
Like rapture and Lucifer, millennium is a
word of Latin origin and doesn’t appear any where in the
Scriptures. We get it from two Latin words, mille, or 1000, and
annum, or year, from the Latin translation of Rev. 20:6.
Mille annum, millennium, the Lord’s 1000-year reign on
Earth, is known to Israel as the Kingdom Age. It’s the
seventh and final thousand years of the Age of Man, begun with
the birth of Adam. It’s often confused with Eternity, but as we
saw earlier the two are distinct. A Millennium is obviously a
defined span of time, while by definition Eternity is the
absence of time as we know it.
The Millennium On Earth
During the Millennium, the Lord will be
King of Heaven and Earth, Earth being restored to the condition
it was in when Adam was created. This will include restoring
peace between man and the animals, bringing back Earth’s
original garden-like environment with its world wide
sub-tropical climate, eliminating foul weather, killer storms,
earthquakes and extremes of heat and cold. The span of man’s
life will begin increasing again to equal those of the Genesis
patriarchs. Sickness and disease, those by-products of sin, will
be greatly reduced. It appears the population of Earth will be
sustained by the return to an agrarian economy, but with all the
obstacles Adam faced gone as the curse of Genesis 3 is finally
lifted. Man will easily produce enough for his family’s use, and
enjoy doing it. None will labor unproductively, or primarily for
the benefit of others. Children will grow up without fear and
adults will grow old in peace. (A summary of Isaiah 2:1-5,
4:2-6, 35, 41:18-20, 60:10-22, 65:17-25, Micah 4:1-8)
Since Earth will be re-populated mostly by
Tribulation survivors in their natural bodies, there will still
be sin although to a much lesser extent, especially at the
beginning. In the so-called Millennial Temple
in Israel,
priests will conduct daily sacrifices for sin, just like in Old
Testament days. But while Old Testament believers observed Temple sacrifices to learn what the Messiah
would one day do for them, Millennial believers will observe
them to remember, and their children to learn, what He’s already
done. (Ezek 40-47)
The Lord will reign supreme on Earth as
King and High Priest, the head of both a one-world government
and a one-world religion. He’ll brook no threats to His
established peace, nor any deviation from His doctrine. (Psalm
2)
At the beginning, only believers will
inhabit Earth, enjoying the truly utopian environment that
mankind has always dreamed about, but only God can create.
They’ll soon begin bearing children who, as they mature, will
have to choose to receive the Lord’s pardon just as we have. And
as it is today some will reject Him to go their own way. By the
time Satan is released at the end of the Millennium, there will
be so many who’ve rejected the Lord that he’ll quickly find a
huge army of recruits for his final attempt to kick the Lord off
the planet.
But with fire from Heaven the Lord will
destroy Satan’s army, casting him into the
Lake
of Fire,
where he’ll be tormented day and night forever. Never again will
he or any of his accomplices be free to afflict God’s people.
(Rev. 20:7-10)
How Did That Happen?
What began as an age of unimagined peace
and prosperity will have ended in open warfare against the very
King who made it possible. How could this be?
Before the Millennium, man had three
excuses for his inability to please God. The first was Satan,
whose clever schemes led man astray. But all during the
Millennium, Satan will be bound in darkness.
The second was the bad influence of
unbelievers. But as the Millennium begins, Earth will have been
cleansed of all its unbelievers. Only those who had given their
hearts to the Lord will be allowed to enter the Kingdom.
And the third was God’s absence from our
midst. For 2600 years, with the exception of one 33 year period,
God will have been absent from the planet leaving man to “fend
for himself.” But all during the Millennium Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit will have dwelt in the midst of the people of Earth.
What’s the point?
In the Millennium, Earth dwellers will live
in the ideal circumstances that Adam and Eve enjoyed in the
Garden of Eden. The
curse will be gone and the Lord will be there among them,
everyone’s a believer and Satan will be bound. And yet, there’s
enough residual sin in the hearts of unregenerate man that he’ll
rebel the first chance he gets. Sinful man cannot dwell in the
presence of a Holy God, being unable to keep His commandments.
He needs a Savior and Redeemer to reconcile him to God,
and a heart transplant to cure him of his sin nature. The whole
point of the Millennium is to prove once and for all that man’s
heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure (Jere. 17:9)
making it impossible for him to live in a manner pleasing to
God.
The Millennium In the New Jerusalem
Life is far different in the Home of the Redeemed Church.
Although the Kings of the Earth bring us their splendor,
no unbeliever can ever set foot in the place, nor even a
believer in his natural state. Our mansions in the sky are built
of the purest gold as are the streets that run before them,
their foundations made from precious stones. There’s no
Temple in the New Jerusalem because the Lamb of God
dwells there and is our Temple. The energy source that lights and
warms us is the Glory of God, and our radiance in turn provides
light for the nations of Earth.(Rev.21:9-27)
Our glorified bodies will have been
released from their dimensional bonds, allowing us to appear and
disappear at will, traveling back and forth through time at the
speed of thought as we plumb the limitless delights of God’s
Creation. No detail has been overlooked where our comfort and
happiness are concerned. There’s no more death or mourning or
crying or pain, only the endless joys of exploration and
discovery. As it is written: “No eye has seen, no ear has heard,
no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love
him.” (1 Cor. 2:9)
Our home is not on Earth, but it’s not at
the Throne of God either. Coming down out of the heavens but
never landing on Earth, our home could be called a low orbit
satellite in today’s terminology. 1400 miles high, wide and
deep, it wouldn’t fit in Israel,
let alone Jerusalem.
If we did touch down on Earth we’d need a space equivalent to
the area from Maine to Florida to the
Midwest, or all of Western Europe from
Sweden
to Italy,
and the New Jerusalem will be over 4000 times as tall as the
world’s tallest building. Nearly 2/3rds the size of the Moon, it
simply won’t fit anywhere on Earth.
The Church has been described as the Pearl
of Great Price. A pearl is created in the ocean and grows as a
response to an irritant. It’s the only precious gem to come from
a living organism. At harvest time, it’s removed from its
natural habitat to be placed in a custom made setting where it
becomes an object of adornment.
And so it is with the Church. Created from
among the Gentile nations, the Church was a major irritant to
both Israel
and the Roman Empire. Though
hundreds of years of persecution were intended for our
destruction, we grew steadily. At the harvest we’ll be taken
from Earth to be placed in mansions the Lord has built
especially for us, to become the object of His adornment.
7)
Eternity
I can’t say much about eternity except to
tell you that there is one. The Bible ends at the end of the
Millennium, yet teaches us that every one ever born lives
forever. The question is not whether you have eternal life. The
question is where you will spend eternity. There are only two
possible destinations and we’ve described them both. Eternal
bliss in the presence of God, or eternal shame and punishment
banished from the presence of God. While God is patient, not
desiring that any should be lost, it’s not His decision to make.
He’s given it to you, knowing that without an alternative, your
choice to accept Him
would be meaningless. He loves you enough to risk that you’ll
make the wrong decision, and enough to abide by your wishes if
you do.
Don’t get me wrong. No one would knowingly
choose to go to a place of eternal torment. But many will wind
up there. When they do it’ll be because they refused to choose
Heaven, and it’s the only other alternative.
Here then are Seven Things you Have To Know
To Understand End Times Prophecy. Mastering them will allow you
to successfully avoid all the heresy and false teaching that
swirls about in these last days. The study of prophecy is not a
salvation issue, but the Lord did admonish us on several
occasions to understand the signs of the times so we wouldn’t be
caught off guard. We are to watch with expectation and wait with
certainty.
In Revelation 1:3 we’re promised blessings
for our diligent study, and in 2 Timothy 4:8a crown for longing
for His appearing. But to me the greatest gift that comes from
studying prophecy is the strengthening of our faith. Nothing can
equal watching the Word of God proceed from abstract to concrete
as we see Bible Prophecy fulfilled before our very eyes. If you
listen carefully, you can almost hear the Footsteps of the
Messiah. 07-23-11