At this time I am
only dealing with
chapter twenty-four
of Matthew.
Prior to speaking
with His disciples
privately on the
Mount of Olives
in Matthew chapter
24, Jesus had
already blistered
the scribes and
Pharisees in chapter
23 for being so
spiritually blind
and legalistic. At
the close of chapter
23, He says,
“36Verily
I say unto you, All
these things shall
come upon this
generation.
37O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the
prophets, and
stonest them which
are sent unto thee,
how often would I
have gathered thy
children together,
even as a hen
gathereth her
chickens under her
wings, and ye would
not!
38Behold, your house is left unto you desolate.
39For I say unto you, Ye shall not see me henceforth,
till ye shall say,
Blessed is he that
cometh in the name
of the Lord.” (Matthew 23:36-39)
There is no way you
and I can know the
agony Jesus must
have felt at that
time.
These very people
had been given their
heritage many years
ago by God. He had
begun their lineage
with Abraham and
Sarah. They had
always longed to see
their Messiah
promised by the
prophets, but when
He came, they did
not know Him. I do
believe some knew
who He was, but
would not accept
Him. Several of
these men had gained
a position of wealth
and power and were
not about to give it
up for anyone. I
believe that
Caiaphas was one who
knew, or at least
suspected, but
wasn’t about to give
up his position of
wealth, prestige and
authority. Not only
that, Jesus knows
that very shortly
they will assist in
having Him horribly
beaten and murdered.
He looks ahead a few
years, and sees
Jerusalem,
the beloved city,
destroyed in 70 A.D.
and His people
scattered to the far
corners of the
earth, taken away
from the land they
love. He looks on
down the corridors
of time and sees
them slaughtered by
despots, such as
Hitler in recent
years.
He remembers His
words to them by the
prophet Amos,
“18Woe
unto you that desire
the day of the LORD!
to what end is it
for you? the day of
the LORD is
darkness, and not
light.
19As if a man did flee from a lion, and a bear met
him; or went into
the house, and
leaned his hand on
the wall, and a
serpent bit him.
20Shall not the day of the LORD be darkness, and not
light? even very
dark, and no
brightness in it?”
(Amos 5:18-20)
They have missed His
first coming, and
long for the second,
not knowing they
have rejected their
Messiah, what lies
ahead for them, and
especially what the
day of the LORD
entails when He
returns.
Now on the Mount of
Olives He informs
His disciples, soon
to be apostles, of Israel’s future. They had to be
downcast when Jesus
told them that His
kingdom would be
postponed and the
temple destroyed and
abandoned. Not
wanting to believe
such a thing, they
showed Him the
grandeur of the
temple courtyard,
but Jesus explained
to them that “…There shall not be left here one stone upon another, that shall
not be thrown down.”
(Matthew 24:2)
On that
Mount of Olives,
the disciples asked
Him three questions:
(Matthew 24:3)
1.
When will these
things happen (the
destruction of
Jerusalem)?
a.
Answered in Luke
21:20-24 (and parts
of Mark)
2.
What will be the
sign of your return?
a.
Answered in Matthew
24:27-51
3.
What will be the
sign of the end of
the age?
a.
Answered in Matthew
24:4-26
i.
Church
Age/Tribulation
(Matthew 24:4-8) –
Beginning of Sorrows
ii.
Tribulation (Matthew
24:9-14)
iii.
Great Tribulation
(Matthew 24:15-26)
To understand this
discourse of Jesus
to His disciples, we
must keep in mind
that He is speaking
to the Jews, not the
Church. There is
always an
“application” for
the Church, as there
is in most every
other area of the
Bible, but this
message is directly
for the Jews. One
point of interest
is, Matthew did not
record the first
question (When will
these things happen?
– the destruction of Jerusalem), but Luke did. Now why is that?
Matthew portrays
Jesus as the Messiah
King.
Mark portrays Him as
the Suffering
Servant.
Luke portrays Him as
the perfect man, Son
of Man.
John shows Jesus as
God in the flesh.
Matthew includes
questions two and
three because they
are about the future Kingdom of Christ
which immediately
follows the end of
the Tribulation.
Jesus is seen as
King, and will set
up His kingdom.
Luke records
question one,
because it concerned
Christ’s presence on
earth either
physically or by His
Spirit, before the
Rapture, Tribulation
and Kingdom age. So
in Luke, Jesus is
seen as the Son of
Man. He returns as
the Son of God.
Mark, in a few
areas, records
question one,
because it also
covered Christ’s
presence on earth.
In Mark He is seen
as the Suffering
Servant, but when He
returns, He will not
be the suffering
Servant, but Judge
and King.
QUESTION NUMBER ONE
(1) – When will
these things happen?
(Luke 21:20-24)
As you recall,
the disciples had
just finished
admiring the temple
buildings that Herod
was erecting. It was
a massive and
beautiful complex.
They were in such
awe of the
structures as they
pointed them out to
Jesus, but He
answered them, “2And
Jesus said unto
them, See ye not all
these things? verily
I say unto you,
There shall not be
left here one stone
upon another, that
shall not be thrown
down."
(Matthew 24:2) So
they first asked,
“3…Tell
us, when shall these
things be? and what
shall be the sign of
thy coming, and of
the end of the
world?”
(Matthew 24:3)
Tiberius Julius
Alexander, second in
command under
Emperor Titus, in 70
A.D., totally
obliterated the
second temple of the
Jews, built by Herod
the Great. Not one
stone was left upon
another.
Jerusalem
was ransacked and
destroyed even more
devastatingly that
when Nebuchadnezzar
destroyed it in 586
B.C. Luke 21:20
describes the
devastation.
“20And when ye shall see
Jerusalem compassed
with armies, then
know that the
desolation thereof
is nigh.
21Then let them which are in Judaea flee to the
mountains; and let
them which are in
the midst of it
depart out; and let
not them that are in
the countries enter
thereinto.
22For these be the days of vengeance, that all things
which are written
may be fulfilled.
23But woe unto them that are with child, and to them
that give suck, in
those days! for
there shall be great
distress in the
land, and wrath upon
this people.
24And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and
shall be led away
captive into all
nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the
Gentiles, until the
times of the
Gentiles be
fulfilled.”
In 73 A.D., 1,000
starving men, women
and children
committed suicide
rather than
surrender to the
Roman army who had
besieged them at
Masada
for two years prior.
The Romans then
destroyed
Jerusalem,
annexed Judaea as a
Roman province, and
drove the remaining
Jews out to areas
such as Africa, Asia
and
Europe.
Since 73 A.D. the
Jewish people have
not lived in their
land, but have been
scattered all over
the world, until
Christ brought them
back and
re-established them
as a nation on May
14, 1948. From the
time they were
removed from their
home land and
scattered throughout
the world, to them
coming together as a
nation, 1,875 years
passed. Since 1948
sixty-three years
have passed as of
today, and soon the
times of the
Gentiles will be
fulfilled.
NEXT TWO QUESTIONS
The next two
questions are: (1)
What will be the
sign of your coming?
And (2), what will
be the sign of the
end of the age?
Jesus answers these
two questions
chronologically
instead of the order
they were asked, and
this makes perfect
sense, because the
age would end prior
to Christ’s return.
So Jesus picks up on
question three and
then goes to
question number two,
since that is the
order they fall.
QUESTION NUMBER
THREE (3) – What
will be the sign of
the end of the age?
(Matthew 24:4-26)
Matthew 24:4-8
describes the
beginning of
sorrows.
“ 4And
Jesus answered and
said unto them, Take
heed that no man
deceive you.
5For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ;
and shall deceive
many.
6And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see
that ye be not
troubled: for all
these things must
come to pass, but
the end is not yet.
7For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom
against kingdom: and
there shall be
famines, and
pestilences, and
earthquakes, in
divers places.
8All these are the beginning of sorrows.”
I personally believe
that these signs are
applicable to the
Church age, but more
particularly the
beginning of the
Tribulation period.
Notice, especially
concerning the
Church age, that
Jesus says, “But all
these things are
merely the beginning
of birth pangs.”
Again, it is my
opinion, but I feel
we are getting a
glimpse of the birth
pains. We are at the
very beginning, as
they keep increasing
in occurrence and
severity. Soon, the
times of the
Gentiles will be
fulfilled, then the
Creator God will be
ready, the water
will break and there
will be a ride to
the delivery room
the likes of which
the world will never
forget. This will be
the most painful
birth to ever occur,
as it increases its
stay in the delivery
room of the
Tribulation through
the next seven
years.
Matthew 24:9-14
describes the first
3 ½ years of the
Tribulation.
At this point, the
bride of Christ, the
Church has been
removed via the
Rapture, and the
Tribulation has
begun.
“9Then shall they deliver you
up to be afflicted,
and shall kill you:
and ye shall be
hated of all nations
for my name's sake.
10And then shall many be offended, and shall betray
one another, and
shall hate one
another.
11And many false prophets shall rise, and shall
deceive many.
12And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many
shall wax cold.
13But he that shall endure unto the end, the same
shall be saved.
14And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in
all the world for a
witness unto all
nations; and then
shall the end come.”
Over the past
many years, we can
document many times
Israel
has suffered because
of hate from others.
As a nation today,
they have fallen
away and yet do not
realize the true
identity of their
Messiah. Lawlessness
has certainly
increased, even
exploded in our
time, and few have
any love for God.
The next two
verses, verses
thirteen and
fourteen, are often
misunderstood,
because we equate
them to our time.
They are not for us.
Remember, Jesus is
telling them how it
will be during the
Tribulation, for the
Jews in particular.
Those who endure to
the end, in the
Tribulation, will be
saved, and the
Gospel will be
preached to the
whole world, during
the Tribulation, by
the 144,000 Jews,
the two witnesses,
and in particular
the angel in
Revelation 14:6.
Think about this.
There are no signs
for the Rapture.
Yet, we are seeing
signs that are for
the period after the
Rapture, the
Tribulation.
I believe
“endurance” is
brought up by Jesus,
because of the
severity of those
days to come. You
and I may read about
the future events of
that day, but do we
really comprehend
just how bad it will
be? I don’t think we
really do.
It is also
admirable that
anyone would want to
spread the Gospel to
the whole world
today, but that is
not a pre-requisite
for the Rapture. It
is a point of fact
for the Tribulation.
Matthew 24:15-26
describes the last 3
½ years of the
Tribulation.
“ 15When
ye therefore shall
see the abomination
of desolation,
spoken of by Daniel
the prophet, stand
in the holy place,
(whoso readeth, let
him understand:)
16Then let them which be in
Judaea
flee into the
mountains:
17Let him which is on the housetop not come down to
take any thing out
of his house:
18Neither let him which is in the field return back
to take his clothes.
19And woe unto them that are with child, and to them
that give suck in
those days!
20But pray ye that your flight be not in the winter,
neither on the
sabbath day:
21For then shall be great tribulation, such as was
not since the
beginning of the
world to this time,
no, nor ever shall
be.
22And except those days should be shortened, there
should no flesh be
saved: but for the
elect's sake those
days shall be
shortened.
23Then if any man shall say unto you, Lo, here is
Christ, or there;
believe it not.
24For there shall arise false Christs, and false
prophets, and shall
shew great signs and
wonders; insomuch
that, if it were
possible, they shall
deceive the very
elect.
25Behold, I have told you before.
26Wherefore if they shall say unto you, Behold, he is
in the desert; go
not forth: behold,
he is in the secret
chambers; believe it
not.”
At this point, Jesus
is speaking of the
mid-point of the
Tribulation period,
which we call the
beginning of the
Great Tribulation,
or the last 3 ½
years. It begins
with the abomination
of desolation spoken
of through Daniel.
The Anti-Christ will
set himself up as
god in the holy
place in
Israel,
causing the full
wrath of God to come
down upon this
earth.
The first half will
be worse than
anything you and I
can possibly
imagine, but the
second half will
make the first half
pale in comparison.
The bleeding hearts
of this world keep
talking about the
love of God,
thinking He will
wink at their sins.
However, the
Tribulation will be
a time when the
world will
experience His
wrath. God is love,
and He is calling
all who will, to
come to Him through
His Son Jesus, but
the day is coming,
perhaps sooner than
we realize that
judgment will come
from the wrath of
God.
Now would be a
good time to hear
what the Lord says
through the Apostle
Paul. “Be
not deceived; God is
not mocked: for
whatsoever a man
soweth, that shall
he also reap.”
(Galatians 6:7) The
God of love also
says, “For
they have sown the
wind, and they shall
reap the whirlwind…”
(Hosea 8:7) Even
today, the world
tramples the cross
and treats the blood
of Christ like
refuse. They dance
naked before Him,
mocking everything
He is, and expect
only love from the
God they spit on.
Other gods are set
on the mantle of sin
and even brought
into the house of
the one and only
true God. Nothing is
left to the
imagination of
sinful man as he
treks head-long into
the bowels of hell.
Jesus tells them
from verses
seventeen through
twenty-two that when
they see the
abomination of
desolation to run as
fast as possible to
the mountains. Don’t
even take time to
stop and get
something, just get
out immediately.
Everything He
mentions in this
verse is Jewish
related. He will
provide a place of
hiding for Israel, but they
must flee.
He also mentions
false christs and
false prophets that
will come. We have
seen false christs
in our time, but
this sign will
escalate then. There
are no prophets
during the Church
age, but there are
false messengers.
However during this
half of the
Tribulation, there
will be false
prophets, saying
that Christ has
come. Jesus
basically says,
“Don’t you believe
it! When I come, I
guarantee you will
know.”
Then in the next
verse He begins His
answer to the second
question.
QUESTION NUMBER TWO
(2) – What will be
the sign of your
return? (Matthew
24:27-51)
For this second
question, our Lord
gives a long
discourse in
answering it. He
says as follows:
“27For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth
even unto the west;
so shall also the
coming of the Son of
man be.
28For
wheresoever the
carcase is, there
will the eagles be
gathered together.
29Immediately
after the
tribulation of those
days shall the sun
be darkened, and the
moon shall not give
her light, and the
stars shall fall
from heaven, and the
powers of the
heavens shall be
shaken:
30And
then shall appear
the sign of the Son
of man in heaven:
and then shall all
the tribes of the
earth mourn, and
they shall see the
Son of man coming in
the clouds of heaven
with power and great
glory.
(I believe that
the sign mentioned
in verse thirty is
the sign of the
cross. The reason
that “the tribes of
the earth mourn” is
because they
recognize a sign
(the cross) that is
associated with the
crucifixion of Jesus
Christ. I believe
that this world
renowned sign that
most all know well,
the cross, will be
emblazoned in the
sky, and then Jesus
will appear. I
emphasize that this
is merely my
opinion, for what it
is worth. To know
for sure, we will
all just have to
wait and see for
ourselves.)
31And he
shall send his
angels with a great
sound of a trumpet,
and they shall
gather together his
elect from the four
winds, from one end
of heaven to the
other.
32Now
learn a parable of
the fig tree; When
his branch is yet
tender, and putteth
forth leaves, ye
know that summer is
nigh:
33So
likewise ye, when ye
shall see all these
things, know that it
is near, even at the
doors.
34Verily
I say unto you, This
generation shall not
pass, till all these
things be fulfilled.
35Heaven
and earth shall pass
away, but my words
shall not pass away.
36But of
that day and hour
knoweth no man, no,
not the angels of
heaven, but my
Father only.
37But as
the days of Noah
were, so shall also
the coming of the
Son of man be.
38For as
in the days that
were before the
flood they were
eating and drinking,
marrying and giving
in marriage, until
the day that Noe
entered into the
ark,
39And
knew not until the
flood came, and took
them all away; so
shall also the
coming of the Son of
man be.
40Then
shall two be in the
field; the one shall
be taken, and the
other left.
41Two
women shall be
grinding at the
mill; the one shall
be taken, and the
other left.
42Watch
therefore: for ye
know not what hour
your Lord doth come.
43But
know this, that if
the goodman of the
house had known in
what watch the thief
would come, he would
have watched, and
would not have
suffered his house
to be broken up.
44Therefore
be ye also ready:
for in such an hour
as ye think not the
Son of man cometh.
45Who
then is a faithful
and wise servant,
whom his lord hath
made ruler over his
household, to give
them meat in due
season?
46Blessed
is that servant,
whom his lord when
he cometh shall find
so doing.
47Verily
I say unto you, That
he shall make him
ruler over all his
goods.
48But
and if that evil
servant shall say in
his heart, My lord
delayeth his coming;
49And
shall begin to smite
his fellowservants,
and to eat and drink
with the drunken;
50The
lord of that servant
shall come in a day
when he looketh not
for him, and in an
hour that he is not
aware of,
51And
shall cut him
asunder, and appoint
him his portion with
the hypocrites:
there shall be
weeping and gnashing
of teeth.”
It is my opinion
that verses
twenty-seven through
thirty-one point to
a specific part of
the seven year
Tribulation period;
i.e. the arrival of
Christ at the
end of the
Tribulation.
Beginning at
verse thirty two, He
is speaking of the
seven year
Tribulation period
as a whole. This
entire seven year
period is actually
called the Time of
Jacob’s Trouble
(Jeremiah 30:7), the
70th week
of Daniel (Daniel
9:27), and the Day
of the Lord (Joel
2:1-11).
Usually, when we
think of Christ’s
return, we think of:
1.
Rapture - His return
in the air to
retrieve His Church
from the earth (as
the Bridegroom), and
2.
Second Coming - His
return at the very
end of the seven
years of tribulation
on earth as Judge
and King.
I personally see
Christ’s appearance
with five different
hats (so to speak):
(1)
Rapture - He is the
Bridegroom.
(2)
Tribulation (time of
Jacob’s trouble, the
70th week
of Daniel, and the
day of the Lord) –
He is the God of
wrath.
(3)
Second Coming – He
is the Conquering
Warrior.
(4)
Millennium – He is
the reigning King.
(5)
Eternity – He is God
and King.
When Jesus speaks
of the “coming of
the Son of Man” in
verse thirty-seven,
I think He is
referring primarily
to items one through
three above, the
Rapture through the
Tribulation. I know
I sound
contradictory, but
that is what I see.
Let me explain it
this way: (1) I
arrive home and
notice that thieves
have broken into my
house. I first make
sure my wife and
children are safe
(Rapture), and then,
with gun in hand, I
go after the thieves
(Tribulation). Let
me put it another
way: (2) A hostage
is taken. The police
first get the
hostage to safety
(Rapture), then deal
with the hostage
taker (Tribulation).
In example one (1),
the wife and
children witness the
signs that thieves
have broken into the
house. They are
placed in a safe
place by their
rescuer, and the
thieves are dealt
with.
In example two (2),
we have the same
scenario. The
hostage is of course
aware that they are
a hostage. All the
signs are quite
evident. They are
rescued and placed
in safety by the
police, and the
hostage is dealt
with.
We today see the
signs. Jesus has
told us exactly what
to expect. We don’t
know when He will
make His move, but
we do know He will
get us to safety
before He
administers wrath
upon all His
enemies. He will
also provide during
this time the
remaining seven
years He promised
His chosen people Israel. He will lead them to
repentance and bring
them back to Him.
By the prophets of
old, God told the
nation Israel of His
Son’s first coming.
They missed the
signs, and a few
even ignored them.
Today He is telling
the world by the
prophets of old and
the prophets of His
New Testament that
He is returning. How
many will miss the
signs, or simply
ignore them?
Just as no one knew
when He would come
the first time, no
one knows when He
will return the
second time. If
anyone says they do,
they are a false
prophet. Ignore
them. Better yet,
run from them. They
bring judgment upon
their own head.
Jesus came as the
lamb of sacrifice
the first time, but
the second time He
will come as a lion
that destroys. Jesus
said, "And
fear not them which
kill the body, but
are not able to kill
the soul: but rather
fear him which is
able to destroy both
soul and body in
hell.”
(Matthew 10:28)
Again, keep in mind
that verses
thirty-two through
fifty-one are
specifically for the
Tribulation era. The
key is that even
now, many of these
signs are becoming
self-evident. As
verse thirty-three
says, “so, you too,
when you see all
these things,
recognize that He is
near, right at the
door.” The time of
our (the Church)
departure (Rapture)
is close at hand. If
Daniel’s 70th
Week seems to be
right around the
corner, the removal
of the bride by the
Bridegroom is even
closer.
God will not
pour out His wrath
upon His own
children. The
Bridegroom would
never suffer His
bride to take His
blows. He is not a
wife-beater. Are you
prepared to meet
Him?
Matthew chapters
twenty-four and
twenty-five are
about a time of
tribulation that
will soon fall upon
this earth. There is
no shame in wanting
to avoid the wrath
of God. I choose to
be called out
beforehand by my
Savior and Lord.
What is your choice?
Grant Phillips
grantphillips@windstream.net
All my articles may
be located at
“Pre-Rapture
Commentary”
http://grant-phillips.blogspot.com
and also “Rapture
Ready”
http://www.raptureready.com/featured/phillips/phillips.html.