Chapter 24
False signs of the
Tribulation. There are certain things that happen in the Church Age that are
not the Tribulation.
Verses 4 and 5,
operation deceit.
Verse 4 — “And Jesus
said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you.” “Take heed” is a present
active imperative, it is an order and it means beware. One of the greatest
dangers to the believer is to be deceived and the only way to avoid it is to
know Bible doctrine. We are not in the Tribulation now, the Church does not go
into the Tribulation, and during the Church Age there is a lot of trouble. The
word “deceive” is an aorist tense and it means in any point of time when you
receive false doctrine or human viewpoint. The active voice indicates that the
believer is a sucker and he is deceived because he doesn’t know doctrine. The
subjunctive mood says it is potential, you don’t have to be deceived. If you
know doctrine you will never be deceived. So the principle out of the aorist
active subjunctive: Don’t be a sucker, learn doctrine.
Verse 5 — “For many.”
The word “many” refers to apostates, antichrists, false Christs; “shall come in
my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many.” In other words, there
are a lot of people during the Church who are going to try to palm themselves
off as Messiah.
Verse 6 — Operation
warfare. “And ye shall hear [keep on hearing] of wars and rumours of wars.” For
all liberals: you can’t stop war by disarmament; “see [make it a point] that ye
be not troubled [frightened].” One of the worst things you can do as a believer
in time of war is to be frightened. You don’t have to go to war to be
frightened. Just have a war around, just hear about it and you can be
frightened. The worst thing that can happen to any believer under any
circumstances is to be frightened but all it takes is a war and some of the
disaster information in a war and people are frightened. The best way to take
all the fun out of life is to be scared. God’s plan is designed so that you do
not have to be frightened — 2 Timothy 1:7; Philippians 4:7.
“for all these things
must come to pass, but the end [the Tribulation] is not yet.”
Verse 7 — Operation
catastrophe. “For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against
kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in
divers places [many areas].” These don’t mean we are in the Tribulation even
though each of them will occur in the Tribulation. These things occur in time
in general.
Verse 8 — the
principle of the pre-Tribulational Rapture. “All these [things] are the
beginnings of sorrows.” All of these previously enumerated characteristics are
general and common to history.
Verses 9-26, the signs
of the Tribulation. This is the
answer to the third question back in verse 3.
The first sign: Verses
9,10 — persecution of Israel during the Tribulation. Israel is always
persecuted but it is concentrated during the Tribulation.
Verse 9 — persecution
from without. “Then [during the Tribulation. When the end comes] shall they
[those who are anti-Semitic] shall deliver you to be afflicted [literally, into
tribulation], and shall kill you: and ye shall be hated of [by] all nations for
my name’s sake.” Revelation 12 amplifies this phrase and shows that
anti-Semitism in the Tribulation is Satanic and that Satan seeks to destroy
Israel so that Jesus Christ cannot return and fulfil the unconditional promises
to Israel. This is all persecution from without and this takes place in the
Tribulation.
Verse 10 — persecution
from within. In the Tribulation Jew will turn against Jew. “And then shall
[the] many [the Jews] be offended.” The word to be offended is a future passive
indicative. The passive voice means that they receive offence from each other;
“and shall betray one another, and shall hate one another.” In most cases this
is the racial Jew turning against the born again Jew — cf. Revelation chapter
seven.
The second sign:
Verses 11-12, apostasy in Israel during the Tribulation.
Verse 11 — “And many
false prophets shall rise.” A false prophet [teacher] is a Jew who is apostate
— “and shall deceive the many.”
Verse 12 — Why do they
do it? “And because iniquity [lawlessness] shall abound.” The reason these
people are deceived in because the word “iniquity” does not mean sin, it is
literally lawlessness and it is a technical word for being minus the Word. Who
is deceived? Anyone who doesn’t know the Word. Ignorance of the Word of God is
the basis of deception. You cannot deceive a believer with doctrine in his
frontal lobe. Lawless means doctrineless, Bibleless, Wordless.
“and the love of many
[Jews who are born again] shall wax cold.” This means that if you don’t know
doctrine you can’t love the Lord; if you don’t love the Lord you are not
interested in His Word. To wax cold in the Greek means to blow on something
until it cools. These people are going to cool off.
The third sign: Verse
13, the survival of believers who know doctrine. They are not only going to
have a wonderful time in the Tribulation but they are going to survive. How do
you survive? Knowledge of doctrine. The only thing that will keep the born again
Jews who know doctrine alive will be their knowledge of doctrine. This will be
illustrated in the verses to come.
Verse 13 — this verse
is mistranslated and misleading as it stands in the King James version. “But” —
the conjunction of contrast. The contrast between ignorant believers and
believers with knowledge of doctrine. The believer who has doctrine will
survive; the believer who is ignorant of doctrine will be deceived and he is
the one who will die. In the Tribulation believers are going to die for one
reason only: ignorance of doctrine; “he that shall endure,” aorist active
participle. The aorist tense gathers up into one point of time his use of
doctrine as a means of survival; active voice: he makes decisions whereby he
survives; “to the end [the end of the Tribulation, the second advent] shall be
saved [delivered]” — physical deliverance, not salvation, as per Zechariah
14:1-4; Isaiah 63:1-6.
Verses 12 and 13 are
in great contrast. In verse 12 the stupid believer is wiped out; in verse 13
the smart believer survives. These verses are talking about Jews but throughout
the world the same principle will apply to Gentiles. The ones who use doctrine
will survive and the ones who do not will not survive.
The fourth sign: Verse
14, evangelism in the Tribulation.
Verse 14 — how did
these Jews get saved in the first place in the absence of the Church? “And this
gospel of the kingdom.” “Gospel” is the translation of a Greek word that simply
means good news, which is the fact that Christ died for the sins of the world.
In this case the word “gospel” is in a genitive construction — “gospel of the
kingdom.” As soon as you put the word “kingdom” in there people simply fall
apart. They think that somehow this is a different gospel, but it is not. All
it is is the gospel, but it has a modifier on it to explain it in its context.
The word “gospel”
used with various types of modifiers
1. “The gospel of
Christ” — Romans 1:16. The gospel belongs to Christ; Christ is the gospel.
2. “My gospel” —
Romans 2:16. “My” is a possessive pronoun. This doesn’t change the gospel but
what it does mean is that now that you are a believer the gospel belongs to
you. It doesn’t change the content of the gospel, that remains static.
Modifiers simply give a different emphasis, here it is the personal possession
of every believer.
3. “Our gospel” — 2
Corinthians 4:3,4. Again we have a possessive pronoun with the noun “gospel.”
This time it is emphasising the responsibility of those who possess the gospel
— to communicate it.
4. “Gospel of peace” —
Ephesians 6:15. The emphasis here is on the work and the production of the
gospel, a gospel which produces peace, peace between man and God — Ephesians
2:14; Romans 5:1.
5. “The everlasting
gospel” — Revelation 14:6. “Everlasting” is a participle going with the noun
“gospel” and the emphasis is on the nearness of judgement. It is the same
gospel but eternity is just around the corner so it is called the everlasting
gospel.
6. “The gospel of the
kingdom” — Matthew 24:14. “Of the kingdom” is a genitive phrase which simply
means that in the Tribulation the kingdom is near and in the gospel there will
be emphasis on the nearness of the return of Christ — Believe on Christ, He is
coming back soon. The gospel of the kingdom emphasises the second advent and
the fulfilment of the unconditional covenants to Israel.
“shall be preached” —
talking about the same gospel we have today. The content is the same, the
emphasis is on the coming of Christ; “in all the world.” In every generation
the world is saturated with the gospel. “In all the world” is fulfilled in four
different types of evangelism. The Tribulation is approximately seven years in
length and during those seven years the world will be evangelised four
different times. First of all by the 144,000 Jewish evangelists of revelation
chapter seven. Secondly by the witness of the Tribulational saints — Revelation
14:12,13. The two witnesses will evangelise the world, apparently by television
— Revelation 11:1-14. Finally, at the end of the Tribulation the angels will
evangelise the world — Revelation 14:6,7.
“shall be preached in
all the world for a witness.” Every person in the Tribulation will be the
recipient of the gospel; “unto all nations,” literally, unto all Gentiles; “and
then [after the world has been evangelised] shall the end [of the Tribulation,
second advent] come.”
The fifth sign: Verse
15, international religion infiltrates Israel during the Tribulation. The
international religion reaches its peak in the Tribulation.
Verse 15 — “When ye
shall therefore see the abomination of desolation.” The abomination of
desolation is an image of the Roman dictator. This image is put in churches
throughout the world. This is the way the World Council of Churches will
develop. A Roman dictator commands a ten-nation confederation which will be in
the old Roman empire — Western Europe plus USA plus maybe a
couple of other nations in the western hemisphere. This Roman dictator will
also hold together his empire just as the Roman empire was held together,
“Caesar is God!” In so doing there will be a way in which people will recognise
Caesar is Lord [God], just as they did in the ancient Roman empire — image of
the Caesar put up in the temple. And so in the temple in Jerusalem there will
be in the holy of holies the image of the Caesar and this is because the
dictator of the Jews in the Tribulation is in a hot spot and he makes a deal
with the dictator of Rome. In the deal the Roman says you must accept my
religion, ecumenical religion, and to show that you do so you will put my
statue, a gold statue, up in the holy of holies. The abomination of desolation
is that statue. This abomination of desolation was spoken of by Daniel the
prophet — 9:27; 11:31; 12:11.
“stand” — perfect
tense, it will stand with tremendous results. The perfect tense indicates that
when they put this statue up in the holy of holies it is the signal to go. So
the Jews who are saved in the first half of the Tribulation get their signal to
get out of town. It is a warning to every born again believer in southern
Palestine, Judea, to head for the mountains immediately. Their instructions
will be given in the verses that follow.
Who are these people?
In the first half of the Tribulation there will be many Jews saved and when the
abomination is put up these Jews are told to go, to run. In the last three and
a half years of the Tribulation more Jews will be saved and they are told to
stay and fight — Zechariah 14. So there are two groups of Jews who are saved in
the Tribulation.
“(whoso readeth, let
him understand).” It is important to understand. “Whoso readeth” here means to
discern, to analyse, to gather exact knowledge from exegesis. You just don’t
read this and get it, you analyse it and get it. “Readeth” means more than just
reading, it means to study it. The principle is obvious: the importance of
Bible study in order to orient to God’s plan. “Let him understand” is a present
active imperative. Present tense: keep on understanding; active voice: you have
to learn it, you have to get doctrine in your frontal lobe; imperative mood:
this is an order.
Verses 16-20, the
believer in the Tribulation applying the doctrine to experience — the application of doctrine.
Verse 16 — “Then [at that
time] let them [born again believers in Judea] which be in Judea flee” —
present active imperative. The abomination going up in the temple is a dramatic
moment, Get out — “into the mountains.” The mountains are three sets of
mountains: Ammon, Moab, and Edom. We know exactly which mountains because
Daniel 11:41 tells us that those who flee to Ammon, Moab and Edom are safe when
the king of the north comes through with his army.
Verse 17 — “Let him
which is on the housetop.” The housetop is where they had their gardens; “not
come down to take anything out of his house.” Most houses in the ancient world
had outside stairs. So the idea is to come down them and keep going, don’t pack
your bags.
Verse 18 — “Neither
let him which is in the field.” These are the people down at the office, those
who are at work. Don’t go back to the house to pick up anything, go straight
from work to the mountains; “return back to take his clothes.” In other words,
verses 17 and 18 amplify the present active imperative of the word “flee.”
There comes a time when to survive you can’t stand around and think about it,
you have to make a decision now. And
when you make a decision “now” you have to have the information in your frontal
lobe so that the decision is easy. You just say, It is time to go, and you get
right now. If a person is going to survive in the Tribulation this is one
decision they have to make.
Verse 19 — “Woe to
them that are with child, and to them that give suck in those days,”
difficulties of travel at that time. Woe to those people means it is difficult.
The word “woe” here means misery and they are going to be miserable travelling
but the point is: travel anyway. A little misery and discomfort now and you
survive.
Verse 20 — “But pray
ye that your flight be not in the winter.” So the Jews can start praying for
this up to three and a half years before. Why in the winter? Because the roads
are impassable going into mountains; “neither on the Sabbath day.” Their Sabbath
is like our Sunday, the highways are clogged with traffic, too crowded.
Verses 21,22 — the
characteristics of the last half of the Tribulation.
Verse 21 — “For then.” Literally, at that time;
“there shall great tribulation.” The Great Tribulation is the last half of the
Tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no,
nor ever shall be.” The worst three and a half years in history will then
follow, but being up in the mountains they will avoid it.
Verse 22 — “And except
those days be shortened,” a little shorter than seven years; “there should no
flesh be saved,” the whole world would be destroyed; “but for the elect’s sake
[believers] those days shall be shortened.” So they are going to be up in the
mountains for a little less than three and a half years.
Once they get up in
the mountains one thing is important: don’t live by your emotions, live by the
Word. Don’t go by how you feel, go by what the Bible says — verses 23-26.
Verse 23 — “Then if
[3rd class condition: maybe yes, maybe no] any man shall say to you, Lo, here
is Christ, or there; believe it not.” In order to get these believers out of
the hills and to massacre them, torture them, kill them, they are going to have
sound trucks and they are going to broadcast: “Jesus Christ is in Jerusalem,
come back.” But don’t believe it, stick with the Word. How you feel is
inconsequential. What the Bible says is important, and that is just as true now
as it will be in the future. If there is a conflict between how you feel and
what the Bible says, the Bible is always right.
Verse 24 — “For there
shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs.”
These great signs are defined in 2 Thessalonians 2:7-10, and they include
performing miracles and speaking in tongues. And this will be used to suck
people in just as it is today; “and wonders; insomuch that, if it were
possible, they shall deceive the very elect.”
Verse 25 — “Behold, I
have told you before.” The importance of hearing the Word, the importance of
hearing it over and over and over again.
Verse 26 — You stay in
the mountains until Christ comes to get you.
Review
Matthew 23:37. God has made
some promises to the Jews which have never been kept to this moment but will
all be fulfilled at the second advent of Jesus Christ. As far as the national
promises are concerned they fall into four categories called unconditional
covenants. An unconditional covenant means that there are no strings attached
and God has to keep His word. They are characterised by the English phrase “I
will.”
The Abrahamic
covenant. The first of these four covenants is the Abrahamic covenant found in
Genesis 12:1-3; 13:14-16; 15:18; 22:15-18. God promised Abraham that he would
have a son who would follow him and from his son would eventually come a race,
and so on. God promised many races from Abraham and He had some very
interesting things for Abraham personally in that covenant.
The Palestinian
covenant. The second of these covenants is the Palestinian covenant in which
God promises to the Jews a piece of real estate which they have never inherited
even until this moment. It is land which lies between the Nile river and the
Euphrates river and goes down into the Arabian peninsula. Even in the hay-day
of the Jews they have never occupied that territory and it awaits the
fulfilment of the second advent of Jesus Christ.
The Davidic covenant. The third is the Davidic covenant in
which God promises David that he will have a son who will reign forever, and
that son is Jesus Christ. There are two primary passages of scripture: 2 Samuel
7:8-16; Psalm 89:20-37.
The New covenant to
Israel. The fourth is the New
covenant to Israel in which God promises all regenerate Jews of the past
dispensations that they will have eternal life under certain conditions which
are specified in Jeremiah 31 and in Hebrews 8:8-13.
When we use the word
“Jew” we refer to three different kinds of people. The first is the racial Jew,
and the racial Jew is anyone who has the genes of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
The second is the religious Jew who is the apostate legalist. Thirdly there is
the regenerate Jew, i.e. the Jew who in the past [Old Testament] personally
believed in Jesus Christ, received Him as his saviour. The Church is not
included. Any Jew who accepts Christ today is not a Jew any longer, he is a
member of the body of Christ.
You will recall again
the discipline which came to the Jews because they were the custodians of the
Word and responsible for its dissemination. As a background for the first part
of this passage, 781 BC begins the 4th cycle of
discipline to the Jews, administered first under Assyria and then under Egypt
in the days of Pharaoh Necho until Pharaoh Necho was defeated at the battle of
Carchemish in 606 BC, and finally under Chaldea.
Chaldea is often confused as Babylonia. The Babylonians and the Chaldeans are
not the same.
In 586 BC the Chaldeans, under Nebuchadnezzar, administered the fifth cycle of
discipline, and this takes us down to 516 BC, a period of
seventy years, often known as the Babylonian captivity. This is terminated by
the rebuilding of the temple, called the second temple, of Zerubbabel. Then
from 516-323 BC, the death of Alexander the
Great, the Jews had the greatest period they will ever have until the
Millennium. This was their golden age, the age in which they applied Bible
doctrine with the result that they had nearly two hundred years of peace and
marvellous prosperity. Then from 323 they began to decline and finally we have,
beginning in 167 BC, a short period of the 4th
cycle of discipline which was terminated in 164 with the Maccabaean revolt
being successful. Again they had a short period which was wonderful and then
they had to go through the cycles again until we get to 63 BC when Pompey the Great came into Jerusalem and captured it. From that
time on, under Rome, the 4th cycle of discipline was administered until 70 AD when Jerusalem fell. With the fall of Jerusalem and the scattering of
the people we have the 5th cycle of discipline which lasts until the second
advent of Jesus Christ. Beginning at 70 AD and going
through to the Rapture of the Church we have the Church Age in which the Church
replaces Israel as custodians of the Word and has the responsibility for its
dissemination.
All if this will be
background somewhere in this passage which begins in Matthew chapter 23 and
goes through the end of chapter 24.
The Lord Jesus Christ
walked out of the temple after the temple discourse. He laid it on the line to
religion, in fact He slashed them to pieces. And now we find the religious Jews
standing behind fuming. Beginning in verse 37 of chapter 23 Jesus pauses and He
looks at Jerusalem as He is walking out of the city, and He says: O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets.” The prophets are those who taught
doctrine and Jerusalem expressed its free will by killing those who taught
doctrine; “and stonest them which are sent unto thee,” God Himself sent men
with a message and they stoned them to death; “how often would I have gathered
thy children.” The verb “would” is actually an expression of divine sovereignty
or the free will of God. The gathering here refers to the fulfilment of these
four unconditional covenants, and the reason these covenants have never been
fulfilled is because the Jews, generation after generation, kept resisting the
Lord Jesus Christ. And here is a perfect illustration: “I would have gathered
thee.” The phrase that follows is very significant and helps to resolve one of
the problems of theology; “even as a hen gathers her chickens under her wings,
and ye would not” — free will. “Not” expresses negative signals.
How do we
differentiate between time and eternity? In eternity there was one will, that
was God’s. Then we come to history, but this is history — angels. And now we
have more than one will, we have at least two wills: the will of God and the
will of Satan who said: “I will, I will,” five times. At that point we have a
conflict. The creature says, I will, and his I will is antithetical to Satan’s.
Then we finally come to history — man. And when we come to category man we have
three categories of will: the will of God, the will of angels, and the will of
man. And, of course, the whole objective under God’s plan is for man’s will to
line up with God’s. We have in history a conflict of wills. So actually it
looks like this: eternity = one will; angelic conflict = two categories of
wills; history of man = three categories of wills; and in eternity = one will
again. But between eternity past and eternity future we have some taken in; we
have all angels who made a decision and all saved or elect angels are involved;
and all regenerate members of the human race are also involved. Now when we get
to the one will in eternity future we have two sets of creatures who are under
that one will. Our objective in operation phase two is to do the will of God,
of course. This is the ideal situation in the devil’s world.
“ye would not” — this
expresses the negative volition of the Jews in Jerusalem and their negative
volition is based upon a concept called religion or legalism. In Matthew
chapter 23 we saw what Jesus did to religion. Now we have the principle that in
religion man does the doing and God is supposed to receive what man does, and
man gets the credit. Therefore when anyone comes along, as Jesus Christ did, He
offers grace, and under grace God does the work and man does the receiving, and
God gets the credit. “Ye would not” indicates that they were religious and
therefore anyone who is religious will reject the truth. As a matter of fact
religion develops through the principle that at the point of God consciousness
when a person goes on negative volition, later on he will get gospel hearing
and at that point he will again go on negative volition and reject Christ.
These two negatives create a vacuum into which is sucked the Satanic system of
religion. So religion is sucked into the frontal lobe of the individual. We
have this coming to its climax when Jesus said to Jerusalem, O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, etc., but ye would not. This indicates the principle that coexisting
on the earth
today are three categories of wills. First of all the will of God as
delineated in phase two of God’s plan, secondly the will of angels (Satan is
the ruler of this world), and thirdly the will of God. These three wills are
categories on the earth today.
Verse 38 — “Behold
your house is left to you desolate.” This is divine viewpoint, the viewpoint of
the Lord Jesus Christ. The word “house” refers to the temple; the temple refers
to Jesus Christ.
Note: Acts 7:44 — “Our fathers had the tabernacle of witness [a title
for the tabernacle] in the wilderness.” The “witness” concerning Jesus Christ.
Everything in the tabernacle and in the temple was a witness concerning Christ
and here were the religious people in the temple and they had obscured the
witness concerning Christ in a very simple way. They had substituted the
various meaningful activities of the Levitical priesthood with a religious
system, a ritual, and they had unbelief in their frontal lobes which created a
vacuum and drew in religion. So Jesus says to them in verse 38 of Matthew 23,
“Your house is left unto you desolate.” The Greek word “desolate” means an
empty house. In other words, while the temple proclaimed Jesus Christ negative
volition at the point of God consciousness and negative volition at the point
of gospel hearing had created something that completely obscured the “witness.”
Now it was simply a temple but not the temple of witness; this had been
completely removed by their negative volition.
Now there is something
that the Jews had not learned. In fact in their religion they were talking
about their heritage, they were going back to Moses and everything was Moses.
But by their negative volition at the points of God consciousness and gospel
hearing they actually had rejected the whole principle that Moses taught
concerning Christ and they had accepted religion. As a result the house was
empty. Since Jesus Christ was not accepted as saviour, and therefore He was not
in their frontal lobes. They walked around with religious frontal lobes and
human viewpoint in this temple. The temple still had all the furniture and
everything it had previously when it was a witness, but a maximum number of
people minus Bible doctrine, rejecting the cross, created a desolate situation.
Their spiritual heritage was wonderful but you can destroy spiritual heritage
in one generation by two acts of negative volition on the part of a maximum
number of people. And that is exactly what they did. Heritage means nothing.
When you do not have positive volition heritage is useless.
Now Jesus said the
temple is desolate. “Your house” is the word He used. And when Jesus spoke that
was divine viewpoint. Human viewpoint says: It is great; it is beautiful. And
who expresses human viewpoint? Eleven born again believers who have been listening
to doctrine for three years under Jesus Christ! It isn’t the building that
counts, it is the people who occupy the buildings.
Verse 39 — “For I keep
on saying unto you, Ye shall not see me henceforth, till ye shall say, Blessed
is he that cometh in the name of the Lord.” In other words, Jesus Christ is
walking out on Israel [in verse 38 He walks out on religion; in verse 39 He
walks out on Israel]. He is through with Israel right then and there, and that
is why in chapters 24 and 25 He gives something to the Jews who are born again
in the future. Chapters 24 and 25 are called the Olivet discourse because this
discourse was given on the mount of Olives. In this discourse He is going to
talk to future Jews.
Now He walked out just
a week or so before the cross. The temple discourse was finished; He gave the
Olivet discourse; and after giving the Olivet discourse which happened on a
Tuesday, on a Wednesday He went to the cross. So He is talking about Jews over
when the Age of the Jews resumes after the Rapture. In between we have the
Church Age and these eleven disciples are going to be the beginning of the
Church. When the baptism of the Spirit takes place on the day of Pentecost they
are going to be entered into union with Christ and once they are in union with
Christ they are no longer Jews.
“Blessed is he that
cometh in the name of the Lord” is a quotation from Psalm 118:26, and it refers
to the second advent of Jesus Christ and explains the failure of Palm Sunday.
The religious crowd had confused the first and the second advents of Christ.
Chapter 24 verse one —
“And Jesus went out and departed from the temple: and his disciples came to him
to shew him the buildings of the temple” — right after Jesus had said, “Your
house is left unto you desolate.” It was a very beautiful series of structures.
Herod was the greatest of all time building contractors and when he finished
the temple it was a very fantastic structure, the most beautiful of all the
edifices which he constructed. But now Jesus says it is desolate and the
disciples say it is beautiful. In this way the disciples are contradicting
Jesus. It was their ignorance of doctrine, and so it is today. Ignorance of
doctrine causes believers to contradict the Lord Jesus Christ.
Verse 2 — “And Jesus
said unto them, Stop looking.” For the past three years they had been impressed
with these buildings. Their admiration of the buildings was not admiration of
an ordinary edification, it was more than that. It was ignorance of Bible doctrine;
it was contradiction of what Jesus had just said in the temple. He said the
house was desolate and they are now admiring it.
Principle: Ignorance of doctrine leads to
admiration of man’s plans.
Today we have
three sets of plans in operation on this earth
a. We have God’s plan
— God is perfect; His plan is perfect: operation phase one, the cross;
operation phase two, the believer in time; operation phase three, the believer
in eternity. And this is a perfect plan because God does the work. Christ did
the work of salvation, the Holy Spirit does the work of phase two, and all
three members of the Trinity do the work of phase three: God does the work.
b. We have Satan’s
plan. Satan’s plan seems to be a plan of producing a perfect environment apart
from God. Satan isn’t in favour of all the terrible things that happen in the
world but it is inevitable because of the sin nature.
c. The third is man’s
plan. This plan is maudlin sentimentality, greatest good for the greatest
number, and many other concepts.
Jesus tells the
disciples that the temple is going to be thrown down, destroyed. That is a
prophecy of the fall of Jerusalem and the temple in 70 AD. Jesus is
speaking in April of 30 AD, just a couple of days
before He dies on the cross. In August of 70 AD this would
happen, so there would be only a period of forty years grace — grace before
judgement. There would be forty years for people to get saved and get out from
under this discipline and judgement.
Verse 3 — the key
verse to understanding this section. “ … the disciples came to him privately.”
This means they are still looking over their shoulder, they are frightened by
the implications of our Lord’s remarks and so they waited until they could question
Him privately. And now they ask Him three questions which lack chronological
order.
“When shall these
things be?” refers to what He had just said about the temple being destroyed.
The answer to that is in 70 AD and Jesus gives the answer
but it is not given in context, only Luke records the answer to the first
question — Luke 21:20-24.
“What shall be the
sign of thy coming?” This is answered in verses 27-51, because this deals with
“the signs of thy coming” [second advent]. It is answered later because it
chronologically it is later. The fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD comes first. Then after 70 AD we go down to
the second advent for the second question. But the second question is out of
line chronologically because then they ask a third question.
“What shall be the
sign of the end of the age?” The end of the age is the Tribulation, the end of
the Jewish Age.
Verses 4-8 are to
remind us of the fact that just because we have trouble in the world it does
not mean that we are in the Tribulation. Let us notice false signs. We are not in
the Tribulation today because there is a war somewhere, because people are
starving, because people are slaughtered, because people go through all sorts
of terrible sufferings. Suffering is general throughout the world because every
member of the human race has an old sin nature, all the fallen angels have an
old sin nature, and it is quite a situation.
Verse 4 — operation
deceit. Believers are going to be deceived in the Tribulation but believers are
deceived today. So being deceived because of lack of doctrine is not unusual,
it is characteristic of all ages. “And Jesus answered and said unto them. Take
heed that no man deceive you.” He is speaking to the eleven disciples on the
mount of Olives. So far they have not learned doctrine even though they have
been with Jesus Christ for three years, but they will learn because the Holy
Spirit will bring these things to their remembrance and they will build
doctrine upon doctrine. “Take heed” means literally to beware, be alert, and
one of the greatest areas of alertness in the life of every believer must be
that he is not deceived by false doctrine, by false interpretations of history;
“that no man deceive you,” aorist passive subjunctive. The aorist tense of
deceive mean in a point of time when you hear false doctrine, or human
viewpoint. The passive voice means that they actually receive this deceit
because they do not have Bible doctrine in the frontal lobe, they are minus
doctrine. The subjunctive mood indicates that this is a potential situation
because there will be some believers in every generation who will know doctrine
and will not be deceived.
It is easy to be
deceived by history. This is the point that Jesus is making because in every
historical era there will be great suffering to some section of the earth.
People will bring upon themselves great suffering, other causes will be brought
into play which will cause great suffering, and it is easy for people to think
the Tribulation is already here.
Verse 5 — this is why
many will be deceived. “For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ;
and shall deceive many.” So to avoid being deceived you must know doctrine.
Verse 6 — the second
point of deception: operation warfare. “And ye shall hears of wars [hot wars]
and rumours of wars [cold wars or psychological warfare]: see that ye be not
troubled [be not scared out of your wits, do not be frightened].” The worst thing
that can happen to you in times of suffering and war is to be frightened and to
be worried. If you are worried about anything or if you have fear then doctrine
is neutralised in your frontal lobe and you couldn’t be in a worse state. There
is no excuse for any believer being frightened or worried about anything
because there is no problem, no suffering, no series of difficulties in this
life that are greater than the plan of God. And God’s plan does not call for
you at any time to be worried or frightened or upset or disturbed or to
manifest any of the characteristics of panic palace. We have the promises of
God’s Word on which to rest. Stop looking at the buildings; stop looking at the
superficial things of life. If you have Bible doctrine you can enjoy the things
of this life, but if you do not have Bible doctrine remember that the things of
this life are desolate and that great inner happiness and peace comes from
Bible doctrine in the frontal lobe and, of course, its utilisation and
application.
Verse 7 — the third
false concept: operation catastrophe. “For nation shall rise against nation,
and kingdom against kingdom.” This is always going on and the only protection
for this kind of thing is to have a strong military and maximum use of Bible
doctrine among believers. From the divine viewpoint it is Bible doctrine that
preserves a nation, believers are the salt of the earth and these believers
must know the Word. And from the human viewpoint no one will pick on you if you
are strong enough and tough enough.
“and there shall be
famines, and pestilences,” disasters caused by lack of food and by disease;
“earthquakes,” disaster caused by nature. The divine expression: nature is
often used to judge people.
Verse 8 — the
principle of the pre-Tribulation Rapture. “All these are the beginning of
sorrows.”
In verses 9-26 we have
the answer of the third question in verse three: What shall be the sign of the
end of the age? They are:
1. Persecution of
Israel during the Tribulation [from without and from within] — verses 9, 10; 2. The apostasy of Israel — verse 11-12;
3. The survival of
believers who know doctrine — verse 13;
4. Evangelism in the
Tribulation — verse 14;
5. International
religion infiltrates Israel during the Tribulation — verse 15;
Verse 14 — The “gospel
of the kingdom” is the same gospel that is mentioned by name in any other
passage of scripture. Various phrases, usually genitive phrases, are used to
place emphasis on the gospel at various times. In the Tribulation this
world-wide evangelism will be conducted in four waves: the preaching of the 144,000 Jewish
evangelists — Revelation chapter 7; the witnessing of their converts —
Revelation 14:12-14; the witness of Moses and Elijah, the two witnesses of
Revelation chapter 11:1-4; angels will evangelise the world just before the
second advent — Revelation 14:6,7. Notice it says “in all the world for a witness
unto all nations.” The phrase “unto all nations” requires a close scrutiny for
this reason: the basis of evangelism, the basis of presenting the gospel, is
order. Various segments of the human race are divided by race, by geography, by
language, and they are divided in order that there might within these segments
law and order. Law and order in various national entities make it possible for
evangelism to occur. In order to protect the human race from destruction and in
order to make it possible for the human race to be evangelised God has set up
what we call categorically divine institutions, something which is organised
for the entire human race. Divine institution #1 is volition which is the basis
of human freedom and the basis of making a decision for salvation. Divine
institution #2 is marriage, #3 is the family [the home], and #4 is nationalism.
Under nationalism a large number of national entities in balance of power gives
the best possible spread for the gospel under the best conditions. You have to
have law and order for evangelism to be successful in any widespread territory.
So we have “unto all nations” because as national entities exist, and as they
maintain their stability, and as they provide laws whereby protection is given
to all members within that national entity — laws which guarantee privacy, and
so on — then of course evangelism continues on a true basis of allowing each
individual to make up his own mind after a very clear and lucid hearing of the
gospel.
“then shall the end
come.” The end refers to the end of the Jewish age and the point of the second
advent.
Internationalism is
always the enemy of evangelism and the Tribulation is one of the greatest
periods of internationalism. And even though it is rampant throughout the world
we still have national entities in existence and these hold the line in order
that evangelism may occur. In other words, nationalism is of God to protect the
human race; internationalism is of Satan to destroy human freedom and human
volition. All international organisations are designed with one purpose in mind
and that is a Satanic system in order to neutralise and to hinder human
freedom. Human freedom is absolutely necessary for true evangelism.
Verse 15 — we have
international religion as it will exist in the Tribulation. The key to this
particular passage is the phrase “the abomination of desolation.” This is a
statue of the Roman dictator which is put up on a pedestal in the holy of
holies in exactly the place where the ark of the covenant is kept and the mercy
seat.
The ark and the mercy
seat speak of salvation from the standpoint of propitiation. Originally in the
holy of holies was the ark, a box made of wood and gold. The wood speaks of the
humanity of Christ, the gold speaks of the deity of Christ, and the two
together speak of the uniqueness of the person of Christ [His hypostatic
union]. Inside of the ark were three things: the tables of the law, a pot of
manna, and Aaron’s rod that budded. Each one of these speaks of a certain
aspect of sin: the law in the sense of violation or transgression of God’s
order, the pot of manna is rejection of God’s provision, and Aaron’s rod that
budded is a revolt against God’s authority — the Levitical tribe. So we have
those things which speak of sin inside of the box and this is a picture of
Christ bearing our sins — 2 Corinthians 5:21.
Over the top of the
ark was a mercy seat and on each end of the mercy seat was a cherub. There were
two cherubs: one of them represented the righteousness of God and one the
justice of God. Once a year on the day of atonement the high priest came twice
into the holy of holies and he sprinkled the blood of a sacrifice over the top
of the mercy seat. God’s righteousness looks at the blood of Christ and is
satisfied; God’s justice looks at Christ being judged for us and is satisfied,
so we actually have in the mercy seat and in the ark a picture of God’s
satisfaction with the work of Christ, or the divine viewpoint of salvation.
This will exist again
in the Tribulation in the temple which will be built at that time, and right in
the middle of the Tribulation after the first three and a half years this great
statue will be erected over the top of where the ark and the mercy seat are
located. The statue represents international religion and it is set up for one
purpose: to indicate that the Jews are accepting ecumenical religion as it will
exist in the Tribulation. The reason that the Jews accept it is because the
dictator of Palestine finds himself in a tight spot. He finds himself in
serious trouble because of the rise of spheres of influence or power politics.
There will be the king of the south, the Pan-Arabic bloc, and as the Arabs
unite their desire, of course, is to destroy Israel. Then we have the kings of
the east, the famous Asiatic bloc, and the king of the north which today is
comparable to the Russian bloc. Now we have in Israel a dictator who is smart
enough to realise that you can’t deal with the oriental mind because when you
deal with an oriental he will break up a deal at any time he finds it necessary
to do so. (We have had many illustrations of this in our day) Then to the north
he finds another oriental-thinking power and so he rejects all three of theses
spheres of influence as being any source of hope and he moves across the
Mediterranean to Rome. And there we have a united states of Western Europe.
This is the image with the ten toes in Daniel. In other words, we have a
ten-nation confederation, and this confederation now has a dictator, sometimes
called in the Bible the king of the West, the king of fierce countenance, the
little horn of Daniel seven, the man of sin in 2 Thessalonians 2, the beast of
Revelation chapter 13, and so on. He is designated by many titles but he is not
only the political leader of the revived Roman empire, the ten-nation
confederation, he is also a religious leader. He is the head of the World
Council of Churches or ecumenical religion as it will exist in the Tribulation.
And as the head of this particular organisation he is pushing his organisation
throughout the world as a basis for further conquest.
Over in Jerusalem we
have a dictator who says to the man in Rome: Look, you give me protection and I
will give you the advantage of all of these raw materials which we have in the
Dead Sea and other places. And so there is an agreement reached in which he has
to do a lot of paying and the dictator says, I will give you protection. Now in
order that this agreement might be formed up, in Jerusalem there is a new
temple which is a replica of Solomon’s and then Zerrubabel’s and then the one
that Herod redid. And they have an actual mercy seat and all of the other
factors connected with the holy of holies. But the Roman dictator says that his
statue must be put up in the most sacred place in the temple. Remember that in
the old Roman empire every emperor, when he was declared god by the senate,
always had a statue made and the statue was unveiled at the same time. Many of
the statues have come down to us today. Hadrian, for example, is said to have had
over 200 statues made of him and they were placed in temples throughout the
Roman empire. So in the revived Roman empire we have emperor worship also
revived and this man sets himself up as God and he says you will have to put
this statue of me in the holy of holies. That occurs at exactly in the middle
of the Tribulation. Three and a half years into the Tribulation brings us to
the point of putting up this statue. Now three and a half years remain before
Christ returns.
In the meantime, as a
result of world-wide evangelism during the three and a half years of this
evangelism throughout the world, thousands of Jews in Judea have found Christ
as saviour. And so the next segment of this passage is for them. And you will
notice it says, When ye shall see. Now “ye” is a second person plural and it
refers to the believers in Palestine. They are given warning as to exactly what
to do. This statue is suddenly put up in the holy of holies. The statue is
called the abomination of desolation and the reason it is called that is
because prior to the Tribulation in the days of Antiochus Epiphanes (25
December, 167 BC) Antiochus Epiphanes went
into the holy of holies and offered pig sacrifices and because of the objection
by the Jews he offered human blood. Then he set up this golden statue which he
called Zeus Olympias. It looked exactly like Antiochus Epiphanes except for one
thing: Antiochus was clean shaven and this statue had a beard. But it was the
exact image of Antiochus Epiphanes and this was the original abomination of
desolation. Its setting up in the temple began the terrible period from 167-164
BC, the Maccabaean wars which terminated with the
liberation of the Jews. So there is some precedent. The Jews understand their
history and therefore they get exactly the same thing in the Tribulation. The
Church is in heaven being evaluated, the Jews have just accepted Christ as
saviour during this period of three and a half years and now if they are going
to stay alive they have to obey the Word of God, they have to understand the
Olivet discourse. So what we are studying here is the difference between life
and death to these Jewish believers in the future. Failure to believe the Word
of God, failure to follow the instructions give here will result in their death,
and there is a sin unto death in the Tribulation, just as in the Church Age,
and the Jewish martyrs in the Tribulation have no excuse for dying at all. God
would preserve all of them until the end of the Tribulation but through their
ignorance of doctrine, through their stupidity, through their failure to
believe the Olivet discourse, many of them will die in Palestine. That is as
close as you can come in the Tribulation to the sin unto death.
So these Jews get
their clue now from verse 15. “When ye [you all] therefore shall see,” the
aorist tense indicates the point of time when the abomination of desolation
goes up; the active voice: subject produces the action of the verb; you have to
do the observing. Notice: “when ye shall see,” the abomination of desolation,
the statue, goes up in the middle of the Tribulation you have to be alert.
Application for us today: In order to know what is going on you have to know
your Bible, it is all there. You can actually tell what is going on in the
world today by reading you Bible; you can’t always tell by reading your
newspaper. “See.” Seeing means to observe, which means to know what is going
on, and they will know what is going on. They will see this great statue put up
and when they do — we have a subjunctive mood (the subjunctive mood is always
for the clucks, the people who won’t study the Word, the people who won’t learn
Bible doctrine, therefore the people who do not know what is going on) which
indicates that there are some believers who will never figure it all out, and
when they get slaughtered a few days after the abomination of desolation goes
up they will wonder what it is all about. And they will die praying to the Lord
to deliver them but if they had known the Bible they would have known they
could not be delivered, for deliverance of the Jews in that first segment of
the Tribulation depends upon following instructions. (The Jews of the first
half of the Tribulation are commanded to run; the Jews who are born again in
the last half of the Tribulation are commanded to stay and fight). In the first
three and a half years the Jews who are saved are commanded to run. The Jews
who do not learn the Olivet discourse, who do not study their Bibles, who
downgrade doctrine (even as we have born again believers today, in fact the
majority, who downgrade doctrine), are dead. These people never get clued up,
they never know what is going on; they are totally disoriented. That is why we
have later in this chapter the words “be alert", know what is going on. Do
you know what is going on today? Do you know from Bible doctrine what is going
on? It is important to know what is going on because this is the principle of
knowing what is going on. So “when ye shall see” is very important, it is
orientation to the plan of God. What do they see? This is the image of the
abomination of desolation, the image of the dictator of the revived Roman
empire. The image is mentioned in about six passages in Revelation: 13:14;
14:9,11; 15:2; 16:2; 19:20,24. This same abomination is also mentioned three
times in Daniel, that is why we have the phrase: “spoken of by Daniel the
prophet” — Daniel 9:27; 11:31; 12:11. God never leaves the believer in the dark
but the key to understanding any age, any catastrophe, any difficulty, whether
it is national or personal, depends upon understanding the Word of God. In the
future the people who are going to be safe in the worst period of history are
those who follow Bible doctrine. And those who do not follow Bible doctrine are
going to be destroyed violently. The only thing that is going to keep people
alive is a knowledge of Bible doctrine, and it starts right here in verse 15 —
“when ye shall see.” And at the end of this verse, “whoso readeth, let him
understand.” The word “readeth” is not readeth at all, it means to analyse, to
exegete, to interpret exactly and correctly; “understand,” understanding is
necessary for obedience. You cannot obey unless you understand; you have to
know doctrine before you can obey doctrine and live by doctrine. No one can
live by doctrine until he has it in his frontal lobe. “Let him understand” is a
present active imperative which means, Let him keep on understanding. This is
an order.
“spoken of by Daniel
the prophet, stand.” “Stand” is in the perfect tense, it will stand in a point
of time with the result that it continues to stand in the holy place, referring
to the holy of holies. This statue will be put up in the place of the ark and
the mercy seat. The statue represents man’s concept “religion” and man’s plans
substituted for God’s plan. That is the principle of putting an abomination of
desolation, a statue, up in the holy of holies. The mercy seat and the ark of
the covenant are removed and in their place you have a statue, and the
principle is: religion wins in Judea. Once Judea is taken over by religion, the
ecumenical religious system of the world at that time, there is only one safe
place for the Jews who are believers and that is out of the land up in the
mountains, areas that are off the beaten path.
Verse 16 — this is the
signal. “Then let them [believers] which be in Judea.” Note this is a specific
geographical location. Judea is southern Palestine; “flee” — present active
imperative, keep on running until you get to the mountains, don’t stop, keep
moving; “into the mountains.” The mountains are mentioned in Daniel 11:41,
Edom, Moab and Ammon. These are areas of three mountain ranges which surround
Judea, so they can flee east or south and get away. And Daniel tells us they
are safe there throughout the rest of the Tribulation.
Verse 17 — some
personal instructions begin, very practical. “Let him which is on the housetop”
— the place where people kept their gardens in the ancient world; “not come
down to take anything out of his house.” That means not come down to pack or
take anything for the journey. If they are not packed already, forget it.
Verse 18 — the people
at work. “Neither let him which is in the field.” The Bible must be interpreted
in the time in which it was written and the field represents people at the office;
“return not to get his clothes.” If you haven’t a bag with you just move on
out.
So we have in verses
17 and 18 the importance of rapidity of movement. Rapidity of movement always
depends upon a certain thing in the frontal lobe; knowledge of pertinent
doctrine and decisiveness. You have to make decisions. You have to have this
knowledge in your frontal lobe when the balloon goes up. When that statue goes
up it is time to move — now! People who are indecisive because they lack
confidence because they lack knowledge of the Word of God are always caught in
a trap. These people who are sitting around trying to make up their minds are
going to be dead, horribly dead, miserably dead, in the sense that they are
going to die from violence. For when that abomination goes up it is the signal
to kill all believers in the land. This is what ecumenical religion will do in
those days; in the name of “brotherhood” they will kill all born again
believers.
Verse 19 — “And woe
unto them that are with child, and to them that give suck in those days!” This
is a very interesting verse for two reasons: it says that the Tribulation is a
terrible time to have children, but if you do have children you have extra
trouble. There will be nothing convenient about this rapid trip into the
mountains. It will be much more difficult for pregnant women and small children
to get away.
Verse 20 — “But pray
ye that your flight be not in the winter.” It is very difficult to travel into
mountains in winter; “neither in the Sabbath day,” the problem of traffic on
the holiday in Judea.
Verses 21-22, the
character of the last half of the Tribulation.
Verse 21 — once the
nucleus of believers who believe the Word of God, who claim the promises of
God, who obey doctrine, get safely into the mountains their problems are not
over. They will survive without any problems along that line. Their biggest
problem is going to be emotionalism once they get into the mountains. They are
going to have a test of their emotional pattern and this test of whether
emotion or the Word is the criterion comes in verses 21 and 22.
“For then.” The word
“then” is an adverb which means, at that time, and once you get into the
mountains, at that time “there shall be great tribulation.” Great tribulation
refers to the last three and a half years of the Tribulation and it is said
here to be the worst period in human history “such as was not since the
beginning of the world to this time, no, no nor ever shall be.” It is without
precedent. These last three and a half years will be a time when Satan is
personally confined to the earth; he is cast out of heaven in the middle of the
Tribulation according to Luke 10:18; Isaiah 14:12; Ezekiel 28:16.
Verse 22 — “And except
those should be shortened.” There will a be slight shortening of the last three
and a half years in order to save those people who find Christ as saviour in
the last half of the Tribulation; “there should no one be delivered” — literally,
no flesh will be delivered. This is a physical deliverance rather than a
spiritual deliverance; “but for the [because of the] elect’s [believers who are
bottled up in Jerusalem] sake those days shall be shortened.”
Verses 23-26, the
emotional versus rational test for these believers.
Verse 23 — “Then if
any man shall say unto you.” Apparently they are going to hear it over the
radios and there are going to be sound trucks brought up to the mountains which
are going to beam out a message: Jesus Christ is back in Jerusalem and He wants
to see you. Jesus Christ is out in the desert and He has said that He wants you
personally to come. This is done in order to deceive those who are up in the
mountains to get them out and down where they can be slaughtered. “Lo, here is
Christ, or there; believe it not,” aorist active subjunctive. There is a reason
for the subjunctive mood here. The aorist tense refers to the point of time
when you become a propaganda victim. The active voice means that you have to
take the initiative and make a decision, and the subjunctive mood instead of
the imperative indicates the fact that you have free will at this point and
that you must operate on the basis of your free will. You are told not to
believe it. The subjunctive is really a command, but a command that recognises
that some are going to disobey it. And who will disobey? There will always be
some who like to emote and they will get all worked up about this and so they
will go on negative signals and come running down the mountain. At the bottom
of the mountain they are going to be slaughtered, for one reason: because the
Bible said specifically, Don’t you believe it.
There is a reason for
all this. We are not in the Tribulation, we will never be in the Tribulation,
it is impossible. But this is to remind us by way of application in the Church
Age: just as there will be suckers in that day so there will be suckers today,
believers who do not take cognisance of Bible doctrine, believers who fail to
learn the Word of God. And actually the worst clucks in the world today are
stupid believers who are sincere. That is as bad as you can get. Sincerity
simply covers the ignorance. We are not commanded to be ignorant; we are not
commanded to be sincere; we are not commanded to allow our emotions to be the
criterion for the spiritual life. We have emotions; they have a place in our
life, but never when it comes to this life spiritually, Bible doctrine. When
there is a conflict between how you feel and what the Word of God says, the
Word of God is always right and your emotions are always wrong. How you feel
does not determine your spiritual life, it is what the Word of God says —
always.
Verse 24 — Here is the
principle behind it. “There shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and
shall shew great signs and wonders.” The great signs will be speaking in
tongues; the great wonders: miracles of healing. So they will pull people out of
the mountains with the same old tongues movement and the same old healing
movement. There is a principle that applies to us today: miracles are more
impressive to some believers than all the doctrine in the world, and anything
that titillates the emotional pattern is more impressive to some believers than
all of the categories of the Word of God.
Now there is a place
for emotion connected with the soul: it is an appreciator of things of the
soul, but the emotion has no place as far as a criterion for the Christian
life. Emotion betrays and destroys the believer who makes it his absolute
authority.
“if it were possible,
they shall deceive the very elect.” Believers who are deceived in the
Tribulation scene are going to be martyred, and that is the sin unto death.
Verse 25 — “Behold I
have told you before.” This means that in order to communicate doctrine, to
teach it, you have to repeat, repeat, repeat. “You” is dative of advantage, it
is to the advantage of every believer to have doctrine repeated and repeated and
repeated. This is communicating.
Verse 26 — “Wherefore,
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.” Follow the Word of God and you
will have not trouble.
Verses 27-51, the
answer to the second question.
Verse 27 — we begin
with an illustration of the second advent. “For as lightning cometh out of the
east, and shineth even to the west; so shall the coming of the Son of man be.”
The four characteristics of
lightning as they apply to the second advent of Christ
1. Lightning travels
at great speed, and Christ returns to the earth with great speed. Lightning is
used as an illustration because of the speed of the second advent.
2. Lightning can be
seen by anyone; Christ will be seen by everyone — Revelation 1:7.
3. Lightning is a
warning of a storm, and the return of Christ will be characterised by the storm
— the baptism of fire.
4. Lightning disturbs
and frightens people and the return of Christ is going to do the same thing —
Revelation 6:15-17. Unbelievers are going to be frightened by the return of
Christ.
Verses 28-31, four
signs of the second advent.
Verse 28 — the first sign: the great slaughter of
Armageddon; verse 29, the second sign: the celestial disturbances; verse 30,
the third sign: the mourning of Israel; verse 31, the fourth sign: the
resurrection of regenerate Israel.
Beginning in verse 27
and going through to the end of the chapter we have the answer to the second
question of verse 3: what are the signs of the second coming of Christ? It
becomes necessary for the Tribulational believers to know when the second
advent takes place so as not to be deceived by false teachers. We have had the
phrase several times: at the end of verse 23, “Believe it not”; at the end of
verse 24, “they shall deceive the very elect”; at the end of verse 26, “Believe
it not.” So we have now a reversal of the question order of verse 3 and we have
the signs of the second advent. These signs were written for a future
generation of believers so that they will not be deceived and so that they will
not lose their lives.
In verse 27 we have
the first illustration of the second advent — lightning. In verses 28-31 we
have four signs of the second advent. Sign one: verse 28, the great slaughter
of the Armageddon campaign. At the end of the Tribulation and just before the
second advent of Christ there will be a fantastic campaign fought throughout
Palestine and Middle East area. It will include the invasion of oriental powers
into the land; it will include the invasion of the king of the west, the
revived Roman empire, the invasion of the king of the north, the pan-Arabic
bloc will move in and there is going to a fantastic campaign. Generally it is
known as Armageddon although Armageddon is only used in Revelation 16. It is a
campaign because it is made up of at least four different battles and there is
a great deal of scripture about these four battles in Joel chapters 2 and 3, in
Ezekiel 38 and 39, in Daniel 11, Revelation chapter 16, Isaiah 63 and many
other passages. But here we look at the Armageddon campaign from the standpoint
of its casualties. There are casualties in any war but the greatest casualties
in any war always come from someone’s stupidity. We have here someone making a
mistake, and that “someone” are the four great spheres of influence who invade
Palestine, all of them seeking the destruction of the Jew one way or another.
In verse 28 we read of
this great slaughter. “For wheresoever the carcass is [a body fallen in
battle], there will the eagles [buzzards] be gathered together.” This is a
quick description indicating that there will be a lot of corpses and a lot of
buzzards working on the situation. There are some other descriptions of this
great Armageddon campaign from the standpoint of its casualties. Revelation
14:20 is what we would probably call a bloody description. It says the blood
will run as high as the horses bridle for 175 miles, and that is an awful lot
of blood being shed. Revelation 19:17 is very similar to this passage in which
it talks about the buzzards having a big feast. Ezekiel 39:17 is another
description. It will take seven months to bury the dead not taken care of by
the buzzards. But the point is there will be a tremendous campaign and an
unusual number of casualties just before the second advent.
Verse 29, the second
sign: the celestial disturbances. These celestial disturbances fall into two
categories. Apparently there will be some meteor activity and then, all of a
sudden, a complete darkness. “Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall
the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light.” The moon reflects
light and all light to the earth is cut off the day of the second advent. There
are two reasons why all of the light is cut off. It protects the born again
Jews who are fulfilling the Word of God by fighting in Jerusalem against
hopeless odds after Jerusalem has been captured by the king of the north and
who do not have the equipment for a prolonged siege, and therefore are about to
be wiped out. They stick to their guns, they continue to believe the Word of
God and as a result God blanks out the earth so it is impossible for any troops
to move. And on the day that the light is blanked out, that is the day that
Christ will return. The second reason has to do with an analogy to the cross.
There are many words for darkness but the type of darkness here means a total
absence of light. Even darkness has some light in it but this darkness has none
at all. During the last three hours on the cross when Jesus Christ was bearing
our sins there was a total darkness surrounding that cross. We have exactly the
same kind of darkness when Christ returns at the second advent. The earth will
be covered completely in darkness and this will fulfil the principle of
Revelation 1:7, “Behold every eye shall see him.” Christ is the Light of the
world and as we find in Zechariah chapters 12 and 14 both of those chapters, in
the early part of the Millennium Christ is the Light that lights the world.
This is especially emphasised in Zechariah chapter 14. So there will be a day
of darkness on the day of the second advent and this means darkness on all sides
of the earth. Notice the sun and the moon are both mentioned. The sun gives
light, the moon reflects light, both the sources of light and the reflectors
are all blanked out.
There are an amazing
number of passages on this particular day. The passages begin in Isaiah chapter
13:9,10. There is Ezekiel 32:7,8; Joel 2:10,11; 3:15; Amos 5:18; Zechariah
14:6; Matthew 24:29; Luke 21:25-27; Revelation 6:12. And because of this darkness
every eye shall see Him, there will be no problem at all in seeing the Lord Jesus
Christ.
“and the stars.” The
word for stars here does not necessarily mean stars but it refers to things
moving in space, small things, so this could be meteors; “shall fall from
heaven.” So there will be some unusual activity at that time. And it may be
that the darkness and the meteors all occur at the same time and there is
possibly some relationship between the two.
Verse 30 — we have the
third sign: the regathering of Israel. “And then shall appear the sign of the
Son of man in heaven [Christ shall appear and all shall see Him]; and then
shall all the tribes of the land [not “earth”] mourn.” The tribes of the land
refer to the Jews, it is not referring to Gentiles at all. This is also
described in Zechariah chapter twelve, verses 11-14. When it says that they
shall mourn it actually is not the usual mourning where you weep over someone
who has departed, this is a happy weeping, a great happiness expressed — tears
of joy. This is a sign of the regathering of the Jews. The tears of joy are
based upon the fact that the fifth cycle of discipline is over.
“and they shall see
the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory.” The
power is the power to regather them, and power is mentioned specifically
because until Christ returns no one has the ability to regather the Jews,
although a lot of people have tried. The Jews are going to be scattered and no
matter how many Israels are organised, no matter how many Zionistic movements
are developed, the Jews are going to remain scattered throughout the earth
until Christ comes back, only the Lord Jesus Christ has the power to bring them
all back to the land. Satan always has a view in hand and he is always going to
be trying to annihilate the Jews on the one hand or regather them on the other
but he will succeed in neither. The Jews will always have a nucleus in the land
and it may or may not be significant. But it is not a great sign. There may be
Jews in the land for another thousand years and then the Tribulation, and on
the other hand it may be very close. Their presence there today doesn’t mean a
thing. There will be Jews in the land at the time of the Tribulation.
Verse 31 — the fourth
sign: the resurrection of Israel. There will be Jews who are alive throughout
the earth and they will be brought back and then the Jews of the Old Testament
will be resurrected. They all have to be regathered because then they have their
baptism of fire — Ezekiel 20. But they are all brought back into the land and
then they are separated. The interesting things is that all of the Jews will
come, regardless of anything, believers and unbelievers alike. We have Jews
alive at the second advent and they are regathered in the previous verse. But
now we have Jews who have been first living in Paradise or Abraham’s bosom and
then were transferred to heaven living with a soul and a spirit but they do not
have a body. In this verse we have the resurrection of all Israel. “He shall
send his angels with the great sound of a trumpet.” Notice again the sound of a
trumpet. We have the same thing at the Rapture of the Church which is the
resurrection of the Church. The trumpet sounds this time for the resurrection
of the born again Jews; “and they shall gather together his elect.” This refers
to the born again Jews from Abraham right down to the interruption of the Age
of Israel at the cross, and then skipping over to the Jews in the Tribulation
who were martyred; “from the four winds.” The gathering together is the
resurrection, the elect again are the born again Jews as in Daniel 12:13 and in
Isaiah 26:19,20. The four winds indicates that these Jews are resurrected from
all over the earth wherever they died. Notice is says “from one end of heaven
to the other.” This is where the born again Jews reside at the present time.
This brings up a
question as to the order of the first resurrection. In the first resurrection
there are four phases. The first resurrection is made up of believers only.
Christ is called “the firstfruits of them that slept,” He is the first person
in the history of the human race to be resurrected. People were brought back
from the dead but there is a technical difference. The people who were brought
back to life in the Old Testament subsequently died. Jesus brought three people
back to life, Lazarus, for example. But eventually Lazarus died. That is
resuscitation, not resurrection. Under resurrection you cannot die, you have a
body exactly like that of the Son of God and it is impossible to die. So Jesus
Christ is the first member of the human race. It was His humanity that made the
decision to die on the cross and it was His humanity that actually died on the
cross (deity can’t die), it was His humanity which was resurrected and He is
the firstfruits — 1 Corinthians 15:23. Secondly, we have the Church, the body
of Christ — 1 Thessalonians 4:16-18; 1 Corinthians 15:51-58; 1 John 3:1,2;
Philippians 3:21; John 14:1-3, and other passages. The Church is resurrected at
the end of the Church Age. The third resurrection occurs at the second advent,
the resurrection of the Jews — Israel of the past plus the Jews who were
martyred in the Tribulation. This is brought out by Daniel 12:13; Isaiah
26:19,20; Revelation 20:4; Matthew 24:31. Then if any Jews die during the
Millennium for any reason they will be resurrected at the end of the
Millennium.
Reasons why the resurrection
of the Old Testament saints does not take place until the second advent
The Church is
resurrected first.
1. First of all
reference is made to Acts chapter 2:25-29, Peter’s Pentecostal sermon. In this
sermon, verse 29, he says that David was still in the sepulchre. David had not
been resurrected on the day of Pentecost. The reason for emphasising this is
very simple. After the resurrection of Christ we have the very interesting
thing that some of the saints were seen walking in the streets, and so on. But
later, over in June of 30 AD on the day of Pentecost
(thirty days later), obviously David had not been resurrected because the body
of David was still in the tomb. David is an Old Testament saint, a Jew, so
obviously they are not resurrected.
2. We have the
identification of the two witnesses of Revelation 11:2-13. They are Moses and
Elijah and they could not die in Jerusalem if they had resurrection bodies. It
is obvious that two of the great Old Testament saints are not in resurrection
bodies because they could not die in Jerusalem during the Tribulation and then
be resuscitated. Once you get a resurrection body it is not subject to
corruption, it is not subject to death.
3. The principle of
the dispensation of Israel. Under this principle it is not completed yet —
Daniel 9. On this side of the Babylonian captivity the Jews were given another
490 years, but the cross was 483 years out and the cross stopped the Jewish Age
with seven years to go. Now we have the Church Age and when the Church is
removed we pick up the conclusion of the Jewish Age — seven more years. The
Tribulation is the end of the Jewish Age and it isn’t over and there is no
resurrection until it is. People are resurrected after their dispensation is
over. The Church is resurrected at the end of the Church Age; the Jews will be
resurrected at the end of the Jewish Age, which isn’t over until the end of the
Tribulation.
4. The fourth concept
simply takes two passages of scripture which in their chronology occur at the
end of the Tribulation. They occur at the second advent and both of these
passages of scripture are talking about the second advent, not the Church Age
where often this resurrection is placed — Daniel 12:13; Isaiah 26:19,20.
5. The reference to
the unconditional covenants to Israel: the Abrahamic, Palestinian, Davidic, and
New covenants. These are not fulfilled until the second advent and therefore
there is no necessity for a resurrection until they are fulfilled. Their fulfilment’s
demand a resurrection. Up until then there is no demand.
6. Matthew 27:51,52 —
we do not have resurrection here but we do have resuscitation and transfer. The
purpose of running a few people through Jerusalem for a little witnessing on
their way to the third heaven is witnessing and transfer.
7. Ephesians 4:8 — a
transfer of souls of the Old Testament saints from Paradise or Abraham’s bosom
to the third heaven.
Verse 32 — a second
illustration of the second advent. Our Lord Jesus Christ often used the fig
tree which has characteristics which illustrate various principles of doctrine,
and especially in connection with Israel. We have already studied one use of the
fig tree in Matthew 21:19,20. There we have a withered fig tree which depicts
Israel’s failure as a missionary base in the dispensation of Israel. We have a
missionary base in every dispensation. In the dispensation of the Gentiles the
missionary base was the family because nationalism was just in the process, and
you take one family which apparently was a family of missionaries, Seth’s
family, and it finally goes down to Noah who was the last missionary of that
family. Then when you get over to the Age of the Jews it is called the Age of
the Jews because Israel is the missionary base. They were custodians of the
Word and responsible for its dissemination, and of course they failed — 5th
cycle of discipline. Then we have the Church Age and in the Church Age the
Church is the missionary base, and believers are responsible for witnessing. In
the Age of Christ, which is the Age of the Millennium, the Lord Jesus Christ
Himself is the missionary. We conclude that from Isaiah: “the earth will be
filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the waters that cover the sea,” Isaiah
11. So the Lord Jesus Christ Himself is the last missionary before eternity
begins.
Notice something: In
the last 1900 years of the Church Age no independent missionary organisation
has lasted for 1900 years. But for 1900 years the local church has lasted. The
local church is the bona fide basis for missions when the local church is doctrinal,
and when it has doctrine then missionaries go. Independent missions have always
been formed by some unusual person, some strong person. For example, Hudson
Taylor of China Inland Mission. And they do a fine job in certain regards, but
always, sooner later, time catches up with them because they do not have the
doctrinal stability to stay in one piece. They depart from doctrine in some way
and they lose out. And this has always been true of any missions that are
independent of an independent church. Now in many ages there is an obvious
reason when you get a maximum number of independent churches or local
congregations that are apostate, obviously there is a problem. But the answer
is not to form independent missionary societies as such, the answer is to form
independent churches that are faithful to the Word and then they thrust out
missionaries. That is why no missionary society retains its doctrinal purity
with which it started, for example. It may over a period of ten or fifteen
years do a magnificent work for the Lord but it fades.
The withering of the
fig tree in Matthew 21:19,20 was to show how Israel failed, but now we have new
fig tree illustration here. In this fig tree parable the fig tree is successful
in the Tribulation. In other words, the fig tree is used two ways. The
dispensation of Israel before it was interrupted by the cross is the withered
fig tree; the end of the Jewish Age is the Tribulation, and now the fig tree is
used to illustrate the success of the Jews as missionaries in the Tribulation.
“Now learn a parable.”
The word learn is very interesting for several reasons because it means to
learn from a teacher, and Jesus is teaching. We will carry the implications a
little further for this reason: when a believer is a new believer he is called
experientially a baby. He has to grow up, and this means that he cannot sit
down and study the Bible for himself and grow up any more than a baby can sit
down and master mathematics. Someone has to teach the new baby and that is why
we have the gift of pastor and teacher in the local church and that gift is
designed so that the first things that you will ever learn, if you get it
right, will be from a pastor and teacher. Everyone has to start out by being
taught by someone. The word “learn” here means to learn from a teacher, to
learn through instruction, and it is an aorist active imperative, a command.
They are commanded to learn this parable and it isn’t going to be hard because
a parable is always a short narrative. Remember, parables illustrate doctrine.
Do not try to get your doctrine from parables, you get your illustrations of
doctrine from parables.
“of [from] the fig
tree.” The word “from” is the preposition of ultimate source, a)po, which means learn from the
ultimate source of the fig tree. The very fact that He would use a)po with the fig tree indicates
that the fig tree represents more than just a fig tree, it represents Israel,
something big.
“When his branch.”
This is a reference to the Lord Jesus Christ. One of His messianic titles is
the Branch as in Isaiah 11:1 in the Hebrew; Zechariah 3:8; 6:12; “is tender.”
The word “tender” isn’t tender at all it means when the branch is about to
sprout. And the sprouting of the branch is the second advent of Christ; “and
putteth forth its leaves.” The putting forth of the leaves is an illustration
of Israel’s evangelism in the Tribulation, the evangelistic production of the
Jews; “ye know that summer is nigh.” Summer is the second advent and the
Millennium. In other words, the parable of the fig tree this time indicates
that the Jews succeeded in doing in seven years what they failed to do in 483
years after the Babylonian captivity. Now you have to remember that this
parable of the fig tree goes with the other fig tree incident and the fig tree
is generally used in this sense as Israel.
Verse 33 — “So
likewise ye, when ye shall see all these things,” the things that have been
discussed; “know.” Notice the principle here. The greatest thing you can do is
be oriented to the plan of God and you have to do this through knowing. This is
to know from the experience of learning; “that it is near.” “It” refers to the
second advent of Christ; “even at the door.”
Verses 34-36, the
principle that Israel has a future. One of the great doctrines of scripture is the fact that Israel is never removed
from the scene. Israel has a future even though they have failed in the past.
Verse 34 — “Verily”
means a point of doctrine is coming up. Jesus is about to enucleate doctrine;
“I say unto you, This generation.” Literally, this race, and it refers to the
Jewish race; “shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled.” That is a challenge
to Satan and that is why we have anti-Semitism. God makes a promise that the
race of the Jews will not pass from the earth until the second advent. Satan
would like to meet that challenge and destroy all Jews. The fulfilling here is
the fulfilling of the unconditional covenants to Israel. Israel’s eternal
security is in the Abrahamic, Palestinian, Davidic and New covenants.
Verse 35 — “Heaven and
earth shall not pass away, but my words shall not pass away.” Even though the
worst catastrophe that could be conceived of, the departure of heaven and
earth, the Words of the Lord shall not pass away. In their words, you can’t
count on the heavens and the earth being where they are now. In fact they won’t
be, they will be destroyed before eternity begins, 2 Peter 3, but you can count
on the Word. God keeps His word; God keeps His word to Israel and although
these unconditional covenants have not been fulfilled yet, they will be.
Verse 36 — “But of
that day and hour knoweth no one.” We are commanded to know the Word but we are
never commanded to figure out when the Rapture is going to occur, when the
second advent is going to occur, the day and the hour are in the hands of the
Lord.
“no, not the angels of
heaven, but my Father only.” The Father has always known when these things will
occur, the Father hasn’t lost track. In other words, God’s plan is not too
great for God is what this last phrase says.
Verse 37 — the third
illustration of the second advent, an illustration by historical analogy. “But
as the days of Noah were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.” In
the days of Noah, after the flood came, all unbelievers were taken off and all
believers continued on the earth — the flood. We have exactly the same
situation here. Christ comes, and all believers remain on the earth for the
Millennium but all unbelievers are cast off — the baptism of fire. In the days
of Noah all unbelievers were saturated with water, at the second advent they
will be saturated with fire. There is an exact analogy here and it is the
antithesis of the Rapture in which believers are taken off the earth and
unbelievers remain. Notice, this is not a Rapture passage, it is the second
advent. Notice, too, at the end of verse 39, “the coming of the Son of man.”
This is the second advent. The Church is not found in Matthew except by way of
prophecy — Matthew 16.
Verse 38 — description
of the days of Noah. “For as in the days that were before the flood.” Actually
before the flood people just simply had negative volition, maximum negative
volition at the point of God consciousness and at the point of gospel hearing.
In fact there was 120 years of negative volition during which time Noah
preached. What characterises negative volition at these points? Well people who
have negative volition must get everything they can out of life, and therefore
they are merely seeking to find happiness in life. These are not sins mentioned
here as such but these are ways of deriving happiness from life since they have
no interest in eternity.
The first is “eating,” a present
active participle which means to crunch with the teeth, to crunch vigorously,
to enjoy eating. So we have the point that they were
trying to derive
happiness by food. The next is drinking and it doesn’t necessarily mean to be
drinking alcoholic beverage, though that could be included, it is just drinking
as a social
activity. These are not mentioned as sin but they are mentioned as things which
indicate apathy and indifference to the gospel. The point that is brought out
is brought out by
the third one, “marrying and giving in marriage.” This is one of those things
where you have some parallels to illustrate negative volition as it results in
just wanting to
enjoy life, that’s all. Marrying and giving in marriage is just another way of
trying to enjoy life, so we have all of these things which are preoccupation
with self, a
selfish desire for happiness, and to ignore eternity; and these are three
general characteristics of the time before Noah. They sinned too but the
sinfulness is
not emphasised;
simply their love of life and their indifference to eternity.
“until the day that
Noah entered into the ark.” That was the day the judgement came. The ark was
the place of safety for the believer.
Verse 39 — “And knew
not.” This is almost parallel to verse 32: “Now learn a parable.” They knew
not. This means to know from the experience of learning doctrine; “until the
flood came, and took them all away.” Who was taken away? The unbeliever. The
unbeliever was taken out of the earth; the earth began all over with believers
only, just as the Millennium will begin with believers only. At the end of the
Millennium there will be many unbelievers just as eventually there were many
unbelievers on the earth after the flood, but you start with believers only.
Notice the phrase, “took them all away.” This means being removed from the
earth; “so shall the coming of the Son of man be.”
Verse 40 — “Then.”
Here is how it works out at the second advent; “shall two be in the field; the
one shall be taken, and the other left.” The one who is taken is the
unbeliever, he is taken out of the world. The one who is left is the believer
staying on for the Millennium. This is just the opposite of the Rapture. At the
Rapture the believer is taken and the unbeliever is left.
Verse 41 — “Two women
shall be grinding at the mill; one shall be taken [the unbeliever], and the
other left [the born again believer].” So we have a direct analogy. Only twice
in history have all unbelievers been removed: once at the flood and once at the
second advent. All unbelievers are taken off in both cases and in both cases a
new civilisation is started with believers only.
The purpose of the
Olivet discourse is to brief Tribulational believers, especially Jews in
southern Palestine, with regard to the events of the Tribulation and how to
stay alive through them. The command in Matthew 24 is to run, compared with
Zechariah chapter 14 where in the last half of the Tribulation the command is
to fight. The believer in the Tribulation must have a fantastic knowledge of
Bible doctrine and he will have to pick it up in a hurry. The events of the
Tribulation are not difficult, in fact a great portion of the scripture
describes these seven years. That is itself is significant. Here are seven
years in history and yet a great percentage of the Word of God is devoted to
describing these seven years. First of all because there are those in the
future who are not believers today and who will not be believers until after
the Rapture, who will need this information, not only for inner happiness and
inner power and impact in witness, but in order simply to remain alive during
the time of the Tribulation. So consequently we learn a principle from that
which is addressed to a future generation of believers: the importance of Bible
doctrine, the importance of making doctrine your life. No matter what you do in
life or where you are, ultimately if you are simply seeking happiness, if you
are living like any unbeliever would live, you are simply trying to be like
anyone else and trying to get a little happiness out of life, you’ve had it.
But if doctrine is your life then you are going to enjoy many things in life.
You can have inner happiness all of the time and it does not make any
difference whether it is suffering or great prosperity and success, you are
going to have a marvellous time in this life. Your life will be meaningful and
the things that you do will count for eternity. So there is a very strong
application to us from this passage even though the Olivet discourse is not
directed toward any believer in the Church Age.
We have studied the
detailed warnings as well as the detailed instructions to Jews of Judea. Now we
have application which begins with an exhortation in verse 42 — “Watch,”
present active imperative. The Greek word means to be alert: Keep on being
alert. This is a military word and it means that in order for a sentry to be on
a post, an outpost, a picketing line, he must have some pertinent information,
some instructions. Any wise military commander, when setting up a picket line,
when putting out flankers, and giving a briefing to those who will act as a
point, always gives information about the enemy. They always warn you what to
expect, what to look for and how to stay alive. So the command which is given
here, “Watch,” is a very excellent one because it brings in the military
analogy and it brings in the principle of interpretation that the Bible must be
interpreted in the time in which it was written. The word “watch” was a command
to a picket, a command to a flanker, a command to someone on the march who was
on the point or a patrol. And the point is that when you go out on
reconnaissance you must know what you are looking for, you must have some
concept of the enemy. So the word “watch doesn’t mean to observe, to stand in
front of a shop window and look, it has to concept of being on the alert with
regard to a situation. This command actually tells the believer of the
Tribulation: “Now you have been given your instructions, look for these things.
Look for the abomination of desolation, know what to do immediately, make your
decision, be alert with regard to Bible doctrine, to divine viewpoint. Do
exactly what the Word of God tells you to do. Run. When you get to the
mountains, stay there. When they tell you that Christ is waiting for you,
believe it not.”
To stay alert doctrine
has to be your life. You have to have doctrine in your frontal lobe, you have
to be able to apply doctrine. So alertness here means more than just to be
alert, it means to be happy, it means to be oriented, it means to be satisfied,
it means to be an island in yourself. And that is exactly the concept of the
Word of God at this particular point. Keep on being alert and doctrine in the
frontal lobe is the only answer to this.
“for ye know not what
hour your Lord doth come.” In other words, the actual date of the second
advent, the actual time, is unknown. But for the Jews who are born again in the
Tribulation they must live constantly alert, they cannot afford to go to sleep at
any point. “Watch” means that you have to stay alert to stay alive. The
principle behind this verse: alertness in any age comes from knowledge of the
Word of God, from Bible doctrine in the frontal lobe. If you do not have Bible
doctrine in the frontal lobe you cannot be alert. You cannot be oriented to
your situation; you cannot be oriented to the plan of God; you simply do not
have the ability to know what is going on. Therefore disorientation leads to
fear, anxiety, and to sins which are dishonouring to the Lord, whereas
alertness, Bible doctrine in the frontal lobe applied to all situations,
results in inner happiness, peace, and productivity, in other words, fulfilling
the purpose for which you remain on this earth after salvation.
The perfect
illustration is the Lord Jesus Christ Himself. When Jesus Christ went to the
cross: first of all He didn’t want to go. In His humanity the cross was
repugnant because He would come into contact not only with human sin but with
all of the sins of the world. Once He got on the cross and the sins of the
world were poured out upon Him God the Father could not help Him even though He
loved Him with an infinite love. All the Father could do was to judge Him and
to pour out divine wrath on the sins that He was bearing. Angels could not help
Christ, human beings could not help Christ, the Father could not help Christ.
The only thing that sustained Jesus for the last three hours of the cross is
doctrine. He had all the realm of doctrine in His frontal lobe. He was able to
go to the cross and to die for your sins and mine and to be the recipient of
divine wrath through doctrine. In other words, when nothing else could sustain
Him doctrine did. And the only thing that can sustain us in time of tragedy and
catastrophe and time of success is Bible doctrine, and unless Bible doctrine is
your life you’ve had it. And that means it has to be in the frontal lobe,
otherwise you’re just another ordinary human being and whatever else you are it
doesn’t cut any ice with God at all. They that are in the flesh cannot please
God.
Actually we have that
particular principle right here. That word “watch” means doctrine. How can you
be alert? Bible doctrine is the only answer. Without Bible doctrine there is no
alertness. You’re not living, you’re just a zombie, you’re a shell of your
spiritual self unless you have Bible doctrine. So here is a command to get
doctrine.
Verses 43-51, parables
to help believers be alert.
Verse 43 — “But know
this.” Notice the contrast. In verse 42: “ye know not.” Again we have a present
active imperative. In the previous verse it was “Watch ye”; now is “Know this.”
So the two imperatives are related. How do you stay alert? How do you stay
alive when you are in a tactical situation where you are outnumbered? You have
to “know,” you have to have information.
“that if” — 2nd class
condition, [if and it isn’t true] which means if the good man of the house had
known but he didn’t know. So he was caught flat-footed; “the good man of the
house,” the head of the house, the master of the house. In other words, the
Father. The good man of the house is a Jewish believer in the Tribulation, and
we already know something about him from the 2nd class condition: he doesn’t
know what he should know — doctrine. He is a believer who doesn’t know the
first part of Matthew 24. (By the way, this is a parable analogous to a
believer in the Tribulation who is ignorant of doctrine)
“had known in what
watch the thief would come, he would have watched [he would have been alert],
and would not have permitted his house to be broken up.” This story is about
the master of the household who has prepared his house against thieves but he
relaxes his defence system because he did not know when the thief would arrive.
And so when he least expected it and when he relaxed his vigilance the thief
came. In the analogy (which is not a true analogy) the thief comes suddenly,
and we have already seen from the word “lightning,” the lightning shining from
the east to the west; the thief represents Christ returning suddenly. His house
is not protected and therefore he suffers. Here is a believer who is not alert
and therefore he suffers. He is not alert to the coming of Christ, he is not
alert to the dispensation into which he finds himself, and his failure to know
doctrine means that he is taken by surprise of the events of the Tribulation.
Jesus said in Revelation 16: “Behold, I come as a thief.” That means, “I come
suddenly,” and so the coming of the thief here refers to those events
immediately preceding the Tribulation which can be summarised by one word:
catastrophe. The coming of the thief then are the catastrophes which precede
the coming of Christ, and these catastrophes overtake. So in the final analogy
the thief refers to the catastrophes of the Tribulation which overtake the good
man of the house who is a Tribulational believer, and it is because of one
thing stated in this short parable: he did not know. Same problem we have
today: did not know. Catastrophe overtakes the ignorant believer, and the
principle is true for us today. The believer who does not know Bible doctrine
is overtaken by catastrophe.
Verse 44 — another application. “Therefore be ye
also ready.” The Greek says become ready or become prepared. There is only one
way to be prepared for catastrophe and disaster and that is Bible doctrine in
the frontal lobe. The verb to become is ginomai, which means to become something you were not
before. Before, these believers were not prepared, they did not have doctrine;
now become prepared. Become means it is a process. Present tense: keep on
becoming; active voice: it must come from your volition, you must do it
yourself; the imperative mood: it is a command, it is an order. No one is
prepared automatically. Doctrine doesn’t become your life by taking it in once
a week or even twice a week. The only people who ever make it are the people
who take it in all the time, the rest are going to fall by the wayside.
Corrected translation: “Therefore become prepared.” There are only two types of
preparation for the Tribulation: 1. Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ; 2. Learn
Bible doctrine.
“for in such an hour
as ye think not.” The Greek says, in a time least expected; “the Son of man
cometh.” So when they least expect it, that is when it arrives. The only way to
be prepared for the least expected is through Bible doctrine.
Verse 45 — a second
parable. This verse looks from the standpoint of someone who is alert. “Who
then is a faithful and wise servant,” two characteristics of the prepared
believer: wise means he has doctrine and is ready to apply it; faithfulness
means that he has stability. Whatever he is doing he is stabilised in it. The
faithful and wise servant is the born again believer in the Tribulation. He has
Bible doctrine, he applies it; that’s wisdom. In whatever he is doing you can
count on him — faithfulness, stability; “whom his lord hath made ruler over his
household.” The household here is Israel in the Tribulation. And here is a Jew
who is responsible for witnessing in the Tribulation so he is made a ruler over
the household — Jews are responsible for witnessing; “to give them meat [bread,
food]” — reference to both salvation and doctrine; “in due season?” To the
unbeliever you give him the gospel, to the believer you give him doctrine
pertinent to the situation.
Verse 46 — “Blessed is
that servant.” Here is a believer in the Tribulation who is prepared and he has
great blessing; “whom his lord when he cometh shall find him so doing.” The key
here is “so doing,” present active participle. What will he be doing? He will
know doctrine, he will apply doctrine, he will have stability and he will be
giving out doctrine. He will live by doctrine, he will communicate doctrine,
both by his life and by his lips. So there is blessing for the one who is doing
that when Christ comes back, and this clarifies these parables. It is doing it
in that three and a half years before He comes back.
Verse 47 — “Verily I
say unto you.” Here comes some doctrine; “That he shall make him ruler over all
his goods.” When Christ returns this person will have reward and apparently
this reward begins in the Millennium. So the principle is: faithfulness is
rewarded.
Verse 48 — “But and
if.” The word “but” sets up a conjunction of contrast. We are going to have a
contrast between a faithful believer and an unbeliever; “that evil servant.” An
evil servant is an unbeliever in the Tribulation. What does the unbelieving Jew
in the Tribulation say? He says in his heart — “shall say in his heart.” The
heart isn’t something you feel in or emote in, it is something you say, the
heart is the brain; “My lord delayeth his coming.” He is an unbelieving Jew,
Messiah has not come. So what does he do?
Verse 49 — “And he
shall begin to smite his fellow servants.” He begins to bully. Here are the
Jews killing the Jews in the Tribulation; “and he shall eat and drink with the
drunken.” In other words, he lives it up. The pressure is on, the unbelieving
Jew is in the midst of all these catastrophes, so what does he do? Well he
blames it on other Jews and so he kills them, then he lives it up — his
sublimation, his escapism.
Verse 50 — “The lord
of that servant shall come in a day when he looketh not for him.” In other
words, Messiah is coming whether he thinks He is coming or not. The unbelieving
Jew thinks He hasn’t even come the first time; “and in an hour that he is not aware
of.” The unbeliever will be caught flat-footed, he is caught by the second
advent. And when the second advent overtakes the unbeliever what happens to the
unbeliever? He enters the baptism of fire.
Verse 51 — “And shall
cut him asunder.” Cut asunder here means to inflict extreme punishment. It is a
reference to the baptism of fire. It is a future tense to indicate that the
baptism of fire does not occur until after the second advent; “and appoint him
his portion with the hypocrites [religious unbelievers]: there shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth.” This weeping and gnashing of teeth takes place at the
point of judgement. These people will weep, it is too late; they will gnash
their teeth because of the opportunity they have missed to be saved. They have
rejected Christ; there is no hope for them.
Introducing the
baptism of fire
From the time of the
cross there are seven major judgements in history.
1. At the cross, the
first judgement, Christ was judged for us. That is the basis of eternal
salvation, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved.”
2. The second
judgement occurs in time and that judgement is rebound — 1 John 1:9. The
believer rebounds for cleansing — 1 Corinthians 11:31.
3. The third judgement
in history takes place after the Rapture of the Church and it has to do with
the believer — the judgement of the believer’s works or the production for
phase two.
4. When Christ returns
to the earth, second advent, we have the judgement of living Gentiles. We get
this in the last half of Matthew 24.
5. The judgement of
living Jews — Ezekiel chapter 20. (Judgements four and five constitute the
baptism of fire)
6. Then we have the
Millennial reign of Christ, 1000 years. At the end of that time fallen angels
are judged.
7. The great white
throne or the last judgement for all unbelievers since the beginning of time.
This occurs at the end of the Millennium.