One of the Jesus-approved ways by which we can gauge how close we are to His return as far as a timeline is concerned is that the gospel of the kingdom will be preached in all the world as a witness to all the nations before the end could come.
Imagine how fantastical that
claim seemed to His disciples, given that they were currently a handful of men
following Him, shunned by the religious power base of the time, and rejected by
their own families and friends for following after Jesus. They had no clue as
to how big the world was, nor did they have the ability to travel by anything
other than ship to faraway lands, journeys that weren’t only time-consuming but
also fraught with danger and uncertainty.
Paul, the Apostle of Christ,
survived no less than four shipwrecks in his life. That’s just one man. So it’s
not as though seafaring was a safe form of transport or that those who’d
departed for a journey were certain to arrive at their destination, yet Jesus
declared the gospel of the kingdom would be preached in all the world.
It’s easy to conclude that the
world is a small place when an individual can reach millions with a camera and
a Wi-Fi connection, but it was not so during their day. Even as early as the
1900s, when most people were still riding their horses to church or taking
carriages if it was a family affair, the notion that the gospel would be
preached in all the world seemed like a far-fetched thing. Sure, missionaries
were making their way to smaller and smaller nations, discovering new groups of
individuals to whom they could preach the gospel, but it still seemed like an
impossible task even as little as a hundred years ago.
All the technological
advancements we are witnessing today had to happen for the myriad of prophecies
regarding the last days to be fulfilled. Those tasked with recording them
didn’t try to explain how they thought they might come about. They just knew
they were hearing from God, were faithful in recording what they received, and
though they might have had questions or certain things didn’t seem probable at
the time, they nevertheless did their duty. That’s the difference between true
prophecy and what passes for prophecy nowadays. Deductive reasoning is not prophecy.
Divine revelation is not required to conclude that a storm is coming if you’re
standing on your stoop, watching the sky grow dark and hearing thunder in the
distance.
The disciples never asked Jesus
how these things could possibly come about. All they asked was when. They took
it as a certainty, as yes and amen, not doubting His words but desiring to know
when His words would come to pass, both regarding the destruction of the temple
and the end of the age.
This is the sort of faith we
must aspire to in every area of our lives. If God says He will keep you,
shelter you, protect you, and guide you in the coming days, take Him at His
word. Believe it as truth and an immutable certainty. The knowledge that God
can protect His own and knowing that He promised He would eliminates any
anxiousness or fear of what the future holds from our hearts.
We journey through this life and
will soon bear witness to the unfolding of the last days of the world, but we
do not do so alone or absent of hope. We know our redeemer lives. We know He is
able and willing to imbue us with all that is necessary to make us living
witnesses and testimonies to His omnipotent power.
That said, ignorance of the days
in which we’re living and of what Jesus said they would look like brings about
unnecessary tumult in our hearts and a tendency to give heed to the voices
speaking things antithetical to His words.
As we compare and contrast
Luke’s retelling of the Olivet discourse with Matthew’s, it’s readily apparent
when Jesus is speaking about the destruction of the temple and the broader
events of the last days before His imminent return.
Luke 21:20-24, “But when you see
Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its desolation is near. Then let
those who are in Judea flee to the mountains, let those who are in the midst of
her depart, and let not those who are in the country enter her. For these are
the days of vengeance, that all things which are written might be fulfilled.
But woe to those who are pregnant and to those who are nursing babies in those
days! For there will be great distress in the land and wrath upon this people.
And they will fall by the edge of the sword, and be led away captive into all
nations. And Jerusalem will be trampled by Gentiles until the times of the
Gentiles are fulfilled.”
The most credible retelling of
the sacking of Jerusalem and the destruction of the temple comes from the
writings of Josephus, a historian and military leader who served as Titus’s
translator when he led the siege of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. He wrote that 1.1
million Jews were killed during the siege, with another 100,00 or so being
enslaved.
What Jesus had prophesied
decades prior had come to pass just as He said it would. Those who remembered
His words fled as instructed and were spared; those who discounted them fell by
the edge of the sword.
While those present during the
destruction of the temple were told to flee when they saw Jerusalem surrounded
by armies, those who would be around during the last days of the world were
commanded to endure to the end. The reason for this is obvious if unpleasant
for those who believe that a geographical place of safety will exist during
those days.
There will be no safe haven for
the children of God when the events Jesus foretold of will begin to unfold
during the last days of the world. There will be no mountains we can flee to or
nations we can emigrate to, and the only place of refuge will be in Him.
Those who trust God will weather the storm, endure, and persevere. Those who trust in the arm of the flesh will have to contend with watching every plan they’ve engineered fail them as things go from bad to worse, and the just will inevitably have to live by faith. If you’re not working on building up your most holy faith and expending your time and energy elsewhere, sooner or later, the futility of your endeavor will become painfully obvious.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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