14And this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed
throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the
end will come. 15So when you see the abomination of
desolation spoken of by the prophet Daniel, standing in the holy place
(let the reader understand), 16then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains. —Matthew 24:14-16
In Matthew 24, Jesus gave us some clear connecting points between Daniel 9 and the Book of Revelation.
If we are going to be diligent about Bible reading, we are going to
have to learn how to read prophetic passages. God is very clear that a
prophet speaking for Him must be exactly right or he should be killed!
(see Deuteronomy 18:20-21) This means the “prophets” featured in the supermarket papers wouldn’t last long!
Some of the things that happen through church history to make the
fulfillment of prophesy apparent to the people of God are what are
called “touchdown fulfillments.” Not the ultimate fulfillment, but an
intermediate fulfillment. Take, for example, the prophecy of Isaiah 7:14, “A virgin shall conceive and bear a son.” There was a fulfillment of that in Isaiah’s day; and then ultimately in Christ.
The prophesy of Joel 2 mentioned in Acts 2
about young men dreaming dreams and old men seeing visions. That was
fulfilled in Joel’s day and again in the birth of the Church, and there
will be an ultimate fulfillment of that prophecy in the time ahead.
So it is with the Matthew 24 passage and the “abomination of desolation” that Jesus mentioned. Interesting, in 175 B.C., Antiochus the IV, a Syrian king, took the name Theos Epiphanes which means God Manifested.
He marched through the Holy Land, down to Egypt. But because he was
turned back (in 170 B.C.), he had such anger that he took it out on the
Nation of Israel. He went into the Holy of Holies in the Temple and
offered a pig on the altar there. And then he forced Jewish people to
eat that meat and to bow down to him.
Now Theos Epiphanes had a bit of an ego problem, right? “Just call me
God Manifested.” Eighty thousand Jews refused to bow down to him and
they were all murdered in the streets of Jerusalem. Daniel’s prophecy
was fulfilled and will be fulfilled again in the end.
Biblical prophecy is not a fantasy movie script. These are realities.
And God has given us times in history to see a touchdown fulfillment of
it. So we’re like, “That could totally happen. I can see that
happening. It has happened — It will happen!” Like that. The
ultimate fulfillment of the abomination of desolation is yet future, as
Matthew points out when he notes, “let the reader understand.” Let’s anticipate God’s promises every day!
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