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It Came Without Warning
~ Chapter IV ~
Not Without Warning
"Therefore watch, and remember, that by the space of three years
I ceased not to warn every one night and day with tears."
Acts 20:31
The Bible states
with absolute clarity that the events surrounding the end of the age and the
return of Jesus Christ will come as a great surprise to the vast majority of
people on earth, even to many within His church. And although it will be a
surprise to many, IT WILL NOT COME WITHOUT WARNING.
God believes in warnings. He does so because it is a part of
His fundamental fairness. He is a God of great mercy. He is not a terrorist. He
does not rejoice in calamity. You will never see Him dancing in the streets when
man suffers, even when man suffers at His hand. God believes in warnings. The
Bible is a book of warnings. It records in great detail what the world will be
like in the last days and the specific steps the Creator is going to take to
prevent man from destroying this planet.
The Olivet Prophecy
One of the most powerful descriptions of the end time was
given by Jesus Christ to His apostles just days before His crucifixion. This
prophecy is arguably the most famous warning ever uttered by the Messiah. It is
recorded in great detail in three of the four gospels (Mt. 24, Mk. 13, Lk 21).
When Jesus gave this prophecy, He was in Jerusalem preparing
to keep His final Passover. While there, His disciples were showing Him the temple, and they commented regarding how
magnificent it was. The gospels of Mark and Luke indicate that the disciples
were marveling at the stones of the temple (Mk. 13:1; Lk. 21:5). Jesus then made
a pronouncement that must have rocked these men. Notice what He said.
And Jesus said unto them, See ye not all these things? Verily
I say unto you, There shall not be left here one stone upon another, that shall
not be thrown down. (Mt. 24:2)
This prediction by Jesus is even more remarkable when you
consider how massive some of the stones of the temple were. The great Jewish
historian Josephus wrote of single stones in the temple that were 40 cubits long
and pillars that were 25 cubits high. (See Josephus, War of the Jews, Book V,
Ch. v.i.). And in one sentence, Jesus said they were coming down.
When the disciples heard these words, they couldn’t contain
themselves. They followed Jesus out of the city, across the half-mile wide
Kidron Valley to the Mount of Olives. It was there that they pressed Him to
expand on His shocking statement. The disciples began by asking Jesus a very
pointed three-part question.
And as He sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came
unto him privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? And what shall
be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world? (Mt. 24:3)
What would follow on that spring day in Judea were words of
uncanny precision and insight. Jesus laid out a picture of life in the last days
that could be read in any newspaper today and scarcely draw a raised eye. But
the Messiah spoke these words over nineteen centuries ago and when doing so
acknowledged He was describing the end of the world. His words revealed a
genuine reason for this particular generation to be deeply concerned. They
included a series of warnings concerning religious, political, social, and
environmental conditions that would grow worse in intensity until they would
reach a state that would threaten human survival. But Jesus also spoke of
deliverance to those few who would truly heed His warning.
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