The
Times of the Gentiles
Recently,
I received a very interesting question
that deserves serious study. The
question was, What did Jesus mean
in Luke 21:24 when He said,
Jerusalem will be trampled on by
the Gentiles until the times of the
Gentiles are fulfilled?
The background for this question is very
interesting and for most readers, the
outcome will be surprising.
One
day, the disciple asked Jesus,
.what
shall the sign of thy coming, and the end
of the world? (Matthew 24:3,
KJV) Jesus responded by expressing
what is identified as a Day of the
Lord prophecy. Remember,
there are five types of prophecy and each
type uses unique rules of interpretation.
(See page 22, Jesus Final Victory.) Jesus
co-mingled the destruction of Jerusalem
(the end of the world) with the
destruction of the Earth (the end of the
world) because there are parallels
between these events. To appreciate
the phrase, Jerusalem will be
trampled on by the Gentiles until the
times of the Gentiles are
fulfilled, and we need to start in
verse 20:
Jesus
said: When you see
Jerusalem being surrounded by [Roman]
armies, you will know that its desolation
[Destruction] is near. Then
let those who are in Judea flee to the
mountains, let those in the city get out,
and let those in the country not enter
the city. For this is the
time of punishment in fulfillment of all
that has been written [in
the Scriptures]. How dreadful it
will be in those days for pregnant woman
and nursing mothers! There will be
great distress in the land and wrath
against this people. They
[the nation of Israel] will fall
by the sword and will be taken prisoners
to all the nations. [The city
of] Jerusalem will be trampled on by
the Gentiles until the times of
the Gentiles are
fulfilled. (Luke 21:
20-24, NIV, italics and insertion mine)
I
am sure that the disciples were shocked
to learn that the nation of Israel was
about to perish, Jerusalem was about to
be destroyed, and this coming catastrophe
would be Gods doing, a
fulfillment of all that had been
written [in Scripture].
I am sure the disciples were well
acquainted with the destruction that
King Nebuchadnezzar inflicted on
Jerusalem in 586 B.C., but I do not think
they were acquainted with the Scriptures
that Jesus mentioned pointing to the
final destruction of Jerusalem.
God
Made a Covenant with Israel
When
God gave His covenant to Israel at Mt.
Sinai, He promised to bless Israel beyond
their imagination if they would
faithfully serve Him as trustees of the
gospel. According to His covenant,
God also promised that He would destroy
the descendants of Abraham if they became
unfaithful to Him and profaned His name.
(Leviticus 22: 31-33; 26: 14-43) God
destroys nations that become unfaithful
to Him and Israel was no exception.
(Ezekiel 14: 12-22) Since God chose
Israel to be a nation of priests, they
were to represent Him to the nations of
Earth. Therefore, Israel had a
higher calling than other nations and
with a higher calling comes a higher
level of accountability. In His
covenant, God also promised that if
circumstances should require Him to
destroy Israel, He would spare a remnant.
(Leviticus 26: 43-45) About 400
years before Mt. Sinai, God made three
promises to Abraham. First, God
promised Abraham that he would the father
of many nations. (Genesis 13:16,
17:4) Second, God promised Abraham
that his descendants would someday
inherit the land of Canaan. (Genesis
12:7, 15:5, 17: 8) Last, God
promised Abraham that all mankind would
be blessed through him. (Genesis 17:19;
Galatians 3:16) God foreknew the
rebellious nature of mankind so He put a
provision in His covenant allowing Him to
spare the remnant of Abrahams
offspring until His promises to Abraham
were fulfilled. About two years
after God entered into the Mt. Sinai
covenant with Israel, the Children of
Israel rebelled against God when the
twelve spies returned from surveying the
land of Canaan. (Numbers 14) According
to the terms and conditions stated in His
covenant, God destroyed Israel, but He
spared a remnant. All of the
people who left Egypt died (except Caleb
and Joshua) and a remnant (the children
born in the wilderness) were spared.
After
entering Canaan, Israel went through
endless cycles of repentance and apostasy
for about 800 years. Finally, when
Israels cup of sin was filled, it
reached a point of no return. Israel
had reached a level of decadence and
rebellion where extended grace had no
redeeming effect. Israels
behavior caused God to carry out the
terms and conditions stated in His
covenant. He allowed King
Nebuchadnezzar to destroy two-thirds of
Israel and take the remnant captive for
70 years. (Ezekiel 5: 10-15;
Jeremiah 25: 9-11)
The
remnant in Babylon clearly understood why
they were captives in Babylon. (Daniel
9: 3-19) Even though God was angry
with Israel, He did not forsake
Abrahams offspring. In fact,
God sent encouraging messages to the
remnant of Israel through Ezekiel and
Jeremiah. God told the exiles that
He had not forgotten His covenant, He
spared a remnant, and He would return
them to their homeland. (Ezekiel
36:24) After seventy years of
captivity ended, God fulfilled His
promise through Cyrus in 536 B.C. (2
Chronicles 36: 22, 23) Not only did Cyrus
set Israel free, but he also returned the
city of Jerusalem (its rubble) to the
Jews. During the reconstruction of
the city and the temple, God reminded
Israel through Ezra and Nehemiah that His
covenant with Israel still remained.
Post-exile Jews perfectly understood that
if Israel behaved like their forefathers,
God would surely destroy them, as well.
(Nehemiah 8, 9)
Gods
relationship with Israel is but a mirror
reflecting Gods relationship with
all nations of Earth. All nations
are subject to Gods higher
authority (Daniel 4: 17, 34, 35) and when
any nation reaches a decadent point where
extended mercy has no redeeming effect, a
God of love is moved to bring that
nations violence and degeneracy to
an end. God does this for the
benefit of innocent children and for
future generations. God does not
enjoy destroying anyone, but He will not
allow sexual immorality, degenerate
behavior, and predatory violence to go
unpunished. When God uses His wrath
to destroy a nation, He often saves a
remnant, if their testimony will
have a redeeming effect on other
survivors. For example, when God
destroyed the world in Noahs day,
He spared a remnant of eight people.
When He destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, He
spared Lot and his family. When He
destroyed Jericho, He spared Rahab and
her family. However, on other
occasions, God spared no one.
(Deuteronomy 2: 31-34; 3: 4-6, 1 Samuel
15: 3)
The
Creation of Plan B
During
the Babylonian captivity, God spoke
frankly, but tenderly, to Israel through
the prophet Ezekiel. God promised
the remnant of Israel that they would
have a bright and wonderful future if they
would cooperate with Him. God
wanted the remnant to forsake the
rebellious ways of their forefathers and
get with the program. If
they cooperated with Him, everything God
promised in His original plan for Israel
would occur. However, God wanted
this remnant to know that if they
should return to Jerusalem and over time
behave as their forefathers did, God
would surely destroy them. To make
this point clear, God did something
during the Babylonian captivity that many
people do not understand. He
created a contingency plan. The
contingency plan was rather simple.
If the remnant of Israel behaved as their
forefathers did, God announced that He
would create a new Israel and move
forward to fulfill His promises to
Abraham. I call Gods
contingency plan for a new Israel.
Plan B. (Because of
space limitations, I cannot address the
dimensions and ramifications of Plan A /
Plan B in this article. Please
review Appendices B and D in my book, Jesus
Final Victory.)
Many
people ask, Why was Plan B
necessary if God already knows the
outcome of everything? Even
though God is omniscient and knows
everything, He does not predestine the
behavior of people. God
responds to human beings according to our
will. He never removes our power
of choice! Israel had the power of
choice and could cooperate with Him or
rebel against him. If Israel chose
rebellion, God made it clear in the
prophecies of Daniel that Plan B would be
implemented.
Consider
Gods foreknowledge: When God
made three promises to Abraham, God
foreknew that He would not be able to
fulfill two of His promises through the
biological offspring of Abraham. In
spite of this, God still attempted to
fulfill the promises! When God
delivered Israel from Egypt, He foreknew
that all of the adults (except Caleb and
Joshua) would die in the wilderness, but
this did not keep Him from delivering
Israel from Pharaohs grip. God
foreknew that when He made promises to
Abraham, He would eventually have to
fulfill those promises through the adoption
of Gentile believers.
Notice
the differences between selection and
adoption. When God chose the
biological offspring of Abraham to be the
trustees of His gospel (Genesis 17:
7-14), Abraham/s descendants became
Gods elect on the basis
of selection. God selected
them. (Exodus 19: 3-8; Romans 9-11)
After 1,500 years of apostasy in Israel,
when it became clear Gods elect
would continue down the path of
rebellion, God implemented Plan B. God
abandoned the biological descendants of
Abraham and He let the world know the
displeasure by destroying that nation and
their city in A.D. 70.
To
fulfill His promise to Abraham, God
implanted the adoption process. God
displaced the biological offspring of
Abraham with self-selecting offspring who
wanted to be trustees of His gospel.
After the cross, anyone who chooses to
serve Jesus Christ as Lord and Master is adopted
into the family of Abraham! (John
3:16; 1: 12-13; Galatians 3: 26-29)
By adopting people who were eager and
willing to do His will, the tables were
turned 180 degrees. By adopting
Gentiles as heirs of Abraham, God
terminated His need for Abrahams
biological offspring.
The
Full Cup Principle
During
the Babylonian captivity, God announced
that His patience with Abrahams
biological descendants was limited.
He had dealt with Israels failures
for about 900 years and in an effort to
bring Plan A to fruition, He granted
Israel one last chance. God gave
Israel seventy weeks (490 years) of
probationary time to accomplish some
divine objectives. (Daniel 9:24)
God told Israel that messiah would appear
during the seventieth week to establish
the kingdom of God on Earth. This
was a test for Israel to determine if it
would receive and embrace the ministry
and teachings of God in the flesh or
despise Gods presence in their
midst. Israels response to
Jesus would reveal whether the nation had
walked away from God during the seventy
weeks or whether the nation had walked
with God, and you know the rest of the
story.
Near
the end of His ministry, a frustrated
Jesus said to the leaders of Israel: Woe
to you, teachers of the law and
Pharisees, you hypocrites! You
build tombs for the [dead]
prophets and decorate the graves of the
righteous. And you say, If we
had lived in the days of our forefathers,
we would not have taken part with them in
shedding the blood of the prophets.
[You think you are wiser and more
enlightened than your forefathers, but
you are no different than your
forefathers. Your corrupt religion is
your God. You worship a religion that
invokes the name of God, but you do not
know God or His ways. If you knew the
Father you would love Me because the
Father and I are one. You have rejected
the Word of God with the same malice and
rebellion exhibited by your forefathers.]
So you testify
against yourselves that you are
descendants of those who murdered the
prophets. [You are murderers, just
like your forefathers.] Fill
up, then, the [cup, the] measure
of the sin [committed by] of your
forefathers! You snakes! You brood
of vipers! How will you escape being
condemned to hell?
Look, your house
[your temple] is left to you desolate [the
glory and presence of God will never
return to it]. (Matthew 23:
29-33, 38 italics and insertion mine)
Israels
seventieth week report card can be
summarized in one sentence. He
came to that which was his own, but his
own did not receive him. (John
1:11) When it became a fact that Israel
rejected Jesus as the Messiah, the Father
determined Plan A and initiated Plan B
which God had created and revealed to
Daniel while he was a Babylonian captive.
Plan A and Plan B cannot co-exist. Plan
B is based on a different (new) covenant.
For example, the High Priest appointe4d
for Plan B is from the tribe of Judah and
He minsters in the true temple that God
established. (Hebrews 7: 12, 8:6)
This is contrary to Plan A which required
the high priest to be a Levite, a
descendant of Aaron. The promises
and prophecies made in Plan A do not
carry over into Plan B. Plan B has
different promises and prophecies. In
fact, the promises and prophecies
belonging to Plan A are incompatible with
the promises and prophecies made in Plan
B! Unfortunately, most Christians
do not realize that it is impossible to
assemble a valid prophetic schematic when
elements from Plan A and Plan B are mixed
or merged together.
The
transition from Plan A to Plan B required
three steps:
First,
a new covenant was necessary. This
covenant is summarized in John 3:16,
stated in Hebrews 8:10, and Jesus
initiated it in Luke 22: 20.
Second,
God took a self-selecting remnant from
old Israel (those who believed that Jesus
was the Messiah) and He created a new
Israel that would include millions of
Gentiles believers from every nation.
Think
about this: If a Gentile obeys
Christs call to follow Him, he is
no different than Abraham who obeyed
Christs demand to follow Him.
From Gods point of view, those who
love God with all their hearts, minds and
souls, and their neighbors as themselves,
live as Abraham lived. In
Gods sight, such people are
Abrahams children. (John 8: 39)
Ironically,
the Jehovah who called Abraham out of his
homeland was the Messiah Himself. (Exodus
6:3; John 8:58; Isaiah 44:6) The
God that calls the Gentiles to leave
their families and homes to become part
of the new Israel is Christ Himself!
(Galatians 3:26) Since Plan A was
terminated, Gentiles in Christ are
counted as the seed (Greek: sperma)
of Abraham and heirs of the promises
which God gave to him. (Galatians 3: 28,
29) Faith in God is a matter of
choice. Surrender to Gods
will is a matter of choice. Plan A
and Israels history proves that
biological descent means nothing without
faith in Christ and surrender to
Gods Spirit. Since biological
Israel consistently rejected the voice of
the Holy Spirit, Jesus had to abandon
biological Israel to fulfill two of His
promises to Abraham. The one
promise God made to Abraham that was
fulfilled through Plan A was the promise
that Messiah would biologically come
through Abrahams lineage. (Genesis
3:16; Matthew 1; Luke 3)
The
third step in the transition from Plan A
to Plan B was the destruction of old
Israel and old Jerusalem. (Luke
21:22) Since Plan B involved a new
High Priest, a new covenant, a new
Israel, and a New Jerusalem, there was no
place for Plan A to be a part of Plan B.
We have already noted that in Gods
original covenant with Israel at Mt.
Sinai, He promised to destroy the nation
of Israel if it went into apostasy.
This covenant that Moses wrote in
Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28 is the
authority behind the phrase. For
this is the time of punishment in
fulfillment of all that has been written
[in Scripture}. (Luke
21:22, insertion mine) During the
seventieth week, Israel confirmed its
rejection of God (the ministry of Jesus).
This was the last straw,
Israels cup of iniquity overflowed.
Forty years later, Jesus Himself sent
Romes armies into Judea (A.D. 70)
to destroy Israel and Jerusalem. Just
as Jesus promised, He spared a remnant.
A self-selecting group of adopted
believers escaped Jerusalem by taking the
words of Jesus to heart and leaving the
city early. Thus Jesus spared
twelve new tribes who believed in
Him! (Compare James 1:1 with James 2:1
for the identity of the new twelve
tribes.)
The
Years Allotted to the Gentiles
Jesus
said, Jerusalem will be trampled
on by the Gentiles until the times of the
Gentiles are fulfilled. (Luke
21: 22-24, italics mine)
Now
that we have explored Gods covenant
with Israel, the rebellious history of
Israel, the seventieth week test, the
differences between election and
adoption, Gods contingency plan to
fulfill His promises to Abraham, and some
of the differences between Plan A and
Plan B, four conclusions can be made
about the phrase, Jerusalem will
be trampled on by the Gentiles until the
time of the Gentiles was fulfilled.
First,
when Jesus spoke these words on the Mount
of Olives, His followers were not called
Christians. (This label would be
created in Antioch a few years later.
See, Acts 11:26.) Believers in
Christ were generally called
disciples, followers of
the Way (Acts 24:14), or Gentile
believers. (Acts 15:23) After Paul
was converted in A.D. 34, the quality of
the Gentiles believing that Jesus was the
promised Messiah and the Savior of the
world soon exceeded the number of Jewish
believers. Furthermore, after the
Romans destroyed Jerusalem in A.D. 70,
there was an enormous amount of
anti-Jewish sentiment throughout the
Roman Empire. This led the Gentile
believers to separate themselves from
Jewish heritage as quickly as possible.
Of course, throughout their history, the
Jews saw no difference between ungodly
Gentiles and believing Gentiles. To
them, the world consisted of only two
groups of people, the Jews and the
Gentiles.
Second,
Jesus used a double entendre in Luke
21:24. The word Gentile goes in two
opposite directions. In
todays vernacular, the words of
Jesus could be stated as follows:
The city of Jerusalem will be
trampled on by godless Gentiles
until the years allotted for the
ingathering of Gentile believers are
fulfilled. (Ephesians 2: 11-22; 1
Peter 2:10)
Third,
when Jerusalem was destroyed in A.D. 70,
Jesus terminated the biological lineage
of Abraham by having all of Israels
genealogical records destroyed.
History records how the Romans took
Israels survivors to Rome to work
as slaves. (It is said that Jewish
slaves helped build the Amphitheater in
Rome.) Thus, the temple fire and
the slavery that followed produces an
interesting dilemma for Jews today.
There are approximately 35 million Jews
on Earth today and no one knows for sure
whether he/she is a biological descendant
(heir) of Abraham and there is no way to
tell! No records exist to identify who is
who.
Since
A.D. 70, it is important to understand
that one cannot become an heir of Abraham
through conversion to Judaism. Even
though a Gentile could become an heir of
Abraham through conversion prior to the
cross. (Matthew 23:15), but this is
no longer possible under the new covenant
(Plan B). Ever since the cross, the
only way to become an heir of
Abraham is through adoption. Paul
says this is true for Jews and Gentiles
alike. (Ephesians 2; Romans 9-11;
Galatians 4) Unfortunately Plan B is not
properly understood and many end time
expositors use Plan A prophecies to make
modern nation of Israel the centerpiece
of their schematic. Let me be
clear! The Israel of God is no
longer centered in or around Jerusalem.
Believers in Christ, whether they are
Jews or Gentiles, are found all over the
world and their High Priest, King, and
Holy Temple are currently in Heaven.
Last,
God declared that if Plan B was
implemented, the city of Jerusalem would
be cursed with wars and desolations until
the end of the world. (Daniel 9:26)
Indeed, 2,000 years of history reveals a
sorrowful story for the ancient city that
King David founded about 1000 B.C. Jerusalem
has experienced many wars and desolations
since A.D. 70. Even though
Jerusalem seems to be prospering
currently, its prosperity is temporary.
The years allotted to the ingathering of godly
Gentile believers will soon end and
God will destroy the entire world,
including ancient Jerusalem.
Daniel 9:26 says,
The end
will come [upon Jerusalem] like a
flood [as a tsunami destroys
everything in its path]: War will
continue until the end [of the world],
and desolations [upon the city]
have been decreed. (Insertions
mine)
I
hope this helps!
Larry
Wilson
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