One of the biggest reasons many Christians reject the AD70 fulfillment framework is because they have been taught to insert themselves into every prophecy in the Bible while ignoring who the texts were originally written to.
That is the real issue.
Modern futurism survives because Christians assume:
* the tribulation is about them,
* Revelation is about them,
* the antichrist is about them,
* the millennium is about them,
* the “Gentiles” are all modern non-Jews everywhere forever.
But once you actually read Paul carefully, that entire framework begins collapsing.
Romans 9:24–26 says:
“even us whom he has called, not from the Jews only but also from the Gentiles? As indeed he says in Hosea,
‘Those who were not my people I will call “my people,”
and her who was not beloved I will call “beloved.”’”
Most Christians immediately assume:
“See? Paul is talking about all nations universally.”
But Paul explicitly tells you where he got the quotation from:
Hosea.
So what was Hosea talking about?
Hosea 1:10 says:
“Yet the number of the children of Israel shall be like the sand of the sea… And in the place where it was said to them, ‘You are not my people,’ it shall be said to them, ‘Children of the living God.’”
Read it again carefully.
Not:
* Europeans,
* Americans,
* Chinese,
* Malays,
* modern global Christianity.
It says:
“the children of Israel.”
Hosea was speaking about the northern kingdom of Israel after the Assyrian invasion. The ten tribes were scattered among the nations, alienated from covenant identity, and regarded as “not my people.”
That is the context Paul is drawing from.
The so-called “Gentiles” entering the covenant story were deeply tied to Israel’s exile and dispersion narrative.
N. T. Wright repeatedly emphasizes that Second Temple Judaism still viewed Israel as existing in an ongoing exile awaiting restoration.
James D. G. Dunn argued that Paul’s theology is inseparable from Israel’s covenant story.
Richard B. Hays demonstrated how Paul reuses Old Testament passages within their original covenantal context rather than inventing detached futuristic meanings.
This changes everything.
Because once you understand that the New Testament is fundamentally about:
* Israel’s restoration,
* covenant transition,
* Temple judgment,
* and the end of the Mosaic age,
then AD70 suddenly makes perfect sense.
And futurism suddenly falls apart.
Jesus Was Not Predicting a Modern Science Fiction Event
Modern futurists imagine Jesus physically descending from outer space, landing on the Mount of Olives, splitting mountains apart, and ruling the earth like a geopolitical emperor.
But this completely misunderstands Jewish apocalyptic language.
Isaiah 19:1 says:
“Behold, the Lord rides on a swift cloud and comes to Egypt.”
Did Yahweh literally surf through the sky over Egypt? No.
It was symbolic judgment language.
God “came” through historical catastrophe.
The prophets constantly used cosmic imagery symbolically:
* mountains = kingdoms,
* earthquakes = political upheaval,
* stars falling = collapsing rulers,
* seas = nations.
Yet futurists suddenly abandon symbolism when they arrive at Revelation.
Then Jesus becomes a Marvel character descending through the clouds while tectonic plates explode beneath Jerusalem.
That is not ancient Jewish theology.
That is modern cinematic literalism.
The Mount of Olives Was About Covenant Judgment
Zechariah 14:4 says:
“On that day his feet will stand on the Mount of Olives…”
Futurists insist this must be physically literal.
But even historically, the Mount of Olives area was traversed and divided by Roman roads and military routes during the Jewish War.
Ancient Roman road remains and pathways near Jerusalem:
Mount of Olives ridge and valley divisions:
The point is not:
“A Roman road mathematically fulfilled Zechariah.”
The point is that Zechariah’s imagery belongs within the first-century covenantal collapse surrounding Jerusalem and the Temple.
Jesus himself said:
“When you see the abomination of desolation… let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains.”
Notice:
* Judea,
* local flight,
* covenant crisis,
* Jerusalem under judgment.
Then he says:
“This generation will not pass away until all these things take place.”
Not:
* 2000 years later,
* modern Europe,
* modern America,
* future global civilization.
His audience was first-century Israel.
Futurism Exists Because Christians Insert Themselves Into Israel’s Story
This is the uncomfortable truth many do not want to face.
Futurism survives because Christians have been conditioned to believe:
“The Bible’s prophetic climax must still be about us.”
So they endlessly postpone fulfillment:
* future antichrist,
* future tribulation,
* future millennium,
* future Temple,
* future Armageddon.
Meanwhile the New Testament repeatedly says:
* “soon,”
* “near,”
* “at hand,”
* “this generation.”
The destruction of Jerusalem in AD70 completed the collapse of the old covenant world:
* Temple destroyed,
* sacrifices ended,
* priesthood terminated,
* Mosaic order judged.
The “coming” of Christ was covenantal judgment language just like Yahweh’s “comings” throughout the Old Testament.
Futurism Ultimately Turns Jewish Apocalyptic Literature Into Fantasy
The irony is painful.
Futurists accuse others of “spiritualizing,” while they themselves selectively literalize symbolic texts.
They do not literally believe:
* Jesus is a seven-eyed lamb,
* Satan is a dragon,
* Babylon is a prostitute on a beast.
But suddenly:
* clouds,
* mountains,
* earthquakes,
* trumpets,
* stars
must become literal geological events.
That inconsistency exposes the problem.
The Bible was not written as a 21st-century disaster screenplay.
It was written within the covenant crisis of Israel, the exile-restoration story, the judgment upon Jerusalem, and the transition from the old covenant age into the new covenant order.
Once that framework is understood, futurism loses the very ground it stands on.—
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