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The Fulfillment of Matthew 24 Is Proof That Jesus Is the True Messiah

by JD Rucker
May 10, 2026
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What if the most quoted prophecy passage in modern evangelical end-times teaching… was never actually about the end times at all? What if Jesus, sitting on the Mount of Olives with His disciples two thousand years ago, was answering a question we’ve forgotten He was asked — and the answer came true within the lifetime of the men sitting in front of Him?

I want to be careful with you right out of the gate, because what we’re about to walk through is going to sound, to some ears, like we’re throwing out biblical prophecy. We’re not. Most of the Bible’s prophetic material — the return of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, the final judgment, the new heavens and the new earth — is still ahead of us. We are not preterists in any general sense. We believe the second coming is future, literal, and bodily. We believe the dead will be raised. We believe Christ will judge the living and the dead.

But Matthew 24, and its parallels in Mark 13 and Luke 21, are a different situation. And the more carefully you read those chapters, the more obvious it becomes that Jesus was talking about something that happened in the lifetime of the people standing in front of Him. He said so. Plainly. And it did happen. Plainly. And the recognition that it happened isn’t a loss for the faith — it’s a gift to it. Because the fulfillment of those words in the year 70 was one of the single greatest pieces of evidence the early church had that Jesus was who He said He was. He told them the temple would fall. He told them when. He told them the signs to watch for. And it all came true, exactly as He said it would, in front of witnesses. That’s not a problem for our faith. That’s fuel for it.

So let’s open the text and do this carefully. Matthew chapter 24, starting in verse 1.

Jesus left the temple and was going away, when his disciples came to point out to him the buildings of the temple. But he answered them, “You see all these, do you not? Truly, I say to you, there will not be left here one stone upon another that will not be thrown down.” As he sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him privately, saying, “Tell us, when will these things be, and what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age?”

Now stop right there, because everything in this chapter hinges on what just happened. Jesus has just said something staggering. The temple — the center of Jewish religious life, the place where God’s presence had dwelt, the building Herod had spent decades expanding into one of the architectural wonders of the ancient world — that temple was going to be torn down. Stone by stone. Not one left on another.

To a first-century Jewish disciple, this was not a casual remark. This was the end of the world as they understood it. And so they ask Him a question. And here is where most modern readers go wrong, because we read their question through two thousand years of theological development and we hear them asking about something they couldn’t possibly have been asking about. They ask, “When will these things be, and what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age?”

In our ears, “the end of the age” sounds like the end of the world. The end of human history. The final curtain. But that is not what those words meant in a first-century Jewish mouth. The Greek phrase translated “end of the age” is *sunteleia tou aionos*, and in Jewish thought, the present age was the age that would end when Messiah came, judged the nation, and inaugurated the messianic kingdom. The disciples were not asking about the destruction of planet Earth. They were asking about the end of the temple-centered Jewish age that they had grown up in. And in their minds, the destruction of the temple, the coming of Messiah in judgment, and the end of that age were all one event.

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So when Jesus answers them, He’s not answering a question we typically have. He’s answering the question they actually asked. And the question they asked was about the temple. About the city. About the world they lived in.

Now look at the parallel in Luke chapter 21, because Luke makes this even clearer. Same scene, same conversation, but Luke records the question this way, in verse 7. “And they asked him, ‘Teacher, when will these things be, and what will be the sign when these things are about to take place?'” Notice — no “coming” language, no “end of the age” language. Just, when will the temple be destroyed, and how will we know it’s about to happen? Luke strips it down to the core question. And that core question is about AD 70.

Mark 13 records it similarly. “Tell us, when will these things be, and what will be the sign when all these things are about to be accomplished?” Again, focused on the temple.

So the question is about the temple. And the answer, accordingly, is going to be about the temple. Watch what Jesus says.

Verse 4. “And Jesus answered them, ‘See that no one leads you astray. For many will come in my name, saying, “I am the Christ,” and they will lead many astray. And you will hear of wars and rumors of wars. See that you are not alarmed, for this must take place, but the end is not yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom, and there will be famines and earthquakes in various places. All these are but the beginning of the birth pains.'”

Now, modern prophecy teachers will tell you these are signs of the end of the world. Wars, famines, earthquakes — turn on the news, they say, and you’ll see them. But Jesus says the opposite. He says when you see these things, *do not be alarmed*. The end is *not yet*. These are not signs that the end is here. They are the normal fabric of human history, and they were going to characterize the decades leading up to AD 70.

And they did. The four decades between Jesus’ crucifixion and the destruction of the temple were one of the most turbulent periods in Roman history. There were famines — Acts 11 records one of them under Claudius. There were earthquakes — Pompeii had a massive one in AD 62. There were wars — the Roman civil war of AD 69, the year of four emperors, was one of the most chaotic years the empire had ever seen. There were false messiahs — Josephus names several. Theudas. The Egyptian. Simon bar Giora. Acts 5 mentions Theudas by name. Jesus told them this was coming, and it came.

Verse 9. “Then they will deliver you up to tribulation and put you to death, and you will be hated by all nations for my name’s sake. And then many will fall away and betray one another and hate one another. And many false prophets will arise and lead many astray. And because lawlessness will be increased, the love of many will grow cold. But the one who endures to the end will be saved. And this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.”

Notice He’s speaking directly to them. *You* will be delivered up. *You* will be hated. This is not a generic warning to twenty-first century Christians. This is a warning to the men sitting on the Mount of Olives that night. And it came true. Stephen was stoned. James was killed by Herod. Paul was beheaded. Peter was crucified. Christians were thrown to lions in Nero’s arenas in the 60s. The persecution Jesus warned about happened to the people He was warning.

And the gospel being proclaimed throughout the whole world — Paul says exactly that in Colossians 1, verse 23, that the gospel has been “proclaimed in all creation under heaven.” Past tense. Already done. By the time Paul wrote Colossians, around AD 60, he could already say the gospel had reached the known world. The mission Jesus described had already been substantially accomplished before the temple fell.

Now here is where the chapter turns sharper. Verse 15.

“So when you see the abomination of desolation spoken of by the prophet Daniel, standing in the holy place (let the reader understand), then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains. Let the one who is on the housetop not go down to take what is in his house, and let the one who is in the field not turn back to take his cloak.”



Stop and look at Luke’s parallel. Luke 21, verse 20. This is the verse that, all by itself, settles the question for anyone willing to read it carefully.

“But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its desolation has come near. Then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains, and let those who are inside the city depart, and let those who are out in the country not enter it.”

Luke is telling us what Matthew’s “abomination of desolation” actually means. The abomination of desolation is *Jerusalem surrounded by armies*. Luke, writing for a Gentile audience that wouldn’t catch the Daniel reference, just states it plainly. When you see the Roman armies around the city, run.

And that is exactly what happened. In AD 66, the Roman general Cestius Gallus marched on Jerusalem with the twelfth legion. He surrounded the city. He laid siege. And then — in one of the strangest military decisions in Roman history — he inexplicably withdrew. The Jewish historian Josephus, who lived through these events, says it was without reason. The early church historian Eusebius tells us what the Christians did when Cestius pulled back. They remembered the words of Jesus. They saw Jerusalem surrounded by armies. They fled. They went to a city called Pella, across the Jordan, in the Decapolis. And when Titus returned three and a half years later in AD 70 with four legions and burned the city to the ground, the Christians were not in it.

Jesus told them what to look for. He told them what to do when they saw it. They listened. And they lived.

That is not a coincidence. That is fulfilled prophecy.

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Verse 21. “For then there will be great tribulation, such as has not been from the beginning of the world until now, no, and never will be.”

This sounds like end-of-the-world language to modern ears. But listen to Josephus describe what actually happened in Jerusalem during the siege. He says the Jews inside the walls turned on each other, three rival factions fighting in the streets while Romans waited outside. He describes mothers eating their own children from starvation. He records that over a million Jews died in the siege and another ninety-seven thousand were taken captive. He says — and this is a direct quote from Josephus — that the misfortunes of all men from the beginning of the world, if they were compared to those of the Jews, were not so considerable. Josephus, an eyewitness, uses almost the exact same language Jesus used. Tribulation greater than anything before or since.

And that’s not Christian language. Josephus was a Jewish historian writing for a Roman audience. He had no theological reason to echo Jesus. He was simply describing what he saw. And what he saw matched what Jesus said.

Verse 22. “And if those days had not been cut short, no human being would be saved. But for the sake of the elect those days will be cut short.”

Titus’ siege of Jerusalem lasted about five months. Compared to other ancient sieges, it was remarkably short. Carthage was besieged for three years. Tyre, for thirteen. Five months was, by ancient standards, cut short. And the Christian community — the elect — had already fled to Pella before it began.

Now we come to the part of the chapter that gives modern readers the most trouble. Verses 29 through 31.

“Immediately after the tribulation of those days the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken. Then will appear in heaven the sign of the Son of Man, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. And he will send out his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other.”

This sounds, to modern ears, exactly like the second coming. Sun darkened, moon not giving light, stars falling, Son of Man on the clouds. How can this possibly be about AD 70?

Here’s the answer. This is Old Testament apocalyptic language, and it has a long, established meaning in the Hebrew prophets. When the prophets wanted to describe the fall of a nation under God’s judgment, they used cosmic imagery. The sun goes dark, the moon turns to blood, the stars fall, the heavens shake. It’s not literal astronomy. It’s the standard prophetic vocabulary for “a kingdom is ending.”

Listen to Isaiah chapter 13, verse 9 and 10. This is Isaiah’s prophecy against Babylon. “Behold, the day of the Lord comes, cruel, with wrath and fierce anger, to make the land a desolation and to destroy its sinners from it. For the stars of the heavens and their constellations will not give their light; the sun will be dark at its rising, and the moon will not shed its light.”

That is Isaiah, describing the fall of Babylon, in the exact same language Jesus uses to describe the fall of Jerusalem. And Babylon’s stars didn’t literally fall. The sun didn’t literally darken. Babylon was conquered by the Medes and the Persians. That’s what the language means. It means a kingdom is ending under divine judgment.

Listen to Ezekiel 32, verse 7 and 8. This is Ezekiel against Egypt. “When I blot you out, I will cover the heavens and make their stars dark; I will cover the sun with a cloud, and the moon shall not give its light. All the bright lights of heaven will I make dark over you, and put darkness on your land, declares the Lord God.”


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Same imagery. About Egypt. And Egypt’s sun did not literally go dark. Pharaoh was defeated. That’s what it means.

So when Jesus says, after the tribulation of those days, the sun will be darkened and the moon will not give light — He is using language any first-century Jew steeped in the prophets would have immediately recognized. He is saying: the kingdom of Old Covenant Israel, centered on the temple, is coming to an end under divine judgment. Just like Babylon. Just like Egypt. Just like Edom. The age is ending.

And the Son of Man coming on the clouds — this is a direct quotation from Daniel chapter 7, verse 13. And in Daniel 7, the Son of Man does not come *down* to earth. He comes *up* to the Ancient of Days to receive a kingdom. The cloud-coming in Daniel is a coronation scene, not a descent. Jesus is saying: when you see Jerusalem fall, you will know that I have been vindicated. I have been seated at the right hand of the Father. The kingdom has been given to me. The old age is over. The new covenant has come.

Verse 32. “From the fig tree learn its lesson: as soon as its branch becomes tender and puts out its leaves, you know that summer is near. So also, when you see all these things, you know that he is near, at the very gates.”

And then the verse the whole argument hinges on. Verse 34.

“Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place.”

This generation. *Hē genea hautē*. The same phrase Jesus uses in Matthew 11, verse 16. The same phrase He uses in Matthew 12, verse 41 and 42. The same phrase He uses in Matthew 23, verse 36, just one chapter earlier — “Truly, I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation.” In every other usage in the Gospels, “this generation” means the people alive at the time Jesus is speaking. There is no contextual reason — none — to suddenly redefine it in Matthew 24.

The dispensational argument that “this generation” means “the Jewish race” or “the generation that sees Israel reborn in 1948” is, to put it bluntly, special pleading. It’s a word taking on a new meaning only in this one verse, in only this one passage, for only one reason — because the natural reading creates a problem for the system. But the natural reading is the right reading. Jesus said that the generation standing in front of Him would not pass away before the temple fell. And it didn’t. The temple was destroyed in AD 70, roughly forty years after Jesus spoke those words. Forty years. The biblical length of a generation. Jesus said it. It happened. On time.

Now I want to be fair to the position we’re disagreeing with. Dispensationalism, in its classic form, teaches that Matthew 24 describes a future seven-year tribulation, that the abomination of desolation is a future antichrist standing in a rebuilt third temple, and that “this generation” refers either to the generation that sees Israel reborn or to the Jewish race as a whole. Their best argument is that the language of the cosmic disturbances and the gathering of the elect is too dramatic to be exhausted by AD 70. And I’ll grant them that as a reasonable concern. The language is dramatic.

But the answer to that concern is not to throw out the most natural reading of “this generation.” The answer is to recognize that Old Testament apocalyptic language is, by design, dramatic. Isaiah’s language about Babylon was dramatic. Ezekiel’s about Egypt was dramatic. The prophets used cosmic vocabulary to describe earthly judgments because earthly judgments under God’s hand are cosmic in significance. The fall of Jerusalem was not a small event. It was the end of an age. The end of the temple system. The end of the sacrificial cult. The end of the Old Covenant order. The cosmic language fits, because what happened in AD 70 was, theologically, an earthquake.

Now, I am not going to argue that every verse of Matthew 24 is about AD 70. I think the chapter shifts. And I think the shift happens at verse 36. Listen.

“But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only.”

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Notice the change. Up to verse 35, Jesus has been giving signs. Specific, observable signs. Wars, famines, false messiahs, armies surrounding Jerusalem, abomination in the holy place. He’s told them what to watch for. He’s told them when to run.

But starting in verse 36, the language flips. Now He says: no one knows the day or the hour. No signs. No warning. Comes like a thief in the night. Like the days of Noah, when people were eating and drinking and marrying, and the flood came and took them all away.

That’s a different event. That’s not the fall of Jerusalem, which Jesus just told them how to predict. That’s something else. Something later. Something with no warning signs at all. Most partial preterists — and I’d put myself here — read verse 36 onward as Jesus pivoting to the actual second coming, the end of human history, the day no one knows. The chapter contains both. Verses 1 through 35, the AD 70 judgment. Verses 36 through 51, the still-future return of Christ.

That reading honors the text. It honors “this generation.” It honors the disciples’ question. It honors the historical reality of AD 70. And it honors the rest of the New Testament’s clear teaching that Christ will return bodily and visibly at a day no one knows.

So let me bring this home. Why does any of this matter? Why spend forty minutes on a question of biblical interpretation that, for a lot of you listening, may seem like an in-house theological debate?

Here’s why it matters. Because for two thousand years, Christians have read the words of Jesus and watched them come true. The early church watched the temple fall and remembered Him saying it would. They watched the Christians flee to Pella before the siege closed and remembered Him telling them to. They watched a million Jews die in a tribulation greater than any before, and they remembered Him telling them what would happen and how to survive it. And every one of those fulfilled details was a confirmation, in real time, that they had bet their lives on the right Messiah. He told them. It happened. He was right.

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That is a gift to the faith, not a threat to it. The fulfillment of Matthew 24 in AD 70 is one of the strongest historical arguments for the reliability of Jesus that we have. It’s specific. It’s testable. It’s documented by a non-Christian eyewitness in Josephus. And it happened on the timeline Jesus gave.

The modern evangelical habit of pushing all of Matthew 24 into a still-future tribulation strips the church of one of its most powerful apologetic tools. It tells the world that Jesus’ most detailed prophecy hasn’t happened yet, two thousand years after He gave it, and we have to keep waiting and reinterpreting and updating our charts. But the more biblical reading is much simpler, and much more compelling. He told them. It happened. He was right. And because He was right about the temple, in the timeframe He said, with the signs He gave, we have every reason to trust Him about the things still ahead — His return, the resurrection, the judgment, the new heavens and the new earth.

So here is what I want to leave you with. If Jesus told the men on the Mount of Olives that their generation would see the temple fall, and within forty years it did fall, exactly as He said — what does that say about the words of His that haven’t been fulfilled yet? And what would it look like to live like you actually believed those words too?

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