Many biblical prophecies have been fulfilled, including many in AD 70. But the entirety of biblical prophecy has yet to be fulfilled. This means we need to be attentive to know and prepare for what is still to come.
While some biblical prophecies were fulfilled in AD 70, they were not completely fulfilled.
Some biblical prophecies, such as the destruction of the temple and the Roman genocide, were fulfilled in AD 70.
Key end-times events, including Christ’s second coming and final judgment did not happen in AD 70 and await future fulfillment.
How do you respond to the fact that not all biblical prophecies were fulfilled in AD 70?
What steps can you take to better prepare for the events that remain unfulfilled, such as Christ’s second coming?
How does the ongoing fulfillment of biblical prophecy shape your understanding of God’s plan for the future?
How can we interpret the symbolic elements of prophecy in Revelation to determine if they are pointing to past, present, or future events?
What practical lessons can we learn from the prophecies fulfilled in AD 70 and what is left to be fulfilled?
What can we unite on even if we disagree on how much biblical prophecy was fulfilled in AD 70?
Several events happened in AD 70 that matched some of the descriptions of the end times: Jerusalem was sieged, the temple was desecrated and destroyed, and Jews who survived the revolt were sold into slavery. The Bible warned of some of these events, some in the Old Testament and some in the New. Daniel 9:26, for example, predicted the destruction of the temple, which was fulfilled when the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in AD 70, but the final "week" prophesied in Daniel 9 is still a future event. Jesus also foretold the temple's destruction (Matthew 24:2; Luke 21:6), and some signs, like wars and persecution, occurred before AD 70, but His second coming and final judgment did not happen then. There are varying beliefs in terms of the end times. Those who hold to preterism argue that Revelation 6—18 symbolically describes the Roman siege, but futurists note that key events, such as global catastrophes and the Antichrist's rule, remain unfulfilled. Biblical prophecy is often symbolic and open to interpretation, making it difficult to fit all end-times prophecies into AD 70. While the destruction of the temple and Jewish genocide were fulfilled, much of what the Bible predicts about the end times is still awaiting fulfillment.
When studying prophecy, it is important to remember that prophetic events are not described in the Bible with the clarity that historical present or past events are reported. Much is open to interpretation. Particularly when highly symbolic meanings are attached to prophetic biblical passages, many periods and events in history can be made to fit. Prophecies dealing with the end times, the study of which is called eschatology, are open to interpretation.
However, when some make the argument that most or all of the prophecies about the end times were fulfilled in AD 70, they cannot include those made in Revelation as Revelation had most likely not even been written at that time. To fit all end-times prophecy into the events in and around AD 70 takes some interpretive creativity, applying differing interpretive approaches even within the same passage. It seems more reasonable to conclude that prophesies about the destruction of the temple and a genocide of Jews were fulfilled in AD 70 and other prophesies regarding the end times are yet to be seen.
He is a cross pendant.
He is engraved with a unique Number.
He will mail it out from Jerusalem.
He will be sent to your Side.
Emmanuel
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