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The 'Olivet discourse' or ''Little Apocalypse'' is a passage found in the
Synoptic Gospels of
Matthew (),
Mark () and
Luke (), occurring just before the narrative of
Jesus's passion beginning with the
Anointing of Jesus. In the narrative is a
discourse or sermon given by
Jesus on the
Mount of Olives, hence the name. According to most scholars, the versions of the discourse in Matthew and Luke are based on
the version in Mark.
The discourse contains a number of statements which at face value appear to refer to future events, and most modern Christians interpret as having been intended as
prophecy. The topics involved are:
#The future
destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem
#
Tribulation in Israel and the nations of the world
#Various signs of the
coming of the
Son of Man
The setting on the Mount of Olives is also thought by some scholars to have not been incidental, but a quite deliberate echo of a passage in the
Book of Zechariah which refers to the location as the place where a final battle would occur between the
Jewish Messiah and their opponents.
Content
Destruction of the Temple
According to the narrative of the synoptic Gospels, a (anonymous)
disciple remarks on the greatness of
Herod's Temple, a building thought to have been some 10 stories high and likely to have been adorned with
gold,
silver, and other precious items (Kilgallen 245). However, the narrative goes on to state that Jesus says that not one stone would remain intact in the building, and the whole thing would be reduced to rubble.
Following this the disciples asked for a
sign, they asked, "when will this happen, and what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age?" Jesus first warns them about things that would happen that should 'not' be interpreted as signs:
★ people who would claim to be
Christ, see also
Antichrist - it was a general belief that if the
Jewish Messiah arrived in
Jerusalem it would mean that the
Kingdom of Heaven was imminent.
★
wars and
rumours of wars.
Then Jesus identifies the beginning of ''birth pangs'' (some older translations read ''sorrows''):
★ Nations rising up against nations, and kingdoms against kingdoms.
★
earthquakes
★
famines
★
pestilence
★ fearful events
Then He described more birth pangs which would lead to the coming Kingdom.
★
false prophets
★
apostasy
★
persecution of the followers of Jesus
★ the spread of Jesus's message (the
gospel) around the world
Jesus then warned the disciples about the
Abomination of Desolation "standing where it does not belong". The Gospel of Matthew and Mark add ''"- let the reader understand -"''. This is generally considered to be a reference to a passage from the
Book of Daniel ( and ).
Although the passage in the Book of Daniel claims to be a
prophecy dictated to
Daniel by
Gabriel during the
Babylonian captivity, some modern scholars believe that the Book was
pseudepigraphically written in the mid second century BC, and that rather than being a genuine prophecy the passage was a ''postdiction'', written as a polemic against the shrine to
Zeus set up in the temple in
168 BC by
Antiochus IV Epiphanes, which had a
Pagan altar added onto the
Altar of Holocausts (Brown et al. 624 and Miller 44). Exactly how the synoptics meant it to be reinterpreted or interpreted, however, is a matter of debate. Some Christians think it to be a successful prophecy about
Titus's
destruction of the temple in AD 70 (see
preterism);
[1][2] others think it to be a reference to a future
Antichrist (see
futurism); while some others see it as another ''vaticinium ex eventu'' about
Caligula's attempt to put a statue of himself or of
Jupiter into the temple in 37-41AD (Brown 144).
Great Tribulation
After Jesus described the ''abomination that causes desolation'' he warns that the people of Judea should flee to the mountains as a matter of such urgency that they shouldn't even return to get things from their homes. Jesus also warned that if it happened in
winter or on the
Sabbath fleeing would be even more difficult. Jesus described this as a time of "Great Tribulation" worse than anything that had gone before.
Jesus then states that immediately after the time of tribulation people would see a sign, "the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light; the stars will fall from the sky, and the heavenly bodies will be shaken." ).
The statements about the sun and moon sound quite apocalyptic, it appears to be a quote from the
Book of Isaiah (). The description of the sun, moon and stars going dark is also described by the Old Testament Joel. Joel wrote that this would be a sign before the great and dreadful day of the Lord, ).
Some scholars think that the intended audiences of the Synoptic Gospels were meant to be aware that these were quotations, and where they were from, and that by using these two quotations together, the
Roman domination of
Israel was deliberately being compared to that during the
Babylonian captivity of six centuries previous, and that it was being predicted that the Roman empire would fall, and the domination end, just as Babylon had.
Coming of the Son of Man
In the Olivet Discourse, Jesus states that after the time of tribulation and the sign of the sun, moon and stars going dark the ''
son of man'' would be seen arriving in the clouds with power and great
glory. Jesus would be accompanied by the
angels and at the trumpet call the angels would gather the elect (God’s chosen) from the heavens and the four winds of the earth, ).
Some Christians have seen this as a prediction of Roman tyranny being overcome by Christianity. Christianity did eventually become the official religion of the Roman Empire. The
Eastern Roman Empire remained Christianized until its fall to the
Turks in 1453, although large portions of its former territory, such as Greece, remain largely Christian to this day.
For the Christians who read the text more literally, this is taken to refer to the
Second Coming. In modern times, supporters of the more literal readings tend to also be politically conservative, and argued that it is the
UN or the
EU that some Middle Eastern confederacy is the fourth empire of ) that will ''devour'' the world.
The synoptics also describe Jesus as stating that ''the elect'' would be gathered together from across the earth and
heaven; technically it states that they would be gathered ''from the four winds, from the furthest part of the earth 'to' the furthest part of heaven'', and so, although most scholars, and almost all Christians, read this as meaning that the gathering would include people not only from earth but also 'from' heaven, a few Christians, mostly modern American
Protestant Premillennialists , have interpreted it to mean that people would be gathered from earth and taken 'to' heaven - a concept known in their circles as the ''
rapture''. Most scholars see this as a quotation of a passage from the
Book of Zechariah in which God (and the contents of heaven in general) are predicted to come to earth and live among ''the elect'', who by necessity are gathered together for this purpose (). According to the ancient gnostics, this passage was to be interpreted as implying that the teachings of the ''son of man'' would automatically bring those who heard and fully understood them (''the elect'') together.
Imminence
In the Olivet Discourse, Jesus stated that when you see all these signs the Kingdom would be right at the door''. He went on to say that ''this generation'' would not ''pass'' until all these things had happened.
This has historically been one of the hardest passages to resolve with a literal interpretation of the text, since at face value it would seem to imply that the disciples would still need to be alive today, and so awkward legends arose suggesting that the disciples that Jesus was speaking to did not die but remain alive, eventually merging into legends like that of a
Wandering Jew and of
Prester John. Indeed,
C.S. Lewis called this "the most embarrassing verse in the Bible"
[3]. More scholarly explanations for how this could be justified have concentrated on the fact that, in
Koine Greek, the word used for ''generation'' can also be used to mean ''
race'', "type", or "sort". For example Jesus spoke about an "evil and adulterous generation" that would seek after a sign. The Bible also speaks of the "generation of the righteous", "the generation of them that seek Him" etc. Clearly the meaning of these expressions is not that all people living at one time or of a certain race were upright or evil, etc. "Generation" is used to express the common type. A common "genesis", a common root. and so the verse could just mean that christianity, the "generation" to which the disciples belonged, would still be in existence, or even just that
humans would be.
Clearly some of the disciples themselves misunderstood this point. In the earliest known Christian document, the
First Epistle to the Thessalonians,
Paul seems to envisage that he and the Christians he was writing to would see the
resurrection of the dead within their own lifetimes: "For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep." (). Some argue that the
Second Epistle to the Thessalonians was
forged, essentially for the sole purpose of contradicting the first epistle. . However in he talks about going to Christ as death.
In the apocryphal
Gospel of Thomas, Jesus is described as saying that the ''kingdom'' will not come by ''watching for it'', and it will not be something to be physically pointed to (
Thomas 113, see also , ), and that the ''new world'' is already here but that people just can't see it (
Thomas 51). In Jesus states to Pilate that his ''kingdom'' is ''not of this world'', see also
New Covenant (theology).
In modern times, most scholars and Christians think that the Olivet Discourse is just using the
apocalyptic language of his time symbolically, as many Jewish prophets did. Nevertheless, throughout history there have been many groups who read the discourse literally, and
Christian thought has always included groups who say that ''the end of the world is near'', some even giving exact dates which have since come and gone without an intervening end of world (see also
Second Coming).
See also
★
Jewish revolt
★
Second Coming
★
Christian eschatology
★
Summary of Christian eschatological differences
★
Eschatology
★
Last Judgement
★
Armageddon
★
Left Behind (series)
★
The Way of the Master
★
Messianic prophecy
★
Kenosis
Notes
1. Craig Blomberg, ''Jesus and the Gospels'', Apollos 1997, pp.322-326
2. N. T. Wright, ''Jesus and the Victory of God'', Fortress 1996, p. 348ff.
3. C.S. Lewis ''The World’s Last Night and Other Essays''
References
★
Brown, Raymond E ''An Introduction to the New Testament'' Doubleday 1997 ISBN 0-385-24767-2
★ Brown, Raymond E. et al. ''The New Jerome Biblical Commentary'' Prentice Hall 1990 ISBN 0-13-614934-0
★ Kilgallen, John J. ''A Brief Commentary on the Gospel of Mark'' Paulist Press 1989 ISBN 0-8091-3059-9
★ Miller, Robert J. Editor ''The Complete Gospels'' Polebridge Press 1994 ISBN 0-06-065587-9
★
Blomberg, Craig. ''Jesus and the Gospels'', Apollos 1997.
★
Wright, N. T. ''Jesus and the Victory of God'', Fortress 1996.