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Did Christ Wrongly Predict His Second Coming? (No, and here’s why)
- Christ was a charismatic prophet and Jewish reformer who appealed to the Messianic desires of first century Judaism
- Through political intrigue, this Jesus was unexpectedly crucified on Passover at the height of His popularity
- His devoted followers and supporters were disappointed by this reversal of fortune. Unable to deal with His sudden downfall, they created an alternate narrative that Jesus had “risen” and thus His prophecies of global peace, political revolution, and divine reconciliation still remained true but only in a spiritual sense.
- These first generation Christians, convinced of His resurrection, waited for His quick return, but it never happened. They were disillusioned and disappointed.
- The “institutional Church” was an ad hoc response to this crisis and organized the faithful into a religion that assumed the newly concocted theology of “resurrection.” The original hope for His parousia or “second coming” was downplayed by the Church and delayed indefinitely. The “Church,” not the “Second Coming” became primary for the next generation of Christians.
- This “institutional Church” became more and more hierarchical and hardened. The charismatic origins gave way to “sacraments” and “rules” until it was finally co-opted by Constantine and the Roman Empire as a new mechanism for imperial unity.
- This Roman imperial inteference led to what we know as “Roman Catholicism.”
“Amen I say to you that this generation shall not pass till all these things be done.” (Matthew 24:34)
“When therefore you shall see the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place: he that readeth let him understand. Then they that are in Judea, let them flee to the mountains: And he that is on the housetop, let him not come down to take any thing out of his house.” (Matthew 24:15–17, D-R)
PS: Incidentally, all this is very important in understanding why the Catholic Church is “Roman,” and it is the topic of my third book. I’m finishing up the book right now and hope to have it back from editors by the end of summer. It discusses the significance of Jerusalem and Rome in Jewish prophecy and in the theology of the early Church. It will show that Christianity “being Roman” is a biblical mandated by the Old Testament, by Christ Himself, and by the New Testament.
Here are the first two volumes: One on the Old Testament origins of Catholicism (The Crucified Rabbi: Judaism and the Origins of Catholic Christianity) and the other on Saint Paul and Catholicism (The Catholic Perspective on Paul: Paul and the Origins of Catholic Christianity).
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