Lesson Objectives

  1. Explain why Matthew 24:15–35 refers primarily to the coming judgment on Jerusalem and not to a distant modern world crisis.
  2. Show how Luke 21:20–24 clarifies the “abomination of desolation” language by identifying the historical siege of Jerusalem.
  3. Understand how prophetic cosmic language functions in Scripture as judgment language and why it must not be woodenly forced into modern sensationalism.
  4. Recognize that Christ’s words were fulfilled exactly, that His authority was vindicated, and that His disciples were called to trust, flee, and endure rather than speculate.

Thesis

In Matthew 24:15–35, Jesus warns of a real, local, historical judgment about to fall upon Jerusalem, using prophetic language rooted in the Old Testament to show that His word would be fulfilled exactly, His disciples must respond in obedient urgency, and His authority as the enthroned Son of Man would be publicly vindicated.

I. The Warning Was Concrete, Local, and Urgent

Key Verse: Matthew 24:15–16 • “Therefore when you see the abomination of desolation… then those who are in Judea must flee to the mountains.”

1. What visible sign did Jesus tell the disciples to watch for, and why does the command to flee to the mountains prove this is not about the end of the physical universe?
2. List three specific first-century details Jesus gave that show this warning was for real people in a real place and time.

Application: Do not turn Christ’s concrete warnings into speculative fog. Personally, learn to respect the plain meaning of Scripture.

When Christ says flee, the faithful do not theorize—they move.

II. The Great Tribulation Was a Horrific Judgment on Jerusalem, Not a Future Worldwide Code

Key Verse: Matthew 24:21 • “For then there will be a great tribulation, such as has not occurred since the beginning of the world…”

3. Why does the context tie the “great tribulation” directly to the siege and fall of Jerusalem rather than a future global event?
4. How does Jesus’ promise to shorten the days for the elect give comfort even in the middle of judgment?

Application: Do not let loaded phrases become excuses for sloppy interpretation. Guard the church against sensational teachers.

A frightening phrase is not a license to ignore the passage around it.

III. The Cosmic Language Is Prophetic Judgment Language, Not Wooden Literalism

Key Verse: Matthew 24:29–30 • “…the sun will be darkened… they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of the sky with power and great glory.”

5. Using Isaiah 13 and Daniel 7, explain in your own words what the “cosmic” language actually means in this passage.
6. How does the destruction of Jerusalem actually prove — rather than disprove — that Jesus is the reigning King?

Application: Do not read prophetic imagery like an unbeliever reading a weather report. Let Scripture teach you how Scripture uses language.

If you ignore the prophets’ language, you will mishear the Prophet who fulfilled them.
The rubble of the Jerusalem temple is a monument to the authority of Jesus Christ.

IV. “This Generation” Means Exactly What It Says, and Christ’s Word Stood Exactly as Spoken

Key Verse: Matthew 24:34–35 • “Truly I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place… My words will not pass away.”

7. What does Jesus mean by “this generation,” and why is it impossible to remove this phrase from its plain first-century meaning?
8. How does the fulfilled judgment on Jerusalem strengthen your confidence in every other word Christ has spoken?

Application: Trust Christ enough to believe Him when His words cut across popular systems. Stand on His word even when religious crowds run the other way.

When Jesus sets a deadline, history always meets it.

Conclusion & Personal Response

Jesus warned of a real desolation. He told His disciples what to watch for. He told them when to flee. He described tribulation that would fall on Jerusalem. He used prophetic judgment language the Old Testament had already taught us how to read. He showed that the Son of Man would be vindicated in power and authority. And He sealed the whole passage with the certainty of His own unfailing word.

Personal Application:
Where are you right now in relation to the enthroned King? Are you obeying, listening, resisting, or playing games with revelation? Write your honest response below.
INVITATION
Jerusalem fell exactly as Christ said. That should tell every soul something serious: when Jesus speaks of judgment, He is right.

Repent. Believe. Be baptized. Live faithfully under the rule of the enthroned King.

Greek / Hebrew Word Study

Term Greek / Hebrew Meaning Relevance to the Sermon
Abominationβδέλυγμα (bdelygma)detestable thing, abhorrent profanationDescribes the defiling reality tied to Jerusalem’s coming desolation
Desolationἐρήμωσις (erēmōsis)devastation, laying waste, making desertedHighlights the judicial ruin coming upon Jerusalem and the temple order
Tribulationθλῖψις (thlipsis)pressure, affliction, distressDescribes the severe distress connected to the siege and fall of Jerusalem
Comingἐρχόμενον (erchomenon)coming, arriving, appearingIn this context tied to Son-of-Man vindication language drawn from Daniel 7
Generationγενεά (genea)generation, contemporaries, age-groupAnchors fulfillment within the lifetime horizon of Jesus’ hearers
Desolationsשֹׁמֵמוֹת (shomemot)desolations, devastationsDaniel’s language for decreed ruin and judgment upon city and sanctuary
Dominionשָׁלְטָן (shalṭan)dominion, rule, sovereign authorityDaniel 7 background for Christ’s vindicated kingship