Why AD 70 fulfilled the judgment, and why rebuilding what Christ ended is a dangerous deception
Jana S Bennun
 
 I need to make this clear, because more and more people are saying this to me directly: that Israel is still awaiting “the time of Jacob’s trouble,” and that what we are witnessing today is prophecy unfolding.That claim is simply not true.It is not supported by Scripture, by history, or by the words of Jesus Himself. This confusion is not harmless. A correct understanding of what has already been fulfilled is essential, because only truth empowers Christians to discern what is happening now and to refuse participation in what is being built through deception.When believers are taught that fulfilled prophecies are still future, they are unknowingly being conditioned to help resurrect a religious system God has already judged and destroyed.What is at stake is not abstract theology. If Christians believe Old Covenant judgments are still pending, they will interpret modern political and religious movements as obedience rather than rebellion. This opens the door to supporting the rebuilding of the temple system, the reinstatement of sacrifices, and the acceptance of so called “universal ethics” ( Noahide laws) that are not rooted in Christ.That path leads directly toward future Noahide laws and a religious legal dictatorship presented as moral order. Yet God has already dealt decisively with that system. Jesus Christ declared, It is finished” (John 19:30) and the judgment on the temple order was swift, final, and historically verifiable.There is no prophetic necessity to reinstall what God Himself dismantled.The claim that “the time of Jacob’s trouble” still lies ahead collapses when confronted with first century history. Jeremiah’s prophecy was not a vague end times warning but a covenantal judgment tied to Jerusalem, the temple, and Israel’s rejection of God’s Son.Jesus explicitly identified its fulfillment within His own generation.In Matthew 24 and Luke 21, He spoke of great distress coming upon Judea, Jerusalem surrounded by armies, and the destruction of the temple, concluding with the unmistakable time marker: “This generation will not pass away until all these things take place” (Matthew 24:34). Luke adds that these were “days of vengeance, to fulfill all that is written” (Luke 21:22). Fulfillment does not allow for postponement.The historical record confirms this with horrifying clarity.The Jewish historian Flavius Josephus, an eyewitness to the Roman siege of Jerusalem, documented devastation unlike anything Israel had ever experienced. He wrote, “For there was never a greater misfortune fallen upon any city than this, since the beginning of the world” (Wars of the JewsBook V) .Famine ravaged the city so severely that Josephus records a mother killing and eating her own child, language that mirrors the covenant curses warned of in Deuteronomy. He described the famine as consuming all natural affection, leaving the city filled with death and despair.Josephus estimates that over one million Jews perished, with tens of thousands taken captive and sold into slavery. The temple, believed by many to be invincible, was burned to the ground.He records that the Romans dismantled Jerusalem so thoroughly that there was left nothing to make those that came thither believe it had ever been inhabited” (Wars, Book VII). Jesus’ prophecy was fulfilled exactly: “There will not be left here one stone upon another that will not be thrown down” (Matthew 24:2.) This was not a metaphor.This was a covenant judgment executed in history.The New Testament interprets these events theologically. Hebrews declares that the Old Covenant was “becoming obsolete and growing old” and “ready to vanish away” (Hebrews 8:13). That vanishing was not theoretical. It occurred when the temple was destroyed and sacrifices ceased permanently. There is no biblical justification for reviving a system God rendered obsolete through judgment and fulfillment in Christ.What we are witnessing today is not prophecy unfolding, but prophecy being artificially reenacted.Attempts to rebuild the temple and reinstate sacrifices do not honor God; they deny Christ. Scripture never instructs believers to reconstruct what God Himself tore down. Paul warned plainly that if one rebuilds what has been destroyed, he proves himself a transgressor (Galatians 2:18). Jesus did not say the system would be paused. He said it was finished.The judgment on that system was final, and irreversible.The danger now lies in deception. Many Christians, unwilling to examine inherited doctrines, are being conditioned to support the resurrection of what Christ abolished. By doing so, they are not defending faith; they are disregarding the finished work of Christ.Instead of standing in the authority, rest, and freedom believers possess in Him, they are lending moral and spiritual support to a structure God judged as merciless and condemned.Christ handed His people a gift: liberation from a system that condemned without transforming and demanded without empowering. The destruction of the temple was not a tragedy for the Church. It was confirmation.Confused Christians who now help recreate that system are not moving history forward; they are moving backward. Even if modern efforts succeed temporarily, Scripture is clear that what is built apart from Christ cannot stand.This is the final warning Christians must hear:Many refuse to slow down and examine whether they themselves have been deceived by dispensational assumptions that push fulfilled prophecies into the future and nullify what Christ already accomplished. By doing so, they quietly disregard Jesus’ own words about judgment on the Jewish system, the temple, and the covenantal order that rejected Him.In their blindness, they are actively helping to recreate a system God decisively judged, a system that Scripture shows to be merciless, coercive, and destructive. In doing so, they are digging their own hole and preparing a future for their children that never had to exist.Had Christians kept their lamps full of oil, had they understood fulfillment rather than fantasy, had they recognized that Christ reigns now as King and not merely in some postponed future, this deception would not have gained traction.If this artificial system is installed, it may appear to succeed for a short time, but it will ultimately fail because it is built in defiance of the finished work of Christ. Yet its failure will not come without cost.Innocent blood will be spilled, not because it was inevitable, but because those entrusted to guard the faith refused to stand, refused to discern, and refused to exercise the authority they already possess in Christ.This tragedy will not be the result of prophecy demanding fulfillment, but of believers failing to protect what was already fulfilled.The time of Jacob’s trouble was real. History records it. Scripture interprets it. Jesus declared it finished. The true danger today is not missing a future judgment, but failing to recognize a completed one – and in doing so, helping construct the very system God has already judged.Thank you for readingJana  Comments by Truth Uncensored Afrika:   The antichrist system is being built right now with Donald Trump and Netanyahau at the head.  Christians wake up!


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