Rational Agnostic
Well-Known Member
That's the point. 2000 years later, there are billions of Christians around the world who still earnestly believe that it will occur.
The reason for that is the historicity of the Resurrection is unimpeachable. If those Old Time Jews could have produced a body, there would be no Christianity.
I read through your note, but I didn't find anything to dissuade me from my other end time studies. Jesus wasn't wrong. The actual timing for His second visitation is found in Daniel and Revelation, within the stated prophetic time periods. This generation is now. We are in the scope of that timing now.
I'm afraid that your declaration of failure is simply premature.
Peaceful Sabbath.
The observation that the prophecies failed would only be premature if some of the disciples who were standing there and listening to Jesus at the time were still alive. In that case we would have to admit that the prophecy could still be fulfilled but the fact that this is not the case proves that the prophecy is false. I have heard that some Mormons believe that John is actually still alive and more than 2000 years old to try to get around this prophecy, but this is an absurd claim that most Christians don't take seriously. I think the context of Matthew 10 demonstrates that the second coming was expected fo occur very soon (likely within a decade or two) of when it was predicted, and at the end of the first century at the absolute latest. As far as the resurrection is concerned, I don't think the evidence that Jesus died on a cross is that strong to begin with, but even if we grant that as being true, it's not reasonable to assume that there was a Resurrection just because the body was missing. There are many more reasonable and natural explanations for that, and the fact that Jesus' disciples don't even recognize the supposedly resurrected Jesus according to the bible is pretty strong evidence that the guy they were talking to was not actually Jesus, but later on they convinced themselves it was since they wanted to believe that it was.