The Lesson of the Fig Tree
Verses
35-38: Verses 35 and 36 warn against attempts to set an exact date
for Christ’s return at the end of the church age. To speculate that day and hour do not eliminate year is a gross
oversimplification. The Father only knows the time of Christ’s
return since it has been set by His authority (Acts 1:7).
However,
we are given a comparison to the days of Noah (and the Flood),
which illustrate and prefigure the condition of humanity at the time
of Christ’s return. The last generation, like the one of Noah’s days, is pleasure-oriented and self-gratifying by eating and
drinking.
The
reference to marrying and giving in marriage may refer to
carrying on the normal course of life without heeding the impending
judgment.
Matthew
24:35 “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not
pass away.”
Heaven
and earth... The heaven refers to the physical universe. Some
scripture interpretations include the words with a roar. The roar
connotes a whistling or a crackling sound as of objects being
consumed by flames. God will incinerate the universe, probably in an
atomic reaction that disintegrates all matter as we know it (see
2Pet. 3:10).
The
elements will be destroyed with intense heat. The elements are the
atomic components into which matter is ultimately divisible, which
make up the composition of all the created matter. This means that
the atoms, neutrons, protons, and electrons are all going to
disintegrate.
Then
the whole of the physical, natural earth in its present form, with
its entire universe will be consumed (Isa. 24:19-20; 34:4).
This
is called the Day of the Lord which is a technical term pointing to
the special intervention of God in human history for judgment. It
ultimately refers to the future time of judgment whereby God judges
the wicked-on earth and ends this world system in its present form.
The
Old Testament prophets saw the final Day of the Lord as unequaled
darkness and damnation, a day when the Lord would act in a climactic
way to vindicate His name, destroy His enemies, reveal His glory,
establish His kingdom and destroy the world (Isa. 2:10-21; 13:6-22;
Joel 1, 2; Amos 5; Oba. 15; Zec. 14; Mal. 4; 2Thes. 1:7; 2:2).
It
occurs at the time of the tribulation on earth (Rev. 6:17), and again
1,000 years later at the end of the millennial kingdom before the
creation of the new heavens and new earth (verse 13; Rev. 20:1 –
21:1).
not
pass away... Pass
Away
Greek:
parerchomai,
to change from one condition or state to another; pass away, as a
person passes away in death, or as old things pass away at the new
birth (2Cor.
5:17). It never means annihilation, but a change only. The heavens
and earth are eternal (Psm. 72:5-17; 89:3-37; 104:5; Ecc. 1:4) and
cannot pass out of existence. They will be changed (Heb. 1:10-12;
12:25-28; Rom. 8:21-23), be renovated by fire (2Pet. 3:5-13), and be
renewed (Rev. 21:1), but never pass
out of existence. They will be changed but My words will not be
changed.
We
know that somewhere in the future, the heaven and earth will pass
away, because we read, we shall have a new heaven and a new earth.
Jesus is the Word of God. He is also, eternal. By this, we know the
Word is eternal.
This
promise is sure, for it would be easier for heaven
and earth
to pass
away
than for Christ’s words
to fail (cf. Mat. 5:18).