He is also referring to those who will murder the prophets in

the Tribulation.

 

David


 


From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: {dbilg} Re: Daily Bread
Date: Mon, 10 Aug 2009 20:54:17 +1000




David, When Jesus says "All these things shall come upon this generation" He 
was referred to the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. There would have been 
people who heard Jesus says those words in A.D. 31 who would be still living in 
A.D. 70.
 
Carleeta

----- Original Message ----- 
From: David Lafleche 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, August 10, 2009 5:36 PM
Subject: {dbilg} Re: Daily Bread

   What Jesus said was, "Verily I say unto you, All these things
shall come upon this generation" (Matthew 23:36).  By that
he meant the "generation" consisted of EVERYONE, throughout ALL
time, who harbored a bad attitude toward the prophets.  Even if
they never actually touched them.  The Pharisees may not have
liked what the Old Testament prophets had written, but they might
have had bitter thoughts against them, and thus were murderers
in their hearts.
 
David

 


From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: {dbilg} Daily Bread
Date: Mon, 10 Aug 2009 17:30:28 +1000





One of the strangest mysteries in the Bible is where we find Jesus blaming 
people of His day for a crime that someone else committed 800 years earlier. If 
someone were to blame me for starting World War I, for example, I would get 
huffed up because I wasn't even born when it started. How could Jesus, the 
Righteous One, be so apparently unfair?
The problem is in Matthew 23:35. Jesus is preaching His last sermon in the 
glorious Temple. Some may say that He was deliberately inviting His own death 
by laying out before the leaders their sins just as they were. (Why not be more 
political and soften up His words?) Then Jesus tells these august pastors of 
the flock that "YOU slew Zacharias ... between the temple and the altar." The 
story goes that the blood of this martyr stained the stones in the pavement 
forever! (See 2 Chron. 24:20, 21.)
Can't you imagine those scribes and Pharisees responding in indignation, "Why 
do You blame US for a crime committed 800 years before we were born? How unfair 
can You be?"
But like He always did, Jesus told the truth. The same awful sin that King 
Joash and the leaders of his day committed when they stoned Zechariah right 
there in the holy Temple, these religious leaders were already nursing in their 
hearts--for within a few hours they would crucify the Son of God. So, in a 
corporate sense, they were guilty also of the murder of Zacharias! The record 
of your sin is not like your electric light bill--you pay only for what you 
use; as sinners by nature we are truly guilty of all the sin ever 
committed--just give us enough time and opportunity. It wasn't only the Romans 
and the Pharisees who crucified Christ; "Were you there when they crucified my 
Lord?" Yes, in a corporate sense.
Christ prayed for a corporate forgiveness to be given to them all, "for they 
know not what they do." Thank Him, and receive it.
</HTML<BR


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