As in the days of Noah: Matthew 24 - As in the days of Noah
At the destruction of 
Jerusalem by the Roman general  Titus in A.D. 70, only the leader of the Pharisees Rabbi Jochanan ben  Zacchai escaped by his cowardly act of murder and deception after  already having incited the Jews to the second worst act of rebellion  against God by actually cursing God in God’s own temple. The first worst  act of rebellion was to commit the double crime of Deicide murdering  God’s own Messiah Jesus Christ and 
Perfidy  never repenting of that 
Deicide.  While setting the rest of the Jews at each other he faked his own death  and secretly arranged to be and was so removed alive from the city  during the siege that destroyed the temple and the city of 
Jerusalem.
Jochanan  ben Zacchai then asked for and received the sponsorship and help of the  Roman Emperor Vespasian and with that then reorganized the Satanic  Priesthood of the 
Naasseni (the  Babylonian sect of the Jews which were the Haburah the serpent  worshippers), i.e the Pharisees’ Sanhedrin, in Jamnia (Yavneh).
His  successor, Rabbi Gamaliel (II), circa 90 A.D., continued the curses  against Christ and the Christians made in the temple by the Jew Satan  Worshippers, the 
Naasseni.  This was originally just before the destruction of the temple by the  Roman General Titus.  This was the "curse against the 
noẓerim  and the minim" (Christ and the Christians) added to the 
Eighteen  Temple Benedictions then. This was the 
abomination  of desolation that Jesus Christ warned about in Matthew 24. It has  been recited at every "authorized" synagogue since then – ALL OF THESE  SYNAGOUES ARE THE 
SYNAGOGUE  OF SATAN. EVERY LAST ONE OF THEM IS THE 
ABOMINATION  OF DESOLATION.
At Jamnia the Satanic cult of Pharisee Rebbis led  by Rabbi Gamaliel (II), supposedly on the authority of the first  Gamaliel who taught Saul and interceded for the Christians decades  earlier, spouted the wide mouth frog vitriol and claimed to close the  canon of Scripture against (the so called by Jamnia only) “apocryphal  books” which were in fact the real Old Testament Canon of Scripture of  the Biblical original Hebrew text and the Septuagint text which was  faithful to that, and also against the New Covenant (New Testament)  Scriptures which were the Gospels and the Book of the Acts and the  Epistles and the Book of the Revelation all of which proclaimed the  Truth that Jesus is the Immortal Son of God and the Messiah of God in  the flesh confessed by Jew and Gentile Christian alike.
At the  Roman siege of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. God’s judgment fell on the bloody  and Satanic Jews, which the Christians escaped, having been  prophetically forewarned by Christ to flee the abomination of the  desolation and did so and fled to Pella directly East of the Jordan in  the Decapolis area before it occurred.
The Christians flourished while the judgment of  God came upon the Jews which just increased the furor of the always  bloody and perfidious and demonically hardened of heart Jews clinging to  their crime of Deicide hoping to secure favor from Satan (the Naas of 
the Naasseni  which  was the Satanic Jews’ Priesthood of Babylon, the Jews Haburah, from the  6th century B.C. and was called the sect of the Pharisees at the time  of 
Our  Only Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and which persecuted Him unto death  – but 
He  rose again.
Another  Satanic Hoax of the Apostate Jews.
2005  Announcement anticipating their bloody stunts to fake the coming of the  Apostate Jews’ false messiah which is in actuality the Antichrist, the  Dajjal, the Yiddish ha maschiah. It was supposed to all have happened by  2007 (2008 at latest) since that was 40 years from the Jews bloody  invasion of the Noble Sanctuary in 1967, these are part of the  prophetically forewarned wars of the Antichrist. Biblically, forty years  is a “generation.” That false timeline of the Jews had been geared for  that forty year period to gain the support of the Apostate Christian  Zionist sect of damned heretics – it has led to the Anglo-American  support of the Antichrist’s wars against God and God’s people, Christian  and Muslim alike in the Middle   East and around the world. God will judge America and England without  mercy for the complete merciless actions of the United States and Great Britain.  False Antichrist Israel Gog and Magog of the Zionist Jews is destined  ONLY for everlasting perdition in hellfire with Satan their ruler  forever.
Rabbi Yitzhak Kaduri - "With the help of G- d  [Kaduri means the Devil, belial, Satan, Iblis], the soul of the Mashiach  [Kaduri means a demon or even Satan himself] has attached itself to a  person in Israel."  See Note 1 at the bottom.
“ba” in Graeco Egptian Pagan Necromantic Sorcery  is the soul of a human being, the nephesh or psuche. “ka” is a demon  from Satan, or in the worst form of Satanic possession is a fallen angel  or even Satan himself.
The following is the power source of the Jews and  Judaism, known as “superforce” in the Apostate Vatican and is the core  of Freemasonry (including especially in Washington D.C. politics all of  which are owned by the Freemasonic influence) and is the central  Diabolic preternatural presence in Mormonism and the Jehovah’s Witnesses  and the rest of all of the Diabolic cults in the world.
That is the  pagan Graeco Egyptian destruction of the “immaculate children” by  ripping their entrails out to secure the demon (the “ka”) supposedly  attached to the young infant’s soul (the “ba”) this is the most horrid  necromantic sorcery performed by murdering children (any of these three  young babies-children: preborn ripped from the mother’s womb, or just  after birth, or a young child). This is the core of the Jews’ blood  murder of children down through the ages and the Jews’ (Alan Guttmacher  and the rest of the Jews who perpetrated abortion of Gentiles) foisting  upon the world the abomination of abortion. This was the core of the  cults that worshipped Satan by murder blood sacrifice in the ancient  world. Included are the cults of Moloch and Chemosh in the Levant and  Melkart of Carthage (Hercules of Greek pagan religion) and the rest  stretching from the ancient world into the 6th century A.D.  in the Mediterranean and continued to the present by Jews’ in secrecy  (the so called blood libel – it is no libel, it is all true).  
MATTHEW 24
CHAPTER XXIV.
Christ foretells the destruction of the  temple: with the signs that shall come before it, and before the last  judgment.  We must always watch.
1 And *Jesus being  come out of the temple went away.  And his disciples came to shew him  the buildings of the temple.
2 And he answering,  said to them: Do you see all these things?  Amen, I say to you, *there  shall not be left here a stone upon a stone that shall not be thrown  down.
3 And as he was sitting on Mount Olivet, the  disciples came to him privately, saying: Tell us, when shall these  things be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the  consummation of the world?
4 And Jesus  answering, said to them: *Take heed that no man seduce you:
5 For many will  come in my name saying, I am Christ: and they will seduce many.
6 And you shall  hear of wars, and rumours of wars.  See that ye be not troubled.  For  these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet.
7 For nation shall  rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom, and there shall be  pestilences, and famines, and earthquakes in places.
8 Now all these are  the beginnings of sorrows.
9 *Then shall they  deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall put you to death: and you  shall be hated by all nations for my name's sake.
10 And then shall  many be scandalized, and shall betray one another, and shall hate one  another.
11 And many false prophets shall rise, and  shall seduce many.
12 And because iniquity hath abounded, the  charity of many shall grow cold.
13 But he that shall  persevere to the end, he shall be saved.
14 And this gospel  of the kingdom shall be preached in the whole world, for a testimony to  all nations, and then shall the consummation come.
15 *When therefore,  you shall see the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of by  **Daniel, the prophet, standing in the holy place: he that readeth let  him understand.
16 Then let them that are in Judea flee to the  mountains:
17 And let him that is on the house top, not  come down to take any thing out of his house:
18 And let him that  is in the field, not go back to take his coat.
19 And woe to them that are with child, and that give suck in  those days.
 
20 But pray that your flight be not in the  winter, or on the *sabbath.
21 For there shall  be then great tribulation, such as hath not been from the beginning of  the world until now, neither shall be.
22 And unless those  days had been shortened, no flesh should be saved: but for the sake of  the elect, those days shall be shortened.
23 *Then if any man  shall say to you: Lo, here is Christ, or there: do not believe him.
24 For there shall  arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and  wonders, insomuch as to deceive (if it were possible) even the elect.
25 Behold, I have  told it to you before hand.
26 If therefore,  they shall say to you: Behold he is in the desert: go ye not out: Behold  he is in the closets, believe it not.
27 For as the  lightning cometh out of the east, and appeareth, even unto the west: so  shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
28 *Wheresoever the  body shall be, there shall the eagles also be gathered together.
29 *And immediately  after the tribulation  of those days, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give  her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the  heavens shall be moved: 
30 And then shall  appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the  tribes of the earth mourn: *and they shall see the Son of man coming in  the clouds of heaven with great power and majesty.
31 *And he shall  send his Angels with a trumpet, and a great voice: and they shall gather  together his elect, from the four winds, from the farthest parts of the  heavens to the utmost bounds of them.
32 Now learn a  parable from the fig-tree: when its branch is now tender, and the leaves  come forth, you know that summer is nigh.
33 So also you,  when you shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at  the doors.
34 Amen, I say to you, this generation shall  not pass, till all these things be done.
35 *Heaven and  earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.
36 But of that day  and hour no one knoweth, no not the Angels of heaven, but the Father  alone.
37 *And as it was in the days of Noe, so shall  also the coming of the Son of man be.
38 For as in the  days before the flood, they were eating and drinking, marrying and  giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark,
39 And they knew  not till the flood came, and took them all away: so also shall the  coming of the Son of man be.
40 Then shall two be  in the field: the one shall be taken, and the other shall be left.
41 Two women shall  be grinding at the mill: the one shall be taken, and the other shall be  left.
42 Watch ye, therefore, because you know not at  what hour your Lord will come.
43 But this know ye,  *that if the master of the house knew at what hour the thief would  come, he would certainly watch, and would not suffer his house to be  broken open.
44 Wherefore be ye also ready, because at what  hour you know not, the Son of man will come.
45 Who, thinkest  thou, is a faithful and wise servant, whom his lord hath set over his  family, to give them meat in season?
46 *Blessed is that  servant, whom, when his lord shall come, he shall find so doing.
47 Amen, I say to  you, he shall set him over all his goods.
48 But if that evil  servant shall say in his heart: My lord is long a coming:
49 And shall begin  to strike his fellow-servants, and shall eat, and drink with drunkards:
50 The lord of that  servant shall come, in a day that he expecteth not, and in an hour that  he knoweth not:
51 And shall separate him, and appoint his  portion with the hypocrites.  *There shall be weeping and gnashing of  teeth.
____________________
*
1 - 3:  Mark xiii. 1 - 4.; Luke  xxi. 5 - 7.
1:   A.D. 33.; Mark xiii. 1.; Luke xxi. 5.
2:  Luke xix.  44.
3:   Matthew v. 1. John vi. 3.
4 - 8:  Mark xiii. 5 - 8.;  Luke xxi. 8 - 11.
4:   Jer. xxix. 8.; Ephes. v. 6.; Coloss. ii. 18.
5:   Matthew xxiv. 11, 24.; Jer. xiv. 14.
7:  II Par. xv.  6.; Is. xix. 2.
9  - 14:  Mark xiii. 9 - 13.; Luke xxi. 12 - 19.
9:   Matthew x. 17.; Matthew x. 21, 22.; Luke xxi. 12.; John xv. 20.;  John  xvi. 2.
11:  Matthew xxiv. 5, 24.; II Peter ii. 1.; I John iv.  1.
13:  Matthew x. 22.
14:  Matthew  xxvi. 13.; Mark xvi. 15.; Col. i. 5,6,23.
15 - 22:  Mark  xiii. 14 - 20. Luke xxi. 20 - 24.
15:  Mark xiii. 14.; Luke xxi.  20. --- ** Dan. ix. 27. 
17, 18:   Luke xvii. 31.
19:   Luke xxiii. 29.
20:   Acts i. 12.
21:   Daniel xii. 1.; Apoc. xvi. 18.
23  - 25:  Mark xiii. 21 - 23.
23:  Mark xiii. 21.; Luke  xvii. 21, 23. 
24:  Matthew xxiv. 5, 11.;  Dt. xiii. 1.; Apoc. xix. 20.; II Th. ii. 9.
27:  Luke xvii. 24.
28:  Job xxxix.  30.; Luke xvii. 37.
29 - 31:  Mark xiii. 24 - 27.;  Luke xxi. 25 - 28.
29:  Isai. xiii. 10.; Acts ii. 20.; Apoc. vi. 12,13.;  Is. xxxiv. 4.; Ezech. xxxii. 7.; Joel ii. 10.; Joel iii. 15.; Mark xiii.  24.; Luke xxi. 25.; 
30:  IV Esr.  xiii. 32; Zach. xii. 12.; Apoc. i. 7.; Matthew xvi. 27.; Matthew xxvi.  64.; Daniel vii. xiii.; Mark viii. 38.;  Luke ix. 26.; Apoc. xiv. 14.
30,  31:  I Thess. iv. 16.
31:  1 Cor. xv. 52.; 1 Thess. iv. 15.; Matthew xiii.  41.; Isaiah xxvii. 12, 13.
32, 33:  Mark xiii. 28, 29.;  Luke xxi. 29 - 31.
33:  James v. 9.; Apoc. iii.  20. 
34,  35:  Luke xxi. 32, 33.  
34 - 36:  Mark xiii. 30 - 32.  
34:   Matthew xxiii. 36. 
35:  Matthew v. 18.; Mark  xiii. 31.; II Peter iii. 12.; Psalm ci. 27.; Psalm cxviii. 89. 
36:   Matthew xxv. 13.; Zach. xiv. 7.; Mark xiii. 32, 35.; Acts i. 7.   
37  - 39:  Luke xvii. 26, 27.  
37:  Gen. vii. 7.; Luke xvii.  26.
38:   Luke xx. 34.; Gen. vii. 13.  
40, 41:  Luke xvii. 34, 35. 
42:   Matthew xxiv. 50.; Matthew xxv. 13.; Mark xiii. xxxiii.
43,  44:  Luke xii. 39, 40.
43:  Mark xiii. 35.; Luke xii.  39.
45  - 51:  Luke xii. 42 - 46.
45:  Ps. ciii. 27
46:   Apoc. xvi. 15.
47:   Matthew xxv. 21, 23.
48:  Matthew xxv. 19: II Peter  iii. 4.
49:   Dt. xxi. 20. 
50:   Matthew xxiv. 42.
51:  Matthew viii. 12.;  Matthew xiii. 42.; Matthew xxv. 30.
 
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MATTHEW 24
CHAPTER XXIV.
Ver. 1.  After the fatigues of preaching and teaching, Jesus towards  evening left the temple, as it is in the Greek, eporeueto apo tou ierou, and went towards Mount Olivet, where he was  accustomed to spend his nights, as we learn from S. Luke, c. xxi. v.  penult.  Jans. — His disciples came to shew him the buildings,  not moved by curiosity, for they had seen them frequently before, but by  pity; because he had on a former occasion, and only just before in  Jerusalem, threatened the destruction of the temple and city, hoping  that the splendour and magnificence of so fine a structure, consecrated  to God, might alter his determination, as S. Hilarius observes.  But the  anger of God, provoked by sins, is not to be appeased with stones and  buildings.  He therefore answered them: (Jans.)
Ver. 2.  Do you see all these things?  Examine again and again  all this magnificence, that the sentence of heaven may appear more  striking. — A stone upon a stone.  We need not look on this as an  hyperbole.  The temple burnt by the Romans, and afterwards even  ploughed up.  See Greg. Naz. orat. ii. cont. Julianum, Theodoret l. iii.  Histor. c. xx. &c.  Wi. — Julian the apostate, wishing to falsify  the predictions of Daniel and of Jesus Christ, attempted to rebuild the  temple.  For this purpose, he assembled the chief among the Jews, and  asking them why they neglected the prescribed sacrifices, was answered,  that they could not offer any where else but in the temple of  Jerusalem.  Upon this he ordered them to repair to Jerusalem, to rebuild  their temple, and restore their ancient worship, promising them his  concurrence in carrying on the work.  This filled the Jews with  inexpressible joy.  Hence flocking to Jerusalem, they began with scorn  and triumph to insult over the Christians.  Contributions came in from  all parts.  The Jewish women stripped themselves of their most costly  ornaments.  The emperor opened his treasures to furnish every thing  necessary for the building.  The most able workmen were convened from  all parts; persons of the greatest distinction were appointed to direct  the work; and the emperor's friend, Alipius, was set over the whole,  with orders to carry on the work without ceasing, and to spare no  expense.  All materials were laid in to an immense quantity.  The Jews  of both sexes bore a share in the labour; the women helping to dig the  ground, and carry away the rubbish in their aprons and gowns.  It is  even said that the Jews appointed some pick-axes, spades, and baskets,  to be made of silver, for the honour of the work.  Till this time the  foundations and some ruins of the walls had remained, as appears from S.  Cyril, in his catechism xv. n. 15. and Euseb. Dem. Evang. l. viii. p.  406.  These ruins the Jews first demolished with their own hands, thus  concurring to the accomplishment of our Saviour's prediction.  They next  began to dig a new foundation, in which many thousands were employed.   But what they had thrown up in the day, was, by repeated earthquakes,  the night following cast back again into the trench.  When Alipius the  next day was earnestly pressing on the work, with the assistance of the  governor of the province, there issued, says Ammianus Marcellinus, such  horrible balls of fire out of the earth near the foundations, as to  render the place inaccessible from time to time to the scorched  workmen.  And the victorious element continuing in this manner  obstinately bent, as it were, to drive them to a distance, Alipius,  thought proper to abandon, though reluctantly, the enterprise.  This  great event happened in the beginning of the year 363, and with many  very astonishing circumstances is recorded both by Jews and Christians.   See the proofs and a much fuller account of this astonishing event,  which all the ancient fathers describe as indubitable, in Alban Butler's  life of S. Cyril of Jerusalem, March 18th.  Thus they so completely  destroyed whatever remained of the ancient temple, that there was not  left one stone upon another; nor were they permitted by heaven even to  begin the new one.  Maldonatus.
Ver. 3.  Tell us, when shall these things be?  and what shall be the  sign of thy coming, and of the consummation of the world?[1]  We  must take good notice with S. Jerom, that three questions are here  joined together.  1. Concerning the destruction of Jerusalem; 2. of the  coming of Christ; 3. of the end of the world.  Christ's answers and  predictions in this chapter, are to be expounded with a reference to the  three questions.  This hath not been considered by those interpreters;  who expound every thing here spoken by Christ of the destruction of  Jerusalem; nor by others, who will have all understood of his coming to  judgment, and of the end of the world.  Wi. — It is probable the  apostles themselves did not understand that they were asking about two  distinct events.  Being filled with the idea of a temporal kingdom, they  thought that Christ's second coming would take place soon; and that  Jerusalem, once destroyed, the Messias would begin his reign on earth.
Ver. 4.  And Jesus answering.  Various are the interpretations  given here.  Some will have it refer to the destruction of Jerusalem,  which took place, A.D. 70; and others, to the end  of the world.  That of S. Chrys. seems to be very conformable to  the context, and is followed by many.  He explains all, to the 23d verse  exclusively, of what shall precede the destruction of Jerusalem; nor is  there any circumstance which cannot easily be referred to that event,  as will appear from a careful and attentive observation of the history  of the Jews, and of the Church at that time, in the writings of Josephus  and Eusebius.  Even the preaching of the gospel to the whole world,  which seems to favour the contrary explanation, is by the same father  said to have taken place before the destruction of Jerusalem.  S. Paul  tells the Colossians, that even in his time the faith was spread all  over the world.  The abomination of desolation may be explained of the  Roman soldiery, or, of the seditious zealots, who, by their murders and  other atrocities, polluted the temple.  See Josephus, b. 4. and 5. of  the Jewish war.  As deicide was a crime peculiar to the Jews and  exceeded every other crime, their punishment was severe above measure.   Had the Almighty punished them to the full of what they had deserved,  not one of the Jews would have escaped.  But as he formerly would have  spared Sodom and Gomorrha, had there been found therein ten just men to  avert the impending ruin; so shall these days of affliction be shortened  for the sake of some who believe.  The verses subsequent to the 22d,  are explained by S. Chrys. of the second coming of Christ, previous to  the general judgment.  Jans. — Such as wish for a more particular  explanation of every thing preceding the 23d verse, how it applies to  the Jews, may consult the concordance of Jansenius, who thus concludes  his observations: "Hitherto we have explained all things of the  destruction of Jerusalem, which prophecies, though they principally  regarded the times of the apostles, may be of use to us in two ways.  1.  It will confirm our faith, when we see clearly fulfilled whatever was  distinctly foretold of this people; and may serve to increase our fears,  when we reflect, that what is immediately added concerning the day of  judgment, shall be fulfilled with the same rigorous exactitude and  certainty.  It is another effect of divine Providence for the increase  of our faith, that this prophecy, which was to take place with regard to  Jerusalem, is not mentioned by S. John, who lived long enough to see it  accomplished, but by the other evangelists, who died long before the  event.  2. It should animate us in the practice of virtue, and gratitude  to reflect, that whatever tribulations happen to the Church, or  throughout the earth, all co-operate to the advantage of the elect.   Such as will be good, have nothing to fear."  Jans. 
Ver. 5.  For many will come.  One of these was Simon Magus, who  in the Acts (c. viii. v. 10.) is mentioned as calling himself the power  of God; hence the apostle S. John (1 ep. ii. 18,) says, and as you  have heard that Antichrist cometh, even now there are become many  Antichrists.  By Antichrists I understand heretics, who, under the  name of Christ, teach doctrines different from Christ; neither is there  any reason for us to be surprised, if many be seduced, since our Lord  declares that many will be seduced.  S. Jerom. . . .  This alone will be  sufficient for us to know the false doctrines taught by Antichrist,  when they assure us that they are Christ; for we do not read in any part  that Christ said so of himself.  The miracles he performed, the  doctrines he taught, and the virtues he on every occasion exhibited,  were proofs sufficient to convince us that he was the Christ.  There is  need of the assistance of God to overcome the snares laid for us by  hypocrisy.  Origen. — Among these impostors were one Theodas, (Acts v.  36,) the impious Egyptian, (Acts xxi. 38,) Judas of Galilee, Menander,  and several others who preceded the destruction of Jerusalem; but many  more will precede the destruction of the world.  This therefore is the first  sign, the seduction of many souls from the true faith by heresies,  and is common to both events.  Jans. — See much more in Barradius, tom.  iii. l. 9, c. 2, where he collects various illustrations from Josephus  and profane authors.  M.
Ver. 6.  Shall hear of wars.  Most authors understand this second  sign of the Jewish wars which preceded the ruin of Jerusalem;  others of the wars of Antichrist, previous to the end of the world.   Both are very probable.  The first is proved from history, and from the  events; the latter, from what we learn from the Apocalypse, will  certainly happen.  M. — These things must happen, as is said of scandals  and heresies, not absolutely, but considering the malice of man, and  the decree of God, by which he had determined to punish the Jews.   Maldonatus.
Ver. 7.  And there shall be, according to the  proverb, loimoV meta  limon, plague after famine, both  natural daughters of war, with intestine divisions, earthquakes, and  other calamities; the third sign. . . .  As the bodies of men  generally grow weak and faint previously to dissolution, so will it be  with the earth before the destruction of the world; so that this  inferior globe will be shaken with unusual convulsions, as if making its  last effort for existence.  The air filled with destructive vapours  will turn to the ruin of men, and the earth exhausted of its natural  fertility, will refuse its accustomed support to the sons of Adam.   Hence will arise wars and famines, insurrections, rebellions, and mobs;  some driven on by famine and want, others by ambition and avarice.  But  if the corrupted heart of man shall refuse to depart from its evil ways,  these calamities shall be increased; for all these are only the  beginnings of more dreadful sorrows.  Origen.
Ver. 9.  Then shall they deliver you up, &c.  The fourth  sign, common to both these events, shall be the persecution raised  against the Church, which will be two-fold; it will regard both body and  soul.  See Luke xxi. 12.  Mark xiii. 9.  All this happened to the  apostles previously to the siege of Jerusalem, as well as to the martyrs  in subsequent times.  A similar persecution, attended probably with  additional severity, will most probably be the lot of the faithful  during the reign of Antichrist.  The calamities, bloodshed, and utter  ruin which took place at the destruction of the city and temple of  Jerusalem, are a figure of the still more dreadful calamities,  bloodshed, and ruin to be expected towards the end of the world; and  which should be frequently present to our minds.  The late learned and  venerable prelate Walmesly admonishes all parents to stand prepared for  the bloody trial themselves, and to teach their children to be ever  ready to meet, with Christian resignation, the awful and approaching  event; for the rest of the world, as we learn from revelation, will be  taken by surprise, as the people at the deluge.  Yes, this last may  literally be styled a bloody trial; for the Church, which was purified  with blood, began in blood, increased in blood, and will end in blood.
                         Sanguine mundata est ecclesia, sanguine cœpit,
                         Sanguine succrevit, sanguine finis erit.
The last chapter of  the Apocalypse, which is the last communication of the divine will to  man, is deserving our frequent and very attentive perusal.  In it Jesus  Christ, by his repeated warnings, wishes to awaken us to a sense of that  day of general retribution, saying: surely I come quickly: behold I  come quickly: and my reward is with me, to render to every man according  to his works.  (Behold the merit of good works proceeding from  faith and charity.)  With what earnestness have the servants of God, in  every age, prayed with S. John: (ibid) Come, Lord Jesus; come,  put a final end to the reign of sin and Satan; come, admit thy elect,  who have been purified in the waters of the great persecution, and in  the blood of the Lamb, to thy heavenly bosom; to that happy sanctuary  and asylum, where no hunger or thirst, no scorching heat of the sun, no  fiery temptation will any more reach or molest them; where the sigh and  the groan will not be heard; where all tears will be wiped away from  every eye, and where they will be inebriated at the torrent of immortal  delights, and will see and enjoy the Lord Jesus, without any  apprehension of offending him, for ever and ever.  A.
Ver. 11.  And many false prophets shall rise, like those lying  teachers mentioned by S. Peter, (2nd Ep. c. ii. v. 1) who shall  bring in sects of perdition, (i.e. heresies destructive of  salvation) bringing upon themselves swift destruction.
Ver. 12.  And because iniquity hath (literally, shall) abounded,  shall arrive at its height, the charity of many, carried away by the  force of bad example, will grow cold; and scarcely, even among  Christians, will a person be found willing to assist Christians, lest he  may be known for a Christian.  Of this we have an example, 2 Tim. iv.  16, At my first answer, no man stood with me, but all forsook me: may  it not be laid to their charge; but the Lord stood by me, and  strengthened me.  Maldonatus.
Ver. 13.  But he that shall persevere to the end, in the midst of  this trying and afflicting scene, in faith and charity,  (or as it is in the Greek; he that shall preserve his patience to the  end, o upomeinaV, proof against heresies, persecutions,  hatreds, or scandals) shall be saved.  To perseverance alone this  promise is made; for, non quæruntur in Christianis initia sed finis.   Tert.  A part of this prediction was, beyond all doubt, accomplished  with regard to the faithful, in the first persecutions raised by the  Jews against the infant Christian Church; but the entire and literal  completion of it is reserved for the latter times.
Ver. 14.  This gospel . . . shall be preached in the whole world,  to serve as a testimony to all nations, of the solicitude of heaven in  having the doctrine of salvation announced to them.  This then is a fifth  sign, and not till then shall the consummation come. — And then  shall the consummation come.  The end of the world, says S. Jerom.   The destruction of Jerusalem, says S. Chrys. and others.  Wi. — If the  final destruction of Jerusalem be here meant, the gospel had been  preached throughout the major part of the then known world.  See Rom. x.  and Colos. i. 6, 23.  If the end of the world, there is the greatest  probability that the true faith will have been announced to every part  of the globe, before that period.
Ver. 15.  The abomination of desolation was first partly fulfilled  by divers profanations of the temple, as when the image of Cæsar was  set up in the temple by Pilate, and Adrian's statue in the holy of  holies, and when the sacrifices were taken away; but will be more  completely fulfilled by Antichrist and his precursors, when they shall  attempt to abolish the holy sacrifice of the mass.  S. Hyppolitus, in  his treatise de Anti-Christo, mentioned by Eusebius, S. Jerom,  and Photius, thus writeth: "The churches shall lament with great  lamentations, because there shall neither be made oblations, nor  incense, nor worship grateful to God. . .  In those days the liturgy (or  mass) shall be neglected, the psalmody shall cease, the reciting of  Scripture shall not be heard." — The prophet Daniel (xii. 11.)  calculates the reign of Antichrist, from the time that the daily  sacrifice shall be taken away; which, by able commentators, is  understood of the sacrifice of the mass, which Antichrist will endeavour  to suppress. — The abomination of desolation,[2] or the  abominable desolation.  Instead of these words, we read in S. Luke,  (xxi. 20.) When you shall see Jerusalem surrounded by an army.   Christ said both the one and the other.  But the words in S. Luke, seem  rather to give us a sign of the ruin of Jerusalem, than of the end of  the world. — Spoken of by Daniel, the prophet.  The sense is,  when you shall see that very prophecy of Daniel literally fulfilled  hereafter.  What follows in the prophecy of Daniel, confirms this  exposition; when the prophet adds, that the desolation shall continue  to the end; that the Jews from that time, shall be no more the  people of God, for denying their Messias; and that they shall put  the Christ to death.  But what then was this desolation, which by  the following verse, was to be a sign to the Christians to fly out of  Judea?  Some expound it of the heathen Roman army, approaching and  investing Jerusalem, called the holy city.  Others understand the  profanation of the temple, made by the Jews themselves, a little before  the siege under Vespasian; when the civil dissensions, those called the  Zealots, had possessed themselves of the temple, and placed  their warlike engines upon the pinnacles; and a part, at least, of the  temple was defiled with the dead bodies of those killed there.  It was  at that time that the Christians, according to Christ's admonition, left  Jerusalem and Judea, and fled to Pella, beyond the river Jordan.  See  Euseb. l. iii. Hist. c. v.  Wi.
Ver. 16.  Then let those.  It is well known that this prophecy was  verified to the letter, in the destruction of Jerusalem.  For, as the  Roman army advanced, all the Christians who were in the province,  forewarned by divine admonition, retired to a distance, and crossing the  Jordan, took refuge in the city of Pella, situated in Trachonitis, and  became subjects of king Agrippa, who was in amity with the Romans.   Remigius.
Ver. 17.  Not come down, into the house.  They  had no occasion, as Mauduit and others seem to suppose, to throw  themselves from the roof, for the Jews had usually stairs on the outside  of their houses.  V.
Ver. 20.  In the winter: an inconvenient season  for flying away. — Or on the sabbath, when it was lawful to  travel only about a mile.  Wi. — Pray to God that you may be enabled to  escape those evils, and that there may be no impediment to your flight.   Estius in dif. loca.
Ver. 22.  No flesh: a Hebraism for no person;  denoting that no one would have escaped death, had the war continued.   Wi. — All the Jews would have been destroyed by the Romans, or all the  Christians by Antichrist.  Maldonatus. — From this place, Jesus Christ  foretells the coming of Antichrist, and forewarns Christians of latter  ages, to guard all they can against seduction.
Ver. 23.  Lo, here is Christ.  These words are very aptly applied  by Catholics to the conventicles of heretics; and would Christians  attend to the injunctions of their divine Master, Go ye not out:—believe  it not, we should not see the miserable confusion occasioned in the  Catholic Church [which, the  Catholic Church, is not defined by  "Rome" but by adherence to apostolic doctrine], by unsteady Christians;  who are guilty of schism, in forsaking the one true fold, and one  shepherd, to follow their blind and unauthorized leaders (typologically  this refers to Gnostics and Judaizing heretics or those  which blaspheme God with false doctrines such as Freemasonry and its  embrace of Satan.).  E. MOST ESPECIALLY we are warned here not to have  anything to do with the false shepherd(s) who will come at the end nor  any with them nor those who follow them - see here: Concerning the false  prophets and the False Prophet, i.e. the primary ones and the False  Prophet himself, Huchede quotes the conclusion in accord with the full  consensus of the Church Fathers, The  Antichrist - Chapter 2 - ARTICLE II - 2.His Apostles  "...he will not be a king, nor a general of  an army, but a clever apostate, fallen from the episcopal dignity. From  being an apostle of the Gospel he will become the first preacher of the  false messiah." These are the current Antipopes since 1958 (John XXIII,  Paul VI, John Paul I, John Paul II, Benedict XVI), and all of the  episcopal leaders with them (Episcopus meaning Bishop, especially the  Bishops [Antipopes] of Rome fallen from the faith). 
Ver. 26.  Behold he is in the desert.  This prediction of false  Christs, may be understood before the destruction of Jerusalem, but  chiefly before the end of the world.  Wi. — As we have mentioned above,  in note on verse 5.
Ver. 28.  Wheresoever the body,[3] &c.   This seems to have been a proverb or common saying among the Jews.   Several of the ancient interpreters, by this body, understand  Christ himself, who died for us; and they tell us, that at his second  coming the angels and saints, like eagles, with incredible swiftness,  will join him at the place of judgment.  Wi. — When he shall come to  judgment, all, as it were by a natural instinct, shall fly to meet him,  and receive their judgment.  S. Hilary understands this literally; that  where his body shall hang upon the cross, there will he appear in  judgment, i.e. near the valley of Josaphat; in which place the prophet  Joel (c. iii. v. 2,) declares, that the general judgment shall take  place.  T.
Ver. 29.  The sun shall be darkened, &c.   These seem to be the dreadful signs that shall forerun the day of  judgment. — The stars shall fall, not literally, but shall give  no light.  Wi. — According to S. Austin, by the sun is meant Jesus  Christ; by the moon, the Church, which will appear as involved in  darkness.
Ver. 30.  The sign of the Son of man, &c.   The Fathers generally expound this of the cross of Christ, that shall be  seen in the air.  Wi. — This sign is the cross, much more resplendent  than the sun itself.  Therefore the sun hides its diminished head,  whilst the cross appears in glory; because the great standard of the  cross, excels in brightness all the refulgent rays that dart from the  meridian sun.  S. Chrys. hom. lxxvii. — The Jews, looking upon him whom  they had pierced, now coming in the clouds of heaven with power and  exceedingly great glory, shall have great lamentations.  Bitterly will  they weep over their misery, in having despised and insulted him  on a cross, who ought to have been the object of their veneration,  adoration, and love.  S. Chrys. hom. lxxvii.
Ver. 34.  This generation; i.e. the nation of the Jews shall not  cease to exist, until all these things shall be accomplished: thus we  see the nation of the Jews still continue, and will certainly continue  to the end of the world.  T. — Then the cross, which has been a scandal  to the Jew, and a stumbling-block to the Gentile, shall appear in the  heavens, for the consolation of the good Christian.  Hoc signum crucis  erit in cœlo, cum Dominus ad judicandum venerit. — If it be to be  understood of the destruction of Jerusalem, the sense may be, this race  of men now living; if of the last day of judgment, this generation of  the faithful, saith Theophylactus,[4] shall be continued: i.e. the  Church of Christ, to the end of the world.  Wi. — This race, I tell you  in very truth, shall not pass away till all this be finally accomplished  in the ruin of Jerusalem, the most express figure of the destruction  and end of the world.  V. — By generation, our Saviour does not  mean the people that were in existence at that time, but the faithful of  his Church; thus says the psalmist: this is the generation of them  that seek the Lord.  Ps. xxiii, v. 6.  S. Chrys. hom. lxxvii. The  final destruction of Jerusalem shall  come at the end of the age when Jerusalem shall have become the center  of Antichrist's short lived empire; then shall Our Lord and Saviour  Jesus Christ at His Second Coming raise and judge all men in the flesh  here on earth at the general judgment of all men by the just judge, the  Lord Jesus Christ. 
Ver. 35.  Shall pass away:  because they shall  be changed at the end of the world into a new heaven and new earth.  Ch.
Ver. 36.  No man knoweth . . . but the Father alone.  The words in  S. Mark (xiii. 32.) are still harder: neither the angels, nor the  Son, but the Father.  The Arians objected this place, to shew that  Christ being ignorant of the day of judgment, could not be truly God.   By the same words, no one knoweth, but the Father alone, (as they  expound them) the Holy Ghost must be excluded from being the true God.   In answer to this difficulty, when it is said, but the Father alone,  it is certain that the eternal Son and the Holy Ghost could never be  ignorant of the day of judgment: because, as they are one and the same  God, so they must hove one and the same nature, the same substance,  wisdom, knowledge, and all absolute perfections.  2. It is also certain  that Jesus Christ knew the day of judgment, and all things to come, by a  knowledge which he could not but have, because of the union by which  his human nature was united to the divine person and nature.  See Colos.  ii. 3.  And so to attribute any ignorance to Christ, was the error of  those heretics called Agnoitai.  3. But though Christ, as a man,  knew the day of judgment, yet this knowledge was not due to him as he  was man, or because he was man, but he only knew the day of  judgment, because he was God as well as man.  4. It is the common answer  of the fathers, that Christ here speaks to his disciples, only as he  was the ambassador of his Father; and so he is only to know what he is  to make known to men.  He is said not to know, says S. Aug.[5], what he  will not make others know, or what he will not reveal to them.  Wi. — By  this Jesus Christ wished to suppress the curiosity of his disciples.   In the same manner after his resurrection, he answered the same  question: 'Tis not for you to know the times and the moments, which  the Father has placed in his own power.  This last clause is added,  that the apostles might not be discouraged and think their divine Master  esteemed them unworthy of knowing these things.  Some Greek MSS. add nor  even the Son, as in Mark xiii. 32.  The Son is ignorant of it, not  according to his divinity, nor even according to his humanity  hypostatically united to his divinity, but according to his humanity,  considered as separate from his divinity.  V.
Ver. 37-38.  And as it was.  The same shall take place at the coming  of the Son of man at the last day, as at the general deluge.  For, as  then they indulged their appetites, unmindful of the fate that was  attending them, gamounteV  kai ekgamizonteV, marrying and  given in marriage, solely occupied with the concerns of this life, and  indifferent to those of the next; so shall it be at the end of the  world.  They are not here accused of gross sins, but of a supine  security of their salvation, as is evident from what follows.  Jans.
Ver. 39.  And they thought not of the deluge, though preached and  predicted by Noe, (which rendered their ignorance and incredulity  inexcusable) till it came and swept them all away.  So shall it be at  the coming of the Son of man.  S. Luke adds, (c. xvii, v. 28,) likewise  as it was in the days of Lot; they shall be eating and drinking,  buying and selling, planting and building, i.e. totally immersed in  worldly pursuits.  Hence the apostle; when they shall say peace,  viz. from past evils, and security, viz. from future, then  shall destruction come upon them on a sudden.  But some one may ask,  how can there possibly be all this peace, all this security, when the  evils mentioned above, famines, wars, plagues, earthquakes, and  particularly the darkness of the sun, &c. &c. are presages  calculated to strike with panic and consternation minds the most  thoughtless and giddy?  I answer, that the wicked are chiefly designed  here, who in the midst of the afflictions and alarms of the good, will  still indulge in their pleasures and luxuries, like cruel soldiers,  whilst the peaceable inhabitants are plundered.  S. Jerom adds, that the  world for some time before its final dissolution, will be freed from  all those calamities.  As to what is said (v. 29,) of the darkness of  the sun and moon, these are circumstances that refer to the very coming  of the judge.  Jans.
Ver. 40.  Then of two men, who shall think of nothing  less than of going to appear before God, one shall be taken to be placed  among the number of the elect, and the other shall be left condemned to  eternal fire with the damned, on account of his crimes.  V. — This  example of the men in the field, and of the condition and disposition of  men at the period of the deluge, strongly expresses how unexpectedly  these evils will rush in upon mankind; and the subsequent account of the  two women grinding in the mill, shews how little they were solicitous  for their salvation.  We are, moreover, taught by these examples, that  some of all states and conditions will be saved, whether rich or poor,  in ease or labour, or decorated with all the various degrees of worldly  honour.  The same is mentioned in Exodus, c. xi, v. 5.  From the  first-born of Pharao, who sitteth on his throne, even to the first-born  of the handmaid that is at the mill, . . . every first-born shall die.   S. Chrys. hom. lxxviii.
Ver. 41.  Two women.  Slaves of both sexes were employed in  grinding corn.  Of these, one shall be carried up to heaven by angels,  the other shall be left a prey to devils, on account of her bad life.   V. — In many ancient MSS. both Greek and Latin, what we read in S. Luke,  (xvii. 34.) of two men in the same bed, one shall be taken, and the  other shall be left, is here added.
Ver. 42.  Watch ye, therefore.  That men might not be attentive  for a time only, but preserve a continual vigilance, the Almighty  conceals from them the hour of their dissolution: they ought therefore  to be ever expecting it, and ever watchful.  But to the eternal infamy  of Christians be it said, much more diligence is used by the worldly  wise for the preservation of their wealth, than by the former for the  salvation of their immortal souls.  Though they are fully aware that the  Lord will come, and like a thief in the night, when they least expect  him, they do not persevere watching, nor guard against irreparable  misfortune of quitting the present life without previous preparation.   Therefore will the day come to the destruction of such as are reposed in  sleep.  S. Chrys. hom. lxxviii. on S. Mat. — Of what importance is it  then that we should be found watching, and properly attentive to the one  thing necessary, the salvation of our immortal souls.  For what will it  avail us, if we have gained the whole world, which we must then leave,  and lose our immortal souls, which, owing to our supine neglect to these  admonitions of Jesus Christ, must suffer in hell-flames for all  eternity?  A.
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[1]  V. 3.  S. Jer. on this place, says,  Interrogant tria: quo tempore Jerusalem destruenda sit: quo venturus  Christus: quo consummatio sæculi futura sit.
[2]  V. 15.  Abominationem desolationis. Bdelugma thV erhmwsewV.  The same words are in the Sept.  Dan. ix.   See S. Jerom on this place, and S. Chrys. hom. lxxvi. and lxxvii. in  Matt.
[3]  V. 28.   Corpus; in most Greek copies, ptwma, cadaver.  See  again S. Jerom, and S. Chrys. hom. lxxvii, p. 492.
[4]  V. 34.  Generatio hæc.  Theophylact, h genea twn cristianwn.
[5]  V. 36.  S. Aug. l. 83. QQ. quæst. 60. tom.  6, p. 33.  Ed. Ben. dicitur nescire filius, quia facit nescire homines,  i.e. non prodit eis, quod inutiliter scirent.  See the same S. Aug. l.  1. de Trin. c. xii. tom. 8, p. 764 and 765. and lib. de Gen. cont.  Manich. c. xxii. p. 659. tom. 1.
Note 1: Jesus said: John v. 43. "I am come in  the name of my Father, and you receive me not: if another shall come in  his own name, him you will receive." This is Jesus telling us that the  Antichrist will be an Apostate Jew leading Apostate Jews.
 
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Consult the saints on the end of  this age.
See this for the history of the world from  creation to the Second Coming of Christ.
 
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