@Davidpt claims that Luke 21:20-24 is not a parallel passage to Matthew 24:15-22 and Mark 13:14-20. I invite him to take a close look at how you compared all 3 passages above and then to explain to us how those could possibly not all be talking about the same thing. He also needs to explain exactly how Matthew 24:15-22 and Mark 13:14-20 should be understood if they are meant to be understood spiritually rather than physically. What would it mean for it to be difficult for pregnant women and nursing mothers to flee in a spiritual sense? Why should people pray that they wouldn't have to flee during the winter or on the Sabbath in a spiritual sense? What does Judea represent in a spiritual sense? But, he never addresses these questions.
You don't get it. Probably never will. At least not in this lifetime. One doesn't have to explain what those things mean if not meaning in the literal sense. Everything else I have been arguing already proves it's not literal events involving 70 AD.
Arguments, such as. Matthew 24:21 and Daniel 12:1 are referring to the same era of time, the same events. Daniel 12:2 proves Matthew 24:21 is not meaning 70 AD since no resurrection event ever followed 70 AD.
Arguments, such as.
Matthew 24:21 For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
Obviously, this is the greatest tribulation this world will ever see and experience, regardless when it is meaning. It can't be equalled nor surpassed in greatness. That presents a major poblem if this great tribulation is not the same as the great tribulation per the following. Because, clearly, it is the greatest tribulation this world will ever see and experience, proven by what I have underlined below.
Revelation 7:9 After this I beheld, and, lo,
a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands;
Revelation 7:14 And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me,
These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.
great
megas
meg'-as
(including the prolonged forms, feminine megale, plural megaloi, etc.; compare also megistoV - megistos 3176, 3187); big (literally or figuratively, in a very wide application):--(+ fear) exceedingly, great(-est), high, large, loud, mighty, + (be) sore (afraid), strong, X to years.
tribulation
thlipsis
thlip'-sis
from qlibw - thlibo 2346; pressure (literally or figuratively):--afflicted(-tion), anguish, burdened, persecution, tribulation, trouble.
Daniel 12:1---and there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time---Matthew 24:21--For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
trouble
tsarah
tsaw-raw'
feminine of 'tsar' (6862); tightness (i.e. figuratively, trouble); transitively, a female rival:--adversary, adversity, affliction, anguish, distress, tribulation, trouble
Well at least we know that 'thlipsis' and 'tsarah' are not meaning the same thing? Right? Of course we don't know that. Of course both words are meaning the same thing. And even though Daniel 12:1 does not mention great, we obviously know it will be great based on what this says, which obviously means, since the beginning of the world to this time, it has no equal, that is can't be surpassed in greatness---And there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time
And this obviously presents a major problem if this---Matthew 24:21--For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be---is not the same tribulation meant in Daniel 12:1, and that it precedes the one meant in Daniel 12:1. You obviously don't fully grasp what constitutes an obvious contradiction. You place your doctrinal bias above logic in this case. Your interpretation of Matthew 24:21 and Daniel 12:1 defies logic.
Arguments, such as. If the AOD was fulfilled in the first century involving 70 AD, why don't all interpreters agree with each other as to what it was? If that's not a red flag, I don't know what is. Here we have all these interpreters insisting that the AOD has already been fulfilled, thus no longer a mystery as to what it was if true, then all of these same interpreters not even agreeing with each other as what the AOD was.
Somehow, though, you think my inability to explain the fleeing recorded in Matthew 24 if not meaning in the literal sense, that this trumps all and any of my arguments above and elsewhere that I have argued these things.
Though, you try to, you cannot get around any of these arguments above. You think you get around them, except you don't, the fact to defy logic in order to get around something does not equal having gotten around something. Only in your world it might mean that, not in mine. You defy logic per your interpretation by having something involving local being greater than something involving global. You defy logic by having something involving local having no equal nor can't be surpassed in greatness. That would be like arguing that a local flood can't be equaled nor surpassed in greatness. That not even Noah's flood can surpass it in greatness.
Funny though how your mind works at times, you would never argue that, yet turn right around, per your interpretation of the Discourse, argue that a local event can't be equaled nor surpassed in greatness. Not even by global events. Who reasons in that manner? Where they are being perfectly reasonable by insisting a local event, such as a flood, can't equal nor surpass in greatness a global event, such as Noah's flood. Then insist the exact opposite when it comes to the Discourse per their interpretation of some of it. That a local event can't be equaled nor surpassed in greatness by global events. These problems go away entirely once one admits that Daniel 12:1 and Matthew 24:21 is involving the same era of time. Keeping in mind that Jesus plainly, thus undeniably tells us that great tribulation per Matthew 24:21 can't be equaled nor surpassed in greatness ever, the fact he said this--no, nor ever shall be.