I'm assuming you base that on me comparing Revelation 10:1-11 with that of Daniel 12:5-9, right? And if so, what you are not factoring in is this. Daniel 12:9 is not involving the 7th trumpet at this point. While what the 7 thunders uttered appear to be involving the 7th trumpet. Meaning once the 7th trumpet sounds it will no longer be a mystery as to what they uttered, what John was told to not write down.
I had to shorten your post to remain within the character limit for this post.
YOU are still
conflating type and antitype, making one person out of
two different persons and one temple our of
two different temples and one time-period out of
two different time-periods.
I don't know how many times I have to explain the difference between a type and an antitype to you, and I'm going to give up, because you just don't get it (or refuse to). Either it goes above your ability to understand, or you pretend I'm saying something I'm not saying.
1. I've said over and over - and over - that (because of what is written about Antiochus IV and his actions in Daniel 8:11; Daniel 11:31; and Daniel 12:11-12; and because of what is written in Matthew 24:15 and in 2 Thessalonians 2;4) the abomination of desolation that Antiochus IV placed in the literal holy place of the literal 2nd temple is a type of the abomination of desolation that will be placed (or appear in or set himself up in) the holy place of the 3rd temple (which is the church).
2. I've said over and over - and over - that
(because of what is written about Antiochus IV and his actions in Daniel 8:11; Daniel 11:31; and Daniel 12:11-12; and because of what is written in Matthew 24:15 and in 2 Thessalonians 2;4) Antiochus IV Epiphanes is
a type of the man of sin.
3. I've said over and over - and over - that I believe that this is why Revelation 10 alludes to the type in Daniel 12, and why Daniel 12:2 & 13 are NOT referring to the time of the type but to the time of the antitype.
NOTE David: ALLUDES TO does not mean "refers to". The judgment of Babylon the Great in Revelation 18:21 alludes to the judgment of ancient Babylon in Jeremiah 51:63-64. Revelation 18:21 is not referring to Jeremiah 51:63-64 but alluding to it. In the same way, Revelation 10:1-7 alludes to Daniel 12:5-7. It is not referring to it.
But you conflate what the two passages are saying about two different time-periods into one and the same time-period because you seem to believe that Revelation 10:1-7 is referring to Daniel 12:5-7 (rather than alluding to it). Do you do the same with Revelation 18:21 and Jeremiah 51:63-64? Because if you do that with one, then you must follow through with all such allusions in prophetic scripture, and conflate them all into one and the same thing.
DANIEL WAS TOLD IN DANIEL 12:13 THAT HE SHOULD "go thou thy way till the end be:" Yet he died hundreds of years before Antiochus IV was even born. How could he go his way till the end of either time-period? He was told how: "for thou shalt rest, and (shall) stand in thy lot at the end of the days." That goes with what Daniel 12:2 says.
Daniel was being given a prophecy about the coming of the type the man of sin, and Daniel 12:2 &13 both project the time-period of the type into the time-period of the antitype - and Revelation 10:1-7 alludes to Daniel 12:5-7. Today we should be able to understand that the reason for this is because the former is a type of the latter - without conflating them into one and the same.
The text of Daniel 8:11; Daniel 11:31; and Daniel 12:11-12
links all three passages to:-
(a) daily sacrifices for sin being removed (which is what occurred in the 2nd temple in the days of Antiochus IV); and
(b) an abomination of desolation being placed in the holy place (which is what occurred in the 2nd temple in the days of Antiochus IV); and
(c) 1,290 days and 1,335 days (the text of Daniel 12:11-12 links the 1,290 and 1.335 days that the verses are talking about, both to daily sacrifices for sin being removed in the temple of God; and an abomination of desolation being placed in the holy place in the temple).
In Daniel 12:11-12 we have,
(1) A historical event,
the beginning of which is fixed to commence at the time of the taking away of the daily sacrifice by Antiochus IV Epiphanes, and the time when he set up of the image of Zeus in the holy place (which was the abomination of desolation); and
(2)
The duration of this period of tribulation for God's faithful elect: 1,290 days. After that, the daily sacrifice was restored, and the abomination of desolation taken away -
which is what the Jews still celebrate at Hanukkah each year.
Extra-biblical sources: Josephus dates the abomination of desolation being set up on the 25th day of Kislev (the 9th month of the biblical calendar) 145 SE (the 145th year of the Seleucid Empire). This matches the account in 1 Maccabees 1:54, which also places the abomination on 25 Kislev, 145 SE.
This took place
over 200 years before the destruction of Jerusalem and the Jerusalem temple in 70 A.D.
Any Bible interpreter who applies
the 1,290 days and 1,335 days to the latter days preceding the return of Christ (2,100+ years after the
historical abomination of desolation in the holy place), needs to explain:
(a)
what constitutes those daily sacrifices in the gospel age which the 1,290 and 1,335 days are associated with; and
(b)
what constitutes the temporary removal of the daily sacrifice in the years immediately preceding the return of Jesus -
without engaging in guess-work and speculation and theological inventions.
Any Bible interpreter who applies the abomination of desolation to the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem in A.D 70 needs to explain
why the abomination of desolation set up in the holy place of the 2nd temple by Antiochus IV, "Epiphanes" in 167 BC (Daniel 8:11; Daniel 11:31; and Daniel 12:11-12),
is not associated with the destruction of either the city of Jerusalem, or of the temple in it, but the abomination/s mentioned in Daniel 9:26-27 are associated with the destruction of both.