Here is a partial cut / paste from my commentary on the book of Daniel - 9:27....
Part 3 of 4
He Shall Bring an End
The “He” in this passage is not some future antichrist. It is Jesus Christ, the same “Anointed One” mentioned in verse 25. He is the One who confirms the covenant (v.27a), is cut off (v.26), and brings a final end to the Levitical system through the sacrifice of Himself. This is the Messiah, foretold and promised, not some malevolent figure inserted into prophecy by human reinterpretation centuries later. When He cried out on the cross, “It is finished” (John 19:30), it was not a cry of defeat but a proclamation of completion. His mission—defined by the six divine tasks in Daniel 9:24—was accomplished in full.
To Sacrifice and Offering
The phrase “He shall bring an end to sacrifice and offering” directly addresses the Levitical system that had operated for over 1,500 years since Mt. Sinai.
Through His death on the cross, Jesus fulfilled every symbol and shadow represented in the sanctuary—every lamb, every sin offering, every annual atonement ceremony. All pointed to Him. At the very moment of His death:
The Temple veil was torn from top to bottom (Matthew 27:51), signifying the end of the earthly priesthood and the removal of the barrier between God and man.
The sacrifices were rendered obsolete, not by temple destruction or enemy invasion, but by the perfect sacrifice—the Lamb of God slain for the sin of the world.
The covenant was confirmed—not abandoned, not replaced, but fulfilled in accordance with Jeremiah 31:31–34, where God promised to write His law upon our hearts.
This was not symbolic theology or poetic vision. It was real, historical, and spiritual fulfillment. Within 3.5 years, Jesus had perfectly kept and fulfilled the Law, revealed the heart of the Father, and offered Himself as the final, once-for-all sacrifice (Hebrews 10:10–14).
This singular moment in Daniel 9:27b also resonates with the broader scope of prophecy—especially the 2,300 evenings and mornings (Daniel 8:14). The “cleansing of the sanctuary” began not with a third Temple or a future antichrist, but with Jesus entering the heavenly sanctuary as High Priest after His resurrection (Hebrews 9:11–14). The earthly temple had served its purpose. It was no longer the center of worship—heaven was.
The events of the cross were not isolated—they were deeply embedded in a divine timeline that included:
The seventy-week prophecy (Daniel 9)
The 2,300-day vision (Daniel 8)
The Passover fulfillment
And the complete and permanent abolition of the Levitical system
Everything aligned. Every symbol found its substance. Every shadow met its light. Jesus was not a casualty of human betrayal—He was the architect and finisher of salvation’s plan.
The seventy weeks were never random. They were designed to lead us to this very moment: the cross. This is the centerpiece of time. It divides covenants, fulfills prophecy, and makes reconciliation possible.
By the middle of the final week, Jesus did exactly what Daniel foretold.
He brought an end to sacrifice and offering.
He fulfilled the covenant.
He opened the way to eternal life.
No future “week” is necessary. No future temple needs to be rebuilt.
It is finished.