It's good that you say that - because you are discussing it in a vacuum when it appears in the Revelation.
1. [G5034 tachos]: swiftly within a brief space of time.
Paul had been transferred to a prison in Caesarea to keep him safe from the Jews. Festus, the Roman governor, had gone from Caesarea to Jerusalem, and the high priest and the chief of the Jews informed Festus against Paul and begged him, asking a favor against Paul that Festus would send for him to Jerusalem (they had made a plot to kill Paul on way).
Festus answered that Paul should be kept at Caesarea - Festus himself would depart Jerusalem swiftly within a brief space of time [G5034 tachos], saying that those having power among the Jews may go down to Caesarea with him, and if there is a thing amiss in Paul, let them accuse him.
Then staying among them more than ten days, going down to Caesarea, on the next day sitting on the judgment seat, he commanded Paul to be brought, and the Jews who came down from Jerusalem stood around and brought many charges against Paul, which they could not prove. (Acts 25:1-7)
In Luke 18:7-8, Jesus said:
"Won't God give justice to his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night? Will he bear their suffering with them, but delay long to help them?
I say to you that He will avenge them swifly within a brief space of time [G5034 tachos]."
Then He said:
"Yet when the Son of man comes, shall He find faith on the earth?".
The first verse in the book of Revelation uses the same word:
"The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show his servants things which must come to pass swiftly within a brief space of time [G5034 tachos] - things which Jesus signified by His angel to His servant John, whom He sent out with it." (Revelation 1:1).
You need to stop interpreting the above word and the word below in a vacuum when it appears in the Revelation:
2. At hand [G1451 eggus]
Luke 19
11 And as they heard these things, he added and spake a parable, because he was near [G1451 eggus] to Jerusalem, and because they thought that the kingdom of God should immediately [G3916 parachrema] appear.
Mark 13
28 Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When her branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves, ye know that summer is near [G1451 eggus].
You have guessed that time into the first century AD, and no amount of telling you not to interpret the word in a vacuum is going to change your mind.
Revelation 1
3 Blessed is he that reads, and they that hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things which are written therein: for the time is [G1451 eggus] at hand.
Nothing in the New Testament that mentions the time of Christ's return / the time of the end suggests or implies that it would take place in the 1st century AD - or ANY century. That's why Jesus gave signs and told His disciples to watch. But His disciples can't even understand the signs, which is why for every two Christians there are three opinions about the Olivet Discourse.
So the apostles no where say that the coming of Christ is near, in the NT?
