Daniel 9:26 And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for himself: and the people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary; and the end thereof shall be with a flood, and unto the end of the war desolations are determined.
27 And he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week: and in the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease, and for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it desolate, even until the consummation, and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate.
Roger, it seems simple. In verse 26 there are 2 subjects.
1) Messiah---singular
2) the people of the prince that shall come---plural
In verse 27 the pronoun belongs to a subject that is singular. Obviously, the people of the prince that shall come is not singlular, it is plural. Therefore, the only one in verse 26 that can fit the singular pronoun is 1), the Messiah.
Therefore, it doesn't matter who one takes the prince that shall come to be meaning. He is not the subject, his people are the subject. A plural subject cannot fit a pronoun that is singular. Personally, I take the prince that shall come to be meaning a future AC. But it doesn't affect verse 27 and the one who fulfills the midst of the week though. It is the singular subject in verse 26 that fulfills the midst of the week. Nor does it affect verse 27 and the one who fulfills the midst of the week if that person takes the prince to come to be meaning Titus. It doesn't matter. It might matter if the prince that shall come is the subject of the clause in question. Except he isn't.
IMO, what is absurd is for anyone to take the prince that shall come to be meaning the Messiah. When the prince in question shall come, the Messiah already came and went and ascended back into heaven regardless when he comes, be that in 70 AD, or be that in the future.. Shall come = something future, in relation to the Messiah being cut off, not something past.
That would be like someone insisting, that if in July 2026 one says "I shall come over to your house and mow your yard for you sometime in August 2026", that this is speaking of a past event rather than a future event. Therefore, unless one agrees with Preterist theology, that Christ came in judgment in the first century, that person is not going to insist the prince that shall come is meaning Christ. And the ironic thing about it, both you and
@Spiritual Israelite appear to be insisting that the prince that shall come is meaning Christ then you attacking
@Spiritual Israelite calling him a Preterist when you are one yourself if you take the prince that shall come to be meaning Christ.
Where do you all assume Christ comes to in the future, remember, shall come = future, after he has already ascended and not even returned yet? Preterists insist He came in 70 AD, but not bodily. Niether of you are thinking things through very well here if you are insisting that the prince that shall come is meaning Christ. Except I have a better chance of winning the lottery than I have of convincing you all that it is absurd to insist the prince that shall come is meaning Christ. Only Preterists would take the prince that shall come to mean Christ. That way it agrees with their interpretation of Matthew 24:30, for one. How two smart ppl like you all cannot see that, is mind boggling. Only Preterists have something to gain per their theology by making the prince that shall come to be meaning Jesus. No one else does.
The fact the pronoun in verse 27 requires a singular subject also 100% debunks that a future AC fulfills the midst of the week. Only a subject that is singular in verse 26 can fulfill that. A plural subject certainly can't. And in this case as well, I have a better chance of winning the lottery than I have convincing anyone who insists a future AC fulfills the midst of the week, that it is the Messiah that does that, not a future AC. And I don't even play the lottery. Maybe I need to go out and buy a ticket though.