Daniel 9:26-27 (KJV) 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. 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.
Daniel 9 contains both restorative elements and destructive elements.
In Daniel 9:24–25, we find the restorative side of the prophecy. Verse 24 gives the
spiritual and redemptive restoration: to finish transgression, make an end of sins, make reconciliation for iniquity, bring in everlasting righteousness, seal up vision and prophecy, and anoint the Most Holy. Verse 25 gives the
physical restoration: the command to restore and rebuild Jerusalem, with street and wall, even in troubled times.
Those restorative elements were to take place within the seventy weeks. The city would be restored, and Messiah would come. Then Messiah would accomplish the redemptive purposes of verse 24 through His ministry, death, resurrection, and covenant-confirming work. But here is the important point: although those redemptive accomplishments were fulfilled within the seventy weeks,
their consequences did not end when the seventy weeks ended.
The reconciliation for iniquity accomplished by Christ continues to bless believers to this day. The everlasting righteousness He brought in does not expire at the end of the seventy weeks. The finishing of transgression, the making an end of sins, the sealing up of vision and prophecy, and the anointing of the Most Holy all have continuing effects in God’s plan of salvation.
They were accomplished within the seventy weeks, but their results continue until the end.
So fulfillment within the seventy weeks does not mean every consequence of that fulfillment must be exhausted within the seventy weeks.
That same principle should be applied to the destructive elements in Daniel 9:26–27.
After Messiah is cut off, Daniel is told that the city and sanctuary will be destroyed, and that desolations are determined. He is also told that sacrifice and offering would cease, and that abominations and desolation would continue until the determined end.
Here is the distinction
: Daniel does not explicitly say that every destructive consequence must be completed within the seventy weeks. The redemptive work of Messiah must be accomplished within the seventy weeks. The covenant-confirming work of Messiah belongs within the final week. But the consequences of rejecting Messiah extend beyond the seventy weeks. That should not surprise anyone.. The restorative consequences of Messiah’s work continue beyond the seventy weeks; therefore, the destructive consequences of rejecting Messiah may also continue beyond the seventy weeks.
Scripture often shows judgment being pronounced before its visible execution arrives. Adam died spiritually the day he sinned, yet his physical death came later. Jesus declared, “Your house is left unto you desolate,” before the temple physically fell. The spiritual judgment came first; the visible historical judgment followed. That is exactly what we see in Daniel 9. Within the seventy weeks, Messiah was cut off. Through His once-for-all sacrifice, He caused sacrifice and offering to cease in their true spiritual purpose. The temple system had reached its fulfillment because the true Lamb had come. But the physical temple continued standing for another forty years, until its visible destruction in AD 70.
That forty-year span is not meaningless. It fits the biblical pattern of forty as a period of testing, witness, transition, and divine patience. Israel was tested forty years in the wilderness. Moses was forty days on Sinai. Elijah journeyed forty days to Horeb. Jesus was tested forty days in the wilderness. Likewise, after the cross,
Jerusalem was given roughly one final generation of apostolic witness before the temple order was visibly removed.
During that period, the apostles preached first in Jerusalem. Thousands of Jews believed. The resurrection was proclaimed. The gospel went forth to Jew and Gentile. Yet Jerusalem as the covenant center continued in rejection of Messiah, and in AD 70 the city and sanctuary were destroyed by the Roman armies.
This is why Daniel 9:26 cannot be reduced only to a spiritual destruction within the seventy weeks. The text says the city and sanctuary would be destroyed after Messiah was cut off. The physical city and physical sanctuary had been restored earlier in the prophecy; therefore, when the prophecy later speaks of their destruction,
the physical destruction cannot simply be dismissed.
At the same time, the physical destruction was not the whole story. The deeper spiritual reality was that the house had already been made desolate by the rejection of Messiah. Rome was the historical instrument, but Jerusalem’s rejection of Christ was the covenant cause. So both dimensions must be held together.
Spiritually, the temple order became desolate when Messiah was rejected and cut off.
Historically, the city and sanctuary were destroyed by the Romans in AD 70.
Covenantally, the relationship between God and unbelieving national Israel entered a long period of desolation until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled.
Prophetically, this desolation continues until God again turns to His people, removes their blindness, and they look upon the One whom they pierced.
This also helps identify “the people of the prince who is to come.” The people who destroyed the city and sanctuary in AD 70 were Roman. Therefore, the coming prince connected with those people must arise from the Roman sphere. He is not called “Messiah the Prince,” as in verse 25. He is simply called “the prince who is to come.” That distinction matters.
Messiah the Prince comes and is cut off.
The Roman people destroy the city and sanctuary.
From the Roman sphere, a later prince arises.
This later prince corresponds to the little horn power revealed in Daniel 7 and 8.
This does not mean Daniel 9:27 is fulfilled by that prince. It is not. Daniel 9:27 belongs to Messiah. Christ confirms the covenant with many and causes sacrifice and offering to cease through His once-for-all sacrifice.
But Daniel 9:26 identifies the Roman people as the destroyers of the city and sanctuary, and in doing so it points forward to a coming prince from that same Roman world. Pagan Rome destroyed Jerusalem in AD 70. Pagan Rome later fell. Out of the Roman world arose the little horn power, which would appropriate the visible church, speak great things, cast truth down, and oppose the true Prince.
Therefore, the structure of Daniel 9 is coherent.
The restorative elements were fulfilled within the seventy weeks, but their blessings continue beyond the seventy weeks.
The redemptive work of Messiah was accomplished within the seventy weeks, but its effects continue until the end.
The destructive elements began with the rejection and cutting off of Messiah, but their consequences also continue beyond the seventy weeks.
The spiritual desolation began when Messiah was rejected.
The physical destruction came afterward in AD 70.
The covenant desolation would continue through the times of the Gentiles.
And the later Roman prince would arise from the same Roman sphere that destroyed the city and sanctuary.
So the prophecy does not fail because the physical destruction occurred forty years after the cross. The seventy weeks establish and complete the redemptive work of Messiah. The continuing blessings of accepting Messiah and the continuing consequences of rejecting Messiah both extend beyond the seventy weeks.
That means we should not demand that the destruction of the city and sanctuary be reduced to a purely spiritual event within the seventy weeks. Daniel speaks of a restored city and sanctuary, a cut-off Messiah, a destroyed city and sanctuary, and desolations determined until the end. The physical destruction in AD 70 is not a problem for the prophecy. It is the visible historical consequence of the spiritual desolation already pronounced by Christ.