Yes, that's one prophesy the Preterit uses to assume Daniel 9 is referring to the physical destruction in 70 AD.
How do you biblically prove Lk 19:41-44 is prophesy for the destruction that came in 70 AD and keep within the timeframe given by Daniel it happening within the 490 years he foretells all he wrote would be fulfilled? The same question applies to some of your other proof texts above?
Mt. 24:1-2 is a parable explaining what heaven is like.
Daniel 9:24–27 must be read with careful attention to the difference between what the seventy weeks are appointed to accomplish and what the prophecy later reveals as consequences for rejecting the Messiah.
Verse 24 gives the controlling purpose of the seventy weeks:
“Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city…”
The seventy weeks are not introduced as a general timeline requiring every event mentioned in verses 24–27 to be completed within the 490 years. Rather, the seventy weeks are specifically determined upon Daniel’s people and holy city for the accomplishment of six redemptive and covenantal purposes: to finish transgression, to make an end of sins, to make reconciliation for iniquity, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy, and to anoint the Most Holy.
Those are restorative purposes. They are messianic purposes. They are the things God determined to accomplish within the seventy weeks.
Verse 25 continues that restorative movement. Jerusalem would be restored and rebuilt. Messiah the Prince would come. The city would be rebuilt in troubled times, and the appointed prophetic period would carry the people forward to the arrival of the Messiah.
So verses 24 and 25 are restoration verses.
They speak of God’s covenant purpose, Jerusalem’s rebuilding, Messiah’s appearing, reconciliation for iniquity, everlasting righteousness, and the sealing up of prophetic vision. These are the things that belong to the seventy-week mission itself.
But verse 26 changes the tone.
After the sixty-two weeks, Messiah is cut off. Then the prophecy speaks of destruction: the people of the prince who is to come destroy the city and the sanctuary. The end comes with a flood. Desolations are determined. This is no longer the restorative purpose of the seventy weeks. This is the consequence of rejecting the Messiah. That distinction is crucial.
The cutting off of Messiah belongs to the seventy-week framework because His death is the very means by which the redemptive purposes of verse 24 are accomplished. Through Him, reconciliation is made. Everlasting righteousness is brought in. Sacrifice and offering reach their true fulfillment.
But the destruction of the city and sanctuary is not one of the six stated purposes of verse 24. It is not part of the restorative mission. It is a judicial consequence that follows the rejection of Messiah.
Therefore, the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 does not have to occur within the seventy weeks in order for the prophecy to be fulfilled. Daniel 9 can reveal consequences that flow from Israel’s rejection of Messiah without requiring every consequence to be completed before the seventy weeks expire.
Verse 27 continues this same destructive consequence pattern.
Messiah confirms the covenant and brings sacrifice and offering to their true fulfillment. But the rejection of Him produces desolation. The abomination that causes desolation is not merely a political event. At its deepest level, it is the covenant horror of rejecting the One whom God sent — the Messiah, the Prince, the true sacrifice, the true sanctuary, and the only means of restoration.
The physical destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in AD 70 was terrible. But it was not the deepest consequence. The greater consequence was spiritual. When Israel rejected her Messiah, God made desolate His relationship with His people. The temple could be destroyed by Roman armies, but the far greater desolation was the long spiritual separation that followed: blindness, scattering, unbelief, and the loss of covenant intimacy until the appointed consummation. This is the spiritual counterpart to the physical destruction of AD 70, and it is still counting!
Verse 26 shows the physical consequence: the city and sanctuary destroyed.
Verse 27 shows the spiritual consequence: desolation determined until the consummation.
Together, these two destructive verses reveal the consequences of rejecting Messiah. They do not belong to the restorative purposes of verses 24 and 25. They flow out of the rejection of the One who came to fulfill those restorative purposes. This is why it is a mistake to insist that the destruction of the temple must fall inside the seventy weeks. That argument assumes that every event mentioned in the passage must be completed within the 490 years. But the text itself does not say that.
What must be fulfilled within the seventy weeks are the redemptive purposes of verse 24 and the coming of Messiah in verse 25. The destructive consequences in verses 26 and 27 are revealed because they flow from the people’s response to Messiah, but they are not the restorative mission of the seventy weeks.
The seventy weeks are centered on Messiah’s appearing, His covenant-confirming work, His being cut off, and His accomplishment of reconciliation and everlasting righteousness.
The desolations that follow are consequences.
Thus, Daniel 9:24–27 unfolds in two movements.
Verses 24 and 25 reveal restoration: the city restored, Messiah coming, sin addressed, righteousness brought in, prophecy sealed, and the Most Holy anointed.
Verses 26 and 27 reveal the consequences of rejection: Messiah cut off, city and sanctuary destroyed, desolations determined, and the covenant relationship made desolate until the consummation.
The prophecy is not unfinished because AD 70 falls outside the seventy weeks. The prophecy’s redemptive center was fulfilled in Christ within the appointed period. The destruction of Jerusalem and the long spiritual desolation that followed are the judicial outworking of rejecting Him. That is the point: the seventy weeks accomplish God’s restorative purpose through Messiah, while the destruction and desolation reveal the tragic consequences of refusing that restoration.