As he sat (καθημενου). Genitive absolute. Picture of
Jesus sitting on the Mount of Olives looking down on Jerusalem and the
temple which he had just left. After the climb up the mountain four of
the disciples (Peter, James, John, Andrew) come to Jesus with the
problem raised by his solemn words. They ask these questions about the
destruction of Jerusalem and the temple, his own second coming
(παρουσια, presence, common in the papyri for the visit of the emperor),
and the end of the world. Did they think that they were all to take
place simultaneously? There is no way to answer. At any rate Jesus
treats all three in this great eschatological discourse, the most
difficult problem in the Synoptic Gospels. Many theories are advanced
that impugn the knowledge of Jesus or of the writers or of both. It is
sufficient for our purpose to think of Jesus as using the destruction of
the temple and of Jerusalem which did happen in that generation in A.D.
70, as also a symbol of his own second coming and of the end of the
world (συντελειας του αιωνος) or consummation of the age. In a painting
the artist by skilful perspective may give on the same surface the
inside of a room, the fields outside the window, and the sky far beyond.
Certainly in this discourse Jesus blends in apocalyptic language the
background of his death on the cross, the coming destruction of
Jerusalem, his own second coming and the end of the world. He now
touches one, now the other. It is not easy for us to separate clearly
the various items. It is enough if we get the picture as a whole as it
is here drawn with its lessons of warning to be ready for his coming and
the end. The destruction of Jerusalem came as he foretold. There are
some who would date the Synoptic Gospels after A.D. 70 in order to avoid
the predictive element involved in the earlier date. But that is to
limit the fore-knowledge of Jesus to a merely human basis. The word
παρουσια occurs in this chapter alone (Matthew 24:3; Matthew 24:27; Matthew 24:37; Matthew 24:39) in the Gospels, but often in the Epistles, either of
presence as opposed to absence (Philippians 2:12) or the second coming of Christ (