steve7150 wrote: OK you did make a good point "My house" meant the temple did have the approval of God but IMHO that was until the curtain was torn in half. I think that incident was a consequence of Jesus crucifixtion and removed any authority that dwelled in the temple. The destruction of the temple was the elimination of a house that was already desolate of God. The fact that the curtain was repaired by man was not by direction from God, therefore it had no authority from heaven.
As to why would Jesus prophecy it's destruction if it had no authority, to fulfill prophecy, to warn Christians,visibly validating the ending of the old covenant even though it had really
already ended when the curtain was torn.
There can be no question that the old covenant had been rendered of no effect at the cross. But there is still so much tied in with the timing of the destruction of the temple and the consequential anihilation of the old covenant economy among the millions of unbelieving Jews during that first century. Matthew 24 sets this stage and Hebrews and other passages add to this "time of the end" as prophesied by Daniel.
The whole (or a vast portion) of the NT deals with the two covenants. Paul who once went about trying to destroy Christianity now has to do battle with the unbelieving Jews who were out to destroy him. The unbelieving Jews were constantly persecuting the church. It was old covenant versus new covenant. It was Israel after the flesh versus Israel after the Spirit. One day, vindication was promised. It was promised to that first century church. One day, the old covenant economy would be wiped out completely and leave the new covenant economy as the only existing economy, as it is today. There is no temple, no sacrifices, no offerings, no more genealogies, no more nothing!
One cannot think planets as being the emphasis of the NT. Well, I suppose one can, but to do so is to commit hermeneutic suicide. Think covenants and the language of them. The destruction of the temple and Jerusalem was not a type of the fulfillment; it was the fulfillment...
And yet there are many discussions today as to whether the Christians back then during the 40 years from the cross to the parousia had to follow the Law. Things such as Paul's Nazarene vow, etc. Allyn may very well be right that the torn curtain was just a sign of much worse things to come.