Elijah John wrote:The verse I alluded to above is Matthew 16.27,28. I read that as a failed prophecy, indicating that either Jesus or the Bible is not perfect.
It's a shame you came to that conclusion.
Mark 9:1 And he said to them, Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see that the kingdom of God has come with power.
Matthew 16: 27, 28 For the Son of Man is going to come in his Fathers glory with his angels, and then he will reward each person according to what they have done. Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.
Luke 9: 27 Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the kingdom of God.
QUESTION: Did Jesus indicate that his first century disciples would see him returned in Kingdom power? (Mark 9:1; Matthew 16: 27, 28; Luke 9: 27)
ANSWER: No, not literally. firstly, note Jesus said "some" of those present would see him in kingdom power. If he was speaking of his literal return to take full control of the earth ALL would see this event, both wicked and good. Jesus was speaking in the presence of his faithful disciples, so there would have been no reason to say "some" and not "all", we can conclude therefore he was speaking of another event.
Furthermore, note that Jesus' emphasis was on those present would "
see" not necessarily what would happen. For example: one can today "see" Elvis, although he is in fact long dead and a vision of the future could, in theory enable someone to "see" a winning lottery ticket even if it hasn't yet been chosen. In a similar way, Jesus was promising his disciples they would "see" something quite magnificent but not that that magnificent event would literally be happening when they see it.
Indeed, what Jesus promising was that they would "see" him in his kingdom glory, something which they did indeed witnesses in a vision a week later; This event is often referred to as "the transfiguration"
The bible writer Luke, links Jesus' words above with the transfiguration, explaining: "In fact, about eight days after saying these words, he [Jesus] took Peter, John, and James along and climbed up the mountain to pray. And as he was praying, the appearance of his face changed and his clothing became glitteringly white." - Luke 9: 28, 29. So Luke equates the fullfillment of Jesus words to this event.
Further, The Apostle Peter (one of those present) also viewed the transfiguration as a fullfilment of Jesus promise above. Refering to the same event Peter writes: "we were eyewitnesses of his magnificence. For he received from God the Father honor and glory when words such as these were conveyed to him by the magnificent glory: This is my Son, my beloved, whom I myself have approved. Yes, these words we heard coming from heaven while we were with him in the holy mountain" The apostle John may also have alluded to the transfiguration at John 1:14.
Note: Christ "coming" is not to be confused with the "Parousia" or his presence [Mat 24:3]
QUESTION: But did not Jesus say in that verse (27) that he would "repay everyone" in the lifetime of any of his listeners?
No he did not. Neither did he imply it. A careful reading of the verse reveals that the only thing he promised those "standing with him" in the first century was they would see "the son of man coming in his kingdom" no more.
MATTHEW 16: 27, 28
For the Son of Man is going to come in his Fathers glory with his angels,
and then he will reward each person according to what they have done. Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they
see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom."
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?s ... w+16:27-28
In the above verses we see Jesus make a prediction (prophecy) in verse 27 and a promise (v 28). The prophecy has two features (a) and (b)...
v 27: (a) 'the son of man [coming]"
followed by (b) reward for "each person" / "everyone" (JB) according or their deeds (other bibles render the same idea he will "
judge all people" (NLT).
Jesus then goes on to make a second promise something specifically to those standing with them, ie
v 28: Some standing with him (Jesus) would not die before the would "see" -
NOT the judgement of everyone (b) but only the "Son of Man coming in his kingdom" (a). What he would do after he came (ie Judge all mankind) they were not promised to "see".
To illustrate: A father explains that the following week there will be a transmission of the Superbowl (sports event) and adds and then there will be a movie. The father then says the following "Truly my son, you will be permitted to see the "the superbowl". Can the son complain that his father broke his promise to let him watch the late night movie that was AFTER the superbowl?
In a similar way, a careful reading of the text shows Jesus' disciples should not have expected to see anything more than what was promised ie "the son of man coming" and certainly there is no reason to conclude that Jesus promised first century disciples would see the final judgement of mankind or that that promise "failed".
Further reading
http://m.wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1102013268#h=24
OBJECTION: But did not Jesus mention the global judgement and the coming of the kingdom in the same paragraph? Can we not conclude "same paragraph, same subject"
This is not only nonsense logic, it is grammatically faulty nonsense logic. Firstly the bible text wasn't originally broken into paragraphs, the paragraphs (like the punctuation) we see in our English bibles remains at the discretion of the individual translator. Further that two elements appear together doesn't mean both are necessarily the object of a given verb; their proximity may be indicative (depending on the structure of the language) but it is the grammatical rules that govern the language that determines the object of a verb not the placement.
To illustrate: I intend to kick my dog and then make love to my wife. Truly I tell you, posters in this forum, you will not die before you see me do the kicking. Does that fact that the kicking of the dog and the making love to the wife are two connected events (in the same line/paragraph) mean you have been promised to see both?
In a similar way, Jesus mentioned two connected events together but only one of those was the object of his promise.
JW