Time is Short--The Eternal  Carrot

All fundamentalist and literalist Christians have grown up with the following  scriptures burned into their minds...
I Thessalonians 4:15-17 "...For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven  with a shout...Then WE which are alive and remain shall be caught up together  with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air..."
I Corinthians 15:51,52 "...WE shall not all sleep, but WE shall all be  changed, In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump...and WE  shall be changed."
Romans 13:11-12 "And that, knowing the time, that now it is high time to  awake out of sleep: for NOW is OUR salvation nearer than when we believed. The  night is far spent, the day is at hand..."
James 5:8 "Be YE also patient; establish YOUR hearts: for the coming of the  Lord draweth nigh."
I John 2:18 "Little children, it is the last time: and as ye have heard that  antichrist shall come, even now are there many antichrists; whereby WE know that  it is the last time."
I Peter 4:7 "But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and  watch unto prayer."
Revelation 22:20 "He which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come  quickly..."
Millions in Fundamentalist and 
Evangelical Churches have grown up with the  idea that the return of Jesus, a return which will fix everything that is wrong  with everything and reward the true saints, is always imminent. We read the  above scriptures as if they were written for us, as it is we who are finally the  ones "upon whom the end of the age has come." Unlike everyone before us, we  really really are the ones who will see it and be changed, avoiding the reality  of physical death.
There never has been, is not now and never will be a shortage of preachers  and pastors who just know we are living in the final, absolutely last days. The  signs are everywhere and every world event is assigned biblical import and  meaning.
In Fundamentalist movements, the tradition goes on and becomes more  pronounced as , earthquakes, floods, fire, volcanoes and "unusual" events, or  wars and rumors of wars, especially in the middle east rear their ugly heads. If  someone blew up the 
Dome of the Rock, well... there... see, now tell us that  Jesus is not a few minutes away from returning.
The fact that most wars are waged by either the Christians, Israelis or the  Islamic nations, among and between themselves, which are the religions whose  teachings are supposed to save us and make our lives better, doesn't seem to  strike us as odd. In fact, at some deep level deeply religious fundamentalists,  seem to believe that millions must die violently, so that "all these things can  come to pass" and the love of God and the fellowship of the 
Holy Spirit can be  visited upon the Christian survivors... or Islamic or Israeli depending on who  wins. Well of course, the Christians win. Each knows who that it will be  themselves that overcomes the other. It's in the book, all of them.
The most popular 
New Testament "proof texts" for this thinking among  Christian Fundamentalists and Evangelicals, comes from Mark 13 and the parallel  passages found in Matthew 24 and Luke 21. These written in answer to the  disciples question... "WHEN shall these things be, and what shall be the sign of  your coming?"
It's all about WHEN. The "when" is unknowable even if one believes with all  their heart it has to be soon. The faithful forget that speculation on the  future is always just that. It is not fact. It is not how it will be and all  speculation over the past 2000 years as to "when", to date has been 100%  wrong.
Far too many Pastor types base their entire ministry on the imminent return  of Jesus. One would be hard pressed to find the actual word "Jesus" in any other  context in their sermons, articles and pronouncements.
It's all about the second coming and it's all about SOON for the most rabid  and judgmental COG splinters. Those who question the wisdom of this mistaken  approach to life become the scoffers who nip at the heels of the saints.
"...there shall come in the last days scoffers, walking after their own  lusts, And saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the fathers  fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the  creation,"
But running that risk, and with all due respect to the sincere seeker of  Biblical truth, I predict that Jesus will not be returning any time soon.
Why not? Because in the very predictions of Jesus lie the fact that he was  himself wrong about them. Jesus put a time limit in the context of his own  predictions that has long since passed no matter how apologists endeavor to  resurrect his prophecies for a yet future time.
"Verily I say unto you", This generation shall not pass, till all these  things be fulfilled" (Matthew 24:34).
We simply have to admit, at face value, Jesus was wrong and not only DID that  generation pass away, but so have countless others that followed. Jesus has not  been misunderstood in this statement. He was wrong. Sincere not doubt and it  simply will not go into the bible-reader mind that this might be the simple  truth of the matter. There has to be another explanation that makes Jesus right  in this perspective not 2000 years past.
"This generation" was not the one Jesus was talking TO, but rather the  generation that "these things" would begin to happen IN. Whew! It's in the far  future and means a future society when all these signs accelerate and come to a  crashing finale ending with the 
Second Coming.
We now have wiggle room to account for the fact that Jesus has not returned  yet. Jesus wasn't mistaken about his own times, he was referring to another  time.
Gleason Archer, who offers this solutions to the "Jesus didn't mean it would  be in his time," notes accurately what we all know 2000 years later.
"Obviously these apocalyptic scenes and earth-shaking events did not take  place within the generation of those who heard Christ's 
Olivet discourse.  Therefore Jesus could not have been referring to his immediate audience when He  made this prediction..." (Encyclopedia of Bible Difficulties, pg 338).
Archer has to say this as he cannot possibly entertain the idea that Jesus  was himself wrong in his perceptions of the times in which he lived and his role  in those times. Later in the Gospels, authors would lower the expectations of  the early Church, who thought Jesus meant them by reminding them late in the  game when it was obvious Jesus wasn't coming any time soon that "a day with the  Lord is as a thousand years. Sorry, we forgot to tell you that in the  beginning." As long as one is incapable of thinking Jesus was himself wrong the  
Kingdom of God being just around the corner if he did his part, the doctrine of  disappointments would have to be addressed as time went on.
And so we simply need to ask a very simple question. To whom was Jesus  speaking? From the opening NT texts, it is obvious that the disciples, apostles  and members of the church thought it meant THEM and did not get any hint of  Jesus meaning anything other than THEM in THEIR time, which was short. The idea  that Jesus would "build my Church" came decades after Jesus death when most were  dead or dying of old age and yet the end did not come. Jesus never envisioned a  Church that would follow decades and millennia after his death. Jesus life would  always be lived and lost in the context of Judaism and the Synagogue.
But back to the original question. To whom was Jesus speaking when he said  the words and to whom did he mean for it to apply? The answer is within the  context, plain and simple.
"Take heed that no man deceive YOU." (Matt 24:4) 
"...YOU shall hear of  wars, and rumors of wars..." (Matt 24:6) 
"Then shall they deliver YOU  up to be afflicted..." (Matt 24:9) 
"When YOU therefore shall see the  the abomination of desolation..." (Matt 24:15) 
"But pray YOU that your  flight be not in the winter..." (Matt 24:20) 
"Behold, I have told YOU  before." (Matt 24:25)
The context in which Jesus spoke was his own. The "you" that he was  addressing was the group he was addressing then and the group to which all these  things would happen for, and soon. Jesus was telling those disciples that these  things would happen in their time. Jesus made a mistake in his perceptions.
In our time, Christians read the same words and see the "ye" and "you" as  "me" and "us" just as the original disciples would have. The only difference is  that the disciples actually were disappointed and this generation has yet to  realize their own disappointment to come.
The proof that Jesus himself meant the people he was talking to is found in  the fact that the "this generation" comment is actually the tale end of a much  larger, often overlooked quote taken in it's entirety.
"So likewise YE when YE shall SEE ALL these things, know that it is near,  even at the doors. Verily I say unto YOU, THIS generation shall not pass, till  ALL these things be fulfilled." (Matt 24:33-24 emphasis mine)
There is no reason to twist the 
words of Jesus to mean more than they were  ever intended to mean. A scripture can never mean what it never meant. The early  disciples and infant Church, knew it meant them and we see the gradual  deterioration of their personal confidence in the immediacy of the Second Coming  promise throughout the NT.
I Thessalonians 4:15-17 "...For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven  with a shout...Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together  with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air..." Meaning...some would  die, but not us who tell you this. Jesus still means us.
I Corinthians 15:51,52 "...We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be  changed, In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump..."  Meaning...you will die, but we won't but it all works out...Jesus still meant  us.
Romans 13:11-12 "And that, knowing the time, that now it is high time to  awake out of sleep: for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed. The  night is far spent, the day is at hand..." Meaning...we had some doubts, but now  we know it's almost here. Jesus still meant us.
James 5:8 "Be ye also patient; establish your hearts: for the coming of the  Lord draweth nigh." Meaning...impatience was growing, hang in there. Jesus still  meant us.
I John 2:18 "Little children, it is the last time: and as ye have heard that  antichrist shall come, even now are there many antichrists; whereby we know that  it is the last time." Meaning...Jesus still meant us.
I Peter 4:7 "But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and  watch unto prayer."
Revelation 22:20 "He which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come  quickly...."Meaning...ok, it's been about 60 years, but Jesus still means  us.
Obviously, everyone of these quoted hopes and statements were wrong. Jesus  did not return for them and to date has not returned for anyone. Paul and the  early church who wrote in his name was just as wrong as the many COG prophetic  types are wrong in this time. And it is based on the fact that Jesus himself was  wrong which I know most Christians can never come to admit. For Paul it  becomes....
" I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the  faith: 8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the  Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me only, but  unto all them also that love his appearing." Meaning...Ok, I give up, Jesus  didn't mean us, or at least not me. I was wrong. 2 Timothy 4:8-9
...and at best, this will also become the reality for those alive today  seeing the imminent return of Jesus in every newspaper and on every turn of the  dial in this dangerous and contentious world of ours.
I'm not scoffing. Being accused of scoffing was a label for those in the  early Church. The disciples expected Jesus return within days of his death and  when they met him in Galilee, even doubted that. Its what you say to those that  are becoming disillusioned but the others know that the return is still in their  lifetime for sure. Scoffers were undermining the confidence of the early  followers and 
disciples of Jesus. An observation is not scoffing.
Observations  are based on the passage of millennia. It's a 2000 year old observation. To  motivate with fear, false prophetic fulfillment's of non- prophecies, and  imagined prophetic accuracy on topics anyone could speculate somewhat accurately  about, is simply foolishness and makes the Church, in any form look stupid and  ignorant. Jesus said his generation would not pass until the 
Son of Man be come.  He was wrong.
So bent on not allowing the member to even remotely entertain the idea that  Jesus was wrong, Paul was wrong and the Church is wrong , it was prudent to  shift the blame for doubt to the member and thinker and away from the clergy,  and thus we have...
2 Peter 3:3 "Knowing this first, (meaning---we forgot to add this apologetic)  that there shall come in the last days scoffers, walking after their own lusts,  4 And saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the fathers fell  asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation. 5  For this they willingly are ignorant of....."
Obviously, the Church took Jesus words literally for them and not for some  future generation. But still Jesus doesn't return to them. This shifts the  problem to the scoffers, doubters and those that misunderstood Jesus and not the  Church who needs to keep the hope of imminent return going like a carrot before  the horse. The Church never entertained until they had to, the idea that Jesus  didn't mean what he said about soon. It also implies that this doubt is  deliberate and calculated. It can never just be doubt based on evidence and time  just going on without any 
evidence of Jesus return. Even with the temple gone  and the Romans more in power than ever, He didn't return. It must have felt for  them then as one might say today. "If Jesus didn't return for the 
Holocaust,  what will it take."
The "scoffers will come" scripture was added when it was obvious to the  Church that people could and were scoffing. And what some consider scoffing is  merely noting that the thing spoken is not so. It's not evil, it's just stating  the obvious and putting, in this case, the church on the spot to explain its  continued use of imminent return going long. It also lends credibility to Jesus  mournful cry at the end of his life..."my God, my God...why have you forsaken  me." I expect Jesus really meant that. It was a real shock not to have had  things work out as one had supposed. Jesus had done his part. He had pushed the  Romans right up to the edge and himself, right up to execution...and still, God  did not intervene, sweep the Romans from the earth and set up the Kingdom. Only  after Jesus actually died did the followers of Jesus have to rethink it all.
I know... and expect it to be said, "you'll think differently when Jesus  returns, or you find yourself in hell with lots of time to rethink your  position." I speak in the hope that the average 
Christian church member won't be  motivated and won't tolerate pastors who use the fear of living on this planet  to promote their own misguided agendas and speculations. One does not have to  see the world only through the eyes of those that speculate on how things are or  will be because frankly they don't and can't  know.
Dennis C. Diehl
DenniscDiehl@aol.com