11. from . . . sacrifice . . . taken way . . . abomination--
(Da 11:31).
As to this epoch, which probably is prophetically germinant and
manifold; the profanation of the temple by Antiochus (in the
month Ijar of the year 145 B.C., till the
restoration of the worship by Judas Maccabeus on the twenty-fifth day
of the ninth month [Chisleu] of 148 B.C.,
according to the Seleucid era, 1290 days; forty-five days more elapsed
before Antiochus' death in the month Shebat of 148 B.C., so ending the Jews' calamities [MAURER]); by pagan Rome, after Christ's death;
by Mohammed; by Antichrist, the culmination of apostate Rome.
The "abomination" must reach its climax (see AUBERLEN'S translation, "summit,"
Da 9:27),
and the measure of iniquity be full, before Messiah comes.
thousand two hundred and ninety days--a month beyond the "time,
times, and a half"
(Da 12:7).
In
Da 12:12,
forty-five days more are added, in all 1335 days. TREGELLES thinks Jesus at His coming will deliver the
Jews. An interval elapses, during which their consciences are awakened
to repentance and faith in Him. A second interval elapses in which
Israel's outcasts are gathered, and then the united blessing takes
place. These stages are marked by the 1260, 1290, and 1335 days.
CUMMING thinks the 1260 years begin when Justinian
in A. D. 533 subjected the Eastern churches
to John II, bishop of Rome; ending in 1792, when the Code Napoleon was
established and the Pope was dishonored. 1290 reach to 1822, about the
time of the waning of the Turkish power, the successor to Greece in the
empire of the East. Forty-five years more end in 1867, the end of "the
times of the Gentiles." See
Le 26:24,
"seven times," that is, 7 X 360, or 2520 years: 652 B.C. is the date of Judah's captivity, beginning under
Manasseh; 2520 from this date end in 1868, thus nearly harmonizing with
the previous date, 1867. See on
Da 8:14.
The seventh millenary of the world [CLINTON]
begins in 1862. Seven years to 1869 (the date of the second advent)
constitute the reign of the personal Antichrist; in the last three and
a half, the period of final tribulation, Enoch (or else Moses) and
Elijah, the two witnesses, prophesy in sackcloth. This theory is very
dubious (compare
Mt 24:36;
Ac 1:7;
1Th 5:2;
2Pe 3:10);
still the event alone can tell whether the chronological coincidences
of such theories are fortuitous, or solid data on which to fix the
future times. HALES makes the periods 1260, 1290,
1335, begin with the Roman destruction of Jerusalem and end with the
precursory dawn of the Reformation, the preaching of Wycliffe and
Huss.
JFB.
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