Yet we have no evidence that 'every eye will see Him' from any of the apostles. In fact the Risen Christ while on earth for 40 days was only revealed to believers in Him:
Something to consider regarding Rev 1:7 ("every eye will see Him"). This is a quote from the comment section of this page,
Will Jesus' second coming be in the clouds? I'm not so sure...
In Rev 1:7 it says:
“Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every EYE shall see him, and they also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him. Even so, Amen.”
Eye is G3788 in Strong’s Concordance and is used for:
1.)the eye
2.)metaph.
the eyes of the mind, the faculty of knowing
“Every eye shall see him” does not necessarily mean that people will physically see him, but may in fact perceive his coming from a sense of knowing due to the Kingdom of God being within them. This is what he probably meant when he said that the Kingdom of God does not come with observation (by watching), and he warned the disciples that there will come a day in which they long to see (different Greek word, not the same as observation, but similar in that they would like to physically perceive with the eyes) one of the days of the Son of man, but that they wouldn’t. Then he continues by warning them to not follow after those who tell them to come see (perceive with the physical eyes). Then he goes on to say that he will suffer and be rejected. Followed by how the days leading up to the flood will be much like the days of the Son of man that will lead up to destruction. They ate, drank, married wives, gave their daughters in marriage right up until Noah entered the ark, followed by the flood that destroyed all the aforementioned people. Same as in the days of Lot, they drank, bought, sold, planted and built. The same day Lot left, Sodom was destroyed. Yeshua goes on to say that it will be the same in the day of when the Son of man is revealed. He goes on to warn people not to go back to get their stuff and not to leave the field. He then cites Lot’s wife as an example, those who try to save their (earthly) lives will lose it and those who lose their (earthly) lives will save it.
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I think the trouble is seeing "His coming" or the "reign of Christ" as one single event, when it's really more of a series of events (His death; resurrection; ascension into heaven; Pentecost; destruction of the Temple) they ALL have great significance.
Also....references to "all" and "every" may point to the future, but these events could be the fulfillment of the beginning of His will being brought to completion. That theology is called "already, but not yet"
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The theological concept of “already but not yet” holds that believers are actively taking part in the kingdom of God, although the kingdom will not reach its full expression until sometime in the future. We are “already” in the kingdom, but we do “not yet” see it in its glory. The “already but not yet” theology is related to kingdom theology or inaugurated eschatology