You asked "Where does that death take place in your understanding of Zec 8?"
Its in my point 2, remember what Peter said to Israel in Acts 3:19-21?
- Israel the nation accepts Christ as the Son of God (John 20:31)
- Jesus returns to forgive the sins of Israel and live with them in the promised land in Jerusalem (Acts 3:19-21)
- Every Jew becomes a priests to bring gentiles to worship in Jerusalem (Zechariah 8:23)
-
It's not a plan B, God already knew Israel the nation would reject his Son, and hence opening the doors to Gentiles thru the fall of Israel (Ephesians 3:9)
That is confusing to me. If the plan was for
1) Israel to accept Christ,
2) Christ to forgive their sins and live with them in the promised land, and
3) the Jews would bring the world to God,
and none of that happened, but a whole other plan was put into place,
why is that not Plan A and Plan B?
In Ac 3:19-21, Peter exhorts them to repent (v.19) and tells them what they can expect if they do:
1) pardon of their sins (v.19) and
2) the comfort of Christ's coming (vv. 20-21); i.e.,
God will send at the end of this age the same Jesus that was preached to them (v.20), and they crucified,
they are not to wait for another time and another Messiah to be sent to them,
this is the time.
There is no sending Jesus a second time, to the Jews or anyone else.
Rather,
Jesus must remain in heaven until the time to restore everything (v.21).
That will be at the resurrection (at the redemption of our bodies, Ro 8:23) at the end of time, when everything is restored in the new creation (2Co 5:17; Gal 6:15), for which the whole creation, as well as those who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, have been groaning (Ro 8:22-23) in longing.
Do you believe in a future 1000 year millennial reign of Christ sitting on David's throne in Jerusalem?
I don't see a time frame stated in Mt 19:28.
I see it as the
renewal in the new creation (2Co 5:17; Gal 6:15) at the end of time, for which the whole creation and the redeemed have been groaning (Ro 8:22-23).
I
do know that it will have its complete fulfillment at the second coming, when the saints in general, especially the 12 apostles, will judge the world as assistants with Christ in the judgment of the great day.