Christ stated all the righteous blood would fall upon the wicked scribes, pharisees, lawyers, and those who killed the prophets:
matthew 23:35 so that on you may come all the righteous blood shed on earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah the son of Barachiah,
f whom you murdered between the sanctuary and the altar.
luke 11;50-51 so that the blood of all the prophets, shed from the foundation of the world, may be charged against this generation, from the blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah, who perished between the altar and the sanctuary. Yes, I tell you, it will be required of this generation.
Christ stated the destruction of Jerusalem would fulfill all that is written about the days of vengeance
Luke 21:22 for these are days of vengeance, to fulfill all that is written.
So I'll stick with Scripture: the destruction of Jerusalem fulfilled the avenging of righteous blood, for the killing of prophets and murdering Christ. Christ being the reason anyone has "righteous blood".
I can concede with your position on Matthew 24:27 in regards to "speed", if in fact Christ is using the lightning simile to describe how fast his coming is.
While, I know you won't care about any of these commentaries, my point is only to show the readers, that there are other non full preterists that apply this same passage to Christ coming in vengeance upon jerusalem. I would agree with the following commentaries that this passage can be applied to Christ's coming in judgment upon Israel in 70ad, and can concede that it can possibly refer to his future unknown coming.
Ellicot
The disciples in their questions (
Matthew 24:3) had connected the destruction of Jerusalem with the “coming” of their Lord, and the two are connected even in His own words and thoughts. In whatever way He came, whether in the final destruction of the Temple and polity of Israel, or at the end of the world’s great drama, the advent would be sudden and unlooked-for as the lightning-flash.
Benson
The coming of the Son of man shall be in a very different manner, and for very different ends from what you are imagining. It shall be like lightning, swift, unexpected, and destructive. His appearance will be as distinguishable from that of every false Christ, as lightning, which shines all round the hemisphere, is from a blaze of straw. What Bishop Pearce observes from Josephus is very memorable, that “the Roman army entered into Judea on the east side of it, and carried on their conquests westward, as if not only the extensiveness of the ruin, but the very route which the army would take, was intended in the comparison of the lightning coming out of the east, and shining even unto the west.” For wheresoever the carcass is, &c. — For though the coming of the Son of man shall be like lightning, swift, spreading, and destructive, yet he will not come personally; his servants only shall come, the Roman armies, who by his command shall destroy this nation as eagles devour their prey. Thus our Lord, after his usual manner, applies a proverbial expression with a particular meaning; and the Romans are very properly compared to eagles, both because eagles are the fiercest birds of prey, and because the Roman ensign was an eagle, to which probably our Lord alluded in this passage.
Barnes
The coming of the Son of man - It has been doubted whether this refers to the destruction of Jerusalem, or to the coming at the day of judgment. For the solution of this doubt let it be remarked:
1. that those two events are the principal scenes in which our Lord said he would come, either in person or in judgment.
2. that the destruction of Jerusalem is described as his coming, his act.
3. that these events - the judgment of Jerusalem and the final judgment in many respects greatly resemble each other.
4. that they "will bear," therefore, to be described in the same language; and,
5. therefore, that the same words often include both events, as properly described by them.
The words had, doubtless, a primary reference to the destruction of Jerusalem, but they had, at the same time, such an amplitude of meaning as also to express his coming to judgment.
Gill
and shineth even unto the west; to the western part of it, with great clearness; in a moment; in the twinkling of an eye, filling the whole intermediate space;
so shall also the coming of the son of man be;
which must be understood not of his last coming to judgment, though that will be sudden, visible, and universal; he will at once come to, and be seen by all, in the clouds of heaven, and not in deserts and secret chambers: nor of his spiritual coming in the more sudden, and clear, and powerful preaching of the Gospel all over the Gentile world; for this was to be done before the destruction of Jerusalem: but of his coming in his wrath and vengeance to destroy that people, their nation, city, and temple: so that after this to look for the Messiah in a desert, or secret chamber, must argue great stupidity and blindness; when his coming was as sudden, visible, powerful, and general, to the destruction of that nation, as the lightning that comes from the east, and, in a moment, shines to the west.
***HOWEVER,
what is interesting is that the passages in revelation 22 where Christ states "I am coming", the verb "I am coming" is present indicative active, and NOT future tense.
Notice, Paul uses future tense for "I will come", so by your argument, when Paul comes in the future, it will be speedily. Which I think is a possible understanding.
Philippians 2:24 and I trust in the Lord that I will come quickly.
However, Jesus states "I am coming" quickly, which is present tense. If quickly is to be understood as literal speedy, well 2,000 years isn't literally speedy.
revelation 22:7 “And behold, I am coming soon. Blessed is the one who keeps the words of the prophecy of this book.”
Your argument that they are different words is incorrect. They are the same word. Adjectives will typically match the gender of the word they are describing.
In the TR, "while" is neuter, thus "little" is mikron, which is also neuter.
In the mGNT, "while" is masculine, thus "little" is mikros, which is masculine
hebrews 10:37 (TR) For, “Yet a little (neuter) while (neuter), and the coming one will come and will not delay;
Hebrews 10:37 (CT): For, “Yet a little (masculine) while (masculine), and the coming one will come and will not delay;
Again, the word is the same, the only difference is the ending, which matches the gender of the word it is describing. So it is completely wrong to state they are different words. Therefore, your counter argument doesn't work.
I agree mikros/mikron = literally short. I believe both are literally short. I was simply stating it is more consistent for you, or any futurist, to argue they both mean the opposite of the definition.
its pretty inconsistent for you to argue that mikron/mikros is not literally short in hebrews 10:37 about Christ's coming, but is literally short in revelation 20:3 in regards to Satan's little season.