The value of Jesus' Words is for everyone from when He spoke them, until now and until He Returns.
The Bible is interesting that way. Isaiah may have been speaking to Babylon directly, but the record is preserved to benefit all who read it, long after the prophecy has been fulfilled. But I'm talking about who the Olivet Discourse specifically addressed--not about who all can benefit from the lessons contained in it.
Jesus was speaking to his disciples about the nation of Israel. That is who he was instructing specifically. Those who benefit much later in time, who were not being specifically addressed, may benefit from the moral and spiritual lessons.
I don't know how you can miss this? Jesus specifically spoke to his disciples and referred to them as "you." This isn't you or me, but the disciples of Jesus at that time.
And when Jesus spoke of the desolation to be experienced by Jerusalem in their generation, he referred to it as Israel's punishment. This wasn't the US, New Zealand, Australia, or the UK--this was Israel.
All nations who have become Christian may experience a parallel reality, and we, as Christians, may benefit from this message. But it was not directed at us, no.
Only the first 2 verses apply to the Temple. All the rest is after that and they apply to our time.
I find that absurd. A major prophecy like the destruction of the temple and Jewish religion, as well as their covenant with God, would not be brushed aside to talk exclusively about the Coming of the Son of Man, who will come on an unpredictable date!
It makes much more sense to me to see that Jesus directly answered the question, "When will this happen?" That is, when will the temple fall?
So Jesus gave a list of things to be experienced by his generation--things he called "birth pangs." They indicated Israel's sin and their deserving of the punishment to come. They experienced famine and earthquake, and heard of warfare and saw it approach.
Then they would see "all these things" in that very generation, particularly because they deserved it, having rejected their Messiah. To sandwich in information about the coming of Messiah was meant only to show the unpredictable nature of God's judgments so that people rely on godly living rather than on prognostications and worldly preparations.
Circular reasoning, 40 years after the OD, the Temple was destroyed, but the rest of His prophecy is either still being fulfilled or awaits fulfilment.
That isn't circular reasoning. Jesus said the main subject would be fulfilled, ie the birth pangs and the fall of Jerusalem. But he also said this would lead to a long Jewish punishment in exile. Where is the circular reasoning in that?
Jesus also said there would be cosmic signs. Not happened yet.
You're saying there were no heavenly signs back in the time of Jesus? You have no idea! Your statement is predicated upon a limb you've chosen to climb out on, the belief that "cosmic signs" translates into your solar flare fixation.
Don't get me wrong. There may be God-made or man-made disruptions of our electrical systems. But fixing ourselves on this as a major and necessary thing to prepare for as a matter of prophecy is your insertion, and not a biblical recipe for preparation for the Kingdom of God. Godly living is the main message here.
Yes, Christians throughout the age, have been told to be ready, it is our hope and our promise. It hasn't happened yet, but it will surely come. Are you ready now?
Don't be silly. You already know I'm a Christian. But you sadly think preparation is something less than spiritual preparation. You think it's some kind of intellectual awareness of prophecy being fulfilled, and taking note of the fact a great solar flare is coming, or a meteor, or an earthquake, or Armageddon itself. The only thing we need for salvation is life in Christ.