Jesus’
Two Prophetic Declarations and the Meaning of AD 70
Introduction: The Temple That Disappeared
For nearly a thousand years the temple stood at the center of Israel’s life with God. Every sacrifice, every priestly duty, and every major feast revolved around it. The temple was not merely a religious building; it was the heart of the covenant itself—the place where God’s presence dwelt among His people and where atonement for sin was offered day after day.
Then, in AD 70, it was gone.
The Roman army destroyed Jerusalem and the temple with it. The daily sacrifices stopped. The priesthood collapsed, the Levitical records destroyed. The system that had defined Israel’s worship for centuries disappeared almost overnight.
What is striking is that this collapse had been predicted decades earlier—not by political observers, but by Jesus of Nazareth.
During His ministry Jesus made two startling declarations about the temple. In one moment He claimed that if His enemies destroyed “this temple,” He would raise it again in three days. In another, He warned that the temple in Jerusalem would soon be torn down so completely that not one stone would remain upon another.
The first statement came early in His ministry when He drove merchants out of the temple courts. When the religious leaders demanded a sign to justify His actions, Jesus answered: “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.”¹
The second statement came near the end of Jesus’ ministry. As He and His disciples were leaving the temple, they admired the size and beauty of the buildings. Jesus responded with a shocking prediction: “Truly I say to you, not one stone here will be left upon another that will not be thrown down.”2
At first these statements seem unrelated. One speaks about restoration, the other about destruction. Yet when read together they reveal a single prophetic message.
The temple would fall because its purpose had already been fulfilled.
The destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 was not simply a political disaster. It marked the end of the old covenant temple system and confirmed the claim Jesus had made from the beginning—that the true temple was no longer a building of stone, but the risen King Himself.
What makes these declarations even more significant is that they are not isolated statements. They form part of a larger prophetic pattern that reaches back into the Old Testament. When Jesus spoke about the destruction of the temple, He directly referred to the prophet Daniel, who had foretold a time when the “daily sacrifice” would be taken away and a decisive crisis would come upon Jerusalem.3 At the same time, Jesus’ statement about raising the temple in three days pointed to His own death and resurrection—the event that would fulfill the sacrificial system the temple represented. In other words, the end of the temple and the resurrection of Christ belong to the same unfolding story. One marks the fulfillment of the old covenant system; the other establishes the new covenant reality. The temple did not simply disappear from history. It passed away because the greater temple—the risen Messiah—had taken its place.
Therefore, to understand the meaning of the temple’s
destruction, we must begin with the King who claimed to replace it.
The Temple in Israel’s Life
To understand the significance of Jesus’ words, we must first understand the role the temple played in Israel’s life.
The temple in Jerusalem was far more than an impressive building. It was the center of Israel’s religious life and the symbol of God’s presence among His people.
Inside the temple complex sacrifices were offered every day. Priests served on behalf of the people. The great festivals of Passover, Pentecost, and Tabernacles drew pilgrims from across the nation. In short, the temple was the heart of Israel’s covenant worship.
Because of this, any
statement about the temple carried enormous meaning.
Genealogical Records and the Temple System
Closely connected to the temple system were the genealogical records that preserved Israel’s tribal identities. These records were especially important for the priesthood. According to the Law of Moses, only descendants of Aaron from the tribe of Levi were permitted to serve as priests. Because of this requirement, careful records of family lineage were maintained in order to verify priestly descent.
Evidence for these records appears both in Scripture and in ancient historical writings. After the Babylonian exile, for example, some families claimed priestly status but were unable to prove their lineage. As a result, they were excluded from serving in the temple until their ancestry could be confirmed.a This shows that priestly service required official genealogical documentation.
The first-century Jewish historian Josephus also mentions such records. Writing about his own background, he explains that he could trace his priestly ancestry through publicly preserved genealogies.b These records were carefully maintained because the functioning of the temple system depended on them.
When Jerusalem and the temple were destroyed by the Romans in AD 70, this system collapsed. The temple itself was burned, the priesthood was scattered, and the genealogical archives connected to temple administration were likely destroyed as well. Without these records, it became nearly impossible to verify priestly descent according to the requirements of the Mosaic Law.
This historical reality has an interesting implication for the New Testament. The Gospels of Matthew and Luke preserve genealogies tracing the lineage of Jesus back through Israel’s history—one through Abraham and David, the other all the way to Adam.c These genealogies may represent some of the last preserved records of Israel’s tribal lines before the destruction of Jerusalem.
After AD 70, such genealogical verification appears to have disappeared. The priesthood described in the Law of Moses could no longer be re-established in its original form because the records required to confirm it were gone.
This development underscores the significance of the
transition taking place in the New Testament. As the temple system passed away,
the focus of worship and mediation shifted away from hereditary priesthood and
toward the risen Christ, whom the New Testament presents as the final and
greater High Priest.d
Jesus as the True Temple
When Jesus said, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up,” His hearers thought He was speaking about the physical temple building. That structure had been under construction for decades and was one of the most impressive buildings in the ancient world.
But John explains that Jesus was speaking about His own body.⁴
This statement reveals something profound. Jesus was identifying Himself as the true temple.
Throughout the Old Testament, the temple represented the place where heaven and earth met—where God’s presence dwelt among His people. But in the Gospel of John, Jesus Himself becomes the place where God and humanity meet.
The Greek word translated “dwelt” literally means “tabernacled.” It suggests the idea of God’s presence dwelling among His people just as it had in the tabernacle and later the temple.
Jesus was therefore claiming that the presence of God was now found in Him.
When His enemies destroyed His body on the cross, He would
raise it again three days later. The resurrection would confirm that the true
temple was not a building made of stone but the living Christ.
The Prediction of the Temple’s Destruction
Near the end of His ministry, Jesus made a second statement about the temple. After leaving the temple courts, He told His disciples that the entire complex would be destroyed.
This prophecy was fulfilled in AD 70 when the Roman army under General Titus destroyed Jerusalem during a Jewish revolt.
The Jewish historian Josephus describes the devastation in detail. The temple was burned and dismantled so thoroughly that much of it was left in ruins.⁶
Within about forty years of Jesus’ ministry, the temple and
its sacrificial system were gone.
Why the Temple System Came to an End
The destruction of the temple was not simply a political disaster. It also carried deep theological meaning.
The New Testament teaches that the sacrifices offered in the temple pointed forward to the sacrifice of Christ.
The book of Hebrews explains that Jesus offered Himself as a sacrifice “once for all.”⁸ Unlike the repeated animal sacrifices offered in the temple, Christ’s sacrifice fully accomplished forgiveness of sins.
Hebrews concludes:
If Christ’s sacrifice truly completed the work of atonement, then the continuation of the temple sacrifices would no longer serve their original purpose.
The destruction of the temple therefore confirmed what the
cross had already accomplished.
Daniel and the End of the Daily Sacrifice
Centuries before the time of Jesus, the prophet Daniel spoke about a future moment when the regular temple sacrifices would cease.
The “regular sacrifice” refers to the daily offerings made in the temple.
Jesus later referred directly to this prophecy when describing the coming destruction of Jerusalem.¹¹ During the Roman siege of the city, the daily sacrifices eventually stopped. Shortly afterward the temple itself was destroyed.
In this way, Daniel’s prophecy and Jesus’ warning both
pointed toward the same historical turning point.
A New Temple and a New Covenant Community
The New Testament goes even further. It teaches that believers themselves become part of God’s temple.
Peter uses similar language when he describes believers as “living stones” being built into a spiritual house.¹³
The center of worship was no longer a building in Jerusalem.
It became a community of people united to Christ and filled with the Spirit.
The Meaning of AD 70
When we place these events together, a clear pattern emerges.
First, Jesus declared that His own body was the true temple that would be raised after three days.
Second, He predicted the destruction of the Jerusalem temple.
History confirmed both declarations. The resurrection established the new temple, and the destruction of Jerusalem removed the old one.
The sacrificial system ended because the final sacrifice had
already been offered.
Conclusion
Jesus’ two statements about the temple frame one of the most important transitions in biblical history.
The temple made with human hands once stood at the center of Israel’s worship. But Jesus declared that something greater had arrived.
Through His death and resurrection, He became the true meeting place between God and humanity. The sacrifices of the old covenant found their fulfillment in Him.
When the temple in Jerusalem was destroyed in AD 70, it did not mark the failure of God’s plan. Instead, it confirmed that the work of Christ had already accomplished what the temple system had pointed toward for centuries. The temple of stone had passed away. The living temple—the risen King and His people—remains.
When these passages are read together, a coherent pattern emerges. Jesus declared that His own body was the true temple that would rise again after three days (John 2:19–21). He also warned that the physical temple in Jerusalem would soon be destroyed within that generation (Matt. 24:2, 34). Daniel had long before spoken of a time when the regular temple sacrifice would be taken away (Dan. 12:11). History records that this is exactly what happened during the Roman destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. The daily sacrifices ceased, the temple was burned, and the system that had defined Israel’s worship for centuries came to an end. Yet the New Testament had already explained why this would happen. The sacrifices of the temple were never meant to be permanent; they pointed forward to the once-for-all sacrifice of Christ. As the book of Hebrews declares, “by one offering He has perfected for all time those who are being sanctified.”14 The temple fell because its purpose had been fulfilled. The shadow gave way to the reality. The sacrifice was complete, the true temple had risen, and the covenant promises now stood centered in the risen Messiah rather than in a building of stone.
Endnotes:
- John 2:19 (ESV).
- Matthew 24:2.
- Dan. 12:11; cf. Matt. 24:15
- John 2:21–22.
- John 1:14.
- Flavius Josephus, The Jewish War, 6.4–5.
- Matthew 24:34.
- Hebrews 10:10.
- Hebrews 10:18.
- Daniel 12:11.
- Matthew 24:15.
- 1 Corinthians 3:16.
- 1 Peter 2:5.
- Heb. 10:14; cf. Heb. 9:11–12, 10:18.
Additional Notes
a. Ezra
2:62; cf. Neh. 7:64.
b. Josephus, Life, 1.
c. Matt. 1:1–17; Luke 3:23–38.
d. Heb. 7:23–28; 8:1–6.