Introduction: More Than Just History
Friends, I want to talk about something that shakes me to my core every time I study it. We all know about the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. We read about it in history books. We know the Roman legions under Titus came in, tore the city apart, and burned the magnificent Temple of Herod to the ground. It was a military, political, and cultural cataclysm that changed the world forever. It was brutal, a time of starvation, slaughter, and unimaginable horror. But what most of the history books won't tell you is what happened before the first Roman soldier ever set foot near the wall.
This wasn't just a military conquest. This was a prophetic and supernatural event. This was a judgment, foretold in chilling detail, and it was preceded by warnings so clear, so loud, and so terrifying that they were recorded not just by the Jewish people, but by their Roman conquerors.
You see, God does not bring judgment without warning. He is merciful. He is longsuffering. But He is also just. The prophet Amos tells us:
"Surely the Lord GOD will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets." (Amos 3:7 KJV)
Before the flood, He gave them Noah. Before the fall of Judah to Babylon, He gave them Jeremiah. And before the final desolation of Jerusalem in 70 A.D., He gave them... well, He gave them Jesus. And when His personal warning was rejected, He sent signs in the heavens and on the earth that defied all explanation.
These accounts are not fables. They come from credible, contemporary historians. We have the testimony of Flavius Josephus, a Jewish military commander who was an eyewitness to the war and wrote "The Wars of the Jews." We also have the account of Tacitus, a cynical and unflinching Roman historian who had no love for the Jews and no reason to invent supernatural tales on their behalf. When two opposing sources record the same impossible events, we have to stop and listen.
This is the story of a city that was warned. And it's a story that has powerful, chilling echoes for us today.
The Prophecies of Jesus Himself
Before we even get to the signs recorded by the historians, we have to start with the ultimate warning. The most direct, specific, and heartbreaking prophecies came from the lips of Jesus Christ Himself, decades before the event.
The disciples, in Matthew 24, were admiring the massive stones and glorious buildings of the Temple. It was the center of their world, their faith, and their national identity. It seemed as permanent as the mountains around it. And Jesus looked at them and said something that must have sounded like absolute madness:
"...Verily I say unto you, There shall not be left here one stone upon another, that shall not be thrown down." (Matthew 24:2 KJV)
Can you imagine hearing that? This wasn't just a building; it was God's house. Yet Jesus, standing right there, pronounced its complete and utter demolition. He went on to describe the exact conditions that would lead to it: wars, famines, pestilences, earthquakes, and false prophets. He warned them about the "abomination of desolation" and told them when they saw Jerusalem surrounded by armies, they needed to flee to the mountains. (Luke 21:20).
But He also specifically prophesied the very kind of supernatural signs we're about to discuss. In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus warns:
"...and fearful sights and great signs shall there be from heaven." (Luke 21:11 KJV)
He told them it was coming. He warned them what to look for. The people had the living Word of God walking among them, telling them exactly what was about to happen. His prophetic words are the foundation for understanding the signs that followed. His rejection was the reason for the judgment; the signs that followed were the final, merciful alarms before the fire.
Five Astonishing Signs of Impending Judgment
With the words of Jesus as our backdrop, let's look at the "fearful sights and great signs from heaven" that were recorded for history. These are the five most profound omens that foretold Jerusalem's fall.
1. Armies in the Clouds
This is perhaps the most spectacular and terrifying omen. Both Josephus and Tacitus record this. It wasn't a localized vision seen by one or two "mystics." It was a mass sighting, witnessed by people all across the land of Judea. Sometime before the war fully erupted, just before sunset, people looked up and were frozen in terror.
Josephus describes it this way in his "Wars of the Jews":
"...before sun-setting, chariots and troops of soldiers in their armor were seen running about among the clouds, and surrounding of cities."
Let that sink in. Not just shapes in the clouds, but a clear vision of armies. Chariots. Soldiers in armor. And they weren't just passing by; they were "running about" and "surrounding of cities." It was a direct, spiritual pre-enactment of the Roman siege that was to come. It was a heavenly declaration of war. Tacitus, the Roman, confirms it in his "Histories," writing of "hosts joining battle in the skies, the fiery gleam of arms."
This was a supernatural event. Today, people try to explain it away as a complex mirage, a "fata morgana." Others, in our modern context, might even point to it as some kind of UFO or interdimensional event. But those in the first century knew exactly what they were seeing. It was a sign from God. It was the spiritual realm breaking through into the physical, showing them the very judgment Jesus had promised: "Jerusalem compassed with armies." He just didn't say they would be on the ground first.
2. The Temple Foretold Its Own Demise
If the signs in the sky weren't clear enough, the Temple itself began to cry out. The very epicenter of Jewish spiritual life became the stage for a series of horrifying and inexplicable events, as if the holy sanctuary knew its own desecration was at hand.
First, there was the gate. The massive eastern gate of the Temple's inner court was a marvel of engineering, made of solid brass. Josephus records that it was so heavy it took twenty men to heave it shut and bolt it every night. One evening, around midnight, the priests and Temple watchmen were stunned to find the colossal gate had swung open entirely on its own. They ran and told their superiors. The "men of learning," the scribes and leaders, understood this was no accident. They interpreted it as a terrifying sign that the Temple's security was gone and that its gates were being supernaturally opened to its enemies.
Second, there was the light. During one of the holy feasts, in the dead of night, a brilliant light suddenly erupted around the altar and the sanctuary. It wasn't a fire; it was a pure, divine-style light, so bright that for half an hour, the Temple was illuminated as if it were broad daylight. Again, the leaders didn't see this as a blessing. They saw it as a warning, a final, "fearful sight" meant to get their attention.
Most chilling of all was the voice. At the feast of Pentecost, as the priests were performing their nightly duties in the inner court, they first felt a quaking, a tremor in the ground. Then they heard a great, rushing noise. This was followed by a sound that Josephus describes as a great multitude of voices, all crying out in unison one phrase: "Let us remove hence."
Tacitus records the same event: "a voice of more than mortal tone was heard to cry that the Gods were departing."
This gives me chills. This is the "Ichabod" moment... "the glory has departed." This is a terrifying parallel to the prophet Ezekiel's vision, generations earlier, when he watched the glory of the Lord literally lift up from the first Temple and depart from the city because of its sin (Ezekiel 10). Now, it was happening again. The spiritual guardians, the angelic protection, the very presence of God that had inhabited that holy place, were announcing their departure. The Temple was being left empty, a hollow shell, vulnerable to the physical destruction that would soon follow. God was moving out.
3. The Impossible Omen: A Heifer and a Lamb
Of all the signs, this one is perhaps the most symbolically profound. It's a biological impossibility, an undeniable miracle that screamed a specific theological message.
As recorded by Josephus, during one of the festivals, a priest was leading a heifer to the altar to be sacrificed. This was a normal part of the Temple ritual. But in the middle of the Temple court, in full view of everyone, the cow stopped and went into labor. What happened next was shocking. The heifer did not give birth to a calf.
It gave birth to a lamb.
A cow giving birth to a lamb is a complete perversion of nature. It cannot happen. But it did. And the spiritual significance was deafening. The Temple system was built on prescribed sacrifices... a bullock for this, a goat for that. The heifer itself was on its way to be sacrificed according to the old Law. But in its place, a lamb appeared... the ultimate sacrificial animal. The symbol of innocence, atonement, and the Passover.
This was God supernaturally screaming at them: "Your sacrifices are over! Your rituals are empty! The true Lamb has already come!"
Decades earlier, John the Baptist had pointed at Jesus and declared, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." (John 1:29 KJV). Jesus, the final and perfect sacrifice, had been offered. This supernatural birth in the Temple court was a surreal, divine sign that the old system was finished. The sacrifice of a heifer was now pointless, because God Himself had provided the Lamb. They were still trying to sacrifice bulls and goats, and God sent them a sign that the age of the Lamb had come, and they had missed it.
4. The Forty-Year Warning
While the most dramatic signs appeared just before the war, other sources tell us the warnings had been accumulating for decades. The Jewish Talmud, compiled centuries later but recording ancient traditions, suggests that the "check engine light" for the Temple had been on for 40 years.
Think about that. 40 years. In the Bible, 40 is always the number of testing, probation, and trial. The rain fell for 40 days. Moses was on the mount 40 days. Israel wandered for 40 years. Jesus was tempted for 40 days. And here, we see a 40-year period of warning leading up to 70 A.D.
Now, do the math. If the destruction was in 70 A.D., what happened 40 years earlier, around 30 A.D.?
The crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus Christ.
This is the spiritual linchpin of the whole event. The moment the veil of the Temple was torn from top to bottom, the 40-year clock of judgment started ticking. That was the "point of demarcation." That was when the old covenant was fulfilled and the new was established in His blood. The Talmud records that for this 40-year period, several key miracles associated with the Day of Atonement... stopped.
For example, a scarlet thread tied to the sanctuary door, which according to tradition miraculously turned white if God had forgiven the people's sins, reportedly stopped turning white for those 40 years. For 40 years in a row, the sign of forgiveness was absent. It remained blood-red.
This wasn't a sudden judgment. This was a 40-year grace period. A 40-year opportunity for the nation to recognize the true Lamb and the new covenant. It was 40 years of God's mercy, patience, and persistent warning... all of which were ignored.
5. The Human Prophet Who Cried "Woe!"
Amidst the heavenly armies and the impossible omens, God sent one final, haunting, human warning. This story, told by Josephus, is just tragic. Four years before the war began, while Jerusalem was still at peace and prosperous, a simple farmer named Jesus, son of Ananias, came to the city for a feast.
Suddenly, as if seized by a spirit, he began to walk the streets and alleys of the city, crying out, day and night, an unceasing, terrifying lament: "A voice from the east, a voice from the west, a voice from the four winds, a voice against Jerusalem and the holy house, a voice against the bridegrooms and the brides, and a voice against this whole people!"
The people were incensed. This was bad for business. It was treasonous. They arrested him and had him severely beaten. But he never defended himself. He never asked for mercy. The Roman authorities then took him and had him whipped until his bones were laid bare. He shed no tears. He begged for nothing. To each lash, his only reply was the same mournful cry, "Woe, woe to Jerusalem!" The Roman procurator, Albinus, finally just let him go, deeming him a madman. For seven years and five months, this man... this human echo of the prophet Jeremiah... never stopped his melancholy prophecy. He was a living, breathing sermon of the coming doom.
His wailing finally ceased at the climax of the Roman siege. As he was making his rounds on the city wall, he cried out with all his strength, "Woe, woe to the city again, and to the people, and to the holy house!" Then, he added a final, personal cry: "Woe, woe to myself also!"
At that exact moment, a stone slung from a Roman siege engine struck and killed him instantly. His prophecy was fulfilled, and his painful work was done. A man named Jesus (Yeshua... "Salvation") became the final voice of "Woe."
Personal Reflections: What Does This Mean for Us Today?
So why are we talking about this? Is this just a fascinating, spooky history lesson? No. Friends, this is a pattern. This is a case study in how God deals with nations and with people. And the echoes for our own time are deafening.
We look at our world and see things that defy explanation. People are seeing strange things in the sky... call them UFOs, UAPs, whatever you want, the "armies in the clouds" phenomenon is back in the headlines. We see our own institutions, even our churches, where it feels like the "glory is departing." We see a world desperately trying to find meaning in its own sacrifices, its own rituals, its own good works, all while rejecting the one true Lamb, Jesus Christ.
Are we in our own 40-year period of warning? Are we ignoring the prophets God is sending? Are we calling the voices crying "Woe!" madmen? These signs were not subtle. They were loud, supernatural, and undeniable. They were God's mercy, giving His people one last chance to turn around, to wake up, before it was too late.
The question for us is, are we awake? Are we listening? Or are we like the populace in Jerusalem, seeing the open gate and the bright light and trying to twist it into a "happy prodigy" while the "men of learning" tremble?
Biblical References and the Ultimate Warning
The entire event is a terrifying confirmation of the words of Jesus in Matthew 24. But it also serves as a stark illustration of a principle laid out in the book of Hebrews, written to those very people in that very time period:
"For if we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, But a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries." (Hebrews 10:26-27 KJV)
The people of Jerusalem had "received the knowledge of the truth." Jesus Christ Himself had walked their streets, taught in their Temple, and performed miracles. They had the ultimate truth. But as a whole, the nation wilfully rejected Him. And as Hebrews warns, there was "no more sacrifice for sins" left for them... not in their Temple, not with their cows and goats. The only thing that remained was exactly what they got: "a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation."
Conclusion and Call to Action
The fall of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. is not just ancient history. It is a prophetic, supernatural, and terrifying lesson written in blood and fire. It teaches us that God is real. The spiritual world is real. Prophecy is real. And judgment is real.
But it also teaches us that God's mercy is real. He does not desire judgment. He warns. He pleads. He sends signs in the heavens, omens on the earth, and prophets in the streets. He gives us 40-year grace periods. He gives us every possible chance to see the truth.
The truth then is the same as the truth now. The only security, the only gate that leads to safety, the only true sacrifice for sin is the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ. All the armies in heaven and earth cannot save a soul or a city that has rejected Him.
Are you listening to the warnings? Are you seeing the signs of the times? Don't be like the people who ignored the alarms until the stones started to fall. The call today is the same as it was then: repent, and believe the gospel. Your only refuge is in Jesus.
I want to know what you think. Do you see parallels to our world today? What signs do you see that people are ignoring? Let me know in the comments below. And if this message resonates with you, please share it, and be sure to check out my other posts and podcast episodes at ConradRocks.Net. Thank you for reading, and God bless.
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