Are you saying that Jesus lied? I don't understand your argument.
Okay. Jesus existed. I will grant that. I won't get sucked into an
atheist/fundamentalist/Christian mainstream argument. Jesus existed.
Historians are pretty confident about that.
The four Gospel accounts in the Bible (and most of the ones that are not
in the Bible) were ALL written after 70 C.E.
Followers of the Yahweh faith that became Christians knew that all the
Yahweh faiths, the one that became modern Judaism and the one that
became modern Christianity and any others that died off, focused on the
Temple in Jerusalem. They needed to get their people to see that the
end of the temple was not the end of their faith.
We will focus on how the "Christians" did it.
They wrote their Gospel accounts and decided that Jesus would focus
his life on the religion that included the temple, but would prophetically
announce it's destruction. Little Boy Jesus visits the temple. Jesus
throws the money-changers out of the temple. The kicker is where the
disciples say, "Look at the marvelous temple." Jesus answers that
"not a stone will be left upon a stone." Even that wasn't true, there were
some stones on stones and a section of wall standing. But it was very
poetic and easier to remember than "The temple will be torn down."
The Gospels were written in such a way to highlight that worship can
continue without the temple, for indeed, the temple was already gone and
the people were devastated. So the Gospels added what would take the
place of the temple- Jesus' own body would be that temple.
Jesus isn't the one that lied to you, friend. The great authors/editors that
founded the Way or Christianity lied to you. These are the ones who chose
the four Gospels and rejected all others.
Jesus may or may not have said, "The temple is not needed to worship the
Father. All who worship worship with spirit and truth" or some things along
those lines, but it was a post-temple destruction author that told you all that
stuff about a great tribulation and the conclusion of the (very Israelite) system
of things. Even those authors had no intent to extend the prophecy they gave
to Jesus to 2000 years later.