Due to haste, I don't have time to cite texts, but perhaps others can do that for me, assuming I don't get a chance to do later on this evening. But Jesus, when asked about his second coming and of the conclusion of the system of things, he listed a series of portents as we all know, which concluded with multiple celestial phenomena, which according to him, were to be visible to all, just like lighting from one end of the sky to the other.
He then said that "THIS GENERATION", referring to HIS generation of THAT time, would by no means pass away? How do we know this? In every other instance in the New Testament when Jesus uses the expression "this generation", 100% of the time he is referring to the "wicked generation of his time". He was referring to his contemporaries.
How else do we know Jesus meant for his words to apply to his immediate generation? Consider the following: Again, I don't have the texts, but am writing from memory:
- He said his disciples would by no means complete the circut of Judea and Samaria before his return
- He said some of his disciples then living would by no means taste death, indicating that the rapture would take place in the 1st century
- He told one of the Jewish religious leaders that HE PERSONALLY would witness his return as a Heavenly King
Judging by the Apostolic epistles of the 1st century, it would also seem that 1st century Christians were expecting his second coming as something imminent. "All the more so as we behold the day drawing nearer", and I'm sure there are more scriptures I can't remember at the moment which indicate a sense of urgent expectation.
I think Christians in the following centuries suffered a big let down when the prophecies failed to come true, so they began to rationalize them away as "misunderstandings" or errors in interpretation, very much like the Watchtower's copyrighted term of "new light". They eventually gave up on preaching the "Kingdom" and began to look within, as the church being the representation of God's kingdom on earth. This is remarkably similar to what the Watchtower says about their "Christian Congregation". Having grown weary of waiting for "Paradise" decade after decade, generation after generation, they have begun to console themselves with the idea that they're already in Paradise. The organization is likened to a "spiritual paradise".
Watchtower has also resurrected the idea of the second coming being iminent long after most of Christianity had entirely given up on defending the failed prophecies and discarded the idea all together.
Can any Christian honestly look at the prophecies of Jesus objectively, without attempting to twist their meaning, and sincerely say his prophecies did not go unfullfilled?