Not my Strongs. I have never used it. I read and understand the scripture. I read what Jesus said.
Ok, I see a problem.
You will look at history books in an attempt to resolve in your mind some time line, yet you do not take the scholarship of language experts when it comes to Scriptures?
Isn't that being a bit disingenuous?
It would seem taking first hand information from one(s) who make the study and teaching of original languages their carrier trumps "I read and understand the Scriptures" when reading leads to an error in understanding.
I am not multi-lingual. I leave that up to other family members, but if I read English correctly, even the word "generation" isn't limited to a select group of people, but all that are in the family.
Look at it from a practical perspective. A baby is a different age then a the parent. The parent is of a different age then their own parents. Now two points.
1) Do you see the word "age." Does it mean era, generation, race, or dispensation? It could be ANY of those.
2) If one takes your view, what generation would not die out? The parents, the young adults, the babies? There is over 100 years just in that grouping alone.
My own father was born in 1907. I was born later. So, if Christ had been speaking to us, would it have been my father or my "generation."
The time line approach as you desire to defend just is not as secure as imagined. It doesn't even survive the English test!
So, David, why not attend to the scholarship of those who actually do work and teach in the languages?
Futurists usually say that Dan 9 introduces the Antichrist. But of course it doesn't. The literal understanding is that it was fulfilled by the life, death and resurrection of Christ. In fact I have never met a futurist that doesn't believe the Antichrist is included here.
John states that there were MANY antichrists in his day.
So what is the point?
Your statement about the antichrist does not disprove anything of the "futurist" thinking. There have been and will be antichrists. Some will be renown, some in the neighborhood of which believers live.
Doesn't disprove that one day there will be a mighty powerful antichrist, just as John wrote about.
If you study history you will find that the Jews began to rebuild the temple in the second rebellion in the reign of Hadrian.
Oh my!
They DID NOT begin to "rebuild the temple." As far as they got was some money gathering and some per-planning.
For the readers who do not know here is some source information on-line.
HADRIAN - JewishEncyclopedia.com
The Bar-Kokhba Revolt 132-135 CE)