Paul describes in great detail what the NT temple is. Larry's mention of 1 Cor 3:16 is just one of many clues that reveal the
church as being the NT temple of God, of which Jesus Himself is the cornerstone, the apostles the foundations, and we the building blocks that have been added since. It is an entity that is constantly growing and developing, and within which is Christ the High Priest Himself in Spirit (the Light, Bread of Life, Altar of Incence/Mediator) and that which was in the Most Holy Place, The presence of the Father and His law. (See Hebrews 8:10). The real temple, built without hands, is in heaven where Christ in person officiates before the Father's throne. But on earth, the church is the temple, having within the spiritual manifestations of the literal, and it is in this temple that abomination of desolation is now being set up.
Satan is a wise crafty being, who is not going to waste time, energy, and effort in attacking a literal nation that already spurns any notion of Jesus being their Messiah. He already has them in his hands, and keeping them in a state of unbelief suits him fine. Nah, his focus is on the church. The deceptions Jesus warned about...the controversies...the false doctrines...the persecutions...the lethargy...the pride and sanctimoniousness...the idea that all is well and we have need of nothing...all these are leading the
church, not literal Israel, into a state of mind where acceptance of the counterfeit will be not just tolerated, but welcomed. The state of modern Israel, and Zionism, both Christian and Jewish, along with Islam, are but minor bit players in the great play unfolding in our lifetime. While the worlds attention driven by Satanic media is focusing on the negatives of these players making them loom large and inciting fear in many minds,
the real and present danger is being either ignored or being deceptively portrayed as our friend.
Jesus warned us to beware deception. But todays church is miserable, poor, blind, and naked. It is already deceived and doesn't know.
