Commentary
Prompted by a disciple’s admiration for the temple, Jesus predicts its complete ruin and answers a private question about when “these things” will happen and what sign will mark their approach. He distinguishes early disturbances from the decisive crisis, warns against deception and panic, describes persecution as a setting for witness, and identifies the abomination of desolation as the signal for urgent flight in Judea. From there the discourse opens onto the public coming of the Son of Man and the gathering of his elect. It ends by holding together two truths: Jesus’ words are certain, yet the exact day and hour remain unknown, so the fitting response is watchful endurance rather than speculation.
Jesus teaches his disciples how to read approaching upheaval without being deceived: the temple will fall, tribulation and false claimants will intensify, the Son of Man will appear openly in glory, and because the exact day is hidden, disciples must answer the crisis with vigilance, endurance, and faithful readiness rather than date-setting.
13:1 Now as Jesus was going out of the temple courts, one of his disciples said to him, "Teacher, look at these tremendous stones and buildings!" 13:2 Jesus said to him, "Do you see these great buildings? Not one stone will be left on another. All will be torn down!" 13:3 So while he was sitting on the Mount of Olives opposite the temple, Peter, James, John, and Andrew asked him privately, 13:4 "Tell us, when will these things happen? And what will be the sign that all these things are about to take place?" 13:5 Jesus began to say to them, "Watch out that no one misleads you. 13:6 Many will come in my name, saying, 'I am he,' and they will mislead many. 13:7 When you hear of wars and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed. These things must happen, but the end is still to come. 13:8 For nation will rise up in arms against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There will be earthquakes in various places, and there will be famines. These are but the beginning of birth pains. 13:9 "You must watch out for yourselves. You will be handed over to councils and beaten in the synagogues. You will stand before governors and kings because of me, as a witness to them. 13:10 First the gospel must be preached to all nations. 13:11 When they arrest you and hand you over for trial, do not worry about what to speak. But say whatever is given you at that time, for it is not you speaking, but the Holy Spirit. 13:12 Brother will hand over brother to death, and a father his child. Children will rise against parents and have them put to death. 13:13 You will be hated by everyone because of my name. But the one who endures to the end will be saved. 13:14 "But when you see the abomination of desolation standing where it should not be (let the reader understand), then those in Judea must flee to the mountains. 13:15 The one on the roof must not come down or go inside to take anything out of his house. 13:16 The one in the field must not turn back to get his cloak. 13:17 Woe to those who are pregnant and to those who are nursing their babies in those days! 13:18 Pray that it may not be in winter. 13:19 For in those days there will be suffering unlike anything that has happened from the beginning of the creation that God created until now, or ever will happen. 13:20 And if the Lord had not cut short those days, no one would be saved. But because of the elect, whom he chose, he has cut them short. 13:21 Then if anyone says to you, 'Look, here is the Christ!' or 'Look, there he is!' do not believe him. 13:22 For false messiahs and false prophets will appear and perform signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, the elect. 13:23 Be careful! I have told you everything ahead of time. 13:24 "But in those days, after that suffering, the sun will be darkened and the moon will not give its light; 13:25 the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken. 13:26 Then everyone will see the Son of Man arriving in the clouds with great power and glory. 13:27 Then he will send angels and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of heaven. 13:28 "Learn this parable from the fig tree: Whenever its branch becomes tender and puts out its leaves, you know that summer is near. 13:29 So also you, when you see these things happening, know that he is near, right at the door. 13:30 I tell you the truth, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place. 13:31 Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away. 13:32 "But as for that day or hour no one knows it - neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son - except the Father. 13:33 Watch out! Stay alert! For you do not know when the time will come. 13:34 It is like a man going on a journey. He left his house and put his slaves in charge, assigning to each his work, and commanded the doorkeeper to stay alert. 13:35 Stay alert, then, because you do not know when the owner of the house will return - whether during evening, at midnight, when the rooster crows, or at dawn - 13:36 or else he might find you asleep when he returns suddenly. 13:37 What I say to you I say to everyone: Stay alert!"
Observation notes
- The discourse is occasioned by the temple itself; Jesus’ answer cannot be detached from the prediction of the temple’s destruction in 13:2.
- The disciples ask about “these things” and the “sign” that “all these things” are about to be accomplished, so repeated references to “these things” are a major discourse thread.
- Warnings against deception bracket major sections: 13:5-6 opens with false claimants, 13:21-23 returns to false messiahs and false prophets, and both sections use imperative caution.
- Jesus distinguishes early turmoil from the end by saying wars and upheavals “must happen, but the end is still to come,” preventing a simplistic equation of crisis with consummation.
- The metaphor “beginning of birth pains” marks preliminary events as real but not final.
- Persecution is not treated as accidental; it becomes a setting for witness “because of me,” with the Holy Spirit supplying speech in trial.
- The statement that the gospel “must be preached to all nations” is embedded within persecution material, linking mission with suffering rather than with ease.
- The command to flee in 13:14-18 is regionally specific to Judea and marked by practical urgency, unlike a generalized spiritual warning detached from place and circumstance.
- The parenthetical “let the reader understand” suggests Mark expects attentive interpretation of Jesus’ allusion and may indicate the discourse addresses readers beyond the original four disciples.
- The tribulation language in 13:19 is deliberately extreme, but 13:20 immediately frames survival in terms of the Lord’s merciful shortening of those days for the sake of the elect.
- The coming of the Son of Man in 13:26 is public and cosmic, not secretive; this directly counters deceptive “look, here he is” claims in 13:21.
- The fig tree saying uses observable signs to teach nearness, yet 13:32 denies knowledge of the exact day or hour; discernment and ignorance are both maintained.
- Jesus’ declaration that even the Son does not know the day or hour heightens the force of the exhortation to watchfulness and resists speculative certainty.
- The closing parable shifts from cosmic events to household responsibility, making readiness practical: each servant has assigned work, and the danger is being found asleep.
Structure
- 13:1-4: Departure from the temple leads to Jesus’ prediction of its complete demolition and the disciples’ two-part private question about timing and sign.
- 13:5-8: Jesus begins with prohibitions against deception and alarm; wars, earthquakes, and famines are not yet the end but the beginning of birth pains.
- 13:9-13: The focus narrows to the disciples’ experience of persecution, Spirit-enabled witness, worldwide gospel proclamation, familial betrayal, and the necessity of endurance.
- 13:14-23: The appearance of the abomination of desolation becomes the concrete trigger for urgent flight in Judea; unparalleled distress, divine shortening of the days, and renewed warning against false deliverers follow.
- 13:24-27: After that tribulation, cosmic disturbance introduces the visible coming of the Son of Man in glory and the angelic gathering of the elect.
- 13:28-31: The fig tree analogy teaches discernment of nearness; Jesus then affirms the certainty of fulfillment, the temporal statement about “this generation,” and the permanence of his words over against heaven and earth passing away themselves to exercise vigilance; Jesus’ final word universalizes the command: “Stay alert.
Key terms
planao
Strong's: G4105
Gloss: lead astray, deceive
Deception, not mere ignorance, is a controlling danger in the discourse; the passage is designed to produce discernment rather than fascination with signs.
telos
Strong's: G5056
Gloss: end, consummation
The term prevents premature identification of preliminary upheavals with the final consummation.
odin
Strong's: G5604
Gloss: labor pain
The image conveys escalation and coming crisis, yet also indicates that early pains are not the final arrival itself.
euangelion
Strong's: G2098
Gloss: good news
Mission is integral to Jesus’ eschatological outlook; suffering does not suspend proclamation.
hypomeno
Strong's: G5278
Gloss: remain, endure, persevere
Perseverance is presented as necessary in the face of hatred and betrayal, which fits the passage’s warning-and-endurance logic.
bdelygma tes eremoseos
Strong's: G946, G2050
Gloss: detestable thing causing desolation
The phrase ties the discourse to Danielic imagery and marks a decisive intensification beyond general turmoil.
Syntactical features
Imperative chain of vigilance
Textual signal: “Watch out” (13:5), “You must watch out for yourselves” (13:9), “Be careful” (13:23), “Watch out! Stay alert!” (13:33), “Stay alert” (13:35, 37)
Interpretive effect: The discourse is structured less as a timetable than as a sustained call to guardedness, discernment, and readiness.
Adversative progression from preliminary to climactic events
Textual signal: “but the end is still to come” (13:7), “But when you see...” (13:14), “But in those days, after that suffering...” (13:24), “But as for that day or hour...” (13:32)
Interpretive effect: These turns mark major transitions and show that Jesus distinguishes stages rather than collapsing all events into a single undifferentiated moment.
Universal negative with exception
Textual signal: “no one knows it—neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son—except the Father” (13:32)
Interpretive effect: The syntax maximizes the limitation on creaturely and incarnational knowledge of the precise time, making date-setting incompatible with the discourse’s plain force.
Comparative parable of household stewardship
Textual signal: “It is like a man going on a journey...” (13:34)
Interpretive effect: The final comparison translates eschatological uncertainty into ethical responsibility: waiting means faithful execution of assigned duty, not passive speculation.
Textual critical issues
Expanded wording in 13:14
Variants: Some witnesses expand the phrase to read more explicitly “the abomination of desolation spoken of by Daniel the prophet standing where he ought not,” while shorter readings omit some of that expansion.
Preferred reading: The shorter wording represented in most modern critical texts.
Interpretive effect: The shorter reading still clearly evokes Daniel, especially with the parenthetical aside, but avoids a likely scribal harmonization toward Matthew’s fuller wording.
Rationale: The expanded form appears secondary and assimilation-prone; the shorter form better explains the rise of fuller clarifying readings.
Prayer request in 13:18
Variants: Some manuscripts read “pray that it may not happen in winter,” while others expand to “in winter or on a Sabbath.”
Preferred reading: “Pray that it may not be in winter.”
Interpretive effect: The shorter reading keeps Mark’s focus on practical hardship rather than adding Matthew-like Sabbath language.
Rationale: The Sabbath addition is best explained as harmonization from the Synoptic parallel.
Old Testament background
Daniel 9:27; 11:31; 12:11
Connection type: allusion
Note: The phrase “abomination of desolation” comes from Daniel and supplies the key scriptural backdrop for the crisis sign in 13:14.
Daniel 7:13-14
Connection type: allusion
Note: The Son of Man coming with the clouds in 13:26 draws directly on Daniel’s vision of the exalted human figure receiving dominion.
Isaiah 13:10; 34:4
Connection type: echo
Note: The darkened sun, failing moon, and shaken heavenly powers belong to prophetic cosmic-collapse imagery associated with decisive divine intervention.
Joel 2:10, 31
Connection type: echo
Note: Cosmic signs before the day of the Lord form part of the background for 13:24-25 and reinforce eschatological judgment language.
Deuteronomy 30:4
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The gathering of God’s people from the extremities of the earth/heaven in 13:27 resonates with restoration imagery of regathering the dispersed.
Interpretive options
Scope of fulfillment in the discourse
- The whole chapter was fulfilled in the events surrounding Jerusalem’s fall in AD 70.
- The chapter moves from near events tied to Jerusalem’s destruction to the still-future visible coming of the Son of Man and final gathering.
- The entire chapter refers only to the distant end of the age, with the temple prediction functioning merely as a launch point.
Preferred option: The chapter moves from near events tied to Jerusalem’s destruction to the still-future visible coming of the Son of Man and final gathering.
Rationale: The discourse begins with the temple’s destruction and includes region-specific flight instructions for Judea, but 13:24-27 describes a public cosmic advent of the Son of Man that goes beyond the local catastrophe. The text itself signals progression rather than a flat single-level fulfillment.
Meaning of “this generation” in 13:30
- It refers to Jesus’ contemporaries, who would live to see the fulfillment of “all these things” associated with the temple crisis.
- It refers to a future generation that sees the signs and then sees the completion.
- It refers to a type of people, such as the unbelieving generation or the Jewish race.
Preferred option: It refers primarily to Jesus’ contemporaries, who would live to see the fulfillment of “all these things” associated with the temple crisis.
Rationale: In Mark, “this generation” normally points to Jesus’ present generation. Since the discourse began with the temple prediction and included near-term signs, the statement is most naturally anchored there, while the subsequent day-or-hour saying preserves an element of eschatological reserve.
Identity of the “abomination of desolation”
- A sacrilegious person or object connected with the Roman assault on Jerusalem and temple desecration.
- A still-future antichrist figure or idolatrous installation only at the end of history.
- A deliberately broad Danielic marker that has an initial historical referent and may prefigure a fuller end-time desecration.
Preferred option: A deliberately broad Danielic marker that has an initial historical referent and may prefigure a fuller end-time desecration.
Rationale: The wording is intentionally allusive rather than over-specified, and the Judean flight context points to a concrete historical crisis, while the Danielic background allows typological escalation without erasing the immediate horizon.
Meaning of “the one who endures to the end will be saved”
- Physical survival through the crisis is chiefly in view.
- Final salvation belongs to those who continue faithfully through persecution and deception.
- The saying teaches an automatic guarantee unrelated to perseverance once someone has initially believed.
Preferred option: Final salvation belongs to those who continue faithfully through persecution and deception.
Rationale: The immediate context combines hatred, betrayal, false prophets, and warnings to remain watchful. The saying functions as a real call to perseverance, not as a denial of grace nor as a reduction to mere physical escape.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The discourse must be read from the temple prediction and the disciples’ question in 13:1-4; detaching it from that immediate setting distorts the force of “these things.”
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: The passage mentions deception, persecution, Judean flight, cosmic signs, and ignorance of the day; interpretation must not elevate one mentioned element while suppressing the others.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: high
Note: Time indicators matter here: Jesus distinguishes preliminary pains, a Judean crisis, events “after that suffering,” and the unknown day and hour. A sound reading respects these temporal markers without forced compression.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The discourse culminates in the Son of Man’s glorious coming and includes the striking statement about the Son not knowing the day or hour in his incarnational mission; both exaltation and functional limitation must be held together.
prophetic
Relevance: high
Note: Apocalyptic imagery should be interpreted through Old Testament prophetic patterns rather than through newspaper-style speculation or wooden literalism at every detail.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The end of the discourse converts prophecy into obligation: watchfulness, endurance, and faithful duty are moral demands, not optional devotional extras.
Theological significance
- Jesus speaks with authority over the temple’s fall, the course of coming distress, and the final appearing of the Son of Man; his words outlast heaven and earth.
- Persecution, betrayal, and hatred do not mean the gospel has failed. In 13:9-13 they become the setting in which witness is carried forward.
- The Holy Spirit’s role in 13:11 shows that divine help meets disciples in the moment of trial, not only before it.
- The elect are not removed from tribulation in this discourse; they are preserved through it, and the days are shortened for their sake.
- The Son of Man’s coming in 13:26-27 answers the false reports of 13:21-23. Final deliverance is not hidden, local, or dependent on insider claims.
- The promise that the one who endures to the end will be saved functions as a real summons to persevering fidelity under pressure.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The discourse advances through repeated warnings and sharp transitions. Jesus does not simply predict events; he classifies them. Wars and disasters are not yet the end, the desecrating sign in 13:14 demands immediate action, and the Son of Man’s arrival stands apart as unmistakable and public.
Biblical theological: Mark 13 binds together temple judgment, Danielic imagery, worldwide proclamation of the gospel, and the final gathering of God’s people. The chapter therefore keeps near-horizon judgment and ultimate consummation in relation without flattening them into the same moment.
Metaphysical: History is presented as ordered rather than chaotic. Human agents deceive, persecute, testify, betray, and endure, yet the sequence still unfolds under divine sovereignty, moving toward judgment and public vindication.
Psychological Spiritual: Jesus addresses recognizable human weaknesses: panic in social upheaval, attraction to confident deceivers, exhaustion under delay, and fear before hostile authorities. His answer is not timetable mastery but discernment, endurance, prayer, and wakefulness.
Divine Perspective: God remains active throughout the crisis. He gives speech by the Spirit, shortens the days for the elect, guarantees the certainty of Christ’s words, and keeps the final timetable in the Father’s authority.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God governs upheaval, limits tribulation, and brings the Son of Man in glory.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus interprets history in advance and claims enduring authority for his own words.
Category: trinity
Note: The Father knows the day, the Son speaks and will come in glory, and the Holy Spirit empowers witness in persecution.
Category: character
Note: Judgment appears in the temple’s fall and the coming distress; mercy appears in God’s preservation of the elect.
- The discourse includes both the near crisis tied to Jerusalem and the climactic appearing of the Son of Man.
- Disciples are told to recognize approaching nearness from signs, yet denied knowledge of the exact day or hour.
- The Son of Man is glorious and authoritative, yet 13:32 speaks of the Son not knowing the day within the incarnational economy.
- The elect face deception and suffering, yet God preserves them and will gather them finally.
Enrichment summary
Mark 13 is framed by the temple’s coming destruction and interpreted through Danielic crisis imagery, not by detached end-times curiosity. Jesus answers a question raised by the temple, insists that turmoil does not by itself equal consummation, and places the decisive crisis within covenantal and apocalyptic categories already familiar from Scripture. That keeps two errors in check: reading the whole chapter as exhausted by AD 70, or severing it from Jerusalem and Judea as though it referred only to a distant future. Its pastoral center is steady vigilance amid deception, suffering, and delay.
Traditions of men check
Treating every war, earthquake, or famine as conclusive proof that the end has immediately arrived.
Why it conflicts: Jesus explicitly says such events must happen and are not yet the end; they are the beginning of birth pains, not the consummation itself.
Textual pressure point: 13:7-8 distinguishes these upheavals from “the end.”
Caution: The correction is not that such events are irrelevant, but that they must be interpreted with the distinctions Jesus himself gives.
Turning eschatology into date-setting confidence or secret-timeline mastery.
Why it conflicts: Jesus closes by denying knowledge of the day and hour to everyone except the Father and converts uncertainty into watchfulness.
Textual pressure point: 13:32-37 grounds discipleship in alertness rather than calculation.
Caution: This should not be used to discourage all study of prophecy; it forbids presumptuous certainty, not careful exegesis.
Assuming faithful believers should expect exemption from hatred, persecution, or social rupture.
Why it conflicts: Jesus tells his disciples they will face councils, beatings, governors, family betrayal, and universal hatred because of his name.
Textual pressure point: 13:9-13 places suffering in the normal path of witness.
Caution: The passage does not command believers to seek persecution, only to endure faithfully when it comes.
Redefining Christ’s coming as merely inward, symbolic, or hidden.
Why it conflicts: Jesus contrasts false reports of localized appearances with the visible coming of the Son of Man in clouds with power and glory.
Textual pressure point: 13:21-27 makes the final coming public and cosmic.
Caution: Apocalyptic imagery should be read with prophetic sensitivity, but the discourse still presents a real, objective advent.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: The chapter opens with the temple’s grandeur and Jesus’ prediction of its ruin. That setting gives the 'abomination of desolation' a specifically desecrating and judgment-laden force within Israel’s holy-place world, and it explains why the command to flee is directed to Judea.
Western Misread: Treating the discourse as generic end-times material with little connection to the temple or Jerusalem.
Interpretive Difference: Keeping the temple in view clarifies the first horizon of the discourse, especially the local flight instructions, while still leaving room for the later final-coming material.
Dynamic: apocalyptic_imagery_frame
Why It Matters: The darkened sun, shaken heavenly powers, and the Son of Man on the clouds draw from prophetic and apocalyptic scriptural language, especially Daniel and the prophets. This idiom signals decisive divine intervention and royal vindication.
Western Misread: Either reading every cosmic detail as a bare astronomical forecast or reducing the whole scene to an inward, invisible event.
Interpretive Difference: The imagery is scripturally charged and symbolically textured, yet it still serves Jesus’ point that the Son of Man’s arrival will be public, climactic, and not confused with localized reports.
Idioms and figures
Expression: the beginning of birth pains
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The image presents wars, earthquakes, and famines as real contractions of coming crisis, but not as the arrival itself.
Interpretive effect: It prevents readers from treating every disaster as the immediate end and teaches a sequence of escalation.
Expression: abomination of desolation
Category: idiom
Explanation: This Danielic phrase names a desecrating sacrilege bound up with devastation. In Mark it functions as the concrete signal for urgent flight, while remaining allusive enough to leave debate over its exact historical identification.
Interpretive effect: It marks a decisive temple-centered crisis and explains the sharp, local urgency of Jesus’ commands.
Expression: the Son of Man arriving in the clouds
Category: other
Explanation: The expression draws on Danielic royal-apocalyptic imagery of vindication and authority rather than a hidden appearance known only to a few.
Interpretive effect: It directly rebuts claims that the deliverer has appeared 'here' or 'there' and points to a public coming.
Expression: gather his elect from the four winds
Category: merism
Explanation: The phrase is a totality expression for gathering from every direction, echoing scriptural regathering language for God’s dispersed people.
Interpretive effect: It gives the scene a comprehensive, corporate scope rather than a merely private sense of comfort.
Application implications
- Christians should read public crises through Jesus’ distinctions, refusing both panic and prophetic sensationalism.
- Because 13:9-11 joins persecution to witness, believers should expect hostile settings to become occasions for testimony sustained by the Holy Spirit.
- The call to endure to the end demands durable allegiance when loyalty to Jesus strains family bonds, status, or safety.
- Since 13:21-23 expects persuasive false claimants and impressive signs, churches must test spiritual claims by Jesus’ words rather than by charisma or spectacle.
- The closing household parable makes readiness practical: waiting for Christ means doing assigned work faithfully, not neglecting ordinary obedience in favor of speculation.
Enrichment applications
- Churches should treat sensational prophecy claims cautiously, especially when they ignore Jesus’ own distinctions between preliminary upheaval, local crisis, and the unknown day.
- Readiness is vocational as well as emotional: each servant has assigned work, so alertness appears in steady obedience rather than speculative fixation.
- Persecution should be read as a context for witness rather than as proof that Jesus has lost control of history.
Warnings
- Mark 13 contains real horizon complexity. Interpretations should not force every verse into either AD 70 alone or the final consummation alone without following the discourse’s transitions.
- The phrase 'this generation' remains debated. Strong claims should be tempered by Mark’s usual usage, the immediate temple setting, and the fact that later material seems to reach beyond a merely local crisis.
- The statement that no one knows the day or hour, 'nor the Son,' should be handled with christological care; it concerns the economy of revealed timing, not a denial of the Son’s deity.
- Old Testament prophetic idiom is essential for reading the cosmic language, but symbolic sensitivity should not dissolve the chapter’s claim about a real coming of the Son of Man.
- References to the elect in 13:20, 22, and 27 should not be made to carry abstract system-level debates beyond the discourse’s pastoral purpose of warning, preservation, and final gathering.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not identify the 'abomination of desolation' so narrowly that all responsible alternatives are excluded; Mark leaves the reference allusive.
- Do not use apocalyptic background to make the discourse less historical than its temple and Judea setting, or less future-oriented than its Son-of-Man language.
- Do not let later debate over tribulation schemes or election systems crowd out the chapter’s plain pastoral demands: discern, endure, flee when necessary, and stay awake.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating every war, famine, or earthquake as proof that the end has immediately arrived.
Why It Happens: Readers often collapse Jesus’ sequence and let current events function as a direct prophetic code.
Correction: In 13:7-8 Jesus explicitly says such upheavals are not yet the end but the beginning of birth pains.
Misreading: Reading the whole chapter as only about a distant final tribulation with little first-century Jerusalem reference.
Why It Happens: The dramatic material later in the discourse can overshadow the temple prompt, the repeated 'these things,' and the Judea-specific commands.
Correction: The discourse must stay anchored in the temple prediction and the concrete Judean crisis, even if it also opens onto the future coming of the Son of Man.
Misreading: Reading the whole chapter as exhausted by AD 70 with no remaining future advent dimension.
Why It Happens: The local setting and the wording about 'this generation' naturally press some interpreters in a strongly preterist direction.
Correction: That reading captures real features of the chapter, but many interpreters judge that 13:24-27 moves beyond Jerusalem’s fall to the still-future public coming of the Son of Man and gathering of the elect.
Misreading: Turning 'stay alert' into a call for timeline mastery and prediction charts.
Why It Happens: Apocalyptic material invites curiosity, and readers often mistake signs of nearness for permission to name the date.
Correction: Jesus combines discernible developments with a direct denial that anyone knows the day or hour; watchfulness is faithful readiness, not chronological control.