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Mark 13:24 — King James Version← Study notes

But in those days, after that tribulation, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light,


Mark 13:24Greek Interlinear

Greek · Mark 13:2420 words
GreekMeaning
ἈλλὰAlla
ButwordG235
ἐνen
inprepositionG1722
ἐκείναιςekeinais
thosedemonstrativeG1565
ταῖςtais
thearticleG3588
ἡμέραιςhēmerais
daysnounG2250
μετὰmeta
afterprepositionG3326
τὴνtēn
thearticleG3588
θλῖψινthlipsin
tribulationnounG2347
ἐκείνηνekeinēn
thosedemonstrativeG1565
ho
ThearticleG3588
ἥλιοςhēlios
sunnounG2246
σκοτισθήσεταιskotisthēsetai
will be darkenedverbG4654
καὶkai
andwordG2532
thearticleG3588
σελήνηselēnē
moonnounG4582
οὐou
notadverbG3756
δώσειdōsei
will giveverbG1325
τὸto
thearticleG3588
φέγγοςphengos
lightnounG5338
αὐτῆςautēs
of itpronounG846
Greek text from the SBL Greek New Testament (SBLGNT). Transliteration follows SBL Academic conventions.

Church Fathers on Mark 13:24

After that the Lord had finished all that concerned Jerusalem, He now speaks of the coming of Antichrist, saying, 'Then if any man shall say to you, Lo, here is Christ; or, to, he is there; believe him not.' But when He says, 'then,' think not that it means immediately after these things are fulfilled about Jerusalem; as Matthew also says after the birth of Christ, 'In those days came John the Baptist;' [Matt 3:1] does he mean immediately after the birth of Christ? No, but he…

Theophylact · 11th century

For then shall Satan be unchained, and work through Antichrist in all his power, wonderfully indeed, but falsely. But a doubt is often raised whether the Apostle said 'signs and lying wonders,' because he is to deceive mortal sense, by phantoms, so as to appear to do what he does not, or because those wonders themselves, even though true, are to turn men aside to lies, because they will not believe that any power but a Divine power could do them, being ignorant of the power…

Augustine · 4th century · de Civ. Dei, xx, 19

Some however refer this to the time of the Jewish captivity, where many, declaring themselves to be Christs, drew after them crowds of deluded persons; but during the siege of the city there was no Christian to whom the Divine exhortation, not to follow false teachers, could apply. Wherefore it is better to understand it of heretics, who, coming to oppose the Church, pretended to be Christs; the first of whom was Simon Magus, but that last one, greater than the rest, is…

Bede · 8th century
Read all 15 entries in the readerCatena Aurea · St. Thomas Aquinas, tr. J. H. Newman · public domain
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