This Generation Shall Not Pass Away (Matthew 24:34 Explained)

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“Truly I say to you, this generation shall not pass away until all these things are fulfilled.”

Matthew 24:34 sounds clear, right?

But many Bible teachers say Jesus didn’t mean that generation—He meant a future generation, possibly ours, 2,000 years later. Some even teach Jesus was wrong. But that would make Him a false prophet, deserving death by the very Mosaic Law He came to fulfill.

So which generation was Jesus talking about? The one He was speaking to? Or some distant future generation?

Let’s let Scripture answer.

The Pattern

Every single time “this generation” appears as a direct statement in Scripture, it means one thing: the generation being addressed.

Not a future generation. Not a “type” of generation. That specific generation.

  • Matthew 11:16: “To what shall I liken this generation?”—Jesus’ contemporaries.
  • Matthew 12:41: “The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment with this generation”—first-century Israel.
  • Matthew 23:36: “All these things shall come upon this generation”—the generation hearing Jesus speak.
  • Luke 11:50-51: “The blood of all the prophets…shall be required of this generation”—that specific generation.

In the New Testament, the phrase appears 17 times outside the Olivet Discourse. In every instance where Jesus or the apostles directly use “this generation”, it refers to their contemporaries.

What About Hebrews 3:10?

Critics point to Hebrews 3:10, where “this generation” refers to the wilderness generation, not the first century:

“Therefore, I was angry with this generation, and said, ‘They always go astray in their heart…’”

But Hebrews 3:10 is quoting Psalm 95—God’s past statement about the Exodus generation. It’s not a direct address to Hebrews’ audience.

The pattern still holds: When “this generation” is used as a direct statement, it always refers to the generation being addressed.

In Matthew 24:34, Jesus is directly addressing His disciples—not quoting ancient history.

Why would Matthew 24:34 be different?

Other Objections

Does “this generation” mean the Jewish people?

Some argue “this generation” means the Jewish race or people that won’t pass away until all is fulfilled.

But genea doesn’t mean “race” in this context—it consistently means “generation” throughout the Gospels. If Jesus meant “race,” He would have used genos. Jesus wasn’t making a vague promise about ethnic survival; He was giving a specific timeframe.

“All these things” didn’t happen in the first century, did they?

Others claim “all these things” (Matthew 24:33) controls the meaning—since the events didn’t happen in the first century, “this generation” must be future.

But this is circular reasoning. It assumes the events didn’t happen, then uses that assumption to redefine “this generation.”

History tells a different story, however. Josephus documents the tribulation, the signs, the temple’s destruction—all happened within 40 years, exactly as Jesus predicted.

“This generation” alludes to the final generation alive at Jesus’ Second Coming.

Still others say Jesus meant “the generation that sees the signs will see all of them”—referring to the future, final generation who will be alive when Jesus returns at the end of earth’s history.

But Jesus said, “You will see”, 18-24 times throughout His Olivet Discourse (depending on which Gospel). He did not say, “They will see”, or “That generation will see”; He said, “You.”

Additional Evidence

Internal Timestamps

Jesus gave multiple time markers pointing to His contemporaries:

  • Matthew 16:28: “Some standing here will not taste death until they see the Son of Man coming.”
  • Matthew 10:23: “You will not have gone through the cities of Israel before the Son of Man comes.”
  • John 21:22: “If I want him to remain until I return,” implying John would live to see Jesus’ return.

These examples all point to that generation’s lifetime and were confirmed when Jerusalem fell in its 70 AD “day of the Lord” judgment 40 years later.

“This generation” in Matthew 24:34 isn’t isolated. The New Testament contains around 100 urgent time statements including “near”, “at hand”, “about to come”, “shortly”, “soon”, “last hour”, and “the time is short”. These aren’t vague temporal expressions that can be stretched to equal thousands of years. They’re urgent warnings to first-century believers.

Early Church Fathers Agreed

For centuries, the Church understood Matthew 24 was fulfilled in 70 AD—including Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and Eusebius. John Chrysostom (375 AD) put it plainly:

“Did all the vengeance come upon that generation? It is quite plain that it was so, and no man gainsays it.”

The modern reinterpretation—stretching “this generation” across 2,000 years—is relatively recent.

The Truth About “This Generation”

Biblically, “this generation” means what it always means: the generation being addressed.

When we spiritualize “this generation”, we ignore every other use of the phrase. We dismiss 100+ time statements. We disagree with centuries of Church fathers. We overlook Jesus saying, “You will see” throughout His Olivet Discourse.

Jesus spoke to His disciples in the first century. He warned them of signs they would see. He told them judgment would come within their generation, within 40 years, and it did; Jerusalem fell in 70 AD. Prophecy became history. Jesus’ words were vindicated as His prophecy was fulfilled exactly as He said it would happen.

Want to dig deeper into understanding biblical prophecy? Check out the Prophecy Course, for Bible prophecy made clear.

Remember: It’s the truth that sets you free.

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REFERENCES

Amillennial.org. “This Generation.” February 3, 2021. https://amillennial.org/this-generation/.

Chrysostom, John. Homilies on the Gospel of Matthew. Translated by George Prevost and revised by M. B. Riddle. In Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 10, edited by Philip Schaff. New York: Christian Literature Company, 1888. https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/2001.htm.

“CHURCH FATHERS: Homily 74 on Matthew (Chrysostom).” n.d. https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/200174.htm.

Eusebius of Caesarea. Ecclesiastical History. Translated by Arthur Cushman McGiffert. In Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 1, edited by Philip Schaff and Henry Wace. New York: Christian Literature Company, 1890.

Griffin, Carson. “Who Was ‘This Generation’ in Matthew?” Christ Over All (blog). Accessed November 28, 2025. https://christoverall.com/article/concise/who-was-this-generation-in-matthew/.

Josephus, Flavius. The Jewish War. Translated by H. St. J. Thackeray. Loeb Classical Library 203. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1927.

———. The Wars of the Jews, or History of the Destruction of Jerusalem. Translated by William Whiston. Project Gutenberg, 2009. https://www.gutenberg.org/files/2850/2850-h/2850-h.htm.

Origen. The Commentary of Origen on the Gospel of St Matthew. Translated by Ronald E. Heine. 2 vols. Oxford Early Christian Texts. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018.

Preterist Archives. “Matthew 24:34 Study Archive.” Accessed November 28, 2025. https://preteristarchives.org/matthew-2434-study-archive/.

Schoenherr, Matthew. Levaire. n.d. “Prophecy Course | SESSION 9 | Olivet Discourse, Part 2.” Prophecy Course. https://prophecycourse.org/session/09/olivet-p2/.


Note on Greek Terms:

(genea) – “generation”: Refers to people of a particular time period or age, consistently used throughout the Gospels to denote contemporaries of the speaker.

(genos) – “race” or “kind”: A distinct term from genea, used to denote ethnic or familial lineage rather than temporal generation.

Matthew Schoenherr
Matthew Schoenherr
Prior to beginning his Christian ministry, Matthew spent over 25 years as a marketing consultant, published author, speaker, coach, business developer and entrepreneur. In 2015, he pushed out over 400 accounts and retooled his marketing practice to serve the Christian Church. In addition to his pastoral studies and spreading the Gospel message through Levaire.com, Matthew helps Christian churches and humanitarian aid organizations develop successful outreach strategies.

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