The contradiction was due to my paraphrasing. Rephrased to avoid the contradiction: "XYZ will not come to pass before the death of the generation in which XYZ comes to pass", which does not in fact require that XYZ come to pass in order to be true.Quasar1011 said:Firstly, you contradicted yourself. You cannot say that the prediction will come to pass, and then say it will come to pass "never at all".
Secondly, the signs I listed, are not the true clue as to the identity of the generation. The signs simply refer to things that will happen during the lifetime of "this generation". The true sign is: the fig tree. The fig tree is one (of many) prophetic symbols of Israel. Let's go back to Mark 13:28 for a minute:
Now learn this lesson from the fig tree: As soon as its twigs get tender and its leaves come out, you know that summer is near.
If the fig tree is prophetic of Israel, when did it put forth its first leaves? The answer: May 14, 1948! This is when the country of Israel was reborn, as a sovereign nation upon the face of the Earth. "This generation" would therefore refer to the people alive to see that event. Do we still have people alive today, that were alive then? Yes, we do. This shows you that Jesus taught that, though we cannot know the day nor hour of His return, we can know when it is near! So, is the generation that was alive on May 14, 1948, a specific enough prediction for you?
P.S. summer is near![]()
Your rendering of a specific does not make Jesus' prediction any more meaningful. Putting aside for now the dubious derivation of your date (or fig

"Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When her branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves, ye know that summer is near: So ye in like manner, when ye shall see these things come to pass, know that it is nigh, even at the doors. Verily I say unto you, that [the generation of 1948] shall not pass, till all these things be done."
If he had said this, then we would have a ballgame. But there's nothing to connect "this" with 1948, unless by "this" Jesus means "the generation in which XYZ comes to pass". But I've already said why that is meaningless. The "Verily I say unto you" is fairly clearly an assurance that the listener will see the second coming, as emphasising a truism is stupid. If I say to you right now, "The Blue Jays will win another World Series. Truly, this will happen before this generation dies", you will not leap to the conclusion that I really mean the generation of 2135 (although given the circumstances, that wouldn't entirely be unwarranted...).
Now let's look at the fig tree, the only basis you have for thinking that Jesus meant something other than the patently obvious when he used the demonstrative. First of all, I question whether the fig tree is the prophetic emblem of Israel. It may very well be, and I'd love to see some quotations if that's the case, but it sounds like glib generalisation to me. Please prove me wrong. Second, even if the mention of a fig tree somehow brings Israel into this, that means only that Israel will somehow be associated with the signs of the second coming. Okay, and it was, if you're right. But that still means his "prediction" was a truism. Finally,
It looks like the kind of tree is rather unimportant. Maybe Jesus pointed at some nearby trees as he spoke, and the closest one was a fig. As George Harrison said, "We could have been the Shoes".Luke 21:29-30 said:And he spake to them a parable; Behold the fig tree, and all the trees; When they now shoot forth, ye see and know of your own selves that summer is now nigh at hand."