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			 Budding Fig Tree (Fig Tree 
			Lesson) 
			Matthew 24:32–35; Mark 13:28–31; 
			Luke 21:29–33 
			Opening: Learn the Season 
			from the Tree 
			Jesus points to a simple, yearly scene: a fig tree sends out tender 
			shoots, leaves appear, and everyone knows summer stands near. He 
			calls this a lesson. When certain signs appear, discerning hearts 
			should recognize what stands at the door. The picture is plain, the 
			charge is serious: learn, read the season, and respond with 
			obedience. 
			Context: On the Mount, Facing 
			a Tumultuous Horizon 
			The setting is the Mount of Olives. The disciples ask about the 
			temple’s fall and the timing of the Lord’s coming. Jesus describes 
			upheaval, persecution, false messengers, and a surrounding of 
			Jerusalem that signals desolation. Within that discourse He offers 
			the fig tree. The leaves teach timing; the Master’s words secure 
			certainty. 
			“These Things” Within a 
			Generation 
			Jesus says, “When you see these things… know that it is near, at the 
			doors… this generation will by no means pass away till all these 
			things take place” (Matthew 24:33–34). The nearest horizon concerns 
			the ruin of Jerusalem and the end of the temple system—events that 
			unfolded within the lifetime of that audience. Disciples in the 
			first century used the Lord’s markers to flee, serve, and keep the 
			faith when the city fell. 
			An Enduring Word for Every 
			Disciple 
			“Heaven and earth will pass away, but My words will by no means pass 
			away” (Matthew 24:35). The leaves guided the first disciples through 
			a national crisis. The promise guides every disciple through every 
			age. Kingdom citizens live ready lives, anchored in the certainty of 
			what Jesus has spoken. His word holds when stones tumble, cities 
			burn, or eras shift. 
			Two Horizons to Hold in View 
			The discourse moves from a near crisis to the final consummation. 
			The fig tree helps with the first: “these things” would occur before 
			that generation ended. The next section (Matthew 24:36 and 
			parallels) speaks of “that day and hour” which no one knows. Wisdom 
			keeps both truths: use the Lord’s signs when He gives them, and stay 
			watchful when no clock is given. Read the leaves He has placed 
			before you; keep a ready life when no leaves appear. 
			What the Fig Tree Teaches 
			Today 
			The Lord trains disciples to think biblically about times. Panic 
			fades when Scripture sets expectations. Presumption fades when 
			Scripture withholds dates. A steady heart grows from three choices: 
			let the context govern interpretation, let obedience govern 
			response, and let the Lord’s reliability govern hope. He said it; it 
			stands. He warned; we prepare. He promises; we endure. 
			Marks of Readiness 
			Jesus’ sermon surrounds the fig tree with practical duties—endure 
			under pressure, speak truth, care for brethren, refuse deception, 
			and keep working while you watch (Matthew 24–25). Wise servants 
			refuse both slumber and frenzy. They keep their post, handle their 
			tasks, measure every message by Scripture, and live as though the 
			Master may arrive today. 
			Application: Reading Leaves 
			in Our Lives 
			When pressures rise—political, cultural, or personal—disciples often 
			look for a calendar. The fig tree resets the aim. Discern the 
			season; keep the commands. Avoid date-setting. Avoid dullness. Use 
			known duties as your daily schedule: worship in sincerity, speak 
			with integrity, serve without delay, pray with vigilance, and hold 
			fast to every word the Lord has spoken. 
			Conclusion: Summer Near, Word 
			Certain 
			Tender branches announce a season. In the same way the Lord’s 
			markers announced a coming judgment in the first century, and His 
			promises announce a coming day beyond every calendar. The safe place 
			remains unchanged: do the Father’s will (Matthew 7:21), build on the 
			Lord’s sayings, and trust the permanence of His word when everything 
			else shifts. 
			Exhaustive Sermon Outline 
			
				- Setting and Question
				
				
					- Mount of Olives 
					discourse; questions about temple and the Lord’s coming 
					(Matthew 24:1–3; Mark 13:1–4; Luke 21:5–7)
 
				 
				 
				- The Parable Stated
				
				
					- Fig tree puts forth 
					leaves; observers know summer is near (Matthew 24:32; Mark 
					13:28; Luke 21:29–30)
 
					- “So also, when you see 
					these things, know it is near, at the doors” (Matthew 24:33)
 
				 
				 
				- Near Horizon: “These 
				Things” and “This Generation” 
				
					- Persecution, deceivers, 
					Jerusalem surrounded by armies, abomination of desolation 
					(Matthew 24:15–22; Luke 21:20–24)
 
					- Fulfillment within that 
					generation (Matthew 24:34; Mark 13:30; Luke 21:32)
 
				 
				 
				- Enduring Certainty
				
				
					- “Heaven and earth will 
					pass away, but My words will not pass away” (Matthew 24:35; 
					Mark 13:31; Luke 21:33)
 
				 
				 
				- Distant Horizon: Unknown 
				Day 
				
					- Shift to “that day and 
					hour” unknown (Matthew 24:36–44; Mark 13:32–37)
 
					- Duties of watchfulness 
					and faithfulness (Matthew 24:45–51)
 
				 
				 
				- Doctrinal Anchors
				
				
					- Doing the Father’s will 
					as the measure of safety (Matthew 7:21)
 
					- The Lord binds 
					salvation to those who obey (Hebrews 5:9)
 
					- Scripture as the only 
					reliable guide; avoid additions and subtractions (1 
					Corinthians 4:6; Deuteronomy 4:2; Revelation 22:18–19)
 
				 
				 
				- Practical Responses
				
				
					- Read in context; avoid 
					speculation (Acts 17:11)
 
					- Live ready lives: 
					honest worship, steady service, tested teaching (Matthew 
					24–25)
 
					- Encourage endurance 
					amid upheaval (Hebrews 10:23–25)
 
				 
				 
				- Invitational Aim
				
				
					- Begin with the Lord’s 
					appointed response to the gospel (Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; 
					Romans 6:3–4)
 
					- Continue in obedience 
					while you watch (Matthew 24:42; 1 Corinthians 15:58)
 
				 
				 
			 
			Call to Action 
			Set your footing on the Lord’s words. Obey the gospel—believe, 
			repent, confess Christ, and be baptized for the remission of sins. 
			Then live awake: measure every season by Scripture, keep the duties 
			He assigned, and hold to His unbreakable word. 
			Scripture Reference List 
			(with notes) 
			
				- Matthew 24:32–35; Mark 
				13:28–31; Luke 21:29–33 — The fig tree lesson: learn seasons, 
				trust His word
 
				- Matthew 24:1–3 — Disciples’ 
				questions frame the discourse
 
				- Matthew 24:15–22; Luke 
				21:20–24 — Near signs tied to Jerusalem’s fall
 
				- Matthew 24:34 — “This 
				generation” promise of near fulfillment
 
				- Matthew 24:35 — Permanence 
				of Jesus’ word
 
				- Matthew 24:36–44; Mark 
				13:32–37 — Unknown day; command to watch
 
				- Matthew 7:21 — Entrance 
				tied to doing the Father’s will
 
				- Hebrews 5:9 — Salvation to 
				those who obey
 
				- 1 Corinthians 4:6; 
				Deuteronomy 4:2; Revelation 22:18–19 — Keep within the written 
				word
 
				- Acts 17:11 — Noble testing 
				of teaching by Scripture
 
				- Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; 
				Romans 6:3–4 — Appointed response to the gospel
 
				- Matthew 24–25 — Ongoing 
				duties of readiness and faithfulness
 
				- Hebrews 10:23–25 — Hold 
				fast and encourage one another
 
			 
			Prepared by David Hersey of the 
			church of Christ at Granby, MO  |