I realize some believe "the fig tree" is "Israel" (straight up).
I've posted why I see it somewhat differently:
I've posted before about how I see a distinction between the two phrases in Lk13:6 "A certain man had
A FIG TREE planted *in* his
VINEYARD"... where Isaiah 5:7 says, "For
THE VINEYARD of the Lord of hosts
is the house OF ISRAEL"... (so "Israel" is the "Vineyard" and something distinct [from that] is
"planted IN" it [that is, distinct from it, yet somewhat related to it]).
I've mentioned in past posts how I've read an article long ago that suggested that
"*the fig tree" itself may speak of
"the Law" or "Law-observant [leadership]" [??] (for lack of a better way of phrasing it; something that likely requires the involvement of "the city"/Jerusalem)
[
*esp. in the "eschatological" sections of scripture, like Matt24:32-33(34-35,
in view of Matt5:18 "Till heaven and earth pass,
one jot or tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled"), and Mk13:28-29(30-31), Lk21:29-31(32-33;
with v.32's "ALL" here
necessarily INCLUDING what was ALREADY just mentioned
in v.24 "and [they] shall be led away captive into all the nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles
UNTIL the
TIMES of the Gentiles be fulfilled" [note:
distinct from the phrase "the
FULNESS of the Gentiles be come in"]--"the TIMES of the Gentiles" having started in 606/605bc, and representing "Gentile domination over Israel"... think: Neb's dream/statue/image, with Neb as "head of gold" and which "TIMES" does not conclude until the END of the future trib yrs, at the time of Christ's Second Coming
to the earth, Rev19)]
Then, I would bring your attention to something that I myself have only just been made aware:
In the Greek,
Luke 13:9's wording "G1519 G3588 G3195 [eis to mellon]" is the same exact phrase as found in
1 Timothy 6:19 - "[kjv] against the time to come" ... "[hcsb] for the age to come"... "[esv] for the future"... "[nkjv, ylt] for the time to come"...
(see the Greek "G3195 -
mello" also in: Matt12:32; Acts 24:15; Col2:17; Heb10:1; 11:20; Heb6:5 [<--this v. adds the word "age" in the sentence])
Compare the two:
https://biblehub.com/text/luke/13-9.htm
https://biblehub.com/text/1_timothy/6-19.htm
So, Wm Kelly [commentary notes under Lk13:9] points out... [says], "
melleiv [G3195 -
mello] is used in the NT constantly for the future in that connection, as in 'the age to come'."
He's not saying Lk13:9 ["3195 -
mellon"] MUST be speaking of this, he's just pointing out the phrasing, where the exact phrasing is used in 1Tim6:19, and what it refers to [in many places] where elsewhere used, also.
I think it's interesting, and something worth pondering, anyway.
[
note: I'm not really drawing any definite
conclusions here... just giving it further thought]