Luke 24:12
And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in all the world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.
So when you see standing in the holy place ‘the abomination of desolation,’ described by the prophet Daniel (let the reader
understand), then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains.…"
Thanks for that. Presumably we're to read the 'holy place' as the Temple, and 'the abomination of desolation' as the Roman destruction of the Temple in 70 CE. The skeptical mind notes that Mark13:2, copied by Luke, was written about 75 CE, 5 years after the event, and reasonably concludes that the author of Mark, copied by Luke, was doing some retrofitting to make it appear thatMark's Jesus, hence Luke's, was predicting the Temple's fall. That, after all, is a
vastly more likely explanation than prophecy, which is a form of magic, and on all the present evidence, wholly imaginary.
Meanwhile with Daniel's three references to the 'abomination of desolation', the first is Daniel 9:26, where he's talking about an 'anointed Prince' who will be the Messiah; and if I check the learned footnotes to my annotated RSV, I find the prophecy was 'satisfied' by Antiochus IV Epiphanes, who ticks all the boxes, including attacking the Temple in 167 BCE.
The second is Daniel 11:31 where (the same learned footnotes say) we're talking about Antiochus again.
The third is Daniel 12:11 (still with Antiochus in the background) where Daniel's told the end of days will come (and here again the footnotes speak) either 1,290 days or 1,333 days or possibly 2833 days, after the said abomination; so if we rely on this as prophecy, the world ended no later than 78 CE ─ which (I dare say we can agree) it didn't.
The cherry-picking of words and phrases (as in Luke here; Mark doesn't have that particular expression) was very popular in the centuries either side of 1 CE, but surely we've moved on from making up your own story with a pair of scissors?
There the reference (13:2) is to all the great buildings, not just the Temple and the 'abomination' words aren't used; but I take your point.