Although I agree with the poverty and ‘loving God’ bit, I’m not so sure about the family or the end of the world bit. Concerning the end of the world, the Jesus character in the new testament only says that nobody knows the ‘hour’ (except supposedly god). It’s in John’s revelations that the apocalypse is mentioned and not directly from the “horse’s mouth” (a horse is a horse, of course, of course … 😉 … the reference indicates my generation)
The Jesus character asked people to join his cult which he considered his family. In the regular family and his ‘family’, he said that people should love and respect parents, brothers, sisters … heck, everyone, even enemies. He attracted both men and women into his entourage/cult/‘family’.
Having read the bible many, many times in my childhood and youth and, in particular the new testament, I got the impression of a radical hippie magician cult leader advocating love, compassion and perhaps a different ‘family’ rather than no-family, and in particular, he nowhere advocated against having children (perhaps commune children?). However, the no-family implication you gave of Jesus’ advice to the rich man makes sense and is interesting and plausible.