DOES THE OLD TESTAMENT PREDICT THE
MESSIAH OR IS THIS JUST AN IDEA INVENTED BY NEW TESTAMENT AUTHORS?
Followers of Jesus believe
that the Old Testament predicted the future Messiah, there is a challenging view
that has gained popularity. Some Bible teachers are saying that the New
Testament authors just picked Old Testament verses out of context and tried to
make them sound as if they were about the Messiah.
For example, Old Testament professor from
one of the world’s leading Bible-believing seminaries presented his paper about
whether or not the Old Testament prophets really predicted the Messiah. In fact, he
argued that the whole idea of the Messiah was made up in the time period between
the Old Testament and the New Testament. Since the New Testament maintains that
Jesus is the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy, this scholar needed to come
up with some sort of explanation, some way of dealing with that issue.
And he did. He argued that the human authors of the Old Testament only wrote about what was going on in their own day but that the Holy Spirit had a deeper and fuller meaning.
He believed the Divine Inspirer of
Scripture intended it to mean something more than the human authors understood.
Similarly, another scholar says the New Testament authors were engaged in “creative exegesis,’
finding meanings in the Old Testament that weren't really there.
THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE PROPHETS
This “creative exegesis”
approach has numerous flaws. First, it seems to maintain that the Hebrew
prophets didn't know they were writing about the Messiah. This idea is rooted in
a mistaken interpretation of 1 Peter 1:10-12. In this passage it says the Old
Testament prophets “made careful searches and inquiries, seeking to know what
person or time the Spirit of Christ within them was indicating as He predicted
the sufferings of Christ [the Messiah] and the glories to follow.”
However, the passage doesn’t say
the prophets didn’t know that they were writing or speaking of the Messiah. It
says they didn’t know when the Messiah would come or who He would be. It is
similar to our situation as believers today. We know there is a future false
messiah, the Antichrist, coming. But we don’t know when he will come or who he
will be. The passage goes on to say that it was revealed that they werent
writing about their own day but about the Messiah’s arrival in the distant future.
THE PERSPECTIVE OF DIVINE
INSPIRATION
Another problematic aspect of this
view is an unusual perspective on biblical inspiration. The Bible is an
inspired text (2 Tim. 3:16) because human authors were moved by the Holy Spirit
to write the words God intended, using their own ideas, personalities, and
styles (2 Peter 1:21). In other words, both the Divine Author and the human
author had the same meaning when they wrote; they had the same intention. In
fact, the Holy Spirit’s superintending of the human author guaranteed the truth
of the human author's intentions and words. The Holy Spirit is the one who
enabled biblical prophets to predict the future Messiah. This is what Peter
meant when he wrote, “no prophecy was ever made by an act of human will, but
men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God” (2 Peter 1:21).
THE PERSPECTIVE OF JESUS THE
MESSIAH
Yet another difficulty with this
view is that the Lord Jesus, the Messiah Himself, disagrees with it. Think
about when the Messiah Jesus met Cleopas and his friends on the road to Emmaus
(Luke 24:25-27). He told them that the only limitation that kept them from
believing in messianic prophecy was that they were “foolish men and slow of
heart to believe in all that the prophets have spoken!” (v. 25). The
resurrected Lord goes on to say that the Scriptures taught that it was
necessary for the Messiah to suffer before entering into glory (or being and
with all the prophets, He explained to them the things concerning Himself in
all the Scriptures” (v. 27).
Just a short time later, the Lord
Jesus had a resurrection appearance with His disciples (Luke 24:44-46). He met
them in the upper room and told them, “These are My words which I spoke to you
while I was still with you, that all things which are written about Me in the
Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled” (v. 44). And
what did He say was written? That “the Christ would suffer and rise again from the
dead” (v. 46). Clearly, the Lord Jesus taught His disciples that the Old
Testament Scriptures were messianic and that they pointed to Him.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Last century, biblical scholar A.
T. Robertson commented on Luke 24, saying, “Jesus found himself in the Old
Testament, a thing that some modern scholars do not seem to be able to do.”
Robertson was pushing strongly the critical scholars of his own day, whose
anti-supernaturalism kept them from recognizing any direct predictions of the
Messiah in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament). Unfortunately, the views of these
critics have become so influential that they have infiltrated even committed
Bible-believing scholars today.
God used messianic predictions to
lead me to faith in the Messiah Jesus and to have confidence in the inspiration
of Scripture. As followers of Jesus, we need to reclaim messianic prophecy as
one of the great evidences that Jesus is indeed the Messiah and that the Bible,
both Old and New Testaments, is supernaturally and divinely inspired.


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