Preview
of Calvary
One
evening a few years ago I carried out an interesting experiment.
I was with a friend who did not believe the Bible, and, like
most unbelievers, knew very little about it. But at least
he was willing to discuss it.
So
I said to him: "Excuse me, Arthur. Do you mind if I give
you a little Bible quiz? Id like to read to you a well-known
Bible passage about Jesus, and then see if you can tell me
whereabouts in the New Testament it comes from? Will you have
a try?"
"O.K.,
Im game. I dont mind exposing my ignorance," said Arthur.
So I read him a few verses about the sufferings and death
of Jesus Christ, and then stopped.
Arthur
wrinkled his brows. "I know the words all right. But
I've no idea which gospel they come from. Or maybe they
even come from one of Paul's epistles," he added
as an afterthought.
"No,
they dont originally come from any of those places, although
they are quoted by several New Testament writers," I
said. "I was reading to you from the book of Isaiah,
in the Old Testament."
"In
the Old Testament? Youre kidding!"
But
I wasnt kidding. I was satisfying myself that some of the
Old Testament prophecies of Jesus really do fit Him so well
that they can be mistaken for New Testament passages.
Jesus
Knew About Prophecy
On
a number of occasions Jesus reminded His followers that the
Old Testament was full of prophecies about Himself. Here is
just one example:
"He
(Jesus) took unto Him the twelve, and said unto them, Behold,
we go up to Jerusalem, and all things that are written
by the prophets concerning the Son of Man shall be accomplished.
For He shall be delivered unto the Gentiles, and shall be
mocked, and spitefully entreated, and spitted on. And they
shall scourge Him and put Him to death. And the third day
He shall rise again."1
Jesus
was not exaggerating. Most of the dreadful things that happened
to Him during the last twenty-four hours of His mortal life
were foretold in the Old Testament. So was His resurrection,
and His ascension to heaven, too. Yet the whole of the Old
Testament was already yellow with age when Jesus was born.
You
may perhaps wonder whether the early Christians might have
cunningly altered the wording of the Old Testament prophecies,
to make them fit the events. But there is no fear of that.
The Christians kept their own copies of the Bible in the Greek
language, while the Jews kept their copies of the Old Testament
in Hebrew.
The
best copies of the Old Testament, upon which our English Bible
is based, are the Jewish ones. It is quite certain that the
Jews would never have altered their copies of the Scriptures,
so as to further the claims of a rival religion.
We
need to look in detail at two of the chapters that Jesus would
have had in mind. If you want to appreciate fully the wonder
of these prophecies, turn them up in your own Bible. As you
read them, keep asking yourself this question: how could the
writers have foreseen these things, unless God inspired them?
Psalm
22 describes the Man of God being put to death by His enemies.
Instead of using the common Jewish method of execution (stoning)
they "pierce his hands and feet".2
He is tormented by thirst as he dies.3
His enemies stand round him.4
They stare at him.5 They laugh
at him.6 They jeer at him, asking
why God does not rescue him.7
They strip off his clothes and share them out, casting lots
for the odd one left over.8
If
you are familiar with the gospels, you will recognise each
of these details. It all adds up to a picture of Calvary,
painted hundreds of years before it happened.
Isaiah
53 fills in more of the details. He was to be "despised
and rejected" by his fellow men, a "man of sorrows,
and acquainted with grief".9
He would be wounded and flogged,10
led as a condemned prisoner to his execution.11
Yet he would accept his fate meekly and without speaking in
his own defence,12 although he
was innocent of any crime.13
The
chapter insists that this was not just another martyrdom.
Seven times over (in verses 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11 and 12) it
explains that this righteous man's death would be an atonement
for the sins of others. Because of this, God would raise him
from the dead,14 and give him
a position of great honour.15
It
is no wonder that when I read this chapter to Arthur, he thought
it occurred in the New Testament. If it did so, people would
accept it as a great piece of Christian literature, a beautiful
poetic description of the sufferings of Jesus Christ. But
it is not a Christian writing. It is found in the Old Testament,
the Holy Book of the Jews - a nation that had always hated
the thought of human sacrifice, and has never accepted Jesus.
The
official Jewish interpretation is that this chapter describes
the Jewish race, not Jesus. One look at the chapter is enough
to show how absurd this interpretation is. Every verse fits
Jesus; half of then could not possibly be applied to the Jews.
Try fitting these extract to the Jews (or, for that matter,
to any other nation):
"He
had done no violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth.
(verse 9)
"By
his knowledge shall My Righteous Servant justify many, for
he shall bear their iniquities." (verse 11)
Even
the Jews are not comfortable with their own interpretation.
They dislike this chapter, and avoid reading it in their synagogue
But though they try to ignore it they cannot destroy it. Isaiah
5 remains a lasting proof of the superhuman origin of the
Bible.
Who
Was Messiah?
It
is difficult for us to appreciate the full significance of
these prophecies without knowing what the Old Testament word
"Messiah" meant to the Jews at the time of Jesus.
Even today, it still means quite a lot to them. A Jewish encyclopaedia
says this about what it calls "Messianism":
"The
term Mashiah is used in the Bible . . . it was applied an
ideal king, who would bring salvation to Israel and a regeneration
of the human race . ."16
Historians
tell us that in the first century Israel was positively buzzing
with excitement at the prospect of Messiahs coming. They we
convinced that the time for Messiah to appear was "now,
or never". Their conviction was based upon the following
passage in the book of Daniel:
"Seventy
weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city,
to finish the transgression, and to make an end of sins,
and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in
everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and
prophecy, and to anoint the most Holy. Know therefore and
understand, that from the going forth of the commandment
to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince
shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks; the
street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous
times. And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah
be cut off."17
The
Jews paid no attention to the words in italics, because they
did not understand them. "Cut off" was a common
Old Testament expression meaning "killed",18
and the Jews did not see how Messiah could possibly be killed.
They knew lots of splendid prophecies about the coming Messiah:
he was going to be a great and glorious leader, the deliverer
of Israel, and king of the whole world. So they turned a blind
eye to the passages (including Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53) that
spoke of Messiahs death.
But
what did excite them was Daniels promise that Messiah would
appear some 69 or 70 "weeks" after the commandment
to rebuild Jerusalem (which in Daniels day was lying in ruins).
The Hebrew word for "week" is the ordinary word
for "seven", and they knew that in the prophets
it could mean either seven days or seven years.19
So
the Jews had long been waiting for Daniels period of 483 to
490 years (69 to 70 "weeks") to elapse. They were
not sure of the exact starting point of the prophecy, because
there had been several "commandments to restore and to
build Jerusalem" around the end of the sixth and the
beginning of the fifth centuries B.C.
But
one thing at least was clear to them: Messiah would have to
come sometime in the earlier part of what we now call the
first century A.D.
From
Daniel 9, therefore, we can add two more to the growing list
of prophecies fulfilled when Jesus first came:
- He
came at just about the right time in history.
- He
was killed, just as Daniel foretold the Messiah would be.
But,
what is even more important, we have learnt something about
the way the Jews understood the Old Testament. There are scores
of Old Testament passages that speak about a Very Important
Person who was to come. This Person was occasionally referred
to as "Messiah" in the Hebrew Bible (although the
word appears in the English Old Testament only in Daniel 9),
but in most cases he is unnamed. Nevertheless the Jews
accepted all these passages as prophecies of the Messiah.
It
is essential that we keep this fact in mind. Some of those
passages may not look to an English reader as if they are
prophecies of the Messiah. But the Bible was not written,
in the first place, for English-speaking people. It was written
by Hebrews, for Hebrews. And the ancient Hebrews had a very
different literary style from modern Europeans.
The
ancient Jews themselves had no doubt at all that those passages
were prophecies of the Messiah. Consequently we are bound
to take the Jews word for it, and look at the prophecies in
the same way as they did.
More
Prophecies of Messiah
There
are so many of these prophecies that it is difficult to know
when to stop. Here are five more to add to the list:
He
was to be born in Bethlehem.
"But
thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the
thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall he come forth
unto Me that is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth
have been from of old, from everlasting."20
We
all know that Jesus actually was born in Bethlehem. That an
established fact. Even those arch-enemies of the Christian
faith the Pharisees and Sadducees, never denied it. But has
it ever occurred to you how unlikely it was for that prophecy
to have been fulfilled by accident?
Bethlehem
was, as the prophecy mentioned, a very small place. Some unscrupulous
gentleman wanted to establish a reputation for himself as
a prophet, he might take a gamble and say, "The next
president of the United States will be a man born in New York."
many leading Americans are New Yorkers that at least he would
stand a sporting chance of being right.
But
suppose that he said "The next president of the United
States will be born in Piketon, Ohio." Since Piketon
has only a few thousand inhabitants the odds against his guess
being right would be enormous. Yet Micah picked a similarly
insignificant village as the birthplace of the Messiah - and
his prophecy came true.
How
did Micah manage it, unless he was inspired by God?
He
was to enter Jerusalem on an ass.
I
can imagine your reaction to that statement. "Well, so
what? Lots of people entered Jerusalem on asses, didnt they?
Why shouldnt Jesus do so, too - especially if He had read
the prophecy that said He had to?"
For
a very good reason. Lots of people did indeed enter Jerusalem
on asses, but they were all ordinary, humble folk. Conquering
kings were far too high and mighty to ride asses. They rode
on mules warhorses, or in chariots. And the prophet said that
it was as King of Jerusalem, King of the World, that Jesus
would arrive at His capital city on a humble donkey. Here
are Zechariahs words:
"Rejoice
greatly, O daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of Jerusalem:
behold, thy King cometh unto thee: he is just, and having
salvation; lowly, and riding upon an ass, and upon a colt
the foal of an ass . . . and he shall speak peace unto the
nations, and his dominion shall be from sea even to sea,
and from the river even to the ends of the earth."21
When
these words were written, they would have seemed utterly ridiculous.
What king would ever become "lowly, and riding upon an
ass"? And if he ever did approach his capital in such
an improper fashion, would his people "rejoice greatly"
and "shout" their approval of such behaviour? How
absurd it must all have sounded!
And
yet, when it happened, it all seemed perfectly natural. Jesus
was a poor man, a humble man, a man of peace. It would have
been unthinkable for Him to have mounted a warhorse. Yet at
the same time He had the bearing, the strength of character,
the dynamic personality and the personal magnetism of a mighty
king.
So
when Jesus deliberately rode into Jerusalem in the way that
Zechariah had said He must, nobody laughed. Instead, great
crowds carpeted His path with their own clothing, and shouted
their acknowledgement that He was their King.22
Without
this response from the crowd, any attempt by Jesus to fulfil
Zechariahs prophecy would have been a farce. But as it turned
Out,
an utterly improbable prophecy came true.
He
was to be uniquely righteous.
Suppose
we ask the question: "Why should God bless Messiah so
richly, by making him so much greater than anyone else?"
Several
correct answers could be given. This is the reason given in
Psalm 45:
"Thou
art fairer than the children of men Grace is poured into
thy lips
Therefore God hath blessed thee for ever."23
" Thou hast loved righteousness and hated wickedness
Therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee
With the oil of gladness above thy fellows."24
The
answer is clear. God would bless Messiah so richly because
of his perfect speech and his perfect behaviour. Consequently,
only a perfect man could claim to be Messiah. An unrighteous
self-styled Messiah would soon have been exposed as a fraud.
Jesus
made this claim. "Which of you convicteth Me of sin?"
He asked.25 No one took up His
challenge.
His
disciples, who knew Him intimately, were clearly convinced
of His utter sinlessness. The whole Christian gospel of salvation
was based upon a belief in a sinless sacrifice. As Peter put
it:
"Ye
were redeemed with the precious blood of Christ, as of a
lamb without blemish and without spot . . . who did no sin
. . . For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just
for the unjust."26
Now
suppose that this had not been true. Suppose that Jesus had
actually been as imperfect as everybody else. Isnt it obvious
that in that case Christianity would have been stillborn?
The Pharisees and Sadducees stopped at nothing-not even at
persecution and murder in their attempts to stifle the preaching
of the early disciples. Yet they could have destroyed the
very foundation of Christianity by bringing evidence that
Jesus was a sinner.
But
they failed to do it.
Why?
One
answer stands out as being far more likely than any other.
They could not. Jesus fulfilled the prophecy that
Messiah would be a sinless man.
He
was to rise from the dead.
Did
Jesus rise from the dead? This question is so important that
a whole chapter must be devoted to it. For now, it is enough
to put on record that the Old Testament prophesied that He
would.
"My
flesh also shall rest in hope
For thou wilt not leave my soul in hell,
Neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption.
Thou wilt shew me the path of life.
In thy presence is fulness of joy;
At thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore."27
This
prophecy is easier to understand in the original Hebrew than
in the English. The word translated "hell" in the
second line is the Hebrew word Sheol which simply
means "the place of the dead". In about thirty places
in our Old Testament it is translated "the grave".
As
the Apostle Peter pointed out28
the Psalm clearly means that, although Messiah would be buried,
his body would not rot away in the grave. He would be raised
up by God to a new life of everlasting Joy.
At
this stage you must reserve your judgement as to whether this
prophecy was fulfilled, or not. After you have read Chapter
7, you may be able to decide.
He
was to ascend to heaven.
Another
prophecy which must have been impossible to understand at
the time was written by King David:
"The
Lord said unto my lord, Sit thou at My right hand, Until
I make thine enemies thy footstool."29
"The
Lord hath sworn and will not repent,
Thou art a priest for ever After the order of Melchizedek."30
The
astonishing thing about this Psalm of David is that it exists
in the Jewish scriptures at all. Humanly speaking, it has
no business to be there. From a Jewish point of view, it should
never have been written, or, if written, it should have been
burnt at once, as heresy.
Many
prophecies declare that Messiah was to be a descendant of
David. In accordance with oriental custom, this meant that
he should be subordinate to David. Yet in the opening line,
David refers to Messiah as "my lord".
Whatever
made David do that? Jesus asked this question of the rabbis,
and they could not answer.31
It did not make sense to them.
The
next two lines were (and still are) equally baffling to the
Jews. Since Messiah is to be king of the world, why should
he have to ascend to heaven and wait there for some time before
being given power on earth?
The
last three lines of the passage quoted above are even more
surprising, if you know the Old Testament background. This
Messiah who Sits in heaven is to be an everlasting priest,
"after the order of Melchizedek".
The
point of this is that Messiah, like all Jewish kings, had
to be of the tribe of Judah. But Jewish priests could only
come from the tribe of Levi, and consequently a king could
not possibly be a priest. King Uzziah tried to do a priests
job once, and God immediately punished him for it.32
How,
then, could Messiah be a priest? The answer lies in the reference
to Melchizedek. This man is mentioned only once before in
the Bible, and that in the very beginning, way back in the
book of Genesis. Melchizedek was a priest to Abraham, and
he was also a king.33
Moreover,
as one New Testament writer pointed out,34
he was an even greater man than Abraham who paid him tithes.
Consequently his priestly order must have been far higher
than that of the priests descended from Abraham.
The
priests of Israel must have winced every time they read that
psalm. It was both baffling and painful. It implied that their
own order of priesthood would come to an end, and give way
to a greater order when Messiah came. Yet those same priests
had somehow been compelled to keep that uncomfortable psalm
for centuries, safely preserved along with the rest of their
Scriptures.
Once
more we have a strange fact that demands an explanation. How
did a psalm that could never have made sense to its writer
come to be written? How did it come to be accepted as part
of the Jewish Scriptures? Why did the priests, who must have
found it so embarrassing-mg, keep it and not destroy it?
And
above all, how does it happen that the events recorded in
the New Testament fit the psalm so perfectly? That they, and
they alone, bring the psalm to life and fill it with meaning?
I
have heard only one explanation that fits all the facts. The
psalm must be a prophecy given by God. The New Testament account
of Jesus ascending to heaven, to be a priest for His followers
and to await the time of His Second Coming, must be true.
Taking
Stock
Some
very important facts have been established in this chapter.
There
is clear evidence that most of the main events described in
the gospels were foretold in the Old Testament. These include
the crucifixion (with very much detail), the approximate date
of Christ 5 appearance, His birthplace, the extraordinary
nature of His triumphal entry into Jerusalem, His perfect
character, His resurrection, His ascension to heaven, His
heavenly priesthood, and the promise of His Second Coming.
How
do the unbelievers explain these facts?
Not
very well. I think I am being fair to them in saying that
these are the alternatives they offer you:
- Perhaps
Jesus deliberately fulfilled the prophecies.
One
theory is that He spent years swotting up the Old Testament
until He knew all the Messianic prophecies, and then went
around fulfilling them. But this bristles with difficulties.
To begin with, how did Jesus contrive to get Himself born
in Bethlehem? How did He manage to achieve what no other human
being has managed: a sinless life? Did He really arrange to
be tortured to death, just because prophecy required it? And
if so, how did He persuade His executioners to comply with
all the detailed requirements of the prophecy? And what about
His resurrection and ascension to heaven?
Obviously
that wont do.
- Perhaps
the early Christians twisted the Old Testament.
It
has been suggested that the first Christians "saw"
prophecies in the Old Testament where no prophecies really
existed-that they twisted the meaning of the Old Testament
to bolster up their own preaching.
But
that wont do, either. The early Christians interpreted their
Old Testament in the same way that Jews had always done. Even
the unbelieving Jews never denied that the Old Testament was
full of Messianic prophecies. The Jews merely denied that
Jesus of Nazareth was the Messiah, because He did not behave
as they thought the Messiah ought to behave.
- Perhaps
the early Christians distorted the facts of history.
According
to this theory the events recorded in the gospels never took
place at all. This treats the New Testament as nothing more
than a collection of legends, compounded to make it look as
if Old Testament prophecy was being fulfilled.
That
was a popular excuse in Queen Victorias day, but it does not
hold water nowadays. We know now that the gospels were written
while plenty of eyewitnesses were still alive. (Chapter 16
gives the evidence for this.) And besides, the moral tone
of the New Testament is so high that it simply cannot be the
work of men who cooked up stories to deceive the public.
Well,
what do you think?
Which
is easier? Which is more reasonable?
To
believe that the prophecies of the Old Testament were fulfilled
in Jesus of Nazareth?
Or
to believe the feeble explanations of the unbelievers?
| 1
Luke 18:31-33 |
2
Ps. 22:16 |
3
Ps. 22:15 |
| 4
Ps. 22:12 |
5
Ps. 22:13, 17 |
6
Ps. 22:7 |
| 7
Ps. 22:8 |
8
Ps. 22:18 |
9
Isa. 53:3 |
| 10
Isa. 53:5 |
11
Isa. 53:8, 12 |
12
Isa. 53:7 |
| 13
Isa. 53:9 |
14
Isa. 53:10 |
15
Isa. 53:12 |
| 16
Dr. J. H. Greenstone, in The Encyclopedia of Jewish
Knowledge, edited by J. De Haas. Behrman, New York,
1934 |
17
Dan. 9:24-26 |
18
For example, Exod. 31:14; Ps. 37:34; Ezek. 17:17 |
| 19
See Num. 14:34 and Ezek. 4:4-6 |
20
Mic. 5:2 |
21
Zech. 9:9, 10 |
| 22Mark
11:9, 10 |
23
Ps. 45:2 |
24
Ps. 45:7 |
| 25John
8:46 |
26
1 Pet. 1:18-19; 2:22; 3:18 |
27Ps.
16:9-11 |
| 28
Acts 2:24-32 |
29
Ps. 110:1 |
30
Ps. 110:4 |
| 31
Matt. 22:41-46 |
32
2 Chr. 26:16-20 |
33
Gen. 14:18-20 |
| 34
Heb. 7:1-4 |
|
|
|