“Jesus took the Twelve aside and told them, ‘We are going up to Jerusalem, and everything that is written by the prophets about the Son of Man will be fulfilled’” (Luke 18:31).
Everyone is the product of a unique combination of improbable events. But Jesus is special: Those improbable events were foretold hundreds of years before his birth.
The New Testament writers had a broader view of the term “prophecy” than we tend to. They included what theologians called types, similar to foreshadowing in literature. So the apostles saw hints of Christ throughout the scriptures. Sometimes they are things that happened to other people in the scriptures but that still point to Christ. Theologians identify about 200 prophecies about Jesus using this broader sense of the word.
But some prophecies are clear and specific and fulfilled only in Christ. There are prophecies that he chose to fulfill, such as riding into Jerusalem on the foal of a donkey, that demonstrate how Jesus saw himself and his mission. But there are others that no man could have chosen to fulfill.
Pick any eight such prophecies:
- Born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2)
- Rejected by his people (Is 53:3, Psalm 22:6-8)
- Abandoned by his followers (Zech 13:7)
- Badly beaten (Is 52:14)
- Death by crucifixion (Psalm 22:16-17)
- Killed with criminals (Is 53:9)
- Lots cast for his clothes (Psalm 22:18)
- Buried with the rich (Is 53:9)
Suppose you cover the entire state of Texas with silver dollars two feet deep – that takes about 1017 silver dollars. Paint one of them red and mix it in good. Now send a blindfolded friend to go anywhere in the state he wishes and randomly pick up one dollar. The odds that he’d get the red one are 1 in 1017. That is how likely it is for one person to fulfill eight prophecies.
And that doesn’t even consider how his ministry (Is 9:1-2, 61:1-2), miracles (Is 35:5-6), and resurrection (Is 53:10, Ps 16:8-10) were predicted.
The life, death, and life of Jesus were uniquely foretold in detail hundreds of years before he was born, demonstrating that he was no mere man and that the death he died was according to the plan of God.
To get the full effect, read what is sometimes called the gospel according to Isaiah, Is 52:13-53:12, and reflect on how closely this passage written 700 years before Christ describes the death of the savior.
1 Josh McDowell and Sean McDowell, Evidence That Demands a Verdict
image credit: M&R Glasgow, via Creative Commons
Part of Christianity 101
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