Showing posts with label Biblical prophecy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biblical prophecy. Show all posts

Monday, 7 May 2018

Part 4. Can we still believe the Bible? A prophetic perspective.

In this essay, I consider the trustworthiness of the Bible from a prophetic angle. Although Biblical Criticism scholars often reject the very notion of "prophecy", in my view prophecy is, in fact, one of the testable aspects of the Biblical claim to being divinely inspired. So, how strong is this kind of evidence? I discuss the messianic prophecies as well as other remarkable prophecies. I also develop good principles for judging prophetic material. What does that say about prophecies concerning the future?

The Bible is a many-faceted book. One of the most important characteristics of the Bible is the many oracles and prophecies that we find therein. In our scientific age, people are in general sceptical about all things supernatural, including prophecy, insofar as this refers to some kind of superhuman knowledge about future events. To the secular mind, it does not make sense that anyone can know the future. As such, some scholars from the Biblical Criticism tradition have found ways to discredit the Biblical idea of prophecy. The question is: Are they right? Is there really something called prophecy?

About one-third of the Bible consists of prophetic writings. This prophetic dimension of the Bible is actually extremely important in deciding what kind of book the Bible is. Although the Bible includes many historical narratives which tell about God's involvement in history, those stories cannot in themselves provide evidence that the Bible is what it claims to be, namely a divinely inspired book. Insofar as their truth can be established, they can at most show that the Biblical witnesses gave a trustworthy account of historical events (see parts 1, 2, 3 of this series for a detailed discussion thereof [1, 2, 3]). It is the prophetic aspect which is in the final instance the most important measure of the Biblical claim that it is no human book but a divinely inspired work - and contains God's message for humankind.

So, there is a lot at stake when it comes to Biblical prophecy. If we can show that the Biblical prophecies had indeed been fulfilled, then this goes a long way to establishing that the Bible is indeed what it says. Prophecy is one of the aspects of the Bible (see also the Biblical worldview [4]) which may provide scientifically measurable "evidence" for the existence of God insofar as the true fulfilment of prophecy goes beyond the possibility of scientific explanation and hinges on the Biblical claim that God knows the future and has through the ages revealed that to his prophets as we read: "I am the LORD: that is my name... new things do I declare: before they spring forth I tell you of them" (Is. 42:8-9).

The question therefore arises: Can we believe the Bible insofar as its prophetic claims are concerned? On the one hand, many Biblical Criticism scholars reject the notion of true prophecy (it does not fit into the "scientific" study of the Bible). On the other hand, we find that fundamentalist Christians often wrongly announce some date in which some prophecy such as the return of Jesus Christ would happen. This also discredits the notion of prophecy. Are there enough evidence to support the notion of true prophecy?

The problem with prophecy is that it is often very difficult to prove that the relevant events did, in fact, happen after the prophecy was given and was not retrospectively so named (this is due to our angle on history - living so long after the relevant events). As such, there are many Biblical prophecies which cannot be shown to be true in this sense. There are, however, some prophecies where we know that the related events do, in fact, came later. In that case, other considerations come into play: there may be various versions as well as interpretations of the prophetic texts where only one is consistent with an outcome that may be regarded as the fulfilment of the prophecy. As such, an evaluation of the evidence for and against the true fulfilment of prophecy is no easy task.

In this essay, I consider the typical arguments that Biblical Criticism scholars bring against Biblical prophecy. I discuss the problem in evaluating whether some prophecy can be shown to have indeed been fulfilled. I also discuss the problem of the variety of possible interpretation of a book such as Revelation. I establish good principles for judging prophetic material. I show that we do have good examples of Biblical prophecy that had been remarkably fulfilled. In the final instance, I also consider those prophecies which concern future events.

Biblical Criticism and prophecy

In Biblical Criticism, the aim is to study the Bible from a scientific perspective. The aim is to clear the text of all unhistorical data - of everything that scholars from a scientific point of view assume cannot have happened. From this angle, the ability to "predict" the future is obviously not possible in any scientific sense. So, when it comes to the Biblical prophets, such scholars tried to reconstruct the Sitz im Leben ("setting in life") in which the prophet operated – this is the historical context in which he presented his message within the social circumstances of the time. For these scholars, it is the ethical dimension of the prophet's message which is of special importance. The predictive aspect was considered as secondary – at most, it could have included some vague "predictions" which are not to be taken seriously because it would most probably be wrong.

What about bold statements about the fulfilment of prophecy found in the Biblical text? In their view, this should be interpreted either as vaticinia ex eventu (foretelling after the event) or that the author created fictional events to give the impression that some prophecy was fulfilled (some mention, for example, events from the life of Jesus in this regard [5]). So, when there are two options for reading the text which cannot be decided by independent means, namely that the prophecy was given beforehand or was retrospectively so interpreted, these scholars always assert the second option. A good example is the dating of the gospels later than 70 AD to allow for some knowledge by the authors about the Roman attack on Jerusalem - if the texts were written earlier it implies that this event was correctly foreseen by Jesus, which such scholars reject.  


One may ask: Is this good methodological practice? In this approach, the possibility of divine intervention in human affairs is excluded in principle. Although scholars can obviously not exclude the possibility that the prophetic interpretation in the text postdates the events mentioned therein, excluding the alternative as a matter of dogmatic belief pre-empts the outcome of independent research. Sometimes this even goes directly against the available evidence. In the case of Jesus's prophecy about the fall of Jerusalem found in the gospels, we actually have good reasons to think that it is a true prophecy. 


We can establish this from the most logical date when the Acts of the Apostles was written - which was by the same author who previously wrote the Gospel of St. Luke in which we find the prophecy about the destruction of Jerusalem (see Acts 1:1). Now, the story told in Acts stops when St. Paul had been in Rome for three years, which was in 62 AD. If there was more to say - such as what eventually happened to St. Paul in Rome etc. - then the author would surely have done so. This means that the Gospel of St. Luke could be dated before that (it was written first) - probably to 58 AD - which is well before the Romans captured Jerusalem in 70 AD. This is consistent with the author using the first person "I" (and "we") in the second part of Acts in accordance with the tradition that the St. Luke who wrote the book is the very same Luke who joined St. Paul on his missionary journeys.

Biblical Criticism scholars, in fact, presuppose what they eventually find! In presupposing that true prophecy is impossible (as well as all supernatural intervention in history), the only possible explanation acceptable to them is the one of natural science. In this way, they merely find what they set out to find! They never seriously consider the alternative possibility that there are more to this world than natural science. So, they reduce religious studies to a secular science without any consideration for the alternative. This is an obviously bad methodology in which Biblical studies is reduced to a secular science even though those "scientists" do not have the scientific means in the discipline to in any sensible way evaluate those claims. They merely assume them to be wrong! 

This is also bad hermeneutics! It is the kind of hermeneutics which believes that the contemporary scholars are - in contrast with the "primitive" people who wrote the texts - the only ones who have a truly scientific and "objective" view on the world from which the texts originated. Not only is this claim false (there is no "objective" angle on history [6]), it also shows an astonishing disrespect for the Other in the context of the dialogue taking place in hermeneutics. To quote Hermann Gunkel (1862-1932), who greatly influenced this discipline: "Following our modern historical world-view, truly not an imaginary construct but based on the observation of facts, we consider the other view entirely impossible" [7].


Using the insights of the great philosopher of hermeneutics, Hans-Georg Gadamer (1900-2002), we can view our interaction with these texts as a conversation in which readers from our generation are in conversation with the authors of those texts (and with many others who have already throughout the ages participated in this conversation). What happens in the one-sided conversation which Biblical Criticism scholars have with those ancient authors, is that the one participant in the dialogue ignores the views of the others as being totally irrelevant to their our fixed opinions! They arrogantly believe that they know it all and that the other persons in the conversation are not worth listening to. What they should keep in mind that the whole modernist philosophical approach used to establish the foundations of the discipline has since been fundamentally discredited [6] - which should caution any scholar to be humble in their approach to these issues. 


Gadamer writes that such an approach to hermeneutics "destroys the true meaning of this tradition" [8]. The point is that, although contemporary scholars may not believe in true prophecy, those authors obviously did! They believed that the oracles were God-given and this influenced their whole perspective on life. Once this aspect is removed, we do not arrive at some “objective” point of view – we arrive at a reductive view with no correspondence to the historical situation. The fact is that they held those beliefs. The prophet, as well as those who listened to him, believed that these oracles came from God. This was part of their worldview; it determined their whole concept of life and the place of major (especially catastrophic) events therein. This is the historical situation! [9]


To reduce the prophetic message to a mere ethical message and prophecy to mere poetry is not only reductionist – it creates a new idea about that reality which is totally divorced from the true historical reality which existed in the context of the Hebrew prophetic tradition. It forces a certain rational view, typical of the modernist perspective, onto Biblical times without any concern for the views of the people who lived during that period. It gives the false impression that this is an “objective” view – the only one that is valid (so typical of the colonial spirit of modernism) – whereas it is, in fact, a total distortion of the real situation. Without doing so consciously, these scholars force their own paradigm onto the text which totally overshadows the voices therein, namely those of the author and the tradition from which the authors came. If we want to know something about the real situation, we have to listen to the voices present in the text and allow them to tell us something about their world. We have to be open to their truth - especially since we cannot prove them to be wrong!

Messianic prophecy?


There are, however, also prophecies which had been given long before the time when the events associated with their fulfilment took place. A good example of this is the messianic prophecies which are usually taken by Christians as being fulfilled in the life and person of Jesus Christ. 


There are many events from the life of Jesus which the Biblical authors understood in terms of the fulfilment of Biblical prophecy. We often find that the authors of the gospels mention that such or such an event was in accordance with the sayings of one of the prophets. The question is whether there is any value in the assessment by those Biblical authors that the Biblical passages which they refer to were indeed real prophecies? Biblical Criticism scholars are of the opinion that the "messianic allusions" in the four gospels are based on later interpretations. In their view, the passages were wrongly interpreted by the early Church and should not be understood in that way. This scholarly assessment is the reason why we find that all capital letters previously used to mark references to the Messiah in typical messianic prophecies had been dropped in some modern translations of those passages such as in Isaiah 53.


Why would one assert that the authors of the gospels held wrong interpretations of typical messianic passages? The main reason for this assessment is that these scholars assert that those passages are not predictions made with the Messiah in mind. Now, this shows a remarkable disconnect with the longstanding Hebrew tradition of understanding prophecy. We read, for example, in 2 Peter 1:19-21: "no prophecy of Scripture came about by the prophet's own interpretation [i.e. his predictions]. For prophecy never had its origin in the will of man, but holy men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit". True prophecy is not based on the prophet's own interpretation of events and his own ideas about the future but was believed to have been supernaturally given through the inspiration of the Spirit of God [10]. The intentions of the prophet, therefore, play no role in prophecy!


According to Hebrew tradition, the prophet often did not even know that he or she was speaking of the Messiah - for the simple reason that the Spirit of God inspired them in a way which they themselves did not understand. The prophet often did not realise that he was speaking about events pertaining to the distant future. This is the Hebrew understanding of prophecy in contrast with the modern scholarly understanding which confuses prophecy with prediction and forces this interpretation onto the text. 


As such, some messianic prophecies originally concerned the king or the people of Israel but was interpreted as having reference to the Messiah (for example, Hos. 11:1 and Matt. 2:15; Ps. 2:9 and Rev. 2:27). The reason for such messianic interpretations was often that the poetic language used had undertones which suggest that there was more to it than that which seems to have been said [11]. One finds, for example, in Psalm 110 that the author prophecises that God's anointed would be a king, who sits on Yahweh's "right hand", as well as a priest "forever". 


So, how can we establish what is true prophecy and what not? When would it be that the New Testament author is merely taking Scriptural passages that seem to fit the events to assert his point? The answer is actually quite simple. Their interpretation of such passages did not happen in a vacuum - there was a well-established Hebrew tradition in which certain passages were marked as "messianic". The scholar Alfred Edersheim, who studied this issue extensively, showed that there were 456 separate Old Testament passages which the rabbinic scholars of the time interpreted as "messianic" [12] - which is miles away from the Biblical Criticism view that only a few passages can be so taken (Is. 7:10-17; 8:23-9:6; 11:1-9; Zech. 9:9; Mic. 5:1-4). 

Edersheim wrote: "A careful perusal of their [the Rabbi's] Scripture quotations shows that the main postulates of the New Testament concerning the Messiah are fully supported by Rabbinic statements" [12]. And this is the important point: the passages were so understood before Jesus arrived on the scene and can, therefore, be understood as consistent with the messianic expectations of the people of Israel. To try and reinterpret the idea of prophecy in such a way that typical messianic prophecies are disqualified seems to be a weak effort to overcome the substantial evidence that such prophecy was overwhelmingly fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ.


There are, however, some Biblical prophetic passages which do not seem to support the meaning given to them by the authors of the gospels. A well-known one is the prophecy of Isaiah about the virgin who shall conceive and bear a son, named Emmanuel (Is. 7:14). How could the Biblical authors be so uninformed that they thought that the Hebrew word “almâh” (veiled) means "virgin" whereas it actually means "young maiden". The reason is, again, quite simple: They understood the word exactly as the translators of the Septuagint understood it when they translated the Tanakh in the third to second centuries BC, namely as meaning "virgin". It seems that the alternative interpretation developed later from the Jewish reaction against Christianity! 


Too many interpretations of one passage?

One of the problems with prophecy, and especially such prophecies as those in the Book of Revelation, is that there are so many different interpretations thereof. Biblical Criticism scholars often assert that St. John's visions as described in that book are not even prophecy at all but merely adheres to the apocalyptic genre of the time in which visions and symbols are used by the authors as a literary device. This, however, seems to go against an explicit statement in the text to the contrary, namely that the book is about "things to come" (Rev. 1:1, 19). The difference is between taking the book as the product of the imagination of the author or as containing true God-given visions as the author asserts [13]. 


Now, it is true that there are at least four interpretations of Revelation. The Preterists take the book as referring to past events from the period before the book was written (especially 70 AD). The Historists believe that the events described are those major events which impacted Middle Eastern history since the time of the writing of the book until the Second Coming of Jesus Christ. The Idealists/Allegoricalists read the book as symbols pertaining to the ongoing struggle between Good and Evil and sees no prophecy in the book. The Futurists believe that the main part of the book concerns future events.


These are indeed very divergent views about the meaning of the book. Does that mean that one should discard it as not containing true prophecy? The fact that there are various interpretations of the book does not necessarily mean that it should not be taken as prophecy given the opposite claim made at the beginning of the book (Rev. 1:1, 19). When we allow for the possibility that it might be true prophecy, then one might suggest that we take the Old Testament prophecies which the Biblical authors took as referring to Jesus as the point of departure in interpreting those of Revelation for the simple reason that the book stands within the same Judeo-Christian tradition. In the very same way that the particular details in those Old Testament prophecies (such as those in the Book of Daniel) were important, the same would apply to the Book of Revelation where one finds similar details. 


When we allow that the Book of Revelation contains true prophecies - in spite of the Biblical Criticism claim that no such prophecy exists (as discussed above) - then one immediately allows that they might find an exact fulfilment just as the other prophecies regarding Jesus were interpreted (even if one holds another view). This means that one allows for the possibility that Jesus was, in fact, the Messiah and would one day return during the Second Coming. And then, it seems very likely that his Second Coming would be a real event just like his first appearance (and not merely an invisible event as some maintain regarding the events of 70 AD). In the final instance, this all hinges on the question whether God did, in fact, inspire the prophets and whether Jesus Christ was, in fact, the long-awaited Jewish Messiah? If this possibility is allowed (which cannot be excluded since so many prophecies have indeed been fulfilled in his person), then other prophecies about future events preceding Jesus's Second Coming might also eventually be fulfilled.


I sometimes get the feeling that one of the reasons why some interpreters are careful to avoid accentuating any details in the Book of Revelation - and stay with vague comments within a symbolic framework - is that they fear that they may be wrong. Now, this is indeed a problem that there are interpreters who make proud pronouncements which consequently turn out to be wrong. This should be a serious warning to be cautious. But is there no other way in which we may allow such details into our interpretation? I would like to suggest that scholars should develop eschatological models (similar to the theoretical models used in science) which can then be tested in the progress of time (more about that below). In this way, our interpretation of the details of the prophecy is not asserted as facts about future events but merely as a sensible reconstruction and integration of the details in prophetic passages. 


Principles for prophetic judgment


I suggest that any open-minded reader would allow for the possibility that real prophecy exists - even if they are inclined to think that the opposite is true. In that case, we may ask how one would decide what counts as real prophecy. In my view, the following principles are important:


1) Good hermeneutics requires that we engage with the texts with respect for the view of the author and the tradition from which s/he originated and not immediately reject his/her view out of hand because of our preconceived views about the world. In the same way that the philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) introduced respect as the basis for our moral behaviour, Gadamer introduced it in the context of the dialogue which takes place in all interpretation. Even when we disagree, we should value the point of view of the Other. Even though we might think his position to be nonsensical, we should remember that we do not have an objective view on the world and it is always possible that we are actually wrong in our assessment (as happened regarding the modernism of the Biblical Criticism of the early twentieth century [6]). As such, we must not only allow for the possible existence of true prophecy but also for other interpretations of prophetic passages than our own.

2) Biblical prophecy stands within a long tradition in which the Biblical text had been read in a certain way. The philosophers Thomas Kuhn (1922-1996) and Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) taught us that we all belong to a paradigm or cultural setting which forms our minds in a particular way. We are people of our time - just as the Biblical authors were of theirs. Today with the emergence of mass media it is possible to change culture quite rapidly - but that does not apply to the ancient world of old Israel. Their culture and tradition stayed the same even in the context of the early Christian Church which evolved from their midst. As such, we should acknowledge their prophetic tradition not only insofar as the texts are concerned but also insofar as their interpretation of those texts is concerned. Our modern interpretation of their texts cannot be better than their own for the simple reason that we are very much removed from their interpretive tradition.

What is also important is to understand that the prophecies in the New Testament which concerns the Second Coming of Jesus Christ stand in the very same prophetic tradition as those which concerned his first appearance. As such, we should remember that the very same people who took the Old Testament prophecies in a literal sense as being fulfilled in Jesus Christ also expected that the prophecies concerning his Second Coming would be fulfilled in such a manner. This suggests that the Idealists/Allegoricalists' attempt to find some "deeper meaning" than the obvious one (say, of the period of "42 months" (3 1/2 years) mentioned in Revelation) is not consistent with the prophetic tradition from which those texts originated. Those people did not have any knowledge of that very Greek approach at that early period [14]. We should allow that the details of the prophecies might, in fact, be literally fulfilled even when the text includes metaphors and symbols.

3) All prophecies are applied to world events. This application might refer to events in the distant past or the future. The process in which this application is done is, however, also important. So often we find that interpreters see something happening in the world which they then on an ad hoc basis relate to prophecies which they think could be relevant to those events. This is, however, not good hermeneutic practice. We should develop good eschatological models pertaining to future prophecy and only then apply them to world events in a systematic way - very much in the same way that we apply theoretical models in science to empirical data. In this way, the eschatological model is known beforehand and the fulfilment thereof can be better evaluated. This means that scholars do not have to be afraid to engage in a more substantial manner with prophecies about the "future". This, however, does not mean that they have to accept everything that had become associated with the Futurists (especially regarding the Rapture [15]).


Re-reading the Bible

We can now consider some Biblical prophecies in more detail. Although there are many Biblical prophecies which the Biblical authors believed (and believers in general believe) to have been fulfilled, I only discuss ones of which the fulfilment can be shown to have happened sometime after the prophecy was given. I discuss two very remarkable such prophecies.

The first is the well-known prophecy of Jeremiah that Jerusalem would be given in the hands of the Babylonians for a period of seventy years (Jer. 25:11-12). We know that this period was understood by the exiles to have commenced when the Neo-Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar first conquered Jerusalem in 605 BC which was also when Daniel and his friends are said to have gone into exile to Babylon (see Dan. 9:1, 10; the city was taken again in 597 BC and 587 BC). The Neo-Babylonian rule came to an end when the Persians conquered Babylon in 539 BC. 

According to the Book of Daniel, the first ruler of the Persians was King Darius, "of the seed of the Medes", in whose first year the prophet Daniel is said to have received one of his prophecies (Dan. 9:1-2; which would have been in about 538 BC). Although the historicity of this Darius is disputed, there is no good reason to doubt that such a person lived (archaeological data has certain limits - see [16]). After him came the well-known Cyrus, who allowed Israel to return to their homeland in the first year of his reign in Babylon (Ezra 1:1). If we assume that Darius ruled for two years (Dan. 9:1-2 seems to imply a reign of more than one year), then Cyrus gave his command in about 536 BC. When we allow for prophetic reckoning (a prophetic year was considered to be 360 years; see Rev. 11:1-2), then the prophecy of Jeremiah may be considered to have been remarkably fulfilled. The period from 605 BC to 536 BC is exactly 70 prophetic years.


Another remarkable prophecy is the one attributed to Daniel in the above-mentioned passage (Dan. 9:20-27). In this case, we read about a period of 70 "weeks" of years, which is 70 x 7 = 490 years, which is in turn subdivided into two periods of 69 "weeks" of years (483 years) and the final period of one "week" (7 years) [17]. The first 69 "weeks" of years is our present concern. According to the prophecy, it would commence with the command to rebuild the city of Jerusalem and end just before the "anointed one" (Messiah) would be "cut off" (i.e. dies). Although scholars differ in their interpretation of the meaning of the two events mentioned, there is a general consensus that the period of 69 "weeks" of years refers to the time in between them (for a discussion of all the views, see [18]).


The only command that was ever given to rebuild the city of Jerusalem, was the one given in the month of Nisan in the twentieth year of the Persian king Artaxerxes Longimanus (Neh. 2:5). This was in the year 445 BC (Artaxerxes's rule is calculated from the death of his father Xerxes in July 465 BC [19]). The three previous commands that were given by Persian rulers, were all concerned with the building of the temple – not the city of Jerusalem (Ezra 1:2-4; 5:13; 6:3-14; 7:12-26). When we take this date as the starting point for the 69 "weeks" of years or 483 years, then the period came to an end during the time of Jesus's ministry on earth, which would be consistent with him being the Messiah. This reading is also consistent with the general expectation that the Jewish Messiah would appear in the time when Jesus did (Lu. 2:26; 3:15; Joh. 1:19, 20) - which was most probably based on this very prophecy of Daniel.


The period of 69 weeks of years would come to an end when Messiah, a Prince, appears - which is just before he would be "cut off" [20]. Given that the prophecy seems to have reference to Jesus, we might ask: To which event during the earthly ministry of Jesus does the prophecy refer? Or to put it differently: when did Jesus present himself as Messiah and King (Prince) to Israel? This clearly happened when Jesus rode upon the donkey into Jerusalem in accordance with the prophecy of Zechariah: "Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Sion; 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" (Zech. 9:9). When that happened, the crowd cried out: "Hosanna, Blessed is the King of Israel that cometh in the name of the Lord" (Joh. 12:13).


Entry into Jerusalem, Giotto
The Entry into Jerusalem by Giotto (1305 AD)
From the details in the Gospel of St. Luke, we know that John the Baptist started his ministry in the fifteenth year of Cesar Tiberius (Luk. 3:1-3). The fifteenth year of Tiberius commenced on 19 August 28 AD. Jesus was therefore baptized in the autumn of 28 AD. This means that he was crucified three-and-a-half years later in the year 32 AD [19]. The year 32 AD is also the only year in which the calendar agrees with the events of that time. Jesus would, therefore, have entered Jerusalem on the donkey on the Sunday before the crucifixion in the year 32 AD (see Joh. 12:1, 12).

This period of 69 weeks of years, i.e. 483 years, that is from 445 BC to 32 AD, ends long after the latest possible date that the text could have been written (in about 164 BC as is accepted in Biblical Criticism circles). This means that a considerable part of the prophecy refers to events that happened long after the text was written (by the latest estimates). Traditional Christians believe that the prophecy dates much earlier, namely to the time mentioned in the Book of Daniel (538 BC; right at the beginning of the Persian rule over Babylon). Irrespective of the position taken, the 483 years obviously ends long after the latest accepted date for the writing of the book. One can also not think that Jesus could have calculated the date to superficially "fulfil" the prophecy because the kind of mathematics necessary to do the calculations was not available at that time.

When we do the calculations, we find that the period between these events in 445 BC and 32 AD is exactly 173880 days (for a detailed discussion, see [21]). Again, when we use prophetic years (360 days in the year; see Rev. 11:1-2), then we find that the period is precisely 69 prophetic years – even to the exact day! One cannot but to say that this is truly astounding. This is one of those cases where we have a prophecy with sufficient details to be tested rigorously as well as the tools to do that test. However one sees this, one cannot but to at the very least accept that this is an astonishing coincidence. 

Prophecies about the future


This brings us to the future. As we have good reasons to think that Biblical prophecy has been accurately fulfilled in the past (and I do not know about any such prophecy that was, in fact, wrong), we may think that the same would happen in the future. In this case, however, I would like to merely present an eschatological model which take another prophecy in the Book of Daniel as the point of departure, namely the one in Daniel 7 (for a more detailed exploration of this model, see [22]). 


In this prophecy, all the different empires which would rule over the people of Israel since the time of Nebuchadnezzar until the time of judgment is depicted as symbolic beasts. At the time of judgment, we read that "one like the Son of man comes with the clouds of heaven", who would receive dominion, glory and everlasting kingship over all the earth (Dan. 7:13-14). Jesus applied this prophecy to his Second Coming, saying that "the Son of man [would] come in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory" (Matt. 24:30). When we take this prophecy in the Book of Daniel seriously, we might view it as describing events throughout history to the Second Coming (which has obviously not yet arrived; it would not happen in secret but with "great power and glory").


What is further remarkable about this prophecy, is that it has a twin: there is another prophecy in the Book of Daniel which agrees on each point with this one, even though other symbols are used (in Daniel 2). In the vision of the prophet described in chapter 7, various beasts rose from the sea. In Nebuchadnezzar's dream in chapter 2, a metal statue is depicted. The four beasts (lion, bear, leopard and a dreadful and terrible beast that was exceedingly strong with great iron teeth) correspond with the four metals from which the statue was made (gold, silver, brass, iron). In both cases, the last one is depicted as stronger than all the others, as a beast/metal which "brake in pieces" (Dan. 7:7; 2:40) and devour/subdue. The great beast had ten horns whereas the statue had ten toes. The "Son of Man" who came with the clouds of heaven at the time of the great judgment agrees with the rock which broke the statue in pieces and filled the earth. Both prophecies mention the "everlasting kingdom" that would follow.

The largest part of the prophecy has been remarkably fulfilled if we take the symbols in the following manner (which is by far the most reasonable explanation - for a detailed discussion of all the different views, see [23]): the lion/gold refers to the Neo-Babylonian Empire (626-539 BC); the bear/silver refers to the Persian Empire (550-330 BC); the leopard/brass refers to the Greek Empire (of Alexander the Great; 356-323 BC) which was divided into four in the time after his death (323-63 BC) in agreement with the four heads of the leopard; the great and terrible beast or iron which is depicted as stronger than all the others refers to the Roman Empire (27 BC- 476 AD) which was divided into two in agreement with the two legs of iron.

One may suggest that the two feet (made of iron mixed with clay) which came after the two iron legs but preceded the ten toes (made of the same), refer to the two empires which came in the place of the eastern and western parts into which the old Roman Empire was divided, namely the Byzantine Empire (306-1460 AD) in the east and the Holy Roman Empire (800-1806 AD) in the west. These two empires included the core areas of the two parts of the old Roman Empire. In my view, the iron refers to the Latins (Romans) and the clay to the Germanic peoples who lived (for the most part) to the north of the Roman Empire but later settled within its boundaries. Both of these were included in these later empires, whose geographical areas changed a lot over the duration of their existence. 

The ten horns/toes would refer to an empire that comes after these empires (the feet) but which has not yet appeared [23]. These are "ten kings" who will rise from the (geographical area of the) old Roman Empire (Dan. 7:24) to rule over a single end-time empire (Dan. 2:42). After that an eleventh horn appeared from between the ten other horns (in Dan. 7) and grew greater than them; this depicts a great Antichristian figure [24] who would persecute the saints for 3 1/2 years (Dan. 7:25) in the time directly before the coming of the Son of man with the clouds of heaven at the time of the great judgment (Dan. 7:13-28).

This interpretation may be refined by including other relevant prophecies which mention these same things (for example, in the Book of Revelation). This is not the place to do that (see [22]). What this model proposes, is that a final antichristian empire would rise from the ashes of the old Roman Empire. In the end of times, a great empire would rise in the geographical area of the old Roman Empire over which "ten kings" would rule - which may refer to some kind of "council of ten" (we can only speculate) - and which would eventually hand over their power to the final Antichrist [25].

One may suggest that the current efforts to integrate the European Union may eventually lead to the establishment of such an empire. If the democratic EU evolves into such an empire, we would see history repeating itself since the old Roman Empire also evolved out of the Roman Republic. It is indeed quite amazing that the EU has, in fact, been rising in the exact geographical area where the prophecy predicts that the end-time empire of the final Antichrist will appear. This means that we must consider developments in the EU in this light which would eventually show if this model is correct. 

The slow but steady process through which the EU has become ever more centralised and more powerful is consistent with this interpretation of the prophecy - but it is obviously still very far from the empire which one would expect in accordance with the prophecy. As such, I think that we may still have to wait a very long time before the world situation develops in accordance with the prophetic picture described above. If the remarkable correspondence between this prophecy and world history (as discussed above) is for real (one can never exclude the possibility of an astounding coincidence!), then it seems very likely that the future would also unfold as foretold in the prophecy.  

Conclusion

In this essay, I discuss the Bible from a prophetic angle. Are the oracles and prophecies in the Bible for real? Did God really inspire the prophets in such a way that the things which they wrote have reference to future events? I argue that we have good reasons to accept that true prophecy exists. I also argue that we should take statements about prophecy in the Bible serious. We should at the very least be open to the prospect that such prophecies had been fulfilled in ancient times exactly as the authors assert - we have no good reasons to distrust their judgment! 

I also discussed some prophecies that had been remarkably fulfilled, such as the one of Jeremiah about the 70 years of exile or the one of Daniel about the 70 "weeks" of years. The fact that Israel did, in fact, went back from Babylon 70 years after Nebukadnezar first took the city and that Jesus did, in fact, revealed himself in Jerusalem as the Messiah exactly 483 years after the royal command to rebuild the city of Jerusalem - exactly as foretold - should be good reasons to believe that these prophecies (and more generally, the Bible) were inspired by God. Even if we think of some reason to doubt this, I think anyone would have to admit that it is an astounding coincidence that one is able to find such a precise fulfilment in the first place! Finding even one such an extraordinary "black swan" (and I discussed a few) is good enough to show that they do indeed exist.


In my view, the fulfilled prophecies in the Bible provide strong evidence that Jesus is indeed the Messiah and that he would, therefore, one day return as foretold. In this case, we also have prophecies about future events that would precede his Second Coming. Again, it seems to me very remarkable that we can, in fact, fit the prophecy of Daniel about the various world empires (Dan. 7) so beautifully with world history. Within this framework, the next empire which would arise would be the final world empire (corresponding to the ten horns/toes). 


As such, it is again amazing that we do, in fact, find that a great political power is rising in the exact geographical area (of the old Roman Empire and the two succeeding empires) where such an empire is expected and also in the right timescale (about 150 years after the fall of the Holy Roman Empire). The question is: Will the EU brake apart or will it continue to grow geographically and in power? Although we cannot assert that the second outcome will happen - we are merely working with an eschatological model - this would definitely be a strong indication that we are seeing the fulfilment of true prophecy. It seems to me that one would be extremely foolish to reject prophecy and the God who inspire without at least careful consideration.


[1] Part 1. Can we still believe the Bible? A hermeneutical perspective.
[5] These are mostly events which cannot be independently verified. But this implies an extreme form of scepticism which is not consistent with good hermeneutics.
[7] Gunkel, Hermann. 1901. Genesis. Gottingen: Vanderhoeck & Ruprecht.
[8] Gadamer, Hans-Georg. 1994. Truth and Method (translation revised by Joel Weinsheimer and Donald G. Marshall, second revised ed.). New York: Crossroad.
[10] One of the good examples of prophecy which was never previously understood in a particular way until the time of its fulfilment, is those passages which concern God's inclusion of the heathen in his plan. St. Paul writes: “the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began, but now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets” (Rom. 16:25, 26; see also 11 Pet. 1:19-21).
[11] We find something similar in so-called "prophetic perspective", also called "mountain peaks of prophecy", where various events happening some time apart are believed to have been included in the same prophecy. The Prophetic Discours is an example, where the reference to the capture of Jerusalem by the heathen is interpreted as referring to both the events of 70 AD when the Romans took the city as well as future events in the time of the Antichrist.
[12] Edersheim, Alfred. Prophecy and History in Relation to the Messiah (Warburton Lectures for 1880-1884, 1885).
[13] The radical scepticism of Biblical Criticism comes down to saying that scholars should accept as their point of departure that the Biblical authors, in general, gave false testimonies and impressions, i.e. they lied. This radical scepticism goes back to the positivist roots of the discipline which asserted that nothing that is not supported by evidence can be believed. This philosophical approach has since been discredited and no philosopher of science worth the name takes it seriously. We know today that archaeology is not an empirical science and that not finding evidence can never be taken as proof of no evidence [15]. In contrast, the Biblical authors such as St. Paul claim that "holy men of God" wrote the texts and that their testimony is true and trustworthy. 
[14] Pentecost, J. Dwight. 1981. Things to Come. Grand Rapids: Zondervan.
[15] The Rapture: The different views.
[16] A Critique of Archaeology as a Science
[17] The first period of 69 x 7 = 683 years are also subdivided into two periods of 7 and 62 weeks of years but that has no direct bearing on the discussion.
What about the final period of one week? According to this prophecy, the death of the "anointed one" (or: Messiah) would be followed by the destruction of the city of Jerusalem and the sanctuary by "the people of the prince that shall come" (Dan. 9:26). This happened in 70 AD when the Romans captured the city (about 40 years after the crucifixion). The last week (7 years) is mentioned only after these events are referred to in the prophecy, which may imply that it follows sometime after that (for a detailed discussion, see [18]).
Some interpreters are very sceptical of the "gap" between the first 69 weeks and the final week (of years) and are therefore even uneasy with the astounding fulfilment of the 69 weeks! The reason for this seems to me due to the connection between the final week (placed at the end of this era) and the dispensational view which take this week as a dispensation on its own (and so justifies a rapture of the church "before the final seven years"). This needs not be the case. The fact that these seven years concern the people of Israel does not necessitate a dispensation of its own. There is no conflict therein that some prophecies about Israel are fulfilled in the present era (dispensation, if you like). In fact, it seems strange that God would revert to some previous (or similar) dispensation in the process of his progressive revelation. For a detailed discussion on the issue (see [15, 18]). 
[18] The Final Seven Years: The different views
[19] Anderson, Robert. 1984. The Coming Prince. Michigan: Kregel.
[20] One might argue that there are other interpretations of this prophecy in which these details are understood differently. Even when that is accepted, it is still astonishing that any interpretation of the prophecy (at all!) could agree so precisely with the historical facts on the ground given the chances of that happening. The agreement with these facts suggests that this is, indeed, the correct interpretation.
[21] A Very Remarkable Prophecy
[22] When can the Second Coming of Jesus be expected?
[23] The Rise of the Final World Empire: The different views.
[24] The Final Antichrist: The different views.
[25] In the Book of Revelation, we read that the rule of the "ten kings" is still in the future. They will rule together with the "beast" (who will persecute the saints for 3 1/2 years; Rev. 13:5-7) to whom they will give their power and against whom Jesus Christ will fight in the great battle (Rev. 17:12-14; 19:19, 20).

Author: Dr Willie Mc Loud (Ref. wmcloud.blogspot.com)
The author is a scientist-philosopher (PhD in Physics; MA in philosophy). He writes on issues of religion, philosophy, science and eschatology.

Part 1. Can we still believe the Bible? A hermeneutical perspective
Part 2. Can we still believe the Bible? An archaeological perspective
Part 3. Can we still believe the Bible? A scientific perspective



Tuesday, 2 April 2013

Bible prophecy: predicting the distant future?

In this essay, the focus is on Biblical prophecy, even though I also discuss prophecy in the wider ancient Middle Eastern context. Three important characteristics of the prophet are discussed, namely that he/she was an oracle of God (the gods), a preacher of ethics and a preserver of tradition. A close connection, going back millennia, existed between prophets (or court diviners) and the written tradition. But what does the word “prophet” mean (or meant)? This calls for a hermeneutic (interpretative) approach. Scholars should not force their own paradigmatic perspectives onto the text but listen to the voices in the text. Both the voices of the individual prophets as well as that of the age-old prophetic tradition are of importance. Certain prophetic themes, like that about the Messiah, can only be appreciated once the ancient Israelite manner of understanding their own prophecies is considered. This also throws light on the possibility of future fulfilment of prophecy.

Prophecy constitutes about a third of the Bible. This shows how important prophecy was in the communal life of Israel and also later in the early church. But what is meant by "prophecy"? To what extent does it concern the future? Did the so-called "messianic" prophecies really foresee the appearance of Jesus Christ? And is it correct to assume that some Biblical prophecies could even have a bearing on current world events? The answers to these questions would differ according to the theological background of the reader. Biblical scholars from different schools of thought would give widely different answers to these questions. But who is correct? In this essay, I will discuss this matter, with a special focus on this predictive aspect of prophecy. I do not try to prove that certain prophecies were fulfilled; I am concerned with a more basic question, namely the validity of the claim that Biblical prophecy has a predictive component.

In the study of Biblical prophecy, it is important to establish what was meant by the word "prophet" in Israelite times. To explore this, we must study the role of the prophet in both the Israelite as well as the wider ancient Middle Eastern context. From this three important characteristics of the prophet are discernible, namely that they operated as oracles of God (or the gods), made ethical pronouncements and preserved the ancient traditions of their people. In current critical scholarship, the ethical aspect is strongly accentuated – but is this justifiable? Is it not a reductionist approach which distorts the ancient context in which the prophecy was given? These and other related issues are discussed. I show that it is of utmost importance that we listen to the Israelites themselves (and not force our views on them) to gain some understanding as to how they understood prophecy, especially “messianic prophecies”. After a discussion of these, I formulate some conclusions as to the Israelite view regarding the predictive aspect of prophecy.

The role of the Israelite prophet

Prophecy seems to have had a long tradition in Israel. Although scholars typically focus on the later prophets, the prophetic tradition is said to be much older than that. We, for example, find that some of the very early figures in the history of Israel were called "prophets" - Abraham (Gen. 20:7), Moses (Deut. 18:18; 34:10), Aaron (Ex. 7:1), Miriam (Ex. 15:20), Eldad, Medad and others (Nu. 11:26), Deborah (Jg. 4:4) and others (Jg. 6:8), Samuel (1 Sam. 3:20) and others (1 Sam. 10:5), Nathan (2 Sam. 7:2), Gad (1 Sam. 22:5) etc. 

When we study the Hebrew prophet, it is important that we do not automatically assume that the prophetic tradition was a late development in Israel, but that we consider the possibility that it was part of a continuous tradition going back to the earliest times (although the later prophets are characterized by more extensive prophecies, typical of that period). This forces us to consider the wider ancient Middle Eastern context in which prophecy operated. Although the Israelite prophetic tradition had certain distinguishing features, it was nevertheless part of a wider Middle Eastern phenomenon. So, what were the particular characteristics of the "prophet"?

1. An oracle of God (or the gods)

The Hebrew word "prophet" means "inspired man". It is derived from the word "prophecy" (nâbâ), which mean "to speak (or sing) by inspiration (in prediction or simple discourse)" [1]. What distinguishes the “prophet” from poets, singers and others of human inspiration, was the idea that these persons operated as spokesmen for the oracles of God, under divine inspiration. In Israel these were further distinguished from other diviners, the spokesmen of other gods (for example, Baal) or spirits (for example, “of the groves”), who were called “false prophets” (see I Ki. 18:19, Deut. 18:14). It was believed that the overshadowing power of the “Spirit of God” produced “true” prophecies (I Sam. 10:6). In all cases, the one important feature that characterized these oracles were its predictive nature.

Since early times – even before Israelite times – such prophets were mentioned in the western Semitic literature of the ancient Middle East. We find, for example, that they operated in the eighteenth century BC in the city of Mari in western Mesopotamia. Among them were both men and women, who went into a trance-like state and recounted their visions and the speech of the gods. Some used certain beverages to induce the prophetic state. Their utterances were in brief, poetic language, and made vague predictions regarding state-affairs and matters affecting the king [2]. (They operated very similar to the Delphian priestesses of Greek tradition).

Such trance-like states are also mentioned in the Hebrew prophetic tradition (1 Sam. 19:24 – Saul was laying naked for a whole day and night). The Hebrew prophets also used poetic language and made predictions (the old name for the prophet was “seer” - 1 Sam. 9:9), some regarding state-affairs and matters affecting the king (1 Sam. 22:5, 1 Ki. 11:29-31 etc.). It was expected of the true prophet to give details concerning future events, which enabled others to discern if the predictions were right and whether or not that person was a true prophet (Deut. 18:22; Jer. 28:8,9). This predictive nature of Biblical prophecy is visible in many prophecies concerning future events (1 Sam. 10:7; 16:1; 1 Ki. 11:30-36; 1 Ki. 13:2; 1 Ki. 22:20 etc.). Of special importance in this regard is the “messianic” prophecies (to be discussed in more detail below).

2. A preacher of ethics

The Israelite prophets' role as pronouncers of oracles not only concerned future events. It was closely connected to their role as preachers of ethics, as the ones who gave the divine perspective on right and wrong. The prophets spoke for God in matters concerning moral and ethical matters. This is the one aspect in which the Hebrew prophets differed from the earlier prophets from Mari – those prophecies lack the ethical content associated with the Biblical prophets [2]. In Hebrew tradition, this aspect of the prophetic ministry also goes back to early times (Jg. 6:8; 1 Sam. 12:14 etc.) and continues right through Israelite history until the time of Jesus Christ (it ends with John the Baptist's ministry).

An important aspect of this moral dimension of the Israelite prophetic tradition concerns the worship of God – what type of worship was acceptable to God. In this regard, the prophets were the ones upholding the Yahweh-alone tradition. They warned the Israelites against the worship of other gods (Jg. 6:8; 1 Ki. 18:18 etc.), especially against the worship of Baal and Ashtoreth, which were part of Israel's popular religion until the Babylonian exile. In this regard, the predictive aspect often included warnings about future punishment if the people do not come back to God (Jer. 35:15; Matt. 3:6-10), but it also (especially during and after the Babylonian exile) included a message of hope and future restoration. Some of these concerned the not-to-distant future (for example, the prophecies of Jeremiah concerning the exile and restoration of Israel) and others the distant future (Daniel's prophecies make this claim – Dan. 8:26; 12:4).

3. A preserver of tradition

Another important aspect of the prophetic ministry concerns the preservation of tradition. The prophets were the persons who wrote down both the oracles (or made sure that it was written down) as well as the wider context in which these prophecies were pronounced. The reason for this was clearly connected to their view concerning the divine origin of these prophecies as God's revelation to His people.

This tradition of writing down the oracles goes back to the prophets of Mari, whose prophecies were preserved for us exactly because they were written down. In fact, the tradition of writing down the oracles of the gods goes back even further, to the Akkadian period in Mesopotamia (~2450-2200 BC), when both the intestines of the sacrificial animals together with the pronouncements of the diviners who “read” them during the campaigns of these Semitic kings (who ruled over all of Mesopotamia) were written down (most copies of these date from Old-Babylonian times) [3,4]. It was not only these royal oracles that were written down. The great deeds of both the Akkadian kings – who sometimes even mention the context in which the gods were consulted – as well as the deeds of the later rulers of Mari, were also orally transmitted by court poets (and later written down) [5]. Among the same poets who told the stories about these rulers, were those who pronounced the oracles (in the case of the Mari prophets). It is possible that those early poet-diviners were shamans, who all over the ancient world were the ones who preserved the traditions of their peoples.

These examples show that the Israelite prophets stood in a prophetic tradition going back millennia in the ancient Middle East [6]. According to Hebrew tradition, they were the ones who preserved the oracles of the Hebrew God since the earliest of times. In this regard the oracles of God given to Abraham (which is the reason why he is called a "prophet") appear in a totally new light: the age-old western Semitic tradition of preserving the oracles in written form suggests that this was also the manner in which the Abrahamic oracles were transmitted. And the Akkadian (and later Israelite prophetic) tradition of providing a historical context for these oracles, suggests that these were embedded in the wider context of the history of the patriarchs since the time when they were first given. The fact that Abraham is said to have received these oracles and is also called a prophet strongly suggests that he was, in fact, the one who wrote down these oracles and history in the first place. He is said to have come from Mesopotamia (the route westwards went through the area of Mari) and would have stood in the ancient Western Semitic tradition of writing down such oracles.  This also suggests that he could have been the one who preserved the older Sumerian traditions of his family (Gen. 4-11) [7].

According to the Hebrew Bible, there was a close connection between the prophets and the written tradition (especially regarding the oracles) throughout Israelite tradition. Among the earliest prophets who are said to have written down these oracles were Moses (who is said to have written down the oracles (Ex. 17:14; 24:3, 4; 34:27, 28; 31:7-9; Nu. 11:26; Jos. 8:32), the history of the exodus (Nu. 33:1, 2) and a poem (Deut. 31:22) – his disciple Joshua also wrote down some of these oracles (Jos. 8:32; 24:26)  Samuel (I Sam. 10:25), Nathan (1 Ch. 29:29; 2 Ch. 9:29); Gad (1 Ch. 29:29; 2 Ch. 29:25), Ahijah (2 Ch. 9:29), Shemaiah (2 Ch. 12:15), Iddo (2 Ch. 12:15; 13:22), Elijah (2 Ch. 21:12), Isaiah (2 Ch. 32:32) etc. The author of Chronicles mentions histories written by the prophets Samuel (who operated in the time of King Saul), Nathan, Gad (from the time of King David), Ahijah (from the time of King Solomon), Shemaiah, Iddo (from the time of King Rehoboam), and other writings by Elijah (from the time of King Ahab) and Isaiah (from the time of King Hezekiah).

The impression that one gets from reading this is that great care was taken to correctly transmit the earlier oracles and accompanying history - all of which were carefully written down during the time when the oracles were first given. This is in accordance with the millennia-old western Semitic tradition of preserving oracles in written form - which gives further credibility (over and above the obvious care that was taken to correctly transmit those traditions) to the Biblical literary tradition. Clearly, the Israelite prophets stood in the ancient western Semitic tradition of poets who not only pronounced (and made sure it was written down) the oracles of the gods (God) concerning the king but also composed, sang and recorded the royal deeds of those kings [8].

Interpreting the prophetic tradition

With this short background on the role of the Israelite prophet, the next question to ask is: What exactly is “prophecy”? Although the answer to this question may seem simple, namely that it is an oracle, this does not do justice to the complexity of the issue. Why? Because there are various contexts from which this question could hypothetically be answered. The ancient prophets who were part of that centuries-old tradition, or an Israelite who were part of that culture in which the prophets operated and who held a wide range of popular ideas about prophecy, would answer the question in a different way from any scholar who come from a particular scholarly tradition or person who participates in a traditional form of Christianity. The problem is that we do not have access to the ancient Israelite paradigm (this would only be possible if we were part of that community during that time). Our only access to them is through the Biblical texts.

Using the insights of the philosopher of hermeneutics, Hans-Georg Gadamer (1900-2002), we can view our interaction with these texts as a conversation. Readers and scholars from our generation are in conversation with the authors of those texts (and with many others who have already throughout the ages participated in this conversation). We, who are embedded within particular traditions (paradigms [9]) converse with those authors, who are embedded in their own tradition. For an open conversation to take place, we must listen to those ancient Hebrew authors. We cannot force our views on them. 

If we force our views on the text, we show a total disregard for their views - we "destroy the true meaning of this tradition" [10]. Often we do this without knowing that we do – our particular paradigm (the tradition which formed us in the views that we hold) unconsciously provides us with glasses which direct our reading of the text. It is this complicated conversational process between ourselves and the voices from the text that result in interpretation.

1. The critical scholarly paradigm

When Biblical Criticism scholars first approached this problem, they did not have these insights available to them. They were primarily concerned with the “real” historical situation – and mistrusted much of the information in the texts (contra what I have shown above). They believed that all references to the supernatural – of which the divine origin of the oracles is an example – should be taken with a pinch of salt. They believed that it was possible to gain access to the “real” objective situation, going beyond the "primitive" ideas which those people held regarding their own situation. In the opinion of these scholars, their own viewpoint was therefore much better than the primitive views of the ancient Israelites. Hermann Gunkel (1862-1932), who greatly influenced this discipline in this regard, wrote in his book Genesis [11]: "Following our modern historical world-view, truly not an imaginary construct but based on the observation of facts, we consider the other view entirely impossible".

This approach postulated that the scholar must reconstruct the Sitz im Leben ("setting in life") in which the prophet operated – this is the historical context in which he presented his message within the social circumstances of the time. In this view, the ethical dimension of the prophet's message is of special importance. The predictive aspect was considered as secondary – at most, it could have included some vague predictions (these scholars accept that in reality nobody can correctly predict the future). Where bold statements about the fulfillment of prophecy is found in the text, this should be interpreted either as vaticinia ex eventu (foretelling after the event) or that the author created fictional events to give the impression that some prophecy was fulfilled (some mention, for example, events from the life of Jesus in this regard). In this way, it was believed that the scholar could clear the text from all unhistorical data. It is in this tradition that critical scholars writing about prophecy operate [12].

The problem is, however, that the people of that time did believe that the oracles were God-given and this influenced their whole perspective on life. Once this aspect is removed, we do not arrive at some “objective” point of view – we arrive at a reductive view with no correspondence to the historical situation. The fact is that they held those beliefs. The prophet, as well as those who listened to him, believed that these oracles came from God. This was part of their worldview; it determined their whole concept of life and the place of major (especially catastrophic) events therein. This is the historical situation!

To reduce the prophetic message to a mere ethical message, and prophecy to mere poetry is not only reductionist – it creates a new idea about that reality which is totally divorced from the true historical reality. It forces a certain rational view, typical of the modernist perspective, onto Biblical times without any concern for the views of the people who lived during that period. It gives the false impression that this is an “objective” view – the only one that is valid (so typical of the colonial spirit of modernism) – whereas it is, in fact, a total distortion of the real situation. Without doing so consciously, these scholars force their own paradigm onto the text which totally overshadows the voices therein. If we want to know something about the real situation, we have to listen to the voices present in the text and allow them to tell us something about their world.

2. The prophetic tradition

We should not only listen to the individual prophetic voices in the texts; we should also listen to the voice of the long-running prophetic tradition behind those voices. In the same way that the scholarly tradition (paradigm) colours the view of individual scholars in their conversation with the voices of the past, the voices of the prophets were formed by the prophetic tradition to which they belonged.

The impact of tradition on people (especially those from past generations) had been demonstrated by philosophers like Martin Heidegger and Thomas Kuhn, who demonstrated the impact of scholarly tradition (called “paradigm”) on individual scholars [9]. As I showed above, the prophets were the keepers of a centuries-old prophetic tradition – which clearly had a profound effect on all the prophets who stood in that tradition. They preserved the older prophetic writings (which they studied), interacted with each other, operated in groups and attended prophetic schools since their youth (1 Sam. 10:5; 19:20; 1 Ki. 18:13; 20:35; 22:10; 2 Ki. 2:3-5; 4:38; 6:1-7 etc.). At times there were hundreds, even thousands of them, operating during the same period (1 Ki. 18:4; 19:18). All the true prophets upheld the Yahweh-alone tradition – and many of them mention the millennia-old concept of the council of the gods (Micah (1 Ki. 22:19-22), Isaiah (Is. 14:13, 14), Jeremiah (Jer. 23:18), Ezekiel (28:16)). They all had very similar prophetic experiences (even though the details often differ) – all prophesied under the power of the Holy Spirit. They also prophesied about similar themes – the messianic theme is present since the earliest times.

The Biblical Criticism approach to a large extent overlooks the importance of this age-old prophetic tradition in ancient Israel. The focus on the Sitz im Leben ("setting in life") places the particular circumstances of the prophet at the centre; it effectively isolates the individual prophet from the tradition to which they belonged. This is very problematic – its overall effect is to minimize the role of those prophetic themes that is not directly applicable to the social situation of the individual prophet (the messianic theme, for example).

This negligence of the prophetic tradition could be ascribed to the general mistrust of tradition in modernist circles since the time of the Enlightenment. The modernist mind was in reaction against the one tradition that it knew all too well, namely the Christian tradition. And this rejection seems to have influenced the way in which these scholars [13] read the texts – it coloured their own approach to the texts. The close association between the Christian tradition and the Biblical prophetic tradition seems to have influenced their approach to the latter – in a certain way it represented a tradition which most modernist scholars opposed. This implies that their approach to the text could not have been completely honest (even if they themselves did not recognize it); their own paradigm was in conflict with the paradigm presented in the text. This can be the reason why they so forcefully imposed their own paradigm on the text and ignored the historical paradigm within which the prophets operated - effectively "destroying" the meaning of that tradition (to quote Gadamer).

The messianic prophecies

The most important prophetic theme that transcends all the individual prophets was the messianic theme. If such a prophetic theme existed (which we know was the case) it was predictive in nature since the long-awaited Messiah was expected to come sometime in the future. Most prophets said something that was taken as messianic in Israelite circles. The Israelites carefully studied the prophetic works to determine when the Messiah would come and what he would be like. Various views regarding the Messiah developed, based on the accentuation of different prophetic passages and different readings thereof. In this respect, the prophetic tradition had a great impact on the wider Israelite culture and paradigm – and the prophecies concerning the future Messiah had a formative impact on the Israelite perspective, especially in the post-exilic period.

There are basically two important groups of texts that provide us with insight into the ancient Hebrew thinking in this regard. The one is the Qumran texts, which date for the most part to the centuries directly before the time of Jesus Christ. It depicts a traditional Israelite (Jewish) community who regarded the messianic writings of the prophets with the utmost respect – they could even be called a “messianic” community. They developed certain ideas as to what the Messiah's ministry would be like – and expected a “priestly Messiah” together with a political Messiah. The other texts are those included in the New Testament. They reflect the thinking of a Jewish messianic community who stood in a very long tradition of Israelites who expected the Messiah and who believed that Jesus was that Messiah. They participated in the church which developed from those early beginnings. In this essay, I focus mainly on their interpretation of the prophetic texts.

In Biblical Criticism, there is a strong current of thinking that most (if not all) the messianic passages mentioned in the New Testament, actually refer to people and events from the time of the prophet and that the messianic "allusions" found there are in fact unfounded later interpretations that contemporary scholars should discard [14]. This approach to the messianic prophecies assumes that the scholarly view about the prophecies is more correct than the view held by the people of those times, i.e. in the early church (their modernist view is in effect the only correct view)! I have already commented on this arrogance which forces a modernist perspective onto the text. 

We should rather listen to those people themselves and try to understand what they said in this regard. How did they interpret those prophecies and why did they do so? Since they stood in the same Hebrew paradigm which was formed from the earliest times, of which the age-old prophetic tradition was a part, they would know much better than us how the prophecies were understood and how it should be interpreted. The early church, and all the Biblical authors, were Jewish and stood in continuation of the centuries-old Israelite tradition in which a certain way of understanding and interpreting prophecies evolved. The New Testament texts clearly contain important material that could help us understand the ancient approach to those prophecies – even if one does not agree that Jesus was, in fact, the Messiah.

The main problem that scholars have with the predictive aspect of prophecy, especially messianic prophecy which is said to have reference to events far beyond the horizon of the prophet, is that the prophet himself could not have viewed it in that way. The prophet was part of a particular community who had a certain set of circumstances which directly impacted on their lives, and the prophet's message was concerned with those circumstances. He did not have particular events in the distant future in mind. But this view totally negates the basic Hebrew understanding regarding prophecy, namely that it was oracles given by God. From the Hebrew perspective, the divine inspiration was such that the prophet foretold things that were even beyond his own understanding. The apostle Paul wrote in this regard: “the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began, but now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets” (this refers to the inclusion of converted heathen within the framework of God's people, but illustrates the point, Rom. 16:25, 26; see also 11 Pet. 1:19-21).

This idea that a prophecy could refer to distant events beyond the view of the prophet, and that this aspect of the prophecy could be hidden within some prophecy concerning events from the time of the prophet, could be amply illustrated. Take, for example, the prophecy of Isaiah about the virgin who would conceive and bear a son, named Emmanuel (Is. 7:14). This had reference to the prophet's time (Isaiah 8:3), but had also been applied to the virgin birth of Jesus (Matt. 1:22, 23; Lu. 1:31-34 do not mention the prophecy, but mentions both the virgin birth and that Jesus was the son of the Most High, the “son of God”). The followers of Jesus clearly believed that the divine origin of the prophecy allowed for an application beyond the view of the prophet. It is easy to see why: in the Septuagint, (which they used and) which represents a very early understanding of the wording in the prophecy (going back to the second century BC), the Hebrew word “almâh” (veiled) has been translated as “virgin” - and Jesus is said to have been born to a virgin. Furthermore, Jesus was accepted to be Emmanuel, not only in the figurative sense as “God in our midst”, but as the embodiment of God among mankind (“the son of God”). For them, the expression “Son of God” referred to one greater than the angels, but beneath the Father (Mark. 13:32).

This way of interpreting prophecy was not unique to the Hebrew tradition. We find the same among the ancient Greeks, where the interpretation of the prophecies of the priestess at Delphi also went far beyond her own understanding of the matter. Take, for example, the prophecy concerning the return of the sons of Heracles, whose wish would be granted after “the third harvest”. This was at first wrongly interpreted (the intention of the priestess was unclear) in a straightforward manner. Only later was it “correctly” understood as referring to the third generation. This clearly shows that such oracles were typically interpreted as being beyond human invention (it originated with the god Apollo) and could, therefore, be fulfilled long after the time of the prophetess herself.

When we study the way that the New Testament authors interpreted the messianic prophecies, it is clear that there is no exact rule – something that upsets the scientifically inclined mind. But prophecy is not scientific prediction – it is mostly given in poetic form and are typically understood as metaphors which allow for various levels of interpretation, both in the time of the prophet and in messianic times (prophecies regarding Israel or the king are taken to also refer to the Messiah, for example, Hos. 11:1 and Matt. 2:15; Ps. 2:9 and Rev. 2:27). Many messianic prophecies were beforehand (i.e. before Jesus' birth) recognized as messianic (this is clear from the Qumran texts as well as the way that they are used in the Biblical text, for example, Matt. 2:4-6; 22:41-46 etc.) or assumed to be such (in Rabbinic literature, 465 Old Testament passages were taken as referring to the Messiah or messianic times [15]), although there was always the possibility the some would only become clear once the Messiah appears.

In general, the interpretation of prophecy is not a singular affair. In the context of Israel in the time of Jesus, this surely involved spontaneous and popular interpretation from the midst of the people themselves. Such interpretation went far beyond any single prophecy; it involved the whole collection of prophetic material, which in total provided the people of Israel with images of what the Messiah would be like (Hand. 3:21; 10:43; Rom. 1:1-3) and the time when he would come (Lu. 2:26; 3:15; Joh. 1:19, 20). And these images, for example, those found in the Qumran texts, are quite consistent with those applied to Jesus (even those about the Messiah as great conqueror were applied to Jesus' Second Coming). In fact, there can be no doubt that Jesus' followers believed that his life fitted the prophetic image of the Messiah perfectly.

What is clear, is that the Israelites themselves believed that the prophets spoke about events far beyond their own time – in the distant future. The early church even believed that some messianic prophecies still await fulfilment (those regarding Jesus' Second Coming) – these would only be fulfilled in the end times. This implies that some prophecies even predict what will happen in the distant future (for the prophet) and would go into fulfilment as the end times draw near. Even if one thinks (as some critics do) that Jesus purposefully fulfilled the prophecies to the extent that he could, that some events in Jesus's life were later fictitiously created by later authors in accordance with prophecies in that regard, that there are conflicts in the various accounts of the life of Jesus which show that the “real” Jesus's life did not fulfill certain prophecies ascribed to him, all of this show that those people had a strong belief that the prophecies of the ancient Hebrew prophets would one day be fulfilled in a messianic figure – and that Jesus was that figure. Any traditional Christian would add that Jesus was in fact the only real Messianic figure (in fact, the greatest of all time) that Jewish culture ever produced and that he appeared exactly at the time when the Messiah was most anxiously expected (Lu. 2:26; 3:15; Joh. 1:19, 20 – probably due to their interpretation of the prophecy in Dan. 9:20-27).

Conclusion

From this discussion of Hebrew prophecy, we can derive certain conclusions. We cannot study the Hebrew prophet, or even the Hebrew prophetic tradition, in isolation. The Hebrew prophet stood in an age-old tradition which developed within the western Semitic culture. They viewed the oracles of God (or the gods) as so important that they made sure that it was written down. This implies a strong connection between the prophetic and the written traditions, which is in fact what is found in ancient Israel. We have access to that tradition through the texts of the Bible.

When we study those texts, we should not force our own views onto the texts. Scholars who force a modernist worldview onto the texts (or some traditional interpreters who force a certain theological or contemporary perspective) show a disregard for the views of those ancient people regarding their own worldview and culture. When we want to define prophecy we cannot divorce it from the ancient world in which it functioned. Prophecy is what they understood it to be – and not any meaning that we want to impose on the word. For them, prophecy is oracles of God (or the gods), which is divinely given, and as such, is greater than the prophet, and applies far beyond his/her point of view. For them, prophecy – especially messianic prophecy – is predictive (not in the human sense) and could find its fulfilment many centuries or even millennia after the life of the individual prophet.

The one prophetic theme that transcends all generations of prophets, is that of the coming Messiah. The interpretation of the prophecies that refer to the Messiah, is not something that can be entirely objectively understood. There is not any particular scholarly method that was used in interpreting those prophecies in ancient times. Rather, it was a matter of spontaneous and popular interpretation. In this regard, it was not so much the single prophecy (even though some of these were extremely important) but the whole collection of prophetic material which provided the image of the coming Messiah. And this image corresponds to a remarkable degree with the narrative told about Jesus of Nazareth. For those who believe that he will return, there are again many prophecies which together provide an image of the world situation in the end times. We will have to wait and see if (and when) they go into fulfilment [16].

[1] Strong, James. 1980. Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible. Nashville: Abingdon (Thirty-eighth printing)
[2] Foster, Benjamin R. 2007. “Mesopotamia”, John R. Hinnells (ed.). Penguin Handbook of Ancient Religions. London: Penguin Books.
[3] Edwards, I. E. S. 1971. "Early History of the Middle East", in The Cambridge History. Vol I Part 2. . Cambridge: Cambridge University.
[4] Horowitz, Wayne. 1998. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns.
[5] Tinney, Steve. 1995. A New Look at Naram-Sin and the “Great Rebellion”. Journal of Cuneiform Studies 47:1-14.
[6] Any understanding of the prophetic tradition in Israel should give credible arguments as to how it arose in the first place. Trying to isolate this tradition from the age-old Western Semitic tradition (which clearly impacted on the writing of the Abrahamic oracles) is clearly wrong.
[7] There is remarkable archeological evidence which substantiate the Biblical account of events that took place during the time of Abraham, suggesting that he was in fact an historical person and that the traditions associated with him is trustworthy. See Mc Loud, Willie. 2012. Op soek na Abraham en sy God. Kaapstad: Griffel.
[8] This shows that the literary tradition is more secure than is often assumed. In fact, the scholarly tradition of requiring substantial archaeological “evidence” to confirm the information in the text before it is viewed as trustworthy, is quite problematic since such data is for the most part sparse and open to many possible interpretations. Instead of a qualified acceptance of the textual tradition, this approach resulted in the unsupported opinion that the textual tradition could not be trusted due to lack of “evidence”.
[9] Kuhn, Thomas S. 1962. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago.
[10] Gadamer, Hans-Georg. 1994. Truth and Method (translation revised by Joel Weinsheimer and Donald G. Marshall, second, revised ed.). New York: Crossroad.
[11] Gunkel, Hermann. 1901. Genesis. Gottingen: Vanderhoeck & Ruprecht.
[12] Hoffman, Yair. 2003. Review of Martin A. Sweeney and Ehud Ben Zvi (eds). The Changing Face of Form-Criticism for the Twentieth Century. RBL 07/2004.
[13] The modernist perspective is clearly visible in their writings – they were children of their time.
[14] Soggin, Alberto. 1989. Introduction to the Old Testament: From Its Origins to the Closing of the Alexandrian Canon (transl. John Bowden, 3rd ed.) Philadelphia: Westminster.
[15] Ebersheim, Alfred. Prophecy and History in Relation to the Messiah (Warburton Lectures for 1880-1884, 1885).
[16] In this essay I on purpose did not accentuate the difference between true and false prophecy since the focus is more generally on ancient prophecy as such.

Author: Dr Willie Mc Loud (Ref. wmcloud.blogspot.com)