Who is the messianic king




















In ex. It seems the concept could be termed a legal equality, a status given by the master. Gary: Did Jesus fulfill any part of this prophecy during his life time?

Answer: No. Neither did Bar Kochba nor any other messiah pretender. They all failed! They did not judge the nations of the world.

They did not bring peace to the entire world. That is the true test of the real messiah: bringing peace to the entire world. Jesus did not do that. Your post is too long and normally would get blocked from my blog.

But I will override it just this one time. I grew up in the Lutheran church and see exactly your point, which I would agree with before I started studying early rabbinic literature.

It was not confined to a short list of obvious prophecies like Isaiah 2. Rather, early rabbis including Jesus were actually thinking on a much higher level, reading the overall prophetic narrative about the redemption of the world.

Prominent in that discussion was a figure who would suffer and die for the sins of his people, as Isaiah 53 prophesies. How could this be? Some proposed that two messiahs needed to come. There is actually Scriptural precedent for this. There is a person in the Hebrew Bible who both suffers and reigns as king, and redeems his people in the process. It was Joseph, who was sold into slavery by his brothers. He suffered in a dungeon in Egypt because of their hatred, but then was put command over Egypt and saved the Egyptians from starvation.

In doing so, he also saved his own family from starvation. I actually discovered it in the liturgy of the ancient synagogue. Your email address will not be published. Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Share this: Facebook Twitter Email Print. Behold, your King is coming to you; He is just and having salvation, lowly and riding on a donkey, a colt, the foal of a donkey Christian -ity sees this prophecy fulfilled on what is traditionally called Palm Sunday Mt.

Such news should have evoked great joy in Israel. Zechariah then revealed three characteristics of the Messianic King. The same cannot be said of any other king who ever lived, especially Alexander the Great, who was wicked, capricious, violent, and unjust. Such was not the case with Alexander the Great, who destroyed and subjugated those he conquered. It seems out of character to speak of the Messiah-King in such a paradoxical way, for kings exude pride and pomp. By the time of Solomon, kings rode horses—symbols of pride, pomp, and power; plus they were instruments of self-reliance and strength in time of battle.

Today the donkey is regarded as a lowly beast of burden. Jesus instructed His disciples not only to get the young donkey but to bring the mother as well. The donkey was a young colt, never ridden and still running behind its mother. First, it is a Messianic prophecy. Second, Jesus is the long-awaited Messiah mentioned in this verse. First, Messiah will establish worldwide peace. Second, He will destroy the weapons of war. The chariot of Ephraim, the horse of Jerusalem, and the battle bow all speak of weapons used in ancient warfare.

These will be destroyed and the materials converted into implements of peace Isa. Third, Ephraim and Judah will be united into a single kingdom of peace Ezek.

Fourth, He will establish peace among all the nations of the world, something not experienced in the annals of human history. Fifth, His reign and rule will begin in Jerusalem but shall cover the earth Ps. A striking contrast can be made between the Messiah and Alexander the Great.

And then the exile happened. This is how the promise of the Messiah became a hope for the distant future once the kingdom of David was hauled off to Babylon. This was the story Jesus was born into.

The basic claim of the four Gospel stories in the New Testament is that Jesus was that faithful king from the line of David. He was the one to whom this entire story had been pointing all along. But how Jesus fulfilled these ancient promises also surprised many people. That will be the focus of our exploration of Isaiah Tim Mackie is a writer and creative director for BibleProject. He wrote his dissertation on the manuscript history of the book of Ezekiel, with a focus on the Septuagint and Dead Sea Scrolls.

What a total nerd! He is a professor at Western Seminary and served as a teaching pastor for many years. How to Read the Bible. Word Studies. Old Testament Overviews. New Testament Overviews.

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Italian Italiano. Norwegian Norsk. Polish Polski. Swahili Kiswahili. Swedish Svenska. Back to Blog. Table of Contents. Remember the divine blessing Now, a quick summary of the back story that Isaiah assumes you know. The people who walk in darkness Will see a great light; Those who live in a dark land, The light will shine on them… For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; And the government will rest on His shoulders; And His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.

Isaiah ,



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