Psalms and Pentateuch

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The Psalms are divisible into 5 books, answering to the 5 books of Moses:

BOOK PSALMS COMMENTS
Book 1 1-41 Genesis: concerning man and his relationship to God. All blessing is bound up in obedience. Closes with a Benediction and a double Amen.
Book 2 42-72 Exodus: concerning Israel as a nation. The counsels of God concerning Israel’s ruin, redeemer, and redemption. Closes with a Benediction and a double Amen.
Book 3 73-89 Leviticus: concerning God’s sanctuary. Closes with a Benediction and a double Amen.
Book 4 90-106 Numbers: concerning Israel in relation to the nations. Closes with a Benediction, Amen, and Hallelujah.
Book 5 107-150 Deuteronomy: concerning God and His Word. Closes with 5 psalms, each beginning and ending with “Hallelujah”.

The last 5 psalms may be seen as an echo of the whole of the five books:

  • Psa 146/Genesis: cp v 4 with Gen 2:7; v 5 with 2:8; v 6 with Gen 1.

  • Psa 147/Exodus: cp v 4 with Exo 1:1; vv 2-20 with Exo 1:7-10.

  • Psa 148/Leviticus: cp v 14 with Lev 10:3.

  • Psa 149/Numbers: cp vv 5-9 with Num 14:21; 24:17-24.

  • Psa 150/Deuteronomy: cp v 2 with Deu 3:24.

The ancient Jewish Sabbath worship incorporated the reading of a portion of the Pentateuch, so that over a 3-year period the whole was covered. A related psalm at the close of each Sabbath service?

It is said that the reading of Gen ended on the 41st Sabbath, Exodus on the 72nd, Lev on the 89th, Num on the 116th, and Deut on the 144th. The 12 extra Sabbaths in a 3-year period [(3 x 52) – 144] were possibly related to the intercalary month (a sort of “leap-year” arrangement by which a 13th month was added periodically to the Jewish calendar). Possible special readings (the final 5 psalms, perhaps) occupied those Sabbaths.

There is then a remarkable association between the Pentateuch and the Psalms, suggesting a plausible reason for the division of the Psalms into 5 books. A reason, also, for the inclusion in the Psalms of almost identical psalms (14 and 53, for example): the same psalm was only very slightly modified for use in 2 different collections.

Psalms of the Sanctuary

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“In the beginning”

The purpose of Yahweh may be summarized in the Hebrew titles of the first five books of the Bible. It is not generally known that the titles in our English Bible are based upon the Greek Septuagint; they bear little or no resemblance to the Hebrew titles. Consider the summary below:

English title Hebrew title Translation
1. Genesis “Bereshith” “In the beginning”
2. Exodus “Ve-elleh shemoth” “These (are) the names”
3. Leviticus “Vayyikra” “He (Yahweh) called”
4. Numbers “Be-midbar” “In the wilderness”
5. Deuteronomy “Haddebarim” “These (are) the words”

In each of the above cases, the Hebrew title is the first word or phrase of the book — which serves as a keynote of its message. Carrying the observation one step further, we notice that the five titles, taken in order and supplying the ellipsis, also provide a message. Almost as poetry, they speak eloquently of the Deity and His comprehensive purpose, as Creator, Lawgiver, and Saviour of the world:

“In the beginning these were the names which Yahweh called. In the wilderness these were the words (which Yahweh spoke).”

“He called”

Let us concentrate on Moses’ third book: Here we find a proclamation of God’s purpose with those whom He has called. “I will be glorified… I will be sanctified in those who approach Me!” This is the main theme of Leviticus: God’s sanctuary among men. God has proposed to erect a “house”, in which He may be sanctified. A “house”, Scripturally speaking, may be either a building or a family. But we think most often of the latter, for we realize that God may be worshipped anywhere — He needs not temples made with men’s hands (Acts 7:48).

Wherever, Lord, Thy people meet, There they behold Thy mercy seat; Where’er they seek Thee, Thou art found, And every place is hallowed ground.”

Thus, when we consider God’s Sanctuary and those who are called to it, we perceive that spiritual sanctification is more Important than physical sanctification — even as our Lord said, “Be ye holy… be ye perfect…”

This rather forbidding book of Leviticus is not a “dead letter”. It has a universal spiritual appeal, to those of all times who constitute the living sanctuary. God has called us all “out of Egypt” and built us up into a spiritual house in the wilderness, having through His Son set us an example of holiness and perfection.

The “Leviticus” Book of Psalms

The Hebrew Psalter is divided into five books, corresponding to the five books of the Pentateuch. Each “book” ends with a benediction, or blessing (41:13; 72:18,19; 89:52; 118:28,29; all of 150). By ancient Hebrew tradition, Leviticus was divided into seventeen Sabbath synagogue readings; the third book of Psalms (Psa 73 through Psa 89) consists of seventeen Psalms. There are strikingly similar arrangements in the other four pairs of Mosaic books and Psalms sections. (For detail, consult The Companion Bible, by Bullinger.)

Ten is the number of ordinal (numerical) perfection; seven, spiritual perfection and God’s covenant. The sum of the two represents a perfection of spiritual order in God’s covenant. In seventeen we see the “beauty of holiness”, the “glory and beauty” of God’s sanctuary, where all services are conducted “decently and in order” (1Co 14:40).

In almost every psalm of the seventeen, the sanctuary or the holy Place or the holy congregation is mentioned. The titles in this section refer to Asaph, Heman, and Ethan (the three “chief musicians” or choir directors) and the “sons of Korah” (doorkeepers in the tabernacle and temple — 1Ch 9:19; Psa 84:10). The three directors stood officially “according to their order” (1Ch 6:32):

Left (1Ch 6:44) Center (1Ch 6:33) Right (1Ch 6:39)
Ethan (Psa 89) or Jeduthun (Psa 76) Heman (Psa 88) Asaph (Psa 73–83)
Of Merari Of Kohath Of Gershom

The group led by each man would play and sing its special hymns in the service of the tabernacle and the temple — a perfection of spiritual order.

The Sanctuary of Yahweh

Certain themes emerge from these “Psalms of the Sanctuary”, which demonstrate the relevance of Leviticus and the sanctuary to our day:

Psalm 73: Yahweh’s sanctuary is the place of enlightenment, a lampstand shining in a dark and frightful world:

“For I was envious at the wicked… until I went into the sanctuary of God; then I understood their end.”

Psalms 74; 79: The enemy is currently enthroned in Yahweh’s sanctuary (Jerusalem and indeed all the earth), and the righteous remnant mourn and pray:

“Thine enemies roar in the midst of the congregation… Thy holy temple have they defiled… How long, Yahweh?”

Psalms 75; 76: But finally Yahweh will arise to cleanse His sanctuary: “God is the judge… in Salem also is His tabernacle, and His dwelling place in Zion… the earth feared and was still, when God arose to judgment…”

Psalms 80; 82: The people of Yahweh are the true and living sanctuary, built up around Christ, the ultimate sanctuary whom the Father strengthened for Himself (Psa 80:15,17):

“God standeth in the congregation of the mighty; He judgeth among the gods.”

Psalms 83; 84: The tents of wickedness will eventually fall, but the sanctuary of Yahweh will stand firm:

“I had rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness.”

Psalms 87; 89: Only one birth is of consequence, and that is the birth, or rebirth, in the sanctuary of Zion:

“Yahweh shall reckon, when He enrolls the people, that this man was born there… in the congregation and assembly of the saints…”

Psalms, “Hallelujah”

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THE HALLELUJAH PSALMS

Twelve “Hallelujah” psalms: ie psalms beginning and ending with “Praise Yahweh”:

  • 104: Double-“Hallelujah” psalms.

  • 105: Borrowing the second “Hallelujah” from end of Psa 104 (which leaves 104 beginning and ending with “Bless the Lord, O my soul”).

  • 106: Double “Hallelujah”.

  • 111: Has double “Hallelujah” by borrowing a “Hallelujah” from beginning of 112. (This is appropriate, since 111 is about the character of God, while 112 is about the character of a man.)

  • 116: Has double “Hallelujah” by borrowing a “Hallelujah” from end of 115. (There is no superscription to mark the proper point of division.)

  • 117: Double “Hallelujah”: The divine name appears in full: “Hallelu (eth) Y’howah”.

  • 135/146/147/148/149/150: Six more double-“Hallelujah” psalms.

Psalms, “Maschil”

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There are 13 “Maschil” psalms: 32, 42, 44, 45, 52-55, 74, 78, 88, 89, and 142. “Maschil” means ‘causing to understand’. Practically equivalent to ‘explanation’. Three times the Passover law laid it upon the head of each household to explain what the purpose of the feast was and is (Exo 12:26,27; 13:8,9,14-16). The purpose behind this commemoration must be kept fresh and clear in the minds of succeeding generations. A similar practice was followed regarding other feasts of the Lord. The same word is used about the reading of the Law at the Feast of Trumpets (Neh 8:1,7). Essentially the same word describes how Hezekiah “prospered” (2Ki 18:7). Also, “Hezekiah spoke to the minds of all the Levites that taught (“ha-maskilim”) the good knowledge of the LORD” at this great Passover (2Ch 30:22).

Psalms, “Messianic” sin?

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Does Psa 51:5 apply to David or to all of us? Does it apply to Christ?

“Behold, I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive me” (KJV).

“Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me” (NIV).

“Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me” (RSV).

The first phrase refers to David’s birth, and the last phrase refers to his conception. But was it David’s mother who was “in sin”, as KJV and RSV imply, or was it David himself who was “sinful”, as NIV implies? Surely the latter.

The title of Psa 51 testifies that it has to do with the sin of David with Bathsheba; like Psa 6, 32, 38, 102, 130, and 143, it is a psalm of profound penitence.

Is David making an excuse in v 5 — ie, “I can’t help myself; I was conceived and born in sin!” In view of the abject admissions of sin elsewhere in the psalm, this doesn’t seem reasonable.

Is David blaming his mother for his own sin? — ie, “I was conceived out of wedlock; therefore it is my mother’s fault that I am a sinner!” Again, this doesn’t make sense in view of his other admissions of his own sin.

Or… is David simply describing the legacy of “sin” in his own human nature, not as an irresistible impulse to do evil, as something which he was powerless to resist, but as an inclination toward evil which he failed to resist? (I would think this must be the case.)

In the same sense we are all “sinful at birth, sinful from the time [our] mothers conceived [us]”.

Was this also true of Jesus? Of course. “Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? There is not one” (Job 14:4).

“How then can man be righteous before God? How can he who is born of woman be clean? Behold, even the moon is not bright and the stars are not clean in his sight; how much less man, who is a maggot, and the son of man, who is a worm!” (Job 25:4-6). Can such words properly be applied to Jesus? He applies similar words to himself, if we understand Psa 22 as his words prophetically: “But I am a worm, and no man; scorned by men, and despised by the people” (v 6).

“Now Joshua (surely a type of Jesus?) was standing before the angel, clothed with filthy garments. And the angel said to those who were standing before him, ‘Remove the filthy garments from him.’ And to him he said, ‘Behold, I have taken your iniquity away from you, and I will clothe you with rich apparel’ ” (Zec 3:3,4). Jesus as the true high priest was clothed in, symbolically, “filthy garments”, which are equated with “iniquity”; when were these “filthy garments” taken away? At his resurrection, both literally and figuratively.

Was Jesus, like all of us, conceived in “sin”, and born in “sin”? Of course. How else explain the offerings for cleansing from childbirth? Or the ceremonial “uncleanness” of menstruation — unless it be connected with childbirth? Or the need for circumcision, along with another offering, even for the baby Jesus? Or, for that matter, the need for baptism: “Thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousness…”? Or, again, the need for the High Priest to offer for himself as well as the sins of the people whom he represents?

But how could Jesus be connected with the confessions of sin committed which we find in Psalm 51 (eg, vv 2,3,5,7,9)? He can, in the sense that he shared the weaknesses and temptations of human nature (‘tempted in all points like we are… compassed with infirmity… learned obedience…”: Heb 4:15; 5:2,3; etc), and in the sense that such words were prophecies of his bearing the burden of human sin (cp Joh 1:29; 2Co 5:21; 1Pe 2:22,24; Rom 8:3; Heb 2:14,15). From this point of view, all the vv in Psa 51 listed above are truly Messianic.

Of course, the verses of confession in Psa 51 need to be read regarding Jesus with a different slant from what David meant when writing about himself, or from what we mean when praying about ourselves. But this is a normal characteristic of Messianic prophecy. For example, the “leprosy” expressions of Isa 53 have an obvious figurative meaning with reference to Jesus and the sin-disease, but they fit Hezekiah, the prototype, in a strictly literal fashion.

There are, in fact, quite a number of psalms with Scripturally-attested Messianic application, in which “sin” and “iniquity” are associated with the subject. Some examples:

  • Psa 40:6-8 are cited as prophetic of Christ in Heb 10:7-9. But Psa 40:12 reads: “Mine iniquities have taken hold of me.”

  • Psa 41:9 is applied to Christ in Mar 14:18 and Joh 13:18. But Psa 41:4 reads: “I have sinned against thee.”

  • Psa 69:4,8,9,21,22,25 all have NT Messianic citations. Yet Psa 69:5 speaks of “my foolishness… my sins.”

Here are three undeniably Messianic psalms. Yet each contains phrases that seem at first glance inappropriate to a sinless Messiah. How should we deal with such “problems”? Some might argue, for example, that Psa 69:1-4 and Psa 69:6-36 are all Messianic (surely they are!), but that Psa 69:5 alone out of the whole psalm applies only to David. But is this really a satisfactory or satisfying way of handling Scripture? Does it not in fact create more problems than it solves?

This approach (ie, of applying the terms “sin” and “iniquity” in such passages to the nature Christ bore) was regularly followed by the earliest Christadelphian expositors. John Thomas, as an example, wrote the following:

“Sin, I say, is a synonym for human nature. Hence, the flesh is invariably regarded as unclean. It is therefore written… [here JT quotes Job 25:4; 14:4; 15:14-16; 2Co 5:21; Rom 8:3]… Sin could not have been condemned in the body of Jesus, if it had not existed there. His body was as unclean as the bodies of those for whom he died; for he was born of a woman, and ‘not one’ can bring a clean body out of a defiled body; for ‘that,’ says Jesus himself, ‘which is born of the flesh is flesh’ (Joh 3:6)…

“Speaking of the conception and preparation of the Seed, the prophet as a typical person, says, ‘Behold I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive me’ (Psa 51:5). This is nothing more than affirming that he was born of sinful flesh; and not of the pure and incorruptible angelic nature” (Elp 127,128).

Such passages refer to Messiah’s inheritance of cursed human nature (cp 2Co 5:21; Rom 8:3; Heb 2:14; etc.). The mere presence in Jesus of propensities to sin was surely an enormous trial. An impulse to sin which is repeatedly resisted may teach us more about the power of “sin” (or sinful tendencies) than does an impulse quickly yielded to. So, in that sense, Jesus would know more about the “power” of “sin” than any other man.

Many students of the Psalms, who are willing enough to believe that Messiah’s experiences are foretold in some or even in many psalms, hesitate when they come to Psa 32. The confession of sin is so explicit that it seems impossible to believe that divine inspiration intended this psalm to be not only about David but also about His Son.

Yet, viewed from another angle, such a reading has a certain seemliness. Consider these details, which all belong to a context of much miraculous healing:

  1. “Jesus knowing in himself that virtue had gone out of him….” (Mar 5:30).

  2. “That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the prophet, ‘Himself took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses’ ” (Mat 8:16).

  3. “The Son of man hath not where to lay his head” (Mat 8:20) — the words of a weary man.

  4. A storm-tossed ship, yet Jesus is asleep (Mar 4:38).

If this side of Christ’s activities proved such a drain of his physical powers, is it not reasonable to presume that he experienced also a drain of his spiritual powers in his conflict against sin without and the propensities to sin within? Jesus, “tempted in all points like as we are” (Heb 4:15), must have found the very existence within himself of impulses belonging to the fallen side of human nature. Before ever he died on the cross as a sacrifice, in this sense “the Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all” (Isa 53:6; 2Co 5:21).

Preaching mission

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“Our community has all too often separated doctrine from practice. We have not seen that doctrine is intended to bring forth living and love towards others. The doctrines of the one faith are not merely empty theological statements devised as a test of our understanding and obedience. They are what they are so as to inspire in each one of us a life worthy of the Gospel of Christ.

“We Christadelphians have analyzed some aspects of doctrine, especially relating to the atonement, to an extent that is inappropriate; and we have virtually — and sometimes actually — divided over these matters. And yet the pseudo-intellectual minutiae over which there has been such strife contain no power to enable the believer to live the new life. It is the basic Gospel itself which has the power to bring forth the new man after the image of Christ.

“It is crucial to true ‘theology’ that it not be separated from the call of doctrine to be the vital force for the transformation of human life. After 150 years of ‘holding the Truth’ and not really preaching it very much nor living it very deeply, western Christadelphia has developed a complex intellectual system that is very much in need of a focus for application and practice. That focus should be in the preaching of the Gospel to the poorer world, and within the more desperate parts of Western society. In such areas there is plenty of opportunity for practicing what we believe: especially in developing an adequate doctrinal underpinning. People do not know their Bibles, do not know doctrine, and yet they so want to be taught.

“Things are coming together, slowly, as western Christadelphia starts to see its need to reach out, and is encouraged by the successes the Lord has granted. We are starting to realize that the true theological cannot avoid the challenge of knowing personally life in its most traumatic forms. It has been truly observed: ‘theology cannot but have a mission.’ Unless ‘theology’ is put to the service of our mission, to save men and women and glorify the Lord, then there can only be an ever-increasing gap between the ‘theologians’ and the grass-roots ecclesia, especially in the mission field. The two halves must come together, or else the new converts will wander, and the ‘theologians’, shocked at the lack of perception in the converts, will likewise go their own way, into ever-increasing abstraction and theory.

“It is worth observing the very simple fact that the New Testament is essentially a missionary document — all the expressions and articulations of doctrine and theology found there are in the context of the preaching of the Gospel and the immediate problems of men and women who respond to it. That is why we are not given a cold statement of faith or catechism in the New Testament, but rather the history of the mission of Christ at its very beginning.” (DH)

Preaching the gospel

In various places, and with varying degrees of success, Christadelphians undertake elaborate, advertised, public gospel proclamation. Often it seems that the degree of success — humanly speaking — leaves us disappointed. But, oddly enough, the one method of gospel proclamation which outdoes all others in efficiency, which costs exactly nothing, and which can be done by absolutely everyone, suffers serious neglect. Personal witness for the faith, which built up the struggling Christadelphian body at a remarkable rate in the last quarter of the last century, is now often passed over for the “flashier” methods.

Yet this is how the gospel was first proclaimed:

“One of the two which… followed him, was Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother. He first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messiah” (Joh 1:39-41).

And then a few verses further on: “Philip findeth Nathaniel, and saith unto him, We have found…” (v 45).

He hadn’t really. Jesus had found him instead. But the two processes are not to be separated. The disciple’s job is to go and “find” his fellow. But in his “looking” it is really God who does the “finding”!

Paul, the master preacher, had none of the modern devices of publicity that we lean on so heavily. His familiar simple recipe was: “Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God” (Rom 10:17).

To be sure, we say, a man cannot receive the gospel without a Bible. Right enough! But that is not what Paul is saying there. His phrase means: “Hearing comes by the spoken word about God”, as the next verse plainly confirms. “How shall they hear without a preacher?” (v 14) They can hear without an advertisement or other clever modern eye-catcher. But not without a preacher. Sooner or later, someone has to do the talking, and the sooner the better.

Nor is there any picking and choosing as to who shall hear our good news. Who are we to discriminate and decide before for God who is and who is not fit for His blessing?

“In the morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thy hand: for thou knowest not whether shall prosper, whether this or that, or whether they both shall be alike good” (Ecc 11:6).

And because “thou knowest not”, thou shalt not make contemptuous pre-judgment as to which mode of preaching is the best. Agreed, some methods seem relatively less efficient than others, to the extent of appearing more wasteful of time or energy or resources. But none is to be despised, for at one time or another the grace of God has made use of them all.

So why don’t we bring our personal witness for the faith into daily life more than we do? Reason number one is: “Behold, I cannot speak; for I am a child” (Jer 1:6). There is a paralyzing feeling of incompetence. “I am not quick-witted enough to cope with the arguments people may fire at me, not sufficiently well-acquainted with the Bible to be able to go to the very passage that is needed, etc, etc.”

Such a poor attitude should be set right once and for all. With the more conscientious, it springs out of a pathetic line of reasoning of this kind: “The Truth must never be let down. I am not competent to start talking on the subject. Therefore I’d better not say anything.”

With many this way of thinking is quite probably an excuse, more than a reason.

There is a very simple way of coping with one’s inadequacy in discussion, and that is to admit it: “I can’t answer your argument right now, but I’m sure it can be answered. Next time I see you, I shall have an answer for you.” None except Christadelphians think it shameful not to be able to come up with a full explanation of every problem passage. Others are highly unlikely to think the worse of us for admitting ignorance on one point or another. Besides, that “next time I see you” leaves the door wide open for a point-blank return to the topic some time later! So that is a positive gain.

On the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza, Philip did not wait for his new acquaintance to ask him: “Do you happen to know what Isaiah 53 is all about?” Instead, he was ready with his own question: “Can you make sense of what you are reading?” This is a fairly obvious example of what we are talking about. But every day a number of opportunities may come along, to speak the right word at the right time. We must learn to be alert to such openings. “Be instant, in season, out of season,” exhorts Paul. Be ready, on the alert, even in the most unlikely circumstances, for you never know!

Jesus sat by the well at Sychar, weary, hungry and thirsty. But when his disciples returned with the food they had bought, they found him alert and vigorous and not interested in food at all. While they were away he had a better meal than they could provide — the spiritual strengthening of an open, inquiring mind with which to hold communion.

He sent out his disciples in pairs, and they set off, one may be sure, nervous and ill at ease at the unaccustomed responsibility he had laid on them. But the men who returned were hardly to be recognized as the same persons. They bubbled over with excitement and pleasure. What was it that had made the difference?

Pride in Proverbs

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        Pro 3:34 He mocks proud mockers but gives grace to the humble.         Pro 6:17 haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands that shed innocent blood,         Pro 8:13 To fear the LORD is to hate evil; I hate pride and arrogance, evil behavior and perverse speech.         Pro 11:2 When pride comes, then comes disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.         Pro 13:10 Pride only breeds quarrels, but wisdom is found in those who take advice.         Pro 15:25 The LORD tears down the proud man’s house but he keeps the widow’s boundaries intact.         Pro 16:5 The LORD detests all the proud of heart. Be sure of this: They will not go unpunished.         Pro 16:18,19 Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall. Better to be lowly in spirit and among the oppressed than to share plunder with the proud.         Pro 17:6,7 Children’s children are a crown to the aged, and parents are the pride of their children. Arrogant lips are unsuited to a fool — how much worse lying lips to a ruler!         Pro 18:12 Before his downfall a man’s heart is proud, but humility comes before honor.         Pro 21:4 Haughty eyes and a proud heart, the lamp of the wicked, are sin!         Pro 21:24 The proud and arrogant man — “Mocker” is his name; he behaves with overweening pride.         Pro 29:23 A man’s pride brings him low, but a man of lowly spirit gains honor.         Pro 30:13 those whose eyes are ever so haughty, whose glances are so disdainful.

Promises of God, the

The true hope of salvation in Jesus Christ, the hope of the gospel, is founded upon promises made by God in the Bible. These are described by the Apostle Peter as “great and precious promises”, by which we may share “the divine nature”, that is, eternal life (2Pe 1:4).

A promise is an undertaking from one person to another, guaranteeing to do or give something in the future. The promises of God are concerned with the future, both of mankind and of the world He has created. Unlike men’s promises, which can be and often are broken, God’s promises cannot fail. But to become effective for any individual, they must be believed; in Biblical terms, faith is the belief of God’s promises, centered in the Lord Jesus Christ.

The phrase ‘to give one’s word’ has the same sense as ‘to promise’. In the Scriptures, God gives His word concerning the future, with all the force of a promise. All of the prophecies in the Bible concerning the future are therefore, in a sense, promises. But those principal promises that constitute the gospel are linked to covenants, or binding agreements.

It is remarkable that the Almighty God, Creator of heaven and earth, should be prepared to enter into covenants with mortal men and women, and to affirm them by solemn oaths, but this is what the Bible records.

The beginning of the promises

The expression of God’s gracious intention to save sinful men and women begins in Scripture immediately after the Fall of Adam and Eve, in this pronouncement: “I will put enmity between thee [the serpent] and the woman [Eve], and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel” (Gen 3:15). Although enigmatic, these words foretell a conflict between good and evil that would be resolved by the victory of a Saviour provided by God, the promised seed (or descendant) of Eve. In the course of time, man’s wickedness drove God to bring the judgement of the Flood upon the earth. But in the aftermath, He made a second great promise to faithful Noah: “I will not again curse the ground any more… While the earth remaineth… summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease” (Gen 8:21,22). This promise of the permanence of the earth was confirmed by a covenant, made by God with all flesh, and symbolized in the rainbow (Gen 9:11-13).

God’s promises to Abraham

The next great development in the unfolding of God’s promises for the future was made to Abraham (originally Abram). He was called by God, about 2000 BC, to leave his home in Mesopotamia to journey to Canaan, which was to become known as the Promised Land.

The promises God made to him were amazingly wide in scope:

“I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great… and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed” (Gen 12:2,3);

“Lift up now thine eyes, and look… for all the land which thou seest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed for ever” (Gen 13:14,15);

“Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them: and He said unto him, So shall thy seed be” (Gen 15:5).

Abraham’s belief in the last of these promises from God was “counted… to him for righteousness”, in other words, his sins were forgiven because of his faith (v 6; cf Rom 4:3; Gal 3:6; Jam 2:23).

These promises once again focused on the promised seed, descended from Abraham, eventually revealed as the Lord Jesus Christ (Gal 3:16). The multiplication of that seed “as the stars of heaven” refers to the multitude of people of all ages who would gain salvation through Jesus, by believing the same promises (Dan 12:3; Heb 11:12,13). God endorsed His promises to Abraham by covenants, first a covenant for the land of Israel (Gen 15:18) and then one with his seed, that He would be their God. This was marked in Abraham’s natural descendants, the nation of Israel, by the rite of circumcision (Gen 17:1-14). Finally God sealed all of His promises and covenants with a solemn oath: “By Myself have I sworn, saith the LORD… that in blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the stars of the heaven… and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed” (Gen 22:16-18). These promises, subsequently reiterated to Isaac and Jacob (Israel), are the very foundation of the gospel of salvation (Gal 3:8,9). They require that Abraham and all the faithful must rise from the dead, as Jesus did, in order to enjoy them (Acts 24:14,15; 26:6-8).

God’s promises to David

Nearly 1,000 years after Abraham, when his descendants, the nation of Israel, had become a kingdom in the land of promise, God made further momentous promises to David the king: “I will set up thy seed after thee… and I will stablish the throne of his kingdom for ever. I will be his father, and he shall be My son” (2Sa 7:12-14). These promises too were affirmed by God by covenant and oath (Psa 89:3,4), and were reiterated by the angel Gabriel at the annunciation of Jesus’ birth (Luk 1:32,33).

God’s promises to Jesus

All of these promises are centered in Jesus, the Son of God (Acts 13:32,33; Rom 15:8,9; 2Co 1:19,20), and so the New Testament begins with the words: “The book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham” (Mat 1:1). But there are other promises in the Old Testament directed personally to him. For example, Jesus is personally promised rulership of God’s Kingdom: “Ask of Me, and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession” (Psa 2:8). Exalted to God’s throne in heaven, Jesus is affirmed by an oath to be a priest or mediator for all believers: “Sit thou at My right hand… The LORD hath sworn… Thou art a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek” (Psa 110:1,4; 1Ti 2:5; Heb 5:5-10).

God’s promises to us

While God’s promises cannot fail to be fulfilled, for us as individuals they are conditional upon our faith, our covenant with Jesus the Saviour through baptism, and a patient seeking for godliness: “For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ… And if ye be Christ’s, then are ye Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise” (Gal 3:27-29). By believing and acting upon God’s promises, we can obtain eternal life and share in the marvellous blessings of God’s Kingdom which is to come on this earth.

Prophecy: more than one fulfillment

ChristadelphianBooksOnline The Agora Bible Articles and Lessons: P-Q

About one-third of the Bible is prophecy. Much of it has more than one fulfillment. Are there any principles which help us in seeing how a prophecy might be fulfilled more than once? Here are three ways in which Bible prophecies can be fulfilled more than once:

  1. A typical fulfillment first: Some Bible prophecies have their complete fulfillment in the long term, but in the short term there is a partial fulfillment in events which are types of the complete fulfillment. Example: The promises to David are quoted with reference to Solomon; cp 1Ch 17:12,13 with 1Ch 22:9,10. This is because Solomon’s reign was a type of Christ’s Kingdom; cp 1Ki 4:25 with prophecies of the Kingdom in Jer 23:6 and Micah 4:4. However, their complete fulfillment comes with Christ; see Luke 1:32,33 and Acts 13:33. Other examples. Mic 4; 5 was initially fulfilled by Hezekiah in relation to the Assyrian invasion, but will be more completely fulfilled by Christ setting up the Kingdom. Some features of Psa 72 were fulfilled by Solomon’s kingdom, but the psalm will be completely fulfilled in the future reign of Christ.

  2. A typical fulfillment later: Some Bible prophecies are fulfilled completely initially but this fulfillment is typical of something greater to come. Example: Isa 17 was fulfilled in the Assyrian invasion in Hezekiah’s time, culminating in the destruction of the Assyrian host (v 14). Yet this fulfillment is also typical of the host which invades the land at the time of Christ’s return, and is destroyed. Other examples: Jer 50; 51 are prophetic of the overthrow of the kingdom of Babylon, but the extensive use of the language of these chapters in Rev 17; 18 shows that this overthrow was typical of the overthrow of another Babylon at Christ’s return. Psa 41 (not strictly prophecy) is about David’s experiences in the revolt of Absalom, but his betrayal by Ahithophel is typical of Judas’s betrayal of Christ (v 9, quoted in John 13:18).

  3. Prophecies fulfilled on a number of occasions: Some Bible prophecies are fulfilled on several occasions because of situations which keep occurring. Example: Deu 28:49 prophesies of “a nation… from far” which God would send against Israel if they forsook Him. Note how the terms of this verse were fulfilled by Assyria (Isa 5:26; 33:19; Hos 8:1) and Babylon (Jer 4:13; 5:15) as well as Rome (Mat 24:28). Other examples: Cannibalism, prophesied in Lev 26:29, is recorded in both 2Ki 6:26-31 and Lam 4:10, and according to Josephus occurred in AD 70. The opposition to Christ by rulers foretold in Psa 2:1-3 occurred at his birth (Mat 2) and his crucifixion (Acts 4:25-28), and will occur at his Second Coming (Rev 17:12-14) and at the end of the Millennium (Rev 20:7-10).

Examples of Bible prophecy with more than one fulfillment:

Isa 2:10-22: (a) earthquake in Uzziah’s day (Amo 1:1,2; Zec 14:5); (b) Last Days (2Th 1:9,19; Rev 6:16,19).

Isa 7:14: (a) birth of Hezekiah, son of Ahaz; (b) Mat 1:23.

Isa 34: (a) Edom and other nations hostile to Israel in Isaiah’s day; (b) Final judgment on the wicked (Rev 14:10,11).

Jer 50; 51: (a) Destruction of Babylon, the great enemy of Jeremiah’s day; (b) Destruction of “Babylon” in the Last Days (Rev 18; cp mg refs).

Hos 10:8 (and context): (a) Judgment on faithless Israel in Hosea’s time; (b) Destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD (Luk 23:30).

Mic 3:12: (a) Threatened fulfillment about 700 BC (Jer 26:18); (b) literal fulfillment in first century AD.

Psa 2: (a) David beset by enemies early in his reign (2Sa 8); (b) Hostility to Christ, the Son of David (Act 4:25-27; Rev 19:15).