Every world
crisis since the completion of the Biblical Canon in the first and fourth
centuries has provoked certain Christians to search their Bibles for
any possible parallels to so-called "Biblical prophecy." With
the present military and verbal conflicts in the Middle East, Christians
are once again being flooded with claims that the ancient prophets predicted
these events. The widely publicized film, "His Land,'' sponsored
by the Billy Graham Foundation, is a graphic portrayal of the process.
Conservative religions literature abounds in the emphasis. In the face
of the added menace of a potential nuclear confrontation between world
powers, it is particularly urgent right now that every Christian pay
sober attention to the historic meaning of "Biblical prophecy''
lest he become a victim of the propagandist's machinations. A little
study now will go a long way in easing the layman's mind in the midst
of the conflicting voices and perhaps spare him the agony of disillusionment
later.
Our Word "Prophet"
To understand any word, one must penetrate to its root origins, its
etymology. For the word "prophet" it is especially important
since it communicates an ancient concept and translates a Biblical Hebrew
word. The English word is taken directly from an ancient Greek noun
which literally meant "to speak for" or "on behalf of."
Thus the noun embraced the concept of speaking for someone, or a spokesman.
The story of Moses at the burning bush is a good Biblical illustration,
when in Exodus 7: 1 God argues with the reluctant Moses, saying, "See,
I make you as God to Pharaoh; and Aaron your brother shall be your prophet."
Aaron was to be Moses' spokesman, or to speak for Moses.
For centuries the meaning "spokesman," or "proclaimer,"
was the primary use of the Greek and later the English. In 1615, for
instance, Jeremy Taylor wrote a book entitled, "The Liberty of
Prophesying." Today its contents would be titled "The Freedom
of Preaching." for that was the subject matter. Our word "prophet
and the ancient Greek meant, therefore, what "preacher'' means
today - one who is a spokesman for God. To see how the word was applied
in the Bible to the spokesmen for God, read such Biblical passages as
Deuteronomy 18:15-20; Amos 3:7-8, 10-16; Isaiah 6:8-10; Jeremiah 20:
7-9, and Ezekiel 3: 16-21.
In the Hebrew Old Testament the word we translate "prophet"
occurs frequently after the passage in Exodus 7:1, where its meaning
is clearly identified. Scholars differ, however, regarding the origin
of that Hebrew word. Some say it was a word borrowed from another Semitic
language, Akkadian, from a word meaning "to call." Others
think the word came from a slightly different Hebrew root meaning "to
bubble up," "to boil" (from the possible relation to
epilepsy, or the ecstatic nature of the earliest prophets). Still another
assumption is that there was an early verb meaning "to proclaim,"
or "speak forth," which was retained only in this noun form.
Whatever the actual origin, these three suggestions, when added together,
provide an excellent description of the classical Hebrew prophets. They
were men who felt a deep sense of the Divine presence linked with a
call to serve; they were deeply disturbed (they "bubbled"
and "boiled") by the serious inconsistency between the behavior
of their nation and its people in the face of the Sinai Covenant, until
they bubbled over to proclaim the Word which stirred within them from
the Divine presence. They therefore were "forth tellers,"
not "foretellers" - the preachers of ancient Israel and Judah
who took seriously the Divine Covenant morality to which their nation
had become committed at Sinai. They were the "Covenant conscience"
of the ancient Hebrew-Jewish people.
The story of the development of the prophet-preachers in ancient Israel
is long, and its origins are obscure in the pre-writing period of Hebrew
history. There is no question, however, that the movement had emerged
by the tenth century B.C., at least by the time of David.
It was then that writing became a cultural feature of Israel. We might
identify an earlier stratum or level of prophecy, however, among the
so-called ''Judges," whose charismatic nature, marked by religious
enthusiasm, nationalistic zeal, and aggressive leadership, links them
with the later classical prophets. The stories of Deborah (Judges 4-5),
Gideon (Judges 6-8) and their peers read like stories of the heroes
of any emerging nation. Security of the nation was their predominant
concern, and sprang from their religious enthusiasm in which they saw
God "fighting" for Israel." It is hard to detect in these
stories the fine ethical and moral ideals of the Mosaic Covenant from
less than a century earlier, for nationalism took precedence over covenant
responsibility. Establishing the security of the nation came first.
The clear inconsistency between the militant stories in Joshua and Judges
on the one hand and the moral emphasis in some of Exodus and most of
Deuteronomy on the other hand ought to make the careful Bible student
cautions about any authoritative use of these early nationalistic stories.
The Classical Prophets and Covenant Responsibility
With the stories about Samuel (a transitional figure) and especially
the account of Nathan's rebuke of David, after he committed adultery
with another man's wife, Bathsheba, a new stratum of prophecy can be
identified in Hebrew history, A man of God, Nathan, dares to challenge
a king who violated the rights of one of his people. The Mosaic Covenant
Law had been prostituted. The condition which God had laid down at Sinai
for the fulfillment of His promises of a land to Abraham's descendants
was ignored, as David behaved like any other oriental despot. With the
violation of the uniqueness of Israel's heritage in the Covenant - an
ethical-moral social structure seen for the first time in human history
- those loyal to the Covenant became incensed, and some felt called
to thunder. "Thus says the LORD!" The era of the classical
Hebrew prophets had been born.
Nathan, Ahijah, Elijah, Micaiah and Elisha left no personal writings,
but an indelible impact from their Covenant concerns remained on sensitive
minds in Israel and Judah for later recording. With Amos a new kind
of literature appeared in the form of prophetic oracles, usually in
poetic form, the more clearly to impress and preserve the stern words.
Beamed to a recalcitrant nation, usually to secular-materialist kings
and princes and often religious leaders, their warnings were focused
on doom and punishment of the nation for her Covenant-breaking.
A desire to save the nation may have sparked the prophets concern, but
it was Covenant responsibility that was clearly motivating his oracles.
Amos thundered:
"For three transgressions of Israel, and for four,
I will not revoke the punishment;
because the [Israelites] sell righteous for silver,
and the needy for a pair of shoes." (2:6)
The first message of the first writing prophet of history was proclaimed
in terms of economic and social justice, which Amos had seen
violated in the cities of Israel and Judah. Isaiah wailed:
Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth;
for the LORD has spoken;
"Sons have I reared and brought up,
but they have rebelled against me.
The ox knows its owner,
and the ass its master's crib;
but Israel does not know,
my people does not understand.
Ah, sinful nation,
a people laden with iniquity (1:2-4a)
and he feared for the fate of Judah because the Covenant of God had
been forgotten. Punishment therefore was inevitable. How otherwise would
a just God deal with faithless Judah? And so on through the seventh
century B.C. and into the sixth, these men of God warned, threatened
and cajoled their people and their leaders. Moral responsibility, they
sincerely believed, was the only sound basis for their security as a
nation. Then tragedy struck, and Judah succumbed to the onslaught of
Nebuchadnezzar's ruthless army in 587 B.C. Jerusalem fell; the people
were carried into bondage, this time into Babylon. The prophetic message
had been fulfilled, as God's retribution descended upon Judah. Hopes
were dashed. The nation was crushed. Thus ended the classical period
of Hebrew prophet-preachers and their Covenant-oriented messages.
Revival of Nationalism
A new era of prophetic preaching appeared in the Babylonian Exile, as
the people's inevitable question, "Why have we suffered so?"
prompted their spiritual leaders to assert more than just "The
prophets told you so." With a punishment so severe - many Judean
leaders were in exile, while most of the peasants were left in a desolated
Palestine in desperate plight - the preachers of Israel turned to messages
of hope and encouragement. They, too, sought an encouraging word from
the LORD. Already the classical prophets had laid a base for such preaching
with occasional flashes of pleading among their harsh warnings. The
word "return" had punctuated many a prophetic sermon as a
clarion call back to Covenant responsibility. But Isaiah more than any
other pre-Exilic prophet probably set the stage with two deeply moving
poems in which he expressed the universal longing for a just and righteous
ruler for the nation.
With the Exile, however, oracles of assurance and comfort flowed from
the mouths and pens of devout men of the Covenant. Some of these new
oracles later became attached to the classical prophetic writings. Of
all the Hebrew prophetic poetry, however, none can match the sublime
thought and expression of Isaiah chapters 40-55, which present the highest
plateau of inspiring literature in the midst of the Exile. The familiar
words:
Comfort, comfort my people,
says your God.
Speak tenderly to Jerusalem,
and cry to her
that her time of service is ended,
that her iniquity is pardoned,
that she has received from the LORD'S hand
double for all her sins.
(Isaiah 40:1-2)
begin a series of matchless prophetic oracles that pointed toward a
period of Hebrew renewal.
The enlightened and more benevolent rule of the Persians also sparked
a renewed hope in the exiled Judeans. What emerged was a religious nation,
however, rather than a political state. Nevertheless, the return to
Palestine and the rebuilding of Jerusalem (520-440 B.C.) saw the revival
of nationalism and separatism under the zealous leadership of Haggai,
Zechariah, Nehemiah and Ezra. Covenant responsibility, other than within
their own community relationships, again was submerged beneath legalistic
particularisms and new nationalistic aspirations.
Apocalyptic Literature
The vast sweep of Alexander's Greek armies across the Middle East in
333-33 1 B.C. did not change immediately the course of Jewish cultural
and religious developments so much as it intensified resistance to foreign
domination. The struggle produced a new kind of literature born of persecution
and suffering under tyranny in the second century B.C. It is called
"apocalyptic" literature, from the Greek root "to uncover"
or "to reveal." It expressed man's ultimate response to frustration
in which he abandons his final hope to God. Born in the midst of crisis,
apocalyptic literature was to continue to provide devout men facing
persecution with strength and inspiration for centuries to come. The
major Old Testament examples are found in Isaiah 24-27, Ezekial 38-48,
Zechariah 9-14, and especially Daniel. But a vast literature of this
nature that never gained admittance to the Bible-Enoch, Jubilees, Apocalypse
of Baruk, II Esdras, the Psalms of Solomon, and a host of others - was
penned during the critical years when Judah was dominated by the Greeks
and the Romans, especially during the three centuries following the
battle of Panias in 198 B.C., when the aggressive Seleucid Greeks captured
Palestine from the Ptolemies of Egypt. It was in the spirit of this
literature that the Qumran Community by the Dead Sea was established
and thrived. The Dead Sea Scrolls were predominantly apocalyptic in
nature, reminiscent of Daniel and Revelation in our Bible. The hope
that a new and mighty act of God in history would bring to an end the
age of human abuses amid persecution and usher in a transformed era
of peace, justice and brotherhood by a great miracle was the inspiration
that spurred the discipline and devotion of the men of Qumran. They,
as well as most Jews, awaited the appearance of the ''anointed one"
(Messiah) who would lead and rule in the new age.
It was, furthermore, about 200 B.C. that the writings of the classical
prophets became canonized; that is, they came to be considered the sacred
word of God. Once having attained that level of authority, those books
lent themselves readily to searching examination for indications of
God's plans for the future and further goaded devout Jews like the holy
men who produced the Dead Sea Scrolls. The original historical associations
of the oracles from the preacher-prophets became secondary, as their
metaphors and allusions became useful for interpreting contemporary
events in terms of the impending end. The prophets as "predictors"
thus gradually replaced the "preacher" concept and took on
a new significance, for every possible relation to their day was sought.
Concern for Covenant responsibility once again became secondary. For
the Christians in the latter part of the first century A.D. the attempt
to prove to the Jews that Jesus was their long-expected Messiah added
to this method of interpreting the prophets. It should be noted that
though the men of Qumran used the same method for interpreting Scripture
that was later used by the Christians, both differed in their interpretations
of history. Both believed, also, that their particular interpretation
was revealed to them by God and thus had final authority.
Back of the figures of both John the Baptist and Jesus can be seen this
mingling of the prophetic concerns for Covenant responsibility with
the apocalyptic hopes of their contemporaries. Scholars differ over
the degree to which Jesus may have been influenced by apocalyptic literature
and thought, but that he spoke in a context of this intense thought
pattern there is no question. That he used its vivid imagery and many
of its expressions there can be little doubt. That Christianity wrested
itself from a dominating control of that kind of thought, however, in
contrast to the men of Qumran, there is also little doubt. The Gospel
of John demonstrates a move away from a preoccupation with the end of
the age and reveals a viability not found at Qumran, which was crushed
by the Romans about A.D. 70. But in periods of crisis, such as that
of the Domitian persecutions of AD. 95, when the Book of Revelation
was probably written, apocalyptic literature served as a steadying influence
for suffering Christians. That the Book of Revelation was written to
meet such a need can easily be seen by noting such repeated expressions
as "what must soon take place", "for the time is near".
Such expressions stand as warnings against applying the contents of
the book to centuries later. Apocalyptic literature represented a decided
decline from the lofty heights of classical prophetic literature.
Conclusions
In discriminate combining and equating of quotations from apocalyptic
literature with passages from the classical prophets of ancient Israel
and Judah, as is done by those who claim that the Bible is being fulfilled
in Palestine today, is therefore a serious breach of academic honesty
and a violation of historical integrity.
On the other hand, failure to see the promises of God to Abraham in
the light of the Mosaic Law and the centrality of Covenant morality
in the stream of prophetic pronouncements is to prostitute the moral
focus of the Bible. When we read, therefore, in Genesis 15: 18:
On that day the LORD made a covenant with Abraham saying, "To your
descendants I give this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river,
the river Euphrates
"
and claim that its fulfillment began with the Partition of Palestine
in 1948, we are misusing the Bible. That promise must be read in the
light of the Books of Exodus, Deuteronomy, and Joshua, which already
record the historic fulfillment of the Genesis passage. But even more
do we misuse the Bible when we forget its central concern for morality
and Covenant responsibility on the part of those who would claim to
be God's people who were "chosen" for responsibility, not
privilege. Thus we must also put beside Genesis 15: 18 such passages
as Deuteronomy 7:12 and 8:19-20:
''And because you hearken to these ordinances, and keep and do them,
the LORD your God will keep with you the covenant and the steadfast
love which he swore to your fathers to keep
"
"
And if you forget the LORD your God and go after other gods
and serve them and worship them, I solemnly warn you this day that you
shall surely perish. Like the nations that the LORD makes to perish
before you, so shall you perish, because you would not obey the voice
of the LORD your God."
From the standpoint of Biblical prophecy, therefore, to evaluate the
situation in Palestine today apart from its relevance to Covenant morality,
the heart of the Mosaic and classical prophetic pronouncements, is to
falsify the Biblical message and prostitute its purpose.
Christians should ask again the obvious question in the face of the
Middle East crisis. "Is the God we worship One who works in history
through geopolitics, or through men who respond in faith to His moral
demands and spiritual guidance?" It is only a blind faith that
can see the God of Jesus Christ at work in most of the events in the
Middle East today, as the Graham film "His Land" so naively
suggests.
According to the central Biblical prophecy, therefore, the State of
Israel today must stand under the moral judgment of God on the same
Covenant terms that were proclaimed to ancient Israel and Judah, if
she is to claim anything from that Biblical heritage. On such a basis
the present events in Palestine cannot possibly be interpreted as fulfilling
Biblical prophecy. Instead we should be reminded of the poignant words
of Isaiah:
Zion shall be redeemed by justice, and those in her who repent, by righteousness.
But rebels and sinners shall be destroyed together,
And those who forsake the LORD shall be consumed. (1:27-28)
What we see happening in Palestine today is purely secular, political
nationalism at work; and it must be viewed and evaluated in terms of
other ethnic, political nationalisms of our day.