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An explanation of Bible prophecy
Christian believe that Bible prophecies are God-given revelations
of the future. God gave His prophets, including Moses, Ezekiel,
Isaiah and Jeremiah, prophecies of the future. He did this to
prepare people for the future, and to show that He is the one true
God and that He is all-powerful.
Many people mistakenly consider Biblical prophecy as God looking
ahead and seeing what will happen as though it were all out of His
control, but He at least has the supernatural ability to foresee
it all and warn His prophets. This is NOT the case for Biblical
prophecy. When the visions and dreams were given to the prophets
of old, God was informing them of what His own plans were for the
future, He was telling them what He was going to do. He was not
telling the prophets about what He, God, was merely foreseeing,
but about what would happen in the future by His choosing and by
His will.
God's prophecies given to His prophets were advance warnings and
foreknowledge of God's promised future plans. He told them, for
example, that the Jews would be forced out of Israel, scattered
worldwide, persecuted worldwide, and that they would eventually
return to Israel. All of these promises have been fulfilled.
To
be more succinct:
A Bible prophecy is not a prediction of the future.
Bible prophecy is a promise about the future by God.
God causes the future to come to pass as He desires.
God is fully in control of the future.
There are different kinds of prophecies. Some prophecies are about
a Messiah, which means "anointed one" or "chosen
one." These are called "Messianic" prophecies.
Christians believe that Jesus is the fulfillment of these
prophecies. There also are "end time" prophecies. These
prophecies refer to a time of severe war, famine and pestilence,
after which a Messiah will reign over the world with justice and
righteousness. Christians believe that this Messiah is Jesus, who
will return in the future.
The Bible contains hundreds of prophecies. Some were fulfilled
more than 3000 years ago. Others have been fulfilled since then.
More than 50 have found fulfillment or partial fulfillment during
the past 200 years. Many Bible prophecies have found fulfillment
more than once, such as the prophecies that the Jews would have
Israel as their own country. (The Jews had sovereignty over the
land of Israel about 3400 years ago up until about 2700 years ago,
and again in 1948).
Bible prophecies involve specific places
Bible prophecies often involve specific places. And usually
that place is all or part of the Jewish homeland. Many prophecies
refer specifically to Israel, Judah and Jerusalem. Judah is the
southern part of the Jewish homeland. Jerusalem is Israel 's most
important city. It was established as the Jewish capital by King
David about 3000 years ago. When prophecies involve other nations,
such as Tyre, Babylon, Nineveh or Edom, it is because those
nations had sought the destruction of the Jewish homeland, or the
Jews, or both and were/are under the scrutiny of God.
Bible prophecies involve specific people
Bible prophecies almost always involve a specific person or
persons. And they usually involve the Jewish people as a group, or
a Jewish person as an individual, such as a king or a Messiah.
Sometimes a Bible prophecy will involve someone who is not Jewish,
but is to be used by God in bringing about His Will. such as a
king who will attack Israel (example: Nebuchadnezzar) or a king
who will help the Jewish people (example: Cyrus). Nebuchadnezzar
and Cyrus lived about 2600 years ago.
Bible prophets are Jewish
God chose to reveal His words to one group of people - the
Jews. This has helped to ensure that we have one source of
information for God's teachings. And, because Israel is literally
in the "middle" of the world, near the convergence of
the three continents of Asia, Africa and Europe, the Jews have
been in a unique geographical position to influence the world with
the monotheistic teachings of one true God. The Bible, in Exodus
19:6, said the Jews were to be a "nation of priests."
The Jews were to teach the rest of the world about God. And,
during the past 2000 years, the Jews have accomplished this
remarkable feat. Through the influence of the Hebrew scriptures,
more than half of the world's people have abandoned their pagan
religions and now worship a monotheistic God.
Bible prophecies were usually delivered in Israel
Bible prophecies usually were delivered in the Jewish homeland
of Israel or Judah. (About 2900 years ago, Israel split into two
Jewish kingdoms called Judah and Israel. Today, the Jewish nation
is united again and is called Israel. However, there are
exceptions: Some prophecies, for example, were delivered in
Babylon when the Jewish homeland had been destroyed about 2600
years ago and many Jews were taken as captives to Babylon .
Bible prophecies explain why a particular event is going to
happen
Bible prophecies often include an explanation as to why a
particular event is going to happen. In Micah 3:11-12, the prophet
Micah said around 2700 years ago that Jerusalem would be destroyed
and "plowed like a field" because its leaders had turned
away from God. The Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem a century
later. In the year 135, the Romans destroyed Jerusalem and
literally plowed part of the city under.
How did God reveal Himself and His Will to the people of
ancient Israel and Judea?
A glance through books of the Old Testament would quickly
suggest that God used several varied modes of divine
self-disclosure towards His Old Covenant people; through
patriarchs, spokesmen, prophets, as well as kings. This
observation is encapsulated in a brilliant summary statement on
Divine revelation by the author of the new Testament letter to the
Hebrews in his prologue:
"In many and various ways God spoke of
old to our fathers by the prophets..." Hebrews 1:1
One such mode of Divine communication was through the awesome
event of a Theophany. Among the most celebrated Theophanies to the
ancient Israel ones would include God's powerful descent on Mount
Sinai as well as His majestic appearance to the prophet Isaiah in
the Temple in Jerusalem. Another mode of Divine revelation was
through dreams.
Revelation through dreams
The Old Testament records that God chose to communicate His
will to the people of Israel through the vehicle of dreams or
"visions of the night" to certain selected persons. One
such type of Divine dream is the co-called incubation dream. These
are dreams initiated by God to the sleeping dreamer in holy
places, without the recipient having deliberately sought to
receive such a dream. Perhaps the most celebrated example of an
incubation dream is Jacob's dream of the Divine ladder at Bethel
Gen 28:11-19 "Jacob... came to a
certain place and stayed there for the night, because the night
had set. Taking one of the stones of the place, he put it under
his head and laid down in that place. And he dreamed that there
was a ladder set up on the earth, the top of it reached to Heaven;
and the angels of God were ascending and descending on it. And the
Lord stood beside him and said, "I am the Lord, the God of
Abraham, and the God of Isaac..." Then Jacob woke from his
sleep and said surely the Lord is in this place - and I did not
know it! And he was afraid and said "How awesome is this
place! This is none other than the House of God, and this is the
gate of Heaven." ... He called that place "Bethel",
(i.e. the "house of God").
Divinely-sent dreams, as recorded in the Old Testament, may be
accompanied by declarations in either: (1) plain words
understandable to the recipient, or (2) in symbolic language or
images needing an inspired interpreter. An instance of the former
type of dream occurs in God's command to the grieving Jacob
(Joseph's father) to travel to Egypt (Gen 46:1-4). Such a dream
needed no interpretation. An example of the latter type is the
Egyptian Pharaoh's two enigmatic God-sent dreams of the seven thin
cows eating the seven fat cows grazing by the Nile as well as that
of the seven withering ears of grain swallowing the good ears of
grain. These last two dreams demanded a skilled interpreter of
divine dreams - the wrongly-imprisoned Joseph:
"Then Joseph said to Pharaoh
"Pharaoh's dreams are one and the same. God has revealed to
Pharaoh what He is about to do... the dreams are one. The seven
lean and ugly cows that came up after them (i.e. the fat cows) are
seven years, as are the seven empty ears... they are seven years
of famine... There will come seven years of plenty throughout all
the land of Egypt. After the, there will arise seven years of
famine..." (Gen 41:25-30).
Authentic and false dreams
The Old Testament however does not classify all dreams as
God-sent. Indeed the elect of God receive very few dreams. On the
other hand many dreams are considered as false. These are the
dreams of the false prophets, men who do not speak for God, and
those dreams were not initiated by the Lord:
"Do I not fill Heaven and earth? says
the Lord. I have heard what the prophets have said who prophecy
lies in my Name, saying "I have dreamed, I have
dreamed!" (Jeremiah 23:24-25).
Dreams in the Last Days
The use of dreams - as an instrument of Divine communication
and the plan for human salvation - continues into the New
Testament era. Thus within the Infancy of Jesus narratives as
recorded by St. Matthew, the righteous Joseph is the recipient of
several dreams concerning: 1. the nature of the forthcoming Virgin
Birth (Matt 1:20-21), 2. a warning to flee to the safety of Egypt
with Jesus and His Mother in the face of the Herodian massacre
(Matt 2:13), 3. an eventual call to return to the land of Israel
(Matt 2:20), as well as instruction to settle in Galilee (Matt
2:22). Furthermore, the day of Pentecost is understood by the
Apostles as a fulfillment of Joel's eschatological prophecy. In
addition to the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, one further aspect
of this prophecy deals with the expectation that while there shall
be an increase in spiritual visions there shall also be a
predisposition for the elderly to experience holy dreams:
"And it shall come to pass afterward,
that I will pour out my spirit on all flesh; your sons and your
daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, and
your young men shall see visions. Even upon the men-servants and
maid-servants in those days, I will pour out my spirit"
(Joel 2:28-29).
Nevertheless, it is important to note that from an Orthodox
theological or doctrinal position, the use of dreams after Christ
is not for the purpose of adding further to the deposit of
"revelation" or Sacred Truth as revealed in the Gospel
of Jesus Christ, but rather a means of "illumination".
Jesus Christ, the Divine Word made flesh, becomes the exclusive
mode of Divine revelation to the world. Nothing more can be added
beyond Christ. Everything else which possesses truth is either
inspired interpretation or illumination, but not revelation. While
God may still send dreams to holy people they are certainly not to
be accepted as "new revelations" to sacred
scripture, but as a means of encouragement, warning, or
edification.
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