the Bible: God's message to us part 9
Think about this for a moment: if God wanted to communicate
with His
creation through the written word, how could He do it?
In other words, how could God certify His written message to prove that
it was really from Him? After all, talk is cheap- anyone can
write
something and then claim that it is
a "message from God" right? In fact, many people have done exactly
that. So how could God demonstrate the authenticity of His written
message to people?
Well, one of the ways that He could do it is by doing something that
only God could do, and that is by predicting future events
before they occur. The fulfillment of
predictive prophecy is one of the ways that we can
use to
determine that the Bible is
just what it says it is- the Word of God. We could spend a
lot of of time detailing the fulfilled prophecies found within the
Bible but here are just two examples- one from the Old Testament and
one from the New Testament…
Cyrus
And The Rebuilding Of Jerusalem
Beginning in Isaiah 44:28 and then continuing on into chapter 45,
the prophet Isaiah
wrote about a man named Cyrus who would build Jerusalem and lay the
foundation of the Temple there. Isaiah received this message concerning
Cyrus around 700 B.C.
Now this prophecy may have sounded a bit ridiculous in Isaiah's time.
In Isaiah's
day both the city and the Temple were still standing without any
apparent need to be rebuilt. Unfortunately, this was not to last very
long. You see, the city and the Temple were eventually destroyed by the
invading Babylonians lead by King Nebuchadnezzar
sometime around 586 B.C.
With this information, let's now jump ahead a little in time. About 50
years after they had taken over Jerusalem, the Babylonians in turn were
conquered by the Persians. Some time after the Persians took control,
the Persian king granted a royal decree authorizing the rebuilding of
the Temple in the city. Do you know what that Persian king's name was?
You guessed it- Cyrus.
Although it may have seemed ridiculous to predict such a thing at the
time, the fulfillment of this prophecy came to pass over 150 years
after God had spoken it through the prophet Isaiah. And it all
happened just as God said it would.
The
Destruction of the Temple
While we're on the subject of the Temple, let's now move ahead a
few hundred years into the New Testament period. In Luke 21:5-6 we
read this...
"Some of his disciples began talking about the beautiful stonework of the Temple and the memorial decorations on the walls. But Jesus said, 'The time is coming when all these things you are admiring will be knocked down, and not one stone will be left on top of another; all will become one vast heap of rubble.'"
Let's talk a little about this Temple which was known in
Jesus' day as
"Herod's Temple." The Temple in Jesus' day was
built from stone and
gold and required 10 years of construction just to complete
the
main
building. The Temple Mount covered an area the size of 25-30 American
football
fields
(about 2300-2700 meters). The retaining walls rose almost 10 stories
above street level. The smallest stones used in it's construction
weighed from 2-5 tons
(2000-5100 kg).
The Temple in Jerusalem was an incredibly elaborate structure. In fact,
it was said that the sun shone off the temple so brightly that you
could not look directly at it from a distance in the
sunlight. Yet Jesus
predicted that this magnificent structure would be totally and
completely destroyed.
With this in mind, let's take a little history lesson and go back in
time to the year
AD 69 or roughly 40 years after Jesus'
death and resurrection.
Beginning in AD 69 and continuing on into AD 70, the Roman
general
Titus (who would later become Emperor)
and his army marched on the city of Jerusalem. Titus had four Roman
legions -an army of 30,000 soldiers- at his disposal and his mission
was to eliminate any remaining resistance against the Roman
Empire from the people in that area. Titus attacked the city of
Jerusalem with
his army for 5 months. During this time the Roman army burned the city
to the
ground and complete destroyed the Temple along with practically
everything else within the city. Over 1 million men,
women and children lost their lives in this
military action.
As the Temple burned during this attack, the gold within it began to
melt and run down into the stone walls and foundation. Later on, the
Romans returned to retrieve the
valuable gold that had melted there. To do this effectively, the Roman
soldiers had to chip away whatever stone was left to get at the melted
gold that had found it's way there. In this way, the words of Jesus
came to pass just as He had spoken-
"no stone will be left upon another."
So there you have two prophetic events that happened just as the
Scriptures said they
would. There are many other prophetic predictions within the Bible that
have been fulfilled and
The Doctor encourages you to seek them out and study them.
Remember, God rewards the diligent student. These promised
fulfillments help give us confidence that God will also fulfill those
promises that have yet to be
completed and the
fulfillment of predictive prophecy is one of the ways that we can
verify the supernatural origin of the Bible.
The Doctor is not a real
doctor but he plays one on the Internet. E-Mail prescriptions are also
available on an individual basis.
Except as indicated, all Scriptural references taken from The
Living Bible, © 1971, Tyndale House Publishers Back
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