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Fulfilled Prophecy as Evidence for
the Bible's Divine Origin
- 2,000
prophecies including approximately 200 about the life, death,
and resurrection of Jesus.
- While
a few of the prophecies have not yet been fulfilled (for example,
the Second Coming of Christ), there are no prophetic failures.
- While
there are both obvious and subtle prophecies, most are very
detailed and specific.
- No
other religion has specific, repeated, and unfailing fulfillment
of predictions many years in advance of contingent events over
which the predictor had no control.
- Studies
of psychics show only around 8% of their predictions come true
and virtually all of these can be attributed to chance and a
general knowledge of circumstances.
- Fulfilled
prophecy is powerful evidence that the Bible is divine rather
than human in origin.
- Objection:
Jesus manipulated events to fulfill prophecy. Answer: (a) Many
prophecies were out of his control (ancestry, place of birth,
time of death). (b) His miracles confirmed Jesus to be the Messiah.
(c) There is no evidence that Jesus was a deceiver. (d) In order
to manipulate all the people (including his enemies) and even
his disciples to make it appear that he was the Messiah, Jesus
would have needed supernatural powers. If he had such powers,
he must have been the Messiah he claimed to be.
Examples of Non-Messianic Prophecies
- The
Succession of Great World Kingdoms (Daniel 2:37-42). Even
negative critics agree that Daniel foretold the governments
in order of Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome.
- Cyrus
King of Persia (Isaiah 44:28-45:1). Since Isaiah lived between
about 740 and 690 BC (2 Kings 25-21) and Cyrus did not make
his proclamation for Israel to return from exile until about
536 (Ezra 1), there would have been no human way for him to
know what Cyrus would be named or what Cyrus would do.
- Israel
to Be Returned to Its Land A Second Time (Isaiah 11:11-12).
The first was under Nehemiah and Ezra subsequent to the destruction
of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The second was in 1948. No other culture
in history has been restored, especially after so much time
and genocidal hatred. (Some say that the "second time" will
be on the last day.)
- The
Closing of the Golden Gate (Ezekiel 44:2-3). The Golden
Gate is the eastern gate of Jerusalem, through which Christ
made his triumphal entry on Palm Sunday before the crucifixion
(Matthew 21). Ezekiel predicted its closing and in 1543 Sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent closed the gate and walled it up, not
knowing he was fulfilling prophecy. It remains sealed to this
day exactly as the Bible predicted, waiting to be re-opened
when the Lord returns.
- The
Destruction of Tyre (Ezekiel 26:3-14). The prophecy was
partly fulfilled when Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the city and
left it in ruins. Alexander the Great later attacked the seemingly
impregnable Island of Tyre by taking the stones, dust, and timber
from the ruined mainland city to build a causeway to the Island.
This prophecy is comparable to saying that Chicago will be destroyed
and never rebuilt.
- The
Doom of Edom (Petra) (Jeremiah 49:15-17). Given the virtually
impregnable nature of the ancient city carved out of rock and
protected by a narrow passageway, this was an incredible prediction.
Yet, in 636 AD it was conquered by Muslims and today stands
deserted but for tourists.
- Flourishing
of the Desert in Palestine (Ezekiel 36:33-35). Since before
the turn of the twentieth century, Israel has been renovated
and Israel's agriculture is flourishing.
- Destruction
of Jerusalem (Mark 13:1-2). Fulfilled literally when the
Romans completely destroyed Jerusalem and the temple buildings.
According to historian and eyewitness Josephus, some of the
stones were 37 feet long, 12 feet high and 18 feet wide. Stones
were even pried apart to collect the gold leaf that melted from
the roof when the temple was set on fire.
Examples of Messianic Prophecies
| Topic |
Old
Testament |
New
Testament |
| Messiah
to be the seed of the Woman |
Gen.
3:15 |
Luke
2:5-7, Gal. 4:4 |
| Messiah
to be the seed of Abraham |
Gen.
12:2-3, 18:18 |
Mat.1:1-2,
Luke 3:34, Acts 3:25, Gal.3:16 |
| Messiah
to be of the tribe of Judah |
Gen.
49:10 |
Mat.
1:1-2, Luke 3:33 |
| Messiah
to be of the seed of David |
2
Sam. 7:16, Ps. 132:11, Jer. 23:5, 33:15 |
Mat.
1:6, 22:42-45, Luke 1:31-33, Acts 2:29-30, Rom. 1:3 |
| Messiah
to be born of a virgin |
Is.
7:14 |
Mat.
1:18-25, Luke 1:26-38 |
| Messiah
to be born in Bethlehem |
Micah
5:2 |
Mat.
2:1-6, Luke 2:4-6 |
| Tribute
paid to Messiah by great kings |
Ps.
72:10-11 |
Mat.
2:1-11 |
| Messiah
to be heralded by a messenger |
Is.
40:3. Mal. 3:1 |
Mat.
3:1-3 |
| Messiah
to be the Son of God |
Ps.
2:2,7 |
Mat.
3:17, Luke 1:32-33 |
| Messiah
to be anointed by the Holy Spirit |
Is.
11:2 |
Mat.
3:16-17 |
| Galilee
to be the first area of Messiah's ministry |
Is.
9:1-7 |
Mat.
4:12-16 |
| Messiah
to be meek and mild |
Is.
40:11, 42:2-3, 53:7 |
Mat.
12:18-20, 26:62-68 |
| Messiah
to minister to the Gentiles |
Is.
42:1, 49:6-8 |
Mat.
12:21, Luke 2:28-32 |
| Messiah
will perform miracles |
Is.
35:5-6 |
Mat.
9:35, 11:3-6, John 9:6-7 |
| Messiah
to be a prophet like Moses |
Deut.
18: 15-19 |
Mat.
21:11, 24:1-35, John 1:45, 6:14, Acts 3:20-23 |
| Messiah
to enter the temple with authority |
Mal.
3:1-2 |
Mat.
21:12 |
| Messiah
will enter Jerusalem on a donkey |
Zech.
9:9-10 |
Mat.
21:1-11 |
| Messiah
to be betrayed by a friend |
Ps.
41:9 |
John
13:18-21 |
| Messiah
to be forsaken by his disciples |
Zech.
13:7 |
Mat.
26:31, 56 |
| Messiah
will be smitten |
Is.
50:6 |
Mat.
26:67, 27:26,30 |
| Messiah
to experience crucifixion (long before crucifixion was invented) |
Ps.
22:15-17 |
Mat.
27:34-50, John 19:28-30 |
| Messiah
will be pierced |
Zech.
12:10 |
John
19:34-37 |
| Details
of Messiah's suffering and death and resulting salvation (hundreds
of years before Christ!) |
Ps.
69:21, Is. 53:2-12, |
Mat.
26-27, Mark 15-16, Luke 22-23, John 18-19 |
| Messiah
to die in 33 AD |
Dan.
9:24-26 |
33
AD is the widely accepted historical date of the crucifixion |
| Casting
of lots for His garments |
Ps.
22:18 |
John
19:23-24 |
| Messiah
to be raised from the dead |
Ps.
16:10 |
Acts
2:25-31, 13:32-37, 17:2-3 |
| Messiah's
resurrection |
Job
19:25, Ps. 16:10 |
Acts
2:30-31, 13:32-35, 17:2-3, 1 Cor. 15:20-22 |
| Messiah
to ascend to heaven |
Ps.
68:18 |
Luke
24:51, Acts 1:9, Eph. 4:8-13 |
| Messiah
to be at the right hand of God |
Ps.
110:1 |
Mat.
26:64, Mark 14:62, Rom. 8:34, Heb. 1:3 |
Messiah,
the stone which the builders rejected, to become the head
cornerstone
|
Ps.
118:22-23, Is. 8:14-15, 28:16 |
Mat.
21:42-43, Acts 4:11, Rom. 9:32-33, Eph. 2:20, 1 Pet. 2:6-8 |

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