Christ in the Old Testament
by the Rev. Dr. Horace Hummel
Retired professor of Exegetical Theology, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis,
Mo.
"Search the Scriptures and they are they which testify of me" (John
5:39). Our Lord's own words could not be clearer. And note that when
He speaks of "the Scriptures," He is referring to the Old Testament (as
is also the case in the Nicene Creed where it states, 'And the third day
He rose again according to the Scriptures'). Later, of course, the term
was extended to include the New Testament as well.
There were skeptics and heretics already in the early church. Most (in)famous
was Marcion, who taught that the Old Testament represented a different
god and threw out the whole Old Testament and some of the New Testament.
On the whole, though, in the main catholic confession of the church there
never was any serious debate about it until relatively modern times beginning
with the eighteenth century and the so-called "Enlightenment". Martin Luther
and most of the Reformation were also certainly no exception!
The ordinary believer certainly makes the same confession today, but
is sometimes hard put to apply the confession in detail. Let us start with
something that I think most Christians do almost automatically. When we
read of "God", "the Lord", etc. in the Old Testament, we simply assume,
as we should, that this is our God or Lord, the same God who in the fullness
of time became incarnate in Jesus of Nazareth and who still manifests Himself
to us through the Holy Spirit.
Let me call your attention to our liturgical usage. Especially when
used in public worship, every psalm is to be concluded with the "Gloria
Patri" (Glory be to the Father...). While not commanded, this should not
be dismissed as simply a pious, but inert custom. It confesses that we
do not "Christianize" the psalms by changing their texts, but that we confess
their prolongation or extension into the time of the Holy Spirit, that
is, our time and until the end of time.
Sometimes the word "typology" is used to describe the predictive meaning
of topics in the Old Testament itself without the illumination of the New
Testament (sacrifice and priesthood are two major examples). But the deeper
meaning of typology is the recognition that the faith of the Old Testament
is essentially of the same type as ours, regardless of surface differences.
That is, salvation was not available by works or human merit, but was a
free gift of God's undeserved grace evident in His election of an unworthy
people and in His promise of a Savior to come.
That is, we do not "read into" the Old Testament meanings that are not
there (although, of course, this is possible). Rather we "read out" of
it its full meaning as revealed by Christ in the New Testament. There is
no one fully adequate way of expressing this truth but one of my favorites
goes back to the church father, St. Augustine, "The New Testament is latent
in the Old; the Old Testament becomes patent in the New."
A common picture or metaphor for visualizing such a confession is the
bud and the blossom. Anyone who knows the flower will see in its bud what
he knows will eventually open into a beautiful flower. Everything is really
in the bud, but what is there will only be revealed in the "fullness of
time" (Galatians 4:4). Any attempt to "read" the bud in another way would
simply be mistaken.
The Creator has established a genetic connection so that the bud can
only become what it is "programmed" to become. We are reminded of Jesus'
frequent use of the word "must" to describe His necessity to fulfill the
Scriptures, not only in suffering and dying, but also in rising again (e.g.
Mark 8:31; Luke 24:44).
Christians have long spoken of the "pre-existence" of Christ from eternity
to eternity (so our Lord Himself in John 8:58; cf., Colossians 1:15ff).
But there is no Gospel or Good News in His pre-existence, as such. More
to the point is that long before the incarnation, God would sometimes reveal
Himself to His people in an "incarnational" way. Among the most obvious
are various passages where "angel of the Lord" is used interchangeably
with "Lord" or "God" alone (e.g. Genesis 22:15-16; Exodus 3:2).
An incarnational motif is especially prominent in connection with the
tabernacle/temple. In various ways God is described as "dwelling" there.
The Hebrew word used can refer to anyone's "dwelling" or "living" in a
house or city. In order to distinguish ordinary "dwelling" from God's "incarnational"
presence in the tabernacle, sometimes the rather artificial word "indwell"
is used. The Bible, of course, is very aware that God is omnipresent or
that His dwelling is in heaven. The paradox of that same God's "indwelling"
on earth is pondered by Solomon in his prayer at the consecration of the
temple (I Kings 8:27ff.). In fact, God's tabernacle presence on earth is
localized as between the two cherubim above the lid or "mercy seat" of
the ark of the covenant in the Holy of Hollies (Exodus 25:22).
When the incarnation itself occurred in Jesus' birth the tabernacle
found its fulfillment there. One of the key passages in making the connection
is John 1:14, "The Word (Christ) was made flesh and dwelt among us ..."
We might also translate "tabernacled among us" to make the connection even
more obvious. St. John uses the usual Greek translation for the Hebrew
for "indwell" and by a happy coincidence the words in the two languages
even happen to sound somewhat alike.
We could trace many other ways where the New Testament shows us how
to recognize Christ in the Old Testament. Let us continually pray that
the Holy Spirit would take the veil of incomprehension or even unbelief
away from our faces when we read the Scriptures (cf. II Corinthians 3:14-18)
and that, as with His disciples after the resurrection, He would become
known to us in the Lord's Supper (Luke 24:30-47). |