Understanding the New Testament and the End Times, Second Edition. Rob Dalrymple

Understanding the New Testament and the End Times, Second Edition - Rob Dalrymple


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the water from Jacob’s well looks forward to the Spirit who is the living water,40 and worship in Jerusalem and Gerizim looks forward to the true worship, which is “in spirit and truth.”41

      search for My sheep and seek them out. . . . I will seek the lost, bring back the scattered, bind up the broken, and strengthen the sick. . . . I will deliver My flock. . . . Then I will set over them one shepherd, My servant David, and he will feed them; he will feed them himself and be their shepherd. (Ezek 34:11, 16, 22, 23)

      Conclusion: What Does It Mean to Say That the OT Finds Its Fulfillment in Jesus?

      At this point I am fully aware that some readers may still find it difficult to accept that all of the Scriptures are about Jesus. This may stem from an understanding of Scripture that asserts that a given verse must be interpreted in light of its immediate context. This understanding is of course quite true. Yet, here it seems that I am arguing that Jesus took a passage out of its immediate context and applied it to himself. This creates a crisis of belief. Either we suggest that Jesus was wrong in doing so, which very few of us would concede, or we must consider the possibility that our assertion is incomplete.

      Ultimately, I am suggesting that there is nothing wrong here. Our high view of Scripture can still be maintained, though we are in need of a slight addition to our paradigm. If we conclude, as I am suggesting, that the entirety of the Scriptures—that is, the overarching narrative of God’s plan to make himself known and to redeem and restore his creation—is about Jesus, then we may also conclude that Jesus is certainly correct to claim that a passage, which on the surface appears to be about the restoration of Israel, is about him. That is, the restoration of Israel finds its fulfillment in Jesus. Consequently, we must both determine the meaning of a passage in light of its original context and determine how this points us to Jesus!

      Thus, the entirety of the story is about Jesus. This is what Jesus was telling the two on the road to Emmaus and the disciples later that same evening! “It was about me! The whole story was leading to me!” Jesus, then, does not simply affirm that he came to fulfill parts of the Law and the Prophets, namely, those parts that applied to him. Instead, the entirety of the Law and the Prophets is fulfilled in Jesus.