I'm With Stupid
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- 6 May 2013
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Repeating something from an earlier book doesn't mean the earlier book is prophesizing it, it's means the later book has an interest in creating a link between the two.Yes it is. It’s refuted it’s David, many Jewish people view it as Jewish people in general, and their suffering, rather than one man specifically.
It’s also in a section of the book that has prophecies.
Here is another quote from Psalms and is taken from Wikipedia:
But let's stick to the quote we were discussing, because there can be a tendency for people sometimes to respond to refutations with "what about this one?" So let's take your hypothesis on face value. Psalms 22 is a prophesy predicting not only Jesus' death, but also the manner of said death (piercing hands and feet). So with that in mind, what aspects of Jesus' execution do the following things from the passage predict?
- Strong bulls of Bashan
- roaring lions that tear their prey
- my heart has turned to wax and has melted inside me
- all my bones are out of joint
- dogs surround me
- they divide their clothes among me
The claim seems to rest on a very specific description of injuries. And yet if it was a prediction, and such a poetic and lengthy prediction at that, it would seem odd to miss out some of the more clearly iconic aspects of the crucifixion (why not mention the cross or the crown of thorns?) and instead refer to a number of things that weren't in Jesus' story, as well as clearly putting it in the context of a contemporary conflict with an adversary that appears throughout the bible.