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THE
PROMISED MESSIAH

Lecture Objectives:
To show that Jesus
of Nazareth claimed to be the promised Messiah, the Son of God, and the
fulfillment of all the promises of God found in the Old Testament concerning a
deliverer to save the world.
References:
John 5.39-40; Luke
4.16-21; John 5.34ff; Matthew 16.15-20; John 4.25-26; Matthew 11.17; Luke
10.21-22; John 10.33-36; John 11.4, 25-27; Luke 4.33-34
Questions For Focus:
- Where is Nazareth?
- How serious a
matter is it for one to "claim" to be the Son of God?
- What does the word
"Christ" and the word "Messiah" mean?
- What does it imply
when it says "the Scriptures bear witness to" Him?
- Can you name three
sources that bore witness to Christ's being the Messiah?
- How do you explain
God being a "Father" and Jesus being "the Son"?
- What is the
significance of Jesus permitting people to call Him by titles normally
ascribed to God?

I. INTRODUCTION
Have you ever looked
forward to the arrival of someone who was very dear to you? Perhaps your
parents, grandparents, a son or daughter, or a very special friend.
 | Recently, on U.S.
television a lady was reunited with her brother she had not seen in over
forty years. She was ecstatic with anticipation.
 | In a small was this
explains the expectation of the first century people of Palestine as they
looked for God's promise to be fulfilled in the coming of His Son.
 | They believed their
Scriptures to be inspired, consequently, they looked for deliverance from
the evil that enslaved the world.
 | They believed this
deliverance would come by One called "Messiah" or
"Christ." Both these terms (one Hebrew and the other Greek)
mean..."the anointed one." |
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Christians believed
that Jesus Christ was truly the one promised and fulfilled all that was said
about His expected coming.
II. JESUS MADE THE
CLAIM HE WAS THE FULFILLMENT OF OLD TESTAMENT WRITINGS
- In Luke
2.41-51 He claimed in the context of the incident to be the fulfillment of
Scripture.
- In John 5.39-40 He
said the Scriptures bore witness of Him...that He was the One who could give
life. The first incident after His messianic anointing by the Spirit of God,
He went back to His home town, Nazareth, and identified Himself. Luke
4.16-21
- Note His
statement: "Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your
hearing."
- There are two
distinct themes present in these texts:
- Jesus
clearly claimed to be the One spoken of in these Scriptures as the
Messiah.
- The
Scriptures are cited clearly as the source of evidence for these
claims.
III. "MESSIANIC
CLAIMS" IS AN EXPRESSION VITAL TO THIS DISCUSSION.
- It is
essential to the whole case for Jesus' Messianic identity.
- Did He actually
claim to be Messiah?
- The
overwhelming testimony of the New Testament is that He did.
- His
contemporaries heard them first and followed Him to the end, even into
persecution and death.
- His claims and
their examination of such seem to be the center point of their faith.
- John
5.34ff - A well developed defense for His Messiahship based on five strong
sources of proof:
- The first
witness: verse 33 - John the Baptist.
- They
had asked John for his conclusion to the claims being made.
- The second
witness: verse 36 - The works He did.
- They
were commissioned by God, thus implying, He was commissioned by God.
- The third
witness: verse 37 - The Father.
- But
they had failed to hear His voice in the deeds He commissioned.
- The fourth
witness: verse 39 - The Scriptures.
- A
thorough, honest investigation of Scriptures.
- The fifth
witness: verse 45 - Moses.
- I.E.
What Moses had written.
- The Torah
condemned them as it contained Messianic terms.
- They were
short of insight into God's law.
- In other
texts He clearly affirmed that He was the expected Messiah/Christ.
- Matthew
16.15-17, 20
- When
Peter clearly affirmed :Christ's identity, Jesus accepted Peter's
perception and congratulated him for it.
- Peter had
made the discovery for himself; it was best that others make the
discovery for themselves, hence verse 20.
- John 4.25-26
- The
woman said "I know that the Messiah is coming."
- With no
reserve on His part He clearly states "I who speak to you am
He."
- Consistently,
throughout the Gospels, He affirmed that God was His Father and that He was
God's Son.
- Matthew 11.27;
Luke 10.21-22
- Note
that these words depict an exclusive mutual bond between Father and
Son.
- That a
revelation of the Father is dependent upon the Son's knowledge of
Him.
- John 5.17-20
- His
sonship is underlined by His activity (healing) as the Father's
activity. His works and the Father's works are similar in character.
- This
statement was made because He had called God His Father (verse 18).
- John 10.33-36
- He
claimed to be the Son of God based on the "works" His
Father had given Him to do.
- John 17.1
- The
glory of the Son contributes to the glory of the Father.
IV. JESUS OFTEN
ACKNOWLEDGED THE CONFESSION OF HIM AS MESSIAH BY OTHERS AND ACCEPTED MESSIANIC
TITLES ASCRIBED TO HIM.
- John
1.40-41 - Andrew said: "We have found the Messiah."
- John 1.45-49 -
Philip tells Nathaniel they had found "Him of whom Moses in the law and
also the prophets wrote."
- Nathaniel
confesses: "You are the Son of God! You are the king of
Israel."
- John
6.68-69 - Peter calls Him "Lord", tells Him He has the words of
eternal life, and acknowledges Him as "the holy One of Israel."
- Matthew 3.16-17 -
God said: "This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased."
- Matthew 8.28-29;
Luke 8.28 - Two Gardarene demoniacs said: "What have you to do with us,
O Son of God..."
- Matthew 21.15-16 -
Children cried out: "Hosanna to the Son of David..."
V. JESUS DEVELOPED A
STRONG CASE FOR HIS IDENTITY FROM OLD TESTAMENT SCRIPTURES.
- Read
carefully Luke 24.25-27; 44-45. Note these significant statements and
explain what is inferred by their content.
- "...to
believe all that the prophets have spoken..."
- "...beginning
with Moses and all the prophets , He interpreted to them in all the
scriptures the things concerning Himself..."
- "...while
He opened to us the scriptures..."
- Matthew
5.17 - He said He hadn't come to abolish the law and the prophets but to
"fulfill them..."
- John 5.39-40; 46-47
- "Moses wrote of Me..."
- Luke 22.37 -
"...this scripture must be fulfilled in me...for what is written about
me has its fulfillment..."
- Explore these
questions:
- What is the
significance of the fact that Jesus developed the Biblical case for His
Messiahship from the whole of the Biblical cannon of the Hebrew
scriptures (O.T.)?
- He repeatedly
appeals to the Law (first five Books of the Old Testament), the Prophets
(their entire collection of writings), the Psalms (the devotional
literature beginning with the Psalms). Why?
- Considering the
data cited here, who do you think Jesus believed Himself to be?
VI. CLOSURE
- What have
we learned?
- That Jesus
clearly believed He was the Messiah who was promised.
- He interprets
Messianic texts and applies them to self and often shows that He had
more knowledge of who/what the Messiah was to be and the nature of
Messiah's redemptive role.
- Those who
investigated His claims became His disciples.
- From these
basic authenticated beliefs developed the religion men have known for
2,000 years as Christianity.
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