Companion to the Bible eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 863 pages of information about Companion to the Bible.

Companion to the Bible eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 863 pages of information about Companion to the Bible.

2.  The Bible contains many prophecies relating to the comparatively near future.  These are all specific in their character, and have a single exhaustive fulfilment.  Examples are:  the prediction to Noah of the approaching deluge, and to Abraham of the bondage of his posterity in a strange land; the disclosure through Pharaoh’s dreams of the coming famine in Egypt; Joseph’s announcement of the future deliverance of Israel from Egypt; the token given to Moses that God had sent him:  “When thou hast brought forth the people out of Egypt, ye shall serve God upon this mountain” (Exod. 3:12); God’s threatened judgments upon the house of Eli with the accompanying sign (1 Sam. 2:34); the warning that David received by Urim and Thummim of Saul’s approach to destroy him (1 Sam. 23:9-12); the prediction that Josiah should defile Jeroboam’s altar at Bethel with men’s bones (1 Kings 13:2); etc.  Minute events, in themselves unimportant, sometimes come within the sphere of prophetic revelation, but always in connection with and subserviency to important transactions affecting the interests of God’s people.  Thus when Samuel anointed Saul as the future king of Israel, he foretold to him the incidents of his journey homeward (1 Sam. 10:2-7).  But this was in order that Saul might be assured of Samuel’s prophetic office, and consequently of the divine sanction to the transaction.  An event in the immediate future is frequently predicted as a pledge that some prophecy of more distant fulfilment shall be accomplished.  Thus the death of Eli’s two sons in one day was to be a token of the fulfilment of all the evils threatened against his house.  The same end may be accomplished by a miraculous sign. 1 Kings 13:3; 2 Kings 20:9, 11.  Prophecies of the kind now under consideration are in general very plain and simple, and their recorded fulfilment is to us a sufficient interpreter of their meaning.

II.  PROPHECIES RELATING TO THE LAST DAYS.

3.  In Old Testament usage, “the last days,” or “the latter days” ("in the latter years,” Ezek. 38:8) denote not simply the distant future, but that future as including the kingdom of the Messiah, which extends to the consummation of all things Gen. 49:1; Numb. 24:14; Deut. 4:30; 31:29; Isa. 2:2; Jer 23:20; 30:24; 48:47; 49:39; Ezek. 38:16; Dan. 10:14; Hos. 3:5; Mic. 4:1.  We are not, however, to conceive of these “last days” as totally separated from the preceding ages.  In the plan of God the history of the world constitutes a whole, all the parts of which are closely connected.  Hence the prophecies relating to the latter days include, more or less distinctly, the events which precede them, and prepare the way for them.  In such prophecies we are not to look for exhaustive details.  They give, as a rule, only general views relating to the conflicts of God’s people and their final triumph.  Where minute incidents are introduced (Psa. 22:18; 69:21; Zech. 9:9; 11:13) it is apparently for the purpose of identifying to future generations the Messiah as their main subject.  See below, No. 9.

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Companion to the Bible from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.