Brian2
Veteran Member
You make a couple of mistakes here:
1. The text of Isaiah doesn't actually have chapters -- they are a relatively recent and Christian insertion. so
2. Israel is explicitly identified as the servant 7 times throughout the book as a whole
3. The servant is never identified in the text as anyone else so any interpretation you make has to be an innovation, not native to the work
Isa 49:3 He said to me, “You are my servant,
Israel, in whom I will display my splendor.”
I have been told by Jews that this servant in this chapter is actually Isaiah.
That identification serves the purpose of addressing other things in the chapter which show that the servant Israel cannot be the nation of Israel, but it disagrees with what you have said. How can the servant Israel in Isa 49 be the nation of Israel with something like verse 5?
Isa 49:5 And now the Lord says—
he who formed me in the womb to be his servant
to bring Jacob back to him
and gather Israel to himself,..........
There are also things in the passage Isa 52:12 -Isa 53:12 which show that the servant there cannot be the nation of Israel.
So even if the servant is called Israel in places that does not mean that it means the nation of Israel.
So Christians say it is messianic because their choice of "messiah" says so? That's circular and self-serving.
Yes, though it is used for its first times in reference to Abraham, it is also used for other people. And though the ideas in the psalm match a particular event in Abraham's life, some commentators see it as a reference to others like David. None of it is messianic, of course, but reference to historical/textual events.
Yes it is no good to say that in the New Testament we have evidence that the Jews saw Psalm 110 as Messianic, because all you do is say the gospel story is lying.
Other Jews have used Psalm 110 as Messianic also and in a similar context to the way Jesus used it when He asked why the Messiah is called the Son of David and yet David calls the Messiah Lord.
From this site: The Messiah would be greater than David
The messianic interpretation of Psalm 110 was also found in rabbinic writings. The Midrash on Psalms 18:29 says:
In other words, the Messiah will receive greater glory, sitting at God’s right hand, than his ancestor Abraham, who sits in the position of lesser honor on the left. The Messiah, though descended from Abraham, nevertheless receives greater glory. This is reminiscent of Psalm 110 in which the Messiah, descended from David, nevertheless receives greater glory because he is David’s Lord.R. Yudan said in the name of R. Hama: In the time to come when the Holy One, blessed be He, seats the Lord Messiah at His right hand, as is said The Lord saith unto my lord: “Sit thou at My right hand” and seats Abraham at His left, Abraham’s face will pale, and he will say to the Lord: “My son’s son sits at the right, and I at the left!”
Melchizedek was both King and Priest, as the Messiah is, Abraham was neither and you are scraing to fit a situation from the life of Abraham into the Psalm.
Abraham did not rule in the midst of his enemies and will not judge nations and crush the rulers of the whole earth. This is something that the Messiah does.
Why do you think that? Are you aware of the Jewish idea of the role of the various anointed people?
You have roles for various anointed people and Christians have all the roles for the Messiah who is a prophet and priest and King and as the Hebrew scriptures show, He is rejected by the Jews and killed and resurrected and sits at the LORD's right hand and then comes to judge the nations and rule.
So you find verses that seem to work with your personal idea of what the messiah is supposed to be and what the gospels describe, and you then decide that they are messianic. That is irrelevant to a Jew who understands the texts very differently and who has a set of messianic prophecies in his understanding that invalidate Jesus.
Yes I know the Jews have rejected Jesus and rejected interpretations of the scriptures that show Jesus to be the Messiah and say that the gospel is lies.
Christians look at what Jesus actually did, what happened to Him, and by that we can see the scriptures that are prophecies about Jesus, many of which have also been Messianic to Jews in the past.
I don't think the Jewish scriptures about the Messiah invalidate Jesus at all, it is just not a complete list.