WAS JESUS' CRUCIFIXION PREDICTED IN PSALM 22?
Psalm 22. Speaks of a man who is despised and mocked by
the people, who suffers from thirst, who has been cut
all over, who has pierced hands and feet and who is near death. He feels he can count all his bones. People are casting lots for his clothes.
Alleged
Fulfilment. The crucifixion of Jesus
Christ.
New
Testament Interpretation. This may be accepted by John (19) for he said
the bit about the casting lots was about Jesus but then John used a verse right
after that (19:36) that was taken out of context so perhaps he believed that
the psalms only contained bits about Jesus and that the context did not mean
anything. Matthew weaves passages from
this psalm into his narrative but this means nothing. Hebrews 2 cites a verse from the Psalm as if
it were spoken by Jesus but it does not say that it
was about the crucifixion of Jesus or that the whole psalm was about
Jesus. It is possible that the same
holds true for John. Never does the
Bible use the entire psalm as a prophecy of Jesus.
The
Truth. It could be describing a severe beating. The man can number his bones for he can feel
in them in the pain. They have pierced
his hands and his feet probably to prevent him from walking to get help and
using his hands after the attack.
Jesus could easily
have cut his own hands and feet if he had got a beating to fulfil this
prophecy. Christians contend that
something very bad happened then when they were singled out for a mention. But that may have just been because of their
importance.
If Jesus wore good clothes on his final journey it would have ensured that the soldiers would try to win them in a game of casting lots. If the gospels did not mention the casting lots and it never happened Christians would be saying that it did happen.
Had it been a real
prophecy, we would be reading in the gospels that Jesus went out in poor clothes and these were
ripped off him and valuable ones put on and for those better clothes the
soldiers cast lots.
Here is proof that
the psalm is not about Jesus.
The man says he
cries in the day and the night and is hated by all and they pierce his hands
and feet and cast lots for his clothes.
This shows the suffering is in the context of something that lasted
longer than what Jesus went through, three hours on the cross. When a man says he cries day and night and
God does not hear and he is in jail he means or most probably means that he was
in jail all that time. It is the same
with the Psalmist and especially the Psalmist because he uses the one tense
until he turns to the future tense at v22.
Verse 8 says that
the persecutors yelled that the Psalmist trusted in and delights in the
Lord. This is supposed to predict the
Jews sneering at Jesus and saying he could save others but not himself and that God would not help him. But the Jews never complemented Jesus on his
trust and joy in the Lord. They always
accused him of being thoroughly bad news and a practitioner of deceitful magic
and satanic magic. They would not have
praised him for they wanted to be seen as better than him.
Verse 11 asks God to
be near for there is nobody to help.
Jesus did not want any help and refused to try and hide when he was
about to be arrested. During his trial he deliberately upset and provoked the High Priest and
Pilate and would not defend himself.
Verse 12-4 says that
the person is hedged in or imprisoned and that is why he is thirsty. Jesus was
offered drink before he was crucified and he would not take it. A man deliberately making himself
thirsty on the cross to emulate the Psalmist could be nothing else but a fake
fulfiller. Prophecies are supposed to be
beyond fabricating.
When the Psalmist
puts the thirst before the wounding of the hands and the feet it strongly
suggests that the wounding was not the reason for the thirst. But crucifixion causes thirst. It is suspicious that Jesus only asks for a
drink just as he is about to die (John 19:28) which means either that he had
already drank enough or that the story was made up for he would have been
desperate long before that.
The Psalm never
mentions death and just says that the Psalmist nearly died (v 15). A prophecy about Jesus would not omit such an
important detail. Verse 20 has the
author asking for deliverance from the sword and the power of the dog which is
the person who is trying to kill him. It
is fantasy to say that this is deliverance from death by means of the
resurrection for it most probably means rescue – remember, never interpret
something as meaning supernatural when it could mean natural. And especially when there
is no hint of resurrection anywhere in the Psalms. Jesus was not killed by the sword but by the
cross.
Jesus, if good,
would not think of his attackers as dogs like the Psalmist did. First of all, Luke says he forgave them for
they did not know what they did. Secondly,
the gospels say that Jesus was at his holiest during his passion. Thirdly, the gospels exculpate the Romans who
crucified Jesus and say the Jews forced them.
The dogs reference proves that the passage about the pierced
hands and feet is symbolic. The passage
is actually saying that since the author is surrounded by dogs they are tearing
holes in his hands and his feet – he is using the image of dogs biting
him. He is trying to defend himself with
his hands and feet and the dogs are making at them for they are his
weapons. The passage is poetry. The present tense in the original Hebrew says
they are at his hands and feet which is proof that is not referring to Jesus
because the Hebrew actually does not mention piercing at all – that is
something that the translators assume the Hebrew means. They imagine that it is implied. But it is not implied for dogs
being at you does not necessarily mean you are being bitten by them.
(See
www.fortunecity.com/greenfield/bp/890/interpretation.html.)
Others see that the
Hebrew says “like a lion at my hands and feet” meaning mauled. The Christians just assume the piercing and
translate it as piercing to trick people into thinking the nailing of Jesus is
meant (Challenging the Verdict, The Fabulous
Prophecies of the Messiah by Jim Lippard).
In our tradition, the Psalmist had no
strength at all and compared it to a fragment of clay pottery and for emphasis
and his tongue was stuck to his mouth with weakness and thirst (v15) BEFORE he
said he was being pierced. But Jesus was
able to yell just before he died AFTER he was pierced so he was not that
weak. If the Psalmist was predicting
Jesus’ experience, he was disputing the authenticity of the gospels.
Christians make the
prophecy seem more convincing when they say it is not chronological. For example, the pierced hands and feet
should have been spoken of first and then the thirst if the prophecy was about
crucifixion for after being nailed and hung up the person gets very thirsty. But a prophecy worth its salt would be
chronological. For example, if I predict
that President X of the USA will get married and have one child and visit
Ireland and then suffer tragically and only one thing comes true, his marriage,
then somebody could say that the visit to Ireland happened before he became
President and the one child refers to the boy he had before he became President
and the tragic suffering happened when his friend died when he was ten.
The composer is on
about his own experiences for and to say he was not is to abuse the scriptures
for only express prophecies have the right to be considered.