From his work on Charles Jennens’ use of Bible passages for libretto of Handel’s Messiah, Tassilo Erhardt believed the “principal aim is not to tell the story of Jesus’ life, but to point out that the prophecies of the Old Testament concerning the Messiah are fulfilled in the person of Jesus.”1 The Bible passages used in Messiah, however, are not the only Old Testament prophecies Jesus fulfilled. Dale and Elaine Routon wrote,
“The Old Testament contains over three hundred references to the coming Messiah (Anointed One). Many of those prophecies Christ specifically applied to Himself…
“Someone may suggest that Christ deliberately tried to fulfill these prophecies in order to lay claim to Messiahship. Notice, however, that many of these prophecies are incidents over which Christ could have had no control unless He was God.”2
One such prophecy was made about where Messiah would be born. As an unborn child the Lord Jesus would have had no control over the timing of Caesar Augustus’ decree that sent Joseph and Mary to Bethlehem to be counted. Nor as an unborn child would He have had control over the timing of his birth while they were in Bethlehem. Yet there in Bethlehem He was born some 700 years after Micah prophesied:
Too little to be among the clans of Judah,
From you One will go forth for Me to be ruler in Israel.
His goings forth are from long ago,
From the days of eternity.”
The Nativity: Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale. Public Domain.
1Johan van Veen, Handel’s Messiah staged Holland Festival Early Music 2000, musica Dei donum.
2Dale and Elaine Routon, Can We Know? An Examination of the Claims of Christianity (Morrison and Gibb, Limited, London and Edinburgh: 1965) 58, 59.
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