Saviour in Old Testament

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    THE SAVIOUR IN THE OLD TESTAMENT

    All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord has laid

    on him the iniquity of us all. He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth;

    like a lamb that is led to the slaughter, and like a sheep that before its shearers is dumb, so he

    opened not his mouth. (Isaias 53:6-7)

    The Orthodox Church is extremely fortunate in having many writings of holy people who have

    experienced God's presence in the world and have recognized His attempts to lead us to Himself. Of

    all these writings the collection known as the Holy Bible or Holy Scripture best presents the truth of

    God's loving care of the world. These various writings of Holy Scripture are divided into two sections:

    the Old Testament, consisting of 49 books and the New Testament, consisting of 27 books.

    The Old Testament was written by holy Hebrews who lived before our Lord Jesus Christ and who

    desired to record some of the many ways God chose to prepare His people for the coming of His

    Son into the world as the Savior of the world. These authors, because of their holiness, were inspired

    by God and clearly saw that just because man had left the Grace of God, God had not abandonedthe world and that He desired not the death of sinners but their return. They recorded many of the

    ways God guided, protected and blessed the Hebrew Nation. The history of the Hebrew nation is a

    history of a people who would for a time remember God and then, due to temptations stemming

    either from hardships or luxury, would forget God and often times refused to accept the man of God,

    the Prophet, who would try to lead them back to God,

    Both in the history and the prayers of the Hebrew nation, which are recorded in the Old Testament,

    we can see that the Hebrew nation longed for the day when its Lord would be always with the world

    and when His Glory would be known by all. The Hebrews knew that once in the history of mankind

    God was not a stranger to man, for Moses had recorded that Adam and Eve heard the voice of the

    Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day (Genesis 3:8). They also knew that such aclose relationship as Adam and Eve had with God was lost when Adam and Eve lost the right to live

    in Paradise, in the Grace of God.

    In the Old Testament we see God guiding the Hebrew nation so that someday He would be able to

    say to the descendants of Adam, Truly, I say to you, today you will be with Me in Paradise (Luke

    23:43). This hope of the Hebrew nation was not based on a simple human desire but on the Word of

    God Himself. As soon as man lost the Grace of God, God promised that one of the descendants of

    Adam and Eve would destroy the power of the devil (Genesis 3:15). Not only did God promise that

    the power of the devil would some day be destroyed but He also appointed the nation from which

    would come He Who would destroy the power of the devil (Genesis 22:18). The Old Testament is

    sure that the hope of a Saviour is not a hope which has risen from the people but that it is a promise

    which has come from God. The Old Testament teaches us that the Saviour is almighty. This Saviour

    in the Hebrew language is calledMessiahwhich in Greek isChristos.

    The Old Testament presents us with a definite history of the preparation of the Hebrew nation for the

    coming of the Messiah, our Lord Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the world. In the books of the Old

    Testament the Prophets taught the Hebrew people about the coming of Christ. The Hebrews also

    showed their expectation of Christ in their prayers. The Book of Psalmscontains many prayers that

    teach about the Messiah.

    In the second Psalm, for instance, we see the Divine Nature of the expected Messiah, The Lord said

    to me, You are My Son., today have I begotten You (Psalm 2:7). The Messiah's Divine Nature isAlso seen in Psalm 109 (110) The Lord said to my Lord, sit at My right hand until I make Your

    enemies Your footstool(Psalm 109:1). In the twenty-first Psalm we are given a vivid description of

    the sufferings which the expected Saviour will go through;

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    how He will cry out to God for help and His persecutors will laugh at Him for putting His hopes in

    God. The scene of the Crucifixion is described even to the point where the Psalm states, They

    parted my garments among themselves and cast lots upon my rainment(Psalm 21:18).

    The Old Testament also teaches us about the suffering of Christ. The great man of God, the Prophet

    Isaias, teaches us that the Saviour of the world would bear the grief and sorrows of all and that Hewould be despised and rejected by men(Isaias 53:3). Isaias saw the Salvation of the world, yet he

    described this great moment in a manner which could only be understood with the coming of our

    Lord:

    He was oppressed, and he was afflicted., yet lie opened not his mouth; like alambthat

    is led to the slaughter, and like a sheep that before its shearers is dumb, so he opened

    not his mouth(Isaias 53:7).

    The Mystery of our Salvation was expected in the Old Testament but because of its great depth and

    the unwillingness of the majority of the Hebrews to love their God with all their heart and with all their

    soul, very few of them could reach the heights of Prophet Isaias and understand what type of

    Saviour they should expect.

    By the time our Lord came, the majority of the Hebrews expected the Messiah to be a political leader

    who would bring them victory against the Romans, who occupied their country. Many people, when

    they saw the great acts of our Lord, thought that He was the king of the Jews, who was to lead them

    to victory and establish His glorious kingdom. When they realized that our Lord did not intend to

    establish a worldly kingdom, their anger knew no limits and Isaias' prophecies came true; And they

    made His grave with the wicked and with a rich man in His death., although He had done no

    violence, and there was no deceit in His mouth(Isaias 53:9).

    Most of the Hebrew people did not understand what they were taught in the Old Testament. Their

    leaders twisted the teachings of the Holy Prophets and confused the people. Some of the people,

    however, understood and they became the first Christians. Later the Hebrew leaders (Rabbis) triedto change the Old Testament so that people would not see that it taught about our Saviour.

    Hundreds of years later the Protestants used this distorted Bible of the Rabbis. The Orthodox Church

    still uses the same Old Testament that the first Christians used. It is called the Septuagint. The Old

    Testament books, especially the Book of Psalms, are read in all the services of the Orthodox Church

    and should be read by every Orthodox Christian at home.