1-3-6 How Was The Word Made Flesh?
c) Old Testament Allusions
How exactly was the word made flesh in the person of Jesus? It
was not simply a question of the nature of His birth. ‘The word’
was a title given to the Lord in recognition of His achievement
in being and becoming the ‘word made flesh’. It wasn’t something
which automatically happened to the Lord, as an irresistible process
in which He played no part. The Lord’s Old Testament allusions,
His familiarity with and use of His Father’s words doubtless had
a lot to do with His becoming ‘the word made flesh’. If Paul alluded
to the words of the Lord Jesus once every four verses on average,
it is to be expected that the Son of God quoted and alluded to His
Father’s word even moreso. And this is what we find, when we search
the Lord’s words for their allusions to the Old Testament.
An example of the Lord’s perhaps unconscious usage of His Father’s
words is to be found in His exasperated comment: “O faithless and
perverse generation, how long shall I be with you? How long shall
I suffer you?” (Mt. 17:17). Of course the Lord would have spoken
those words and expressed those ideas in Aramaic- but the similarity
is striking with His Father’s Hebrew words of Num. 14:27: “How long
shall I bear with this evil congregation…?”. As a son comes out
with phrases and word usages which ‘Could be his father speaking!’,
so the Lord Jesus did the same thing. What I am saying is that the
Lord was not merely quoting or alluding to the Father’s Old Testament
words, in the way that, say, Paul or Peter did. As the Father’s
Son, He was speaking in the same way as His Father, no doubt saturated
with the written record of the Father’s words, but all the same,
there were those similarities of wording and underlying thinking
which are only seen between fathers and sons. And His words of Mt.
17:17 = Num. 14:27 seem to me to be an example of this.
The level, depth and multiplicity of Old Testament allusions becomes
the more amazing when we accept that these were spoken words, some
of them clearly spoken unprepared and off-the-cuff. Literature can
be crafted to pack multiple allusions. But when a speaker produces
such a depth of allusion, one can only marvel at his intellectual
depth. But with the Lord, it reflects His utter familiarity with
the Father’s word, grasping the real spirit of it all. He breathed
it, thought it, spoke it, lived it. And in all He said, this was
reflected. He truly was “the word made flesh”. The following are
just a few examples from the first words of Jesus; but the list
can be continued. The simple fact is that on average, the Lord is
alluding to the Old Testament at least 3 times in every verse! This
means that every phrase of every sentence He is recorded as speaking-
is alluding to His Father’s word. It would’ve been like an orphaned
son ‘finding’ his late father’s words. He would read the words with
such delight, and somehow eagerly pick up their sense in the way
nobody else could.
The Words Of Jesus |
Old Testament Allusions |
| Mt. 3:15 Suffer it to be so now:
for thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousness. |
Ez. 18:19,21 fulfill righteousness |
| Mt. 4:4 It is written, Man shall
not live by bread alone, butby everyword that proceedeth
out of the mouth of God |
Dt. 8:3 direct quote |
| Mt. 4:7 It is written again, Thou
shalt not tempt the Lord thy God. |
Dt. 6:16 direct quote |
| Mt. 4:10 Get thee hence, Satan:
forit is written, Thou shalt worshipthe Lord thy God,and
him only shalt thou serve. |
Dt. 6:13 direct quote |
| Mt. 5:3 Blessed are the poor in
spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. |
Ps. 40:17; Is. 41:17; 61:1 |
| Mt. 5:4 Blessed are they that mourn: |
Is. 61:1-3; 66:2 |
| for they shall be comforted. |
Is. 40:1 |
| Mt. 5:5 Blessed are the meek: |
Ps. 37:11,20; Is. 60:21; Prov.
22:24,25; 25:8,15 |
| for they shall inherit the earth.
|
Gen. 15:7,8; Ex. 32:13 |
| Mt. 5:6 Blessed are they that hunger
and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled.
|
Gen. 49:18; Ps. 17:15; 119:20;
Jer. 23:6; Is. 45:24; 51:1; 55:1; 65:13 |
| Mt. 5:7 Blessed are the merciful:
for they shall obtain mercy. |
2 Sam. 22:26,27; Ps. 18:25,26 |
| Mat 5:8 Blessed are the pure in
heart: for they shall see God. |
Ex. 33:20; Job 19:25-27; Ps. 17:15;
Is. 6:5; 38:3,11 |
If you follow through some of those allusions- and there are surely
many more that I’ve not picked up- it becomes apparent that the
Lord had a mind capable of operating on several different levels
of allusion at once. So it was not simply that He was hyper-familiar
with His Father’s word. He had the intellectual ability, with all
the intelligence of God’s very own Son, to think and speak on several
levels at once. Hence His words were absolutely full of
God’s thoughts and words. He was so fully and deeply “the word made
flesh”. And in analyzing from where in the Old Testament
the Lord quoted, we find that He had His favourite places- just
as we’d expect from a genuine man. He appears to have been especially
fond of the references to the “Servant” in the latter half of Isaiah;
and also of the Psalms. He quotes from them both literally and freely,
with all the confidence and appropriacy of a person who is thoroughly
familiar with the text. But the way and extent to which He applied
it all to Himself makes Him in very reality “the word made flesh”. |