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AmbroseSJ
Guest
I appreciate your view, and agree. It’s just that “the great sign” in its contemporary fulfillment seems lost and forced. If it weren’t for the birth of Jesus, I doubt if anyone could point to one single “great sign” in chapters 7 & 8. Rather they would find warnings, and somewhat expected predictions of invasions (although Ahaz may have not expected them Isaiah seems to think so.) But, I must always keep in mind that it is Scripture itself which gives us the interpretation of the Great Sign (Matt 1:23)Of course I’m not denying that Isaiah’s words have a relevance (have their ultimate relevance) in the birth of Jesus. But the way I see it, I just feel that a few Christians seem to talk about Isaiah 7:14 as if it couldn’t be anything other than the birth of Jesus. They just make it appear as if that particular verse isn’t about anything in Isaiah’s time; he instead is speaking about an event that will happen centuries later. They make it appear as if it’s an either-or issue. I say it’s both.
But as you say, it is not an either/or issue. It wouldn’t make sense for Isaiah to prophecy this birth if there was NO relevance to Israel’s situation at the time.
In my view this is how MOST prophecies are ultimately revealed! IOW, it is suddenly seen as being fulfilled at a time in the future, by those in the future, who realize the ultimate “applicability.” OTOH, prophecies in their contemporary context would be vague and difficult to imagine, if not downright inconceivable. So as you say, it wasn’t as if Isaiah’s prediction of the birth of the Messiah by a virgin was clearly forseen here (even by Isaiah perhaps.) But when the ultimate fulfillment did take place, the “great sign given by God” suddenly makes sense (at last!)When Matthew quotes Isaiah 7 and says that Jesus’ conception was the fulfillment of Isaiah’s statement, it’s probably not so much like Isaiah being a sort of fortune-teller predicting that in the distant future, so-and-so would happen at a specific date, but rather Isaiah’s words having enough relevance that Matthew from generations later could see his words about the birth of a boy who is ‘God-with-us’ being most relevant in this particular situation, when God really came down with us in the form of Jesus. (In this sense, the birth of Jesus is its ‘fulfillment’ par excellence.) In other words, it’s not so much a prediction by a past writer of the ‘future’ as it is of a present writer seeing the past being echoed right here and now. ‘Applicability’ might be a good term to use here.
So we may be arguing at cross-purposes, or using different terminology.