Micah,
I agree that Jewish scholars have legitimate responses to many of our assertions. I think we need to provide legitimate responses to their objections.
So, how would you respond, apart from faith and Holy Spirit (which you may have noticed is insulting to the Jews)?
Anna
Anna,
My intention was not to infer that the Jewish people do not have faith, nor the Holy Spirit.
We who have faith that Jesus is the Messiah, can only attempt to answer their objections with the help of the Holy Spirit. In other words, rationally responding to their objections from the Torah which was originally given to the Jewish people is not sufficient, it requires inspiration from the Holy Spirit.
To interpret the ‘sign’ that was given to King Ahaz, and also his son Hezekiah (who may have been a very young co-regent with his father at the time) is not a simple matter if we are to look at this ‘sign’ from the historical context.
The chronology of events is very contested and jumbled. King Pekah of Samaria, of the Northern Kingdom of Israel was assasinated by Hoshea in what most scholars think to be the year 732 AD. According to 2 Kings 16, King Jotham, the father of Ahaz was alive in his last year of his 20 year reign at the time. So, I do not know if this event would require a ‘sign’.
The prophet Isaiah says that in 65 years Samaria, the seat of the Northern Kingdom would come to an end. If this prophecy was given to King Ahaz in about 735 AD (and possibly Hezekiah who may have been a co-regent with his father at the time), then by 670 AD the extinction of Samaria as the seat of the Northern Kingdom of Israel would be complete.
This is the date which historians think the King of Assyria brought citizens from Assyria to Samaria to intermarry with the few remaining inhabitants of Samaria. Who subsequently were taught the rudiments of the Torah, hence the bias against Samaritans by the religious Jews in the days of Jesus.
701 AD is the date most historians place for the invasion of King Sennacharib into Judea with his threat against King Hezekiah. Samaria, the seat of the northern kingdom of Israel had already been conquered by 722 AD. The prophet Isaiah tells King Hezekiah that he was to be given a ‘sign’. Reasonably, the sign was the destruction of the 185,000 man army of Sennacharib by the angel of the Lord during the night. According to Jewish tradition this was Passover, and a re-enactment of the avenging angel who slew the firstborn of Egypt on the very first Passover.
As far as the name that is given in Isaiah 9:6. the Septuagint version is most often quoted by the early church fathers as, “
The messenger (or angel) of great counsel”
There are theophanies, or christophanies in the Torah, especially Genesis and Exodus which the early church fathers recognized to be appearances of the pre-incarnate Christ in the form of an angel or messenger of God. One of these appearances was to Abraham and later to Lot. Genesis 19:24 speaks of two YWYH’s one of which was with Lot and his family:
" YWYH reigned down fire and brimstone from YWYH out of heaven" This did not go unnoticed by several of the early church fathers, including Justin Marytr, Ireneaus and Eusebius the historian.
Other instances of ‘theophanies’ mentioned by the early church fathers, are the angel of the Lord in the burning bush who appeared to Moses and who declared the name of the LORD. This is most likely the angel of the Lord who went before the Israelites in the pillar of cloud by day, and the pillar of fire by night. The 'captain of the hosts of the LORD who appeared to Joshua. The angel of the Lord who wrestled with Jacob and so on.
Thus, in the NT Jesus declares that he is the I AM. At the same time, he says that
'no one has seen God (the Father) at any time, only the only-begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father he has declared him.'
There are other details in the life of Hezekiah which have possible prophetic announcements of Jesus apart from the name of Hezekiah’s wife.
Just a few examples, Hezekiah re-instituted the Passover that had been neglected.
Hezekiah destroyed the brazen serpent which had become an object of worship. Up till this time, the brazen serpent had not been mentioned in the Tanakh since the time of Moses when he was instructed by the LORD to fashion it. It was Jesus who brings up the analogy of the brazen serpent to his sacrificial death on the cross in his conversation with Nicodemus.
There is one scripture in Lamentations that is quoted by the early church fathers, and has significance to me as one who has some familiarity with certain ‘charismatic’ Hasidic Jews of the past.
"The breath (spirit) of our nostrils, the messiah (anointed) of the LORD was taken in their pits, of whom we said, under his shadow we shall dwell among the nations."
(Lamentations 4:20)
These responses are not necessarily of the Holy Spirit, but a small gathering of the insights of some of the early church fathers regarding the subject of the Messiah as foretold in the Tanakh
God’s peace be with you
micah