Christians say that the prophet Isaiah was speaking about Jesus, and Jews disagree. Christians say that the Psalms prophesy to events in the life of Jesus, and Jews disagree.
Your comment is greatly misleading. Of course Jews would disagree with the Christian interpretation. However, Christians don’t
solely interpret the OT as being
exclusively about Jesus. Those texts had meaning centuries prior to Jesus. Those meanings are still retained and exist in harmony with the Christian interpretations. In biblical interpretation, it’s called a “double literal meaning.”
Therefore… the OT cannot stand on its own!
The Catholic Church asserts that the OT stands on its own as inspired revelation. We would all benefit from re-reading
Nostra Aetate. This does not mean that the OT is separated from the NT. No one is claiming that, which I assume was your understanding of my claim. However, we must admit as Christians that the Old Testament has a distinct meaning on its own that is both true and is part of God’s divinely revealed revelation.
I disagree. If you only had the OT and I only had the NT, who would understand God’s plan for salvation better?
Neither of us. We would both be missing out on the fullness of revelation. I would still be waiting for God’s covenant to be fulfilled and you would lack the necessary background that the entire New Testament is laid on.
The Christian understanding of the OT – coming, as it does, from an understanding of Jesus (and the NT) – does stand above an understanding rooted solely in the OT.
Your statement is unclear. Jesus was mysteriously foretold in the OT for sure. But God’s initial covenant was with the Jews, not the Christians. There was no Christian understanding of the OT until Jesus. Are you trying to imply that God’s initial covenants were lacking in something because your statement certainly seems to suggest that.
No one is saying that “Christianity is better than Judaism”, and unless you think that’s what’s in play in our discussion, then you’re off in the weeds, I’m afraid.
I’m not claiming that this is the topic currently being discussed. However, if we continue to take the faulty framework that you’re laying out, that’s where we are headed. If the New Testament is superior to the Old Testament, then why would Christians not be better than Jews? If the Old Testament cannot stand on its own as Scripture, what do the Jews actually have? Do you see the point that I’m making?
And no one is making that claim – that God’s covenant with the Jews is now null – either!
Again, I’m not addressing an explicitly stated claim. However, I’m addressing a point that typically follows from that line of thinking.