LEARNING ACTIVITY #30
Prophetic Language in the Bible
If we study the Bible carefully, we shall determine that there are some symbols
and metaphors that are peculiar to the language used in prophecy. These are and have
been troublesome to some Christians and an understanding of these will greatly aid
you in your Bible reading and study.
Using your Bible, look up the following
verses and write them in the space provided. As you proceed answer the questions
as they appear.
The fall of Babylon to the Medes in 539 BC is actually prophesied
in the Bible (see Isaiah 13:1).
1. Isaiah 13:10 ___________________________________________________________________________
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2.
What cataclysmic events were to happen in the universe during the fall of Babylon
by the Medes? _________________________________________________________________
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3.
Isaiah 13:13 _______________________________________________________________
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4.
In the verse above, what cataclysmic events were to take place? ____________________
____________________________________________________________________________
With
reference to the fall of Babylon, there are no historical or scientific records that
validate any of the physical events that seem to be implied in the above verses!
In
another example, the prophet Isaiah announces the desolation of Bozrah the capital
of Edom late in the sixth century BC (we know it is Bozrah from Isaiah 34:6). Look
closely at the language used in that prophecy.
5. Isaiah 34:3 ________________________________________________________________
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6.
In the above verse, do you think that "the mountains shall be melted with
their blood" actually happened? ___________________________________________________________
7.
Isaiah 34:4 ________________________________________________________________
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8.
What cataclysmic events are prophesied in the above verse? ______________________
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9.
Isaiah 34:9 ________________________________________________________________
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10.
What cataclysmic events are prophesied in the above verse? _____________________
____________________________________________________________________________
11.
Isaiah 34:10 ______________________________________________________________
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12.
From the verse above, describe in your words the burning of Bozrah. ______________
____________________________________________________________________________
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I
think you might agree that the language used in the scriptures above would demand
a cataclysmic catastrophe to take place (if this language is to be taken literally),
along with some sort of profound phenomena taking place in the universe.
But
instead, what we can draw from these passages is that symbol and metaphor belong
to the grammar of prophecy! It is not necessary to ask, Have these predictions been
fulfilled? We know they have been; as the accomplishment of them stands in history
as a monument to the truth of the Scriptures. God has not permitted anything He has
said through His servants the prophets to fall to the ground unfulfilled. One thing
is for sure, there is not a single sane person who would say that the symbols and
figures depicting these monumental events literally took place!
13. Read Ezekiel
32:7–8.
14. Describe the cataclysmic events that should take place if the
two verses above are taken to be literal. ___________________________________________________________________
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15.
Micah 1:4 ________________________________________________________________
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16.
Here the prophet Micah tells of how God will come down to earth in power against
the sins of Israel. In your words, what is to happen? _______________________________
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17.
Nahum 1:5 _______________________________________________________________
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18.
How does the prophet Nahum describe what happens to the earth in the presence of
God? ______________________________________________________________________
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19.
Daniel 8:10 ______________________________________________________________
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20.
In the verse above, the destruction of the Jewish people by Antioch Epiphanes is
being described. What is it that was to happen? ________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
All
of the examples above are sufficient to illustrate what is actually self-evident,
that in prophetic language the most terrible phenomena are used to represent God's
judgment and His awesome power. The imagery, if literally fulfilled, would have to
result in the total dissolution of the world or the destruction of the universe when
in fact it is meant to describe the downfall of a dynasty, the capture of a city,
or the overthrow of a nation!
If the language we have examined above has the
meaning that we have assigned to it, then similar language throughout the Bible can
be understood in the same manner. This method of understanding the Scriptures is
known as "analogia fide" and is an accepted interpretation principle used
by Bible scholars. It is the application of this principle that we will be making
in upcoming Learning Activities to understand what the Bible is saying in other key
passages in the Scriptures.
There are some who would dispute the above understanding
by saying that if we interpret one part of a discourse literally then we are bound
by consistency to interpret the entire prophecy in the same manner. This group would
contend that in Matthew 24:29–31, if we interpret verse twenty-nine figuratively
then the rest of the chapter must also be interpreted figuratively as "you cannot
have it both ways to suit your theology." This would mean that the words, "Judea,"
"mountains," "housetop," and "field" must be figurative.
Their reasoning then supports a literal understanding of ALL words that appear in
the text! It is difficult for the author of this web site to understand how such
an argument can be put forth by anyone who has seriously studied the Scriptures.
A serious study clearly reveals that writers of the various books of the Bible at
times write expressions through a series of figurative terms, but incorporate all
of this in the midst of a very plain and understandable narrative of factual (literal)
information. Consider the following example from the book of Psalms.
In Psalms
18, verses three through five, David writes of the distress he is under. In verse
six, David calls upon the Lord for his deliverance which comes as described in verses
seven through eighteen. But notice the language in verses 7–18 used to describe his
deliverance.
"...the earth shook and trembled; the foundations also
of the hills moved and were shaken..." Verse 7.
"There went
up a smoke out of his nostrils, and fire out of his mouth devoured: coals were kindled
by it" Verse 8.
"He bowed the heavens also, and came down:
and darkness was under his feet" Verse 9.
"And he rode upon
a cherub; and did fly; yes, he did fly upon the wings of the wind" Verse
10.
"...thick clouds passed, hail stones and coals of fire" Verse
12.
"Yea, he [God] sent out his arrows..." Verse 14.
"...Oh
Lord, at the blast of the breath of thy nostrils" Verse 15.
"...he
drew me out of many waters" Verse 16.
It is obvious that God delivered
David, but the deliverance was not by means of the acts of nature and by the physical
means as decribed in these verses. These descriptions are used to indicate that David's
deliverance by God was just as if God had physically come down from above and effected
all of these things so that David could be delivered but these acts described, in
and of themselves, were not the deliverance itself. They are meant to be proof of
a divine deliverance and no more (not that that is a small thing!). They are "figurative
language."
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