- May 15, 2017
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Whoa, hard stop. We both 100% agree that the New Testament does not wipe out the Old. I think we agree that the Old Must be read in light of the New.Well here, you've resolved your own challenge.
"one reading of the same text we can say it means virgin in relation to the Messiah and young woman in relation to King Hezekiah."
In reality, we don't actually have 1 reading of 1 text. We have 2 readings of 1 text. The original Isaiah reading (which may or may not involve a virgin) and Mathews later reading which involves Mary.
Rather than erasing the old testament with the new, the solution is to hold the two in balance, respecting each in its own light.
Another good example of this issue is found in Genesis 1:26. People say that the "Us" is Jesus and the holy Spirit and the father.
But obviously the ancient isrealites and Moses had no idea who Jesus was, so when they wrote and listened to that, that's not what they would have understood.
And interestingly enough, with the tower of Babel, God says "let us go down and confuse their language", but no pastor gets up on stage and ever preaches about Jesus confusing languages of people at Babel.
And further in Isaiah 6, "us" is used in reference to God and his angels and council.
The point is that, there two two different contexts and two different readings. And I'm sure you know this.
But you can't erase the old testament with the new. Rather you must hold them both, in balance with one another. Understanding that the old testament readers never had the full revelation and thus the old testament doesn't actually say those things.
But simultaneously there is another potential assumption at play here. And that is the assumption that Mathew is not merely using the old testament to convey new truths. But that Mathew is making an effort at re-telling the book of Isaiah.
But Mathew need not be saying that Isaiah was intended to be understood that way (a virgin) by its original isrealite audience. Rather he's only speaking to his later audiences about revelations that he has for people of that later time.
But we cannot say that Matthew was adding a "new reading" or "re-telling" to the text, that would imply that it was not a prophesy about the salvific Messiah, that Matthew was reading into the text what he though needed to be read into. That it is simply a prophesy about a messiah, of which there were other such as Hezekiah. The two Testaments work together for full revelation, one not above the other in any understanding.
I would say that we cannot read Gen. as you are saying because the NT implies a ex nihilo creation.All this to say, the new testament does not overwrite the old testament. If they say conflicting things, the solution is not to delete the old testament in favor of the new.
And for that reason, we cannot replace Genesis, just because John had something else to say.
What challenges would an ex materia reading do for something like the gospel? I'd say, it doesn't have any impact at all.
It isn't a salvific issue, so it doesn't challenge the Gospel in that manner, which believing in g YEC perspective does not either.
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