All theological positions are based on one’s philosophy of life, not the scriptures.
It’s like a game of Dodgeball. The team you’re on is determined by your philosophical presuppositions. The scriptures are just the balls being thrown around.
All theological positions are based on one’s philosophy of life, not the scriptures.
It’s like a game of Dodgeball. The team you’re on is determined by your philosophical presuppositions. The scriptures are just the balls being thrown around.
2. Pesher Interpretation:
3. Midrashic Interpretation:
4. Allegorical Interpretation:
5. Fulfillment Citation:
| NT Reference | OT Source | OT Context | NT Usage | Shift in Meaning | Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Matthew 2:15 | Hosea 11:1 | God’s historical deliverance of Israel from Egypt, called His “son.” | Jesus’ return from Egypt, fulfilling Israel’s role. | Historical event becomes a typological prophecy about Jesus. | Typology/Fulfillment Citation |
| Matthew 1:23 | Isaiah 7:14 | Sign for King Ahaz about a child named Immanuel, born to a young woman. | Jesus’ virgin birth, using Septuagint’s “virgin.” | Historical sign becomes a messianic prophecy. | Pesher/Fulfillment Citation |
| Matthew 2:17–18 | Jeremiah 31:15 | Rachel’s mourning for Israel’s exile, with hope for restoration. | Bethlehem infants’ massacre. | Historical lament reframed as a fulfilled tragedy. | Pesher/Fulfillment Citation |
| Matthew 3:3 | Isaiah 40:3 | Preparing a way for God’s deliverance of Israel from exile. | John the Baptist preparing for Jesus. | Exile restoration prophecy fulfilled in John’s ministry. | Pesher |
| John 19:36 | Psalm 34:20 (possibly Exodus 12:46) | God’s protection of the righteous or Passover lamb regulations. | Jesus’ unbroken bones at crucifixion. | General protection or ritual rule becomes a specific prophecy. | Typology/Fulfillment Citation |
| Acts 15:16–18 | Amos 9:11–12 | Restoration of Israel’s kingdom, dominance over Edom. | Gentile inclusion in the church, using Septuagint’s “mankind.” | National restoration becomes universal salvation. | Pesher |
| Romans 9:25–26 | Hosea 2:23, 1:10 | Restoration of Israel after judgment, called “my people.” | Gentiles becoming God’s people through faith. | Israel’s restoration extended to Gentiles. | Midrash/Typology |
| Romans 10:6–8 | Deuteronomy 30:12–14 | Accessibility of the Torah for obedience. | “Word of faith” in Christ, accessible through faith. | Torah’s accessibility becomes salvation through Christ. | Midrash |
| 1 Corinthians 9:9–10 / 1 Timothy 5:18 | Deuteronomy 25:4 | Law against muzzling an ox while treading grain. | Material support for Christian ministers. | Agricultural law reinterpreted for human laborers in ministry. | Midrash/Allegory |
| 2 Corinthians 6:16–18 | Leviticus 26:12, Ezekiel 37:27, 2 Samuel 7:14 | God’s covenant presence with Israel or Davidic king. | Church as God’s temple and people, including Gentiles. | Israel/Davidic promises applied to the church. | Pesher/Midrash |
| Galatians 3:16 | Genesis 12:7 | Promise of land to Abraham’s descendants (plural). | “Offspring” as Christ, the singular heir. | Collective promise narrowed to Jesus. | Midrash/Typology |
| Galatians 4:21–31 | Genesis 16–21 | Historical narrative of Hagar and Sarah, Abraham’s sons. | Allegory of old (law) and new (faith) covenants. | Family story becomes allegory for law vs. faith. | Midrash/Allegory |
| Hebrews 1:5 | Psalm 2:7 | God’s adoption of the Davidic king at coronation. | Jesus’ eternal divine sonship. | Royal coronation becomes Christ’s divinity. | Typology/Fulfillment Citation |
| Hebrews 10:5–7 | Psalm 40:6–8 | Obedience over sacrifice in personal worship. | Jesus’ incarnation and sacrificial death. | General worship statement becomes messianic prophecy. | Midrash/Typology |
| 1 Corinthians 15:54–55 | Isaiah 25:8, Hosea 13:14 | God’s future defeat of death or taunt against death. | Christ’s resurrection defeating death. | General/judgmental texts become resurrection triumph. | Pesher |
I had AI create this simplified chart so that I could read the four gospels in parallel…
This chart organizes the four Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) in parallel, arranged in chronological order to facilitate reading the accounts of Jesus’ life and ministry side by side. Each row represents a key event or teaching, with corresponding passages listed for each Gospel. Blank cells indicate that a Gospel does not include that event. Read each row’s passages to follow the narrative chronologically across all four accounts.
| Event/Pericope | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prologue and Early Life | ||||
| Genealogy of Jesus | 1:1-17 | 3:23-38 | ||
| Annunciation to Mary | 1:26-38 | |||
| Birth of Jesus | 1:18-25 | 2:1-7 | ||
| Shepherds Visit | 2:8-20 | |||
| Magi Visit | 2:1-12 | |||
| Flight to Egypt | 2:13-15 | |||
| Return to Nazareth | 2:19-23 | 2:39 | ||
| Jesus at Age 12 in Temple | 2:41-52 | |||
| Preparation for Ministry | ||||
| John the Baptist’s Ministry | 3:1-12 | 1:1-8 | 3:1-18 | 1:19-28 |
| Baptism of Jesus | 3:13-17 | 1:9-11 | 3:21-22 | 1:29-34 |
| Temptation of Jesus | 4:1-11 | 1:12-13 | 4:1-13 | |
| Early Judean Ministry (Mostly John) | ||||
| Wedding at Cana | 2:1-11 | |||
| First Temple Cleansing | 2:13-22 | |||
| Nicodemus Visits Jesus | 3:1-21 | |||
| Samaritan Woman at the Well | 4:1-42 | |||
| Galilean Ministry | ||||
| Call of the First Disciples | 4:18-22 | 1:16-20 | 5:1-11 | |
| Healing of Official’s Son | 4:46-54 | |||
| Rejection at Nazareth | 4:16-30 | |||
| Healing of Peter’s Mother-in-Law | 8:14-15 | 1:29-31 | 4:38-39 | |
| Sermon on the Mount | 5:1–7:29 | 6:20-49 | ||
| Healing of the Centurion’s Servant | 8:5-13 | 7:1-10 | ||
| Raising of Widow’s Son | 7:11-17 | |||
| Sending of the Twelve | 10:1-42 | 6:7-13 | 9:1-6 | |
| Beheading of John the Baptist | 14:1-12 | 6:14-29 | 9:7-9 | |
| Feeding of the 5,000 | 14:13-21 | 6:30-44 | 9:10-17 | 6:1-15 |
| Walking on Water | 14:22-33 | 6:45-52 | 6:16-21 | |
| Peter’s Confession of Christ | 16:13-20 | 8:27-30 | 9:18-21 | |
| Transfiguration | 17:1-13 | 9:2-13 | 9:28-36 | |
| Later Judean and Perean Ministry | ||||
| Healing of Blind Bartimaeus | 20:29-34 | 10:46-52 | 18:35-43 | |
| Parable of the Good Samaritan | 10:25-37 | |||
| Mary and Martha | 10:38-42 | |||
| Raising of Lazarus | 11:1-44 | |||
| Plot to Kill Jesus | 11:45-54 | |||
| Passion Week | ||||
| Triumphal Entry | 21:1-11 | 11:1-11 | 19:28-44 | 12:12-19 |
| Second Temple Cleansing | 21:12-13 | 11:15-19 | 19:45-48 | |
| Cursing of the Fig Tree | 21:18-22 | 11:12-14, 20-25 | ||
| Olivet Discourse | 24:1–25:46 | 13:1-37 | 21:5-36 | |
| Anointing at Bethany | 26:6-13 | 14:3-9 | 12:1-8 | |
| Last Supper | 26:17-30 | 14:12-26 | 22:7-38 | 13:1–17:26 |
| Betrayal by Judas | 26:47-56 | 14:43-52 | 22:47-53 | 18:2-12 |
| Peter’s Denial | 26:69-75 | 14:66-72 | 22:54-62 | 18:15-18, 25-27 |
| Trial Before Pilate | 27:11-26 | 15:1-15 | 23:1-25 | 18:28–19:16 |
| Crucifixion | 27:32-56 | 15:21-41 | 23:26-49 | 19:16-37 |
| Burial | 27:57-61 | 15:42-47 | 23:50-56 | 19:38-42 |
| Resurrection and Post-Resurrection | ||||
| Resurrection Morning | 28:1-10 | 16:1-8 | 24:1-12 | 20:1-18 |
| Road to Emmaus | 16:12-13 | 24:13-35 | ||
| Appearance to Disciples | 28:16-20 | 16:14-18 | 24:36-49 | 20:19-29 |
| Ascension | 24:50-53 |
Theology often adapts to historical events, which helps explain the different views on the end times (eschatology) even among early Christians. For instance, in letters written before the destruction of the Jerusalem temple in AD 70, Paul never links Christ’s return (the Parousia), the resurrection, or judgment to that event. Instead, he focuses on a general, future hope for all believers (e.g., 1 Corinthians 15:23; 1 Thessalonians 4:16), without mentioning the temple, which was still standing at the time.
In contrast, the Synoptic Gospels (Mark, Matthew, and Luke), likely written after the temple was destroyed, directly connect its fall to the Parousia. They portray the temple’s destruction as a sign of coming judgment and a lead-up to Christ’s return (Mark 13:2, 24–27; Matthew 24:2, 29–31; Luke 21:6, 20–28). Even so, they still view the resurrection as a future event, hinted at through symbols like the trumpet (Matthew 24:31) and affirmed in other teachings (Mark 12:25; Matthew 22:30; Luke 20:36).
Later still, the Gospel of John (written around AD 90–100) does not mention the temple’s destruction in relation to the Parousia or resurrection. Instead, it emphasizes a more spiritual or “realized” view of Christ’s presence now, while still affirming a future bodily resurrection (John 5:24–29). This reflects a shift toward a more universal theological perspective, no longer centered on the events of AD 70.
This development—from Paul’s silence on the temple, to the Synoptics’ focus on it, to John’s move beyond it—shows how early Christian beliefs about the end times evolved in response to historical changes.
Below is a comparative list of 1 Maccabees and Daniel 11…
| 1 Maccabees Event | Daniel 11 Reference | Chronological Alignment (Approximate Dates) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seleucid oppression begins under Antiochus IV Epiphanes (1 Macc 1:10–20): Antiochus IV becomes king (175 BCE) and plunders Jerusalem, taking temple treasures. | Dan 11:21–24: A “contemptible person” (Antiochus IV) seizes the kingdom through intrigue, plunders wealth, and distributes spoil. | c. 175–170 BCE | Both texts describe Antiochus IV’s rise and early actions. Daniel’s prophecy symbolically portrays his deceit and greed, matching 1 Maccabees’ historical account of his looting. |
| Antiochus IV’s religious persecution (1 Macc 1:20–64): Antiochus bans Jewish practices (c. 167 BCE), desecrates the temple with a pagan altar (“abomination of desolation”), and enforces Hellenistic worship. | Dan 11:31: “Forces from him shall profane the sanctuary… and set up the abomination that makes desolate.” | c. 167 BCE | The “abomination of desolation” in Daniel aligns with the temple desecration in 1 Maccabees, often identified as the altar to Zeus in the Jerusalem temple. |
| Maccabean Revolt begins (1 Macc 2:1–70): Mattathias and his sons (Judas Maccabeus) resist Seleucid oppression, sparking the revolt (c. 167–166 BCE). | Dan 11:32: “The people who know their God shall stand firm and take action.” | c. 167–166 BCE | Daniel’s reference to a faithful remnant resisting aligns with the Maccabean uprising, though Daniel is less specific about the revolt’s leaders or details. |
| Judas Maccabeus’ victories (1 Macc 3:1–4:35): Judas wins battles against Seleucid generals (e.g., Apollonius, Seron, Gorgias) and recaptures Jerusalem, rededicating the temple (164 BCE). | Dan 11:32–33: The faithful “shall receive a little help” and continue to resist, though some fall. | c. 166–164 BCE | The “little help” in Daniel may allude to Judas’ early successes, though the prophecy remains vague. The temple rededication (Hanukkah) is not explicitly mentioned in Daniel. |
| Antiochus IV’s campaigns and death (1 Macc 6:1–16): Antiochus IV campaigns in the east, falls ill, and dies (164 BCE). | Dan 11:40–45: The King of the North engages in campaigns, faces turmoil, and dies with “no one to help him.” | c. 164 BCE | Both texts describe Antiochus IV’s eastern campaigns and death, though Daniel’s account is more symbolic and debated (some see Dan 11:40–45 as future or unfulfilled prophecy). |
| Continued Seleucid conflicts (1 Macc 6:18–9:57): After Antiochus IV’s death, the Maccabees face ongoing wars under Antiochus V and Demetrius I, with Judas dying (160 BCE). | Dan 11:35–39: Ongoing struggles for the faithful, with some falling, until “the time of the end.” | c. 164–160 BCE | Daniel’s vague reference to continued persecution may correspond to post-Antiochus IV conflicts in 1 Maccabees, but the prophecy shifts toward an eschatological tone. |
| Hasmonean consolidation (1 Macc 10:1–16:24): Jonathan and Simon establish Hasmonean rule, achieving relative independence (c. 160–134 BCE). | No clear parallel in Daniel 11 | c. 160–134 BCE | Daniel 11 does not clearly address the later Hasmonean period, focusing instead on earlier Seleucid conflicts or possibly an eschatological future. |