Daniel H. Fletcher

Psalms of Christ


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texts (i.e., various verses scattered throughout the OT), memorize them to support apologetic aims (i.e., prove that Jesus was the Messiah), and then forget about the rest of the OT for all intents and purposes. The OT did not play a major role in establishing our Christology beyond a few messianic prophecies. My colleague even told me that his mother literally cried when he told her he planned to get his doctorate in OT! While her emotional reaction may not be the norm, it reflects the practical neglect of the OT in many Christian traditions historically. Take my own Restoration Movement tradition as but one example that has attempted to more or less follow the NT church in its external forms and organization, but has largely neglected the inner workings of the Bible of the apostles, as well as its proper interpretation as a scriptural tradition that is primarily about Jesus Christ.

      Given the traditional reasoning, none of these texts or myriad of others carries any christological import simply because the NT is silent about them. This reduces the Christian approach to the OT to a catalog of messianic proof texts at the expense of the rest of the OT. As Dan McCartney confirms:

      I am convicted, therefore, that the NT writers have given us examples of how to read the OT christologically, and they expect us to apply their post-resurrection hermeneutical perspective in our own reading of the OT, and not restrict ourselves to their examples as the only “approved” ones. In short, they have given the church an inspired interpretive trajectory for understanding the OT rightly (i.e., christologically). To use a common—albeit imperfect—analogy, they have taught us how to fish, not given us a fish. As for the NT writers being authoritative interpreters of OT Scripture, I agree that they are foundational for the church as bearers of unique divine authority, commission, and revelation; yet, is this not even more reason to adopt their overall interpretive approach to the OT? It is precisely because of their inspired authority that our interpretations should be rooted in their use of the OT. In short, when we implement their interpretive strategy today, we are not relaying the foundations of scriptural interpretation, but are moving about freely in the house God has built for us in Christ.

      I believe we have in the NT a “go and do likewise” scenario where Jesus and the NT writers give the interpretive map for christological readings of the OT, even “non-messianic” passages. Yes, they give methods of exegesis too, but these are subservient to the larger goal of interpreting the OT christologically. Put differently, there is nothing inherently “Christian” about grammatical-historical exegesis, typology, intertextuality, allegory, or predictive prophecy; these are all evident in the OT itself. But what is distinctly Christian is the hermeneutical starting point of the apostolic church: Israel’s Scriptures are about Jesus Christ. They point to him; he is their ultimate goal and meaning, and the Holy Spirit enables Christians to read the OT as a comprehensive witness to the gospel of Christ.

      Does this also apply to so-called “non-messianic” passages? It is fairly obvious that the NT writers have applied christological interpretation when they quote an OT passage as referring in some way to the person and work of Christ. What about OT passages not cited in the NT, or those that do not make the traditional “messianic” lists? Are they messianic too? Patrick Reardon observes: