# 2 of Ten
Reasons Why I Believe The Bible Is The Word Of God by R. A. Torrey
SECOND, on the ground of its fulfilled
prophecies.
There are two classes of prophecies in the Bible-first,
the explicit, verbal prophecies, second, those of the types.
In the first we have the definite prophecies concerning
the Jews, the heathen nations and the Messiah. Taking the prophecies, regarding
the Messiah as an illustration, look at Isaiah 53, Mic. 5:2, Dan. 9:25-27. Many
others might be mentioned, but these will serve as illustrations. In these
prophecies, written hundreds of years before the Messiah came, we have the most
explicit statements as to the manner and place of His birth, the manner of His
reception by men, how His life would end, His resurrection and His victory
succeeding His death. When made, these prophecies were exceedingly improbable,
and seemingly impossible of fulfillment; but they were fulfilled to the very
minutest detail of manner and place and time. How are we to account for it? Man
could not have foreseen these improbable events-they lay hundreds of years
ahead-but God could, and it is God who speaks through these men.
But the prophecies of the types are more remarkable
still. Everything in the Old Testament-history, institutions, ceremonies-is
prophetical. The high priesthood, the ordinary priesthood, the Levites, the
prophets, priests and kings, are all prophecies. The tabernacle, the brazen
altar, the laver, the golden candlestick, the table of shewbread, the veil, the
altar of incense, the ark of the covenant, the very coverings of the tabernacle,
are prophecies. In all these things, as we study them minutely and soberly in
the light of the history of Jesus Christ and the church, we see, wrapped up in
the ancient institutions ordained of God to meet an immediate purpose,
prophecies of the death, atonement, and resurrection of Christ, the day of
Pentecost, and the entire history of the church. We see the profoundest
Christian doctrines of the New Testament clearly foreshadowed in these
institutions of the Old Testament. The only way in which you can appreciate this
is to get into the Book itself and study all about the sacrifices and feasts,
etc., till you see the truths of the New Testament shining out in the Old. If,
in studying some elementary form of life, I find a rudimentary organ, useless
now, but by the process of development to become of use in that animal's
descendant, I say, back of this rudimentary organ is God, who, in the earlier
animal, is preparing for the life and necessities of the animal that is to come.
So, going back to these preparations in the Bible for the truth that is to be
clearly taught at a later day, there is only one scientific way to account for
them, namely, He who knows and prepares for the end from the beginning is the
author of that Book.
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