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By Apostle William Korir
There the priest represented the whole nation before the Lord.
After many years, the Israelites crowned a king, David, whom God called, “A man after my own heart.”
God spoke to the Jews through David and other godly men, called prophets, reminding them to be holy as a witness to all nations. When the Israelites sinned, the Lord warned Israel through these prophets, that if they continued to sin, He would allow a foreign nation to overrun their country.
In spite of these warnings, Israel was disobedient and rebelled against God, rejecting His laws and killing the prophets who testified against them.
Finally, after eight hundred years of rebellion, Israel was taken out of her own land and was made captive in the nations of Assyria and Babylon.
But God continued to speak through prophets during the Jews' captivity. Some of the messages were calls to repentance, while others were prophecies about the Savior who would come to rescue sinful mankind.
The prophet Micah foretold the exact city where the Savior would be born and described His eternal nature saying, “Out of Bethlehem shall the one come who will rule in Israel, whose existence is from old, from everlasting.”
God even revealed that the coming Savior would descend from the royal line of David. Through the writings of the prophet Malachi, the Lord described a special messenger who would announce the coming Savior and prepare the people to receive Him.
Zechariah prophesied, “O daughter of Jerusalem: Behold, your King comes to you: He is righteous and has salvation; humble, and riding on the foal of an donkey.”
King David described how the Savior Himself would know in advance that one of His close friends, with whom He ate bread, would betray Him.
And Zechariah even recorded that the price of the betrayal would be thirty pieces of silver.
Jesus was whipped, tortured, and then crucified, for our sins.Through the prophet Isaiah, God foretold that the coming Savior would be tortured, by whipping, and that His face would be spat upon.
David described the method of execution as “piercing the Savior's hands and feet, yet not breaking any of His bones.”
That the Savior would say, “My God, my God, why have You forsaken Me?”, and that onlookers would laugh and ridicule the Savior, saying, “He believed that the Lord would deliver him.”
David also wrote that “the Savior's bones would be out of joint and in His thirst He would be given vinegar to drink,” and that the Savior's persecutors would “divide His clothes among them, and gamble for His robe.”
Isaiah said that onlookers would be “astonished” when they saw how the Savior's face was disfigured from the torture.
The prophecies in God's book even describe how one day, David's descendants, the inhabitants of Jerusalem, would “look at the Savior whom they had pierced.”
And all this was written in the Scriptures many hundreds of years before the Savior came.
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