Messiah

(Or Messias.)

                     The Greek form Messias is a transliteration of the Hebrew, Messiah, "the
                     anointed". The word appears only twice of the promised prince (Daniel 9:26;
                     Psalm 2:2); yet, when a name was wanted for the promised one, who was to be
                     at once King and Saviour, it was natural to employ this synonym for the royal
                     title, denoting at the same time the King's royal dignity and His relation to God.
                     The full title "Anointed of Jahveh" occurs in several passages of the Psalms of
                     Solomon and the Apocalypse of Baruch, but the abbreviated form, "Anointed" or
                     "the Anointed", was in common use. When used without the article, it would
                     seem to be a proper name. The word Christos so occurs in several passages of
                     the Gospels. This, however, is no proof that the word was generally so used at
                     that time. In the Palestine Talmud the form with the article is almost universal,
                     while the common use in the Babylonian Talmud without the article is not a
                     sufficient argument for antiquity to prove that in the time of Christ it was regarded
                     as a proper name. It is proposed in the present article:

                          I, to give an outline of the prophetic utterances concerning the
                          Messiah;
                          II, to show the development of the prophetic ideas in later Judaism;
                          and
                          III, to show how Christ vindicated His right to this title.

                                      I. THE MESSIAH OF PROPHECY

                     The earlier prophecies to Abraham and Isaac (Genesis 18:17-19; 26:4-5) speak
                     merely of the salvation that shall come through their seed. Later the royal dignity
                     of the promised deliverer becomes the prominent feature. He is described as a
                     king of the line of Jacob (Numbers 24:19), of Juda (Genesis 49:10: "The sceptre
                     shall not pass from Juda until he comes to whom it belongs"), and of David (II
                     Kings 7:11-16). It is sufficiently established that this last passage refers at least
                     typically to the Messiah. His kingdom shall be eternal (II Kings 7:13), His sway
                     boundless (Psalm 71:8); all nations shall serve Him (Psalm 71:11). In the type of
                     prophecy we are considering, the emphasis is on His position as a national hero.
                     It is to Israel and Juda that He will bring salvation (Jeremiah 23:6), triumphing
                     over their enemies by force of arms (cf. the warrior-king of Psalm 45). Even in the
                     latter part of Isaias there are passages (e.g. 61:5-8) in which other nations are
                     regarded as sharing in the kingdom rather as servants than as heirs, while the
                     function of the Messiah is to lift up Jerusalem to its glory and lay the foundations
                     of an Israelitic theocracy.

                     But in this part of Isaias also occurs the splendid conception of the Messiah as
                     the Servant of Jahveh. He is a chosen arrow, His mouth like a sharp sword. The
                     Spirit of the Lord is poured out upon Him, and His word is put into His mouth
                     (42:1; 49:1 sq.). The instrument of His power is the revelation of Jahveh. The
                     nations wait on His teaching; He is the light of the Gentiles (42:6). He
                     establishes His Kingdom not by manifestation of material power, but by
                     meekness and suffering, by obedience to the command of God in laying down
                     His life for the salvation of many. "If he shall lay down his life for sin, he shall see
                     a posterity and prolong his days" (53:10); "Therefore will I distribute to him very
                     many, and he shall divide the spoils of the strong, because he hath delivered his
                     soul unto death, and was reputed with the wicked" (53:12). His Kingdom shall
                     consist of the multitude redeemed by His vicarious satisfaction, a satisfaction
                     confined to no race or time but offered for the redemption of all alike. (For the
                     Messianic application of these passages, especially Isaiah 52:13 to 53, cf.
                     Condamin or Knabenbauer, in loc.) In spite, however, of Justin's use of the
                     last-mentioned passage in "Dial. cum Tryphone", 89, it would be rash to affirm
                     that its reference to the Messiah was at all widely realized among the Jews. In
                     virtue of his prophetic and priestly offices the title of "the Anointed" naturally
                     belonged to the promised one. The Messianic priest is described by David in
                     Psalm 109, with reference to Genesis 14:14-20. That this psalm was generally
                     understood in a Messianic sense is not disputed, while the universal consent of
                     the Fathers puts the matter beyond question for Catholics. As regards its Davidic
                     authorship, the arguments impugning it afford no warrant for an abandonment of
                     the traditional view. That by the prophet described in Deuteronomy 18:15-22, was
                     also understood, at least at the beginning of our era, the Messiah is clear from
                     the appeal to his gift of prophecy made by the pseudo-Messiah Theudas (cf.
                     Josephus, "Antiq.", XX, v. 1) and the use made of the passage by St. Peter in
                     Acts 3:22-23.

                     Special importance attaches to the prophetic description of the Messiah
                     contained in Daniel 7, the great work of later Judaism, on account of its
                     paramount influence upon one line of the later development of Messianic
                     Doctrine. In it the Messiah is described as "like to a Son of Man", appearing at
                     the right hand of Jahveh in the clouds of heaven, inaugurating the new age, not by
                     a national victory or by vicarious satisfaction, but by exercising the Divine right of
                     judging the whole world. Thus, the emphasis is upon the personal responsibility
                     of the individual. The consummation is not an earth-won ascendancy of the
                     chosen people, whether shared with otter nations or not, but a vindication of the
                     holy by the solemn judgment of Jahveh and his Anointed One. Upon this
                     prophecy were mainly based the various apocalyptic works which played so
                     prominent a part in the religious life of the Jews during the last two centuries
                     before Christ. Side by side with all these prophecies speaking of the
                     establishment of a kingdom under the sway of a divinely-appointed legate, was
                     the series foretelling the future rule of Jahveh himself. Of these Is., xl, may be
                     taken as an example: "Lift up thy voice with strength thou that bringest good
                     tidings to Sion: lift it up, fear not. Say to the cities of Juda: Behold your God.
                     Behold the Lord your God himself shall come with strength and his arm shall
                     rule." The reconciliation of these two series of prophecies was before the Jews in
                     the passages--notably Ps. ii and Is., vii-xi--which clearly foretold the Divinity of
                     the promised legate. "His name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, God the
                     Mighty, the Father of the world to come, the Prince of Peace"--titles all used
                     elsewhere of Jahveh Himself (cf. Davidson, "0.T. Prophecy", p. 367). But there
                     seems to have been little realization of the relation between these two series of
                     prophecy until the full light of the Christian dispensation revealed their
                     reconciliation in the mystery of the Incarnation.

                                 II. MESSIANIC DOCTRINE IN LATE JUDAISM

                     (See also APOCRYPHA). Two quite distinct and parallel lines are discernible in
                     the later development of Messianic doctrine among the Jews, according as the
                     writers clung to a national ideal, based on the literal interpretation of the earlier
                     prophecies, or an apocalyptic ideal, based principally on Daniel. The national
                     ideal looked to the establishment on earth of the Kingdom of God under the Son
                     of David, the conquest and subjugation of the heathen, the rebuilding of
                     Jerusalem and the Temple, and the gathering in of the Dispersed. The
                     apocalyptic ideal drew a sharp distinction between aion outos and aion mellon.
                     The future age was to be ushered in by the Divine judgment of mankind preceded
                     by the resurrection of the dead. The Messiah, existing from the beginning of the
                     world, should appear at the consummation, and then should be also manifested
                     the heavenly Jerusalem which was to be the abode of the blessed.

                     National Ideal

                     The national ideal is that of official Pharisaism. Thus, the Talmud has no trace of
                     the apocalyptic ideal. The scribes were mainly busied with the Law, but side by
                     side with this was the development of the hope of the ultimate manifestation of
                     God's Kingdom on earth. Pharisaic influence is clearly visible in vv. 573-8O8 of
                     Sibyl. III, describing the national hopes of the Jews. A last judgment, future
                     happiness, or reward are not mentioned. Many marvels are foretold of the
                     Messianic wars which bring in the consummation--lighted torches falling from
                     heaven, the darkening of the sun, the falling of meteors-but all have for end a
                     state of earthly prosperity. The Messiah, coming from the East, dominates the
                     whole, a triumphant national hero. Similar to this is the work called the Psalms of
                     Solomon, written probably about 40 B.C. It is really the protest of Pharisaism
                     against its enemies, the later Asmoneans. The Pharisees saw that the
                     observance of the law was not of itself a sufficient bulwark against the enemies of
                     Israel, and, as their principles would not allow them to recognize in the
                     secularized hierarchy the promised issue of their troubles, they looked forward to
                     the miraculous intervention of God through the agency of a Davidic Messiah. The
                     seventeenth Psalm describes his rule: He is to conquer the heathen, to drive
                     them from their land, to allow no injustice in their midst; His trust is not to be in
                     armies but in God; with the word of his mouth he is to slay the wicked. Of earlier
                     date we have the description of the final glories of the holy city in Tobias (c. xiv),
                     where, as well as in Ecclesiasticus, there is evidence of the constant hope in the
                     future gathering in of the Diaspora. These same nationalist ideas reappear along
                     with a highly developed system of eschatology in the apocalyptic works written
                     after the destruction of Jerusalem, which are referred to below.

                     Apocalyptic Ideal

                     The status of the apocalyptic writers as regards the religious life of the Jews has
                     been keenly disputed. Though they had small influence in Jerusalem, the
                     stronghold of Rabbinism, they probably both influenced and reflected the religious
                     feeling of the rest of the Jewish world. Thus, the apocalyptic ideal of the Messiah
                     would seem not to be the sentiment of a few enthusiasts, but to express the true
                     hopes of a considerable section of the people. Before the Asmonean revival Israel
                     had almost ceased to be a nation, and thus the hope of a national Messiah had
                     grown very dim. In the earliest apocalyptic writings, consequently, nothing is said
                     of the Messiah. In the first part of the Book of Henoch (i-xxxvi) we have an
                     example of such a work. Not the coming of a human prince, but the descent of
                     God upon Sinai to judge the world divides all time into two epochs. The just shall
                     receive the gift of wisdom and become sinless. They will feed on the tree of life
                     and enjoy a longer span than the patriarchs.

                     The Machabean victories roused both the national and religious sentiment. The
                     writers of the earlier Asmonean times, seeing the ancient glories of their race
                     reviving, could no longer ignore the hope of a personal Messiah to rule the
                     kingdom of the new age. The problem arose how to connect their present
                     deliverers, of the tribe of Levi, with the Messiah who should be of the tribe of
                     Juda. This was met by regarding the present age as merely the beginning of the
                     Messianic age. Apocalyptic works of the period are the Book of Jubilees, the
                     Testament of the Twelve patriarchs, and the Vision of Weeks of Henoch. In the
                     Book of Jubilees the promises made to Levi, and fulfilled in the Asmonean
                     priest-kings, outshadow those made to Juda. The Messiah is but a vague figure,
                     and little stress is laid on the judgment. The Testament of the Twelve Patriarchs
                     is a composite work. The foundation portion, conspicuous from its glorification of
                     the priesthood, dates from before 100 B. C.; there are, however, later Jewish
                     additions, hostile in tone to the priesthood, and numerous Christian
                     interpolations, Controversy has arisen as to the principal figure in this work.
                     According to Charles (Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs, p. xcviii) there is
                     pictured as the Messiah a son of Levi who realizes all the lofty spiritual ideals of
                     the Christian Saviour. La range on the other hand (Le Messianisme chez les
                     Juifs, pp. 69 sqq.) insists that, in so far as this is the case, the portrait is the
                     result of Christian interpolations; these removed, there remains only a laudation
                     of the part played by Levi, in the person of the Asmoneans, as the instrument of
                     national and religious liberation. A conspicuous instance in point is Test. Lev.,
                     Ps. xviii. While Charles says this ascribes the Messianic characteristics to the
                     Levite, Lagrange and Bousset deny that it is Messianic at all. Apart from the
                     interpolations, it is merely natural praise of the new royal priesthood. There can
                     be no question indeed as to the pre-eminence of Levi; he is compared to the sun
                     and Juda to the moon. But there is in fact a description of a Messiah descended
                     from Juda in Test. Jud., Ps. xxiv, the original elements of which belong to the
                     foundation part of the book. He appears also in the Testament of Joseph, though
                     the passage is couched in an allegorical form difficult to follow. The Vision of
                     Weeks of Henoch, dating probably from the same period, differs from the
                     last-mentioned work principally in its insistence on the judgment, or rather
                     judgments, to which three of the world's ten weeks are devoted. Messianic times
                     again open with the prosperity of Asmonean days, and develop into the
                     foundation of the Kingdom of God.

                     Thus the Asmonean triumphs had produced an eschatology in which a personal
                     Messiah figured, while the present was glorified into a commencement of the
                     days of Messianic blessings. Gradually, however, the national and apocalyptic
                     ideals. The Apocalypse of Baruch, written probably in imitation, contains a
                     similar picture of the Messiah. This system of eschatology finds reflection also in
                     the chiliasm of certain early Christian writers. Transferred to the second coming
                     of the Messiah, we have the reign of peace and holiness for a thousand years
                     upon earth before the just are transported to their eternal home in heaven (cf.
                     Papias in Eusebius, "Hist. eccl.", III, xxxix).

                          III. THE VINDICATION OF THE MESSIANIC DIGNITY BY CHRIST

                     This point may be treated under two heads (a) Christ's explicit claim to be the
                     Messiah, and (b) the implicit claim shown in His words and actions throughout
                     His life.

                     Christ's explicit claim to be the Messiah

                     Under this heading we may consider the confession of Peter in Matthew 16 and
                     the words of Christ before his judges. These incidents involve, of course, far more
                     than a mere claim to the Messiahship; taken in their setting, they constitute a
                     claim to the Divine Sonship. The words of Christ to St. Peter are too clear to
                     need any comment. The silence of the other Synoptists as to some details of the
                     incident concern the proof from this passage rather of the Divinity than of
                     Messianic claims. As regards Christ's claim before the Sanhedrin and Pilate, it
                     might appear from the narratives of Matthew and Luke that He at first refused a
                     direct reply to the high priest's question: "Art thou the Christ?" But although His
                     answer is given merely as su eipas (thou hast said it), yet that recorded by St.
                     Mark, ego eimi (I am), shows clearly how this answer was understood by the
                     Jews. Dalman (Words of Jesus, pp. 309 sqq.) gives instances from Jewish
                     literature in which the expression, "thou hast said it", is equivalent to "you are
                     right"; his comment is that Jesus used the words as an assent indeed, but as
                     showing that He attached comparatively little importance to this statement. Nor
                     is this unreasonable, as the Messianic claim sinks into insignificance beside the
                     claim to Divinity which immediately follows, and calls from the high priest the
                     horrified accusation of blasphemy. It was this which gave the Sanhedrin a
                     pretext, which the Messianic claim of itself did not give, for the death sentence.
                     Before Pilate on the other hand it was merely the assertion of His royal dignity
                     which gave ground for His condemnation.

                     Christ's implicit claim shown in His words and actions throughout His life

                     It is in His consistent manner of acting rather than in any specific claim that we
                     see most clearly Christ's vindication of His dignity. At the outset of His public life
                     (Luke, iv, 18) He applies to Himself in the synagogue of Nazareth the words
                     relating to the Servant of Jahveh in Isaiah 61:1. It is He whom David in spirit
                     called "Lord!" He claimed to judge the world and to forgive sins. He was superior
                     to the Law, the Lord of the Sabbath, the Master of the Temple. In His own name,
                     by the word of His mouth, He cleansed lepers, He stilled the sea, He raised the
                     dead. His disciples must regard all as well lost merely to enjoy the privilege of
                     following Him. The Jews, while failing to see all that these things implied, a
                     dignity and power not inferior to those of Jahveh Himself, could not but perceive
                     that He who so acted was at least the Divinely accredited representative of
                     Jahveh. In this connection we may consider the title Christ used of Himself, "Son
                     of Man". We have no evidence that this was then commonly regarded as a
                     Messianic title. Some doubt as to its meaning in the minds of Christ's hearers is
                     possibly shown by John, xii, 34: "Who is this Son of man?" The Jews, while
                     undoubtedly seeing in Daniel, vii, a portrait of the Messiah, probably failed to
                     recognize in these words a definite title at all. This is the more probable from the
                     fact that, while this passage exercised great influence upon the apocalyptists,
                     the title "Son of Man" does not appear in their writings except in passages of
                     doubtful authenticity. Now, Christ not merely uses the name, but claims for
                     Himself the right to judge the world (Matt., xxv 31-46), which is the most marked
                     note of Daniel's Messiah. A double reason would lead Him to assume this
                     particular designation: that He might speak of Himself as the Messiah without
                     making His claim conspicuous to the ruling powers till the time came for His
                     open vindication, and that as far as possible He might hinder the people from
                     transferring to Him their own material notions of Davidic kingship.

                     Nor did His claim to the dignity merely concern the future. He did not say, "I shall
                     be the Messiah", but "I am the Messiah". Thus, besides His answer to Caiphas
                     and His approval of Peter's affirmation of His present Messiahship, we have in
                     Matt., xi, 5, the guarded but clear answer to the question of the Baptist's
                     disciples: "Art thou ho erchomenos?" In St. John the evidence is abundant. There
                     is no question of a future dignity in His words to the Samaritan woman (John, iv)
                     or to the man born blind (ix, 5), for He was already performing the works foretold
                     of the Messiah. Though but as a grain of mustard seed, the Kingdom of God
                     upon earth was already established; He had already begun the work of the
                     Servant of Jahveh, of preaching, of suffering, of saving men. The consummation of
                     His task and His rule in glory over the Kingdom were indeed still in the future, but
                     these were the final crown, not the sole constituents, of the Messianic dignity.
                     For those who, before the Christian dispensation, sought to interpret the ancient
                     prophecies, some single aspect of the Messiah sufficed to fill the whole view.
                     We, in the light of the Christian revelation, see realized and harmonized in Our
                     Lord all the conflicting Messianic hopes, all the visions of the prophets. He is at
                     once the Suffering Servant and the Davidic King, the Judge of mankind and its
                     Saviour, true Son of Man and God with us. On Him is laid the iniquity of us all,
                     and on Him, as God incarnate, rests the Spirit of Jahveh, the Spirit of Wisdom
                     and Understanding, the Spirit of Counsel and Fortitude, the Spirit of Knowledge
                     and Piety, and the Fear of the Lord.

                     L. W.  Geddes
                     Transcribed by Donald J. Boon

                                       The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume X
                                    Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
                                    Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
                                 Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
                                 Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

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