| 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 |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia: NewAdvent.org |
| Return to Life-of-Christ.org |