
Jesus in the Old Testament is a series of posts that will offer my readers a chance to consider pictures or shadows of Jesus in the Old Testament. As mentioned in the introduction to this series, some may be obvious, some may be not so obvious, and some may simply be a facet of the Lord those reading may not have considered previously.
I hope as we venture through this series, we will see the Lord in many wonderful pictures throughout the Old Testament.
| SEEING JESUS IN |
| Cyrus |
| Rebuilder |
| Isaiah 44:28 who says of Cyrus, ‘He is my shepherd, and he shall fulfill all my purpose’; saying of Jerusalem, ‘She shall be built,’ and of the temple, ‘Your foundation shall be laid.’” |
| John 2:20 The Jews then said, “It has taken forty-six years to build this temple, and will you raise it up in three days?” |
We have seen this verse before, back in our third installment in the Cyrus study, looking at him as a shepherd, Of course his call to shepherd the people of God was a dim reflection of the Great Shepherd we have in Jesus, but he pointed to the Master.
For this post, we shall consider the description of Cyrus as a rebuilder, a servant used by God to build, and in his rebuilding, again pointed to the Master.
Both Jerusalem and the temple were to be rebuilt under the guidance of Cyrus according to our passage this morning. And as we may have mentioned earlier, when Isaiah is prophesying of this man, he lines out Cyrus’ mission quite clearly.
Imagine for a moment that you are Cyrus, that as you are dominating the nations, overpowering whole people groups and conquering vast areas of the world, you become aware of this prophecy of Isaiah. It would be hard to ignore, since Isaiah named you out in this very verse!
And while you are on a rampage of conquering, you find out you are destined to build. And not only to build a small outpost for a historically passive people, but your mission is to free a rebellious people , provide them passage back to their holy ground and then give them the right to rebuild the temple that provided the Babylonians, (a mighty world power at the time), such resistance to conquering over 70 years prior!
No wonder Isaiah clearly identified him. Calling him out by name was so necessary, for any “run of the mill” conquering general could not imagine this to be his purpose in life!
He rebuilt the temple, and the city of Jerusalem. A massive undertaking, and his leadership provided the Jewish people the freedom, resources and conditions in which they could flourish.
He took on a massive project in the rebuilding of the Temple, but in comparison to his anti-type, Jesus the Savior, it is but a dim reflection of the scope of work accomplished. Yes, Cyrus provided the conditions to enable the rebuilding of a physical temple, but how far greater the task to raise a greater Temple in only three days. To raise a Temple that would house all the people of God? To raise a Temple that would become the source of strength for a people to love their enemies, to pray for those who persecute them and to give witness to the God who went through the grace to build the true temple of God, the Body of Christ.
Our Temple is not made with hands. Jesus is the very Temple of God we belong to. May we honor His name by living as He want His people to live.
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