A fellow law enforcement brother, Sir Robert Anderson, described perhaps the greatest Old Testament prophecy, if his calculations were accurate.
Anderson was the Assistant Commissioner of the London Metropolitan
Police (Scotland Yard) from 1888 to 1901; he was also a theologian and
author. He wrote many books related to Christianity, science and prophecy, including The Coming Prince.
In this short volume, Anderson makes the case
for a remarkable Old Testament prophecy from the prophet Daniel. While
the Israelites were certainly comforted by prophecies predicting their
enemies would eventually be destroyed, there was a far more reassuring
prophecy described by Daniel.
He predicted the coming of a Messiah, a savior who would deliver the
Jews. Daniel’s prophecy was incredibly specific. I’ll do my best to
reconstruct the case made by Anderson, but I encourage you to research
his work for yourself.
In 538 B.C. Daniel wrote the following bold prediction:
Daniel 9:25
“So you are to know and discern that from the issuing of a decree to
restore and rebuild Jerusalem until Messiah the Prince there will be
seven weeks of years and sixty-two weeks of years”
In this prophecy (written 538 years before Christ was born), Daniel
claimed there would be 69 “weeks of years” between the issuing of a
decree to rebuild Jerusalem and the appearance of the Messiah. In 464
BC, Artaxerxes, a Persian king, ascended to the throne. Nehemiah, the
Jewish cupbearer to King Artaxerxes, was deeply concerned about the
ruined condition of Jerusalem following the defeat of the Jews (Nehemiah
1:1-4). As a result, he petitioned the king:
Nehemiah 2:5,6
“Send me to Judah, to the city of my fathers’ tombs, that I may rebuild it. So it pleased the king to send me”.
According to the Old Testament, the decree to restore and rebuild
Jerusalem was issued “in the month Nisan, in the twentieth year of
Artaxerxes the king” (Nehemiah 2:1). The Jewish calendar month was
Nisan, and since no day is given, it is reasonable to assume the date
would be understood as the first, the Jewish New Year’s Day. And, in the
Julian calendar we presently use, the corresponding date would be March
5, 444 BC.
So when did the Messiah appear? Jesus, on numerous occasions, forbade
and prevented his followers from revealing His identity as the Messiah.
He frequently performed miracles and swore His disciples to silence,
saying his “hour has not yet come” (John 2:4, 7:6).
But, on March 30, 33 A.D., when he entered Jerusalem on a donkey, he
rebuked the Pharisees’ protest and encouraged the whole multitude of his
disciples as they shouted, “Blessed is the King who comes in the name
of the Lord”. Jesus even said, “If these become silent, the stones will
cry out” (Luke 19:38-40). This was the day on which Jesus was publicly
declared the Messiah.
Jesus enters Jerusalem (Passion Play-OBERAMMERGAU)
Let’s compare then, the date of the decree (March 5, 444 BC) with the
date of Jesus’ declaration (March 30, 33 AD). Before we begin, we must
clarify (as noted by Anderson) an important feature of the Jewish
prophetic year: It was comprised of twelve 30 day months (it had 360
days, not 365 days). Since Daniel states 69 weeks of seven years each,
and each year has 360 days, the following equation calculates the number
of days between March 5, 444 BC (the twentieth year of Artaxerxes) and
March 30, 33 AD (the day Jesus entered Jerusalem on the donkey):
69 x 7 x 360 = 173,880 days
Now let’s compare Daniel’s prophecy with the true interval between
the two events. The time span from 444 BC to 33 AD is 476 years
(remember 1 BC to 1 AD is only one year).
And if we multiply 476 years x 365.2421879 days per year (corrected for leap years), we get the result of 173,855 days.
Close, but not precisely what Daniel predicted (although I still
think this is pretty amazing). Now let’s add back the difference between
March 5 and March 30 (25 days). What is our total? You guessed it,
173,880 days, exactly as Daniel predicted.
The ancient Jews were careful to use prophecy as a measuring stick.
If someone claimed to be a prophet, yet his predictions did not come
true, he was abandoned and his writings did not make it into the Canon
of Scripture:
Deuteronomy 18:22
When a prophet speaketh in the name of the LORD, if the thing follow
not, nor come to pass, that [is] the thing which the LORD hath not
spoken, [but] the prophet hath spoken it presumptuously: thou shalt not
be afraid of him.
Sir Robert Anderson understood the degree to which the authors of the
Old Testament treated fulfilled prophecy as evidence of Divine origin.
The ancient authors recognized only God could “declare the end from the
beginning” and forecast to the very day “things that are not yet done”
(Isaiah 46:10). Anderson’s investigation highlighted perhaps the
greatest prophetic declaration of all.