
Knowing Jesus in the Old Testament?
A Fresh Look At Christophanies
Andrew Malone(Author)
Inter-Varsity Press
Published on 20. February 2015
Book
Paperback/Softback
208 pages
978-1-78359-204-3 (ISBN)
Description
The language of 'christophanies' is used technically by scholars to refer to appearances of the incarnate Son of God after his resurrection, as narrated in the New Testament Gospels and Acts. At a more popular level, though, the term is increasingly applied to alleged appearances of the pre-incarnate Son in the Old Testament.
That Jesus appeared to - and was even recognized by - the likes of Abraham and Moses is usually argued from several scriptural trajectories. The New Testament suggests that God the Father is invisible, inviting us to ask who conducted the Old Testament appearances; the mysterious Angel of the Lord has often been interpreted as a manifestation of the divine Son; and several New Testament passages imply Old Testament appearances of and encounters with Jesus. It seems obvious, indeed orthodox, to affirm that Jesus has always been at work in communicating with and saving his world.
However, Andrew Malone argues that, while Christ-centred readings of the Old Testament abound, christophanies prove to be a flimsy foundation on which to build. Despite apparent success, any scholarship commending the idea does not withstand close scrutiny. Malone carefully sifts the evidence to show that the popular arguments should be abandoned, and that the pursuit of Old Testament christophanies ultimately threatens to undermine the very values it promotes. He concludes that it better honours the Trinity and the text of Scripture to allow that the Father and the Spirit, as well as the Son, were themselves involved in Old Testament appearances.
That Jesus appeared to - and was even recognized by - the likes of Abraham and Moses is usually argued from several scriptural trajectories. The New Testament suggests that God the Father is invisible, inviting us to ask who conducted the Old Testament appearances; the mysterious Angel of the Lord has often been interpreted as a manifestation of the divine Son; and several New Testament passages imply Old Testament appearances of and encounters with Jesus. It seems obvious, indeed orthodox, to affirm that Jesus has always been at work in communicating with and saving his world.
However, Andrew Malone argues that, while Christ-centred readings of the Old Testament abound, christophanies prove to be a flimsy foundation on which to build. Despite apparent success, any scholarship commending the idea does not withstand close scrutiny. Malone carefully sifts the evidence to show that the popular arguments should be abandoned, and that the pursuit of Old Testament christophanies ultimately threatens to undermine the very values it promotes. He concludes that it better honours the Trinity and the text of Scripture to allow that the Father and the Spirit, as well as the Son, were themselves involved in Old Testament appearances.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Nottingham
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (UK-trade)
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
266 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78359-204-3 (9781783592043)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
02/2015
1st Edition
Inter-Varsity Press
€14.49
Available for download
Person
Andrew Malone is Lecturer in Biblical Studies and Dean of Ridley Online at Ridley Melbourne Mission & Ministry College, Australia
Content
Acknowledgments 8
Foreword 9
Abbreviations 11
1. Getting oriented 15
part 1: is god the father invisible?
2. Seeing God in the Old Testament: yes! 33
3. Seeing God in the New Testament: no? 44
4. Toward a doctrine of (in)visibility 66
part 2: is jesus the angel of the lord?
5. Likely suspects 83
6. Candidate 1: God unspecified 93
7. Candidate 2: a mundane messenger 106
8. Candidate 3: God the Son 129
part 3: what does the new testament
contribute?
9. Significant passages introduced 145
10. Issues of working backwards 151
11. Significant passages scrutinized 164
12. What can we conclude about christophanies
and theophanies? 190
Index of Scripture references 199
Foreword 9
Abbreviations 11
1. Getting oriented 15
part 1: is god the father invisible?
2. Seeing God in the Old Testament: yes! 33
3. Seeing God in the New Testament: no? 44
4. Toward a doctrine of (in)visibility 66
part 2: is jesus the angel of the lord?
5. Likely suspects 83
6. Candidate 1: God unspecified 93
7. Candidate 2: a mundane messenger 106
8. Candidate 3: God the Son 129
part 3: what does the new testament
contribute?
9. Significant passages introduced 145
10. Issues of working backwards 151
11. Significant passages scrutinized 164
12. What can we conclude about christophanies
and theophanies? 190
Index of Scripture references 199