The Prophets
Hundreds of years before Jesus, the prophets described exactly what was coming.
They saw it coming
The prophets were people God spoke through — sometimes hundreds of years before the events they described. They weren’t guessing. They were seeing.
And what they saw was a person. Someone who would fix everything the law couldn’t fix.
The Suffering Servant
Isaiah, writing about 700 years before Jesus was born, described someone who would change the equation entirely:
“He was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed.” — Isaiah 53:5
Read that again slowly.
Pierced for our transgressions. He takes the punishment we earned. Crushed for our iniquities. He absorbs the weight of our failure. By his wounds we are healed. His suffering becomes our restoration.
“We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to our own way; and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all.” — Isaiah 53:6
There it is again — the substitute pattern. From Abel’s lamb, to Abraham’s ram, to the Passover lamb, to the sacrificial system — and now Isaiah names it clearly: one person will carry the sin of everyone.
A new heart
Jeremiah and Ezekiel added something the law could never offer — internal transformation.
“I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people.” — Jeremiah 31:33
The old covenant wrote the law on stone tablets. The new covenant would write it on your actual heart. Not rules from the outside — transformation from the inside.
And Ezekiel made it even more vivid:
“I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit in you and move you to follow my decrees.” — Ezekiel 36:26-27
God isn’t going to renovate the old you. He’s going to give you a new heart entirely. And His Spirit — His actual life — would come inside you and do what the law never could.
Dry bones
Ezekiel had a vision of a valley full of dry bones — an entire army, long dead. And God asked him:
“Son of man, can these bones live?” — Ezekiel 37:3
Then God commanded Ezekiel to speak to the bones, and they came together — bone to bone, flesh and skin covering them. And then the breath of God entered them and they stood up alive.
This isn’t just a cool story. It’s a picture of what God does with dead people. He doesn’t give them CPR. He breathes entirely new life into them. Resurrection.
The third day
The prophet Hosea dropped this line, almost in passing:
“After two days he will revive us; on the third day he will restore us, that we may live in his presence.” — Hosea 6:2
On the third day. Remember that.
The pierced one
Zechariah saw something that wouldn’t make sense for centuries:
“They will look on me, the one they have pierced, and they will mourn for him as one mourns for an only child.” — Zechariah 12:10
God says “they will look on me, the one they have pierced.” God Himself would be pierced. And then:
“On that day a fountain will be opened to the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, to cleanse them from sin and impurity.” — Zechariah 13:1
A fountain for cleansing. Opened by a piercing. The prophets were describing a single event that would fix everything — centuries before it happened.
The picture is complete
Stand back and look at what the Old Testament is telling you:
- A substitute will die in your place (the sacrificial system)
- He will be pierced and crushed for your sin (Isaiah 53)
- He will carry sin away forever (the scapegoat)
- He will give you a new heart and His Spirit (Jeremiah, Ezekiel)
- He will raise the dead on the third day (Hosea)
- He will be God Himself, pierced and opened as a fountain (Zechariah)
Every one of these threads is pointing to the same moment. The same person. The same event.
It’s time to see who showed up.