Many of the Messianic prophecies supposedly fulfilled by Jesus were neither Messianic nor prophetic.

I’m interested in civil discussion here. It occurred to me after reading the prophecies supposedly fulfilled by Jesus that many of them were neither Messianic nor prophetic in nature. Much of it amounts to pulling OT passages out of their context and applying them to Jesus. I’ll draw from the more obvious examples I could find.
 

Take Matthew 13:35 for example. It says that Jesus spoke in parables in order to fulfill the prophecy in Psalm 78:2 ”I will open my mouth in parables; I will utter things hidden since the creation of the world.” Now in context, this psalm has nothing to do with the Messiah and it certainly wasn’t a prophecy. Seriously, go back and read it. This verse is an introduction to a psalm where the author is simply saying “I’m about to tell you all the great things God has done in Israel’s past”.

In Isaiah 2:4, it says that the Messiah “shall judge the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.”
 
Here’s another obvious one. In Matt 27:9-10, it says that the chief priests bought a field with the blood money they gave Judas in order to fulfill the prophecy in Jeremiah ”They took the thirty pieces of silver, the price set on him by the people of Israel and they used them to buy the potter’s field.” There are 2 problems with this: 1) These words aren’t even in Jeremiah, they’re in Zechariah 11:13 (sort of). And 2) In Zechariah, this verse has nothing to do with the Messiah or prophecy. If you read the chapter, it’s a story about God’s judgment on Israel, and there’s no mention of buying a field.

Isaiah 11:1-9:  
we see prophecies about the coming Messiah, some of which were fulfilled in Yeshua, but some have not been fulfilled yet. . We don’t yet see wolves lying down with lambs, nursing children playing at the cobra’s hole, or the earth full of the knowledge of the LORD. The verses in Micah are also clear prophecies about the coming Messiah, and they tell of a universal peace that has not yet manifested. The argument then is: if Jesus was the Messiah, why isn’t there world peace? Many Jewish People who are still waiting expectantly for the Messiah are expecting a Messiah who will bring world peace.
 
And please note: This is not Christians merely noticing things in the OT that reminded them of Jesus. The verses are clear that these things took place in order to fulfill specific prophecies. But in each of these cases, early Christians pulled OT passages out of context, deemed them prophetic, and applied them to Jesus.

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