Christianity rises or falls on a claim: Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ.
That word “Christ” is not Jesus’ last name. Jesus was not born to Joseph and Mary Christ! Christ is a title. It means “Anointed One.” Same idea as “Messiah.” In the Old Testament, anointing with oil set someone apart as God’s chosen king. So when the New Testament calls Jesus “the Christ,” it is saying: He is God’s promised Savior-King.
But here’s the question: promised where?
The answer is: all over the Old Testament. A set of themes runs through the entire story like bright threads woven through one long tapestry. And those threads converge in one Person.
1) Messiah means King, and the King is promised from David
God promised that a true king would come from the line of David, a king whose kingdom would not collapse like all the others.
A key passage is 2 Samuel 7. God makes a covenant with David. He promises a descendant who will sit on a throne, and God says, “I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever” (2 Sam. 7:13). The immediate context includes David’s son Solomon, but the “forever” language reaches beyond Solomon. Solomon’s kingdom did not last forever. The promise is reaching forward.
That’s why the New Testament keeps calling Jesus “Son of David” (Matt. 1:1). It is not random. It is a claim: Jesus is the heir to the Davidic promise.
The prophets pick this up too. Isaiah speaks of a coming ruler from David’s line (Isa. 11:1). Jeremiah says, “I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, and he shall reign as king” (Jer. 23:5). The Messiah is not a vague spiritual idea. He is a real king promised to come at a real time in real history.
And that raises the next question.
If this is a king, what kind of king is He?
2) The Old Testament gives the Messiah divine names and divine authority
This is where many people get surprised. The Old Testament not only promises a Davidic king. It speaks of a Messiah whose identity and authority are far bigger than a merely human ruler.
Start with Psalm 110. David writes, “The LORD says to my Lord: ‘Sit at my right hand, until I make your enemies your footstool'” (Ps. 110:1). Notice what David is doing. He calls the Messiah “my Lord.” David is the king, yet he looks up to someone greater than himself. And this greater one is invited to sit at God’s right hand, the place of divine authority.
Jesus Himself used Psalm 110 to make a point: if the Messiah is only David’s son, why does David call Him “Lord”? (See Matt. 22:41–45.) Jesus was not playing word games. He was pressing the logic. The Messiah is David’s son, yes, but He is also David’s Lord.
Now add Daniel 7. Daniel sees “one like a son of man” coming “with the clouds of heaven” and being given “dominion” and “a kingdom” so that “all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him,” and his dominion is everlasting (Dan. 7:13–14). In the Old Testament, “coming with the clouds” is not normal human imagery. It’s God imagery. And the scale is global and eternal. This Messiah is not a local political hero. His reign reaches the whole world.
Then consider Isaiah 9:6–7. Isaiah speaks of a child who will be born, a son given, who will rule on David’s throne. And the names given are staggering: “Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace” (Isa. 9:6). Whatever debates people raise about how to parse the titles, the plain meaning is weighty: this child carries divine titles.
When you put these passages together, the direction is unmistakable. The Old Testament is not only predicting a human king. It is preparing us for something deeper: God visiting His people, in and through the Messiah, with divine authority and divine saving power.
That leads to a third thread.
If this king is so great, why does the Old Testament also speak of His suffering?
3) The Messiah is promised as a suffering Savior who bears sin
Many people in Jesus’ day expected the Messiah to crush Rome and restore Israel politically. They expected glory first. They did not have categories for a Messiah who would suffer.
But the Old Testament does.
Isaiah 53 is one of the most striking passages in all of Scripture. It describes a figure who is rejected, despised, and familiar with suffering (Isa. 53:3). Then it explains why: “He was pierced for our transgressions… the LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all” (Isa. 53:5–6). He is not suffering because he made mistakes. He is suffering as a substitute, bearing guilt he did not earn. His suffering is vicarious: He was punished in our place.
Isaiah 53 is so detailed, so central, and so clearly fulfilled in Jesus that it deserves extended treatment. We will examine this passage closely in the next article. For now, the key point is this: the Messiah is promised as a suffering servant who bears sin and brings salvation through substitutionary death.
Psalm 22 follows the same pattern. It begins with the cry Jesus quoted on the cross: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Ps. 22:1). Jesus was not merely quoting a psalm to express His anguish. Words were precious when every breath was a challenge in crucifixion. His cry was a declaration that He was fulfilling Psalm 22, which is clearly a messianic psalm. The psalm goes on to describe events that never occurred in David’s own life. It describes mockery and public shame (Ps. 22:7–8), including the exact words hurled at Jesus on the cross: “He trusts in the LORD; let him deliver him” (compare Ps. 22:8 with Matt. 27:43). It speaks of physical agony (Ps. 22:14–15), hands and feet pierced (Ps. 22:16), and soldiers dividing garments by casting lots (Ps. 22:18). These details would match the crucifixion of Jesus, a millennium in the future, with eerie precision.
Here is what matters: David wrote this psalm around 1000 BC, but these things never happened to David. Crucifixion did not exist. It would not be invented for hundreds of years, first by the Persians and Phoenicians, then perfected by Rome. Yet David describes it with precision: hands and feet pierced, garments divided by casting lots, specific mockery. David was never crucified. His hands and feet were never pierced. His enemies never cast lots for his garments. He was never mocked with those specific taunts. David, inspired by the Holy Spirit, was writing prophetically about someone else, the Messiah who would come from his line. Then it turns to vindication and worldwide worship (Ps. 22:27–28).
How could David and Isaiah write so precisely about events they never witnessed and suffering they never experienced? Peter explains: the Old Testament prophets were inspired by “the Spirit of Christ” or “the Spirit of the Messiah” to foretell the Messiah’s future sufferings and subsequent glory (1 Peter 1:10-12). The same Spirit who would later indwell the Messiah was already at work in the prophets, revealing what was to come. This is not human guesswork. This is divine revelation.
Isaiah 53 develops this theme of the suffering Messiah even further, and we will examine that passage in detail in the next article.
At this point, a thoughtful person might say: “Fine, but suffering doesn’t prove He is Messiah. Lots of people suffer.”
True. Which brings us to the next thread.
4) The Messiah is not defeated by death, He is vindicated and enthroned
The Old Testament does not merely say, “He will suffer.” It also points to the Messiah’s vindication after suffering.
One important text is Psalm 16: “You will not abandon my soul to Sheol, or let your holy one see corruption” (Ps. 16:10). In Acts 2, Peter argues that David’s words reach beyond David’s own grave, to the Messiah whom God raised up (Acts 2:24–32). The early church did not invent resurrection to give the story a happy ending. They proclaimed it as the act of God that confirmed Jesus’ identity. Paul puts it plainly: Jesus was “declared to be the Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead” (Romans 1:4).
Isaiah 53 itself hints at this. After describing death, Isaiah says, “He shall see his offspring, he shall prolong his days” (Isa. 53:10). The servant dies, yet his days are prolonged. He suffers, yet “he shall see and be satisfied” (Isa. 53:11). This sounds like resurrection: vindication after death.
And then we circle back to Psalm 110, the enthronement psalm. The Messiah sits at God’s right hand until His enemies are subdued (Ps. 110:1). Peter uses that text to say something explosive: God has made Jesus “both Lord and Christ” (Acts 2:36). That means Jesus is reigning now, and He will return to bring the story to its final conclusion.
5) Even the details are not random, they fit the promised pattern
The Messiah is not only a set of big ideas. The Old Testament also includes concrete anchor points.
Micah 5:2 names Bethlehem as the birthplace of a coming ruler whose “coming forth is from of old” (Mic. 5:2). The verse ties together humility (Bethlehem is small) and greatness (his origin reaches back). Whatever someone believes about how prophecy works, it is hard to dismiss this as merely vague religious poetry.
And the “house of David” theme is not optional. The Messiah is tied to David, yet greater than David (2 Sam. 7; Ps. 110). That is exactly the tension the Gospels place before us: Jesus is born into David’s line, and yet speaks and acts with divine authority, forgiving sins, calming the sea, receiving worship, and declaring that He will judge the world.
Given this convergence of prophecies, you might expect Jesus to have announced Himself as “the Messiah” from day one. Yet He often avoided using that title publicly. Why?
6) Why Jesus avoided the title “Messiah” during His ministry, and why the church preached it loudly afterward
One of the most honest and overlooked details in the Gospels is that Jesus often avoided calling Himself “the Messiah” out loud. Not because the title was wrong, but because the word was loaded with false assumptions.
Many people expected a political strongman. Jesus knew that if He publicly led with the title, people would misunderstand the kind of kingdom He came to bring. So He often used another title, “Son of Man,” drawn from Daniel 7. This was deliberately ambiguous. The phrase could refer to an ordinary human being or prophet, but in Daniel’s vision it describes a mysterious figure who receives divine authority and an everlasting kingdom. By using this title, Jesus avoided triggering immediate political revolt. But there was something deeper at work. Jesus’ restraint with the title wasn’t evasion. It was ensuring that true recognition of His identity would come through the Father’s revelation, not human political expectations.
This becomes clear at the turning point when Peter confesses, “You are the Christ” (Matthew 16:16). Jesus responds by making clear this wasn’t the result of human reasoning or Jesus’ self-promotion. It was divine revelation: “Flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven” (Matthew 16:17). Immediately Jesus begins talking about suffering and death, and Peter is horrified (Matt. 16:21–22). That reaction makes sense. Peter had a “glory now” Messiah in mind. Jesus is reshaping the definition: the Messiah must suffer, atone, rise, and then reign.
After the resurrection and ascension, they finally understood. Now the title can be preached publicly with clarity. That is exactly what happens in Acts. The apostles proclaim Jesus as the Christ, seated at God’s right hand, and coming again to judge (Acts 2:34–36; 3:19–21).
Conclusion: the prophecies do not merely match Jesus, they converge on Him
If this were one prediction, you could shrug. If it were only symbolic patterns, you could dismiss it as flexible interpretation. But what we actually have is a convergence:
A promised Davidic King whose throne endures
A Messiah who receives divine names and divine authority
A suffering servant who bears sin as a substitute
A vindicated ruler who lives after death and reigns at God’s right hand
A kingdom that expands to the nations and will one day be openly established
This is why Christians say Jesus is the Christ: not because it sounds inspiring, but because the story told in the Old Testament fits Him in a way it fits no one else.
And if Jesus is the promised Messiah, then the appropriate response is not merely, “Interesting.”
It is personal surrender.
He is not only the King Israel needed. He is the King you need. The call of Scripture is clear: repent, believe, and bow to the true King, the one who suffered for sinners, rose in victory, and will return in glory.
Prophecy is not entertainment.
It is God’s way of saying: I keep My promises. Trust My Son.