Typology (theology)
Typology in Christian theology and biblical exegesis is a doctrine or theory concerning the relationship of the Old Testament to the New Testament. Events, persons or statements in the Old Testament are seen as types prefiguring or superseded by antitypes, events or aspects of Christ or his revelation described in the New Testament. For example, Jonah may be seen as the type of Christ in that he emerged from the fish's belly and thus appeared to rise from death.
In the fullest version of the theory of typology, the whole purpose of the Old Testament is viewed as merely the provision of types for Christ, the antitype or fulfillment. The theory began in the
Notably, in the Eastern Orthodox Church, typology is still a common and frequent exegetical tool, mainly because of the church's great emphasis on continuity in doctrinal presentation through all historical periods. Typology was frequently used in early Christian art, where type and antitype would be depicted in contrasting positions.
The usage of the terminology has expanded into the secular sphere; for example, "
Etymology
The term is derived from the Greek noun τύπος (typos), 'a blow, hitting, stamp', and thus the figure or impression made on a coin by such action; that is, an image, figure, or statue of a man; also an original pattern, model, or mould. To this is prefixed the Greek preposition ἀντί anti, meaning 'opposite, corresponding'.[3][4]
Origin of the theory
Christian typology begins in the New Testament itself. For example,
The early Christians, in considering the Old Testament, needed to decide what its role and purpose was for them, given that Christian revelation and the
Typology is also a theory of history, seeing the whole story of the Jewish and Christian peoples as shaped by God, with events within the story acting as symbols for later events. In this role, God is often compared to a writer, using actual events instead of fiction to shape his narrative.[8] The most famous form of this is the three-fold Hegelian dialectic pattern, although it is also used in other applications besides history.
Development of typology
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The system of
The development of this systematic view of the
Jewish typological thought continued to develop in
Typology frequently emerged in art; many typological pairings appear in sculpture on cathedrals and churches and in other media. Popular illustrated works expounding typological couplings were among the commonest books of the late Middle Ages, as
Example of Jonah
The story of Jonah and the fish in the Old Testament offers an example of typology. In the Old Testament Book of Jonah, Jonah told his shipmates to throw him overboard, explaining that God's wrath would pass if Jonah were sacrificed, and that the sea would become calm. Jonah then spent three days and three nights in the belly of a great fish before it spat him up onto dry land.
Typological interpretation of this story holds that it prefigures Christ's burial and resurrection. The stomach of the fish represented Christ's tomb; as Jonah exited from the fish after three days and three nights, so did Christ rise from His tomb on the third day. In the New Testament, Jesus invokes Jonah in the manner of a type: "As the crowds increased, Jesus said, 'This is a wicked generation. It asks for a miraculous sign, but none will be given it except the sign of Jonah.'" Luke 11:29–32 (see also Matthew 12:38–42, 16:1–4). In Jonah 2, Jonah called the belly of the fish "She'ol", the land of the dead (translated as "the grave" in the NIV Bible).
Thus, when one finds an allusion to Jonah in
Other Old Testament examples
Offering of Isaac
Genesis Chapter 22 brings us the story of the preempted offering of Isaac. God asks Abraham to offer his son Isaac to Him, cited as foreshadowing the crucifixion of Jesus. Isaac asks his father, “Where is the lamb for the burnt offering”, and Abraham prophesies, "God himself will provide the lamb for the burnt offering, my son." And indeed, a ram caught by its horns awaits them, which is also seen as a type for Christ, the
Joseph
Genesis Chapters 37–50 have the story of Joseph in Egypt, and Joseph is commonly cited as a Christ type.[12] Joseph is a very special son to his father. From his father's perspective, Joseph dies and then comes back to life as the ruler of Egypt. Joseph's brothers deceive their father by dipping his coat in the blood of a sacrificed goat (Genesis 37:31). Later, Joseph's father finds that Joseph is alive and is the ruler of Egypt who saves the world from a great famine. Other parallels between Joseph and Jesus include:
- both are rejected by their own people
- both became servants
- both are betrayed for silver
- both are falsely accused and face false witnesses
- both attain stations at the "right hand" of the respective thrones (Joseph at Pharaoh's throne and Christ at the throne of God)
- Joseph was 30 years old when he stood before Pharaoh, and Jesus was about the same age, according to the Bible, when he began his ministry
- Money and goods were not able to save the people in time of famine, they had to sell themselves, the same notions are discussed throughout the New Testament.
- both provided for the salvation of gentiles, (Joseph provided a physical salvation in preparing for the famine, while Christ provided the deeper spiritual salvation)
- Joseph married an Egyptian wife, bringing her into the Abrahamic lineage; Christ's relationship with the church is also described in marriage terms in the New Testament
- A direct parallel with Joseph ruling over all of Egypt, and that only Pharaoh would be greater in the throne (Genesis 41:40) is repeated in 1 Corinthians 15:27 with regards to Jesus
- Both suffered greatly, and through patience and humbleness were exalted greatly by God, who gave in abundance all things over time.
Moses
Moses, like Joseph and Jonah, undergoes a symbolic death and resurrection. Moses is placed in a basket and floated down the Nile river, and then is drawn out of the Nile to be adopted as a prince (floating the body down the Nile river was also part of an
While in the wilderness, Moses put a brazen serpent on a pole which would heal anyone bitten by a snake, provided that the person looked at it (Numbers 21:8). Jesus proclaimed that the serpent was a type of Himself: "as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up" (John 3:14).
In the battle with the
Inanimate types
Other types were found in aspects of the Old Testament less tied to specific events. The
The Jewish
Post-biblical usage
As Erich Auerbach points out in his essay "Figura", typological (figural) interpretation co-existed alongside allegorical and symbolic-mythical forms of interpretation.[18] But it was typology that was most influential as Christianity spread in late Mediterranean cultures, as well as in the North and Western European cultures.[19] Auerbach notes that it was the predominant method of understanding the Hebrew scriptures until after the Reformation—that is, that the Hebrew texts were not understood as Jewish history and law but were instead interpreted "as figura rerum or phenomenal prophecy, as a prefiguration of Christ".[20] Typological interpretation was a key element of Medieval realism, but remained important in Europe "up to the eighteenth century".[21]
Further, typology was extended beyond interpretations of the Hebrew scriptures and applied to post-biblical events, seeing them as "not the ultimate fulfillment, but [...] a promise of the end of time and the true kingdom of God."[22] Thus, the Puritans interpreted their own history typologically:[23]
Applied more liberally and figured more broadly, typology expanded into a more elaborate verbal system that enabled an interpreter to discover biblical forecasts of current events. Thus, the Atlantic journey of the Puritans could be an antitype of the Exodus of the Israelites; and the New England colony, a New Zion, to which Christ may return to usher in the Millennium. The first settlers were conservative, cautious typologists, but as Edward Johnson's Wonder-Working Providence of Sion's Saviour in New England (1654; composed c. 1650) demonstrates, by the 1640s New England's sacred errand into the wilderness and the approaching Apocalypse were accepted antitypes of sacred history.[24]
In this way, the Puritans applied typology both to themselves as a group and to the progress of the individual souls:
Applied more broadly, typology enabled Puritans to read biblical types as forecasting not just the events of the New Testament but also their own historical situation and experiences. In this way, individual Puritans could make sense of their own spiritual struggles and achievements by identifying with biblical personages like Adam, Noah, or Job. But this broad understanding of typology was not restricted to individual typing; the Puritans also interpreted their group identity as the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy, identifying their community as the "New Israel."[25]
Typology also became important as a literary device, in which both historical and literary characters become prefigurations of later historical or literary characters.[26]
Intrinsic vs. extrinsic typology
Exegetical professor Georg Stöckhardt[27] (1842–1913) separated biblical typology into two categories. He distinguished extrinsic or external typology as separate from the meaning of the text and its original meaning – rather, it is applied to the topic by the reader. Stöckhardt saw intrinsic or internal typology as embedded within the meaning of the text itself. Although he rejected the possibility of intrinsic typology because it would violate the doctrine of the clarity of scripture,[28] most typologists either do not make this distinction or do not reject typology internal to the text. Stöckhardt's position against intrinsic typology is related to the position that all Messianic prophecies are rectilinear as opposed to typological.[29]
Typology and narrative criticism
Typology is also used by narrative critics to describe the type of time in which an event or happening takes place. Mark Allan Powell separates chronological time from typological time.[30] Whereas chronological time refers to the time of action, typological time refers to the “kind of time” of an action. Typological settings may be symbolic.
See also
- Anagoge
- Foreshadowing
- Correspondence (theology) – typology of Emanuel Swedenborg.
- Peter Leithart – typologist
- Parallelomania, concerning the overuse of typology
- Supersessionism
- Tropological reading
References
- ^ A Study of Biblical Typology Archived 2010-02-05 at the Wayback Machine (Wayne Jackson, Christian Courier)
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica
- ^ Liddell and Scott's Greek-English Lexicon, Oxford 1871.
- ^ The Latin figura, meaning form, shape, or figure, may be comparable, but is from the less violent verb fingo, finxi, fictum, to fashion, form, or mould (Cassell's Latin Dictionary)
- ^ 1 Peter 3:21
- ^ E. Earle Ellis, 1957, Paul’s Use of the Old Testament. Edinburgh; London: Oliver and Boyd.
- ^ See also Leviticus 18
- ^ Typology Washington State University
- ISBN 978-0064300322(and many other editions)
- ^ Jackson, see above
- ^ for example Hebrews 8:6
- ^ Learn the bible site
- ^ Burial customs [1] [2].
- ISSN 2391-7598. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
Origen certainly sees Jesus crucified in the image of Moses lifting his hands, while he also notes the difference – Jesus is not simply another Moses.
- ^ John 10:9
- ^ John14:6
- ISBN 978-0-946351-31-2
- ^ Auerbach, Erich. "Figura". pp.54–57.
- ^ Auerbach p.58
- ^ Auerbach p.53
- ^ Auerbach p.61
- ^ Auerbach p.58.
- ^ See for instance, Sacvan Bercovitch, Typology and Early American Literature, U Mass Press, 1972.
- ^ Emory Elliott, "New England Puritan Literature" p.188 at Donna Campbell's American Literature site at WSU
- ^ American Passages Unit 3 Glossary
- Dante. For a collection of essays on this topic, see Earl Miner, Literary Uses of Typology from the Late Middle Ages to the Present, Princeton U Press, 1977. Of especial interest in this volume are Robert Hollander's essay "Typology and Secular Literature: Some Medieval Problems and Examples" (pp.3–19) and Barbara Kiefer Lewalski's "Typological Symbolism and the 'Progress of the Soul' in Seventeenth-Century Literature" (pp.79–114).
- ^ Stöckhardt in the Christian Cyclopedia
- OCLC 4816986.
- ^ For more on rectilinear as opposed to typological prophecy, see Surburg, Raymond F. (December 1980). "The Proper Interpretation to Old Testament Messianic Prophecy" (PDF). The Lutheran Synod Quarterly. BLTS. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
- ^ Mark Allan Powell, What is Narrative Criticism? (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1990), 72-4.
Further reading
- Fairbairn, Patrick. The Typology of Scripture. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1847.
- Northrop Frye (1982). The Great Code: The Bible and Literature.
- Goppelt, Leonhardt. Typos: The Typology Interpretation of the Old Testament in the New. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1982.
- Martens, Peter. "Revisiting the Allegory/Typology Distinction: The Case of Origen." Journal of Early Christian Studies 16 (2008): 283–317.
External links
- Berkeley, Set of woodcut typological illustrations to the Speculum Humanae Salvationis
- Online book Patrick Fairbairn The Typology of Scripture, 1859
- Catholic Encyclopedia: Types in Scripture
- Jewish Encyclopedia: ALLEGORICAL INTERPRETATION
- Puritan typology, Donna M. Campbell, Washington State University
- Nicholas Lunn, "Allusions to the Joseph Narrative in the Synoptic Gospels and Acts" (2012) [3]