types/typology
types/typology A recognition that in the Bible there is discernible a pattern of
salvation events. Some of what happened in the OT is seen to be anticipations of events recorded in the NT, and some of the narratives in the gospels seem to be reflected in the Acts. The anticipations are called ‘types’ and the fulfilments are the ‘antitypes’. Thus the story of the
Exodus is repeated in the synoptic gospels; the Israelites cross the
Red Sea, yield to temptations of doubt and disillusionment for forty years in the
wilderness, and then Moses on Mount
Sinai presents the people with the
Law. In the gospels Jesus is
baptized in the water by
John, is tempted for forty days in the wilderness, and then gives the
Sermon on the Mount (Matt. 5–7). The difference is that where Israel failed, by repeatedly grumbling and doubting God's determination, Jesus succeeded. The gospels are, as it were, retelling the story of Israel, but giving the events of Jesus as its climax and rationale. It could be shown that Matt.'s account of Jesus recapitulates that of Israel with Gen. (Matt. 1: 1), Exodus (2: 15), Deut. (5–7); a ministry about kingship and prophecy; an exile (Calvary) and restoration (the Resurrection). The principle behind such
exegesis is that God had the same purpose in the NT as he always had (cf. Heb. 13: 8). He is consistent. Though his plan failed because of Israel's weakness, he did not change his plan but brought it to completion through Jesus.
It is possible that there is a typological parallelism between the Passion narrative in Luke and the later chapters of Acts. In the gospel, the
Lord's Supper and teaching about ministry is followed by four trials (before the
high priest, the
Sanhedrin,
Pilate, and
Herod); the
crucifixion; three days in the grave; the
resurrection. In the Acts, there is a meal at
Troas (Acts 20: 7), a discourse about ministry (20: 28 ff.); four trials, before the Sanhedrin,
Felix,
Festus, and Herod
Agrippa II; the shipwreck, followed by three months with
Publius. And the climax of the book is Paul's arrival in
Rome.
If such a theory is plausible, the purpose of the literary device is to show how the disciple must be as his master; that if the way of Jesus was in humiliation, there can be no other way for the Church (Luke 9:23).
The story of the
Flood and
Noah's ark is treated typologically by 1 Pet. 19–21.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Tikal Resources Announces Nine Months Financial Results.
Business Wire; 11/29/2001; 700+ words
; ...Alberta--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 29, 2001 Tikal Resources Corp. (TSE:TKZ.)("Tikal") today announced the financial and operating...422 CORPORATE ACTIVITY On October 22, 2001 Tikal Resources Corp. ("Tikal") jointly announced...
|
|
TIKAL RESOURCES CORP.
Magazine article from: Alberta Report; 2/19/2001; ; 700+ words
; Tikal Resources, a Calgary-based oil and gas...committed to thinking "outside the box." Tikal is a comparatively small firm that prefers...started another company in 1998, he called it Tikal Resources Ltd., recalling a visit to the...
|
|
Tikal Resources Corp. and BelAir Energy Corporation Enter Into Definitive Agreement.
Business Wire; 10/22/2001; 700+ words
; ...BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 22, 2001 Tikal Resources Corp. (OTCBB:TKZA)(TSE...issued and outstanding common shares of Tikal for consideration of 0.4 of a BelAir common share for each common share of Tikal. This represents a premium of 30% to...
|
|
Tikal's urban jungle In Guatemala, the Ruins of an ancient Mayan city are splendor in the grass
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 1/30/1994; ; 700+ words
; TIKAL, Guatemala -- After taking us through the...ruined shrines -- Tony Ortiz, a veteran Tikal National Park guide with a strong sense of...overlooking the Great Plaza. "This is the Tikal that everybody knows," Ortiz said, with...
|
|
Ancient Maya aristocracy.(Tikal: dynasties, foreigners, and affairs of state: advancing Maya archaeology)(The Maya and Teotihuacan: reinterpreting Early Classic interaction)(Maya palaces and elite residences: an interdisciplinary approach)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Antiquity; 6/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; JEREMY A. SABLOFF (ed.). Tikal: dynasties, foreigners, and affairs of...the nature of ancient Maya civilisation. Tikal Teobert Maler (1842-1917) was among the first to explore Tikal (Maler 1997). His records, together with...
|
|
BelAir Energy Corporation and Tikal Resources Corp. Proceed with Business Combination.
Business Wire; 11/9/2001; 700+ words
; ...BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 9, 2001 Tikal Resources Corp. (OTCBB:TKZA)(TSE...issued and outstanding common shares of Tikal. The parties have signed a binding Arrangement Agreement pursuant to which BelAir and Tikal shall amalgamate by way of a plan of arrangement...
|
|
Tikal, Guatemala -- Exploring ancient history
Newspaper article from: Deseret News (Salt Lake City); 11/19/2006; ; 700+ words
; TIKAL, Guatemala -- The jungle rises 100 feet...used it in a "Star Wars" movie. This is Tikal, in the tropics of Guatemala. It is one...You can spend several days walking through Tikal -- walking where the Maya walked, trying...
|
|
The majestic mysteries of Tikal's Mayan temples
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 4/17/1988; ; 700+ words
; TIKAL, Guatemala I am at the top of the Temple...sweeping aerial view encompasses the heart of Tikal - said to have been the greatest and most majestic city of the Mayan Empire. I am seeing Tikal as part of a visit to this Central American...
|
|
Tikal: dynasties, foreigners, and affairs of state: advancing Maya archaeology.(Archaeology and Prehistory)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute; 9/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; SABLOFF, JEREMY A. (ed.). Tikal: dynasties, foreigners, and affairs...seminal questions, such as the date of the Tikal dynasty's founding (c.AD 100). He...s paper on the epigraphic material at Tikal concentrates necessarily on the political...
|
|
Excavations in the Great Plaza, North Terrace and North Acropolis of Tikal, 6 vols. (book reviews)
Magazine article from: Antiquity; 9/1/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...Introduction Although the first volume of the Tikal reports was published as long ago as 1958...I and II marks the metamorphosis of the Tikal work in the minds of most Mayanists. Until...tables and 2 charts. Review perspective The Tikal volumes belong to the class of scholarly...
|
|
Tikal
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Tikal , ruined city of the Classic Period of the Maya , N central Petén, Guatemala. The largest and possibly the oldest of the Maya cities, Tikal consists of nine groups of courts and plazas built on hilly land above surrounding...
|
|
Maya
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History
...Copan), Mexico (Palenque, Uxmal, and Chichen Itza), and Guatemala (Piedras Negras, Uaxxactan, and Tikal). The capital was at Tikal (population 50,000), which was a center of education, economics, science, and religion. Mayan accomplishments...
|
|
pre-Columbian art and architecture
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...regions: the Petén district (Uaxactún and Tikal ); the cities of the river valleys, such as Piedras Negras...uacute; and in varying degrees at other sites, including Tikal and Uaxactún. Erected on high land above the surrounding...
|
|
Mayan Temples
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of the Unusual and Unexplained
...ball games, and blocks of stone inscribed with hieroglyphics. Tikal, another Mayan center in Guatemala, had more than 3,000...and increasingly larger buildings approaching the center of Tikal accommodated a surrounding community that may have numbered...
|
|
Mayan Mythology
Book article from: Myths and Legends of the World
...Historians call this their Classic period. During this time, the Maya built vast stone cities and ceremonial centers such as Tikal and Palenque. After the Classic period, Toltecs from central Mexico arrived in the Yucat á n and eventually merged...
|