Now let's address some of Final Overture 's points...
Are you really in doubt that Psalms 22 is about Jesus?
as I said before, Psalm is not a prophecy,to begin with. It is nothing but an experience by its writer ,an experience that millions others of righteous believers had,they had been exposed to sufferings and been vindicated by God. religious zeal is the only reason to turn such passages into prophecies!.
What is the ground of such an assertion - that "Psalm is not a prophecy" other than merely assertion for the sake of winning an argument? You're simply trying to eliminate a possibility by defining what a Psalm can be without considering the Psalms themselves. But the Psalms can indeed be prophetic:
You shall break them with a rod of iron
and dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel.â€
(Psalm 2:9)
The above verse is not "nothing but an experience by its writer". It is a prediction of a future occurrence, i.e. a prophecy.
For you will not abandon my soul to Sheol,
or let your holy one see corruption.
(Psalm 16:10)
How can this verse be "nothing but an experience by its writer"? The future tense indicates something which has not yet happened. And, as Peter makes clear in Acts 13, David died and remained dead and buried to that time, and to this time. So, the statement concerning a future occurrence wasn't about David, himself, but about another.
In place of your fathers shall be your sons;
you will make them princes in all the earth.
I will cause your name to be remembered in all generations;
therefore nations will praise you forever and ever.
(Psalm 45:16-17)
This is a beautiful prophecy in Psalm 45. That is clearly not "an experience by its writer" because it was future and not yet experienced by anyone.
The Lord is at your right hand;
he will shatter kings on the day of his wrath.
He will execute judgment among the nations,
filling them with corpses;
he will shatter chiefs
over the wide earth.
(Psalm 110:5-6)
Here is another passage which is not "an experience by its writer". It is clearly a prophecy of judgment.
So, obviously the Psalms can be prophetic and your reply to Final Overture is bogus. A Psalm can be or contain prophecy. This is a simple fact and has nothing to do with "religious zeal" and everything to do with proper exegesis.
Given this, there is no a priori reason to deny the prophetic nature of Psalm 22. Final Overture's question is an honest acknowledgement of what ought to be perfectly obvious to everyone familiar with the facts - Psalm 22 is about the crucifixion of Jesus. What is written there is not something that David personally experienced, in his own life. There is no point in the life of David when they pierced his hands and feet. There was never a time when David's garments were divided and men cast lots for his clothing.
Your calculated rejection of the truth here is nothing more than that - a clear indication of your own dishonesty - as you show yourself willing to trample the obvious underfoot in order to win the argument at any cost.
In Christ,
Jim