NT Text: Acts 3:22
OT Source(s):
Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Direct Quotation
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment + Typology
Anchor Text: Deut 18:15-19 — A Prophet Like Moses
Significance: In the temple sermon following the healing at the Beautiful Gate, Peter quotes Deuteronomy 18:15 to identify Jesus as the long-awaited Prophet like Moses: "The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among your brothers. You must listen to Him in everything He tells you" (Acts 3:22). Moses' original promise answered Israel's plea at Horeb not to hear God's voice directly (Deut 18:16), instituting an ongoing prophetic mediation; yet the singular "a prophet like me" pointed beyond the succession of prophets to one supreme mediator, for "no prophet has risen in Israel like Moses" (Deut 34:10). The connection is promise-fulfillment carried by genuine typology: Moses is a historical figure whose mediatorial office — speaking God's very words, leading a redeemed people through the wilderness toward inheritance — corresponds to and is escalated in Christ, who does not merely relay God's words but is the Word, and whose disobedience-clause ("everyone who does not listen... will be cut off," Acts 3:23) now carries final, eschatological weight. Peter sharpens the urgency: the One they "must listen to" is the very Servant God raised up and glorified (Acts 3:13, 26), so refusing Him is no longer a civil offense but exclusion from the people of God. The savoring is that the mediation Israel craved — God known without being consumed — is fully and gladly given in Jesus, the Prophet greater than Moses who brings not law from a distance but "times of refreshing" (Acts 3:19-20) and the restoration of all things to those who hear and turn.