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Does Deuteronomy 18 really exclude Jesus as the Prophet like Moses? In this video, I respond to arguments made by Tovia Singer, who maintains that Joshua is the complete fulfillment of Moses’ prophecy and that no future messianic expectation remains. I begin with an important concession: Joshua is indeed a genuine fulfillment of Deuteronomy 18. Singer is right to highlight the strong textual connections between Joshua and Moses, and the Hebrew Bible itself explicitly presents Joshua as “like Moses” in significant ways. Where the argument breaks down, however, is in treating Joshua as the final fulfillment even from the perspective of the Hebrew Bible itself. The same text that affirms Joshua’s likeness to Moses also explicitly denies that he is the ultimate Prophet like Moses. Deuteronomy 34:10–12—written after Joshua’s death—declares that no prophet had yet arisen like Moses, one who knew the LORD face to face, performed unparalleled signs and wonders, and accomplished a definitive salvation. These criteria go far beyond leadership succession or Spirit-anointing, and by them Joshua clearly falls short. The Hebrew Bible itself confirms this by presenting later figures who also take up the “Moses pattern.” Elijah’s ministry intentionally mirrors Moses: wilderness provision, confrontation with false gods, theophany at Sinai, miraculous signs, and even the parting of waters. His successor Elisha intensifies this pattern further, performing greater signs and proclaiming a ministry marked not only by judgment but by grace and restoration. Yet even these prophet-like-Moses figures fail to bring lasting redemption—the kingdoms still fall, exile still comes, and Israel still waits. That expectation comes into sharp focus at the close of the Hebrew canon. Malachi promises a future Elijah who will come before the day of the LORD. If Elijah himself is a new Moses, then his future role as forerunner points forward to the final and ultimate Prophet like Moses—the Messiah. That Messiah is Jesus Christ. He alone knows God face to face, performs signs and wonders surpassing those of Moses and Elisha, accomplishes a true and final exodus from sin and death, and brings his people into the everlasting Promised Land of rest and peace—something neither Moses nor Joshua could ultimately do. Deuteronomy 18 does not undermine the Christian claim about Jesus. Read in its full biblical context, it demands him. #Deuteronomy18 #ProphetLikeMoses #JesusChrist #Messiah #BiblicalTheology #ChristInTheOldTestament #Apologetics #HebrewBible