Now, right off,
there are no prophecies contained in the book of Psalms,
yet while there is great wisdom to be had from within these passages,
and that many times these are indeed prophetic,
being already mostly the real purpose of wisdom anyway,
to remain as timeless and always relevant.
Contrary to popular Christian belief,
Psalm 22 does not describe a crucifixion,
yes, it is a most powerful transmission,
but the style and its descriptive use of symbols,
are consistent with much of the other psalms,
showing their easy correlation,
of course this psalm demonstrates torment,
except it is not God’s,
or the promised Messiah’s torture being portrayed,
it is of a human’s,
representing only people,
with three different divisions listed,
the narrator, outsiders from Israel, and finally the people of Israel.
First in Psalm 22,
you say that ‘iysh’ means ‘person,’
when this supposed crucified man now was no longer a ‘iysh’ or ‘person,’
then in Hosea,
God clearly states Himself as to not being a ‘iysh’ or ‘person,’
onward back to Psalm 22,
we hear you say that ‘adam’ means ‘mankind,’
again while referencing from Hosea,
I guess you somehow expect God to become ‘adam’ or ‘mankind’ there.
Even still, Adam was a man,
obviously not a perfect creation,
so it does make sense that Jesus would be modeled after him,
because He was far from perfect as well.
Hosea 6:1-2 looks more like on two levels,
as an excuse for what Christians would suspect as a time before Jesus’ dying,
up until His resurrection,
following with Hosea 6:6 stating that God only desires mercy,
not sacrifice,
also acknowledgement, not burnt offerings,
which is one again that Christians should have read better of,
although Christians can freely read into all they want from their Bible,
however, they can never force into reality their belief,
no matter the number have to be systematically blotted out.