The One Year Bible- January 21st
We are almost one month in to our year-long journey in the
Bible and this week we finished up the first book of the Old Testament. This is
no small accomplishment. Genesis is a long book, filled with important stories
that serve as important pieces to the overall story of
the Bible. We will make reference to many of these stories and events as we go
along. Each time we reach a milestone in our journey we should celebrate. As
well as finishing the book of Genesis we will also finish one month in the
word. Give yourself a pat on the back and you should feel good for your
accomplishments. I also want to encourage you to keep going. If it is not
already, your daily reading will become habit and spending time in God’s Word is
one of the best habits you could ever have. On to the study...
Seth’s Thoughts
The Old Testament
We will finish up the story of Joseph this week. It has been
a longer story than most and there is good reason for it. First of all, this is
the back-story for the most important event in Jewish history, the Exodus. The
Exodus tells of God’s love and mercy for his chosen people and how he redeemed
them from slavery in Egypt. As a New Testament Christian this story foreshadows
the story of how Jesus redeemed us from the slavery of sin. But let’s not get
ahead of ourselves. As we read the Old Testament we see many similarities
between it and some stories in the New Testament. I believe that this is one
purpose. Theologians call this Biblical Typology.
I found this description of typology in a resource I have
entitled “Fellowship With God” written by Rev. Henry F. Fingerlin:“The Bible
is an amazing book. But something not too commonly know is that the Bible
contains a unique kind of prophecy that no other book contains or could
contain, namely, Typology. In Romans 5:14b St. Paul says that “Adam...was a
type of the one who was to come.” (That is Adam was a type of Christ). In I
Peter 3:21 Peter tells us that Baptism “corresponds” to Noah’s ark in which 8
persons were saved through water. The word translated “corresponds” in the
Revised Standard Version is antitype in Greek. There are many such “types” and
“antitypes” in the Bible. For example the Passover Lamb and the scapegoat, who
bore the sins of the people, are types of Jesus; and the work of the High
Priest in making sacrifice for the sins of the people is a type of his saving
work. Types, copies, shadows, miniatures, scale model, partial, earthly,
temporal, limited, imperfect—these are the people, observances and events of
the Old Testament. Fulfillment, spiritual, eternal, perfect, unlimited—these
are the realities, the completion, the fulfillment brought into being through
Jesus and the New Covenant. This is the way Jesus and the Apostles understood
the Old Testament and its fulfillment in the New. Only God who knows the future
and also brings it to pass, could so thoroughly detail through prophecy and
types all that would transpire through John the Baptist, Jesus, and the
beginning of the New Covenant.”
There is much to say about Biblical typology but one thing
to remember is that Old Testament Biblical types are always less than the New
Testament antitype. As Paul writes in Colossians 2:17, “These are a shadow
of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ.” How does this relate to the story of Joseph?
Some theologians see Joseph as a “type” or Christ. Here are a few examples:
- Joseph is the “beloved” son of
his Father(Gen. 37:3)—Jesus is the Father’s “beloved” son (Matt. 3:17
- Though innocent, Joseph is sold
for silver (Gen. 37:28)—Jesus is betrayed and sold for silver (Matt. 26:15)
- Joseph finds himself in prison
with two other criminals (Gen. 40)—Jesus suffered death (a kind of prison)
between two criminals (Luke 23:32-33)
- Joseph foretells death to one
prisoner and release and restoration of the other (Gen. 40:9-19—Jesus tells one
of the thieves that he will be with him in paradise while the other dies in his
sins (Luke 23:42)
- Joseph is freed from prison by a
decree of Pharaoh (Gen. 41:37-41)—Jesus is freed from the prison of death by
the Fathers decree of Life, Resurrection, for His Son (Acts 2:24)
- Joseph is exalted at Pharaoh’s
right hand and given a name that is above all names (Gen. 41)—Jesus is exalted
to his fathers right hand and given a name that is above every other name
(Phil. 2:9-11, Acts 2:33-36)
There are others that we could talk about but these are the
big ones. I will be highlighting some more typology as we go this year. Let me
know what you think about typology. Remember you can't always say that
something is a “type” of Christ, but if you see something that you may think is
let me know and I will do some investigating for you.
The New Testament
We read a few more parables of Jesus as well as read about
some miracles including the feeding of the 5,000 and just as amazing, the
feeding of the 4,000. One of the most powerful passages we read came in Ch. 16.
Peter’s confession of Christ is a powerful witness to the divinity of Jesus and
his claim to be the Messiah. After hearing Jesus preach and witnessing his
miracles he boldly professes, “You are the Christ (Messiah) the Son of the
living God." Either Peter was crazy or he was convinced that this
simple man from Nazareth was the promised Messiah.
Bits And Pieces
We will dive into the book of Exodus this week and here are
the vital stats:
PURPOSE: The Lord reintroduces Himself to Israel, rescues
them from Egypt, and gives them a covenant of laws and sacrifices.
AUTHOR: Moses
KEY PEOPLE: Moses, Miriam, Pharaoh, Pharaoh’s daughter,
Jethro, Aaron, Joshua
KEY PLACES: Egypt, Goshen, Nile River, Midian, Red Sea,
Sinai Peninsula, Mount Sinai
LAW THEMES: Plagues against unrepentant Egypt; God gives the
Ten Commandments and requires an oath to fulfill the Law.
GOSPEL THEMES: God remembers and fulfills His promises to
the patriarchs; atonement through sacrifice.
SPECIAL FEATURES: Exodus relates more miracles than any
other Old Testament book and is noted for containing the Ten Commandments
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home