The just shall live by faith. Love your neighbor as yourself. A man reaps what he sows. The law of God is in our minds and written in our hearts. These are all concepts and biblical truths with which every Christian can recite by heart and proudly proclaim that he lives by the grace of the New Testament and not under the law of the Old Testament. There is, however, a slight problem with this way of thinking. All of the verses quoted above come from the Old Testament. The just shall live by faith is found in Habakkuk 2:4. You shall love your neighbor as yourself is a direct quote from Leviticus 19:18. A man reaps what he sows comes from Hosea 10:12-13. And the promise of a new covenant where the law is in our minds and written in our hearts and not on tablets of stone is found in Jeremiah 31:33.
The only Bible that Jesus, his disciples, the Apostle Paul, and all of the first century believers possessed, used, and quoted from was the Old Testament. And yet, it is that portion of the Bible which makes up 39 of the 66 books of the entire Bible that most of us remain ignorant. It was the Old Testament from which came the fulfillment of the prophecies about the Messiah. Philip, in Acts 8:35, shared the gospel with the Ethiopian eunuch from the Old Testament book of Isaiah. He did not have the Romans road at his disposal. The New Testament was not written in a vacuum, nor as a book to replace the Old Testament. The New Testament is not the Christian Bible and the Old Testament only a book for the Jews. If that were the case, then everything that we teach as Christians, as believers in Jesus, could be dismissed out-of-hand by the Jews as simply Christian teachings and doctrines that do not apply to the Jews.
Jesus was speaking to a Jewish audience when he said, "Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil. For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled". (Matthew 5:17-18 KJV)
Living in
My challenge to you is to read, study, and learn the whole Bible, not just the 27 books of the New Testament. If we say that we believe that the Bible is the Word of God, then it is important to partake of it all. Understand that the Old and New Testaments form the whole counsel of God. They are joined together by the common threads of God's redemption for mankind. The next time you are reading in the New Testament and there is a quote from the Old Testament, stop, turn to that passage and seek to understand its history and application. And he (Abraham) believed in the Lord and he counted it to him as righteousness, Genesis 15:6. Phinehas stood up for the Lord and it was counted to him for righteousness (see Psalm 106 and Numbers 25). Jesus, God's servant, humbled himself, but was raised up, and will one day be highly exalted (Isaiah 52:13).
Blessings from
David
1 comment:
David,
Thanks for the good word. I think that the current lack of attention toward the OT comes from our dispensational background. For many, the OT is useful to decipher prophecy and little more.
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