Sometimes, Christians are called people of the New Testament. What does this say about the Old Testament? What do we really know of Jesus without both Old and New Testaments? In John 1, we are told that Jesus is The Word. But, is that Word of Jesus only the red print of our New Testaments?
Think of all the New Testaments that have been published for a variety of reasons. But, is the New Testament complete without the Old? The New Testament is the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. But, for what reason do we need the Gospel?
Is the Old Testament just, well, old? Didn’t Jesus come to do away with the old and bring in the new?
John 1 tells us: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him was not any thing made that was made. In Him was life, and the life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it . . . And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen His glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth” (vv. 1-4, 14).
Hmmm. This New Testament Word seems to identify Jesus as the Creator of all things. But, where do we learn the details? Upon what is “The Word was with God, and the Word was God” founded? We are comforted by the salvation story of the New Testament, but upon what does it stand? Is our hope in a feeling?
Every younger generation thinks itself more progressive and enlightened than the previous generation. Technologically advanced, it’s easy to proclaim, “Out with the old! In with the new!” But, relegating the Old Testament of God’s Word to dusty shelves of folklore leaves Christianity without a foundation. Ignoring historical relevance and archeological evidence leaves Sunday school children ill-equipped to defend their faith in the marketplace of ideas.
Genesis is the foundation of Christianity. But, describe Genesis as a fairy tale for “neanderthals” and one can begin to undermine the authority of God’s Word: Jesus Christ.
The message of sin and the Cross was foolishness to the Greeks of St. Paul’s day. That’s because the Greeks (Acts 17) had no knowledge or understanding of the first book of the Old Testament. Without belief in Genesis, they were, shall we say, pre-Darwin people. Evolutionists of a sort. Captive to their own imaginings. For this reason, the Apostle Paul had to define his terms and lay the foundation for the Gospel of Jesus Christ by starting at the beginning with the Genesis creation. It was only then that some people could understand and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.
In contrast, the Jews (Acts 2) were familiar with the Old Testament. They understood and believed the history of Genesis. They acknowledged the origin of sin. Therefore, some of them could better understand the Gospel when the Apostle Paul presented it to them.
Before we can be new people — transformed people, we need to see the old for what it is. God presents His-Story by starting at the beginning. We should do the same.
Jesus becomes more than an “experiential moment” for people of the Old and New Testaments. The One who calls Himself “The Way, the Truth, and the Life” is authority. Jesus is The Word of creation. He is the God who created male and female. Defined marriage and family. Ordered society. Determined everything right. Moral. Good. The first man and woman rebelled against The Word and fell from perfect creation. We’ve been rebelling ever since. But, for our sake, The Word did something unthinkable. “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” The Word — Jesus — became our Savior.
The glory of Christ — from Old Testament through New — is “full of grace and truth.”
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