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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Two Testaments

It is evident to every person who reads the Bible , that it is divided into two sections - the Old Testament and the New Testament. This may at first seem only to be a historical division, but no. The old is distinctly divided from the new, by the appearance on earth of Jesus the Christ and the sending forth of the Holy Spirit. It would be better understood as two covenants. Although there are more than two covenants in the Bible, the division represents the distinction between the covenant instituted by Moses and the last one instituted through the Messiah, Jesus Christ.


Let me summarize some of the relationships between the two. An understanding of this is fundamental to understanding the Bible.
     1 The Old Covenant describes a gracious God reaching out to reconcile rebellious and lost people. This covenant includes the law, which is holy and good in itself, was designed to expose sin and the inability of humanity to attain the righteousness for acceptance with God. Yet this same law that condemns also provides a remedy in redemption   i.e.  the means to overcome failure and return to God the judge and saviour.
           It is good to observe throughout the old testament that God is seeking the hearts of the people i.e. true devoted worship of himself as the true God. To many nations the call of the prophets rang out - 'Repent - turn back to God'
            For the Israelites, many ceremonies were given to show the deeper meaning of the offence  of sin ( the slaying of an animal instead of the guilty), and the deep meaning of substitution whereby the guilty could be set free by the value and suffering of another (animal). A few people of the old covenant days comprehended and believed this message from God, but the greater part chose unbelief and carried on in ritual only, or in distinct rebellion.



      2  When Jesus arrived, this is just what he found. The ritualistic religion of the Jews and the idolatry of the Gentiles. He himself made it clear that he had no intention of destroying the old covenant purpose, but rather to fulfill it - that is - God reconciling the world unto himself.
         The great difference in the new testament is this: God now revealed as 'Father', calls the people, not to enact ceremonies but rather to believe in a person as the full and final expression of his holiness , grace , and love. This person is Jesus. And so the new testament is all about  this person. Four gospel writers record the history of his  life on earth. The Apostles by the Holy Spirit give the detail of his deity, death, resurrection ascension and present place in heaven. The last book presents this person as triumphant over all evil and the blessed hope of him as head over a new creation. 


    And so we discover that the Old Testament pointed forward to the messiah, Christ Jesus, and the New Testament reveals the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ!


     What is the point of this? It is life changing to know that God is reaching out to us, not in the terms of Law Covenant, but reaching out to us in the person of His Son. Acceptance and reconciliation with God is based on our faith in a person, not how well we may perform under rules and regulations.


One could go much further making comparisons, contrasts and give many Bible references, but may the enlightening Spirit of God bless you all with understanding of things that differ.


John McKee

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Making sense of the Bible

        In the quest to make sense  of the Bible, it is so important to see God acting.  Many people are preoccupied with ' what does it say for me'  and miss the real story-line.


      When our mind is open to this perspective, we read so often of God  - - creating, speaking, redeeming, reconciling, saving, judging, sanctifying  etc.  It may be to a wandering person, a wandering nation, or a wayward church, God is seen as proactive. He is the initiator and the sovereign operator as Jesus said to Pilate " You could have no power at all against me, unless it be given you from above" John 19


           This highlights His holiness and righteous judgments, and also His love and grace.
It is true we must respond to the entreaty of God, but let us not read the Bible with the blinkers of self improvement. We are challenged often to change, but this is only possible by God's grace.


John McKee

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Searching for the purpose

 It is most helpful in studying the Bible,  if we can discover the purpose of the writer. This is not a matter of imagination, but a simple yet careful observation of what the writer says.
        For  example John wrote his gospel, not as an historical record but as he says himself  "these things are         written that you might believe that Jesus is  the Christ..."  John 20.
       Again  he begins 1 John  " these things I write that your joy might be full".
        Peter gives his purpose at the end of 1 Peter 'exhorting and declaring that this is the true grace of God wherein you stand.'
           Luke ' sets in order' the narrative of Jesus.

The real danger is adding to the holy Scriptures as much as taking away from them!

J . McKee
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Sunday, March 4, 2012

compass

The bible is to be the compass to direct us the right way!!
Sometimes we need a compass to find our way through the bible !!

Let the compass point to north ( ie upwards )  -When we read this book with God's honour in our minds, it is a safe starting ground.

Let us learn to read it on our knees and find the sweetness of God revealing himself.

jrm

Sunday, December 18, 2011

The Bible has been treated as a book of literature, as a book of rules, as a book of history, a book of examples etc and all this is true yet as such it remains only a book. The word that is important, as we navigate through the 66 books, is the word "revelation". More than revealing the journey of humanity, it is rather God revealing Himself to His creatures, His people. This revelation comes in various ways - creation, prophetic utterance, writings upon stone, the experiences of people etc
The initial illumination to Adam and Eve became obscured, but God did not give up. He revealed His personal relationship with Abraham. He revealed His holy character through the law given to Moses. He displayed His great mercy in the person of King David. He outline His wrath against idols in the writings of Iasiah.

Beautifully interwoven in all these Old Testament revelations, is the glimpes of the coming Messiah. And when He came, as none other, He 'revealed' the Father. To read the Gospels just as biographies of Jesus is to miss much of the moral intent of God being revealed. By the Holy Spirit, the apostles were taking off more of the wrappings to reveal the glories of the Son of God

Finally John glimpses the revelation of God as revealed in the Lamb, the consumator of the ages.

This is no ordinary book. Let us pray ' Lord open my eyes to see you in these pages'

JRM