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Showing posts with label O.T. Survey Video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label O.T. Survey Video. Show all posts
Overview': The Central Core Theme of the Old
Testament: A Biblical Theology of the Old and New Testament.
Charles e Whisnant, Teacher
The study that we will be using
THE PROMISE-PLAN OF GOD
Walter C. Kaiser, Jr.
Before going into any kind of detailed look at how the book
unfolds, let’s look at Kaiser’s proposed theme for the unity of
Scripture. Since Kaiser is presenting a biblical theology rather than
a systematic theology, the whole book traces the chronological
development of the theme of the promise-plan of God. In his own
words,
The promise form of biblical
theology focuses on one all-embracing divine word of promise rather
than on its many scattered predictions (which is what most think of
when they hear the word “promise”), and it traces the growth of
that declaration of God in the larger teaching passages in each era
of divine revelation.
A definition of promise:
God gave a promise to Abraham,
and through him to mankind; a promise eternally fulfilled and
fulfilling the history of Israel; and chiefly fulfilled in Jesus
Christ, he being that which is principal in the history of Israel
(19).
Expanding on this, Kaiser then gives his own definition of the
promise-plan of God:
The
promise-plan is God’s word of declaration, beginning with Eve and
continuing on through history, especially in the patriarchs and the
Davidic line, that God would continually be
in his person and do
in his deeds and works (in and through Israel, and later the church)
his redemptive plan as his means
of keeping that promised word alive for Israel, and thereby for all
who subsequently believed. All in that promised seed were called to
act as a light for all nations so that all the families of the earth
might come to faith and to new life in the Messiah .
From here, Kaiser gives 10 distinctives of his
promise-plan proposal;
The doctrine of the Promised
Messiah is found throughout all the Scriptures and not just in
isolated or selected passages as understood by the
Promise-Fulfillment Scheme
The Old Testament Messianic
teaching was regarded as the development of a single promise (Grk.
epangelia), repeated and unfolded through the centuries with
numerous specifications and in multiple forms but always with the
same essential core
The New Testament writers equate
this single, definite promise as the one made to Abraham when God
called him from Us of the Chaldeans
While the New Testament writers
occasionally speak of promises, using the plural form of the word,
the manner in which they manner in which they do so does not weaken
the case for a single definite promise in the Scriptures
The New Testament writers regard
this single, definite promise, composed of many specifications, to
be the theme of both the Old and New Testaments