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Joshua Boyd
A Walk Through the Bible – Series Introduction
Big Picture Purpose
Instead of deep-diving into one book, we’re stepping back for the 30,000-foot view—seeing the Bible as one connected story and one unified plan of God.
The Old Testament: Written for Us
1 Corinthians 10:11–13 teaches:
We often quote verse 13 (“God won’t give you more than you can handle”), but in context it refers to Israel’s failures.
The lesson:
The Bible as One Connected Story
When read as a whole, you see:
History accelerates toward Jesus.
Matthew 1:17 highlights:
God was moving history toward fulfillment.
The entire biblical story unfolds in a relatively small geographic region—yet its impact spread across the Roman Empire within 300 years and now across the world.
Key Principles for Reading the Bible
The Old Covenant
The core command:
Israel repeatedly broke that covenant—especially through idolatry.
The problem wasn’t the covenant.
The problem was the human heart.
God Promises Something New
In Jeremiah 31:31–34, God promises:
What Changed?
Hebrews explains:
When Jesus fulfilled it, it was completed—not discarded.
Then came the New Covenant:
Under the Old Covenant:
Under the New Covenant:
Instead of rules written on stone, the law is written on hearts.
God’s Unchanging Plan
From Adam onward:
The plan never changed—only the covenant structure did.
Our Opportunity Today
The heroes of Scripture (Abraham,
By Faith Alive ChurchJoshua Boyd
A Walk Through the Bible – Series Introduction
Big Picture Purpose
Instead of deep-diving into one book, we’re stepping back for the 30,000-foot view—seeing the Bible as one connected story and one unified plan of God.
The Old Testament: Written for Us
1 Corinthians 10:11–13 teaches:
We often quote verse 13 (“God won’t give you more than you can handle”), but in context it refers to Israel’s failures.
The lesson:
The Bible as One Connected Story
When read as a whole, you see:
History accelerates toward Jesus.
Matthew 1:17 highlights:
God was moving history toward fulfillment.
The entire biblical story unfolds in a relatively small geographic region—yet its impact spread across the Roman Empire within 300 years and now across the world.
Key Principles for Reading the Bible
The Old Covenant
The core command:
Israel repeatedly broke that covenant—especially through idolatry.
The problem wasn’t the covenant.
The problem was the human heart.
God Promises Something New
In Jeremiah 31:31–34, God promises:
What Changed?
Hebrews explains:
When Jesus fulfilled it, it was completed—not discarded.
Then came the New Covenant:
Under the Old Covenant:
Under the New Covenant:
Instead of rules written on stone, the law is written on hearts.
God’s Unchanging Plan
From Adam onward:
The plan never changed—only the covenant structure did.
Our Opportunity Today
The heroes of Scripture (Abraham,