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Opening Example: Favorite book/movie franchises?
Question: What do we do with the Old Testament? Particularly the God of the OT? (Note: "Hebrew/Jewish Scriptures," "First Testament," "Old Testament" all refer to Genesis—Malichi)
Marcion tried to answer this question by saying that the God of the OT was a different god than the God revealed in Christ. Therefore Christians should reject OT.
Smacks of anti-semitism. Marcion wanted a Christinaity, "Untrammeled and undefiled by association with Judaism."
But then we meet the opening of the book of Mark. "The beginning of the Gospel" begins with — the Old Testament.
"Isaiah" quote is actually 3 Old Testament quotes. First Malachi 3:1,
"Look, I am sending my messenger who will clear/prepare the path before me; Then suddenty the Lord (Yahweh) whom you are seeking will come to his temple." (God is going to come on the scene; but first a messenger).
Which it self is a quote from Exodus 23 at Mt. Sinai, "I'm about to send a messenger/angel in front of you to guard you on your way and bring you to a place I've made ready."
And a quote from Isaiah 40, "A voice one calling, 'In the wilderness prepare the way for Yahweh; make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be raised up, every mountain shall become level, the rugged plaes a plain. And the glory of Yahweh will be revealed, all all people will see it together." (Which just a few verses later is the passage we talked about last week..."Tell the good news...here is your God!")
Application: Jesus and NT is unintelligible without the OT.
Just because there's continuity with what came before doesn't mean something new isn't happening.
In the stories of the first horseless carriages, the investors and inventors were ridiculed because what they were doing was "just a fad" or just a novelty. Cars were just doing the same thing horses had done for centuries. And horses were a lot easier to care for.
John (and, we'll see, Jesus) had continuity with the past; but something brand new was happening as well.
Application: Reducing Jesus down to a "nice moral teacher" is an insult to what John proclaimed and the first Christians believed.
John's message was to change direction.
But here's the thing about repentance and forgiveness: Grace has little effect on those who feel they have no need of it.
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Opening Example: Favorite book/movie franchises?
Question: What do we do with the Old Testament? Particularly the God of the OT? (Note: "Hebrew/Jewish Scriptures," "First Testament," "Old Testament" all refer to Genesis—Malichi)
Marcion tried to answer this question by saying that the God of the OT was a different god than the God revealed in Christ. Therefore Christians should reject OT.
Smacks of anti-semitism. Marcion wanted a Christinaity, "Untrammeled and undefiled by association with Judaism."
But then we meet the opening of the book of Mark. "The beginning of the Gospel" begins with — the Old Testament.
"Isaiah" quote is actually 3 Old Testament quotes. First Malachi 3:1,
"Look, I am sending my messenger who will clear/prepare the path before me; Then suddenty the Lord (Yahweh) whom you are seeking will come to his temple." (God is going to come on the scene; but first a messenger).
Which it self is a quote from Exodus 23 at Mt. Sinai, "I'm about to send a messenger/angel in front of you to guard you on your way and bring you to a place I've made ready."
And a quote from Isaiah 40, "A voice one calling, 'In the wilderness prepare the way for Yahweh; make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be raised up, every mountain shall become level, the rugged plaes a plain. And the glory of Yahweh will be revealed, all all people will see it together." (Which just a few verses later is the passage we talked about last week..."Tell the good news...here is your God!")
Application: Jesus and NT is unintelligible without the OT.
Just because there's continuity with what came before doesn't mean something new isn't happening.
In the stories of the first horseless carriages, the investors and inventors were ridiculed because what they were doing was "just a fad" or just a novelty. Cars were just doing the same thing horses had done for centuries. And horses were a lot easier to care for.
John (and, we'll see, Jesus) had continuity with the past; but something brand new was happening as well.
Application: Reducing Jesus down to a "nice moral teacher" is an insult to what John proclaimed and the first Christians believed.
John's message was to change direction.
But here's the thing about repentance and forgiveness: Grace has little effect on those who feel they have no need of it.