Understanding the Bible: A Narrative of Redemption

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The first reason why God gave us the scripture is to present Jesus Christ as the Savior and Redeemer of the world. There are many people who feel that the Bible is supposed to be a history of civilization, a complete history of civilization. Some feel that it's supposed to be a textbook on science or creation like paleontology, something like that. There are many people who feel that the Bible has purposes that it really does not have. [00:02:47]

The Bible is not a history of civilization. It's not a textbook on creation. The Bible is a history of redemption, and it is a history of the Redeemer through whom that Redemption came. The Bible is a textbook on salvation, and it is going to present to us the historical context through which the Savior who brought that salvation came. [00:04:00]

The Bible is concerned with a 2,000-year period of History from Abraham to Christ. That's 2,000 years, and that's the period of history with which the Bible concerns itself. 1,178 chapters out of 1,189 chapters in the Bible are given to that man and his progeny because he did provide the historical context through which the Messiah came into the world. [00:08:26]

The purpose of the Bible is to present Jesus Christ. The purpose of the Bible is to say in the Old Testament Jesus is coming and to say in the New Testament Jesus came. Now a third purpose for which God gave us the Bible is explained by the Apostle Paul in second Timothy 3:17. God gave us the scripture according to Paul so that the man of God might be perfect or complete, absolutely equipped for every good work God wants him to do. [00:09:43]

There's a sense in which the Bible is not written to the unbeliever. There's a sense in which God only has one message to the unbeliever, and that message is repent and believe the gospel. Now after that unbeliever repents and believes the gospel, God has 66 holy little books filled with truth that he wants to share with that believer because the real intent and purpose of God in writing the Bible was that the man of God might be more Godly. [00:10:15]

Personal revelation will never contradict special Revelation. Special Revelation has authority over personal revelation, although personal revelation is still very much a reality. I believe personal revelation should always be checked out by the special revelation of the scripture. After all, how do you know it's God who's telling you to do something? The Devil is a counterfeit and an imitator, and his strategy is to deceive us. [00:16:06]

The world today uses this kind of a criteria for determining what's right: rationalism, reason, logic, humanism, science. The world has its way of determining what the moral absolutes are supposed to be. The scripture says we know what's right by revelation. God has given us the scripture to instruct Us in righteousness. [00:18:17]

The men who wrote these books were Kings, fishermen, Shepherds, prophets, generals. Some of them were political or Civic leaders, one was a physician, some were priests and scribes, one was a Publican, one was a converted Rabbi, and many are unknown or Anonymous. They wrote over a period of 1,500 years. [00:19:36]

The books that we call the Old Testament had been selected from among many books that claimed to be inspired and put into a collection of books just simply called the scriptures by the third or fourth Century BC. And then at a council of rabbis at a place called Jamnia at about 90 to 100 AD, this was made official. [00:21:08]

The Old Testament was written in Hebrew, and the New Testament was written primarily in Greek. That means if you want to know the Bible, you need to know a little Hebrew and you need to know a little Greek. Now, I know a little Hebrew, and I know a little Greek. The Hebrew runs a delicatessen in New York, and the Greek runs a restaurant in Virginia Beach, Virginia. [00:23:37]

The Bible could have been written in classical Greek or stilted Greek, the Greek of the cultured people, but it wasn't. It was written in the co Greek, which means the everyday language of the people, the people out there in the marketplace. This means that it was the intent of God when the word of God was written that the lay person understand the scripture, that it be very readable, very understandable. [00:27:20]

Approach the word of God always with the will to do, with the will to apply what the word of God teaches. [00:28:02]

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