Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Why Do We Have the Old Testament?

I have been asked what my favorite part of the Bible is.  It is difficult to pick out a favorite section of the Bible.  I have gone through the whole Bible,  chapter by chapter, every day for the past several years, and each time I go through it again, I glean something new from the most unexpected areas.  .

These past few weeks I have been reading I Chronicles.  In I Chronicles we learn about David’s life, but there are many chapters listing genealogies, names of warriors, and musicians, and tabernacle workers and all listing whose sons they were.  This can get very boring, but right in the middle of all the ‘sons of’ may be a gem.  Chapter 4 is an example that shows lists of names, and suddenly 2 verses about a fellow named Jabez, whom the Lord blessed.

Then after plodding through more lists of names, and sons of so and so, in chapter 26: 5 it says:  ‘Peullethai the eighth; for God blessed him.”  Then on it goes listing more names.  I had to stop and think about this.  At first I thought the person it was speaking of was this Peullethai, but as I reread it, and noticed the punctuation, I realized the one being blessed was in verse 4, Obed-Edom.  Obed-Edom had been faithful to God in caring for the Ark when it had been dropped off back in 2 Samuel.  Peullathai was one of Obed-edom’s sons, so was blessed, also, because his father had been faithful.  This can be a lesson to us as parents.  If we are faithful, our children will be blessed as well.  Verse seven even mentions the grandchildren.

Elsewhere in this same book are words of David, sounding very much like a Psalm.  Some examples are I Chron. 16: 8-10: O give thanks to the Lord, call on His name…Sing to Him, sing praises to Him…Glory in His Holy name.”  And in verses 31-34 of chapter 16 we have all nature singing: “Let the heavens be glad and the earth rejoice…Let the sea roar…let the fields rejoice. then shall the trees of the wood sing out for joy before the Lord…O give thanks to the Lord, for He is good; for His mercy and loving kindness endure forever.”

All this from what I thought was the very ‘boring’ book of I Chronicles.  I once read that you may look lightly upon a Scripture and see nothing; meditate upon it often; there you shall see a light, like the light of the sun.  This must be what it means, as I have found that the more I read the Scriptures, the more nuggets I find.

Another thing I have found with the Old Testament, it shows us the most base of human nature.  God’s chosen nation did despicable things, turning away from God time after time.  And then the Old Testament ends nearly 400 years before Christ is born.  It would almost seem as though God had turned away from man, was just washing His hands of the whole human race.

But, as the New Testament begins, a baby is born just as predicted in the Old Testament.  And as it tells in Isaiah, the baby became the Passover Lamb, and instead of God washing His hands of mankind, His Son paid the price of all the sin handed down through all these generations, that man can be washed in the blood of that Lamb.  What a picture of Grace the New Testament gives.  And without the Old Testament, we may not see the clear picture of Grace.