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How does the Old Testament apply to Christians today?


During the past few months God once again has been shaking my ‘tree’…

This has been happening quite often in the last few years.

Like so many Christians today..especially here in the US, a lot of my theological beliefs (outside the basic gospel) was taught to me by teachers I sat under in Church, or in some instances passed down from one generation to the next within families.

What God has been doing is forcing me to look at some of the theological teachings to which I’ve clung: ‘nudging’ me into doing my own studying and comparing these teachings to the Word of God.

The most recent being Dispensationalism.

If anyone would have asked me the last 27 years I would have stated ‘yes…I’m a dispensationalist’…but after examining more closely the beliefs of this teaching I’m not so sure any more. If forced to take a stand right now, I would have to say no; I reject it.

As its only been recently that I have started digging into this, I can’t make a list of: A, B, and C, etc...and tell anyone all the reasons I don’t cling to this teaching now….(soon, I hope to do just that) but can say one of the things God used to get me to look at it more closely for myself was the way almost every Christian who claims to hold to dispensationalism looks at prophecy concerning the ‘end days’…And their delegating the Church [which Christ gave his life for] to some sort of ‘after-thought’ on God’s part; also the way most divide the Whole Word of God up…not believing it all, Old and New Testament, can (and does) speak to all believers today.

Well I said all that because of a mini message I came across today by R C Sproul, titled: How does the Old Testament apply to Christians today…

How does the Old Testament apply to Christians today?

R C Sproul

“One of the great weaknesses of today’s church is a tendency to denigrate and neglect the Old Testament.

It’s a much more sizable piece of literature than the New Testament, and it covers an enormous period of history, the history of redemption from the creation of the world until the appearance of the Messiah. All of that is a revelation of God’s activity on this planet, and I believe it was inspired by the Holy Spirit and given to the church for the church’s instruction and for the church’s edification.

I also think that one of the great problems in today’s church is an abysmal ignorance of God the Father.

We relate to Jesus. He’s our Redeemer. He’s God in the flesh so that we have a way in which we can understand Jesus. It is more difficult when we look at God The Father and also the Holy Spirit. The history of the Old Testament certainly calls forth something of the Messiah who is to come, but it is constantly revealing the character of God the Father, the one who sends Jesus into this world, the one whom Jesus calls Father, the one from whom Jesus says he has been sent, that person to whom we are being reconciled and redeemed.

So how can we possibly justify neglecting such an enormous body of literature that communicates to us the character, nature, and will of our Creator and the one who has sent our Redeemer into this planet?

Saint Augustine is the one who said that the New Testament is concealed in the Old Testament and the Old Testament is revealed by the New Testament. In fact, about three-fourths of the material of the New Testament is either a quotation from or allusion to what went before it. I don’t think we can really understand the New Testament until we have made a very serious study of the Old Testament.

Obviously there are things in the Old Testament that do not apply to the Christian in our day. For example, we are not to continue the ceremonies that were required of the Jewish people; those ceremonies were “types” that anticipated the once-for-all fulfillment of them in the work of Christ. So for us to offer animals as sacrifices would be an insult to the completion of Jesus’ work on the cross.

That doesn’t mean that since that part of the Old Testament is fulfilled we are to neglect it altogether. The Old Testament is a treasure-house of knowledge for the Christian who will seek to investigate it”

2 comments on “How does the Old Testament apply to Christians today?

  1. I personally find the Old Testament more fascinating than the New Testament. Further, the more I study the New Testament against the Old, the less “new” information I find in the New; virtually everything in the New Testament was previously stated in the Old. I think that a lot of the misunderstanding of the New Testament would be cleared up were teachers to source the New Testament doctrines in the Old Testament.

  2. the more I study the New Testament against the Old, the less “new” information I find in the New; virtually everything in the New Testament was previously stated in the Old.
    ————————————————–

    Forgive me healtheland, i just saw your comment..for some reason it didn’t show up in my dashboard.

    Yes!! I agree with you. Shortly after being wonderfully born again, God led me to a small Church where the Pastor held weekly bible studies on the old Testament. He was a wonderful teacher…his love for God’s word was infectious, especially the old Test.

    Having an understanding of the old…the shadows and types, certainly opens the understanding to the new Testament. I see Jesus from Genesis to Revelation.

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