The Bible is literary in nature. It uses words to tell a story. One story.
The story of a broken people and the redemptive unrelenting grace of their God.
Some have drawn a line between the Old and New Testaments, highlighting their disjunction
and distinct differences instead of their unity, maybe even accepting one and
rejecting the other, functionally at least. However both testaments when struck
ring like a tuning fork in harmony together. The OT leads to the conclusion of
the NT and the NT is out of context where it does not stand upon the OT. They
are an inseparable whole, a unified narrative, the story of redemptive history.
In the previous two chapters we attempted a summary of both the Old and
New Testaments giving us a framework to understand each. In this chapter we
will synthesize the story of the OT and NT into one unified narrative,
highlighting in particular the various ways the OT has been fulfilled in the NT
as we unpack the term “Redemptive History.”
Redemptive History
Redemptive History is a term that is used to refer to the entirety of
God’s plan of redemption for His people from their sin.[1]
It encompasses the history of God’s promise of an everlasting covenant with His
people through His Son, Jesus Christ. Redemption history includes everything
God orders by His sovereign hand before the coming of Christ in time and space
and everything He orders for the salvation of His people after Christ’s coming.
Redemptive history is His-story, God’s story of how He redeems His people from
sin. It reads all of Scripture through the lens of what God is going to do
(when reading the OT) and what God has done (when reading the NT) thereby
emphasizing God’s gracious initiative for sinners by underlining every line of
the story in the red merciful blood of Christ.
THE STORY OF REDEMPTIVE HISTORY
The story of redemptive history surrounds the question, “How does the Old
Testament link to the New Testament?” Redemptive history seeks to synthesize
the two testaments, to find the link between Malachi and Matthew, a link
between the varying genres of the Bible, a link between what may seem at first
differing purposes from book to book. Redemptive history seeks to bring clarity
to the Scripture as a whole thereby answering these questions emphatically. And
it does so by tracing the crimson thread of God’s grace through Jesus Christ in
the life of the sinner. Here is a synthesis of the OT and NT highlighting the
story of redemptive history.
Both testaments fundamentally address the reality of the human condition.
They plainly lay out the disruption of original sin and it’s transmission to
all mankind. This disruption to the intended order of creation posed an eternal
dilemma: mankind’s relationship to their Creator was disordered through sin and
therefore disrupted their created purpose. Instead of living in worship under
the Lordship of their God, mankind has sought to worship the created rather
than the Creator. This fundamental problem of sin plagues the characters in
both the OT and the NT.
In the midst of this problem, both testaments witness to the need for
restoration, the need for redemption in their relationship with their Creator.
In the OT we see a pregnant hope of a future reconciliation between Israel and
their God. In the NT we live in the realization of this hope that has been disclosed.
What is this link between this hope and it’s realization? Jesus of Nazareth,
the promised Messiah.
“Jesus Christ is the link between the Old Testament and the New. God’s
revelation reaches its climax in the New Testament—and this climax is not a new
teaching or a new law, but a person, God’s own Son.”[2]
See the OT speaks of a coming Messiah, as we have seen in the previous
chapters, who will one day reconcile the disordered people of God to their
proper created purpose—the worship and glorification of their Maker. Or as the
word of the Lord speaks to this coming hope through the prophet Ezekiel,
“I will make a covenant of peace with them. It shall be an everlasting
covenant with them…My dwelling place shall be with them, and I will be their
God, and they shall be my people. The nations will know that I am the Lord who
sanctifies Israel, when my sanctuary is in their midst forevermore.” (Ezekiel
37:26-28)
Upon this OT promise the NT builds. The NT recounts the life of the
Messiah in the Gospels, the link between the two testaments, and the
implications of the redemption He brings for God’s people. The NT lives not in
anticipation of God’s grace over sin, as Ezekiel prophesied, but in the realization
that God has atoned for our sin and reconciled us to Himself.
“Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by
the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son.” (Hebrews
1:1-2a)
“But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners,
Christ died for us. Since, therefore, we have now been justified by his blood,
much more shall we be saved by him from the wrath of God.” (Romans 5:8-9)
The OT anticipates the coming grace of God and the NT unpacks the
realization of this grace. This linking relationship between the two testaments
is grace. Both exist in unity to tell the same story, the story of a merciful
and loving God. Both testaments are linked by this grace, the Messiah, the
savior, Jesus. When read through this lens Scripture presents a unified
encounter between humanity and their gracious God.
This is the story of redemptive history. It is fundamentally God’s story
of how He reconciled his broken people to Himself. Redemptive history is a term
that emphasizes the important of context. Therefore every text in Scripture,
because of it’s overall context, is linked by Christ to the good news of the
Gospel for sinners.
God Designed Redemptive
History For His Glory
In light of our understanding of redemptive history, the story of the Old
and New Testaments are not mere happenstance. The events recorded were not
merely accidental through the exercise of human will. The narrative of both
testaments were a planned reality. Redemptive history is His story, designed
for His ultimate end for all of creation: His Glory. Redemptive history, the
thread of redemption in Christ between the Old and New Testaments (prefigured
in the OT and realized in the NT), is the fulfillment of this design.
As the Author of the story, God timed the linking event of Jesus life and
death according to the purpose of that which might display His glory most. Some
people may ask why Jesus came in time and space when He did, they may say “Why
didn’t Jesus come in the garden after Adam and Eve sinned?” We may not be able
to give a definitive answer, but we do see two dispensations of history, one in
which God’s people know how desperate they are for His saving grace, and one in
which they know how gracious God has been towards them in Christ.
Knowing our need is essential for giving praise. If you were sitting at
home with a glass of cold water from the tap, your thirst would not be dire.
But if you were in a desert far from water, you would know your need. How much more
glorious would be the stranger you come across with a glass of cold water in
the desert than that person in your home. The same proves true with our praise
of God. Only when we know how destitute we are in our sin do we know the weight
of praise God deserves from us. And so God in His sovereign will brings about
the culmination of our salvation according to His sovereign timing for His
glory.
“In him we have redemption through his blood…making known to us the
mystery of his will, according to his purpose, which he set forth in Christ as
a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven
and things on earth.” (Ephesians 1:7a, 9-10)
“But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of
woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we
might receive adoption as sons.” (Galatians 4:4-5)
Scripture is a story of a created purpose. The entire OT leads to this
reality, that the people would “Know that I am Lord.”[3]
Then in Christ the grounds for our boasting in God was accomplished, “The work
of Christ on earth, and especially his crucifixion and resurrection, is the
climax of history, it is the great turning point at which God actually
accomplished the salvation toward which history had been moving throughout the
OT.”[4]
The end of redemptive history is God’s glory. Another way of putting it would
be that God’s glory is the fulfillment of God’s redemptive plan in Jesus
Christ. How is God glorified as the OT
is fulfilled in the NT?
God is Glorified
Through the OT Fulfillment in the NT
The story of redemptive history highlights the awe-inspiring connection
between the OT and the NT, the grace of God in Jesus Christ. At the center of both
testaments is the theme of God’s promises and their fulfillment. The OT
surrounds the promises of God for His people. It isn’t until the NT that the
fulfillment of these promises and institutions are finally realized. As one
thirsts for water and rejoices in a cold glass, so too as we look at the OT
promises fulfilled in the NT we will rejoice in God’s goodness towards us and
raise our praise of thanks. Let’s turn to the progression of a few of the ways
God plans in the OT are fulfilled in the NT.
THE OLD AND NEW COVENANTS
A covenant is a binding promise between two individuals. God makes a covenant
in the Garden of Eden to Adam and Eve, a promise based on works. Adam and Eve
were promised an eternal relationship in the presence of God if they would submit to refraining from
eating “of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil” (Gen. 2:17). We call
this promise the “Old Covenant” or the “Covenant of Works.”
The Westminster Confession puts it this way, “In [the old covenant] life
was promised to Adam and through him to his descendants, on the condition of
perfect, personal obedience.”[5]
However the fall of Adam and Eve by disobeying God through eating of the tree
shattered the covenant of works. It did so for every person as this single act
of sin spread to every descendant of mankind. No person, because of the far
reaches of sin in every area of life, could now fulfill this covenant through a
life of perfect obedience. It is impossible to earn our salvation by works, “so
we also have believed in Christ Jesus, in order to be justified by faith in
Christ and not by works of the law, because by works of the law no one will be
justified” (Gal. 2:16b).
But in the midst of our rebellion, it pleased God to institute a “New
Covenant,” a “Covenant of Grace.” Jeremiah records God’s promised covenant of
grace:
“Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new
covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah…I will put my law
within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they
shall be my people…For I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their
sin no more” (Jer. 31:31, 33b, 34b).
Now in the NT, at the Last Supper, Jesus declares that He is the
fulfillment of this new covenant, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood” (1
Cor. 11:25).[6] Through Jesus’ death on the
cross God promises us redemption—not through a fulfillment of legal demands and
works—but instead now through faith which is itself a gift from God. The new
covenant is an emphatic fulfillment that God is a God of grace to His people.
In Christ the promise of relationship that God gave to Adam is fulfilled to all
whom by faith rest in the promise of God. When God’s people through faith
experience this grace, God becomes increasingly more glorious to them.
THE MEANS OF ATONEMENT
The entrance and subsequent universal spread of sin to all mankind is the
problem that God deals with throughout all of redemptive history. Atonement is
the means by which God redeems His people from sin. In the OT atonement happened
primarily through the sacrificial system. Once a year on the Day of Atonement
God’s people through the high priest would offer a blood sacrifice, two male
goats, for the forgiveness of their sins as a whole (see Lev. 16). In the
giving of the law to Moses, God provided this means of atonement that His
people might know the seriousness of their sin, the seriousness bloodshed
symbolized, and the graciousness of God to forgive them.
Now in the NT, the OT atonement sacrifices have been fulfilled in Jesus Christ.
In the OT only the high priest could offer sacrifice on behalf of the people as
their mediator. In Christ we have an eternal high priest who advocates for our
redemption, “We have such a high priest, one who is seated at the right hand of
the throne of the Majesty in heaven, a minister in the holy places” (Heb. 8:1).
In the OT the sacrifice was a continual sacrifice, done year in and year
out. But as John Stott so clearly puts, “The Old Testament blood sacrifices
were only shadows; the substance was Christ. For a substitute to be effective,
it must be an appropriate equivalent.”[7]
Jesus was an appropriate equivalent; He was fully human and completely
righteous. Therefore God offered Himself as a sacrifice through the bloodshed
of His Son on the cross once and for all, not to be repeated year by year, “He
entered once for all into the holy places, not by means of the blood of goats
and calves but by means of his own blood, thus securing an eternal redemption”
(Hebrews 9:12).
The means of atonement has been perfected, it has been fulfilled through
Jesus. We are “justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is
in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be
received by faith” (Rom. 3:23-24). Our redemption stands now upon a God who
took Himself out of grace and mercy to the cross, to die the death we deserved,
so that we might have the life with Him that we were created to share in. God
is glorified by overwhelming the hearts and minds of His saints by displaying
what lengths He will go through to redeem them.
THE ULTIMATE PROPHET, PRIEST, AND KING
In the OT there were three prominent leadership offices, prophet, priest,
and king. The prophet’s task was to speak God’s word to His people. God did
this through such prophets as Moses, Elijah, Isaiah, and Daniel. God promised
that another prophet would come,
“The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among
you, from your brothers—it is to him you shall listen—just as you desired of
the Lord your God…I will put my words in his mouth, and he shall speak to them
all that I command him” (Deuteronomy 18:15-16a, 18).
Jesus is the promised coming prophet. Whereas all OT prophets spoke a
word from God, Jesus was the Word from God, the logos, because He was God. He came as His own prophet to declare
the good news of the fulfillment of God’s promise to His people. The
fulfillment of redemption in Himself. Jesus did not need to say “Thus says the
Lord,” instead he simply spoke with authority and every word spoken was a “Thus
says the Lord.” Jesus fulfills the office of prophet and we have the privilege
of His authority and declarations recorded for us in Scripture.
The OT also spoke of the office of the Priest. Priests existed to offer
sacrifices to God on behalf of His people for their atonement. They mediated
the relationship between the people and their God. However instead of
continuing a succession of priests from the Levitical line, God brings a
fulfillment to the office of priest through Jesus. As priest He is our eternal
mediator, “always [living] to make intercession for [us]” (Heb. 7:25). As
priest, as we have just looked at, He offers atonement for our sins, not by
means of animal sacrifice, but by displaying His love and mercy towards us by
offering Himself as our atoning sacrifice. The fulfillment of the priestly
office in Christ is of great consolation for no sinner could mediate as Christ
does.
Whereas the prophets and priests were God’s idea to instituted, the
office of King in the OT was not, it was a slap in the face to God. Judges were
not good enough for Israel. They wanted to be like their neighbors who had
kings rule over them. But God was their king. However in God’s grand story of
redemption He institutes a human kingship under His own kingly and sovereign
rule. Kings Saul, David, and Solomon rule somewhere between faithfulness at
times and rebellion at others. The long line of kings from onward from them is
a ghastly portrayal of power and human wickedness. Kingship is abused.
But the kingdom of God is not ruled by sinful human kings. Instead Jesus
comes as the Messiah, the righteous human king. “Blessed is the king who comes
in the name of the Lord!” (Luke 19:38). He is “King of Kings and Lord of Lords”
(Revelation 19:16). He rules God’s sovereign kingdom in righteousness. He
fulfills our desire for a king, a ruler to govern us for our wellbeing and
flourishing. He is the eternal king whom we are to joyfully bow our knee to
every day.
Conclusion
So throughout the story of both the Old and New Testaments we see a
unity, a vivid portrayal of God’s plan of redemptive history enacted through
His love and care for His people. The institutions of the Old Testament give
way to their fulfillment in the New through God Himself entering the story in
the person of Jesus. Redemptive history is the greatest story ever told and we
have the privilege of each being cast a role as it moves closer and closer to
it’s ultimate fulfillment at the end of the age.
JT Holderman is Associate Pastor of Bellevue Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Gap, PA.
* * *
[1] For a further exposition on the
subject of Redemptive History, see Geerhardus Vos, Biblical Theology: Old and New Testaments (Carlisle, PA: Banner of
Truth Trust, 2012); Jonathan Edwards, A
History of the Work of Redemption contained in The Works of Jonathan Edwards, vol. 1 (Carlisle, PA: Banner of
Truth Trust, 2009), pp. 532-619.
[2] Sidney Greidanus, Preaching Christ From the Old Testament
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), p. 49.
[3] Scripture speaks in many places
of God ordering all of history so that the nations will know that He is the
Lord: cf. Exodus 6:7, 7:5; Isaiah 49:26, 60:16; Ezekiel 5:13, 20:42; Joel 2:27,
3:17.
[4] The ESV Study Bible (Wheaton: Crossway, 2011), 23.
[5] The Westminster Confession of Faith, 7.2.
[6] However the Covenant of Grace
is prefigured in the OT: It begins with Adam and Eve. God had every right to
simply wipe them out for their sin, but instead he extends grace based on
nothing they have done to deserve it. God also extends a covenant of grace to
Abraham in Genesis 15 and 17 in which God promised him progeny and the promised
land apart from any works. The covenant of grace abounds in many other places
in the OT.
[7] John Stott, The Cross of Christ, p. 138.
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