{"id":853,"date":"2009-08-19T15:30:33","date_gmt":"2009-08-19T15:30:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.beliefnet.com\/bibleandculture\/2009\/08\/the-indelible-image-relating-the-ot-and-nt-thought-worlds.html"},"modified":"2009-08-19T15:30:33","modified_gmt":"2009-08-19T15:30:33","slug":"the-indelible-image-relating-the-ot-and-nt-thought-worlds","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/2009\/08\/the-indelible-image-relating-the-ot-and-nt-thought-worlds.html","title":{"rendered":"The Indelible Image: Relating the OT and NT Thought Worlds"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span class=\"mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image\"><a href=\"http:\/\/blog.beliefnet.com\/bibleandculture\/assets_c\/2009\/04\/indelibleimage-thumb-400x595-4529.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Thumbnail image for indelibleimage.jpg\" src=\"https:\/\/wp-media.beliefnet.com\/sites\/137\/import\/assets_c\/2009\/08\/indelibleimage-thumb-400x595-4529-thumb-200x297-7275.jpg\" class=\"mt-image-none\" width=\"200\" height=\"297\" \/><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n<p>Below you will find an excerpt from the second of my two large volumes studying the whole of&nbsp; NT Theology and Ethics.&nbsp; The first volume entitle &#8216;The Indelible Image: The Individual Witnesses&#8217;&nbsp; will be out next month at some point and is already selling on Amazon.&nbsp; Interspersed you will find footnotes as I had to copy this directly from a pdf to here, so you may ignore those if you like.&nbsp; In any case, the subject is well worth a good discussion.&nbsp; See what you think. <\/p>\n<p>BW3<\/p>\n<p><b>Relating the Old Testament and the New Testament Thought Worlds<br \/><\/b><br \/>Although it is possible at this juncture to discuss the relationship of the Old Testament to<br \/>the New Testament, that subject belongs in a discussion of the canon, which is not the<br \/>focus of this study, and in any case I addressed it somewhat in the first volume of the<br \/>present work.3 Here our interest is the relationship of Old Testament theology and ethics<br \/>to the theology and ethics that we find in the New Testament. The reason for this<br \/>distinction is simple: the documents of the New Testament existed in the New Testament<br \/>era and are expressions of the thought world of that era, long before there was a New<br \/>Testament canon. The thought world of the New Testament speakers and writers was<br \/>enormously influenced by the thought world exhibited in many books now found in the<br \/>Old Testament, although certainly they were also profoundly influenced by<br \/>intertestamental Jewish literature and thought.<\/p>\n<p>I say &#8220;many&#8221; books because some books of the Old Testament seem to have exerted little<br \/>or no influence on the early Christians. An obvious example is the book of Esther, which<br \/>seems to have made no impact at all, and perhaps this is not surprising, since the Old<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br \/>1C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity (New York: Harper, 2001 [1952]), p. 65.<br \/>2Morna Hooker, &#8220;The Nature of New Testament Theology,&#8221; in The Nature of New Testament Theology:<br \/>Essays in Honour of Robert Morgan, ed. Christopher Rowland and Christopher Tuckett (Oxford:<br \/>Blackwell, 2006), p. 90. Her argument is essentially the same one that I am making here for narrative being<br \/>the larger rubric in which one can best understand New Testament theology and ethics.<br \/>3See Ben Witherington III, The Individual Witnesses, vol. 1 of The Indelible Image: The Theological and<br \/>Ethical Thought World of the New Testament (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2009).<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<\/p>\n<p>Testament canon was not fully closed in the New Testament era, and one of the debated<br \/>books was Esther. In fact, several of the books that later made up the third part of Tanak,<br \/>the Writings, are missing in action in the New Testament, as are various other Old<br \/>Testament books (e.g., Nehemiah). And it is not simply that they are not quoted; they are<br \/>not even alluded to. It therefore is better, on the whole, to talk about the influence not of<br \/>particular books, although we could do that (the most heavily cited in the New Testament<br \/>are Isaiah and Psalms), but rather of the influence of the thought world.<\/p>\n<p>And here we note a remarkable fact. The Old Testament, taken as a whole, has precious<br \/>little to say about the afterlife and only somewhat more about eschatology. And indeed, it<br \/>is mostly the very latest Old Testament books, including especially the more apocalyptic<br \/>prophets, that have anything of consequence to say on this subject; and sometimes, even<br \/>when talking about the Yom Yahweh, they are talking not about some final<br \/>eschatological judgment on the world but rather about a temporal judgment on Israel<br \/>and\/or the nations after which there can be redemption for God&#8217;s people and further<br \/>mundane life.<\/p>\n<p>By comparison, the thought world of the New Testament writers is overwhelmingly<br \/>eschatological in character. In this respect, the New Testament thought world is far more<br \/>like the thought world of some of the intertestamental Jewish literature than that of the<br \/>Old Testament. Of course, this could be said to create a problem for canonical<br \/>theologians, at least for those who want to limit the discussion within the parameters of<br \/>what is found in the Old Testament and the New Testament. But there are red flags right<br \/>within various New Testament books against taking this sort of approach as well.<br \/>For example, the little document called &#8220;Jude&#8221; clearly draws on extracanonical material<br \/>from the Enoch literature and probably from Apocalypse of Moses as well. And then we<br \/>have Paul, who shows the influence of Wisdom of Solomon, and James, who draws on<br \/>Sirach. Thus, we can focus on the relationship between the thought worlds of the Old<br \/>Testament and the New Testament, but we should not limit ourselves to that discussion,<br \/>not least because important ideas such as bodily resurrection of the dead, although they<br \/>did not germinate in the intertestamental period, certainly gestated in that period. When it<br \/>comes to the Old Testament itself, the concept of resurrection is barely mentioned, in<br \/>Daniel 12:1-2 and as a metaphor in Ezekiel (and see Is 26:19). Put simply, some of the<br \/>concepts most crucial and determinative for the early Christian thinkers are almost absent<br \/>from the Old Testament. Christian theology and ethics could never be done purely on the<br \/>basis of the careful interpretation of the Old Testament.<\/p>\n<p>And indeed, some scholars have asked probing questions about whether one can even talk<br \/>about a unified Old Testament thought world, not least because the material found there<br \/>was produced and edited over an incredibly long period of time, in various places, in<br \/>different countries, in exile and in the Holy Land, and much of the literature is<br \/>anonymous, or at least we do not know who actually finally wrote it down. In any case,<br \/>the concept of books did not exist in the Old Testament era in the same way it did in the<br \/>first century A.D. By contrast, the gestation period of the New Testament is tiny, the<br \/>social networks are much more closely knit, and we know a good deal about various of<br \/>the New Testament authors, including that they either were, or were in touch with, the<br \/>original eyewitnesses of the events that came to be called the &#8220;good news.&#8221; Then too, all<br \/>the writers shared something vital in common: a vibrant faith in a recently crucified and<br \/>risen savior named &#8220;Jesus.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There was no singular sort of experience like the Christ-event, not even the exodus and<br \/>Sinai events, that generated the faith of all the Israelites. In some ways, then, it is unfair<br \/>to compare the Old Testament and New Testament thought worlds, and in any case the<br \/>Old Testament thought world reflects a long period of development with some<br \/>remarkable changes in and after the exile in regard to afterlife theology. We must talk in<br \/>terms of progressive revelation when dealing with the Old Testament thought world. It is<br \/>not at all clear that we need to do that with the New Testament thought world. And then<br \/>too, if we are going to speak at all about biblical theology and ethics, the narratological<br \/>necessities dictate that we talk about an ongoing tale that has a beginning, a middle, a<br \/>climax, and an end. The Old Testament does not include the last two elements of the<br \/>story, although especially its prophetic corpus sometimes foreshadows and foretells it.<\/p>\n<p>Some will ask why is it so important to consider the theology and the eth<br \/>\nics in the Bible<br \/>in a processive and progressive manner. One answer is that we cannot judge the meaning<br \/>of a story and the character of its actors before we get to the end. Consider for a moment<br \/>the example of J. R. R. Tolkien&#8217;s great trilogy, The Lord of the Rings. We cannot tell<br \/>whether Frodo will have the necessary character to do what is required with the ring until<br \/>we near the end of the story. Up to that point, we do not know whether he will pass the<br \/>test. Or even more tellingly, we cannot tell whether Gollum is going to end up being an<br \/>adversary or an assistant in the process of saving the Shire and the world until right near<br \/>the end. And what of Gandalf? Will he return in time or at all to help the human race<br \/>ward off evil? We do not know until many hundreds of pages into the story. The Bible<br \/>involves a similar, even more grand, epic story from creation through fall through various<br \/>acts of redemption to the final new creation. Viewing the whole story from the end<br \/>changes the way we look at the character of God, the character of God&#8217;s people, how<br \/>human history will play out, the nature of redemption, and a host of other subjects. The<br \/>truth is that we do not fully know God and the divine character sufficiently for eternal<br \/>salvation before Jesus turns up to reveal it. We do not fully understand the depths of<br \/>human depravity until Jesus shows up and dies on the cross to reveal and overcome it.<br \/>We do not fully understand the importance of creation to God&#8217;s eternal plan until we hear<br \/>near the end that God&#8217;s plan is that all of fallen creation be renewed and restored, and that<br \/>the resurrection of Jesus will be the harbinger and indeed catalyst of the final stage of<br \/>redemption for human beings themselves.<\/p>\n<p><b>Sticking to Our Story<\/b><\/p>\n<p>It is precisely because biblical history is told in the Bible as an ongoing story that a<br \/>narratological approach to theology and ethics is not merely useful but actually is<br \/>required to fully understand what is being claimed and taught. The first question to ask<br \/>about any theological or ethical remark in the Bible is &#8220;Where in the story do we find it?&#8221;<br \/>Is it near the outset, or is it in the middle or toward the end? During the administration of<br \/>which covenant was this or that teaching given? Most fundamentally, does this or that<br \/>theological or ethical remark come before or after the Christ-event? Does this point in the<br \/>story reflect the partial revelations of the earlier period or the fuller revelation that comes<br \/>in and after the Christ-event?<\/p>\n<p>These are the right sorts of questions to ask when we are thinking about the theology and<br \/>ethics found in the Bible, and this is precisely why we cannot do biblical theology in a<br \/>manner that treats the Old Testament as if it provides as full a revelation of God&#8217;s<br \/>character, plan, and people as does the New Testament. It does not, nor did the New<br \/>Testament writers think that it did, even though it was the only Bible that they had. They<br \/>believed that they were the people on whom the ends of the ages had come, and they<br \/>believed that in fact the author of this whole story had finally stepped out onto the stage<br \/>in person to bring in the final chapters and explain the meaning of it all.<\/p>\n<p>With this reminder about the narratological framework and nature of the thought world<br \/>that we are dealing with, it is appropriate to say some final things about some of the<br \/>major symbols in the symbolic universe that generate that sort of thought world and<br \/>story, but first we must note that we have now found a clue or two as to why the early<br \/>church completely rejected the so-called Gnostic Gospels when considering what<br \/>eventually would be their canonical texts.<\/p>\n<p>The first reason is that the canonical Gospels do indeed focus heavily on the passion and<br \/>death of Christ; indeed, each of them can be viewed as a passion narrative with a long<br \/>introduction. By contrast, the Gnostic Gospels place no focus on the death of Jesus, and<br \/>indeed they actually avoid doing so. They see no great theological significance in that<br \/>event, or really any other similar event, which depends on historical reality and<br \/>particularity.<\/p>\n<p>Equally important, as Luke Timothy Johnson says, &#8220;None of the Gnostic Gospels take the<br \/>form of narrative. Rather, they focus entirely on Jesus as revealer, and take the form of<br \/>discrete sayings . . . with no narrative framework (Gospel of Thomas), or revelatory<br \/>discourses in response to questions (Gospel of Mary, Dialogue of the Saviour). Two of<br \/>the most important Gnostic Gospels (Gospel of Truth, Gospel of Philip) take the form of<br \/>teaching about Jesus rather than any sort of story.&#8221;4 In other words, the sensibilities and<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br \/>4Luke Timothy Johnson, &#8220;Does a Theology of the Canonical Gospels Make Sense?&#8221; in Rowland and<br \/>Tuckett, eds., Nature of New Testament Theology, p. 103.<br \/>629<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>symbolic universe that formed those documents are very different from those Jewish ones<br \/>that formed our canonical Gospels. In fact, it is not an overstatement to say that most of<br \/>the Gnostic texts reject the God of the Old Testament altogether, the God of material<br \/>creation.<\/p>\n<p>Johnson puts it this way: &#8220;Insofar as the God of Israel is the God who creates the material<br \/>world, the Gnostic texts resist that God. A Gnostic sensibility that finds the world to be a<br \/>corpse and blessedness in detachment and solitariness (see the Coptic Gospel of Thomas)<br \/>is far both from the sensibility of Torah and of the canonical Gospels.&#8221;5 All the writers of<br \/>the New Testament probably were Jews or God-fearers,6 not Marcionites or Gnostics, and<br \/>so we would expect them to devalue neither the Old Testament thought world nor the Old<br \/>Testament vision of God and creation, and they do not disappoint us in this regard. The<br \/>changes that we find between the Old Testament and the New Testament symbol systems<br \/>are christologically, ecclesiologically, and eschatologically engendered, but all of those<br \/>categories (the discussions of a messiah, of God&#8217;s people, of the future in connection with<br \/>the messiah and God&#8217;s people) are Jewish and must be seen as a further development of<br \/>Old Testament and early Jewish thinking on such subjects in a particular direction in the<br \/>light of the Christ-event.<\/p>\n<p><b>The Old Testament Thought World and Its Relevance to Christian Thought<\/b><br \/>At the center of the Old Testament symbolic universe and narrative thought world lies a<br \/>singular God, Yahweh. Scholars have come to call what they find in the Old Testament<br \/>&#8220;ethical monotheism,&#8221; and this is an appropriate label. Yahweh, the God of the Bible, is a<br \/>hands-on deity constantly involved in the affairs of the world and his people, and he is<br \/>constantly making demands of them in regard to their behavior especially, but also in<br \/>regard to their beliefs. The Shema frequently is seen as the core credo of the Old<br \/>Testament God: &#8220;Hear, O Israel, the LORD our God is one&#8221; (Deut. 6:4). Here &#8220;one&#8221;<br \/>presumably means &#8220;as opposed to many gods.&#8221; In other words, this is a statement against<br \/>polytheism, not about the composition or complexity of the biblical God.7<\/p>\n<p>What was believed about this God can be deduced fairly easily from a close reading of<br \/>the Pentateuch and the first few Historical Books. As the only real God in the cosmos, the<br \/>biblical God was believed to be the creator of all things and all beings. No other being or<br \/>thing existed before this God decided to create the universe and all that is within it. This<br \/>view stands in stark contrast to other ancient Near Eastern views about how the universe<br \/>was created out of a struggle between various deities. The Old Testament writers will<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br \/>5Ibid., p. 105.<br \/>6The author of 2 Peter ma<br \/>\ny be an exception to this rule, but Luke probably was a Gentile God-fearer.<br \/>7On which, see Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the God of Israel: God Crucified and Other Studies on the<br \/>New Testament&#8217;s Christology of Divine Identity (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2008).<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<\/p>\n<p>have none of that. There is only one God, and there is only one universe, which was<br \/>created by this God and reflects the divine character. The way this is expressed in the<br \/>beginning chapters of the Bible is that God created all things and made them tov<br \/>(&#8220;good&#8221;), indeed made them tov mu&#8217;od (&#8220;very good&#8221;). A good God made a good creation<br \/>and good creatures to fill it.<\/p>\n<p>This idea of monotheism created enormous problems when it came to the issue of the<br \/>origins of evil&#8211;the study of theodicy. Polytheism could always explain that evil came<br \/>about through one or another of the bad deities or through cosmic struggle, but<br \/>monotheism could not go that route. Some other explanation for evil had to be suggested.<br \/>What is most interesting in Genesis 1-3 is that we are not told where evil comes from; it<br \/>simply lurks in the presence of the snake in the garden. It appears that the Old Testament<br \/>writers were much more interested in talking about how to cope with evil than in<br \/>debating its source.<\/p>\n<p>However, the Old Testament writers did repeatedly emphasize that the one and only God<br \/>was not evil, had no dark side, no shadow of turning, nor did this God do evil things. The<br \/>blame for the &#8220;fall,&#8221; as it came to be called, is placed solely on human beings, not on God<br \/>for making defective merchandise. This pattern of thought is seen not only in various<br \/>places in the Old Testament but also in the New Testament. As Paul puts it, Adam is the<br \/>head of the human race, and as a result all of us have sinned and died in Adam, and it is<br \/>also true that all of us, on our own, have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (see<br \/>Rom 3:23; 5:12-21; 1 Cor 15:20-28, 42-50). Not once in the Bible is there a discussion<br \/>about some flaw or ethical defect in God. The blame for the human malaise is always<br \/>placed at the door of human beings, however much they may have been beguiled or<br \/>bamboozled by the powers of darkness in the universe. God is holy, just, and good and is<br \/>not responsible for sin and evil.<\/p>\n<p>This raises questions about the sovereignty of God, and the Old Testament does indeed<br \/>repeatedly insist that God is almighty. Sometimes this takes the form of insisting that<br \/>God is the maker and ruler of the universe, but more frequently, since the Old Testament<br \/>is the story of God&#8217;s dealings with a fallen and imperfect people, it takes the form of<br \/>insisting that God is almighty to save or rescue his people. God will not willingly let<br \/>them go down the path of ruin and self-destruction (cf. Gen 6 with Hos 11). At the very<br \/>heart of the Pentateuch is the story of the exodus and Sinai events, which becomes the<br \/>paradigm and indeed the litmus test of the character of God&#8211;Yahweh is a redeemer God,<br \/>who rescues his people time and time again. This brings into the picture God&#8217;s love,<br \/>compassion, and mercy, for there is no suggestion in such stories, not even in Exodus,<br \/>that these people earned God&#8217;s favor and deserved to be rescued and therefore that a<br \/>righteous God was obligated to extricate them (see Ex 34:6-7).<\/p>\n<p>True enough, it is stressed that the Hebrews were victims of horrible oppression, but there<br \/>is no suggestion in these stories that God rescued them because their character was so<br \/>much better than that of the Egyptians (see Deut 7:7-8). Indeed, as the traditions of the<br \/>wilderness wanderings that followed were to demonstrate, these people had some severe<br \/>issues in regard to both their behavior and their beliefs about the true God. Golden calves<br \/>and immorality came as neither total accident nor total surprise from these people. In<br \/>other words, although God was just in punishing the Egyptians, he was also gracious in<br \/>rescuing the Hebrews. And here we come upon a crucial point.<\/p>\n<p>Salvation in the Old Testament is, almost exclusively, a this-worldly proposition. It is<br \/>something that God does in space and time to rescue, redeem, restore, and aid the return<br \/>of his people to their rightful place or condition or character. There is in fact hardly<br \/>anything of a doctrine of heaven in the Old Testament (although occasionally an Enoch<br \/>or an Elijah gets &#8220;beamed up&#8221; into the living presence of God), and so whatever justice or<br \/>redemption that happens must happen in the here and now, in space and time. To be sure,<br \/>in the later and apocalyptic prophecies we begin to see an afterlife or at least a theology<br \/>of new creation, as in Second and Third Isaiah, Ezekiel, and Daniel, but clearly enough<br \/>Sheol is the dominant concept of the afterlife in most of the Old Testament. But nowhere,<br \/>apparently, do we find any New Testament writers who merely conjure with Sheol after<br \/>death for anyone.8<\/p>\n<p>There is considerable insistence in the Old Testament on God&#8217;s holiness and righteous<br \/>character. This, of course, is one reason why we talk about ethical monotheism. The<br \/>biblical God is not running around committing immoral acts or, like various pagan<br \/>deities, attempting to mate with mere mortals. Notably, when we have a story such as<br \/>Genesis 6:1-4, in which angels (called &#8220;sons of God&#8221;) come down from above and violate<br \/>the creation order by mating with mortals, the heavens break loose and a flood judgment<br \/>comes upon the earth. The biblical God will not tolerate, never mind perpetrate, a breach<br \/>of the creation order, much less blur the line between Creator and creature in this regard.<br \/>Thus, when we hear God say, &#8220;Be holy, for I am holy&#8221; (e.g., Lev 11:44), we are<br \/>beginning to get to the root of the matter in terms of the Old Testament symbolic<br \/>universe. God is one, and God is holy, and God&#8217;s people should be both one and holy as<br \/>well.9<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br \/>8On Old Testament eschatology and apocalyptic, see Bill T. Arnold, &#8220;Old Testament Eschatology and the<br \/>Rise of Apocalypticism,&#8221; in The Oxford Handbook of Eschatology, ed. Jerry L. Walls (New York: Oxford<br \/>University Press, 2007), pp. 23-39. This excellent survey of the relevant data shows that there is some<br \/>eschatological and apocalyptic material in the Old Testament, particularly in the later prophetic material,<br \/>and it demonstrates that there is a connection between the earlier promises of God about land, monarchy,<br \/>and the like and their final fulfillment in a this-worldly restoration or balancing of the scales of justice. This<br \/>conclusion is seen not as a natural development of historical processes but rather as a result of divine<br \/>intervention, whether in connection with the Day of the Lord or by some other means. See also Ben<br \/>Witherington III, Jesus the Seer: The Progress of Prophecy (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1999). What<br \/>Arnold, quite rightly, does not say or suggest is that in the Old Testament this conclusion of things is<br \/>closely or regularly linked to a human messianic figure intervening or returning.<br \/>9Here the reader will profit from reviewing the critique of Francis Watson&#8217;s view of such matters and<br \/>biblical theology in general in Witherington, Individual Witnesses, pp. 000-000.<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<\/p>\n<p>And here is where I say that just as theology and ethics are bound up in the character of<br \/>God and one could talk about the theological story of an ethical God acting ethically, so<br \/>also theology and ethics are intertwined in what is expected of God&#8217;s people. The<br \/>character of God is to be reflected in the behavior (and belief) of God&#8217;s people. Put<br \/>another way, when one knows and believes in the true character of the biblical God and<br \/>has experienced God acting &#8220;in character&#8221; on behalf of his people, the only appro<br \/>\npriate<br \/>response is to mirror that character in one&#8217;s own community and life. &#8220;Be holy, for I am<br \/>holy&#8221; is a mandate not merely to set oneself apart from the behavior patterns of the larger<br \/>culture but rather to model oneself on the divine character. And interestingly, such<br \/>imitation is never seen to violate the distinction between Creator and creature or to lead<br \/>to a human being&#8217;s apotheosis. It is the voice of the snake, not of God, that promises,<br \/>&#8220;You shall be as gods.&#8221; Yet it must be stressed that the primeval story insists that human<br \/>beings are created in the image of God, created with a capacity for a special relationship<br \/>with God, and thus in some ways the story of salvation history throughout the Bible is the<br \/>story of God&#8217;s efforts to bring about the renewal of that indelible but effaced image. Only<br \/>so could human beings once more be said to be, as in Psalm 8:5, &#8220;a little less than God&#8221;<br \/>(or at least than the angels, depending on how one reads )e6lo4h|&lt;m in this verse).<\/p>\n<p>A further feature of the Old Testament thought world that strongly shapes its contours is<br \/>the notion of covenant. The God of the Bible is a God who cuts covenants with both<br \/>individuals, such as Noah or Abraham, and also with a whole group of people&#8211;a chosen<br \/>people. Covenants are agreements, and the biblical ones mostly take the form of<br \/>covenants between suzerain and vassal, not parity treaties. Yahweh dictates the terms in<br \/>these covenants, and they contain not only stipulations but also sanctions involving<br \/>blessing and curse. They are ratified by a sacrifice and also have a covenant sign, such as<br \/>circumcision or even a rainbow. It would be hard to overestimate the importance of<br \/>covenant in the relationship between God and his people as described in the Old<br \/>Testament. God made demands, not only ritualistic but also ethical, of his people in a<br \/>fashion similar to an ancient dowry or betrothal agreement. To fail to live up to the<br \/>stipulations resulted in the curse sanctions being enacted on God&#8217;s people.<\/p>\n<p>And this brings up another crucial point. God&#8217;s people, either individually or collectively,<br \/>are not immune to judgment. Their chosenness does not exempt them from God&#8217;s justice;<br \/>indeed, judgment, according to the Old Testament, begins with the household of God. It<br \/>is a singular mistake to muddle up the concept of chosenness or election and the concept<br \/>of salvation. As we have noted, the Old Testament has very little to say about<br \/>&#8220;everlasting life,&#8221; and when it speaks of &#8220;chosenness,&#8221; it does so not in terms of eternal<br \/>benefits to particular individuals.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, chosenness in the Old Testament normally has to do with God picking someone<br \/>or some group for a specific historical purpose, such as the choice of Cyrus to release<br \/>God&#8217;s people from exile in Babylon. But even when the concept is applied collectively to<br \/>Israel, it normally has the sense that God has chosen this people to be a light to the<br \/>nations, bearing witness to God&#8217;s character and demands, and to be a blessing to the<br \/>nations (e.g., the promises to Abraham). Election, then, has historical purposes in the Old<br \/>Testament, and little or nothing is said about personal eternal fringe benefits. The<br \/>corollary of this should be clear: later Christian concepts of election and salvation<br \/>(especially as blended together into one idea) ought not to be read back into the Old<br \/>Testament willy nilly. When dealing with the relationship of the Old Testament thought<br \/>world to the New Testament thought world, one must have a sense of progressive<br \/>revelation and the progress of a developing understanding of concepts such as election<br \/>and salvation. Missional election, however, is a concept carried over into the New<br \/>Testament.<\/p>\n<p><b>Nurturing a Sense of Progressive Revelation<\/b><br \/>This brings us to another important, indeed crucial, point. Biblical or canonical theology<br \/>and ethics, if they are even going to be attempted, should not be done in an ahistorical<br \/>manner, as if the Bible could be treated flatly as a thesaurus of theological and ethical<br \/>ideas in which &#8220;salvation&#8221; in Exodus means exactly the same thing as &#8220;saved by grace<br \/>through faith in Christ&#8221; means in Ephesians. If there is no sense of or sensitivity to the<br \/>way ideas develop over time and concepts are modified and change across the biblical<br \/>witness, if there is no sense of understanding of progressive revelation, then attempts at<br \/>biblical or canonical theology and ethics should be forsaken because such attempts will<br \/>run roughshod over the historical character and givenness of these wonderful texts. Don<br \/>Carson makes this helpful observation: &#8220;Precisely because God&#8217;s self-disclosure has<br \/>taken place over time, New Testament theology, as part of the larger discipline of biblical<br \/>theology, is committed to understanding the constitutive documents within the temporal<br \/>framework. In this respect, New Testament theology differs widely in emphasis from<br \/>systematic theology, which tends to ask atemporal questions of the biblical texts, thereby<br \/>eliciting atemporal answers.&#8221;10 But is the latter a legitimate exercise? If we denude New<br \/>Testament theology of its historical givenness, is such an exercise possible without<br \/>serious distortion and transformation of the New Testament material into something other<br \/>than it was intended to be and to say?<\/p>\n<p>It is true that the same God is revealed in the Old Testament and the New Testament, but<br \/>it is not true that God&#8217;s Old Testament people and New Testament people had the same<br \/>level of understanding or even the same understanding of that God. This is made quite<br \/>clear by comparing the Shema with its Christian modification in 1 Corinthians 8:6:<br \/>Christians refer the term &#8220;God&#8221; to the Father and the term &#8220;Lord&#8221; to a different person,<br \/>Jesus, yet paradoxically, they do not deny the oneness of God. What one could say is that<br \/>these various witnesses had compatible understandings of God.<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br \/>10D. A. Carson, &#8220;New Testament Theology,&#8221; in Dictionary of the Later New Testament and Its<br \/>Developments, ed. R. P. Martin and P. H. Davids (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1997), p. 808.<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<\/p>\n<p>As the author of Hebrews reminds us in Hebrews 1:1-2, the revelation was partial and<br \/>piecemeal in the Old Testament era, but now God has revealed himself fully in his Son.<br \/>This means that any biblical or canonical theology worth the paper it is written on will<br \/>have a clear sense of development, of before and after, of partially and more fully<br \/>revealed, of promise\/prophecy and fulfillment, and of typology. In other words, we must<br \/>have a historical way of thinking about these theological and ethical concepts and their<br \/>development, and we must conjure with the fact that some things that God revealed to<br \/>and demanded of his people in one era were either partial or took account of what Jesus<br \/>calls &#8220;the hardness of the human heart.&#8221; This is what it means to think in a selfconsciously<br \/>Christian manner about the Old Testament, to think christologically and<br \/>ecclesiologically about it, to think historically about it.<\/p>\n<p>From the Christian point of view, Christ is both the climax of all God&#8217;s revelation to<br \/>humankind and the hermeneutical key to understanding all of what has come before,<br \/>which was only preparatory for the coming of the Christ. This is not to say that God&#8217;s<br \/>love for Israel was mere prolegomena for what was to follow. Indeed not. It is to say,<br \/>however, that God always had in mind to save the world through the Jewish messiah, so<br \/>God&#8217;s love for Israel was not the end of the story or an end in itself; rather, it was the<br \/>means by which Israel could come to fulfill its destiny in the person of Jesus, who would<br \/>be the light of the world.<\/p>\n<p>If a former P<br \/>\nharisee such as Paul can say of the Mosaic law that it was only a<br \/>&#8220;childminder&#8221; (paidago4gos) of God&#8217;s people until Christ came, and when Christ came,<br \/>God&#8217;s people reached their majority and moved beyond the childminder or guardian and<br \/>so on to a new covenant, then we know that it will not suffice either to say that the new<br \/>covenant is just the old one renewed or to assume that the continuity with what came<br \/>before is dominant and the new elements in the new covenant are subdominant. The<br \/>whole discussion about the obsolescence of the Mosaic covenant in Galatians and<br \/>Hebrews prevents us from overstressing the continuity and underplaying the radical new<br \/>character of the new covenant in so many ways, both theologically and ethically.<br \/>I frankly state that I, as a Christian, assume the truth of the New Testament witness, and I<br \/>assume also that the hermeneutic of the New Testament writers and their way of viewing<br \/>and handling the Old Testament constitute the way Christians should attempt to view it<br \/>today, namely, eschatologically, viewing what has come before in the light of the<br \/>inbreaking kingdom, the coming of the Messiah, and the like. And what that meant was<br \/>not merely &#8220;new occasions teach new duties (and ethics)&#8221;; it meant a new understanding<br \/>of God, reenvisioned in the light of the significance of the Christ-event.<\/p>\n<p>Christ cannot be found under every rock of the Old Testament. Indeed, he cannot be<br \/>found under many, for there are few messianic texts in the Old Testament. A generous<br \/>estimate sees about 5 percent of the Old Testament having to do with messianism, the<br \/>longing for a future and more perfect ruler for God&#8217;s people. So when I say that we must<br \/>read the Old Testament in the light of the Christ-event, what I mean is not that we read<br \/>Christ back into the Old Testament at various junctures without a clear leading from the<br \/>Old Testament or New Testament itself (thus, e.g., Christ is not the angel of the Lord,<br \/>there was no incarnation of Christ before the incarnation), but rather that we have the<br \/>strong sense that that whole era was preparatory for the coming of the Christ to earth so<br \/>that &#8220;when the time had fully come God, sent forth his Son&#8221; (Gal 4:4).11 We can learn<br \/>much about the first person of the Trinity from the Old Testament itself, but not much<br \/>about the second and third persons of the Trinity; those two persons do not come fully to<br \/>light until and after the Christ-event. This way of studying the Bible not only prevents<br \/>Christian anachronism; it allows us to read the Old Testament with our Jewish friends<br \/>with profit and respect for the historical givenness and character of that text. After all, the<br \/>Old Testament was the Word of God for Jews before it ever became part of the Christian<br \/>Bible.<\/p>\n<p>When a covenant&#8217;s stipulations were broken in antiquity (and here we are talking about a<br \/>suzerain\/vassal treaty), then it was entirely up to the ruler to decide what to do next,<br \/>besides exact the curse sanctions of the original treaty that had to be put into play once<br \/>the law had been broken. If the ruler decided to relate in a positive way with a people<br \/>again, then a new covenant would have to be drawn up, and various of the ideas,<br \/>stipulations, and sanctions of the new covenant could be a repetition to one degree or<br \/>another of various of the previous ones. For example, honoring parents is affirmed in<br \/>both the Mosaic law and in the law of Christ (the imperatives that Christ gives). The<br \/>reason why Christians obey such an imperative is that it is in the new covenant, not that it<br \/>was once in an old one, as if the old one was still continuing.<\/p>\n<p>When a new covenant is cut, the old one becomes obsolete, if we are talking about the<br \/>same two parties doing the covenanting. In fact, when the curse sanction of a covenant is<br \/>enacted, that covenant is over.12 In the New Testament some of the authors seem to see<br \/>the death of Jesus as absorbing the curse sanction against sin in God&#8217;s people from the<br \/>previous covenants and thus as the end of that covenant. In Colossians Paul even calls<br \/>Jesus&#8217; death a &#8220;circumcision,&#8221; associating it with the covenant sign, and Mark, with his<br \/>rending of the veil of the temple, signals the end of an era of God&#8217;s presence located in<br \/>what was becoming, so to speak, the temple of doom. And one more thing: were it the<br \/>case that election equals eternal salvation in the New Testament, how do we explain the<br \/>fact that Jesus, the one person whom God did not need to save from fallenness, is the one<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>11Similarly, Howard Marshall stresses, &#8220;The concept of a threefoldness in God is simply not present in the<br \/>Old Testament&#8221; (&#8220;The Development of Doctrine,&#8221; in Beyond the Bible: Moving from Scripture to<br \/>Theology, with Kevin J. Vanhoozer and Stanley E. Porter [Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2004], p. 49).<br \/>12Nowhere does the Old Testament state anything to the effect that the Abrahamic covenant makes the<br \/>Noachic one obsolete or defunct. However, such a statement was unnecessary because the Noachic<br \/>covenant was not with the forebear of Israel, Abraham. It was a covenant with Noah and his family and<br \/>also with the earth. The Abrahamic covenant was the beginning of covenants with those who would come<br \/>to be called &#8220;Hebrews,&#8221; and the Noahic covenant was not. This is why, for instance, Paul says nothing<br \/>about the Noachic covenant but must talk about the Abrahamic and Mosaic ones.<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>person viewed as the Elect One in Ephesians and elsewhere in the New Testament?<br \/>Election and salvation, it turns out, are two different but related concepts in both<br \/>Testaments, but in no instance should we assume that the former idea simply implies<br \/>eternal salvation.<\/p>\n<p>A useful line of questioning involves God&#8217;s sovereignty as depicted in the Old<br \/>Testament. How does the Old Testament depict the way God exercises that sovereignty?<br \/>Does the Old Testament suggest either that God so controls everything that nothing<br \/>contrary to his will ever happens or that everything that does happen is part of his plan?<br \/>Certainly, the answer to that question must be no. God is not the ultimate author of sin,<br \/>and the Old Testament nowhere suggests such a view. One test case can be considered by<br \/>reflecting on how God relates to his own people. There is no more poignant depiction of<br \/>this than in Hosea 11:1-11:<\/p>\n<p>When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son.<br \/>The more I called them, the more they went from me; they kept sacrificing<br \/>to the Baals, and offering incense to idols. Yet it was I who taught<br \/>Ephraim to walk, I took them up in my arms; but they did not know that I<br \/>healed them. I led them with cords of human kindness, with bands of love.<br \/>I was to them like those who lift infants to their cheeks. I bent down to<br \/>them and fed them. They shall return to the land of Egypt, and Assyria<br \/>shall be their king, because they have refused to return to me. The sword<br \/>rages in their cities, it consumes their oracle-priests, and devours because<br \/>of their schemes. My people are bent on turning away from me. To the<br \/>Most High they call, but he does not raise them up at all.<br \/>How can I give you up, Ephraim? How can I hand you over, O Israel?<br \/>How can I make you like Admah? How can I treat you like Zeboiim? My<br \/>heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender. I will not<br \/>execute my fierce anger; I will not again destroy Ephraim; for I am God<br \/>and no mortal, the Holy One in your midst, and I will not come in wrath.<br \/>They shall go after the LORD, who roars like a lion; when he roars, his<br \/>children shall come trembling from the west. They shall come trembling<br \/>like birds from Egypt, and like doves from the land of Assyria; and I will<br \/>return them<br \/>\nto their homes, says the LORD. (NRSV)<\/p>\n<p>What should we conclude from this poignant prophetic poem? In this poem God is<br \/>depicted as a parent who calls his children, but they do not automatically or always<br \/>respond in the way God desires. They continue to behave sinfully over and over again,<br \/>and with moral consequences as well, such as being overcome by their enemies. But God,<br \/>like a spurned parent, will not give up on Israel. God keeps calling them from exile and<br \/>does not express his wrath against Israel&#8217;s sin. Rather, God roars like a mighty lion, and<br \/>his cubs finally recognize the sound of his voice and come running back to their parent.<\/p>\n<p>I submit that this reveals a great deal about God&#8217;s character. It reveals that God, who has<br \/>the power to simply organize all things and all the behavior of his people in a preordained<br \/>way, chooses instead to relate to his children in love and by means of love. He calls them<br \/>back, he does not compel or predetermine them to come back. There is something about a<br \/>love relationship that could not be predetermined anyway. Love can be freely given and<br \/>freely received only between personal beings. Love cannot be coerced, compelled, or<br \/>even just predetermined. And Yahweh had decided not to act like some humans would to<br \/>compel a response or to destroy those who do not respond according to the desired script.<br \/>The power of contrary choice has been given to God&#8217;s people, and they do not always<br \/>respond as they ought to do.<\/p>\n<p>But even more impressively, God has chosen to relate to his people in a loving manner,<br \/>wooing and winning their response. This picture of God comports with texts such as John<br \/>3:16-17, which tells us that God&#8217;s heart is big, and that he does not desire (and has not<br \/>predetermined) that anyone should perish. It comports with texts such as 1 Timothy 2:1-<br \/>6, which tell us that not only did Jesus die as a ransom for all the world, but also God<br \/>desires that all people come to a knowledge of the truth and be saved. Thus, accordingly,<br \/>the concepts of election and salvation look different when we understand that this is the<br \/>character of the gracious biblical God, and that his modus operandi is much as we find it<br \/>to be in places such Hosea 11:1-11 and 1 Timothy 2:1-6.<\/p>\n<p>This brings us to a crucial point. The Old Testament says very little about the coming<br \/>messiah, and yet on almost every page of the New Testament, Jesus takes center stage. I<br \/>suggest that there could be no clearer proof that we are not dealing merely with the<br \/>gestation of religious ideas over time. New Testament theology is not merely a natural<br \/>development of Old Testament theology, though there is considerable overlap, and the<br \/>same can be said about the ethics in the New Testament compared to the ethics in the Old<br \/>Testament.<\/p>\n<p>Something happened in space and time to change the thought world of the early Jews<br \/>who ended up writing books of the New Testament. That something was the coming of<br \/>the historical Jesus and the impact that he had on these Jews. To study New Testament<br \/>theology and ethics and leave Jesus out of the equation or relegate him and his teaching<br \/>to a presupposition for, or addendum to, New Testament thought is a huge mistake, and I<br \/>have attempted to avoid that mistake in these volumes.<\/p>\n<p>The person, work, teaching, and impact of Jesus are the chief reasons for the differences<br \/>between the Old Testament and New Testament thought worlds. Of course, the New<br \/>Testament writers, so to speak, pick up the Jesus ball and run with it in several different<br \/>creative directions, but it is Jesus who is the catalyst for all that is going on theologically<br \/>and ethically in the New Testament. This is why, in my view, it is beyond comprehension<br \/>that anyone would attempt to examine New Testament theology or ethics and leave Jesus<br \/>and the Jesus tradition out of consideration or treat it last, as Caird does, as if it had little<br \/>impact on figures such as Paul, James, and Peter, and as if they were simply doing<br \/>theologies all on their own after the fact, politely ignoring the teachings and life of their<br \/>founder. True, it is a challenge to show the relationship between the thought world of<br \/>Jesus and that of his followers, but it is not impossible, as I have tried to show in this<br \/>study.<\/p>\n<p><b>Relating the Old Testament and the New Testament Thought Worlds<\/b><br \/>Here, another Venn diagram may help us conceptualize both the relationship and the<br \/>overlap between the thought worlds of the Old Testament and the New Testament.<\/p>\n<p>[THE IMAGE HERE WAS NOT REPRODUCIBLE, PICTURE THREE INTERSECTING CIRCLES WITH A COMMON CENTER]<\/p>\n<p>This purely symmetrical representation of the relationship is a bit lopsided if we are<br \/>talking about the historical realities of the situation. The overlap between the Old<br \/>Testament and the New Testament thought worlds is greater than the overlap between<br \/>those of the Old Testament and the ancient Near East or between those of the New<br \/>Testament and the Greco-Roman milieu, but still we get the picture. The overlap between<br \/>the Old Testament and the New Testament symbolic universes is considerable, but it does<br \/>not consist of a majority of the material that we find in the New Testament, precisely<br \/>because so much of the New Testament is generated out of the Christ-event, which of<br \/>course affected none of the Old Testament writers.<\/p>\n<p>Or again, the overlap between the Old Testament and the ancient Near Eastern thought<br \/>worlds is considerable, as is the overlap between those of the New Testament and the<br \/>Greco-Roman milieu (in both theology and ethics), but it is less than the overlap between<br \/>the Old Testament and New Testament. What lies at the very center of the diagram,<br \/>where all the circles intersect? The answer is, of course, the profound concern for both<br \/>some form of God-talk or religion and some form of ethical norms related to the Godtalk.<br \/>Both the biblical monotheistic culture and the polytheistic culture were profoundly<br \/>concerned with the divine and its influence on the world of humanity and intensely<br \/>interested in what sort of behavior and belief satisfied the divine demands on human life.<br \/>In all of these cultures priests, temples, and sacrifices were at the heart of the divinehuman<br \/>exchange. Christianity offered something new in suggesting that the time had<br \/>arrived where literal temples and sacrifices, and the priests who attended them, were no<br \/>longer necessary. God had been propitiated once and for all, and sin had been expiated<br \/>once and for all, and a people had been delivered once and for all, and this changed the<br \/>whole concept of religious life and what amounted to true piety.<\/p>\n<p>Furthermore, there would be no more talk of a monarchial succession of kings. Jesus is<br \/>the final monarch, who would have no successors; he is the Son of Man, who would<br \/>personally rule forever in a forever kingdom (Dan 7:13-14). And last but not least, there<br \/>would not be a mere holy land. Christians were not worried at all about a doctrine of the<br \/>land or a particular holy place, for Christ was coming back to reign over the entire earth.<br \/>No doctrines of Torah, temple, or territory would be reaffirmed in their original senses in<br \/>the new covenant, and yet this did not mean that there was an abandonment of the<br \/>concept of laws and norms, or of temples or priests, or of a reign upon the earth.<\/p>\n<p>What changes is that all these concepts are now processed through the Christ-event and<br \/>its implications. It will be the law of Christ, the people as his sanctuary\/temple\/dwelling,<br \/>and Christ&#8217;s return to rule the whole earth that will be the transmutation found in the New<br \/>Testament. What is interesting about this transformation is that it has both spiritual and<br \/>eschatologica<br \/>\nl dimensions. Clearly enough, it was believed that Jesus would literally<br \/>come back and literally reign upon the earth, though he would not be rebuilding any<br \/>temples. The sacred zone would extend throughout the earth, and worship in spirit and<br \/>truth anywhere would be true worship. Yet also, all believers, male and female, can be<br \/>said to be already, here and now, enlisted in Christ&#8217;s new priesthood, and they can indeed<br \/>offer spiritual sacrifices of self and praise to God, all the while viewing their own bodies<br \/>and the body of Christ as temples, the places were Christ dwells.<\/p>\n<p>It cannot be emphasized enough that the Christian movement truly was something radical<br \/>in this regard in the eyes of a Greco-Roman person, for it placed far more emphasis on<br \/>belief and ethical behavior and far less emphasis on rituals performed correctly as being<br \/>at the heart of the religion. It also promised far fewer this-worldly benefits and far more<br \/>afterlife benefits, though most of them involve this world in its final transformed state.<br \/>Salvation in the New Testament is often spoken of in terms of the final state of affairs,<br \/>and not merely as some form of current healing, help, rescue, deliverance, though it could<br \/>begin with such things, sometimes at conversion. In other words, when the language of<br \/>&#8220;God&#8221; and &#8220;salvation&#8221; changes not merely in an eschatological direction but also in a<br \/>christological direction, then we are dealing with a profound refocusing of the symbol<br \/>system.<\/p>\n<p>In 1977 James Dunn wrote an important book entitled Unity and Diversity in the New<br \/>Testament: An Inquiry into the Character of Earliest Christianity.13 It essential thesis is<br \/>that a range of diversity is found within the New Testament canon. This is, of course,<br \/>true. But what is less well emphasized in Dunn&#8217;s study is the profound unity that is also<br \/>shared by the New Testament documents, especially when it comes to Jesus. But one<br \/>more point of importance is this: the diversity found in the New Testament is not<br \/>divergence or what might be called &#8220;dueling theological banjos.&#8221; Diversity, yes;<br \/>differences, yes; radical disagreements and contradictions, no. There is a unity that does<br \/>not amount to uniformity; it is a unity in harmony, not a monotone unity.<\/p>\n<p>Thus, we do not have one author saying that Jesus is the Son of Man, and another saying<br \/>that he is not. We do not have one author saying that Jesus is the divine Son of God, and<br \/>another saying that he is not. We do not have one author saying that the kingdom is<br \/>breaking in, and others saying that it is not. We do not have one author saying that<br \/>Gentiles must keep all of the Mosaic law, and another saying that they must not. The<br \/>degree of diversity is not nearly so great as Dunn wants to make it, and the degree of<br \/>unity is more profound than he seems to allow. There is a reason for this. The authors of<br \/>the New Testament are, as we have noted, part of a small minority sect that is well<br \/>connected and highly networked such that there was a basic agreement on many things in<br \/>terms of theology and ethics, especially about the gospel and Jesus. There is already<br \/>manifest in the New Testament a shared proto-orthodoxy about a variety of subjects, not<br \/>least the importance of Jesus for salvation. We have no Marcionite or Gnostic authors of<br \/>New Testament books not because of the later orthodoxy of the fourth century, when the<br \/>canonizing of the New Testament became finalized; rather, it is because there were no<br \/>such Christian writers or groups in the New Testament era, or if there were, they were<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>13 A second edition was published in 1990, and a third edition in 2006 (London: SCM Press).<br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<\/p>\n<p>treated as false teachers even then (see 1-3 John), and their writings were not shared<br \/>among the Christian communities. More particularly, there were no apostles or original<br \/>disciples of Jesus of such persuasions.<\/p>\n<p>In short, we should expect no more diversity within the New Testament documents than<br \/>we might find among the community documents at Qumran (by which I mean their<br \/>original documents, not merely their library books). All of the New Testament is written<br \/>by Jews who were part of this movement, with the possible exception of Luke, who<br \/>seems likely to have been a God-fearer, and perhaps the author of 2 Peter. In any case, all<br \/>of the New Testament books are written from a committed Jewish Christian perspective.<br \/>The range of opinion on matters of right belief is not great, nor is the range of opinion on<br \/>most ethical issues. The range of opinion on matters of orthopraxy is somewhat more<br \/>diverse.<\/p>\n<p><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Below you will find an excerpt from the second of my two large volumes studying the whole of&nbsp; NT Theology and Ethics.&nbsp; The first volume entitle &#8216;The Indelible Image: The Individual Witnesses&#8217;&nbsp; will be out next month at some point and is already selling on Amazon.&nbsp; Interspersed you will find footnotes as I had to&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":199,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-853","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v23.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Indelible Image: Relating the OT and NT Thought Worlds - The Bible and Culture<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/2009\/08\/the-indelible-image-relating-the-ot-and-nt-thought-worlds.html\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Indelible Image: Relating the OT and NT Thought Worlds - The Bible and Culture\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Below you will find an excerpt from the second of my two large volumes studying the whole of&nbsp; NT Theology and Ethics.&nbsp; The first volume entitle &#8216;The Indelible Image: The Individual Witnesses&#8217;&nbsp; will be out next month at some point and is already selling on Amazon.&nbsp; Interspersed you will find footnotes as I had to&hellip;\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/2009\/08\/the-indelible-image-relating-the-ot-and-nt-thought-worlds.html\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"The Bible and Culture\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2009-08-19T15:30:33+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"http:\/\/blog.beliefnet.com\/bibleandculture\/files\/import\/assets_c\/2009\/08\/indelibleimage-thumb-400x595-4529-thumb-200x297-7275.jpg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"Ben Witherington\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"The Indelible Image: Relating the OT and NT Thought Worlds - The Bible and Culture","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/2009\/08\/the-indelible-image-relating-the-ot-and-nt-thought-worlds.html","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"The Indelible Image: Relating the OT and NT Thought Worlds - The Bible and Culture","og_description":"Below you will find an excerpt from the second of my two large volumes studying the whole of&nbsp; 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A graduate of UNC, Chapel Hill, he went on to receive the M.Div. degree from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and a Ph.D. from the University of Durham in England. He is now considered one of the top evangelical scholars in the world, and is an elected member of the prestigious SNTS, a society dedicated to New Testament studies. Witherington has also taught at Ashland Theological Seminary, Vanderbilt University, Duke Divinity School and Gordon-Conwell. A popular lecturer, Witherington has presented seminars for churches, colleges and biblical meetings not only in the United States but also in England, Estonia, Russia, Europe, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Australia. He has also led tours to Italy, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Jordan, and Egypt. Witherington has written over thirty books, including The Jesus Quest and The Paul Quest, both of which were selected as top biblical studies works by Christianity Today. He also writes for many church and scholarly publications, and is a frequent contributor to the Beliefnet website. Along with many interviews on radio networks across the country, Witherington has been seen on the History Channel, NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, The Discovery Channel, A&amp;E, and the PAX Network.","url":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/author\/bwitherington"}]}},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/853","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/199"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=853"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/853\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=853"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=853"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/bibleandculture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=853"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}