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Feb 23, 2005 · Jesus came to fulfill all that was written in the Law and the Prophets. All of it was pointing to him, even where it is not explicitly prophetic. He accomplishes what the Law required.
Jan 16, 2023 · Answer. The millennium (also known as the millennial kingdom) is the 1,000-year reign of Jesus after the tribulation and before the Great White Throne Judgment of the wicked. During the millennium, Jesus will reign as king over Israel and all the nations of the world (Isaiah 2:4; 42:1).
God’s revelation throughout the Old Testament prefigures, anticipates, and announces beforehand the redemption that he would accomplish in the person and work of his incarnate Son, Jesus Christ.
- Jesus Recognized The Entire Old Testament as Authoritative
- Jesus Recognized The Entire Extent of The Old Testament
- Jesus Cited Fourteen Different Old Testament Books
Jesus’ view of the Old Testament can be seen by the way He used the Old Testament Scripture. He recognized the entire Old Testament as Scripture, He accepted the two main divisions of the Old Testament, the Law and the Prophets, and He quoted from fourteen individual books of the Old Testament.
The Old Testament, in its entirety, was recognized as authoritative by the Lord Jesus. He called it the Scriptures. We read Him saying the following: To Him, there was a completed Old Testament Scripture. In other words, He recognized every book as inspired by God.
The New Testament records Jesus referring specifically to fourteen different Old Testament books. The evidence is as follows: When dealing with the subject of marriage, Jesus cited the Book of Genesis. We read of this in Matthew: He trusted this passage as giving God’s authoritative Word on the matter. Jesus quoted from the Book of Exodus which rec...
- Jesus is the Last Adam. From the beginning, the full story of Scripture reveals the full glory of Christ—even with Adam. Hunter and Wellum remind us that Adam was “not just the first man in God’s story.
- Jesus is testified to by ‘the Law and the Prophets’ Paul is clear about Christ’s whereabouts in the Old Testament: “But now apart from the law the righteousness of God has been made known, to which the Law and the Prophets testify” (Romans 3:21).
- Noah: a Foretaste of judgment and salvation through Christ. If Jesus is the last Adam, Noah was meant as a new Adam. In his story, two themes emerge, judgment and salvation—which offer a foretaste of Jesus in the Old Testament.
- Isaac: Jesus is the “seed” of Abraham and true substitute. Remember, God promised Abraham that “all peoples on earth will be blessed through you” (Genesis 12:3), and then repeated it: “Through your offspring all nations on earth will be blessed” (Genesis 22:18).
Sep 14, 2018 · “Jesus Christ is the Messiah, and therefore, we dare not simply appropriate the Old Testament laws for our lives as though he had not come.” So at the end of the book of Matthew, we read, “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19).
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Jesus’s view of the Scriptures was similar to his contemporaries—accepting their completely divine origin, reliability, and authority in our lives—but also markedly different—seeing their judgment of ethnocentrism, their Christological nature, and their implications for the Levitical purity laws.