intro to the gospels and acts

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  • 8/4/2019 Intro to the Gospels and Acts

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    Intro to the Gospels and ActsWith help from How to Read the Bible Book by Bookand The ESV Study Bible.

    Highly recommended resources! Seriously, buy them and read them!

    Jesus of Nazareth is the unmistakable centerpiece of the biblical story. The Gospels make it clear that his significance lies not simply

    his death, but also especially in his person, life, and teaching. Nonetheless, each evangelist (Gospel writer) in his own way demonstrat

    by way of narrative that the death and resurrection of Jesus are the high points of his story (fully one -fourth to one-third of each Gosp

    is given over to the events of the final week).

    The first three are synoptic (seeing Jesus through common eyes). Though Matthew and Luke use Mark in their telling of the Jes

    story, they set out on their own individual paths, all telling the same story, but each with his own concerns and emphases for the sake

    his implied readers. Lukes Gospel is unique in yet another way, because he narrates the story of Jesus in two aspects: First, his Gospe

    as do the others, tells about what Jesus began to do and to teach (Acts 1:1); second, in the book of Acts, he tells how the story

    Jesus continues, now through the power of the Spirit, in the ministry of the early church.

    Jesus of Nazareth is the Long-Awaited and Promised Messiah of the World

    The evangelists make it especially clear that you cannot understand Jesus without seeing how he fits into the Old Testament story th

    has preceded himas the climax and fulfillment of the hopes expressed almost from the beginning of the story. On the one hand, theall see Jesus as clearly fitting into the prophetic traditionby his mighty words, mighty deeds, and symbolic actions (e.g., cleansing th

    temple; cursing the fig tree)and so he is perceived by the crowds (Matt 21:46; Luke 7:16; 13:13). At the same time, all of them ar

    writing from this side of the resurrection and know that he is none other than the expected Son of David (Mark 10:4748), God

    Son (Ps 2:7; Matt 3:17; 17:5; and parallels), who comes to his people as their King.

    One key to this aspect of their narratives lies with the Old Testament understanding of the role of the king in Israel, who is often see

    both to represent God to the people and to embody the people of Israel in his own person. This can be seen especially in the book

    Psalms and in the suffering servant songs in Isaiah 4253. It will be helpful for you as you read the Gospels to note how the evangelis

    tell the story of Jesus from this perspective. Take, for example, his baptism and the testing in the desert, where Jesus succeeds at th

    very places where Israel failed, as his own citations from Deuteronomy 68 make plain. Or take the discourse in John 15:18, whe

    Jesus, picking up an image of Israel from the Old Testament (Ps 80:819; Isa 5:17; Jer 2:21), speaks ofhimselfas the true vine and h

    disciples as the branches. And his death is clearly seen in light of Isaiahs suffering servant (Isa 52:1353:12), as the one who bears t

    sins of the people, thus both representing the people and drawing them into the story themselves.

    For each Gospel (and the book of Acts, too), the evangelist ties the story of Jesus to the story of Israel as the fulfillment of Jewis

    messianic hopes and expectations. Related to this, each Gospel was written at a time when Gentile inclusion in the grand story was

    full swing; and rejection of Jesus by many of the Jews is often highlighted.

    The Kingdom Already but Not Yet

    Also related to their composition and relationships to one another, is the essential message about the coming of the kingdom (

    already and not yet). Again, the message of the NT cannot be separated from that of the OT. The OT promised that God would sa

    his people, beginning with the promise that the seed of the woman would triumph over the seed of the Serpent (Gen. 3:15). God

    saving promises were developed especially in the covenants he made with his people: (1) the covenant with Abraham promised God

    people land, seed, and universal blessing (Gen. 12:13); (2) the Mosaic covenant pledged blessing if Israel obeyed the Lord (Exodus 1

    24); (3) the Davidic covenant promised a king in the Davidic line forever, and that through this king the promises originally made tAbraham would become a reality (2 Samuel 7; Psalm 89; 132); and (4) the new covenant promised that God would give his Spirit to h

    people and write his law on their hearts, so that they would obey his will (Jer. 31:3134; Ezek. 36:2627).

    As John the Baptist and Jesus arrived on the scene, it was obvious that Gods saving promises had not yet been realized. The Roma

    ruled over Israel, and a Davidic king did not reign in the land. The universal blessing promised to Abraham was scarcely a reality, fo

    even in Israel it was sin, not righteousness, that reigned. John the Baptist therefore summoned the people of Israel to repent and

    receive baptism for the forgiveness of their sins, so that they would be prepared for a coming One who would pour out the Spirit an

    judge the wicked.

    Jesus of Nazareth represents the fulfillment of what John the Baptist prophesied. Jesus, like John, announced the imminent arrival

    the kingdom of God (Mark 1:15), which is another way of saying that the saving promises found in the OT were about to be realized. T

    kingdom of God, however, came in a most unexpected way. The Jews had anticipated that when the kingdom arrived, the enemies

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    God would be immediately wiped out and a new creation would dawn (Isa. 65:17). Jesus taught, however, that the kingdom w

    present in his person and ministry (Luke 17:2021)and yet the foes of the kingdom were not instantly annihilated. The kingdom d

    not come with apocalyptic power but in a small and almost imperceptible form. It was as small as a mustard seed, and yet it would gro

    into a great tree that would tower over the entire earth. It was as undetectable as leaven mixed into flour, but the leaven wou

    eventually transform the entire batch of dough (Matt. 13:3133). In other words, the kingdom was already present in Jesus and h

    ministry, but it was not yet present in its entirety. It was alreadybut not yet. It was inaugurated but not consummated. Jes

    fulfilled the role of the Servant of the Lord in Isaiah 53, taking upon himself the sins of his people and suffering death for the forgivene

    of their sins. The day of judgment was still to come in the future, even though there would be an interval between Gods begi nning

    fulfill his promises in Jesus (the kingdom inaugurated) and the final realization of his promises (the kingdom consummated). Jesus, wh

    has been reigning since he rose from the dead, will return and sit on his glorious throne and judge between the sheep and the goa

    (Matt. 25:3146). Hence, believers pray both for the progressive growth and for the final consummation of the kingdom in the word

    your kingdom come (Matt. 6:10).

    The Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) focus on the promise of the kingdom, and John expresses a similar truth with th

    phrase eternal life. Eternal life is the life of the age to come, which will be realized when the new creation dawns. Remar kable

    Johns Gospel is the claim that those who believe in the Son enjoy the life of the coming age now. Those who have put their faith

    Jesus have already passed from death to life (John 5:2425), for he is the resurrection and the life (John 11:25). Still, John also loo

    ahead to the day of the final resurrection, when every person will be judged for what he or she has done (John 5:2829). While t

    focus in John is on the initial fulfillment of Gods saving promises now, the future and final fulfillment is in view as well.

    The already-not-yet theme dominates the entire NT and functions as a key to grasping the whole story (see chart). The resurrection

    Jesus indicates that the age to come has arrived, that now is the day of salvation. In the same way the gift of the Holy Spirit represen

    one of Gods end-time promises. NT writers joyously proclaim that the promise of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit has been fulfille

    (e.g., Acts 2:1621; Rom. 8:916; Eph. 1:1314). The last days have come through Jesus Christ (Heb. 1:12), through whom we hareceived Gods final and definitive word. Since the resurrection has penetrated history and the Spirit has been given, we might thi

    that salvation history has been completedbut there is still the not yet. Jesus has been raised from the dead, but believers await th

    resurrection of their bodies and must battle against sin until the day of redemption (Rom. 8:1013, 23; 1 Cor. 15:1228; 1 Pet. 2:1

    Jesus reigns on high at the right hand of God, but all things have not yet been subjected to him (Heb. 2:59).