A parent who believes "the everlasting gospel," doesn't want to be misled into 
"the mark of the beast," sincerely wants to "follow the Lamb whithersoever He 
goeth," longs to receive the "seal of God," is burdened for her near-teen 
daughter who loves to read. They've been reading the Bible. Yes, also books 
about the Bible, but they've been reading the Book itself, and that includes 
the Old Testament.
The child is curious, doesn't want anything held back from her. They're 
perplexed: sometimes the true God comes through as kind and merciful, 
forgiving, loving; but there are also places where He seems hard, severe, 
threatening most severe punishment on His people who seem bent on rebelling 
against Him. Much in the books of the Old Testament prophets seems frankly 
difficult reading for a sensitive child. We've sensed the problem in our own 
"family worship time" when we've read Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and even 
Hosea--yes, "balanced" with New Testament reading.

But how can one understand the way God so often threatens His people of old? 
Why that seemingly endless conflict? Why the almost constant unpleasant tension 
between Him and His people? Actually, you don't see it until you come to Exodus 
19. In Genesis there's a pleasant relationship between God and His people, for 
example, God making those fantastic promises of "blessings" galore to Abraham 
and his descendants, and His tender dealings with Isaac and Jacob. He writes 
His holy law on their hearts.

Then suddenly, a change: He must write it on tables of stone amid thunder, 
lightning, trumpet blowing, earthquakes, and a fearful death boundary around 
Mount Sinai. And almost from then on, rebellious, backsliding people slipping 
back into pagan worldliness right up into Malachi, until finally we get to 
Matthew where they crucify their Lord of glory.

What happened in Exodus 19? The people themselves formed the old covenant (vss. 
4-8), whereas Abraham had believed the new covenant. The new one is the 
one-sided promise of God; the old is the "faulty" promise of the people. That's 
why a major portion of the Bible is the "Old Testament" (or covenant), leading 
us back to where Abraham was to be "justified by faith" under the new covenant 
(Gal 3:24). Let's make the new covenant clear to our children!

--Robert J. Wieland

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Deaf-Blind Inspirational Life Group" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/dbilg?hl=en.

Reply via email to