We tend to look to the New
Testament to tell us about Jesus, yet it was the Old Testament about
which Jesus said, "the Scriptures point to me!" In Discovering
Jesus in the Old Testament, Nancy Guthrie takes readers from Genesis through
Malachi shining the light of Christ on the promise of a descendent
who will put an end to the curse of sin, the story of a father who
offers up his son as a sacrifice, the symbol of a temple where people
can meet with God, the prophecy of a servant who will suffer, the person
of a king who will rule with righteousness—and so much more. Day by
day throughout the year, readers will see the beauty of Christ in fresh
new ways, creating a deeper understanding and appreciation for who
Jesus is and what he accomplished through his Incarnation, Cross and
Resurrection.

Q&A with Nancy about The One Year Book of
Discovering Jesus in the Old Testament
Most people turn to the New Testament to read about Christ,
so how do we discover Jesus in the Old Testament?
The Old Testament is filled with people, patterns, symbols, and stories
that point to Christ. In fact, without the light that Christ shines
on the Old Testament, it is an unfinished story, an unfulfilled promise.
Unless we read the Old Testament through the lens of Christ, we simply
can’t understand how God can be just and yet extend mercy to sinners.
Without Christ, we can’t understand how God will be able to bring sinners
into his holy presence. Christ answers the questions, resolves the
tensions, and is the substance behind the symbols of the Old Testament.
What prompted you to devote nearly a year to putting
together The One Year Book of Discovering Jesus
in the Old Testament?
A while ago I became captivated with the scene Luke writes about in
chapter 24 of his Gospel. Two disciples were on the road to Emmaus,
devastated that the one they thought was the promised Messiah had been
crucified. Jesus came and walked beside them and expressed a little
frustration that these two Jewish followers who would have grown up
being trained in the Torah had not understood from the Old Testament
that the Messiah would suffer before he was glorified. Luke writes
that, "Jesus took them through the writings of Moses and all the prophets,
explaining from all the Scriptures the things concerning himself (Luke
24:25-27)." When I read this I want to say, "Luke, don’t stop there!"
I wish he had recorded the details of this entire conversation, because
I would love know exactly what Jesus pointed to in Genesis and Leviticus
and Psalms and Jonah and Hosea and the rest of the Old Testament and
said, "This is about me...This is about the curse I came to bear...This
is about the mercy I came to lavish on sinners...This is about
the sufficiency of my salvation...This is about my deliverance
from slavery to sin...This is about the judgment that was poured
out on me at the cross..." The One Year Book
of Discovering Jesus in the Old Testament reflects my own journey through the Old Testament
to seek to discover what Jesus might have pointed to on that day to
help them to understand clearly who he was and what he came to do.
For many people, this is a new way of reading and understanding
the Old Testament. Is this the way you have always understood it?
Not at all. I was that little girl who always had all the answers growing
up in Sunday School. But for most of my life, I’ve seen the Old Testament
as a series of stories about people who provided examples of how to
live or how not to live the life of faith. Only in recent years have
I begun to understand that the Bible is one story of God’s accomplishing
redemption through Christ. Honestly, writing this book was my way of
re-orienting the way I have found instruction and hope in the Old Testament.
I worked my way through the Old Testament asking how each passage pictured
Christ’s person or work or pointed to a need that only he would meet.
What was the process like for you?
The study for and writing of this book has been a profound learning
experience that has left me well aware of how much more I have to learn.
But it has been much more than a process of academic discovery. It
has inspired me to worship. Over and over again I found myself at my
computer moved to tears and brought to my knees by a fresh glimpse
of the grace of God in Christ pictured in Old Testament figures and
events. For example, while working on this book I first saw the connection
between the thorns introduced as part of the curse in Genesis 3 and
the thorns pressed into Christ’s brow at the crucifixion. What a sovereign
God we serve that even in this painful detail of Christ’s experience
we would see that God was accomplishing his plan first articulated
in the Garden—that Christ would take upon himself the curse of sin.
The
Old Testament provides vivid pictures of the person and work of Christ
that help us to see it from a different angle. As we imagine Abraham’s
agony as he walked up the mountain preparing to offer up Isaac, we
sense the cost the Father paid who "gave his only begotten son."
When we read David’s psalm imploring God to wash away his sin and
make him clean, we can’t help but worship the Christ whose blood
makes forgiveness available to sinners who don’t deserve it.
What have been some of your sources as you’ve put together
The One Year Book of Discovering Jesus in the
Old Testament?
I’ve listened to and read dozens and dozens of sermons by men who capably
preach Christ from the Old Testament such as Tim Keller, Bryan Chapell,
Sinclair Ferguson, and Ed Clowney, and used commentaries by those who
are adept at presenting Christ from the Old Testament such as Philip
Ryken, Kent Hughes, and Iain Duguid. I’ve also been helped tremendously
by books such as Clowney’s The Unfolding Mystery, Christopher Wright’s
Knowing Jesus through the Old Testament and Gospel & Kingdom by
Graeme Goldsworthy.
What do you hope the readers of The
One Year Book of Discovering Jesus in the Old Testament will take away from it?
I hope it will do for them what it has done for me. I have stood back
in wonder at the magnificence of God’s plan for redemption and at his
providence and power that are accomplishing that plan. As readers see
how the Old Testament prepares us for the person and work of Christ,
I hope they will move closer to worshiping him according to his marvelous
and matchless worth.
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