Q&A with Nancy Guthrie on
The Promised One: Seeing Jesus in Genesis
Q. What can readers expect in The
Promised One: Seeing Jesus
in Genesis?
A. This book is a ten-week Bible study through
the book of Genesis oriented specifically for what Genesis
has to show us about who Christ will be and why he will come.
Each weekly lesson includes questions for personal study,
a teaching chapter that emphasizes how the passage fits into
the bigger story of redemptive history, and something I’ve
never seen in a Bible study before—a brief section on how
the passage uniquely points to what is yet to come at the
consummation of Christ’s kingdom when he returns—as well
a guide for group discussion.
My longing is for women’s Bible studies in our churches to have more
of a sense of the big story of the Bible with Christ at the center,
and my aim has been to create resources that provide sound biblical
theology and gospel-saturated application presented in a personal and
passionate way.
Q. What would you say to someone who says, "I've
studied Genesis before. I don’t need that again"?
A.I would say that the Bible is living and active
and it always has something new to say to us because we read it
in context of the struggles and questions we have now that we might
not have had when we studied that passage before. But more significantly
I would ask, since we know that the whole Bible—Old and New Testaments—is
really about Jesus, what did you learn about who Jesus is and what
he came to accomplish from your previous study of Genesis?
The truth
is, most of us have never studied Genesis expecting to see anything
about Jesus. We’ve taught and been taught Genesis and most of the
Old Testament as a collection of stories about people who provide
us with examples to follow. But as we read the Old Testament we
don’t want to merely make observations about the behavior of the
godly and godless and then try harder to be like the godly and
less like the godless. The Old Testament is an uncompleted story,
a promise waiting for its fulfillment. And Jesus is that fulfillment.
So once we know where the story was leading all along—to Christ—it
makes sense to go back and read it again in that light, through
those glasses.
Q. But how does Genesis teach us about Jesus?
A. Jesus said to the Jewish religious leaders
at one point: "You search the scriptures because you think
they give you eternal life. But the Scriptures point to me!"
(John 5:39). And of course the scriptures he was talking
about are the books of the Old Testament. Later, when he
walked with the two of his followers on the road to Emmaus
we read that, "Jesus took them through the writings of Moses
and all the prophets explaining from all the Scriptures the
things concerning himself" (Luke 24:27). To explain to these
followers who he was and why he had to die and rise again,
Jesus began in Genesis probably saying something like, "This
is who I am . . . the is why I came . . . this is the curse
I came to bear . . . this is the mercy I came to show . .
. . . . I am the blessing God promised . . . I am the sacrifice
God provided."
Q. Can you give us an example of what you mean?
A. When we hear Jesus say that the scriptures "point
to me," we realize that the Bible is not primarily about what God wants
us to do, but about who God wants us to see. And it is Jesus we see
as we study Genesis together. As we gaze into the wonder of creation
we see Jesus as the agent of creation and the light that was in the
world before there was a sun or moon. As we agonize with Adam and Eve
over the curse that comes after the fall, we see Jesus as the promised
offspring who will crush the head of the serpent. In the terror of
the flood, we see Jesus as the ark of safety in whom we are saved in
the storm of God’s judgment. When we walk up the mountain with Abraham
and Isaac, we see that they point us toward God’s provision of a once-for-all
sacrifice—his beloved Son. As we look with Joseph into the faces of
the brothers who sought to kill him, we see a foreshadowing of the
one who could have said the to those who nailed him to the cross, "It
wasn’t you who sent me here, but God."
Q. Why is it important for us to study the Old Testament
this way?
A. For many reasons! For one, this is the way
Jesus taught the disciples to read and understand the Old Testament.
When we read the gospels and listen to the sermons in the book
of Acts and work our way through the epistles, we see that they
taught the Old Testament just as Jesus had taught them to. They
help us to see that without Jesus, the Old Testament is an uncompleted
story, and without the Old Testament we simply can’t make sense
of the ministry of Jesus.
Another reason would be that without a
greater understanding of the bigger picture of the biblical story,
we really can’t make sense of so many of the smaller parts that
we read. But as we grow in our understanding of God’s intention
for his glory to be manifest over the whole earth, and as we develop
a firmer grasp on the way in which he is working out his plan for
the redemption of all things, we are better able to figure out
many of the parts of the Bible that perplex us.
Q. A number of your previous eight books have been
on the topic of grief or loss, coming out of the experience of the
death of two of your children. Does that experience play a part in
The Promised One?
A. When you’ve experienced first-hand the effects
the curse of death that came because of Adam and Eve’s sin, your
longing grows for that curse to be gone for good. It makes you
hate sin and the power sin has to hurt us in this broken world.
And when we go to Genesis, looking to find Christ there, we see
that not only is the grace that will come through Christ promised
in the midst of the curse, but also that he will be the one who
will take this curse upon himself at the cross. The thorns that
began to grow from the ground as a result of the curse were thrust
upon his head. Because of what he accomplished on the cross, we
can look forward to the new heaven and new earth in which there
will be “no more curse.” I, for one, have a longing for that day
like never before because of the losses in my life.
Joni Eareckson Tada says that most of us are content to swim in
the shallow end of the theological pool when things are good, but
suffering and sorrow push us into the deep end of the pool, and
that has certainly been my experience. We have questions that need
answers, and it is to the scriptures that I have turned to find
those answers. My experience has caused to me to dig deep into
God’s word to figure out more about who God is and what he’s doing
in the world and therefore in my life. And the truth is, the deeper
I go, the more amazed I am at the goodness and glory of his plans,
and the more confident I am that he can be trusted.
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