If you struggle with how to understand the bible as a whole, this is your book. It is clear and concise, effortlessly moving you through the bible's storyline but along way giving you solid interpretive guidelines by which to follow in future bible reading. If you can't see the forest through the trees of scripture, this book shows you how, and will encourage you to press forward. It is fairly rudimentary for the more experienced bible reader/teacher, but if that's you, that doesn't mean you won't be helped. To adapt a C.S. Lewis quote, we can always go "higher up and deeper in[to]" the Gospel, and seeing a fresh retelling of the Bible's story, centered on the person and work of Jesus, is always beneficial. Also, I love how this book inspires a (lower C) catholicity in that all evangelical iterations of Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, Anglicans, Whatever-ists can all give a hearty "amen" to every part of this book. Though there are varying biblical theology systems that manifest in the denominational diversity we have today, there is one (big B) Biblical Theology that all we evangelicals can agree on. This book drives that unity home in that the arc of biblical history hinges on and finds its fulfillment in the person and work of Jesus Christ. Certainly endorse this book.
Top quotes:
18. Biblical theology helps us to grasp this main purpose by looking at each passage of Scripture in light of the whole Bible so that we understand how every part of Scripture is related to Jesus.
18. Reading Scripture rightly means knowing where each book fits into its overarching narrative. And knowing the overarching narrative helps us read and understand accurately each event, character, or lesson that’s been given to us as part of God’s progressively revealed Word. Understanding the whole story of Scripture clarifies who Jesus Christ is and what the Gospel is.
25. [W]hen Jesus surveyed the Old Testament Scriptures – the Book of Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms or Writings – he intended for his followers to understand that all of these books were written about him. This is how Luke [24:44-47] tells it: “He interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself.”
29. Imagine that each book of the Bible shines like a star. But it’s only when you zoom out far enough that you begin to see that these stars form a giant and glorious constellation. Biblical theology analyzes and synthesizes each star, and then zooms out to view the breathtaking panoramic constellation of divine glory. And what’s at the center of this glorious constellation? God the Father sending his Son through the Spirit to win a people for his own glory.
69. The mission Jesus gave to his churches is a difficult and costly one. Following him in faith and obedience will certainly require enduring persecution and suffering for the sake of the gospel. But as believers look forward to the hope of his return, believers also look back and remember that the one who is now risen and exalted on high was also the servant who suffered and died.
76. When we use the Bible to prove our point without regard for the context of the passage, we are proof-texting. Proof-texting reads meaning into a passage instead of reading meaning out of the passage. Proof-texting is easy because you don’t have to do the serious and careful and prayerful work of understanding the author’s intended meaning.
92. God’s plan of salvation is revealed progressively through Scripture, innating in Jesus Christ. The way God reveal this plan developed like a seed that grows into a tree. And recognizing where the passage you’re studying fits into this covenantal development is crucial to proper interpretation.
98. We must read Christologically. No matter what passage you are teaching from, you must always ask how it relates to the person and work of Christ… we should labor to understand where this text fits into the big story. We’ve seen that Jesus is the Hero; so we must ask questions like: What does this passage reveal about Jesus Christ, his life, and his work? Does this text point forward to Christ’s first coming? Does it anticipate Christ’s return? How does the gospel affect my understanding of the text? How does the text anticipate and reflect upon the gospel?
102. Biblical theology helps us understand that Jesus Christ is to be faithfully proclaimed as the end, the goal, and the centerpiece of Scripture, since “all the promises of God find their Yes in him” (2 Cor. 1:20).
116. The busyness of life, hurrying along to the next thing, and living nonstop until you drop can have the unintended effect of blinding us to what’s really important, what’s really beautiful, and what’s really precious, even if it happens to be right in front of us. Life in this fallen world can easily inoculate our hearts from feeling wonder and awe, even when we have the privilege of beholding something that’s truly amazing and astounding and gloriously beautiful.