Nipate

Forum => Controversial => Topic started by: GeeMail on December 23, 2014, 12:52:17 PM

Title: The gospel in a nutshell
Post by: GeeMail on December 23, 2014, 12:52:17 PM
This is the RSS (Real Simple Syndication) of the Word.

http://www.absg.adventist.org/2014/4Q/TE/PDFs/ETQ414_13.pdf

December 21

The Gospel in the Old Testament
“For we also have had the gospel preached to us, just as they did;
but the message they heard was of no value to them, because those
who heard did not combine it with faith” (Heb. 4:2, NIV).
This verse is startling in its implications. Foremost is that the gospel, not simply “good news” but the good news, was preached in the Old Testament. Second, it was preached then just as in New Testament times. There is no hint that there was any difference in the message itself. The problem, therefore, was not with the message but with the way it was heard. Today, too, different people can hear the same gospel
message very differently. How crucial, then, that we surrender ourselves in utter faith to the teaching of the Word so that when the gospel is preached we hear it correctly.
Look at the following verses and summarize the gospel message in
each:
Gen. 3:15
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Exod. 19:4–6
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Pss. 130:3, 4; 32:1–5
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Isa. 53:4–11
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Jer. 31:31–34
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Did you notice a common refrain? God intervenes to save us; He forgives our sins and puts “enmity” in us toward sin so that we can be “willing and obedient” (Isa. 1:19).
One (Jesus) died for the many, bore their (our) iniquities, and justifies the undeserving. The new covenant is different from the old covenant because the law is written in the
heart, and sins are “remember[ed] no more” (Heb. 8:12).
In short, forgiveness and the new birth are a package: justification and sanctification represent God’s solution to the sin problem. These passages could be multiplied, for the message is the same throughout the Bible: despite our sin, God loves us and has done all that is possible to save us from it.

Question to ponder: How can we, as people who believe in the importance of keeping the law, protect ourselves from the error of believing that law-keeping is what justifies us? Why is that not always so easy to do?