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In this episode, Duffey and Tyler discuss biblical hermeneutics and Redemptive-Historical interpretation. This continues the series from Tyler and the 5-Fold hermeneutic.
What's on the menu for today's discussion? Topical? Textual? Verse by verse?No! It's the other white meat: Redemptive Historical Preaching!I would actually liken it to red meat since Redemptive Historical Preaching is a form of Expository Preaching. From the vaults of the "Cross-Eyed" Podcast with Bryant Rueda, we are serving up much food for thought concerning the Redemptive Historical approach to preaching. * Why is Redemptive Historical Preaching Important?* What is its relation to Christ-centered hermeneutics?* Is there a Redemptive Historical formula or algorithm to follow?* Do we set aside a Literal-Grammatical Hermeneutic?* Is it Scriptural?* and more!In today's environment, the Redemptive Historical approach to preaching may seem alien. Is Redemptive Historical preaching from Mars and Expository Preaching from Venus?Gird your loins as we scratch the surface on the theory and nuts and bolts of Redemptive Historical Preaching!"For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God; and are become such as have need of milk, and not of strong meat.For every one that useth milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness: for he is a babe.But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age, even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil." Hebrews 5:12-14 (KJV).Resources:https://urbanpuritano.com/podcast/cross-eye-biblicism-a-back-to-basics-conversation-featuring-bryant-ruedahttps://urbanpuritano.com/podcast/biblical-interpretation-according-to-calvinismhttps://urbanpuritano.com/podcast/a-christocentric-alley-oophttps://urbanpuritano.com/podcast/jerusalem-and-jesus-the-shadow-of-christ-in-the-conquest-of-zion
March 27, 2024 Dr. JOSEPH C. MORECRAFT III, Pastor of Heritage Presbyterian Church of Cumming, GA. & author of the 8-volume commentary on the Westminster Larger Catechism titled, “Authentic Christianity”, who will address: “The MOST SIGNIFICANT REDEMPTIVE HISTORICAL EVENT BETWEEN CREATION & the CROSS of CHRIST & ITS RELEVANCE FOR TODAY” Subscribe: iTunes TuneIn Android RSS Feed Listen:
You, too, can be a Master of Sacred Scripture! The Scripture of the Old and New Testament is unique theological literature. The inspired Word of God is Special Revelation. From God to us through His messengers throughout time, space, and redemptive history. As such, it is understandable via ordinary methods of learning appropriate to its nature. After all, its nature is to communicate. Therefore, don't despair!You, too, can grasp the communicative intent of God's Word. The question is, "How?"Some say a Literal Grammatico-Historical method will do the trick. Others argue for a Redemptive-Historical method. Still, others opt for various other methods. What are some basic, Biblically informed presuppositions that affect the nitty-gritty work of "opening the Scriptures"? What should be the confessional Calvinist's interpretive control beliefs for the concrete work of drawing out a true sense of Scripture?Today's episode is a chilled out conversation from Bryant Rueda's Cross-Eyed Podcast from 2022 where we scratch the surface of such matters. Get busy reading the Word or get busy dying! Hope it is stimulating and a blessing to you! Suggested resources for further study:The Reformation and the Right Reading of Scripture by Iain ProvanA Basic Guide to Interpreting the Bible: Playing by the Rules by Robert SteinHermeneutics as Apprenticeship: How the Bible Shapes Our Interpretive Habits and Practices by David I StarlingBiblical Hermeneutics: Five Views (Spectrum Multiview Book Series) by Stanley Porter(Editor), Beth Stovell (Editor)Engaging the Old Testament: How to Read Biblical Narrative, Poetry, and Prophecy Well by Dominick S. HernándezOpening Scripture by Patrick FairbairnAll Roads Lead to the Text: Eight Methods of Inquiry into the Bible by Dean B. DeppeA Biblical-Theological Introduction to the Old Testament: The Gospel Promised by Miles V. Van PeltA Biblical-Theological Introduction to the New Testament: The Gospel Realized by Michael J. KrugerAs always, keep it locked on urbanpuritano.com and check out https://youtu.be/VZB4o1zHODM for the original podcast from which today's episode was chopped and screwed! Thanks to Bryant "John Donne" Rueda!
Kim addresses the covenantal focus of biblical eschatology, concentrating on our union with Jesus Christ and His life, death, burial, and resurrection. Redemption accomplished and redemption applied comes back into the conversation with a much deeper reality and context. Christ's full mission of bringing in God's Kingdom is Definitive, Progressive, and Final and is worked out in the historical past, present, and future.
Ryan Noha and Camden Bucey speak with Lane Tipton on the heels of recording the sixth course in our Fellowship in Reformed Apologetics: “Christology and Redemptive-Historical Hermeneutics.”
Ryan Noha and Camden Bucey speak with Lane Tipton on the heels of recording the sixth course in our Fellowship in Reformed Apologetics: “Christology and Redemptive-Historical Hermeneutics.” Chapters 00:07 Introduction 09:00 Van Til’s Christology and Hermeneutics 12:53 The Great Debate Today and Other Books on the Subject 20:58 Going Deeper than Evidences 30:36 Modern Christologies […]
Ric Rodeheaver | Acts 2,8,10-11,19; 1 Corinthians 14
In this episode of Regener8d Radio, Gregg sits down with Dr. Richard Barcellos, who is pastor of Grace Reformed Baptist Church (www.grbcav.org), Palmdale, CA, and author of In Defense of the Decalogue: A Critique of New Covenant Theology, The Family Tree of Reformed Biblical Theology, The Lord's Supper as a Means of Grace: More than a Memory, and Getting the Garden Right: Adam's work and God's rest in light of Christ. Gregg and Dr. Barcellos discuss Redemptive-Historical and Theological hermeneutics, or the lenses through which we read the scriptures. Did Jesus, Paul, and other biblical writers read (and write) from a certain hermeneutical perspective? Can we even replicate that? Listen and find out! ________________________ Regener8d Designs is now live! Buy merch featuring the Regener8d Radio logo or choose from several other entirely original designs! https://regener8d-designs.creator-spring.com/ ________________________ Socials: Twitter: https://twitter.com/Regener8dRadio Instagram: https://instagram.com/Regener8dRadio Facebook: https://facebook.com/Regener8dRadio Twitch: https://twitch.tv/Regener8d Discord Community Server: https://discord.gg/gxjcjhn7fj ________________________ For inquiries, please reach out to: regener8dradio@gmail.com Intro Music: "Sub 60" by DJ Cutman --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/regener8dradio/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/regener8dradio/support
Rev. Dr. Gregory K. Beale (PhD, Cambridge) ha held the position of the J. Gresham Machen chair of New Testament and is research professor of New Testament and biblical interpretation at Westminster Theological Seminary, but is now building graduate program at Reformed Theological Seminary in Dallas. Dr. Beale's academic interests include the New Testament's use of the Old Testament, the book of Revelation, the biblical-theological theme of temple as the dwelling place of God, and the topic of inerrancy, among others. In this episode, we discuss is shorter commentary on Revelation. We discuss the date the book was written, the main views of how to interpret the book of Revelation, how to determine what is to be understood as literal v. symbolic, how the seals, trumpets, and bowls parallel each other, the beast and the mortal head wound, 666 and the mark of the beast, the two witnesses, the Gog and Magog War of Ezekiel 38 & 39, the millennium, and much more! Guest Website: gkbeale.com Buy the Book: https://www.amazon.com/Revelation-Commentary-G-K-Beale/dp/0802866212/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=beale+revelation&qid=1644760862&sprefix=beale+re%2Caps%2C759&sr=8-1 YouTube: https://youtu.be/ijbPr1w_xCs Email: theweirdchristianpodcast@gmail.com
In this episode I begin a series highlighting how a Historical-Grammatical and Redemptive Historical hermeneutic would be employed for a book study like the book of Judges. Episode one covers introductory remarks and the historical backgrounds for the book. Enjoy the show!
The beauty of God's Word is that whether you read it with a Systematic Theology lens or a Redemptive Historical lens, you will always find coherence and consent of its parts. In EP 8, we scratched the surface on the spiritual dynamic that gave birth to the Church and the ensuing spiritual antithesis that was realized after Genesis 3:15. We perceived a theological resonance between the enmity God graciously and sovereignly placed within redeemed mankind and the serpent and what the Scriptures later develop as the doctrine of effectual calling. We continue our consideration of the people of God as an assembly of the saints through the Biblical motif of the "kingdom of God". Gird your loins and attune your heart to the theological resonance found in Scripture concerning the kingdom of God.
The boys begin with playful banter about Scott’s wearing of cardigans, Kyle’s obsession with Mr. Rogers, and Barry’s quiet provocations before the parishioner gets the train back on track. For this episode’s featured topic is Redemptive-Historical preaching. The 3GTers start off by defining what this type of preaching is and how it is done. They …
Yesterday, Bob and Shawn discussed how the Grammatical Historical Method is the best way to study the Bible. What are the Allegorical and Redemptive Historical Approaches to study? Are either of these good methods of Bible study?
Tom and Ryan continue their discussion in the first Chapter of the Westminster and 2nd London Confessions on the topic of Biblical Interpretation. They briefly introduce the categories of Redemptive Historical & Grammatical Historical Interpretations of Scripture and why they matter.
What is a Redemptive Historical Understanding of the Bible The post What is a Redemptive Historical Understanding of the Bible? appeared first on Theocast - Reformed Theology.
What is a Redemptive Historical Understanding of the Bible The post What is a Redemptive Historical Understanding of the Bible? appeared first on Theocast - Reformed Theology.
The Bible makes sense in its deepest and richest capacity only when we read it through Jesus shaped goggles. When we see all of it through the lens of its Main Character - it should cause us to preach explicitly Christian sermons.Recorded November 31 in Bradenton FloridaChrist Centered Preaching Handout1. Two vital hermeneutics:1. First, we must have a good grasp on the original context of our particular passage and the original intent of the message. (who wrote this and why?)2. Second, we must always understand the context of our passage within the context of all of scripture, and also understand it in terms of the grand narrative of God’s redemption.2. Redemptive-Historical progression1. Redemptive-historical progression traces God’s history with the world from his good creation (Gen 1), to the human fall into sin and God’s plan of redemption through the seed of the woman (Gen 3:15), to a long history of God continuing the line of the seed of the woman (Gen 3 - Malachi), to Christ (the Gospels), the Church (Acts and the New Testament Letters), and finally to the new creation (Rev 22).2. In other words, in the Bible we can trace a continuous redemptive history which centers in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, who then ascends to rule his church from heaven until he comes again. Creation to New Creation.3. Promise Fulfillment1.If the text contains a promise of the coming Messiah, then you can easily move to the New Testament to show the ultimate fulfillment of the promise in Jesus Christ.1. Example: “The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the ruler’s staff from between his feet, until tribute comes to him; and the obedience of the peoples is his.” - Gen 49:102. Show the fulfillment in Matthew 1:1-17 Jesus Christ, the king of kings, born of the tribe of Judah and the House of David.4. Typology1. Old Testament events, persons, or institutions can function as types which foreshadow the great Antitype - the person and work of Jesus Christ.2. Examples: The fall of Adam and Eve. Adam is the human race’s representative, he prefigures Christ the second Adam, who also is a representative of a new human race.1. Noah’s Ark; The Ark of the Covenant; the tabernacle; the rock in the wilderness; Crossing the red sea; The Passover Lamb; Pentecost; Issac; Moses; Joshua; King David…etc5. Analogy1. Analogy exposes parallels between what God taught Israel and what Christ promises the Church; what God demanded of Israel (the Law) and what Christ demands of his Church.2. Example: Genesis 12:1-9 Israel must claim Canaan for the Glory of God; in the New Testament Jesus mandates his Church to claim all nations for God (Matt 28:18-20) Your message or theme then would be something like -God reclaiming the earth as his good kingdom through the work of Christ.6. Longitudinal Themes1. Although similar to redemptive-historical progression in some ways, it is distinct in focusing on the development of theological ideas rather than development in redemptive history. Longitudinal themes refers to themes that can be traced through the scriptures from the Old Testament to the New - Themes such as God’s coming kingdom, God’s covenant, home and exile, rest and sabbath, God’s redemption, righteousness and nakedness, God’s presence, God’s love, God’s faithfulness, God’s grace, God’s justice and judgment, God’s providence.1. Every major Old Testament theme leads to Christ7. New Testament Reference1. The New Testament reference makes a direct bridge to Christ.1.Example: God created his good creation by his powerful “word”; John in his gospel tells us that that “Word” is Jesus Christ (John 1:1,3)8. Contrast1. Because of the coming of Christ the text’s message for the contemporary Church may be quite different from the original message for Israel. So we preach by contrast.2. Example: circumcision was a commanded by God for every Jew; but for us we know that Christ is our circumcision and circumcision is a heart issue. Circumcision was the outward sign of the Old covenant, but in Christ baptism is the sign of the New Covenant- which is an outward expression that we have died with Christ and have been raised with him to new life.. So we contrast the the Old and the New.Examples 1-8 taken and adapted from Sydney Greidanus Preaching Christ from Genesis*9. The Imperative vs. Indicatives model1. An Imperative is an immediate action. Example of a Biblical imperative: “Do not be drunk with wine which is dissipation but be filled with the Spirit.”2. An Indicative serves as a sign or indication of something. Example: “You were bought with a price; do not become bondservants of men.”3. The idea here is that God never commands us to do something apart from the grace he has already shown us through the work of Christ. The commands of God are never separate from who he is and what he has done for us in Christ4. Though obviously clear in the letters of Paul and most of the NT, we can see this model going back all the way to the giving of the Ten Commandments.1. “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. “You shall have no other gods before me…”1. Scripture is full of the Imperative vs. Indicative model showing us that whatever we do for God it is out of grateful love and adoration of what he has already done for us. This is a wonderful exercise for the mind and heart of any pastor and wonderful tool for us as ministers of the Gospel.10. Jesus as fulfillment to our hopes and longings.1. What is the scripture commanding or offering to us? What is it, and why we want and need it?2. How do we fail to live up to this command or standard? Or how and why we fail to obtain what is offered.3. How does Jesus and what he has done through the cross answer my dilemma?? How Jesus offers it to us freely. (Themes like Freedom, righteousness, faithfulness, bravery/courage, justice & mercy, forgiveness, love, etc)11. Connecting our story to a Biblical character or Biblical story1.Any passages where we are dealing with an Old Testament character who is showing incredible faith/trust in God we can ask the simple question - how much more reason do we have to trust God? We have God’s complete trust-worthiness displayed in the cross. Jesus, God incarnate, became vulnerable, weak, helpless, killable - for you and for me. You can trust him. We have much greater reason to trust God than any OT figure because of the cross.Recommended Resources for Further Study:Books:Jesus Storybook Bible - Sally Lloyd JonesPreaching - Tim KellerChrist Centered Preaching - Brian ChappellPreaching Christ in All of Scripture - Edmund ClowneyPreaching Christ in Genesis - Sidney GreidanusPreaching the Whole Bible as Christian Scripture - Graeme GoldsworthyThe Soul Winner - Charles SpurgeonStanding in Grace - David GuzikPreaching and Preachers - Martyn Lloyd-JonesThe Heart of the Gospel - Martyn Lloyd-JonesChrist in the Psalms - Patrick Henry ReardonThe Gospel - Ray Ortlund JrRhythms of Grace - Mike CosperRomans: Encountering God’s Power - John StottProdigal God - Tim KellerKnowing God - J.I. PackerBetween Two Worlds - John StottWhy Grace Changes Everything - Chuck SmithCommentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament = D.A. CarsonOnline Courses:Preaching Christ in a Postmodern World - Tim Keller & Edmund Clowney (iTunes U)Christ Centered Preaching - Brian Chappell (Covenant Seminary resources)The Bible ProjectMiscellaneous:What is Gospel-Centered Ministry? - Tim Keller (Gospel Coalition Conference Message 2007)They Testify About Me - Preaching Jesus and the Gospel from the Old Testament (TGC 2011)Preaching Christ from the Old Testament - Sinclair FergusonPreparing the Way for Christ - ESV Study Bible ArticleResources from http://CalvaryChapel.comWhat is Gospel Centered Preaching - Pete NelsonHow to Wreck a Sermon : 5 Simple Steps - Pete Nelson10 Minute Seminary - What is Gospel Centered Preaching? - Mike NegliaThe Key to Understanding and Obeying Scripture - Mike Neglia3 Benefits of Seeing Christ in the Old Testament - Andy DeaneExpositors Collective is part of the GoodLion podcast network, for more quality content visit their webpage http://www.GoodLion.io
Luther’s “tower experience” and breakthrough moment on Sola Fide immediately transformed his understanding of Scripture. The Boys discuss how reading the Bible as an accounting of redemption (rather than a handbook of spirituality) will inevitably transform your perspective of the Bible. There’s an obvious correlation between Law-Gospel distinction and biblical unity.
[Bible Interpretation] 1. An Introduction to a Redemptive-Historical Interpretation of the Bible - Rev. Preston Graham
In this episode we continue our discussion of the so called "misogyny" of the Bible by laying a hermeneutical foundation for how we are to read the Bible in a Redemptive Historical and how Jesus is the answer in the back of the book so to speak. We explore Paul's view that Jesus tore down social dividing lines and what this does to show the ultimate intention of God and his work of subverting Ancient Near Eastern cultural norms throughout the Old Testament. Enjoy the show! If you enjoy this content, please consider partnering with us by becoming a Sponsor here on Podbean or by finding us on Patreon.
RedGraceRadio – RedGraceMedia | Evangelical, Evangelistic, and Reformed
http://www.redgracemedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/rgr-49-version-1.mp3 On this episode we discuss an article we referenced on Facebook titled “This New Religion Is Causing an Existential Crisis at American Colleges and Universities, NYU Prof Says” and the reality we live in an era of, what we […] The post RedGraceRadio: The Mental Disorder Of Liberalism and The Social Justice Radical Jihadists appeared first on RedGraceMedia | Evangelical, Evangelistic, and Reformed.
Northwest Theological Seminary presents a study of the Life of the Prophet Jeremiah, taught by Academic Dean James T. Dennison during the Spring of 2012 and 2013.
2006 Commencement Seminar Lecture by Dr. Peter Lillback
Dr. Green on the Psalms