There is always a danger of squeezing the Bible into a mold we bring to
it rather than letting the Bible mold us. And, there could hardly be
more diversity within the Protestant canon--diverse genres, historical
settings, authors, literary levels, ages of history.
But while the Bible is not uniform, it is unified.
The many books of the one Bible are not like the many pennies in the
one jar. The pennies in the jar look the same, yet are disconnected; the
books of the Bible (like the organs of a body) look different, yet are
interconnected. As the past two generations' recovery of biblical
theology has shown time and again, certain motifs course through the
Scripture from start to end, tying the whole thing together into a
coherent tapestry--kingdom, temple, people of God, creation/new
creation, and so on.
Yet underneath and undergirding all of
these, it seems to me, is the motif of God's grace, his favor and love
to the undeserving. Don't we see the grace of God in every book of the
Bible? (NT books include the single verse that best crystallizes the
point.)
Genesis shows God’s grace to a universally wicked
world as he enters into relationship with a sinful family line
(Abraham) and promises to bless the world through him.
Exodus shows God’s grace to his enslaved people in bringing them out of Egyptian bondage.
Leviticus shows God’s grace in providing his people with a sacrificial system to atone for their sins.
Numbers
shows God’s grace in patiently sustaining his grumbling people in the
wilderness and bringing them to the border of the promised land not
because of them but in spite of them.
Deuteronomy shows God’s grace in giving the people the new land 'not because of your righteousness' (ch. 9).
Joshua
shows God’s grace in giving Israel victory after victory in their
conquest of the land with neither superior numbers nor superior
obedience on Israel’s part.
Judges shows God’s grace in taking
sinful, weak Israelites as leaders and using them to purge the land,
time and again, of foreign incursion and idolatry.
Ruth shows God’s grace in incorporating a poverty-stricken, desolate, foreign woman into the line of Christ.
1 and 2 Samuel show God’s grace in establishing the throne (forever—2 Sam 7) of an adulterous murderer.
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and 2 Kings show God’s grace in repeatedly prolonging the exacting of
justice and judgment for kingly sin 'for the sake of' David. (And
remember: by the ancient hermeneutical presupposition of corporate
solidarity, by which the one stands for the many and the many for the
one, the king represented the people; the people were in their king; as the king went, so went they.)
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and 2 Chronicles show God’s grace by continually reassuring the
returning exiles of God’s self-initiated promises to David and his sons.
Ezra
shows God’s grace to Israel in working through the most powerful pagan
ruler of the time (Cyrus) to bring his people back home to a rebuilt
temple.
Nehemiah shows God’s grace in providing for the
rebuilding of the walls of the city that represented the heart of God’s
promises to his people.
Esther shows God’s grace in protecting his people from a Persian plot to eradicate them through a string of 'fortuitous' events.
Job
shows God’s grace in vindicating the sufferer’s cry that his redeemer
lives (19:25), who will put all things right in this world or the next.
Psalms shows God’s grace by reminding us of, and leading us in expressing, the hesed (relentless covenant love) God has for his people and the refuge that he is for them.
Proverbs shows us God’s grace by opening up to us a world of wisdom in leading a life of happy godliness.
Ecclesiastes
shows God’s grace in its earthy reminder that the good things of life
can never be pursued as the ultimate things of life and that it is God
who in his mercy satisfies sinners (note 7:20; 8:11).
Song of
Songs shows God’s grace and love for his bride by giving us a faint echo
of it in the pleasures of faithful human sexuality.
Isaiah shows God’s grace by reassuring us of his presence with and restoration of contrite sinners.
Jeremiah
shows God’s grace in promising a new and better covenant, one in which
knowledge of God will be universally internalized.
Lamentations shows God’s grace in his unfailing faithfulness in the midst of sadness.
Ezekiel shows God’s grace in the divine heart surgery that cleansingly replaces stony hearts with fleshy ones.
Daniel shows God’s grace in its repeated miraculous preservation of his servants.
Hosea shows God’s grace in a real-live depiction of God’s unstoppable love toward his whoring wife.
Joel shows God’s grace in the promise to pour out his Spirit on all flesh.
Amos shows God’s grace in the Lord's climactic promise of restoration in spite of rampant corruption.
Obadiah
shows God’s grace by promising judgment on Edom, Israel’s oppressor,
and restoration of Israel to the land in spite of current Babylonian
captivity.
Jonah shows God’s grace toward both immoral Nineveh
and moral Jonah, irreligious pagans and a religious prophet, both of
whom need and both of whom receive the grace of God.
Micah shows
God’s grace in the prophecy’s repeated wonder at God’s strange
insistence on 'pardoning iniquity and passing over transgression'
(7:18).
Nahum shows God’s grace in assuring Israel of good news'
and 'peace,' promising that the Assyrians have tormented them for the
last time.
Habakkuk shows God’s grace that requires nothing but
trusting faith amid insurmountable opposition, freeing us to rejoice in
God even in desolation.
Zephaniah shows God’s grace in the Lord's exultant singing over his recalcitrant yet beloved people.
Haggai
shows God’s grace in promising a wayward people that the latter glory
of God’s (temple-ing) presence with them will far surpass its former
glory.
Zechariah shows God’s grace in the divine pledge to open
up a fountain for God’s people to 'cleanse them from sin and
uncleanness' (13:1).
Malachi shows God’s grace by declaring the Lord’s no-strings-attached love for his people.
Dane Ortlund
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