EXPLORING THE STORY: A Reference Companion - Softcover

Barr, Adam

 
9780310326991: EXPLORING THE STORY: A Reference Companion

Inhaltsangabe

Exploring the Story helps you understand and grasp the significance of each chapter in the bestselling The Story--an innovative Bible that presents Scripture as a continuous narrative in chronological order.

The big picture of God's redemptive plan comes into focus as you learn about the following elements:

  • Timeline—shows how the events of The Story relate to the rest of history.
  • Plot Points—briefly describes the key narrative themes of a passage.
  • Cast of Characters—introduces the people featured in the text.
  • Chapter Overview—summarizes the corresponding chapter in The Story.
  • Discussion Questions—gives ideas for individual or group reflection.
  • Section Commentary—presents theological issues, important archaeological discoveries, or launch points for further discussion.

 

Small group leaders, pastors, and lay students of the Bible will gain a deeper understanding of God's life-changing redemptive plan by reading this book alongside The Story.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Adam T. Barr is the Pastor of Teaching Ministries at Corinth Reformed Church and President of Borderlands, a ministry that equips church and campus ministries to disciple Next Generation leaders. He has earned degrees from Hope College, Western Theological Seminary, and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and studied at Westminster Theological Seminary. He updated, edited and contributed to the Zondervan Illustrated Commentary: One-Volume Illustrated Edition ed. F. F. Bruce.

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Exploring the Story

A Reference Companion By Adam T. Barr

ZONDERVAN

Copyright © 2011 Zondervan
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-310-32699-1

Contents

Preface....................................................................91 Creation: The Beginning of Life as We Know It............................112 God Builds a Nation......................................................163 Joseph: From Slave to Deputy Pharaoh.....................................224 Deliverance..............................................................275 New Commands and a New Covenant..........................................326 Wandering................................................................367 The Battle Begins........................................................418 A Few Good Men ... and Women.............................................469 The Faith of a Foreign Woman.............................................5210 Standing Tall, Falling Hard.............................................5711 From Shepherd to King...................................................6212 The Trials of a King....................................................6713 The King Who Had It All.................................................7214 A Kingdom Torn in Two...................................................7715 God's Messengers........................................................8116 The Beginning of the End (of the Kingdom of Israel).....................8717 The Kingdoms' Fall......................................................9218 Daniel in Exile.........................................................9819 The Return Home.........................................................10320 The Queen of Beauty and Courage.........................................10821 Rebuilding the Walls....................................................11322 The Birth of the King...................................................11723 Jesus' Ministry Begins..................................................12224 No Ordinary Man.........................................................13025 Jesus, the Son of God...................................................13726 The Hour of Darkness....................................................14227 The Resurrection........................................................14828 New Beginnings..........................................................15329 Paul's Mission..........................................................15930 Paul's Final Days.......................................................16631 The End of Time.........................................................170Resources for Further Study................................................175

Chapter One

CREATION The Beginning of Life as We Know It

Plot Points

God, the main character of The Story, is revealed as the absolute sovereign of creation, totally distinct from yet intimately involved with all he has made.

Nature is not simply a collection of random, meaningless matter in motion; it is a carefully crafted revelation of a loving God.

Humanity, made in God's image, occupies a unique role and position in this creation, a place of dignity and responsibility.

Humanity's tragic rebellion against God's command impacts everything.

God has a plan to redeem his fallen creation, giving us a hint of the good news to come in his promise that a descendant of Adam and Eve will crush the serpent.

Throughout the New Testament, the flood story forecasts God's future and final judgment (e.g., Matt. 24:37-39; Luke 17:26-27; 2 Peter 2:4-10).

Cast of Characters

Abel. Son of Adam and Eve; younger brother of Cain; a shepherd and devoted worshiper of the Lord; killed by his brother; name means "vanity, breath, vapor."

Adam. First man, made from earth; husband of Eve; like his wife, Eve, made in God's image; tragically disobeyed God's prohibition and affected all of human history; name can mean "man" and is closely related to the Hebrew word for "ground" (adamah).

Cain. Son of Adam and Eve; older brother and murderer of Abel; ancestor of Lamech, who killed indiscriminately (see Gen. 4:23-24); name sounds like the Hebrew for "gotten," conveying the sense of optimism Eve held for his life.

Eve. First woman, made from man; husband of Adam; tempted by Satan in the form of a serpent, disobeyed God's command; name means "living."

God. Creator of all things and central character of The Story; God chose to reveal himself to us through his creation.

Noah. Descendant of Adam and Eve; a "righteous man, blameless among the people of his time" (Gen. 6:9); commanded to build a great boat to save himself and his family from the flood God sent to wipe out everything having "the breath of life" (Gen. 6:17); name sounds like "rest" in Hebrew, expressing his parents' hope that he would help bring rest from the effects of the curse.

Shem, Ham, Japheth. Noah's three sons; called to help "increase in number and fill the earth" (Gen. 9:1) after the flood.

Chapter Overview

The first nine chapters of Genesis have raised questions throughout church history. What kind of literature are these passages? How do the events described here relate to the theories formed by contemporary scientists and archaeologists? Are the "days" twenty-four-hour segments or ages, long periods of time? Was the flood local, covering the known world, or was it global, covering the entire planet?

These questions are significant. They lead us to think deeply about the purpose of Scripture, and Christians who take Scripture as seriously as Jesus did will not be content simply to write these questions off as "academic." To work toward the answers we seek, it is helpful to begin by reflecting on the central narrative intent of these chapters. For the people of Israel and for us today, they reveal why the world we see and know is the way it is. They help us grasp what it means to be human and the causal forces that shape our lives. These are questions of existence and meaning.

Think about the fall and the disobedience of Adam and Eve in Genesis 3. The fruit of their rebellion against God is a series of curses, each of which takes a good, God-ordained source of blessing and twists it into a form of heartache—work is now toil, marriage a battle, childbirth a painful ordeal. Consider the flood as well. In this story we see a reversal of God's work in creation as the life and the land that had come from the sea is now covered and destroyed by the waters of chaos and judgment. The stunning beauty and heart-wrenching tragedy of our world is explained and understood through these stories, helping us understand why something good has gone terribly wrong.

God's Word invites us to consider the powerful connections between the original world God created, our disobedience, and our ongoing relationship to God. We are invited to consider how human disobedience has universal implications. Although we often think of our choices as individual decisions that don't impact other people ("If it doesn't hurt anyone else, it's not a problem"), this chapter shows us that the simple act of eating fruit, if done in disobedience to God, can lead to suffering and death—for everyone. The choices and decisions we make in this life are writing a moral drama, and our every deed illustrates how we embrace or reject our Creator God.

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