When I first read
this book, I was impressed with it and intended to review it long
before now. I trust that my delay will not distract from the
significance of this book for anyone who really wants to study the
Bible. We included a review a couple of issues ago on a book that
summarizes the Bible’s message, book by book. As we stated, it
was a quick helpful reference book. The Symphony of Scripture
will also enable the reader to see how God’s word, written by so
many different people from so many different times and places, all
support unifying themes throughout the Scripture. If we were to
admit to a glaring weakness among Christians concerning the Bible,
it’s that we either do not know the Scripture or we know it
eclectically. The average Christian struggles to see how one part
of Scripture relates to another part and how the whole impacts his
or her life at every level. Christians have the tendency in
studying, teaching, and preaching, to read a passage outside the
immediate and overall setting; therefore it is easy to moralize,
legalize or over-spiritualize the Bible’s message.
As you will see
in this issue’s In Case You’re Asked article, we do an
injustice to Scripture and ourselves by making its message too
simplistic. However, we can help ourselves along if we have some
kind of thread or threads to help us see the grand narrative in
the Bible. Mark Strom says in the introduction, “The book works
through the main events and features of the Bible story. My aim is
to show how these events and insights contribute to the overall
pattern, and to suggest some ways in which the coming of Jesus
completes it.” He then writes, “ I have concentrated on
providing some key ideas about how each historical period, event,
institution or book adds something and fits in to the Bible’s
overall history.”
I have
appreciated other overview approaches to Scripture in the past:
Jack Scott’s Old and New Testament surveys in our ABES
series are an excellent summary overview of the Bible. S. D.
DeGraff’s Promise and Deliverance has been a favorite for
developing the central motif of covenant throughout the Bible. I
believe Strom’s book is a combination of the two. His additions
make it extremely valuable in understanding the Bible’s overall
story and how the parts relate to the whole. His final point is
that Jesus Christ is the key to understanding the unity in the
diversity within the sixty-six books.
The Old Testament
section is comprised of twenty-two chapters and the New Testament
section contains ten chapters. It is an easy to read book that
could be a good text for a Sunday school class, a Bible study
group, or as a training tool for those who teach the Word. Other
writers have maintained, as does Strom, that the first eleven
chapters of Genesis provide an account of the events and themes of
which shaped the entire course of its story. Strom, however,
carefully leads the reader to see how those chapters reveal how
the purpose of God in creation, the devastating effects of sin,
and the first glimpses of God’s plan to restore harmony with his
people, all fit together and culminate in Jesus Christ. He
demonstrates how topics such as covenant, judgment, grace,
kingdom, gospel, and eschatology all interface with each other.
You will particularly benefit from his emphasis on our temptation
to live by law rather than by grace and how we build our lives
upon rules, confessions, and traditions rather than upon the
finished work of Christ. Understanding what the Bible teaches is
the key to resisting that legalistic tendency. Strom writes he is
convinced that people today continue to make the same mistakes as
did those in Bible days, namely confusing the “what God has
done,” with “what we should do.”
One quote on this
connection will give a flavor of the entire book; “The gospel
shows us that God accepts us fully on the basis of Christ’s
finished work. If we understand this, then we begin to experience
a wonderfully realistic and other centered way of life: we worship
Christ through our jobs, recreation, and relationships, our good
times and bad, and we use our new freedom to serve others. Life is
no longer about our egos, security, and comfort. Free in the
knowledge of what Christ has done, we fear no longer to confess
our weaknesses, nor do we grasp at glib answers to remove the
paradox and sting of failure and suffering.”
Another quote
will give you an idea of why I so strongly recommend this book;
“One group of people trouble me deeply—those who struggle
under the rules and expectations of their Christian friends and
leaders. Among these are the divorced, the depressed, the socially
inept, the unsuccessful, the sick, the average, the separated, the
poorly educated, the lonely, the doubting, the intimidated, the
hurt and the shy. They cannot appreciate their acceptance and
worth in Christ because of the stumbling blocks placed before them
by preachers of rules and experiences who spiritually rob them and
leave them under the burden of false guilt.”
As Strom
develops the theme of the Kingdom of God as it unfolds in the New
Testament, he has some helpful and insightful ideas about the
community. He states that one reason people suffer from things
like low self-worth and esteem is because they see their
Christianity as an individual thing between themselves and God.
They even use “quiet times” to foster that notion, and do not
see themselves as members of the body of Christ.
Unless each of us sees that, we will never understand our
significance and worth. He states, “When we cease focusing on
feeling good about ourselves, and move towards recapturing the
dignity of being a servant to others, then we actually discover a
far deeper sense of personal worth and satisfaction.” The more
we develop a sense of community in our Christian life, the more we
will see how it relates to our everyday life. It is the lack of
connection between faith and daily life that leads to alienation
and the feeling of being second-class.
You will reap
great benefits from this book. It is an easy read but not a
simplistic book. It is a most helpful overview of the Bible and I
believe a key to understanding the message of that book.
-Charles Dunahoo
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