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The Tale of Two Adams PDF

232 Pages·2008·0.97 MB·English
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T T T A HE ALE OF WO DAMS C C HRIS AUGHEY MGK Press Cedar Ridge, California © 2002 by Chris Caughey First published 2008 Published by MGK Press [email protected] and taleoftwoadams.blogspot.com All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews. ISBN 978-0-615-24140-1 LCCN 2008907318 Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture is the author’s own translation of the original Hebrew and Greek. Scripture quotations marked "NKJV™" are taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved. “Scripture quotations taken from the New American Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.” (www.Lockman.org) “New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.” Cover design: Rob Ryan Contents Introduction 1 1. What Are You Talking About? 5 2. In the Beginning: Covenant and Creation 45 3. Covenant Before Creation: The Covenant Between the Father, Son and Holy Spirit 71 4. Grace to Everyone and Everything: The Covenant of Common Grace 91 5. The Covenant of Grace: From Genesis 3:15 to Abraham to the Last Day 111 6. The Mosaic Covenant: The Old Covenant of Law 135 7. The New Covenant: The Triumph of the Last Adam 159 Appendix 1: We Confess 181 Appendix 2: Glossary 201 Appendix 3: Recommended Reading 209 Index of Scripture 215 Acknowledgments I NEED TO THANK my wife and children for all of their love, encouragement and constructive criticism as I wrote this book. They have been my biggest fans during this whole process. I could not have done it without them. I am deeply grateful to God for the privilege of learning everything about which I write in this book from Dr. Meredith G. Kline. He was my professor and my friend. If there is anything good or helpful in this book, the credit needs to go to that brilliant scholar who was more passionate about the Gospel than anyone else I know. My faith in, and devotion to the Lord, the Last Adam, was only profoundly deepened under his instruction. Very little (if anything) in this book is original. The reader should consider it largely a distillation of Dr. Kline’s written corpus and lecture material from his Pentateuch and Prophets courses. The Lord called Dr. Kline home to the very upper-register which saturated everything he said, did and thought on April 13, 2007. I look forward to the day I will see Dr. Kline again in glory because of the accomplishment of our Savior. Thanks are also due to the Wilson family, especially Bob and Cameron. In many ways, this book would not have been written without their kind help. I must also thank Kevin Pischke, Rob Ryan and Dan Miller for their technical expertise. This book would likely have stalled out without them. Finally, I owe a debt of gratitude to Matt and Kim Gilliland of Woodglen Press for their patient help and advice. Introduction 1 Introduction 2 “I am astonished that you are so quickly turning away from the one who called you in the grace of Christ to another gospel, which is not another Gospel—except that some are confusing you, and want to pervert the Gospel of Christ. But even if we, or an angel from Heaven should preach to you a gospel besides the one we preached to you, let him be damned. As we just told you, so now I say it again: if anyone preaches to you a gospel besides the one you received, let him be damned.” The Apostle Paul, Galatians 1:6-9 Those are strong words. The Apostle Paul was obviously concerned about the new Gentile Christians in Galatia who were being seduced by the Judaizers. The Judaizers were a group of Jews who taught that faith in Christ was indeed necessary for a person to be right with God… but so was keeping at least parts of the Law of Moses. They said, “If you are not circumcised according to the Law of Moses, you cannot be saved” (Acts 15:1). What we know about the Judaizers, we mostly infer from Paul’s letters and the kinds of ideas he was arguing against. This much, at least, is clear: the Judaizers couldn’t (or wouldn’t) distinguish clearly between works and grace when it came to salvation. Not much has changed. That is not because 21st century culture is so much like the culture of the 1st century. Culture, though good, is not where the “action” is, biblically speaking. Instead, the Bible is concerned about the history of the revelation of God’s kingdom by means of covenants. In that case, not much has changed because since Adam broke the original covenant, sinners have always wanted to contribute some of their own work to their standing before God. That desire to contribute may be understandable (in light of the Fall), but Paul says that any teaching which promotes that contribution is damnable (in light of the Gospel of Jesus Christ). Yet some people are still promoting a confusion of works and grace with respect to the Gospel. In light of what Paul said, I 3 Introduction find it hard to believe that such people intend to blur the line between works and grace. After all, it seems to be confusion in thinking and reasoning that produces the muddling of works and grace. Nevertheless, such confusion is being taught to the Church at large by seminary professors who teach pastors who preach to their congregations. Other people are being confused by what they hear on the radio or read in popular books. No matter where the confusion comes from, my purpose in this book is to show that covenant theology and the Gospel of salvation are inseparably joined together; however, if we misunderstand covenant theology—and if we’re consistent with our misunderstanding of covenant theology—we will misunderstand the Gospel of salvation. Fortunately, however, though many teachers and authors misunderstand covenant theology, yet because they have not thought enough about the connection between covenant theology and the Gospel, they still proclaim the same Gospel that Paul so passionately defended and preached. My labors in this book will be for the purpose of defending the Gospel that Paul preached, against other “gospels” that would compete with Paul’s. I will do this in somewhat the same way that Paul did it in Galatians 3: by taking a look at the biblical covenants and their relationships to each other. We will begin with the first covenant that the Father made with creation and Adam, and we will conclude with the New Covenant that the Last Adam mediated between the Father and His covenant people. By studying justification via an examination of all of God’s covenants from creation to consummation, from beginning to end, this book will also serve as an introduction to covenant theology. During our walk through the main story line of the Bible—the tale of two Adams—it should become clear that justification depends in various ways on all of God’s covenants. But before we dive right in, some definitions are in order. 4 Chapter 1 1 What Are You Talking About? 5 What Are You Talking About? 6

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111. 6. The Mosaic Covenant: The Old. Covenant of Law. 135. 7. The New Covenant: The Triumph of the Last Adam. 159. Appendix 1: We Confess. 181. Appendix 2: Glossary 201 this book is to show that covenant theology and the Gospel of salvation are during a backpacking trip. Suppose you, an
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