Casket Empty: Old Testament Study Guide


Book Description

This book will help you understand the redemptive story of the Old Testament through six major periods: Creation, Abraham, Sinai, Kings, Exile and Temple, with the first letter of each heading making up the word CASKET. This acronym will enable you to memorize the storyline of the Old Testament and place key events, people and biblical books in their correct time period. The author takes you through each period step by step, explaining the major covenants and highlighting the most important people, events, and biblical themes. As you become familiar with storyline of the Old Testament you will learn that God's redemptive plan is climactically fulfilled in the New Testament with the coming Messiah. The acronym for the entire Bible is CASKET EMPTY, therefore, which points to the empty tomb of Jesus as the beginning of God's new creation, the assurance that death has been defeated, and the guarantee of our resurrection yet to come. Through the acronym CASKET EMPTY you will have a framework for remembering the entire sweep of the Bible with the person and work of Christ at the center.




CASKET EMPTY Bible Study


Book Description

Learning the Old Testament as one redemptive story through CASKET EMPTY® enables you to trace its storyline in chronological sequence through six key periods: Creation, Abraham, Sinai, Kings, Exile, and Temple, represented by the acronym CASKET. In this eighteen week study, you will learn about key people, events, and promises in the Old Testament and discover how God's plan of redemption is being fulfilled in Jesus. When used with the companion New Testament Bible Study, represented by the acronym EMPTY, the entire story of the Bible is traced from Genesis to Revelation-with Jesus at the center.




CASKET EMPTY New Testament Maps


Book Description

The CASKET EMPTY New Testament Maps consists of seven essential maps in one, fold-out, color pamphlet that is small enough to fit into the pocket of your Bible, yet easily accessible so that you can have it open when studying or reading the New Testament. The maps will help you trace the ministry of Jesus and the expanding witness of the early church, including Paul's missionary journeys. The color pamphlet includes the following seven maps given in chronological order: The World of Expectations (Map 1), Israel in the Time of Jesus (Map 2), Jesus' Public Ministry (Map 3), Jesus' Journey to the Cross (Map 4), The ExpandingWitness of Pentecost (Map 5), Paul's Missionary Journeys (Map 6), and The Spread of Christian Witness (Map 7). The maps are designed to be used with the New Testament Timeline, Study Guide, and Bible Study in the CASKET EMPTY? Bible series.




The World that Shaped the New Testament


Book Description

In this book, Calvin Roetzel explores the social, political, religious, and intellectual environment of the New Testament writers. Roetzel maps the major features of the first-century landscape so that the student may be able to view the whole, and through the whole gain new perspective on and insight into each part. Now updated with the most current scholarship and with revisions taking into account archeological findings, this is the best available introduction to the subject. Expanded materials include discussion of the social structure of Roman society, political dimensions of Pharisaism, Hellenistic religious expression, the Jewish Diaspora, the influence of the Septuagint on the Gospel writers and Paul, and women in antiquity. Pictures are integrated into the text at relevant points, the end of each chapter contains suggestions for further reading, and there is also a current and comprehensive bibliography of topics and authors.




Readings from the Ancient Near East


Book Description

Comprehensive, up-to-date collection of primary source documents (creation accounts, epic literature, etc.) gives insight into the Ancient Near East and the Old Testament.




CASKET EMPTY Old Testament Maps


Book Description

The CASKET EMPTY? Old Testament Maps consists of seven maps in a fold-out color pamphlet that is small enough to fit into the pocket of your Bible, yet easily accessible so that you can have it open when studying or reading the Old Testament. The maps will help you trace the geographical movement of God's people in the Old Testament and identify important locations in the Bible. The color pamphlet includes the following seven maps given in chronological order: Abraham's Journey to the Promised Land (Map 1), The Exodus from Egypt (Map 2), Tribal Allotment of the Promised Land (Map 3), The United Kingdom (Map 4), The Divided Kingdom (Map 5), The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires (Map 6), and the Persian Empire (Map 7). The maps created by International Mapping are designed to be used with the Old Testament Timeline, Study Guide, and Bible Study in the CASKET EMPTY? Bible series.




From Noah to Israel


Book Description

The primaeval blessing, 'Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth,' first announced to humankind in Genesis 1.28 is renewed to Noah and his sons after the flood in Genesis 9.1. There is widespread scholarly consensus that the ensuing dispersion in Genesis 10.1-32 and 11.1-9 is the means by which the creation blessing is fulfilled. Kaminski argues that the primeval blessing is not fulfilled in the Table of Nations and that Yahweh's scattering Noah's descendants in the Babel story does not contribute positively to the creation theme. Rather, the creation blessing is being taken up in the primary line of Shem (Genesis 11.10-26), which leads directly to Abraham. She further suggests that divine grace is not absent after the Babel judgment, as is commonly assumed, but is at work in the Shemite genealogy. She argues that the primeval blessing, which is unfulfilled in the primaeval history, is taken up by Abraham and his descendants by means of a divine promise. While the blessing is in the process of being realised in the patriarchal narratives, it is not fulfilled. The multiplication theme is resumed, however, in Exodus 1.7, which describes Israel's proliferation in Egypt. This is the first indication that the creation blessing is fulfilled. Realisation of the primaeval blessing progresses after the flood, therefore, from Noah to Israel. Yet God's blessing on Israel is not for their sake alone - it is the means through which the divine intention for creation will be restored to the world. JSOTS413




The Baker Book of Bible Charts, Maps, and Time Lines


Book Description

Reproducible Charts and Maps for Effective Biblical Teaching Bible charts, maps, and timelines enrich our understanding of God's Word and support effective Bible teaching, but clear and reliable information is difficult to find. To put this information into the hands of teachers and students of the Bible, The Baker Book of Bible Charts, Maps, and Timelines provides full-color pages of reproducible material based on the most up-to-date biblical scholarship. This accurate and easy-to-understand reference book of full-color, reproducible charts and maps presents essential information about the Bible in a concise, visual way to support the study of God's Word.




Was Noah Good?


Book Description

The juxtaposition of 'favour' and 'righteousness' in the flood narrative raises an interpretative and theological problem: Is Noah chosen because of divine favour or because of his piety ? Source-critical scholars identify two different theologies by J and P: J understands Noah's election to be an act of grace whereas P emphasizes Noah's righteousness as the basis for his election. Scholars who interpret the flood narrative according to its final form argue that Noah is chosen because he is righteous. This view is problematic, however, since in the primaeval history grace is shown to the 'undeserving', thus it is characteristically unmerited. This book entails an exegetical analysis of, and according to, the final form of the text, with particular attention being given to the meaning and function of these verses in the Toledot structure. Kaminski argues against the commonly held view that Noah finds favour because he is righteous, and seeks to demonstrate that divine favour is unmerited in accordance with the theme of grace in the primaeval history and in Genesis as a whole. Thus what sets the flood story in motion is not Noah's righteousness, but the divine favour he finds.