The New Testament Witness to Christ and His Kingdom, Student Workbook, SW13

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T H E N E W T E S T A M E N T W I T N E S S T O C H R I S T A N D H I S K I N G D O M

A P P E N D I X 3 7

Typology Readings Rev. Dr. Don L. Davis

The Study of Types Critical to New Testament Mastery

There are many passages in the New Testament which we cannot understand without having become in some measure familiar with the types. The epistle to the Hebrews is almost entirely made up of references to the Old Testament: as the substance, Christ, is proved to be better than the shadows–better than Moses, than Joshua, than Abraham, than Aaron, than the first Tabernacle, than the Levitical sacrifices, than the whole cloud of witnesses in the picture gallery of faith; and lastly, his blood is proved to be better than the blood of Abel. We sometimes forget that the writers of the New Testament were students of the Old Testament ; that it was their Bible , and that they would naturally allude again and again to the types and shadows, expecting their readers also to be familiar with them. If we fail to see these allusions, we lose much of the beauty of the passage, and cannot rightly understand it. . . . [The study of types] gives us a sure antidote for the poison of the so-called “higher criticism.” If we acknowledge the Divine intention of every detail of the types, even though we may not understand all their teaching, and if we believe there is a lesson in every incident recorded, the attacks of modern criticism will not harm us. We may not be clear enough to understand what the critics say, or to answer their criticisms; but if our eyes have been opened to see the beauty of the types, the doubts which such writers suggest will not trouble us, and we shall have a more profitable occupation than reading their works . When so much of this destructive criticism is about, we cannot do better than urge all–even the youngest Christians–to take up the typical study of God’s Word; for though he has hid these things from the wise and prudent, he reveals them unto babes .

Ada R. Habershon, Study of the Types . Grand Rapids: Kregel Publishing, (1957) 1974. pp. 19, 21

Do We Presently Study the Bible in the Same Way and with the Same Methods as the Lord and the Apostles?

After more than twenty years of teaching the grammatical-historical hermeneutic, I can see only one problem with it: it doesn’t appear to be the way the biblical writers always did it! When we examine how the biblical writers used previously written Scripture, we see that they seemed to “discover” meaning there that, judged by its

James DeYoung and Sarah Hurty, Beyond the Obvious . Gresham, OR: Vision House Publishing, 1995. p. 24

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