How did the book impact your understanding of the Old Testament? I have always known that the Old Testament was, at its core, Christocentric, just as the New Testament is. This knowledge, however, was much more theoretical than practical. I could’ve told you before reading this book that every book in the Old Testament pointed to Christ, but I could not have told you how most of them pointed to Christ. Some are easier than others, like the books that directly prophesy about Jesus, such as Jeremiah. But others were much less apparent. For instance, in Exodus, Williams describes the Jesus Focus by illuminating to us the anticipatory facets of things like the tabernacle, the sacrificial table, and even the deliverance from Egypt. And again in Job, when Williams draws an incredible parallel to the suffering innocent. Who was more innocent than Christ? Yet who suffered more? These are things that I had never considered when reading through these books. Now, when reading through the Old Testament, it feels as though some of these anticipatory comparisons had been staring me in the face all along.
How did the book impact your …show more content…
I just think that many of the Christocentric ideas in the New Testament are much more readily apparent than those in the Old. In fact, Williams acknowledges this in his forward by describing the problem of missing the Jesus focus as occurring “in a lesser degree” in the New Testament than in the Old Testament. Often throughout the book, Williams’ themes will be quite similar to his Jesus Focuses. This is because the Christocentric theme of the New Testament books is so often directly stated within that book. For example, in Galatians, the theme would be turning from the law and accepting grace. This is also the Jesus