High School students almost always forget to bring a Bible to church at Hays Hills Baptist. For this reason, the staff has decided to provide Bibles for those who have forgotten to bring their own, and as a result a collection of lost, donated, and purchased Bibles has been accumulated over the past few years. This conglomeration of Bibles has yielded a large stack of skinny New Testaments severed from the Old Testament because contemporary Christians have not understood the relevance of the Old Testament. One reason for this is that Christians most likely suspect that the Old Testament has nothing to do with the Great Commission and the Lord’s call to engage in global missions. On the contrary, Walter Kaiser writes in his article, “
In order to demonstrate God’s global missions mindset in the Old Testament, Kaiser exegetes three important Scriptures. First, he discusses God’s call and promise to Abraham in Genesis 12:1-3. He explains that God promises to bless Abraham in several different ways so that Abraham’s offspring may be a blessing to the nations (12). “The message and it its content, in fact the whole purpose of God, was that He would make a nation, give them a ‘name,’ bless them so that they might be light to the nations and thereby be a blessing to all nations” (12).
The second passage that Kaiser considers is Exodus 19:4-6. He emphasizes three phrases from these verses: special possession, kingdom of priests, and holy nation. He explains that
Third, Kaiser uses Psalm 67 to demonstrate God’s global purposes in the Old Testament. Finding its basis in the Aaronic blessing in Numbers, Psalm 67 explains that God’s blessing is for the purpose of the nations knowing His ways.
After explaining these three Scriptures, Kaiser exhorts Christians to take God’s challenge to
The God of the Old Testament is the same God in the New Testament. He is blessing some so that others may also be blessed in the future. This understanding raises many questions for the contemporary Christian. How am I blessing others with the knowledge that I have been given? Where am I contributing to God’s global purposes? To whom am I giving? Where am I going? Who am I sending? All of these questions must be answered in order to remain on task with God’s global purposes. Indeed, God has not changed His purposes, and the Old Testament is as globally and missionally minded as the New Testament.