Friday, December 22, 2006

Old Testament

I think it's alright to say that many Catholics (& Protestants) today do not appreciate the largest portion of God's Word- the 39 books of the Old Testament- as it ought to be. Somehow we have the idea that the Old Testament Scriptures are not quite as important as the New Testament. However, this is not at all true.

Not only is it important for us as Catholics to know the Old Testament; it is virtually impossible to truly understand the New Testament without it! The history of God's chosen people, the Jews, is our history too, because we are the direct heirs of the faith of Abraham.

Perhaps the most important part of the Old Testament is found in Exodus 20, where we read the Ten Commandments as God gave them to Moses. I'm not sure how many Christians could name these ten foundational laws of God-but we should be able to. In fact, we should be studying and learning all of God's Word as if our lives depended on it, because they do!

The Old Testament may seem out-of-date and irrelevant in the 21st century. But nothing could be further from the truth. The truths of the Old Testament still apply to us today.

We should make it a point to spend time studying the entire Bible, including the incredible story of previous generations of God's people as told in the Old Testament! Also, we should learn to value all of God's revelation!

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Comments:
Paul,

There are more than 39 books in the O.T., according to my Bible.

;)
 
Oh yes. Not forgetting the deuterocanonicals.
 
Yeah. It upsets me when people treat it like it is a separate canon altogether.

(Before you jump at it, yea I know the word "deuterocanonicals" does somewhat mean "second-canon" but it is not a separate canon, and therefore should not be treated thus. So don't bother telling me.)
 
Edit to add - the second paragraph is addressed to assorted nitpickers, not to Paul.
 
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