God’s Final Word
By John McCoury
Roan Mountain, Tennessee
In the past, God spoke to our people through the prophets. He spoke many times. He spoke in different ways. But in these last days, he has spoken to us through his Son. He is the one whom God appointed to receive all things.
God made everything through him. Hebrews 1:1-2 When you open the Old Testament you are reading the Word of God spoken to the fathers by the prophets. I hope you understand and value the Old Testament. What a marvelous book! How many ways God spoke in that book — in dreams, in visions, in sudden appearances. He spoke in that wonderful act of inspiration, that nobody fully understands, where somebody speaking the words that come to his mind and heart is uttering the words of God. And it comes to us in many different forms, as the writer of Hebrews says. You open Genesis and you have first the very straightforward, but majestic and moving tale of creation, of the fall, and the flood. This is followed by the simple narrative of the lives of the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Then the story of Moses and the Exodus, and the thundering of the Law, coming at last to the sweet singing of the Psalmist, the homespun wisdom of Proverbs, and the delicate tenderness of the Song of Solomon. Then the rest of the Old Testament is filled with the exalted visions of the prophets, these mighty men who spoke to times of crisis in the nation and yet lifted their eyes and saw far beyond the horizons of time to great events that God was going to bring into being when the seasons rolled around. Yet, when you finish the book, and you have heard all the matchless oratory of the prophets, you still realize that God’s voice has not answered the deep questions of the human heart. It is only when you open the Gospels and begin to read of Jesus, who he was, what he did, where he went, what he said, how he acted, how he lived, and the way he handled situations, that all the utterance of the prophets begins to merge into one great voice and we get God’s final word to humankind.
In Montana is what is called, The Three Forks of the Missouri River, the place where three rivers flow together to form the Missouri. They rise in the mountains in the western part of Montana and they form this great river, the Missouri, that flows on down through Montana and then into North Dakota, South Dakota, through Missouri, and joins the Mississippi along with the Ohio. Altogether this forms the greatest river system and drainage network that the world knows. All these rivers drain out of hills and valleys and mountain ranges that are far separated from one another. I always think of that when I think of the way the Old Testament has flowed together to form the one great voice that speaks in the New. All the various themes that God introduces to humankind in the Old Testament are brought together in the voice of Jesus. He is God’s final word to man, greater than the prophets, fulfilling everything they have written.
Lord Jesus, you are God’s final word. I thank you that I can see how the entire story of the Old Testament finds its fulfillment in you. Are we missing the grandeur of the world’s greatest epic through neglect of either the Old or New Testaments? Is the Person at the epicenter of it all central in our personal lives?
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John McCoury is the pastor of Evergreen Freewill Baptist Church in Roan Mountain, Tennessee, and the chaplain at Roan Highlands Nursing Center. You can read more good Christian news from John HERE.
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