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You are here: Home / Archives for Christopher Ash

4 Psalms You May Not Have Realized Were About Christ

July 31, 2024 By Peter Krol

Last week, I shared an article by Christopher Ash about Jesus as the lead singer of the psalms. I can’t help but follow up this week with another article by Ash entitled, “4 Psalms You Didn’t Realize Point to Christ.”

Ash considers:

  • Psalm 1 – the man who meditates constantly on God’s word
  • Psalm 6 – the innocent sufferer who can drive evildoers away
  • Psalm 109 – perhaps the harshest of the psalms of cursing against the wicked
  • Psalm 145 – perpetual praise offered to the Lord

All four psalms only make real sense if Jesus Christ is the lead singer.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Christopher Ash, Interpretation, Jesus Focus, Psalms

In the Psalms, Jesus is the Lead Singer

July 24, 2024 By Peter Krol

Christopher Ash explains how the Psalms were intended to be read from a Christ-centered perspective.

Perhaps the greatest blessing of a Christ-centered reading is that it frees me from being imprisoned into thinking that the Psalms are all about me. No, they are not all about me! They are all about Jesus Christ in his flawless human nature and his incomparable divine nature. They revolve around Jesus, who sang the Psalms as a significant part of his life of faith and prayer and praise on earth.

I remember seeing on the wall of a church the words of Psalm 20:4: “May [the Lord] grant you your heart’s desire and fulfill all your plans!” How wonderful, you might think. The Bible promises me all that my heart desires. Until you read the psalm and realize that Psalm 20 is a prayer for the king in David’s line. Ultimately, it is a prayer that Jesus will have his heart’s desire granted and that his plans will be fulfilled. And they will!

The Psalms are not all about me. If I think they are, I will end up disillusioned. But when I grasp that they are all about Christ, my heart lifts in joy that he is the blessed Man and I belong to him.

That is but one of the blessings of reading the Psalms in light of the fact that Jesus is lead singer. The other blessings are:

  1. You can sing in tune with the gospel.
  2. You can sing every line of every song.
  3. You can sing for joy in Jesus.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Christopher Ash, Jesus Focus, Psalms

6 Key Questions about the Book of Job

May 19, 2021 By Peter Krol

Christopher Ash, author of a new book on the Book of Job, answers 6 key questions on the book of Job.

  1. Is the book of Job about suffering?
  2. What are we to make of Job’s comforters?
  3. Did Job deserve his sufferings?
  4. Why is the book of Job so long?
  5. Who or what is Leviathan?
  6. Is there any hope in the book of Job?

I haven’t read Ash’s new book yet, but his commentary on Job is one of the best commentaries I have read on any book of the Bible. My understanding of Job has been shaped profoundly by Ash’s insights. I commend his brief blog article for your consideration to get a quick overview.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Christopher Ash, Job

Job: The Wisdom of the Cross

July 15, 2016 By Peter Krol

Job Wisdom of the CrossSome commentaries trumpet their contemporary relevance; others excel at close observation or textual analysis. Few bring all these skills together, but Christopher Ash’s recent volume on Job is among their number. Weighing in at almost 450 pages of meaty exposition, this tome gives an intimidating first impression. But Job is a long book, and its 42 chapters each receive just over 10 pages of Ash’s attention. This fact makes Ash’s comments fly swiftly and land hard.

Readers of Job often wrestle with lofty questions about the suffering of innocents, the place of lament, and the problem of evil. Asked from a posture of comfort or philosophical whimsy, such questions are what Ash refers to as “armchair questions.” And he contends that the book of Job deals not with armchair questions but with wheelchair questions—those asked from a position of weakness, desperation, and even devastation. Ash walks through Job’s lengthy speeches with a painstaking interest that never gets tedious. He explains each character’s arguments, stanza by stanza, showing that though humanity’s concerns have changed, they have ever stayed the same. And he shows that Job’s suffering makes most sense as preparing the world for Jesus’ suffering. Because bad things happened to a good man, good things might just happen to bad people—we can be reconciled to God.

Crossway advertises the Preaching the Word series as being “by pastors for pastors,” but don’t let this tagline deceive you. Ash’s writing is straightforward and engaging enough to leave no layperson behind. I’ve read more than 50 commentaries over the years, and Ash’s is one of the very best.

It’s available for $30.15 at Amazon and $29.35 at Westminster Books.


Disclaimer: Amazon and Westminster links are affiliate links. If you click them and buy stuff, you’ll relieve a bit of our innocent suffering by sending a small commission our way at no extra cost to yourself.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Christopher Ash, Commentaries, Job

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