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You are here: Home / Archives for Jesse Johnson

Why Study Esther

February 26, 2020 By Peter Krol

Jesse Johnson has another great post at The Cripplegate, this time about the book of Esther. (I previously linked to one about Ezra.) In “Why Study Esther,” Johnson delves into the mystery of why God is never named or explicitly mentioned in the book.

To drive this point home, Esther is the only book of the Bible that does not mention God or God’s name. In fact, the author goes out of his way to avoid writing it (consider the pains he took in Esther 4:14, writing an ambiguous sentence when every Jewish child would know God was the one working).

But this too is by design. No book of the Bible has its focus on God’s sovereign direction of history to the extent that Esther does. It’s masterful. It’s clear. It’s unambiguous. But it’s also subtly beautiful.

Only a fool would look at a backyard covered in animal tracks and declare that because the animals can’t be seen now, they must not have been there at all. Similarly, only a fool would look at Esther and imagine that because God is not seen on stage that he is not there at all.

At the end of 2019, I spent a few months saturating in Esther, reading it 20 times in a row. I agree with Johnson on the book’s high value. The full article is worth your time.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Esther, Jesse Johnson

Lessons from a Genealogy

December 25, 2019 By Peter Krol

Merry Christmas! As you reflect on the birth of our Lord Jesus, consider what lessons Jesse Johnson would have us take from Jesus’ genealogy in Matthew 1:

This then is the advent hope found in a genealogy: that the savior will be born in an unusual circumstances, that he will be the savior of sinners who respond to him in faith, and that this message will go to the world.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Genealogies, Jesse Johnson, Matthew

Why Study Ezra

October 9, 2019 By Peter Krol

Have you ever read Ezra? Have you bothered to study it? If not, Jesse Johnson thinks you should.

After explaining one of the Bible’s most incredible prophecies (Isaiah 44:24-45:1), Johnson says this about Ezra:

The proclamation is that Israel would return, and is what is fulfilled in the book of Ezra.

Ezra is worth studying because it is a full-color illustration of Yahweh’s sovereignty. Nearly every chapter speaks of the meticulous application of that sovereignty for the purpose of rebuilding Israel. Nehemiah will focus on rebuilding Jerusalem’s physical architecture, but before God gets to that, Ezra first describes the rebuilding of Israel’s spiritual architecture, namely the temple and the priests.

The most remarkable thing about the book of Ezra is that despite their zeal in the return, and despite the miraculous nature of God’s prophetic word, the return doesn’t go well. In fact, it ends in failure.

He concludes:

Study the book of Ezra. As you do, the more you are in awe of God’s meticulous sovereignty, let that impress upon you that for those apart from Christ, they don’t need a miracle. They don’t need a new start. They need a new heart, which only comes through New Covenant.

This analysis is great. Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Ezra, Jesse Johnson, Overview

Examples of Jesus in the Old Testament

July 24, 2019 By Peter Krol

Jesse Johnson did us a great favor by giving 6 thoughtful examples of how to preach Jesus from Old Testament texts, where “the coming Messiah” is not the main point. Even when a text doesn’t directly predict the coming of Christ, we ought to make sure we see it climax in the good news about Jesus’ death and resurrection, and/or the message of forgiveness being preached to all nations.

Johnson’s examples are good models of first determining the author’s main point for his original audience, and second connecting that main point to the good news about Jesus. This prevents forced or tenuous gospel connections that fail to land with transformative power. See my post on this topic for further explanation.

Johnson’s examples are:

  • Leviticus 13 (leprosy)
  • Judges 19 (dismembered concubine)
  • Genesis 11 (Babel)
  • 1 Kings 18 (showdown on Mt. Carmel)
  • 1 Samuel 14 (Jonathan eating honey)
  • Proverbs 5 (sexual immorality)

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Interpretation, Jesse Johnson, Jesus Focus, Main Point

Translating God’s Name

April 19, 2017 By Peter Krol

To build your confidence in your English Bibles, we don’t often get into issues of translation from the Hebrew and Greek scriptures. But Jesse Johnson wrote a recent article at the Cripplegate about why English Bibles should translate God’s personal name as Yahweh instead of the typical “the LORD.” Johnson walks through each argument presented in the prefaces to most English translations about why they keep the superstitious Jewish tradition of not using the name God revealed to us. And then he gives his own reasons why the personal name, and not the title, should be used.

My favorite part is when he answers the objection—often considered the trump card—that we don’t actually know how YHWH would have been pronounced, since its vocalization has been long lost.

This misses the point. We don’t know with “certainty” how any of the Hebrew words were pronounced. I’m not even sure Yahweh spoke Hebrew to Adam in the garden anyway. How did Adam pronounce Eve? Is it the same way Americans do it? We can’t even agree on how to pronounce Isaiah, much less Yahweh. But the solution is not to render Isaiah as “ISH,” and it is certainly not to replace Isaiah with “The PROPHET.”

One commenter on the post asks why Johnson is okay with “Jesus” over the original “Yeshua.” Johnson replies:

At least “Jesus” is a name, not a title. Imagine replacing every use of Jesus with “The SAVIOR.” Wouldn’t that undercut his personhood? I think so.
And, btw, your point about Yeshua — Jesus is exactly the argument that should be made for Yahweh. Nobody says Jesus was pronounced that way, yet we don’t blink about using it. But then we change a name that is thousands of years older than that? Ba humbug.

Johnson’s arguments explain why I repeatedly refer to God as Yahweh in my Exodus series, and why I will continue to do so when I read the Old Testament out loud.

Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Jesse Johnson, Translation, Yahweh

The Bible Teaches Us to Use the Bible

November 11, 2015 By Peter Krol

When we want to figure out how to use the Bible, we don’t need to complicate the process. The Bible itself tells us how to use the Bible.

Jesse Johnson quotes W.H. Pike, who writes of the many instructions the Bible itself gives about how to use the Bible:

  1. Read it (Neh 8:8)
  2. Believe it (Rom 10:8)
  3. Receive it (James 1:10)
  4. Taste it (Heb 6:5)
  5. Eat it (Jer 15:16)
  6. Hold it fast (Titus 1:9)
  7. Hold it forth (Phil 2:16)
  8. Preach it (2 Tim 4:2)
  9. Search it (John 5:29)
  10. Study it (2 Tim 2:15)
  11. Meditate on it (Ps 1:2)
  12. Compare it (2 Cor 2:13)
  13. Rightly divide it (2 Tim 2:15)
  14. Delight in it (Ps 119:92)

Pike’s article explains each point in a few sentences. Check it out!

Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Bible reading, Jesse Johnson

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