Poythress demonstrates how the sacrifices, traditions, and penalties of the Law of Moses graphically foreshadow the work of Christ and his relationship with his people.
Table of Contents
Part I: UNDERSTANDING THE DIFFERENT ASPECTS OF THE LAW
The Challenge of the Law of Moses
- Basic principles for interpreting the Old Testament
The Tabernacle of Moses,
- Prefiguring Godās Presence through Christ
- The tabernacle as a symbol of the Messiah
- The tabernacle as a symbol of Godās dwelling with Israel
- The tabernacle as a symbol of heaven
- The furniture of the tabernacle
- The multifaceted character of tabernacle symbolism
- Practical lessons from the tabernacle
- Guidelines for interpreting the revelation of the tabernacle
The Sacrifices, Prefiguring the Final Sacrifice of Christ
- The necessity of holiness
- Redemption from sin
- The sequence of events in sacrifice
- The types of sacrifices
The Priests and the People,
- Prefiguring Christās Relation to His People
- The mediatorial role of priests
- Similarities of priests to the tabernacle
- Later replications of the tabernacle
- Pagan counterfeit worship
- The people of Israel
General Principles for Godās Dwelling with Human Beings Prefiguring Union with Christ
- The interaction of tabernacle, sacrifices and priests
- Covenant
The Land of Palestine, the Promised Land
- Godās promise of the land
- The holiness of the land and its symbolic associations
The Law and Its Order
- Prefiguring the Righteousness of Christ
- The law as the sovereign treaty of the great King
- The law articulating Godās order
- The law expressing the way of life
- New Testament application of laws of cleanliness
- Order in personal relationships: the ten commandments
The Purposes of the Tabernacle the Law, and the Promised Land:Pointing Forward to Christ
- The connections of tabernacle symbolism
- The connections of the law
- Moral and ceremonial aspects of the law
- The tabernacle, the law, and the land as elementary and deep
- The righteousness set forth in the law
- Blessing and curse from the law
- The interpretation of Mosaic law in Hebrews
The Punishments and Penalties of the Law Prefiguring the Destruction of Sin and Guilt through Christ
- The righteousness of Godās punishments
- Penal authority given to human beings
- Simple examples of just recompense on earth: murder and theft
- The significance of the injured party: God and human beings
Part II: UNDERSTANDING SPECIFIC PENALTIES OF THE LAW
The Principle of Penal Substitution
- The operation of recompense in Deuteronomy 13
- The significance of holy war: justice and purity
- New Testament Applications
- ApplyingĀ Deut. 13:1-18Ā today
- Punishment
- Restoration
Principles of Justice for the Modern State
- The nature of responsibilities of the state
- Principles for just state punishments
Just Penalties for Many Crimes
- Penalties for theft and accident
- Repentant offenders
- Penalties for murder, attempted murder, and manslaughter
- Penalties for bodily injury
- Penalties for verbal crimes
- Penalties for profanation of the holy community
- Penalties for violent usurpation of authority
- Penalties for crimes against servants
Penalties for Sexual Crimes
- Principles involved in understanding Mosaic sexual law
- Penalties for fornication
- Penalties for adultery
- Penalties for sexual perversion
- Alternatives to my position on sexual crimes
Deterrence and Rehabilitation
- The use of the general principle of equivalence
- The role of deterrence and rehabilitation
- The deterrent value of my proposed punishments
- The rehabilitative value of my proposed punishments
A Critique of Prisons
- Does prison justly restore and punish?
- Does prison effectively deter and rehabilitate?
Our Responsibilities Toward Imperfect States
- Primary responsibilities
- Earthly political responsibilities
Fulfillment of the Law in the Gospel According to Matthew
- Matthew 1-4
- Matthew 5-7
- Matthew 5:17-20
- Pentecost in Matthew
- Obedience to the law in the Great Commission
- The broader role of the Old Testament in the Great Commission
- Christocentric interpretation
Appendix A: FALSE WORSHIP IN THE MODERN STATE
- The point at issue: the God-given authority of civil government
- State responsibilities concern offenses against human beings, not offenses against God
- Is false worship an attack against other human beings?
- Is false worship an attack against the state?
- Practical reasoning
- Objection 1: the possibility of renewal of holy war
- Objection 2: false worship incites Godās anger against the whole society
Appendix B: Evaluating Theonomy
- Major Concerns of Theonomists
- Interpreting Old Testament Law
- Old Testament penalties
- The relation of this book to theonomy
- Modifying the theses of theonomy
- Possible objections
- Some possible one-sidedness in theonomy
- Theonomic stridency
Appendix C: Does the Greek Word Ī Ī»Ī·ĻĻĻ Sometimes Mean āConfirmā?
- The nature of the dispute
- Analysis of possible examples of the sense āconfirmā
- Conclusion
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Shadow of Christ in the Law of Moses, The is in the following collections: