Chasing the Truth

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Spurgeon, Types, and the Majesty of Christ

Shadow and Substance

In our Wednesday evening series teaching through Colossians, we have just completed Colossians 2:16-23. In this passage, Paul utilizes the distinction between the “shadow” presented in the Old Testament laws and the “substance” that comes in Christ. This interplay of shadow and substance—type and antitype—is a key interpretative tool that helps us to understand so much of the God’s revelation in history and helps to understand how Jesus and the Apostles read the Scriptures—and how we should too! As a follow up to my teaching on Colossians 2:16-23, I spent some time working through what typology is, how it works as an interpretive way of thinking, and what ways we can see this play out in Scriptures especially in the relationship between the Old and New Testaments.

Don’t Be a Modern-Day Marcionite

One of the significant motivations for a typological interpretive framework is to help us see just how unified the Old and New Testaments are. So often, we think of ourselves as “New Testament” Christians. But truly, we are people of the entire Word. While there are many aspects of the Old Testament that have been fulfilled in Christ, we can’t excise the Old Testament from our Bibles—or at least we shouldn’t. I fear that we actually do become modern-day Marcionites at times. Not confessionally, but practically in the way that we read the Bible. By tending towards reading mostly (or only?) the New Testament, we effectively demonstrate a misunderstanding of the relationship between the Testaments while also robbing ourselves of the very foundation upon which our “New Testament faith” is built. Without understanding the ways in which God has worked and promised to fulfill His purposes laid forth in the Old Testament, we truncate and shrink our understanding of and appreciation for what is communicated in the New Testament. In fact, did you know that about 84 percent of your Bible is Old Testament when you consider both the Old Testament text itself and then all the quotations and citations of the Old Testament by New Testament authors? An understanding of typology helps us to fight against the tendency to only read and study part of the Bible. By showing us the majesty of Christ in fulfilling not just the direct prophecies of the Old Testament but also the whole story that God is telling typology leads us toward an appreciation of the entire Word of God.

Spurgeon and the Majesty of Christ

As a way of demonstrating this line of thinking, I want to point you to the Prince of Preachers and a sermon that C. H. Spurgeon preaching on John 19:30. As you read this excerpt (warning: it’s lengthy), I want you to think on two concepts. First, consider the majesty of Christ in the fulfillment of all the expectations of the Old Testament. What person could hold together and fulfill all the prophecies and all the prefigurements that are found in the Scriptures? No one but the God-Man. Second, contemplate the sovereignty, wisdom, and omnipotence of God to be able to orchestrate such an elaborate, expansive, and awesome plan. Truly there is no God like ours!

What I hope you’ll see is this: a typological framework brings practical awareness and enduring appreciation for who God is and what He alone has done in human history to save us. What a God we have! Isn’t He worthy of worship and obedience?


Additional Reading

Fred Zaspel has put together a few excellent but short articles that summarize and provide some examples of Typology. If you would like more information about this subject, check out these articles.

The Warrant for Typological Interpretation of Scripture

The Nature of Biblical “Types”

Typology as Prophecy