Summary
This book asks a straightforward question with far reaching implications, how did the apostles tell the story of Israel when they preached Christ. Rather than starting with modern categories, it listens to apostolic sermons and letters, tracing the narrative logic that runs from promise to fulfilment.
The argument highlights how the New Testament uses Scripture, especially in passages where the gospel is proclaimed or defended. It aims to show that apostolic proclamation is not a patchwork of proof texts, it is a coherent retelling of the Old Testament story centred on Jesus as Messiah and Lord.
The authors write with the needs of the church in view. The goal is to equip readers to interpret Scripture with the apostles, so that preaching and teaching follow the same storyline and reach the same Christ centred conclusions with integrity.
Strengths
The most obvious strength is its method. It does not treat biblical theology as a private scheme imposed on the text, it treats apostolic interpretation as a model. By walking through New Testament examples, it trains the reader to see how the apostles reasoned and how they proclaimed.
A second strength is its balance of detail and synthesis. It engages real texts rather than abstractions, yet it regularly steps back to summarise what the passages teach about covenant fulfilment, promise, and mission. That pattern makes the book useful in sermon preparation and in theological training.
A third strength is its confidence in the unity of Scripture. The authors show how the gospel is rooted in the Old Testament story without diminishing the distinct voices within that story. The result is a richer sense of continuity, which helps prevent both moralism and over simplification.
Limitations
The approach is strongly shaped by selected representative texts, which is sensible, but readers will sometimes want more interaction with alternative readings. Where debates are complex, the book tends to keep moving rather than pausing for extended critical engagement.
Also, because the focus is apostolic retelling, less space is given to how this method should be applied to difficult passages outside the main storyline. Pastors may still need additional tools for genres like wisdom or lament, even if the storyline remains essential.
How We Would Use It
For preaching, this book is best used as a guide to apostolic instincts. Before outlining a sermon, read the relevant chapter, then ask how your passage fits the same pattern of promise and fulfilment. It helps you speak of Christ without skipping the Old Testament context.
For training pastors, it makes an excellent seminar text. Students can be asked to trace one apostolic sermon, identify its Old Testament foundations, and then practise expressing the same gospel logic in their own words. That discipline produces better preaching and better Bible study leadership.
For church teaching, the material can support a series on how the New Testament reads the Old Testament. Used carefully, it strengthens confidence in Scripture and helps congregations see why the apostles preached the way they did.
Closing Recommendation
If you want biblical theology that is tethered to the apostles rather than to modern fashion, this is a wise purchase. It offers a clear framework, strong textual engagement, and genuine help for proclamation.
Keep it near your desk when preparing sermons or Bible studies. It will not answer every interpretive question, but it will anchor your reading in the same storyline the apostles proclaimed.
Christopher R. Bruno
Christopher R. Bruno is an American theologian of the early twenty first century, rooted in confessional evangelical theology with Reformed convictions.
He is known especially for his work in biblical theology and systematic theology, including studies on the atonement, union with Christ, and the storyline of Scripture. His writing frequently connects careful doctrinal formulation with the unfolding drama of redemption, serving the church through both academic and accessible works.
Bruno continues to be appreciated for his doctrinal steadiness, theological depth, and desire to see doctrine fuel worship and mission. He models a thoughtful engagement with the biblical text that is both rigorous and church centred, helping readers hold together careful scholarship and pastoral sensitivity.
Theological Perspective: Reformed