Summary
This book addresses a question that sits behind many debates about the Bible, how Jesus relates to the Scriptures of Israel, and how canon and covenant shape that relationship. It aims to help readers think carefully about continuity and fulfilment, not as abstract puzzles but as matters that shape reading, preaching, and doctrine. The focus is on how Scripture is received, how covenants frame expectation, and how Christology is formed within that canonical context.
For pastors, the value is in sharpening instincts. Many errors in preaching arise from weak assumptions about canon, promise, and fulfilment. A work that forces you to slow down and consider the theological architecture of the Bible can strengthen your handling of both Testaments. This book seeks to do that, with sustained argument and careful distinctions.
Strengths
The book presses readers to take canon seriously. That matters because the church does not preach isolated religious texts, it preaches the Scriptures as a unified, covenant shaped witness that reaches its goal in Christ. The argument also encourages careful language about fulfilment. It pushes back against simplistic readings that either collapse the Old Testament into the New, or sever the connection between them. Pastors who want to preach Christ from all Scripture will find this kind of disciplined thinking helpful.
Another strength is its theological ambition. It does not treat Christology as a detachable topic, but as something formed by covenantal and canonical realities. That is a healthy instinct for Bible teachers, since it encourages preaching that is both Christ centred and text faithful.
Limitations
This is a longer and more argumentative book than many in the series. It is not an introductory overview, and some sections may feel abstract if you are looking for direct sermon help. You may also need to read slowly, since the payoff comes from following the logic rather than skimming for takeaways. It is a book for building theological muscle, not for quick illustration.
In addition, the book is less immediately practical than some biblical theology volumes. Its contribution is foundational, and the practical use comes as you apply its categories to your own preaching and teaching over time.
How We Would Use It
We would use this in a reading group for pastors or interns, perhaps alongside actual sermon preparation in Old Testament texts. It would also be useful for those engaged in teaching biblical theology or defending a coherent Christian reading of the Old Testament. When questions arise about how Jesus reads the Scriptures, or how the covenants relate, the book provides categories that can prevent muddled answers.
If you want to strengthen the foundations of how you read the Bible as Scripture, this is a worthwhile, if demanding, supplement.
Closing Recommendation
A substantial theological study that repays careful reading, especially for those who want stronger canonical and covenantal categories for Christ centred interpretation.
Matthew Barrett
Matthew Barrett is an American theologian and church historian associated with contemporary Reformed evangelicalism.
He has written extensively on the doctrine of God, the Reformation, and the retrieval of classical theism, seeking to recover historic confessional theology for the modern church. Through books, teaching, and editorial work, he has encouraged renewed engagement with the Protestant orthodox tradition.
Barrett is known for theological depth combined with clear argumentation. His writing calls readers back to historic orthodoxy, emphasising divine holiness, simplicity, and sovereignty. By drawing on the riches of the Reformation and post Reformation eras, he seeks to strengthen doctrinal foundations and foster worship shaped by a high view of God.
Theological Perspective: Reformed