Summary
This volume offers a big picture reading of the Hebrew Bible, showing how its storyline and major themes hang together. Dempster gives sustained attention to the shape of the canon and the movement of the narrative, so that the Old Testament is read as a coherent whole rather than a pile of separate texts. The focus is not on detailed verse by verse commentary, but on tracing patterns like kingship, land, seed, temple, exile, and hope, and on helping the reader see how the parts relate to the whole. The writing is brisk and structured, with clear signposting and repeated summaries that keep you oriented. It is the sort of book that helps preachers ask better questions of the text, especially when preparing series across books or when trying to locate a passage within the wider argument of Scripture.
Strengths
The chief strength is the sense of proportion. Many books either drown in detail or float in abstraction, but here the argument stays close enough to the text to feel earned, while still keeping the horizon wide. The emphasis on canonical shape is particularly helpful for pastors who want to preach the Old Testament in a way that respects its own voice and also appreciates its forward pull. The categories are memorable, and the book repeatedly pushes you to read for storyline, not isolated moral lessons. It will also help you teach the unity of the Bible to a congregation without flattening differences between genres and eras. The tone is confident and warm, and the author is intent on serving the church, not merely advancing a thesis.
Limitations
Because the book aims for a panoramic view, some readers will want more direct engagement with disputed texts and alternative readings. At points the narrative sweep can move quickly, leaving you wishing for a little more patience with hard corners of the canon, especially where historical questions or literary debates come to the surface. Those who are looking for close exegesis for a Sunday sermon will need to pair this with a solid commentary. The same big picture strength can also be a weakness if you treat it as a shortcut, since the value lies in sharpening your judgement, not replacing careful work in the passage. It is best used as a guide to orientation and synthesis rather than as a one stop shop.
How We Would Use It
We would use this early in preparation, before diving into the weeds, to steady the compass. If you are preaching through an Old Testament book, this will help you set the direction of travel, locate repeated themes, and state the book level message with greater confidence. It is also excellent for training settings, reading groups with pastors, or elders who want to think more deeply about how the Old Testament functions as Christian Scripture. In congregational teaching it can supply a framework for Bible overview classes. When you come to a particular passage, you can return to the big themes and ask how this text serves the larger movement, then turn to more detailed resources for the specific exegetical decisions.
Closing Recommendation
If you want a sturdy biblical theology of the Old Testament that improves your instincts for context and storyline, this is well worth reading. It will not write your sermons for you, but it will make you a better reader of the whole canon, and therefore a more faithful preacher of its parts. Read it with a Bible open, take notes on the themes that recur, and let it shape how you explain the Old Testament to your people, as promise, pattern, and preparation for the gospel.
Stephen G. Dempster
Stephen G. Dempster is a Canadian Old Testament scholar of the contemporary era, writing within evangelical scholarship with a strong biblical theological instinct.
He is known for reading the Old Testament as a unified story, attending to covenant, kingship, and the hope of God’s rule, and he often helps pastors connect prophetic warnings and promises to the larger canon.
He remains valued for clarity, thematic insight, and careful restraint that lets the text lead. Recommended titles include Dominion and Dynasty, Micah in the Two Horizons Old Testament Commentary, and his contribution to the ESV Expository Commentary.
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical