Bible Books

Overviews of Biblical Books

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These are book-level overviews — structure, theme, central argument, and place within the redemptive-historical flow of Scripture. Biblical theology, as pioneered in its modern form by Geerhardus Vos and continued by figures like Edmund Clowney, reads each biblical book as a movement within a single story: the covenant history that culminates in Jesus Christ. A book is more than its individual verses; each has an argument, a shape, and a pastoral purpose in the canon.

Old Testament books are read typologically — pointing forward to Christ — not allegorically. Genesis introduces creation, fall, and the line of promise. The prophets exposit covenant blessing and curse. The Psalms are the church's hymnbook and Christ's prayer book. New Testament books complete the story: the Gospels record the life of the incarnate Son, Acts traces the gospel's advance, the Epistles pastor the early church, and Revelation unveils the triumph of the Lamb.

Use these overviews as orienting maps before diving into individual passages. Context is everything in biblical interpretation.

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Old Testament

Gospels and Acts

New Testament Epistles

Revelation

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