Kids & Kingdom- Children in the Covenant: Teach Them Diligently

In my previous post, we considered the promises that God made to his people and how each of those promises found their fulfillment in Christ. God promised his people that he would crush Satan, bless the nations, reign forever, and save his people, all through the gift of offspring. All of these promises, just like every promise of God, “find their yes” in Christ (2 Cor 1:20).

However, God did not expect his people to be passive bystanders as he fulfilled his promises. He called them to faith-motivated action. After promising Abraham that he would make him into a great nation, God asked him to sacrifice his only son (which God stopped and provided a substitute for, by the way). After promising the Israelites that he would rescue them from slavery in Egypt, he asked them to follow him into the wilderness (including walking through the sea!). After promising Israel a land to inherit, he asked them to trust him and take the land even though their enemies were stronger and more numerous.

When God makes promises, he wants us to trust him and act on that trust. When he made promises to Israel regarding offspring and children, he expected his people to trust him and obey him. But what did obedience look like, and what does it look like for us?

Continue reading “Kids & Kingdom- Children in the Covenant: Teach Them Diligently”

Why You Should Read a Children’s Bible

Our culture is fascinated with unconventional methods to reach common goals, especially when they work! Well, here’s my hot take of an unconventional method to assist Christians in attaining the common goal of biblical literacy. Read a good children’s Bible, whether you have kids or not! These books have been one of the most unexpected tools that God has used to increase my knowledge of His Word. They’ve given me the ability to understand the over-arching story of the Bible better. They have also equipped me to share that story with kids and adults!

I love to teach where Old Testament stories or passages fit in the redemptive storyline of the Bible or how they point us to Christ. Take the story of David and Goliath, for example. I may say something like, “this story points to Jesus because Jesus is the better David, who goes on our behalf to fight the giants of sin and death and when He wins, His victory is attributed to us, even though we didn’t lift a finger.”

Or I may consider how David’s victory over Goliath was an essential part of his path to becoming king and receiving a promise from God that one of his descendant’s would rule on his throne forever, a promise that was fulfilled when one of David’s descendants was crucified, resurrected, and sat down at the right hand of the Father to reign forever.

How can we see connections like this? One of the best places is a good children’s Bible. They excel at giving you the gist of a passage and showing you how it fits into the larger story of the Bible. They can provide excellent summaries, application, and food for thought. I love reading them with my kids, but I also enjoy reading them for my own personal benefit.

Here are a few of the ones I recommend:

  1. The Jesus Storybook Bible by Sally Lloyd-Jones
  2. The Biggest Story Bible Storybook by Kevin DeYoung (we are currently reading this with our oldest sons right now and using the memory cards for scripture memorization)
  3. The Beginners Gospel Story Bible by Jared Kennedy

Remember, with a lot of these you are not reading direct translation of God’s Word. You are reading distilled and simplified passages that are meant to show the reader what the passage means in the grand scheme of God’s revealed truth. Don’t replace regular Bible reading with one of these, use them in addition to your regular reading. I hope that you’ll find, as I have, that such a tool is invaluable, and a worthy addition to any child or adult’s library!

*Header photo by Crossway featuring Deyoung’s The Biggest Story Bible Storybook