After reading and studying the Bible, you can learn various information and topics. In this article, as expressed in the kingdom of God, the people's choice of God, the death of Jesus sacrifice, and the expression seen in the church, about the promise of redemption that God has accomplished with Jesus and the New Testament I will argue. The Kingdom of God is one of the common themes of Old Testament and New Testament. Because the New Testament is based on the literal meaning of the information in the Old Testament it is necessary to thoroughly study these two will in order to understand the kingdom.
· God has been completed and completed in the New Testament through the ransom plans of the contract. In the Old Testament verses that declared the New Testament (in particular Ezekiel 11: 16-20, 36: 16-28, and 37: 21-28), the promise of a clean, clean and spiritual transformation I saw. Domination of Messiah. III. Jesus crucified this new covenant, especially by death. And he acknowledged it and used bread and the Holy Grail to remember (Matthew 26: 28, Mark 14: 24, Luke 22: 20). . This is the future of the Jeremiah era, it was carried out by Jesus, in particular his work at the ransom and the sacrifice of the cross.
Matthew was drawing Jesus' life as a promise to reach God's promise with Abraham and David. Indeed, Matthew shows how God depicts Jesus' work with the people of Israel using the story of Israel. Jesus was given "blood of the covenant" in death (Matthew 26:28, Mark 14: 24, Luke 22:20). In Luke 1:72, the birth of John was interpreted as a god "that you remember your contract and our vow to Abraham our father". I opened a new kingdom. They emphasized repeatedly that Jesus was "the son of David", the fact of "Christ", hence Nasanael admitted that he was "the son of God, the king of Israel" (John 1: 49). His core discussion in Michael Bird's writings "Jesus is the Christ" is "The identity of Jesus' Messianic is the earliest earliest and most basic claim of Christ" (p. 4 )is. As Bird explained, this is a unique royal occupation.