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Joshua Boyd

A Walk Through the Bible – Series Introduction

Big Picture Purpose

Instead of deep-diving into one book, we’re stepping back for the 30,000-foot view—seeing the Bible as one connected story and one unified plan of God.

The Old Testament: Written for Us

1 Corinthians 10:11–13 teaches:

We often quote verse 13 (“God won’t give you more than you can handle”), but in context it refers to Israel’s failures.
 The lesson:

The Bible as One Connected Story

When read as a whole, you see:

History accelerates toward Jesus.

Matthew 1:17 highlights:

God was moving history toward fulfillment.

The entire biblical story unfolds in a relatively small geographic region—yet its impact spread across the Roman Empire within 300 years and now across the world.

Key Principles for Reading the Bible

  1. God is always right.
    • Even when consequences seem severe.
    • God is love—Old Testament and New.
  2. Always ask:
    • How does this apply to me?
    • What can I learn from their example?

The Old Covenant vs. The New Covenant

The Old Covenant

The core command:

Israel repeatedly broke that covenant—especially through idolatry.

The problem wasn’t the covenant.
 The problem was the human heart.

God Promises Something New

In Jeremiah 31:31–34, God promises:

What Changed?

Hebrews explains:

When Jesus fulfilled it, it was completed—not discarded.

Then came the New Covenant:

Under the Old Covenant:

Under the New Covenant:

Instead of rules written on stone, the law is written on hearts.

God’s Unchanging Plan

From Adam onward:

The plan never changed—only the covenant structure did.

Our Opportunity Today

The heroes of Scripture (Abraham,