The Old Testament View of Time
The Old Testament View of Time
The Hebrew concept of time found in the Old Testament is concerned more with the
quality of time as it relates to hail, rain, summer, and harvest or to “evil days” or “prosperous
times.” Clock or calendar time certainly is tracked in the Old Testament. Believing Jews as well
as Christians believe the Old Testament is an accurate account of actual historical events and real
people.
The Old Testament teaches by means of stories, by personal examples from the lives of
individuals, and by case histories of God’s dealings with men and angels. Scripture uses poetic
images, dreams, visions and providential arrangements of circumstances to indicate God’s
invisible workings in human affairs from behind the scenes of history. The Hebrew year cycles
around seed time and harvest and commemorative feasts and festivals. These call to mind the
redemptive deeds of God and his blessings upon his chosen people Israel.
The feasts of Israel have great symbolic import both for the nation of Israel and for the
Church. Many details concerning dates and length of these feasts are given in the Torah
(Leviticus 23).
The Old Testament gives us a record of patriarchs and races, nations and kings. It is a
selective record narrowing down to focus on the bloodline leading to the Messiah. Israel is at
stage center, all directions are measured from Jerusalem, and the relationship between the
Israelites and their God determines their prosperity or adversity in the land (eretz yisrael). The
historical record of the Old Testament reveals national deterioration and repeated failures by
men, but persistent, gracious intervention by God who sovereignly works out his grand strategy
down through the ages. Israel typifies God’s dealings with the nations. From Israel the Messiah
has already come once, and through Israel will come the ultimate salvation of the nations when
Messiah returns.
The Old Testament does not often speak at all about the affairs of other nations unless
they impinge on events concerning Israel. Little is said about earthquakes, natural disasters,
wars, the rise and fall of empires and nations, storms, or cosmic events—unless such happenings
relate directly to Israel. In addition, the purpose of the biblical record is mostly moral and ethical.
Because he is a personal God who makes covenants, Yahweh is evidently much more interested
in helping men to know him and to understand themselves than he is in teaching us details of
science or all the fine points of history.
Concerning the Old Testament, Paul plainly says in First Corinthians, 10:11, that “These
things happened to them (to the Old Testament fathers) as types, but they were written down for
our instruction, upon whom the end of the ages has come.” In his letter to Romans, (Romans
15:4), Paul also wrote, “Whatever things were written in former times were written for our
instruction, that through patience and the encouragement of the scriptures we might have hope.”