Showing posts with label The Drama of Scripture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Drama of Scripture. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2013

Benediction: The Face of God

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed
Conclusion and Benediction: The Face of God


Conclusion and Benediction

As the wise men concluded their stories at evening’s end
Prayers and blessings would rise up like campfire smoke
The story echoing and stillness in the hope—transcend
And the minstrels would play their final chords
And the hymn singers their final choruses to the Lord
Prayers were offered up and chants—incantations  
The crowd would fade into the night back to their own places
The circle shrinking as less light reflected off fewer faces
The poets would add midnight oil to their lamps
Light their pipes and ladle out more brew
The morning was a long way off for them to be through
The images and prose floated like music—the lyrics presupposed
They knew they would not sleep until it was written in verse
So without plan, reservation, or thought—
they would not rehearse
Quill and ink scratched paper frantically in final prose

The poets proclaimed, “This is how the story goes . . .”


The Face of God

Once we walked in the loving gaze
Of the face of God
In Eden’s beauty paradise
On heavenly earth; on heavenly sod
Our transgressions made us outcasts
And dark winds blew us,
To the East, it threw us
The wind withered the land
The fallen outnumbered the sand
None could rest, not kings in their riches
Nor the poor with outstretched hand . . .
And the prophets cried out
The priests offered sacrifice and praise with shout,
And the kings waged war and decreed
Until it was clear, all people bleed
And silence deafened the people in need
Then the starry night came. . .
Wise men were called from the East
Back to their Prince of Peace
His star led them there
With gifts of worship so fine and fair
The Light had entered darkness
After four hundred years of silence
Broken in a babies cry
For all to live, who once had died
The Shepherds came with staff and rod,
And these wise men, to see the face of God
In former days, and in many ways
God spoke and now by His Son,
In these latter days
He walks again with His people
In Eden made anew
His face and their face; seen through and through
To once again walk in that loving gaze
In the Glory of the face of God
In Eden’s paradise
On heavenly sod
To be right again with our God
Heaven came down and intimacy restored
Both rich and poor have seen their Lord


© December 2011, Robbie Pruitt


Hebrews 1:1-4

“God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the worlds; who being the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person, and upholding all things by the word of His power, when He had by Himself purged our sins, sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high, having become so much better than the angels, as He has by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they.”

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Restoration is Here

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed

Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed: 

Restoration is Here

Restoration the final act
When all is made new
All that is broken had been seen to
When all is made right
All will worship at that day
When there is no more night
When Jesus has come back
He will have worshippers
A number too great to count
And to God’s own glory—surmount  
Recreation and restoration we are to be about
And on the mountaintop we will all shout!
It is, indeed, finished!
Death has been diminished
“All that is sad will come untrue”
And creation will be renewed
We will praise His name until that final day is done
Until all can say, “I am His daughter. I am His son.”
We wait until He comes on the cloud
When the final glory has been revealed
At the lifting of the final shroud
Then we will worship
With a many a shout—as we all yell out loud
Hosanna to our King
May His glory ever ring! 

This is how the story comes to its final end,
when all has just commenced
And all is made new again, as it was in former days hence


© September 7, 2012, Robbie Pruitt 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

The Church and Her Mission

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:
The Mission of the Church
Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed


Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:

Pentecostal Kingdom Come:
The Church and Her Mission

We will go
Tell it on the mountain
Until all will know
Dance and sing and put on a show
Until all the world comes aglow
And all has the chance to be grafted in
Until all will come to know
The King has come and freedom is shown
To know Him and to make Him known
And God’s Kingdom has come
On earth as it is in heaven
And the yeast is worked into the leaven
Community rises up—everything is held in common
Brother is brother’s keeper
Love escalates and rises ever steeper
Heaven has come down and blessing abounds
Tongues of fire emerges and descends
Fire flames, rearranges, changes and begins
His presence and power from nation to nation
Witnesses consulted, witnesses made
Flame so bright there is no shade

This is how act five closes, with flames of fire and community
Power displayed so brightly the whole world would see


© September 4, 2012, Robbie Pruitt


This poem was also submitted to Open Link Night at dVerse Poets. To see more poems submitted, please visit the site. The links will be live at 2 p.m. Central time today.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

The King and His Kingdom Has Come

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 4: The Coming of the King: Redemption Accomplished
Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:
The Mission of the Church
Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed

Act 4: The Coming of the King: Redemption Accomplished

The King and His Kingdom Has Come


The King is coming—rejoice!
Though sin has us broken at our broken choice
The King will be our Lord
His people escaping judgment and judgment’s sword
Redemption is coming and all will be made new
Transparency—He will see us through

The King is here! His Kingdom has come.
Redemption is accomplished in its sum

This is how act four has its end,
With the Alpha and the Omega declaring, “It is finished.”
And having the last word on our sin


© September 7, 2012, Robbie Pruitt

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Scary Silence and the Hope that Would Emerge

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen 

Interlude: A Kingdom Story Waiting for an Ending: 
The Intertestamental Period 
Act 4: The Coming of the King: Redemption Accomplished
Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:
The Mission of the Church
Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed

Interlude: A Kingdom Story Waiting for an Ending:
The Intertestamental Period

Scary Silence and the Hope that Would Emerge

The hardest thing to do is wait
When the silence is so loud it sounds like hate
Though the promise was made, the Word was not spoken
The fear washed over at all that was broken
The promise was given and His good plan emerging
It was at Bethlehem that heaven and earth would be merging
Silence would be broken by a babies cry
The entire world would hear, as the Angels would begin to sing
Good tidings they would bring
But not before this deafening silence stings
Scary silence and the hope that would emerge
All is coming together and all will transpire
The coming of our King and the salvation He will bring
When all will rise up out the mire
Salvation birthed at what would transpire
But now the echoing silence and the quiet dance
Until the Bridegroom brings the romance
Nothing is happenstance
All will come to pass and all will be revealed
In the incarnation, nothing is sealed

This is how the interlude ends,
With silence and stillness— and waiting for amends


© September 4, 2012, Robbie Pruitt

Saturday, October 20, 2012

A People for a King

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 3: The King Chooses Israel: Redemption Initiated
Interlude: A Kingdom Story Waiting for an Ending: 
The Intertestamental Period 
Act 4: The Coming of the King: Redemption Accomplished
Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:
The Mission of the Church
Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed

Act 3: The King Chooses Israel: Redemption Initiated

A People for a King


The garden gate slammed shut
There appeared a swirling sword of flame
Walling out all of humanity
As they were cast out of the Garden
East of Eden, away from God’s glory

A chosen people for a King
Promise of redemption and rescue
A covenant and a signet ring
An end to the rebellion, God would bring
And a final end to death’s sting

The pride of the people
And their own feeble attempts
Fell short of God’s glory
Offerings were made half-heartedly
Towers were built story after striving story
To reach heaven without God—for one’s own glory

A people for a King
A Nation and a name
Patriarchs, a land, and a promise
His Kingdom He would build
If we believed God

Through one man—the fall
Through one man—a promise
Salvation for one and all
If we believe God . . .
It is counted to us as righteousness
While we fall short God is for us
To restore us and to dwell among us

A people for a King
Paradise to be found
Death will loose its sting
This is what our God will bring
Adoption—we are His
To His covenant we are bound

This is how act three comes to a close—a people for a King
With Israel’s salvation initiated and the love God would bring.


© September 1, 2012, Robbie Pruitt

Saturday, September 15, 2012

The Rebellion Leads to Fall

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 4: The Coming of the King: Redemption Accomplished
Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:
The Mission of the Church
Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed

Act 2: Rebellion in the Kingdom: Fall
The Rebellion Leads to Fall


When all was well and at rest
The serpent appeared and then the test
Trust waivered and nerves were weak
Judgment was waivered at the unknown’s mystic
The outlook of the monumental decision was bleak
Adam and his bride waivered and were weak
And the serpent was cunning and sleek

Rebellion in the kingdom; all would fall
Not one thing left standing—nothing at all
The whole world would shake at this grave mistake
And to their nakedness and shame, humanity would awake
Glory was tarnished and the image would break
And all would be lost, because all was at stake
They ran and hid from their shame—clothing they would make

God called out in the Garden’s evening hue
Asking the profound question, “Where are you?”
They knew what they had done and knew they were through
There was no hiding and nothing was left that had been new
“What is this that you have done my daughter and my son?
I see you.”
There was nothing that could make this right
and nothing that they could do
The kingdom had fallen
and this would be something God would have to see to.

This is how the second act finished
With all in smoke and ashes, as all had been diminished


© August 30, 2012, Robbie Pruitt

Friday, September 7, 2012

Creation and Kingdom

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 4: The Coming of the King: Redemption Accomplished
Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:
The Mission of the Church
Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed

Act 1: God Establishes His Kingdom: Creation
Creation and Kingdom

In the beginning
The Word was spoken
In flashed the light
As the darkness was broken
In the beginning God
His Spirit hovering over
His Kingdom established
Order out of chaos
And all a shiny new

Garden green and peaceful—sustain
Beauty, provision, and abundance
The shalom of God among us—remain
Walking Eden’s green grassy sod
In perfect harmony with our God
No pain, no death, no dying there
No sadness; no crying—anywhere
Lies of serpent, no buying in
Intimacy—all is well
This is the perfect story we live and we tell

Once upon a time in a land far away
Paradise existed in that beautiful day
The Kingdom was illuminated by glory’s array
No hiding; no nakedness; no shame
No fault; no blame
And every evening our Creator God came
Dwelt with us, for us, and among us
Walking hand-in-hand in this Eden land
A Garden paradise and a Glory King
Celebratory and worshipful songs we sing
And good gifts would our good God bring

We lived in His artwork
His story is the frame
We are His masterpiece
Bearers of God’s own image and fame
For the glory of His own name
No thorns to stop us; no hardened earth
Just fruitful multiplication
And a daily new birth
Animated by God’s own breath
To live forever without death
Basking in God’s great love
And all His good gifts from above

This is how the first act would close
In Garden paradise in the sweet aroma of rose


© August 30, 2012, Robbie Pruitt

Saturday, September 1, 2012

The Narrative Unfolds

The Drama of Scripture cover from Amazon.com

An epic poem based on The Drama of Scripture: 
Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
By Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen

Act 4: The Coming of the King: Redemption Accomplished
Act 5: Spreading the News of the King:
The Mission of the Church
Act 6: The Return of the King: Redemption Completed

Prologue: The Bible as Grand Story

The Narrative Unfolds


In the days of old
The wise men spoke
The oral tradition
From generation, to generation
They spoke, from every tribe and nation
Tales of God, creation, and Kingdom
Of Rebellion and kingdom’s fall
Israel, a people chosen—one and all
Restoration was initiated—Reclamation
And the silence loomed, waiting for first bloom
Then . . . the coming King
And rescue from the unrelenting doom
The wise old men shared with glee
Songs of redemption and community
Anthems to a King and psalms of eternity
Restoration and a new world we would see
The epic unfolding before us nightly
At campfire circle, as embers glow
The eldest would begin,
“This is how the story goes!”


© August 28, 2012, Robbie Pruitt


The Drama of Scripture

We are living in the greatest story ever told, God's story of love and His plan for redemption.

This grand narrative is larger than us, but it includes us nonetheless. The story is not about us, however, it is about the love of God in His son Jesus. According to The Drama of Scripture, this story is broken into six main parts: God's establishment of the kingdom in creation, rebellion of the kingdom in the fall of humanity, The King chooses Israel and redemption begins, the coming of The King, Jesus' redemption of His people, spreading the news of The King, and the return of The King, God's redemption completed.

While the Bible is composed of 66 individual books, 39 in the Old Testament and 27 in the New Testament, the Bible is a single narrative, a unified story. There is a "big picture" in the scriptures. We tend to only see the Old and New Testaments and individual books, but the Bible is a "Whole Testament." Scripture is a meta-narrative. N.T. Wright calls this "The whole sweep of scripture."

In looking at this overarching survey of the scriptures, The Drama of Scripture is a well done, simple, and straightforward resource. The book also suggests a complimentary website filled with Power Points and other resources for teaching the book and communicating the "grand narrative" of scripture in six acts. The book and the website outlines the whole Biblical narrative in an easy to understand and comprehensive presentation.

We are living in this great story because of the Great Storyteller God. As G.K. Chesterton wrote, "I had always felt life first as a story and if there is a story there is a storyteller." We have a greater understanding of the Storyteller by looking at the story we are in through the scriptures. And the closer we get to the Storyteller, the clearer His story becomes.

The Drama of Scripture and its companion website are exciting resources, which aid us in studying The Storyteller and His great story found in the scriptures.

This review was adapted from my blog, My Two Mites, and was also posted on Amazon.com, goodreads, and on Examiner.com.