SBJT 21.1 BT Exegeis Typology Sequeira Emadi
SBJT 21.1 BT Exegeis Typology Sequeira Emadi
SBJT 21.1 BT Exegeis Typology Sequeira Emadi
Aubrey Sequeira is a church-planting intern at the NETS Center for Church Planting
and Revitalization in Williston, Vermont. He earned his PhD in Biblical Theology and
Old Testament from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.
As Doug Moo has noted, “typology is much easier to talk about than to
describe.”1 Even among evangelicals, competing definitions of typology
are legion. These matters are further complicated by related (and equally
polarizing) issues such as the nature of biblical theology, the NT’s use of
the OT, the structure of the canon, authorial intent, the relationship of the
divine and human authors of Scripture, and other knotty theological and
hermeneutical issues.2
Given the debate surrounding typology, even in evangelical circles, this
article argues for an approach to typology that coheres with a self-con-
sciously Reformed and evangelical understanding of the discipline of biblical
theology. Our aim is to set out the essential features of a type by rooting
typology in the basic presuppositions of biblical theology and in Scripture
as a self-interpreting divine-human book that progressively unfolds along
covenantal epochs. In other words, we are endeavoring to uncover the exe-
getical logic that undergirds the NT authors’ interpretation and that leads
them to interpret typology as a feature of divine revelation. Understanding
that logic will reveal a great deal about how the NT authors conceived of
the nature of types. Put simply, we are attempting to describe how typology
in the NT “works.”
Ultimately we will argue that the exegetical logic of the NT authors demon-
strates that types are historical, authorially-intended, textually rooted, tied
to Scripture’s covenant structure, and undergo escalation from old covenant
shadow to new covenant reality. In order to unpack this thesis we will first
explain our understanding of the discipline of biblical theology. Second,
we will unravel how our understanding of biblical theology both creates
and constrains hermeneutical commitments with regard to the relationship
between the testaments and the NT use of the OT. We will describe this
approach to Scripture as biblical-theological exegesis. Third, we will consider
the implications of biblical-theological exegesis for typology. Finally, we will
explain how this approach to typology contrasts with “figural reading” and the
attendant problems with figural readings as a subjectivist and reader-oriented
approach to the relationship between texts within Scripture.
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Paul is concerned to show that the gospel he preaches has in fact actually been
announced by what we now refer to as the Old Testament: the δικαιοσύνη he
announces is that “to which the Law and the Prophets testify” (Rom 3:21). Unless
we are to think that everything that Paul now finds in those Scriptures is grounded
in nothing more than the bias effected by his own conversion, or adopt some
narrow postmodern perspectivalism, it is worth asking how, methodologically
speaking, Paul’s reading of Scripture differs from that of his unconverted Jewish
contemporaries. How does he himself seek to warrant his Christian reading in
the Scriptures themselves, and thereby convince his readers?28
The canonical approach decreases and may eliminate the questionable division
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between the human and divine authors’ intentions in a given text. This approach
does not appeal to the divine author’s meaning that is deliberately concealed
from the human author in the process of inspiration (a sensus occultus); it appeals
to the meaning of the text itself that takes on deeper significance as God’s plan
unfolds (a sensus praegnans). When God breathes out his words through human
authors, he surely knows what the ultimate meaning of their words will be, but
he has not created a double entendre or hidden a meaning in the words that we
can uncover only through special revelation. The ‘added meaning’ that the text
takes on is the product of the ultimate canonical shape . . . . we can often verify
the ‘fuller sense’ that the NT discovers in the OT by reading OT texts as the NT
authors do: as part of a completed, canonical whole.30
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arises from it, coheres with it, and never contravenes it.31 We contend that
biblical-theological exegesis helps trace the lines between OT types, their
textual development, and their divinely intended fulfillment in the NT.
Historicity
First, types must be rooted in history. Biblical-theological exegesis affirms
Scripture’s claims concerning its historicity and treats the unfolding of God’s
eternal plan as redemptive history, not literary artifice. This historical dimen-
sion to typology is critical for biblical theology given how many apostolic
claims concerning the person and work of Christ are rooted in his fulfillment
of the patterns of Israel’s history.
In this respect, types are not mere metaphors or symbols—products of
literary art.35 If the Apostles’ typological claims about Christ are purely alle-
gorical, Christ is not necessarily the actual solution to any historical plight.
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He does not remedy our exile from the garden nor meet Israel’s need for a
Davidic king. Instead he is merely a figure to whom the Apostles, via their
own literary artfulness, assigned allegorical or kerygmatic significance. Put
simply, if types are not historical, then Christ is not the culmination of a
providentially ordained history or the fulfillment of any actual, historical
promise.
The NT attests to this fact repeatedly by attributing the significance of
an OT type to its historicity. The Adam-Christ typology in Romans 5, for
instance, hangs on the notion that Adam is a figure of historical conse-
quence—the federal head of the human race. Paul’s typological argument
is stripped of any real significance if Adam is merely metaphorical or myth-
ological. Wherever NT authors identify a type they do so in a way that
highlights its historicity (cf. 1 Cor 10:1–13). Their aim is not merely to
describe Christ using theological or kerygmatic categories but to demon-
strate that he is the telos of history, the one who fulfills Israel’s expectations
and resolves humanity’s plight.
Dennis Johnson eloquently captures this reality:
Long before he sent his Son to bring rescue in ‘the fullness of time’ (Gal 4:4),
[God] sovereignly designed events, institutions, and individual leaders to pro-
vide foretastes of the feast, whetting Israel’s appetite for the coming Savior and
salvation. Israel’s historical experiences of blessing and judgment, weal and woe,
also prepared a rich symbolic ‘vocabulary,’ embedded in the dust and blood of real
history: concepts and categories pre-designed to articulate the sufficiency and
complexity of Jesus’ saving work.36
Authorially-Intended
Second, types are prospective and author-intended. The notion of sensus
praegnans allows biblical interpreters to maintain that Scripture often devel-
ops the meaning of a type beyond the original intent of the author while in
no way of contravening a text’s original meaning. This notion undergirds
how NT authors understand the relationship between type and antitype.
Later biblical authors may unfurl the significance of an OT person, event, or
institution but they do not retroactively confer typological status. As Beale
explains, types are “indirect prophecy;”37 they are designed and described
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Paul is not saying that the events can now be seen to be τυπικῶς—as if they
became τύποι as a result of some later occurrence or factor. Rather, Paul insists
that in their very happening, they were happening τυπικῶς. The τύποι-quality
of the events was inherent in their occurrence, not invented by the Pentateuchal
historiographer or artificially given “typical” significance by Paul the exegete.
The divine intent of the events clearly includes the τύπος-nature of the event.
A providential design was operative, causing the events to happen τυπικῶς.38
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The fact that OT types anticipate New Covenant realities does not negate
that Christ often fulfilled the OT in surprising, unexpected ways. Additionally,
affirming the prospective nature of OT types does not mean that interpreters
prior to Pentecost could have discerned all that the OT typologically antic-
ipated. As Paul states, even though the Law and the Prophets bore witness
to Christ (Rom. 1:2; 3:21; 15:8; Gal 3:8), the gospel was a “mystery that
was kept secret for long ages” (Rom 16:25–27).
As we discussed above with the notions of “mystery” and sensus pragnaens
God’s ultimate intent for a type is “hidden” until the coming of Christ. Types,
therefore, exhibit creative theological and textual development across the
canon which culminates in the New Covenant. Thus, Christian interpreters
after the resurrection have a privileged interpretive location in redemptive
history. Christ’s death, resurrection, and ascension, coupled with his apos-
tles’ ministry and the work of illumination by the Spirit, shed light on the
typological structures of the OT. Certain OT types are only discernible
retrospectively. This retrospection, however, does not “create” the type. The
association is not reader-imposed.41 Instead, this retrospection is a recogni-
tion that some OT types were “hidden in plain view”—only intelligible by
the light of later revelation.42
Escalation
Third, in Scripture, types are marked by significant escalation as they find
their fulfillment in Christ. God’s final eschatological word is in his Son,
and the Son climactically fulfills all previous revelatory types (Heb 1:1–3).
There is therefore a significant “discontinuity” between the christological
fulfillment and all previous instantiations of a type, thus making God’s word
in Christ a “better” word.
This escalation is a function of the progressive nature of special revelation.
The pattern of God’s acts in the OT bears witness to a final act which will
not just reflect his previous dealings with his people, but will also consum-
mate his work with them. Since redemptive-history develops toward an
eschatological goal, antitypes are not merely analogous with earlier episodes
in biblical history. As Hoskins explains, “future realities anticipated by the
prophets would not merely serve to repeat the past, but would be greater
than the patterns or types that preceded them.”43 New Covenant antitypes
are the telos of biblical history. The New Covenant fulfills OT expectations
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Textual
Fourth, types are textually rooted and developed across the canon. As Berkhof
notes, “Accidental similarity between an Old and New Testament person or
event does not constitute the one a type of the other. There must be some
Scripture evidence that it was so designed by God.”45 This means that types
are rooted in the text of the Old and New Testaments and can be exegetically
demonstrated. Any posited correspondence between persons, events, or
institutions that is not rooted in Scripture imposes an extra-textual grid over
Scripture’s message and thus silences Scripture’s own self-interpretation.
Thus when properly interpreting types, readers must connect the proposed
type with antecedent texts rooting it in some pattern in biblical history,
while also tracing its development forwards through the canon, rather than
making a direct jump from a single text to fulfillment in Christ. For instance,
before directly extrapolating an idea from the Psalter or the Prophets into
fulfillment in Christ, it is best to see how this notion has developed in pre-
cursor texts in Scripture, that is, in previous redemptive-historical epochs.
Likewise, when a hint of something greater is found in the Law, it is best
to find subsequent texts within the OT, i.e., within the Psalter, Prophets, or
even Wisdom literature that build and develop this notion, before tracing
it through to fulfillment in Christ.
The author of Hebrews, for example, undergirds his typological argumen-
tation with this kind of biblical-theological exegetical logic. To understand
the hope of a Melchizedekian King-Priest set forth in Psalm 110, the author
reaches back for the framework and categories provided in Genesis 14 and
also by the Levitical priesthood. The obsolescence of the Levitical priest-
hood is not established by christological assertion, but by recognizing that
the priesthood itself is meant to be provisional because (1) a priest-king like
Melchizedek has Scriptural priority over the Levitical line, and (2) a future
Melchizedekian priest-king whose work will have a finality to it is promised.
Schrock explains that this textual dimension of typology recognizes that
types “must arise from the language, sequence, and storyline of the Bible
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Covenantal
Finally, types are covenantal.50 As many scholars have posited throughout
the history of interpretation, covenants shape the biblical storyline and
provide the essential building blocks for biblical theology.51 One key ele-
ment of biblical-theological exegesis is to interpret texts “in light of where
they are in redemptive-history, or where they are in terms of the unfolding
plan of God.”52 That unfolding plan moves along covenantal epochs. With
each new covenant, God unfolds his eternal plan, filling out the details and
developing earlier promises while bringing Israel’s eschatological hopes into
sharper focus. As a result, “the Bible’s typological and covenantal structures
are interdependent.”53 Types (i.e., the temple, the land, etc.) are part of
God’s covenants, and covenants provide the interpretive context necessary
to understand a type’s significance in redemptive history.54
Put simply, any favorable characteristic or quality between an OT indi-
vidual, event, or institution must not be taken as typological of Christ.
Rather, OT characters, events, and institutions can be seen as typological
if they are prospective and tied to covenantal and messianic structures. Vos
made this same point:
The bond that holds type and antitype together must be a bond of vital continuity
in the progress of redemption. Where this is ignored, and in the place of this
bond are put accidental resemblances, void of inherent spiritual significance, all
sorts of absurdities, will result, such as must bring the whole subject of typology
into disrepute.55
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virtue of their sufferings and subsequent deliverance.58 Rather, within his own
covenantal context, Joseph is the one who brings the covenant promises of
the Abrahamic covenant to a partial (and anticipatory) resolution. Further,
Joseph is also tied to a messianic structure, for Moses describes the coming
Judahite prophesied in Genesis 49:8 in terms that reveal that Joseph’s life as
a “picture” (type) of the king-to-come.59
Second, Zecharaiah 4:6–10 presents Zerubbabel as the one who will bring
to completion the building of the Temple. Is Zerubbabel a type of Christ?
Yes, by virtue of his role as the anticipation of the eschatological David, and
thus as the embodiment of hope for the ultimate fulfillment of the Davidic
covenant. The messianic nature of Zerubbabel’s role is highlighted by the
hope for a new David throughout the book of Zechariah. Further, Zerub-
babel’s anticipatory role as a type is underscored by the fact that the book
of Zechariah ends with the hope of an eschatological and greater Temple
yet to come (Zech 14:20–21).
Alternatively, sometimes textual and historical correspondences exist
between persons, events, and institutions even when there is no typological
relationship between them. For instance, in Matthew 13:32 Jesus says that the
kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed which blossoms into a tree so large
“that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.” This descrip-
tion of a kingdom like a tree with birds nesting in its branches is used in the
LXX to describe Nebuchadnezzar’s kingdom (Dan 4:12). While Jesus may
very well have had Daniel 4:12 in mind, the textual correspondence forged
by Jesus description of his own kingdom with words that once described
Nebuchadnezzar’s kingdom in no way indicates a typological relationship
between the two.
Typology has always been a subject of fierce debate within the scholarly
community. In recent years, however, one particularly unhealthy trend has
emerged which eschews the principles of verifiability and the hermeneutical
constraints that we have set forth above. As an alternative to the self-consciously
methodological approach described in this article, some scholars prefer to
describe the phenomenon of typology using terms such as “Figural Reading.”60
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the interpreter. In figural reading, textual warrant for types is not a primary
concern, because the figure/type is retrospective and activated by the reader,
who reads in light of his or her experience in the community of faith.71 As
Seitz puts it, “the church reads the final form of Christian scripture as canon,
the parts informing the whole, the whole informing the parts, according to
the rule of faith.”72 Thus the primary interpretive constraint is the community
and the community’s rule of faith. Figuration does not stop with the canon,
but continues as interpreters throughout history bring the poles of figures
together in re-appropriating texts and applying them to their own contexts.73
In sum, figural interpretation adopts a form of the sensus occultus under-
standing of OT texts. In figural reading, NT authors (and by implication
modern interpreters) are not uncovering OT types intended by OT authors
as prospective historical events, persons, or institutions that culminate in
Christ. Instead, they are creating correspondences between the OT and
Christ through sanctified interpretive imagination. The OT is “Christianly
contextualized”74 by reading Christological correspondences into it—cor-
respondences unintended by the human author.
In some ways, “figural reading” is the subjectivist counterpart to redemp-
tive-historical typology. Proponents of “figural reading” are seeking to
describe the same phenomena in the biblical text, but they do so from a
radically different worldview and hermeneutical perspective. Figural reading
does arise from praiseworthy motives: a desire to recover the OT as Christian
Scripture and to rescue biblical interpretation from the disastrous effects of
Enlightenment dogma and the rationalist assumptions of historical-criticism.
The chief problem with figural reading, however, is that it fails to account for
objectivity and textual warrant in interpretation, for it is rooted in postmodern
assumptions concerning meaning and interpretation. Figural reading claims
to follow premodern exegesis but does not adequately take into account
the premodern view of inscripturated revelation as the bedrock on which
exegesis must be based.75 Advocates of figural reading jettison the Protes-
tant doctrines of the perspicuity and sufficiency of Scripture and the Bible’s
nature as a “self-interpreting word” (Sacra Scriptura sui ipsius interpres), in
favor of reader-oriented hermeneutical principles. Figural reading therefore
inherently sets itself up against principles of verification. It involves using an
extra-textual grid to interpret the Scriptures with external authorities as the
interpretive constraints. Though some of its advocates seek to distinguish it
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from allegory, it works on the same basic principles. Thus figural reading often
leads to “figures” (or so-called types) which are nothing more than fanciful
“figures” of the reader’s imagination, not open to any interpretive validation.
In the end, figural reading suffers from the same problems inherent to
all postmodern interpretive agendas: it muffles the voice of the author and
discounts a text’s character, making the task of interpretation a subjective
enterprise. Reader-activated correspondences between OT and NT reveal
nothing about Scripture’s own redemptive-historical claims. As a result,
figural readings of Scripture often reveal little more than an interpreter’s
imaginative prowess. The true message of Scripture as developed through
the promise-fulfillment structure of the covenants is bartered away for a
two-dimensional interpretive freedom which licenses interpretive communi-
ties to shape and re-shape Scripture as they see fit. The result is “Theological
Interpretation” which eschews the Bible’s own approach to both theology
and interpretation.
Conclusion
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1 Douglas J. Moo, “Paul’s Universalizing Hermeneutic in Romans,” SBJT 11 (2007), 81. Oswald Allis similarly
warned that typology, while “interesting” and “important,” is also “very difficult; and it is easy to make
mistakes, even serious mistakes, in dealing with it” (Oswald T. Allis, Prophecy and the Church [Philadelphia:
P&R, 1945], 23).
2 Literature on typology and other attendant issues abounds. For a small sampling of the conversation, see
Richard Davidson, Typology in Scripture: A Study of Hermeneutical ΤΨΠΟΣ Structures (Andrews University
Seminary Doctoral Dissertation Series; Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1981); Richard
Longenecker, Biblical Exegesis in the Apostolic Period (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1975); John S. Feinberg,
ed., Continuity and Discontinuity: Perspectives on the Relationship between the Old and New Testaments (Wheaton:
Crossway, 1988); Dale C. Allison Jr., The New Moses: A Matthean Typology (Minneapolis: Fortress Press,
1994); G. K. Beale, ed., The Right Doctrine from the Wrong Texts? Essays on the Use of the Old Testament in the New
(Grand Rapids: Baker, 1994); John Currid, “Recognition and Use of Typology in Preaching,” RTR 53, no.
3 (1994): 115–29; W. Edward Glenny, “Typology: A Summary of the Present Evangelical Discussion,”
JETS 40, no. 4 (1997): 627–38; Christopher Seitz, Figured Out: Typology and Providence in Christian Scripture
(Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2001); D. A. Carson, “Mystery and Fulfillment: Toward a More
Comprehensive Paradigm of Paul’s Understanding of the Old and the New,” in Justification and Variegated
Nomism (ed. D. A. Carson, Peter T. O’Brien, and Mark A. Seifrid; vol. 2, WUNT 181; Grand Rapids: Baker,
2004), 393–436; Paul M. Hoskins, Jesus as the Fulfillment of the Temple in the Gospel of John (Eugene, OR: Wipf
& Stock, 2006); Graeme Goldsworthy, Gospel-Centered Hermeneutics: Foundations and Principles of Evangelical
Biblical Interpretation (Downers Grove, InterVarsity Press, 2006); Douglas J. Moo, “The Problem of Senus
Plenior,” in Hermeneutics, Authority, and Canon (ed. D. A. Carson and John D. Woodbridge; Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 1986), 179–211; idem, “Paul’s Universalizing Hermeneutic in Romans”; Peter Leithart, Deep
Exegesis: The Mystery of Reading Scripture (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2009); Benjamin Ribbens, “A
Typology of Types: Typology in Dialogue,” JTI 5 (2011): 81–95; James Hamilton, “The Typology of David’s
Rise to Power: Messianic Patterns in the Book of Samuel,” SBJT 16 (2012): 4–25; idem, “Was Joseph a
Type of the Messiah? Tracing the Typological Identification between Joseph, David, and Jesus,” SBJT 12,
no. 4 (2008): 52–77; David L. Baker, Two Testaments, One Bible: The Theological Relationship Between the Old
and New Testaments (3rd ed.; Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2010); Andrew Naselli, From Typology to
Doxology: Paul’s Use of Isaiah and Job in Romans 11:34–35 (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2012); G. K. Beale,
Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament; Peter J. Gentry and Stephen Wellum, Kingdom
through Covenant: A Biblical Theological Understanding of the Covenants (Wheaton: Crossway, 2012); Richard
Ounsworth, Joshua Typology in the New Testament (WUNT; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2012); Hans Boersma
and Matthew Levering, eds., Heaven on Earth: Theological Interpretation in Ecumenical Dialogue (Malden, MA:
Wiley-Blackwell, 2013).
3 D. A. Carson, “Systematic Theology and Biblical Theology,” in New Dictionary of Biblical Theology (ed. T. D.
Alexander, Brian S. Rosner, et al. (Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 2000), 91.
4 For a helpful primer of the various ways that the term is used in contemporary biblical scholarship, see Edward
W. Klink III and Darian R. Lockett, Understanding Biblical Theology: A Comparison of Theory and Practice (Grand
Rapids: Zondervan, 2012). Klink and Lockett provide a useful taxonomy of various approaches to “biblical
theology.” Their work, however, tends to create silos that are somewhat too tight and misrepresent certain
approaches/practitioners. For instance, Klink and Lockett overlook the emphasis on literary interpretation
by many practitioners of the “BT2 school,” presenting this approach as though it were exclusively focused
on redemptive-history to the exclusion of literary aspects of interpretation. Furthermore, a major flaw in
Klink and Lockett’s work is that they treat these various approaches to biblical theology as though they can
be assessed equally, when in reality, they are comparing apples and oranges, for the differing approaches
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are marked by radically different presuppositions and epistemologies. Klink and Lockett simply evaluate
each approach superficially, without consideration for the underlying epistemological commitments and
presuppositions of each view. For this criticism, we are indebted to Peter J. Gentry, “The Significance of
Covenants in Biblical Theology,” SBJT 20.1 (2016), 9–33.
5 Peter J. Gentry and Stephen J. Wellum, Kingdom through Covenant: A Biblical-Theological Understanding of the
Covenants (Wheaton: Crossway, 2012), 32. Vos defines “biblical theology” as “nothing else than the the
exhibition of the organic progress of supernatural revelation in its historic continuity and multiformity.”
Geerhardus Vos, “The Idea of Biblical Theology as a Science and as a Theological Discipline,” in Redemptive
History and Biblical Interpretation: The Shorter Writings of Geerhardus Vos (ed. Richard B. Gaffin Jr.; Phillipsburg,
NJ: P&R Publishing), 15 (emphasis original). Because of the confusion surrounding the use of the term in
his own day, Vos himself preferred the term “History of Special Revelation,” for it “expresses with precision
and an uninvidious manner what our science aims to be,” but settled for the use of the term “biblical the-
ology” because of its established usage. Geerhardus Vos, Biblical Theology: Old and New Testaments (Carlisle,
PA: Banner of Truth, 1975), 12. Also self-consciously following in Vos’ footsteps is G. K. Beale, who sees
his work in NT biblical theology as further developing Vos’ program. See G. K. Beale, A New Testament
Biblical Theology: The Unfolding of the Old Testament in the New (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2011), 20. For a brief and
helpful history of the use of the term, which traces the emergence of a distinctively Reformed and evangelical
tradition of biblical theology to the works of Geerhardus Vos, in distinction from the post-Enlightenment
practice of ‘biblical theology’ as pioneered by J. Gabler, see Gentry and Wellum, Kingdom through Covenant,
27–34, and also Richard B. Gaffin Jr., “Systematic Theology and Biblical Theology,” WTJ 38 (1976): 281–84.
See also the excellent history and proposal by D. A. Carson, “Current Issues in Biblical Theology: A New
Testament Perspective,” BBR 5 (1995): 17–41.
6 Brian Rosner, “Biblical Theology,” in NDBT (ed. T. D. Alexander, et al; Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press,
2000, 10). Treat provides another helpful definition of biblical theology: ““faith seeking understanding of
the redemptive-historical and literary unity of the Bible in its own terms, concepts, and contexts” ( Jeremy
Treat, The Crucified King: Atonement and Kingdom in Biblical and Systematic Theology [Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
2014], 35).
7 See Gentry and Wellum, Kingdom through Covenant, 32–34, 82–92.
8 Carson, “Current Issues in Biblical Theology,” 32.
9 D. A. Carson identifies the NT use of the OT as one of the three “most important” focal issues in NT
theology, and avers that “the relation of the NT to the OT and in particular the use of the OT in the NT”
is “the most difficult question by far” in NT theology, and that “no responsible NT theology, insofar as
it sees itself part of a broader biblical theology, can proceed very far without taking [issues related to the
NT use of the OT] into account.” D. A. Carson, “New Testament Theology,” in Dictionary of the Later New
Testament and Its Developments (ed. Ralph P. Martin and Peter H. Davids; Downers Grove: Intervarsity,
1997), 810–11. See also the importance given to the issue by Gerhard Hasel, New Testament Theology: Basic
Issues in the Current Debate (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978), 186–88; James K. Mead, Biblical Theology: Issues,
Methods, and Themes (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2007), 62–68; and Beale, A New Testament Biblical
Theology, 11–15.
10 James M. Hamilton, What Is Biblical Theology? (Wheaton: Crossway, 2014), 15.
11 Ibid.
12 James M. Hamilton, With the Clouds of Heaven (NSBT 32; Downers Grove: IVP Academic, 2014), 21.
13 G. K. Beale, The Erosion of Inerrancy in Evangelicalism: Responding to New Challenges to Biblical Authority (Wheaton:
Crossway, 2008), 104n41.
14 Building on Vos’ metaphor (cf. Vos, “Idea of Biblical Theology,” 11–15), Beale describes “biblical-theo-
logical-oriented exegesis” as “canonical, genetic-progressive (or organically developmental, as a flower
develops from a seed and bud), exegetical and intertextual” (Beale, NT Biblical Theology, 15). Beale has since
moved away from using the term “intertextual” because of its roots in postmodernism and reader-response
hermeneutics. He instead prefers to use the terms “inner-biblical exegesis” and “inner-biblical allusion.”
See G. K. Beale, Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament: Exegesis and Interpretation (Grand
Rapids: Baker, 2012), 39–40. A similar model of interpretation is also articulated by Gentry and Wellum,
Kingdom through Covenant, 82–100, Douglas J. Moo and Andrew David Naselli, “The Problem of the New
Testament’s Use of the Old Testament,” in The Enduring Authority of the Christian Scriptures (ed. D. A. Carson;
Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2016), 734–46; D. A. Carson, “New Testament Theology,” in Dictionary of the
Later New Testament and Its Developments, 811.
15 See Gentry and Wellum, Kingdom through Covenant, 82–100.
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Biblical-Theological Exegesis and the Nature of Typology
16 Kevin J. Vanhoozer, Is There a Meaning in This Text? The Bible, the Reader, and the Morality of Literary Knowledge
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2009), 262.
17 G. K. Beale, “Questions of Authorial Intent, Epistemology, and Presuppositions and Their Bearing on the
Study of the Use of the Old Testament in the New: A Rejoinder to Steve Moyise,” IBS 21 (1999): 155. For
a condensed, yet compelling presentation and defense of these presuppositions as they pertain to the NT
use of the OT, see ibid., 152–80. See also Vanhoozer, Is There a Meaning, 201–452.
18 As Vanhoozer rightly puts it, when interpreters do not distinguish “‘what it meant’ to the author from
‘what it means’ to the reader, [they] risk confusing the aim of the text with their own aims and interests ...
Contemporary readers who reject the meaning/significance distinction, refuse hermeneutic realism, and
ignore the author’s intended meaning as a goal and guide, condemn themselves to such confusion, and
to interpretive narcissism besides. Bereft of intrinsic meaning, a text becomes a screen on which readers
project their own images or a surface that reflects the interpreter’s own face” (Vanhoozer, Is There a Meaning,
263).
19 See Beale, “Questions of Authorial Intent,” 156–58; Vanhoozer, Is There a Meaning, 261–62; E. D. Hirsch,
“Meaning and Significance Reinterpreted,” Critical Inquiry 11 (1984): 202–24; E. D. Hirsch, “Transhistorical
Intentions and the Persistence of Allegory,” New Literary History 25 (1994): 549–67. This is essentially a
further development of Hirsch’s notion of “willed types;” see E. D. Hirsch, Validity in Interpretation (New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1967), 123–26. Very similar is Beale’s notion of “cognitive peripheral
vision;” see G. K. Beale, “Inaugural Lectures: The Cognitive Peripheral Vision of Biblical Authors,” WTJ
76 (2014): 263–93.
20 G. K. Beale, “Did Jesus and His Followers Preach the Right Doctrine from the Wrong Texts? Revisiting
the Debate Seventeen Years Later in the Light of Peter Enns’ Book, Inspiration and Incarnation,” Them 32 no.
1 (2006): 21.
21 As Gentry and Wellum (Kingdom through Covenant, 83) put it, “Scripture is God’s Word written, the product
of God’s mighty action through the Word and by the Holy Spirit whereby human authors freely wrote
exactly what God intended to be written and without error.” In Vanhoozer’s words, Scripture is “a unified
communicative act, that is ... the complex, multi-levelled speech act of a single divine author.” Kevin J.
Vanhoozer, “Exegesis and Hermeneutics,” in NDBT, 61.
22 Vanhoozer, Is There a Meaning, 264.
23 The classic formulation of sensus plenior is set forth and defended in Raymond E. Brown, The “Sensus Ple-
nior” of Sacred Scripture (Baltimore: St. Mary’s University, 1955). Brown describes sensus plenior as “that
additional deeper meaning, intended by God but not clearly intended by the human author, which is seen
to exist in the words of a biblical text (or group of texts, or even a whole book) when they are studied in
light of further revelation or development in the understanding of revelation”( Ibid., 92.
24 See D. A. Carson, “Mystery and Fulfillment: Toward a More Comprehensive Paradigm of Paul’s Under-
standing of the Old and the New,” in Justification and Variegated Nomism: The Paradoxes of Paul (ed. D. A.
Carson, Peter T. O’Brien, and Mark A. Seifrid; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2004), 410–34; G. K. Beale and
Benjamin J. Gladd, Hidden But Now Revealed: A Biblical Theology of Mystery (Downers Grove: IVP Academic,
2014); and Jared Compton, “Shared Intentions? Reflections on Inspiration and Interpretation in Light of
Scripture’s Dual Authorship,” Them 33 no. 3 (2008): 23–33.
25 Carson, “Mystery and Fulfillment,” 427.
26 Carson wisely observes the emphasis in Paul on the hiddenness of the Christian meaning of the OT, saying,
“To lay great emphasis on the coherence of Paul’s reading of the Old Testament without simultaneously
taking into account Paul’s insistence on hiddenness—that strange hiddenness that corresponds both to
human morally culpable blindness and to God’s infinitely wise ordering of things so as to bring about the
cross—not only ignores Paul’s specific utterances regarding the μυστήριον, but misconstrues the biting edge
of his understanding of typology. The result is that God himself, in his word, becomes domesticated. That is
why Paul’s handling of the Scriptures, as penetrating as it is, can never partake of scholarly one-upmanship.
He is never saying to his Jewish peers, ‘You silly twits! Can’t you see that my exegesis is correct? I used to
read the Bible as you still do, but I understand things better now. Can’t you see I’m right?’ Rather, while
insisting that his exegesis of the old covenant Scriptures is true and plain and textually grounded, he mar-
vels at God’s wisdom in hiding so much in it, to bring about the unthinkable: a crucified Messiah, whose
coming and mission shatters all human arrogance, including his own.” Carson, “Mystery and Fulfillment,”
432–33.
27 See Moo and Naselli, “New Testament’s Use of the Old,” 732–33.
28 Carson, “Mystery and Fulfillment,” 411.
31
The Southern Baptist Journal of Theology 21.1 (2017)
29 See Beale, New Testament Biblical Theology, 5; Gentry and Wellum, Kingdom through Covenant, 84–87; Vanhoozer,
Is There a Meaning, 265.
30 Moo and Naselli, “New Testament’s Use of the Old,” 736.
31 Applying Hirsch’s categories of “meaning,” and “significance,” Vanhoozer rightly notes the relationship
between the Spirit’s revelatory work and this “fuller meaning,” the constraint placed on it by the “original
meaning,” and the extension of the original meaning through canonical development: “Does the Spirit lead
the community into a fuller meaning that goes beyond “what it meant”? ... The Spirit is tied to the written
Word as significance is tied to meaning. With regard to hermeneutics, the role of the Spirit is to serve as the
Spirit of significance and thus to apply meaning, not to change it. At the same time, the Bible is concerned
with its own relevance, that is, with the extension of its meaning into new contexts. Between the contexts
of the author and reader stand a number of textual contexts—narrative, generic, canonical—that enable
us to extend biblical meaning into the present.” Vanhoozer, Is There a Meaning, 265.
32 See discussion below.
33 Moo, “Paul’s Universalizing Hermeneutic in Romans,” 82. Beale, similarly concerned that typology not be
seen as a hermeneutical imposition on Scripture, notes that typology “can be called contextual exegesis
within the framework of the canon since it primarily involves the interpretation and elucidation of the
meaning of earlier parts of Scripture by later parts” (Beale, Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old
Testament, 25).
34 Gentry and Wellum’s work on the covenants defines typology with the same features enumerated below.
Our understanding of typology is heavily influenced by them. They define typology as “the study of the
Old Testament salvation-historical realities or “types” (persons, events, institutions) which prefigure their
intensified antitypical fulfilment aspects (inaugurated and consummated) in New Testament salvation
history.” This definition usefully highlights the essential features of a biblical type. First, types are historical
(“salvation historical realities”). Second, types are prospective (“prefigure”). Third, types exhibit escalation
in moving from type to antitype (“intensified antitypical fulfillment”). Fourth, types are textual (“OT” and
“NT salvation history”). Finally, as Wellum and Gentry imply throughout the book, types are unfolded
through the covenants. They are shaped and interpreted by the covenantal structure of Scripture. In the
remainder of this section, we will consider how each of these features is a rooted in the exegetical logic and
hermeneutical principles of biblical-theological exegesis. (Gentry and Wellum, Kingdom through Covenant,
103). See also Beale’s clunkier but perhaps more theologically loaded definition: “The study of analogical
correspondences among revealed truths about persons, events, institutions, and other things within the
historical framework of God’s special revelation, which, from a retrospective view, are of a prophetic nature
and are escalated in their meaning” (Beale, Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament, 14).
For similar approaches to typology which have also influenced our understanding see Brent Evan Parker,
“The Israel-Christ-Church Typological Pattern: A Theological Critique of Covenant and Dispensational
Theologies” (Ph.D. diss., The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2017), 20-68 and David Schrock,
“What Designates a Valid Type? A Christotelic, Covenantal Proposal,” STR 5, no. 1 (2014):5.
35 Contrast Sparks who posits that a “theological reading of the Bible [may be performed] even when Scripture’s
ostensible historical content turns out to be either wrong or fictional in some way” (Kenton L. Sparks,
God’s Word in Human Words: An Evangelical Appropriation of Critical Biblical Scholarship [Grand Rapids: Baker,
2008], 178). See also the discussion in Frances Young, Biblical Exegesis and the Formation of Christian Culture
(Cambridge, Cambrdige University Press, 1997), 194–95.
36 Dennis E. Johnson, Him We Proclaim: Preaching Christ from All the Scriptures [Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing,
2007], 198–99.
37 Beale, Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament, 17–18
38 Davidson, Typology in Scripture, 268. Likewise, in Romans 5:14 Paul refers to Adam as a “type of the one who
was to come.” As Schreiner notes, “the reference to ‘the coming one’ (τοῦ μέλλοντος) should be understood
from the perspective of Adam. In other words, from Adam’s standpoint in history Jesus Christ was the one
to come” (Thomas R. Schreiner, Romans [BECNT; Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 1998], 280). Thus,
Adam’s federal headship is designed by God to forecast the federal work of the Messiah. Also Moo states,
“the future tense is probably used because Paul is viewing Christ’s work from the perspective of Adam”
(Douglas J. Moo, The Epistle to the Romans [NICNT; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996], 334). While it is not
exactly right to speak of τοῦ μέλλοντος as “future tense,” Moo probably has in mind the sense of the word
more than its form. I (Sam) am thankful to Brent Parker who first drew my attention to this argument in
Parker, “The Israel-Christ-Church Typological Pattern: A Theological Critique of Covenant and Dispen-
sational Theologies,” 20-68.
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Biblical-Theological Exegesis and the Nature of Typology
39 Stephen Dempster considers the OT typological roots of Paul’s “third day” statement in “From Slight Peg
to Cornerstone to Capstone: The Resurrection of Christ on “The Third Day” According to the Scriptures,”
WTJ 76 (2014): 371–409. For a slightly different approach than Dempster’s, see Martin Pickup, “‘On the
Third Day’: The Time Frame of Jesus’ Death and Resurrection,” JETS 56.3 (2013): 511–42. Pickup maintains
that the significance of the “third day” motif is based on the Jewish belief that a corpse did not undergo
decomposition until the third day and explains the application of Psalm 16:10 as fulfilled in Jesus, as well
as the typological application of Jonah’s third-day deliverance to Christ (Matt 12:40).
40 In the same vein, Treat comments on Luke 24 saying, “When Jesus said, ‘thus it is written, that the Christ
[Messiah] should suffer’ (Luke 24:46), he was not merely proof-texting Isa 52:13–53:12 or some other
elusive individual prophecy of a suffering Messiah. He was interpreting his life, death, and resurrection
as the fulfillment of a pattern in the story of Israel, a pattern characterized by humiliation and exaltation,
shame and glory, suffering and victory” (Treat, The Crucified King, 54).
41 See also Beale’s comments on retrospection in Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament,
13–25.
42 As Carson describes, this view of typology which affirms that types are prospective even if only identifiable
retrospectively is “typology with teeth.” Carson writes, “This “typology with teeth,” this re-reading of
Scripture by focusing on the story-line, this unveiling of material that is actually there in the text (even if
it was long hidden), is precisely what makes coherent the shattering event of the cross. Unless one simul-
taneously preserves mystery and fulfillment, then both the sheer Godhood of God and the despoiling of
human pretensions are inexcusably diluted.” (“Mystery and Fulfillment, 433-34).
43 Hoskins, Jesus as the Fulfillment of the Temple in the Gospel of John, 20.
44 See Schrock’s discussion of “retro-types” in this journal.
45 Louis Berkhof, Principles of Biblical Interpretation (2nd ed.; Grand Rapids: Baker, 1952), 145.
46 David Schrock, “What Designates a Valid Type? A Christotelic, Covenantal Proposal,” 5.
47 Ibid., 6.
48 Ibid., 6-7.
49 Beale, Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament, 24–25.
50 Interpreting types according to their covenantal context is particularly important when examining OT
historical narrative, since it often lacks explicit theological commentary. Readers often understand the full
significance of characters’ actions only in light of covenant stipulations and promises laid out elsewhere in
the OT. Covenants, thus, provide the inner-biblical interpretive and theological grid needed to evaluate
historical narratives. Reading OT history according to covenantal unfolding and context reveals the deeper,
theological significance that often goes unstated in narrative.
51 See discussion in Gentry and Wellum, Kingdom through Covenant, 21–80; Peter Golding, Covenant Theology:
The Key of Theology in Reformed Thought and Tradition (Scotland: Christian Focus, 2004).
52 Ibid., 94.
53 Schrock, “What Designates a Valid Type?,” 6.
54 For a full development of this point see, Peter J. Gentry, “The Significance of Covenants in Biblical Theol-
ogy,” SBJT 20, no. 1 (2016): 9–33.
55 Vos, Biblical Theology, 146.
56 Hamilton affirms the same notion though with different language. He traces argues that Joseph is a type of
the Messiah on the basis of textual correspondence, historical correspondence, and redemptive historical
import. What Hamilton calls “redemptive historical import,” we are calling covenantal correspondence.
See James Hamilton, “Was Joseph a Type of the Messiah? Tracing the Typological Identification between
Joseph, David, and Jesus,” SBJT 12, no. 4 (2008): 52–77
57 John Currid, “Recognition and Use of Typology in Preaching,” RTR 53, no. 3 (1994): 121.
58 Samuel Cyrus Emadi, “Covenant, Typology, and the Story of Joseph: A Literary-Canonical Examination
of Genesis 37–50” (PhD diss., The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2016), 40–125.
59 See Emadi, “Covenant, Typology,” 78–82.
60 See Frei, Eclipse of Biblical Narrative, 1–50. Frei actually subsumes typology under “figural reading” as that
which best represents the stance of the NT authors and the pre-modern church towards the Bible as “real-
istic narrative.” Ibid., 1–3. See also David C. Steinmetz, “The Superiority of Pre-Critical Exegesis,” Theology
Today 37, (1980): 27–38.
61 For a description and balanced criticism of the modern TIS movement(s), see D. A. Carson, “Theological
Interpretation of Scripture: Yes, But . . . ,” in Theological Commentary: Evangelical Perspectives (ed. R. Michael
Allen; London: T&T Clark, 2011), 187–207. See also Daniel J. Treier, Introducing Theological Interpretation
33
The Southern Baptist Journal of Theology 21.1 (2017)
of Scripture (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2008); Kevin J. Vanhoozer, “Introduction: What is the Theological
Interpretation of the Bible?” in Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible (ed. Kevin J. Vanhoozer;
Grand Rapids: Baker, 2005).
62 Frei, Eclipse of Biblical Narrative, 1–7.
63 Daniel J. Treier, “Typology,” in Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible, 825–26.
64 Erich Auerbach, Mimesis (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1968), 73. Quoted in Richard B. Hays,
Reading Backwards: Figural Christology and the Fourfold Gospel Witness (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press,
2014), 2.
65 John David Dawson, “Figural Reading and the Fashioning of Christian Identity in Boyarin, Auerbach and
Frei,” Modern Theology 14, (1998): 188. Advocates of figural reading operate on a spectrum ranging from
those who see divinely ordained prefigurement to those who see the figuration as purely an act of the reader.
See Treier, “Typology,” 826.
66 Ibid.
67 Christopher R. Seitz, Figured Out: Typology and Providence in Christian Scripture (Louisville: Westminster John
Knox Press, 2001), 32.
68 Stanley D. Walters, “Finding Christ in the Psalms,” in Go Figure! Figuration in Biblical Interpretation (ed. Stanley
D. Walters; Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications, 2008), 38.
69 R. W. L. Moberly, “Christ in All the Scriptures? The Challenge of Reading the Old Testament as Christian
Scripture,” Journal of Theological Interpretation 1, (2007): 100.
70 Hays, Reading Backwards, xv.
71 Robert W. Wall, “Jesus in the Old Testament,” Journal of Theological Interpretation 2 (2008): 17–18.
72 Seitz, Figured Out, 81.
73 It is perhaps this emphasis on the text’s figural effects outside its own context that has given rise to several
studies in Wirkungsgeschichte, for the meanings of the text are increasingly “figured out” as the text is trans-
posed and applied in new and varying contexts.
74 R. W. L. Moberly, “Christ in All the Scriptures? The Challenge of Reading the Old Testament as Christian
Scripture,” JTI 1 (2007): 100.
75 See, for instance, the persuasive critique along these lines of Hays’ approach to figural reading by Thomas
J. Millay, “Septuagint Figura: Assessing the Contribution of Richard B. Hays,” SJT 70 (1): 93–104. Millay
convincingly demonstrates that Hays’ claim that his understanding and practice of figural interpretation
is in continuity with the early church is not tenable in light of “the whole worldview that separates Hays
from the early church fathers.” Ibid., 102.
76 G. K. Beale, “Positive Answer to the Question Did Jesus and His Followers Preach the Right Doctrine from
the Wrong Texts?,” in The Right Doctrine from the Wrong Text? Essays on the Use of the Old Testament in the New
(ed. G. K. Beale; Grand Rapids: Baker, 1994), 404.
34