
Old Testament Survey, Part 1 – Course OT1: Grader Answer Key as of 3/23/2018
Answer Key for Students
Old Testament Survey
Course OT1a – Overview and Genesis: Lessons 1-4
MOUNT ZION BIBLE INSTITUTE
You have been encouraged to use your own words while formulating answers from the reading text. We are looking for your
own thoughts and words in order to demonstrate your understanding of what you have read. In this answer key, we have often
quoted from the text directly, in order to have an accurate standard of comparison for your answers in your own words.
Therefore, your answers are acceptable whenever they are in general agreement with the text; we do not require or want an exact
match with our answers provided herein. Some questions ask for a personal response. We suggest you review these with your
pastor or other mature Christian that you know. Answers or words not from the reading text are set in brackets.
Lesson 1 Introduction
1. a. Romans 15:4 God gave the Old Testament for us today to learn from and find hope.
b. 1 Corinthians 10:11 All that happened in the OT is an example for us, so that we can correct our ways.
c. 2 Peter 1:21 God inspired the OT Scriptures to be written.
2. The Old Testament is God’s revelation to men. It is not the entire revelation of God, but all of the Old Testament is God’s
Word.
3. a. God guided the authors of the Old Testament books in such a way that they wrote what He wanted them to write.
b. He did not ignore the personalities of the authors. He did not force them all to use the same style…They received His
word and wrote it, each in his own style, each with his own vocabulary, each according to his own education. But what
they wrote was not their own; it was God’s. The words they used were the words chosen by God, and the thoughts they
expressed were God’s revelation to men.
4. We do not understand in order that we may believe; we believe in order to understand. And when we believe that God in-
spired the writers of the Old Testament, the door is opened for us to understand what He has written.
5. a. This simply means that there are no errors in it, and more: that it is not capable of error.
b. …when they wrote, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, they were kept from any error.
c. If Jesus proclaimed the Bible to be true and yet it had errors, we could not trust Jesus or the Bible. But when Jesus pro-
claims it to be true and it is in fact true, then both Jesus and the Bible are reliable and trustworthy.
6. a. In Exodus 5 about the Israelites making bricks without straw, critics say this is impossible. The ancient peoples always
needed a binding material for their bricks. But in excavations made at the Egyptian city of Pithom, which was built by
the Israelites (Exo 1:11), the lower courses of brick were made with good chopped straw. The middle courses were made
with less straw, and much of that was stubble. The upper courses were made without any straw. This agrees perfectly
with the biblical story.
Also at Jericho, excavations at the site of ancient Jericho showed that there is no evidence of the walls being battered in.
“The bricks that composed the east wall lie as a streak down the eastern slope gradually getting thinner, with conspicu-
ous traces of a general fire. Thus the outer wall fell outwards, and down the hillside, quite flat” (Halley). Time after time
the critics of the Bible have been silenced by the findings of archaeology.
b. The infallibility of the Bible is proved by its divine authorship. It needs no human proof. Science can show that particular
statements of the Bible are true, but it can never provide an adequate foundation for our belief in an infallible Bible.
Only God can do that.
c. Personal answer
7. a. Proclaiming in advance what will happen in the future.
b. It also establishes the Bible as coming from God. No one but God knows the future; He knows it because He has designed
it and ordained it. He holds it all in His hands.
c. Personal answer
8. The entire Old Testament exists to lay a foundation for, and provide an introduction to, the New Testament. This is true be-
cause Jesus Christ is the center of the biblical narrative. The Old Testament points forward to Him; the New Testament
centers on Him.
9. New Testament believers should study the Old Testament because the whole Bible is all about Jesus Christ.
10. a. It speaks with all the authority of God Himself.
b. Since the Old Testament is part of God’s Word, it is applicable to our lives.