
The Promised Gospel
“Which he had promised afore by his prophets in the holy scriptures” (Romans 1:2, KJV)
The modern Christian, bombarded by claims that the Gospel is simply a recent invention or philosophical construct, might well benefit from the Apostle Paul’s penetrating observation in Romans 1:2. Here, amidst his magisterial introduction to the Roman epistle, Paul establishes a truth that ought to silence every critic of Christianity’s historical credibility: the Gospel of God possesses an ancient and prophetic pedigree that stretches back through centuries of revelation.
What strikes the careful reader immediately is Paul’s strategic placement of this parenthetical remark. Rather than announcing his apostolic credentials and diving into doctrinal exposition, he pauses to establish the historical foundation of his message. The Gospel he proclaims is not a product of modern ideologies, a cunningly devised fable designed to manipulate the masses into religious restraint, but rather the fulfillment of promises that preceded Christ’s earthly ministry by millennia.
God’s Promise Precedes Human Performance
The phrase “promised afore” reveals God’s initiative in redemptive history. Long before Mary conceived in her womb, before shepherds heard angelic choruses, before wise men followed a star, God had bound Himself by His word to provide redemption. This commitment appears as early as Genesis 3:15, where the “seed of the woman” would bruise the serpent’s head—a promise that theodicy demanded and God’s love supplied.
This ancient promise represents far more than wishful thinking or religious speculation. It demonstrates the deep forethought that underlies the gospel. Justice and love cannot be separated and God’s character requires both perfect holiness and perfect mercy to be satisfied simultaneously. The Old Testament promises reveal God working out this cosmic resolution through historical particularity. It would all culminate in Jesus Christ our Lord.
The prophets who delivered these promises were not, as modern critics suggest, political propagandists or religious opportunists. They were, as Peter reminds us, “holy men of God who spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost” (2 Peter 1:21). Their words carried God’s authority precisely because they originated not in human imagination but in Holy Spirit revelation.
The Prophetic Witness Across Centuries
When Paul refers to “his prophets,” he encompasses the entire Old Testament revelation—not only those formally designated as prophets, but all who spoke under Holy Ghost inspiration. Moses, though primarily a lawgiver, prophesied of One “like unto me” whom God would raise up (Deuteronomy 18:15). David, though a king, penned Messianic psalms that detailed the suffering and glory of the coming Savior. Isaiah, the evangelical prophet, painted such vivid portraits of the suffering Servant that one might suppose he stood at the foot of Calvary’s cross.
Consider the mathematical improbability of Jesus fulfilling even a fraction of the 300-plus Old Testament prophecies concerning the Messiah. The prophecies span centuries, emerge from different authors in various circumstances, yet converge with stunning precision upon a single historical figure. Micah 5:2 specifies Bethlehem as the birthplace; Isaiah 7:14 predicts virgin birth; Psalm 22 describes crucifixion in detail centuries before this method of execution was even known in Israel; Isaiah 53 presents substitutionary atonement with such clarity that Jewish scholars have struggled to explain it away for millennia.
The Ethiopian eunuch, reading Isaiah 53 in his chariot, encountered this very phenomenon. When Philip asked whether he understood what he read, the eunuch’s response reveals the proper attitude toward Scripture: “How can I, except some man should guide me?” (Acts 8:31). Philip then “opened his mouth, and beginning at this scripture, preached Jesus unto him” (Acts 8:35). Here we see the essential unity between Old Testament promise and New Testament fulfillment—the Gospel preached from a passage written seven centuries earlier.
The Authority of Holy Scriptures
Paul’s designation of these writings as “holy scriptures” establishes their godly authority and permanent validity. These are not human documents reflecting ancient religious aspirations, but sacred texts carrying the endorsement of heaven itself. The word “holy” separates these writings from all human speculation and philosophy—they belong to God in a unique sense.
This divine authority explains why Jesus could say to the religious leaders of His day, “Search the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: and they are they which testify of me” (John 5:39). The Old Testament Scriptures possessed sufficient clarity and completeness to point seeking hearts toward the coming Messiah. They were not preliminary sketches that would be discarded when the Master arrived, but rather the divine blueprint that validated His identity when He appeared.
The dispensational framework that governs biblical interpretation recognizes that while God’s methods of dealing with humanity have varied across different epochs, His essential gospel message remains constant. The sacrificial system, the Passover lamb, the Day of Atonement, the bronze serpent—all these Old Testament institutions pointed forward to the ultimate sacrifice that would accomplish what their repeated performance could only symbolize. Furthermore, the insistence on faith always ensures it is of the Lord, lest any man should boast.
The Foolishness of Modern Skepticism
In our age of academic arrogance, when biblical scholarship often seems more concerned with deconstructing than understanding, Paul’s simple assertion carries prophetic weight. The modern tendency to dismiss Old Testament prophecy as vaticinium ex eventu—prophecy written after the fact—betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of both Spirit inspiration and historical evidence. Both realities are abundantly present in God’s word to a notable sense of satisfaction for any person with integrity. If God knows the end from the beginning, why should it surprise us that He revealed future events to His prophets with perfect accuracy?
The intellectual honesty that once characterized biblical scholarship has too often given way to philosophical commitments that preclude supernatural intervention. Modern ideological thinking often adopts commitments that blind their adherents to obvious truths that contradict their preferred worldview. The convergence of Old Testament prophecy and New Testament fulfillment presents evidence that should compel any fair-minded investigator toward faith—unless prior commitments have rendered such evidence intentionally inadmissible.
The Apostolic Method of Gospel Preaching
Paul’s consistent practice, recorded throughout Acts, demonstrates the essential role of Old Testament foundation in effective gospel preaching. When addressing Jewish audiences, he invariably began with the Scriptures they already acknowledged as authoritative. In the synagogue at Thessalonica, “Paul, as his manner was, went in unto them, and three sabbath days reasoned with them out of the scriptures, Opening and alleging, that Christ must needs have suffered, and risen again from the dead; and that this Jesus, whom I preach unto you, is Christ” (Acts 17:2-3).
This method was not only strategic but doctrinal. The Gospel gains its credibility from its fulfillment of God’s promises made centuries earlier. When Philip preached to the Ethiopian eunuch, he didn’t begin with systematic theology or apologetic arguments—he started with Isaiah 53 and showed how Jesus fulfilled what the prophet had written.
Modern evangelism might benefit from recovering this apostolic approach. Rather than treating the Old Testament as irrelevant to Gospel proclamation, we should follow Paul’s example in demonstrating the organic unity between promise and fulfillment, between prophecy and historical realization.
The Contemporary Application
For believers, Romans 1:2 serves both as encouragement and exhortation. It encourages us that our faith rests not upon recent innovations but upon the eternal counsels of God, worked out through centuries of revelation and culminating in the person and work of Jesus Christ. The same God who faithfully fulfilled His ancient promises continues to fulfill His contemporary ones.
The verse also exhorts us to deeper study of the Old Testament Scriptures. If these writings were sufficient to reveal Christ to seeking hearts in the first century, they remain sufficient today. Every believer should be able to demonstrate from the Old Testament that Jesus is the promised Messiah, following the examples of Philip, Paul, and our Lord Himself.
In an age when biblical literacy continues to decline even within the church, Paul’s reference to the prophetic foundation of the Gospel reminds us that shallow roots produce weak faith. The Christian who knows only the New Testament operates with half a Bible, missing the rich tapestry of types, shadows, and prophecies that illuminate the glory of Christ’s person and work.
The Gospel promised “afore by his prophets in the holy scriptures” stands today as the same “power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth” (Romans 1:16). Its ancient pedigree does not diminish its contemporary relevance—rather, it establishes the unshakeable foundation upon which every generation of believers may build their confidence in God’s redemptive purposes. The promises have been kept; the prophecies have been fulfilled; the Scriptures have been vindicated. In Christ, every word of God finds its “Yea and Amen” (2 Corinthians 1:20).
Pastor Thomas Irvin
George County Baptist Church
Lucedale, Mississippi


