Vanderhoven7: "I would say that the focus of the New Testament is essentially on Jesus Christ."
Essentially, yes, but there are numerous NT statements (as SBF indicated) that would never make sense unless we accept the Jewish background pointing to the Messiah. These point to Jesus being sent by the almighty Jewish God to save the world. (John 3.16) Jesus was to become the "mediator" between God and humankind, not to replace God. (1 Tim. 2.5) Even when Jesus birth was announced, the message was: "He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David." (Luke 1.32, ESV) Although Jesus was bound to receive the utmost attention, he still would not be "the Most High." People of the nations would follow his steps in the name of the Father. All this focus on Jesus Christ happened to the ultimate glory of his Father. (Phl. 2.11)
Vanderhoven7: "I believe that not only is the New Testament Christocentric, but so is the Old Testament."
Sorry, I can not agree with this statement. A few hundred prophecies in the OT pointing to Jesus as the world savior, the Messiah, sent by God, does not result in him receiving more importance than YHWH, whose name appears nearly 7.000 times. (Ps. 83.18) "The nations shall know that I am Jehovah"... over 60x in Ezequiel alone. In the book of Psalms, thousands of references lead us to the almighty God, Jehovah. Christ is addressed in the book prophetically dozens of times, compared to the rest pointing to the universal Father.
Vanderhoven 7: It is not a matter of where we put the emphasis...but where God puts the emphasis.
One thing that people often overlook is that the Jewish people ALREADY were worshipers of God YHWH. They did not need convincing in NT times that God the Father was the Almighty. They were plenty aware of that. But what was the thing missing from the Jewish culture? Assimilating Jesus Christ in their worship schedules under the new arrangement. That's what! Jews of the 1st century did not accept Jesus as their Christ because they were too busy looking for someone to free them from the claws of the Roman empire. Jesus did not solve their problem right away. Actually, Jesus showed no interest in Roman politics. He only talked about God's promises though Him into the FUTURE. So they concluded that Jesus was not their Messiah.
Out of keeping with God's promise to Abraham, there was an urgent need for Jews to open their minds and souls so they could now appreciate what God was doing for them by means of Jesus Christ. If they failed to accept Jesus as God's agent and savior in this new arrangement, they were doomed for destruction. So God put their Jewish lives on the pendant of Jesus' sacrifice. The emphasis was now to bring out the importance to embrace Jesus Christ, and doing so would please the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Repetition was necessary, since Jews were not accustomed to worship their God through a mediator. (John 14.6) In all, we need to look at the New Testament, not through later trinitarian philosophy, but through the OT prophecies leading to God's envoy to save the world.