I write this hesitantly, because words can be so easily misunderstood. I found parts of the video agreeable, and parts... less educating. As I stated before, words by themselves can be easily misread, and misunderstood; so I want to say clearly that it was a well done video.
That said, biblical justice covers a broad spectrum of topics. The video, though well done for a condensed version, blurred lines in order to push its own point of view. Its hard not to do that though when cover a large topic, covered throughout the Bible, in a 6ish minute video.
First off, the I cant find anywhere in the bible where God told Abraham "to teach his descendants the way of The Lord, by doing righteousness and justice" Now we could infer that from Abraham's character and qualities, but flawed at its end. If someone can find this passage, I'd like to know.
Next, God told Abraham (Genesis 15:13-14) that his descendants would be slaves in a country not there own, but it would end in there betterment. In Exodus, God did not just "confront Egypt's evil." He sent Moses and Aaron to fulfill his promise to Abraham, and the refusal of the Pharaoh (Exodus 7:14) God sent judgments, each one followed with a path of surrender.
Yes, God spoke to the people of Israel about social justice, and personal justice; AFTER, after they had rejected him in favor of following other gods and being like the nations God had actually told them to wipe out. His prophets didn't just "Declared Israel guilty." He sent them to warn them that they were abandoning Him, and the consequences. Not just of consequences, but of His desire for them and His forgiveness if they returned.
The biggest issue I have with the video where they declare that Jesus came to solve injustice. I would simply like to point out that Jesus died for our sins; our wrongs committed against God. Yes, some of that would include our wrongdoings against each other, something going on since Abel; but Jesus did not die for earthly justice, rather the eternal justice that declared this world and all in it to be "guilty".
Getting off my soap box now. I'd love to discuss with anyone that disagrees with me. Overall, I still think the video was well done and serves the purpose it was created to.