Posts
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Why Jesus Wants You to Lose Hope
Wed Feb 08, 2012
by Justin Holcomb
God Gospel Justification Sin -
Dangers Leaders Face
Tue Feb 07, 2012
by Dave Kraft
Mission Church Preaching Church Leadership Wisdom Church Planting -
Confessions of an Idol Worshiper
Tue Feb 07, 2012
by Dustin Kensrue
God Scripture Worship Gospel Sin Culture -
Win the Man, Not the Argument
Mon Feb 06, 2012
by Douglas Willson
Church Leadership Heart Wisdom Gospel Apologetics -
Developing a Philosophy of Ministry
Sun Feb 05, 2012
by Jeremy Pace
Mission Church Preaching Church Leadership Evangelism Wisdom Church Planting
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Interview with Eric Mason
Wed Sep 03, 2008
by Darrin Patrick
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Interview with John Piper
Thu Sep 04, 2008
by Mark Driscoll
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The Call to Formative Instruction
Sun Sep 28, 2008
by Tedd Tripp
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Lecrae - Rebel Intro
Tue Sep 30, 2008
by Lecrae
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Interview with Lecrae
Tue Sep 30, 2008
by Mark Driscoll
Archives
Promos
How to Read the Bible
There are two ways to read the Bible. We can read it as law and threat, or we can read it as promise and assurance. If we read the Bible as law, every page will feel like God glaring at us: “If you ever . . . .” And since we are all law-breakers at heart, the Bible will crush us. Even the promises will come across as law: “God will bless sinners—well, the ones who deserve it.” If we read the Bible as promise, every page will be hope from God. It will breathe new life into us. Even the commands will be sweetened with grace: “God will bless sinners—yes, sinners who break these laws.”
Which way of reading of the Bible is correct?
The apostle Paul explains: “The law, which came 430 years afterward, does not annul a covenant previously ratified by God, so as to make the promise void. . . . God gave it to Abraham by a promise” (Gal 3:17-18). Here is Paul’s point. If we want to know whether we should read the Bible through the lens of law or promise, we can start reading on page one and see which comes first. And in fact, promise comes first—God’s covenant with Abraham in Genesis 12. The law is a later sidebar, in Exodus 20. The category “promise” is the larger, wraparound framework for everything else. The deepest message of the Bible is the grace of God for sinners. The Bible presents itself this way. The laws and commands and examples and warnings are all there. Let’s revere them. But we can read them with this as our foremost thought: “Jesus obeyed it all. He died for all my failure. And now he is changing my heart. I can read this page of the Bible with hope in his grace.”


