The Guardian, the Shadow, and the Reality: Understanding the Law's True Purpose One of the most consequential misunderstandings in Christian thought today is the belief that the Law of Moses remains an active instrument in the world — condemning, judging, and driving people toward Christ. It is a well-intentioned reading, but it misreads both the nature of the Law and the radical finality of what God accomplished in Jesus. To understand why, we have to go back further than Sinai. We have to go back to Adam, to the hidden mystery of an eternal covenant , and to the appointed moment in history when everything the Law was pointing toward finally arrived. Paul's letter to the Galatians gives us the clearest window into the Law's actual design. In Galatians 3:24-25 he writes, "Therefore the Law has become our guardian until Christ, so that we may be declared righteous by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer under that guardian." The guardian, ÏÎħÎıδÎħγÏ...
Two Covenants, Two Kinds of Children, One God There are not two Gods, but one God whose covenant has fundamentally changed how His children exist and relate to Him. Remarkably in Galatians 4 — Paul reaches back into a beloved narrative in Scripture and reads it as an allegory. Two women in Abraham's household, two sons, two entirely different origins, two entirely different destinies. And in doing so, he gives us one of the most clarifying pictures in the New Testament of what it actually means to live under each covenant. "These things," Paul writes, "are being taken allegorically, for these women are two covenants" (Galatians 4:24). Hagar represents the covenant from Mount Sinai — the very same mountain of fire and thunder we stood before in the last section, Two Mountains, Two Mediators, One God — bearing children into slavery. Sarah represents the covenant of promise, bearing children into freedom. The contrast begins at the point of origin. Hagar's ...