Biblical Interpretation

God's Judgments Contain Hidden Graces

God's Judgments Contain Hidden Graces

God’s judgments contain hidden graces. That is probably a surprising statement because we tend to think about judgment—and especially God’s judgment—as painful, terrifying, and devasting. Of course, God’s judgment is terrible. However, the prospect and pronouncement of judgment from God is also something that contains hidden grace—at least on this side of heaven.

Spurgeon, Types, and the Majesty of Christ

Spurgeon, Types, and the Majesty of Christ

One of the significant motivations for a typological interpretive framework is to help us see just how unified the Old and New Testaments are. So often, we think of ourselves as “New Testament” Christians. But truly, we are people of the entire Word. While there are many aspects of the Old Testament that have been fulfilled in Christ, we can’t excise the Old Testament from our Bibles—or at least we shouldn’t. I fear that we actually do become modern-day Marcionites at times. Not confessionally, but practically in the way that we read the Bible.