BiblicalPattern

The Story All Stories Point To: An Epilogue

The Story All Stories Point To: An Epilogue

We have walked through the history, the shadows, and the symbols. We have measured the wall with the plumb line of the Tanach and cleared away the debris of centuries. But as the dust settles, we find ourselves standing before a quiet, garden tomb in the twilight mist of the third day.

If the powers of darkness had known—if they had truly understood the architecture of the Father’s heart—they never would have struck (1 Co 2:8). But they did. And in that moment of apparent defeat, the single act of history occurred by which the marred beginning was reversed.

Since the garden, all of creation was caught in a singular, terrifying momentum toward destruction. But at the empty tomb, that momentum was broken. The seal was not just moved; the curse was intercepted. Every story ever told—every longing for home, every hope for justice, every cry for life—was merely a rehearsal for this. All history prior flows toward and into that tomb; all history and hope following walked out of it.

The Pattern of the Restoration

This is the story the Passover was preparing us for. The One who brought order to the tohu vavohu of Ge 1:1 is the same Word who was with God and was God in the beginning (Jn 1:1-2). He stood in the gap to reverse the great fruit fiasco of Ge 3:15-16.

The Feasts of Yehoveh are not merely dates on a calendar; they are the spiritual nervous system of the restoration of all things.

  • Passover & Unleavened Bread: The substitutionary sacrifice has been made. Yeshua, our Passover Lamb, has been sacrificed (1 Cor 5:7). We were taken out of Egypt by His blood, and now, we enter the week of Unleavened Bread—the season where we yield our lives to Him as He removes the "Egypt" from our own hearts.

  • Firstfruits: The seed that was planted in the earth did not stay there. He is the Firstfruit from the dead (1 Cor 15:20), the proof that the harvest of humanity has begun. Because He rose, we know the harvest is sure.

  • Shavuot (Pentecost): Fifty days later, the Fire that descended on Sinai to give the Torah descended again to write that Torah on hearts of flesh (Ac 2:1-4, Jr 31:33). It is the empowerment to live as citizens of the Kingdom while still in the diaspora of this world.

  • Yom Teruah (Trumpets): We listen for the blast. It is the announcement of the King’s approach. The Risen One is the Returning One (1 Th 4:16).

  • Yom Kippur (Atonement): The day of final reckoning and covering, where the High Priest emerges from the Holy of Holies to declare that the dwelling place of God is finally, fully cleansed.

  • Sukkot (Tabernacles): The end of all stories. The Great Rehearsal for the day when the dwelling place of God is with man (Rv 21:3). The earth restored, the curse forgotten, the King in our midst.

Seven feasts, largely forgotten, hold the key to all we believe in and hope for by the Word of God.

The Living Hope

I look at the empty tomb and I don't just see a historical fact; I see my own future. Because He rose, I know I will too. This reality demands more than my intellectual assent—it demands my alignment. I want my life to be a rehearsal for His Kingdom. I want the rhythm of my days to beat in time with the Feasts that proclaim His plan.

The "Faith Once Delivered" is not a burden to be carried; it is a Person to be followed. It is the clarity that when everything else falls away, He remains.

He is risen. The Lamb has conquered. The tomb is empty. The King is coming.

Let the heavens rejoice and the earth be glad, for the Firstborn from the dead has claimed His inheritance! We do not celebrate a faded memory; we rehearse a coming glory. To the Lamb who was slain and is now seated on the throne—to Him be the blessing, the honor, the glory, and the power, forever and ever!

Amen.