From Stone to Flesh

What if “law” is the wrong word entirely? What if Torah was never a legal code but an arrow aimed at a specific target — and the hiding of it in stone was part of the message?

The word most English readers of the Bible encounter as “law” is the Greek nomos, which the translators of the Septuagint used to render the Hebrew Torah. The translation is understandable. It is also misleading.

Torah does not mean law in the legislative sense — a code of statutes, a set of enforceable regulations. It comes from yarah: to point, to aim, as an archer draws toward a target. Torah is instruction. Direction. Something aimed at something.

That single observation quietly reframes one of the oldest arguments in biblical interpretation. The Law versus Grace camps have been arguing for centuries about whether the Law applies or doesn’t apply, whether it saves or doesn’t save, whether it has been abolished or is still binding. Both camps are treating Torah as legislation. But an archer’s arrow is not a regulation. Missing the target is not breaking a rule — it is missing the point. The word translated “sin” carries exactly that meaning: to miss the mark. The Law and Grace debate, on both sides, has been missing what Torah was always aimed at.

Hidden in Stone

When God gave the commandments at Sinai, they were written on tablets of stone. Most people carry a mental image of those tablets — monumental, displayed, permanently visible. But that is not what happened to them.

The stone tablets were placed inside the ark. The ark was placed inside the Most Holy Place, behind a thick veil. The Most Holy Place was accessible to one person — the High Priest — once a year. The priests entered the Holy Place throughout the year, but the inner room, where the ark sat, remained sealed except for that single annual entry. The people saw the tabernacle from outside. The tabernacle itself, the Holy Place, the veil, the ark, the cover — each layer standing between them and what was written inside.

The instruction was hidden from the people it was given to.

If Torah was primarily regulatory — a set of rules to be kept — hiding it behind successive layers and restricting access to once a year through a single mediator would be a strange way to administer it. You do not govern a people with laws they cannot see.

But if Torah was prophetic — always pointing toward something, always pointing toward someone — then the hiddenness is part of the message. The structure itself is teaching. The veil is not an obstacle. It is instruction.

The Promise

The prophets carried a consistent word about what was coming:

I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit in you. Ezekiel 36:26-27

I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. Jeremiah 31:33

The stone is not destroyed. What was written on stone gets written somewhere else — inside the person. The hiding place moves. What was concealed behind a veil in the Most Holy Place becomes hidden within. The mediation changes. No veil, no priesthood standing between — the instruction written directly into the one receiving it.

This is the same movement compressed into a single image in one of Jesus’ parables:

The kingdom of heaven is like leaven, which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal till it was all leavened. Matthew 13:33

Leaven in the symbol-system is not sin (see A Lesson From The Days of Unleavened Bread). It is doctrine, teaching, influence — the system that permeates whatever it enters and transforms it from within. The woman takes it and hides it. It disappears into the meal. Invisible in its operation. Working from the inside out until the whole is transformed.

The instruction hidden in stone, behind a veil, unreachable — becomes the instruction hidden in the person, working from within, leavening the whole.

One Law, One Word

Torah is singular. Not a collection of disconnected statutes but a unified body of instruction aimed in one direction. John opens his gospel with the same singleness: In the beginning was the Word — Logos, the single creative intelligence through whom all things were made.

One Torah. One Logos. Both pointing at the same reality.

Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill [πληρōō — plēroō] them. Matthew 5:17

The archer’s arrow reaches its target. The instruction that was always pointing — hidden in stone, promised for the heart, hidden in the meal — arrives at what it was aimed at all along.

For what is written about me has its fulfillment. Luke 22:37

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *