The Biblical Story

Scripture tells one coherent story across two testaments and sixty-six books. Understanding that story as a whole (its shape, its movement, and its goal) is what biblical theologians call the meta-narrative: the grand arc from creation and fall through redemption to new creation. Reading within this arc protects against reading any passage in isolation and helps the whole Bible interpret its parts.

The four acts below (Creation, Fall, Redemption, and New Creation) provide the governing framework. Within Redemption, seven sub-stages trace how God restores what was broken: through covenant promise, exodus and law, kingship, exile and prophetic hope, and finally through the person and work of Jesus Christ, his church, and the world to come.

Every passage of Scripture belongs to a stage. Knowing the stage tells you what God is doing in that moment of the story, what questions the text is answering, and how it fits within the whole counsel of God.

10 stages · 4 acts

Redemption

7 stages
3

Patriarchal Promise

Promise given, tested, and preserved through the chosen family

After judgment scatters the nations, God calls Abram and binds Himself by promise to bless him, make him into a great nation, give him land, and bring blessing to all peoples through his offspring. This stage narrows the redemptive storyline to the patriarchal family while keeping the nations in view.

Abrahamic Covenant
4

Exodus and Sinai

Deliverance, covenant, holiness, and the dwelling presence of God

God redeems Israel from slavery in Egypt, brings them through the sea, and forms them into His covenant people at Sinai. This stage establishes the pattern of redemption by blood, covenant obedience, priestly mediation, sacrifice, holiness, and God dwelling among His people.

Mosaic Covenant
5

Monarchy and Davidic

Kingdom, covenant kingship, and the need for a righteous son of David

God forms Israel into a kingdom under His rule and establishes David’s house as the royal line through which His purposes for His people will advance. This stage displays both the promise of righteous kingship and the failure of Israel’s kings, pressing the story toward a greater Son of David who will rule in faithfulness.

Davidic Covenant
6

Exile and Restoration

Judgment, preserved hope, and partial return under God's covenant faithfulness

Israel and Judah come under covenant judgment because persistent idolatry, injustice, and unbelief have broken the covenant life given at Sinai and corrupted the Davidic kingdom. Yet God does not abandon His promises: through the prophets, exile becomes both judgment and a place where hope is clarified, pointing toward restoration, a new covenant, a purified people, and the coming reign of the Lord.

Mosaic Covenant
7

Incarnation and Ministry

The promised Son comes, announces the kingdom, and reveals the Father

In this stage, the eternal Son comes in true humanity as the promised Messiah, born of David's line and sent to fulfill God's saving purposes. His public ministry announces the kingdom of God, reveals the Father, calls Israel to repentance and faith, gathers disciples, confronts evil, heals the broken, and moves deliberately toward His death and resurrection.

New Covenant
8

Cross and Resurrection

Atonement accomplished, death defeated, and the risen Christ vindicated

In the cross and resurrection, Jesus accomplishes redemption by bearing sin, satisfying the righteous judgment of God, and rising bodily as the firstfruits of the new creation. This stage is the decisive climax of the gospel story: the promised King, Servant, Son, and Lamb gives Himself for sinners and is raised in victory.

New Covenant
9

Pentecost and Church

The risen Christ pours out the Spirit and gathers his witnesses

After the cross and resurrection, the ascended Christ sends the promised Holy Spirit at Pentecost and gathers a people from Jews and Gentiles who bear witness to Him among the nations. The church participates in the spiritual blessings of the new covenant — forgiveness, the indwelling Spirit, and access to God — while living between Christ's accomplished redemption and His return, and while God's unconditional promises to Israel await their full consummation.

New Covenant