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Wednesday, June 4, 2025

The Bible Isn’t a Puzzle. It’s a Portrait



Some people approach Scripture like it’s a riddle to decode. They pore over word counts, cross-references, secret numerologies. They read the prophets like stock forecasts and Revelation like a cosmic escape room.

But the Bible was never meant to be a logic puzzle.
It was meant to reveal a Person.


The Word Was Made Flesh, Not Flashcards

When St. Jerome said, "Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ," he didn’t mean that failing to solve the Book of Numbers made you a bad Christian.
He meant that the Scriptures reveal who Jesus is.

From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible is a portrait of God's heart. A mosaic of covenants. A series of encounters. Not a spreadsheet of rules or a theological labyrinth.

Yes, the Bible contains law. And poetry. And apocalyptic visions. But each page is grounded in something deeper: a God who reveals Himself not in riddles, but in relationship.

The Catechism reminds us that "In Sacred Scripture, the Church constantly finds her nourishment and her strength" (CCC 131). Scripture doesn’t just inform us. It feeds us.


What Changes When You Read It Like a Portrait?

You stop asking, "What does this verse mean in isolation?" and start asking, "What does this reveal about God’s nature?"

You start to see:

  • The mercy behind the miracles

  • The tenderness behind the commandments

  • The patience behind the prophets

You read Exodus and see rescue. You read the Psalms and hear longing. You read Isaiah and feel a God who refuses to abandon His people.

Suddenly, it doesn’t matter if you’ve memorized the genealogies. You’re meeting Someone. Not analyzing something.


Scripture Is Meant to Be Prayed

The Catechism tells us that "the Church forcefully and specifically exhorts all the Christian faithful... to learn the surpassing knowledge of Jesus Christ by frequent reading of the divine Scriptures. 'Ignorance of the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ.'" (CCC 133)

This is not a call to intellectual decoding.
It’s a call to intimacy.

When you read Scripture relationally, it becomes a place of encounter. Not performance.

You don’t have to understand everything you read.
You don’t have to parse every verb in Greek.
You just have to show up with your heart open.

That’s how love works.


What Kind of Portrait Is It?

It’s layered. Sometimes abstract. Sometimes hyper-detailed. Sometimes haunting. But always alive.

The Bible isn’t trying to be tidy. It’s trying to be true.

It reflects human longing, divine pursuit, cosmic tension, and real-world mess.
It tells of God speaking through donkeys, dreams, burning bushes, and broken people.

And at the center of this sacred portrait is a face: Jesus.

The Word made flesh.
The One the whole library points to.
The image of the invisible God (Colossians 1:15).

You can’t reduce Him to a diagram.
But you can fall in love.


Why Scripture Gets Misread

One reason people struggle with the Bible is because they expect it to behave like a textbook. But the Bible isn’t arranged by subject headings or step-by-step instructions.

Instead, it tells the story of a relationship over time. A story filled with beauty, betrayal, renewal, and promise.

When people isolate verses without understanding the broader narrative, they often misunderstand the tone or the purpose. Context isn’t a footnote—it’s part of the sacred meaning.

In Luke 24, Jesus walks with two disciples on the road to Emmaus. They don’t recognize Him at first. But He opens the Scriptures to them—and later, in the breaking of the bread, their eyes are opened. (Luke 24:13–35)

This isn’t just a charming post-Resurrection moment. It’s a model for how Scripture works:

  • We walk with Christ.

  • He explains what we didn’t understand.

  • And through that encounter, we begin to see.


The Role of the Church in Reading Scripture

Reading the Bible doesn’t have to be a solo effort. In fact, it isn’t meant to be.

The Church, guided by the Holy Spirit, helps us read with clarity, continuity, and reverence.

As the Catechism teaches: “The task of interpreting the Word of God authentically has been entrusted solely to the Magisterium of the Church, that is, to the Pope and to the bishops in communion with him” (CCC 100).

This doesn’t mean you need a theology degree to pray the Bible. It means you have a trustworthy compass. The Church helps us stay within the frame of the portrait.


Let Scripture Form You

Too often, we approach the Bible asking, “How can I use this?”
But a better question is: “How can this form me?”

Hebrews 4:12 reminds us: “The word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword… discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart.”

Scripture isn’t static. It’s alive.

If you let it, it will:

  • Comfort you in seasons of grief

  • Challenge you when you’re stuck

  • Remind you who God is when the world forgets

  • Recenter you when life gets noisy


You Don’t Have to Be an Expert to Be Transformed

The Gospel was first proclaimed to fishermen, tax collectors, widows, and wanderers. The Spirit didn’t wait for seminary credentials.

So don’t be afraid to open your Bible just as you are.

Let the Word wash over you.
Let it read you.
Let it bring you into the ongoing story of salvation.

Want to encounter God more personally through Scripture? Follow the full Face of God series or support its development at ko-fi.com/convertingtohope.

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