Allegory: Holy Bible is Allegoric Mystery: Freewoman

The Holy Bible is all "allegory" in both "covenants".
Holy Bible DOES NOT think for you; Rather DOES make you think.

His angel plays the last trump it

Allegory: 1 day [is] as 1,000 years

Galatians 4: Which things are an allegory:
Abraham: had Two Sons by Two Mothers:
(i) Mount Sinai: them & (ii) Jerusalem above: us
 (i) bondwoman [Law]  &  (ii) freewoman [Grace]


  Allegory 1: One of twain: Law vs Grace is winner take all
Allegory 2: "Let there by Light": Understanding (only) 
Allegory 3: "One Proseleyte": "more the CHILD of hell"
Allegory 4 : "Moses' Seat": The Law, isn't a mercy seat.
Allegory 5: "The Operation of God":  it removes the law
Allegory 6: plural "doors of heaven" vs "I am the door".


Bible Allegory - Biblical Allegory

Bondwoman: Mother of them all: children: bondage: this Agar is Mount Sinai: Law
Freewoman: Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the mother of us all: Grace

Galatians 4 - "Which things are an allegory" - Holy  Bible

Three  Allegoric  Wishes
Grace --> Mercy --> Peace
(Three things that make One: White)

The word "allegory" is used in the Holy Bible (KJV) to reveal to us the Scriptures are allegorical. Sadly many (Matthew 7:13) deceived by many (Matthew 24:5) are so dog gone bewitched (Galatians 3:1) by ministers of Satan (2Corinthians 11:15) saying you too can have partiality from an impartial God, they're not aware the Bible is allegoric. Forgive them...

Forgive them, who know not, thereby err, is on the Law side of the cross
Knowing the truth, to be free of ignorance and error, is on the Grace side
God giveth us the victory is notably "through Jesus->Christ" (thru the cross)

Forgive "them": children, servants; And notably because they "know not". Many pride them-selves on being "children" of God; But know not the God (on high) they are children of is Law, and that the higher God biblical exhortation is "be no more children", since children get tossed to and fro by winds (spirits) of doctrine. Many also pride them-selves in being servants(slaves) of righteousness, not knowing the higher biblical exhortation is "thou art no more a servant". For only "above a servant" is truly free: free of believing the lies(laws). Children and servants differ nothing: both "know not" and thereby still have to be told what to Do-teronomy & Don't-eronomy; But good old Deuteronomy has a curse hidden in the midst of it, making it(law) both good + evil, which is what we are exhorted to discern (allegory: a void).


The Bible is allegoric from begin to end. It not only self defined itself as "allegory" in both "covenants", but also as "mystery" over 20 times; And the "mystery" mentioned in Colossians 2: 2 is notably a triple "mystery" to solve:
   (i)  the mystery of God, and
   (ii)  [the mystery] of the Father, and
   (iii) [the mystery] of Christ.

The Bible is allegoric mystery
to solve by "seek and ye shall find", having within it see-king clues, and also clues of what to "find": Seek ye first the kingdom of God (not kingdom of heaven) and his righteousness (not supposed righteousness of another law); Find grace (at the throne of grace, where only mercy is notably obtainable, not both mercy and sacrifice), and find grace "in time" (not too late), to "help"(not hinder). Thereby "find rest" (peace): there remaineth a rest to the people of God: Hebrews 3 and Hebrews 4. Also "find" the 1/100 sheep that went astray, which is notably "found"("alive") in Luke 15. Perhaps also "find" no fault(law) in J->C, as Pilate did "find" in Luke 23 & John 19. And if concupiscence a problem (as CrossWalk says it is with half the men in church), perhaps "find" a law as the source of said hind-rance, as Paul did in Romans 7; Which notes "we are delivered from the law" (as answer to "deliver us from evil": Mt 6:13).

Many do not know the shew is a comparative teaching (scripture -vs- scripture) "written aforetime
for our learning" (Rom 15:4). Such not only suggests thinking is allowed, but also ignorance isn't bliss. According to converted Peter, willing ignorance was the cause of the first of twain worlds all perishing (2Peter 3). According to converted Paul all perish is by the using of ordinances (laws), which we are exhorted to "touch not, taste not, handle not" (Colossians 2:20-22).

Biblical Allegory is unknown to many,
even to many servants of righteousness.

The word "allegory" doesn't appear in the New King James Version (NKJV) of the Bible. It uses "symbolic" instead. Neither does "allegory" appear in the New International Version (NIV) of the Bible. It uses "figurative"; And worse yet, some NIVs leave out Rev 22:21 altogether and some leave out "Christ" if they include Rev 22:21 (see via Parallel Bibles). Some Bible commentaries even use "metaphor" instead of "allegory". But  after 100,000 hrs of actual Bible study
it's my insight Translators of the Bible used the most appropriate word: allegory, being more meticulous about translating than unlearned scribes.

Which things are an allegory: Bible is allegoric, allegorical
To clarify more churchy definitions of allegory: biblical allegory is simply a story in which people, places, and things often have another meaning, kinda like allegoric parables and allegoric proverbs do. Scriptures are allegorical, stories with a spiritual moral of life or death (allegory: grace or law) consequence. Biblical allegory is more than symbolic, figurative, or an extended metaphor.

The Holy Bible is allegoric. Being allegorical it is a virtue-all God shew, whereby all the worlds a stage, and a mystery to be solved "in time" (Heb 4:12) since there's neither any mystery nor time for it in eternity; The reconciliation unto God(Grace) objective being  "with all thy getting, get understanding". For understanding ("grace glory" thereof) is what prevails, among all, in heaven.

All scriptures are allegorical from Genesis 1:1 to Revelation 22:21
Understand that "my grace is sufficient" means no law required; Understand that "I will have mercy, and not sacrifice" means I will have grace, and not law. And understand "immutable" means unchangeable by any means. No amount of lying, crying, or dying will ever change the immutable will of God.

Paul The Apostle was also a Steward at allegorically speaking
In Galatians 4 Paul The Apostle allegorically notes Abraham had two sons (Ishmael/Isaac; allegorically Flesh/Spirit) by two different women (Agar/Sarah; allegorically bondwoman/freewoman). Then he notes "which things are an allegory", for these things(plural) "are the two covenants" (two testaments: law/grace). One of twain Jersusalems (allegorically mothers), Jerusalem below: "this" Agar is Mount Sinai (law) gendereth to bondage (plan b); But Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the mother of us all (plan a: approved).

What it says, in plain allegorical english, is law, which was "added" to "my grace is sufficient" (no law required) was plan b: "bondage"; Whereas firstly pure wisdom (of two wisdoms) from above (Grace unto you from God our Father) is plan a: approved.  So in the exhortation: "study to shew thyself approved unto God", "shew" suggests a study of twain things: disapproved (law) vs approved (grace), with only one of twain being what's right for you: all the KofG within "you".

To be sure that's what it allegorically says, let us go on to the question Paul (his witness unto all men) both asks and answers in Galatians 4 mention of allegory (which has an allegorical theme, discussion, conclusion). Question: what saith the script-u-are? Of twain scriptures, which one are you? Answer: cast out the bondwoman and her son (allegory: cast out the law and result of law: sin and death). The obvious benefit of no law: no imputation of sin and no dead end. For law is not only the source of sin (Rom 5:13); Law is also the "strength" ("strong man": Mt 12:29) of sin, and the "sting" of sin (law imputes) is death (1Cor 15:56). So as James 1:15 allegorically says: sin(law), when "it is finished", brings "death".

The conclusion of Galatians (allegorically written "unto the churches", which is mentioned only in Galatians and Revelation) is: "Brethren, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ with your spirit. Amen", allegorically different from the Pauline Epistle format; Which generally concludes Pauline epistles with: "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ with you all. Amen". A last "Amen" to that: Grace(only) with you all, is also how Pauline written Hebrews and Revelation allegorically end, how the Bible ends, is what makes both it and "you all" one thing: Holy (not Holy Holy).

Bible Allegory: Biblical Allegory Examples: Bible is Allegorical

- "this" Agar is "Mt Sinai" (allegory interpretation: of this/that, law is this, and grace is that)
- "that" Jesus Christ is come (allegory: of this/that, first/second, law/grace, grace is already come)
- "the seven stars are the angels of the seven churches" (allegory: an angel is a church leader)
- "seven spirits are seven lamps of fire" (see also seven horns and seven eyes of slain lamb)
- "the field is the world" (parable moral: a "man" sows good seed in his field)
- "good seed are children of the kingdom, but tares are children of the wicked" (be not good + evil)
- "I have gotten a man from the LORD"
(allegorically 1st Adam the 1st LORD of twain)
- "the woman thou sawest is that great city" (allegory: churchy Jerusalem is a spiritual "Baby"-lon)
- "silly women laden with sins" (allegory: silly women are bewitched churches who impute sin)
- "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me" (allegory: two Gods result in feeling "forsaken")
- "when I am weak, then am I strong" (allegory: if grace is weak, then law [the strength of sin] is strong)
- "the kingdom of God is within you" (allegory: it's obviously not in ye do err, lest all perish thereby)
- "The Lord... is longsuffering to us-ward" (allegory:  none perish is what's accounted salvation)
- "God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world" (allegory: not this, but rather that)
- "My kingdom is not of this world" (allegory: of kingdoms and worlds, KofG is of that world)
- "God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (allegory: not them, nor CJ)
- "one day with the Lord as a thousand years" (allegory: yesterday: was a watch in the "night": Ps 90:4)
- "and a thousand years as one day" (allegory: perhaps Rev 20's "1,000 yrs" is one day at Easter)
- "the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life" (allegory: law: was a ministration of "death"; grace is life)
- "the law is not of faith" (allegory: see Galatians 3; and "whatsoever is not of faith is sin" in Romans 14)
- "God hath not appointed us to wrath" (rather only "them": 1Thess 5:3 were appointed to deadly wrath)
- "I die daily" (allegory: "die" here obviously not dead end of life + death, but a daily flush of dung)
- "God our Saviour...will have all men to be saved" (allegory: men: plural, speaks of dblemindead)
- "after that faith is come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster" (allegory: schoolmaster was law)
- "they that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercy" (allegory: be ye therefore merciful)
- "eternal life, which God that cannot lie, promised" (allegory: grace can't law, so grace can't die)
- "I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill" (allegory: I am not come to law, but to grace and truth)
- "when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son" (allegory: law had an expiry date)

... since the Bible Allegory list is as long as the Bible is, about 1,000 pages, I'll simply leave off here


Next Page of Allegory: Allegory 1: One of twain is winner take all

The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ with you all. Amen.
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