Exposing the Veils of Ambiguity and the Fullness of the Gospel
2 Corinthians 3:12-18
"Since we have such a hope, we are very bold, not like Moses, who would put a veil over his face so that the Israelites might not gaze at the outcome of what was being brought to an end. But their minds were hardened. For to this day, when they read the old covenant, that same veil remains unlifted, because only through Christ is it taken away. Yes, to this day whenever Moses is read a veil lies over their hearts. But when one turns to the Lord, the veil is removed. Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed [reflecting] into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit."
People cling tightly to religious institutions, traditions, rituals, and dogmas, often treating them as the ultimate source of truth and righteousness. People looking for a more experiential relationship with God. These folks will say things like, "the scriptures say, the letter kills but the Spirit gives life" and infer that teaching the word of God brings death, but the experiential movement of the Spirit brings life.
When our expressions of our faith are isolated like this, whether the veil of rigid dogmatic ritualism or the veil of unanchored experientialism, the ultimate victim is always the Scriptures. Both of these things are the veils Paul speaks of. Paul’s imagery of the veil is devastatingly accurate. Anything that we place between our hearts and the direct beholding of Christ’s glory in the gospel becomes a barrier.
When traditions, institutions, or rituals are elevated to the place of final authority, Scripture is quietly demoted to a proof-text repository that must serve the system.
Likewise, when personal experiences, feelings, or dramatic "moves of the Spirit" become the ultimate validator of truth, Scripture is again sidelined; this time reduced to a inspirational springboard we leap from rather than the anchoring revelation we submit to.
The spirit at work in both of these veils is "ambiguity". Ambiguity isn’t neutral; it’s a deceptive fog (a veil) that keeps hearts from turning decisively to Christ.
It whispers, "is this clear enough?"
"Do you really need to go further?"
Leaving them circling shadows instead of beholding Christ's glory.
This spirit of ambiguity thrives on half-truths, selective emphasis, and evasion of Christ’s piercing clarity, turning the gospel’s razor-sharp simplicity into a clouded maze. It’s not a mere confusion; it’s a deliberate haze, echoing "hardened minds" (v. 14) and the "veil over their hearts" (v. 15) in Paul's diagnoses.
The veil drapes over rigid institutions, traditions, and dogmas as the "ultimate truth" (truth not found in the Scriptures). The spirit of ambiguity lurks in the gaps of language.
How exactly does this ritual save?
What unspoken merit or mediation does it confer?
Proxy baptisms for the dead? (1 Corinthians 15:29)
Prayers for those in purgatory?
Elevating bishops as Spirit-guaranteed overseers?
Even when they read the law there is still a veil covering their face.
These "gracious provisions" become ends in and of themselves. Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus ("outside the church, no salvation" ) bonds the Spirit to fallible human offices, sidelining Scripture’s priesthood of all believers (1 Peter 2:9).
The result? A veiled heart that reads Moses (or creeds) without seeing Christ as the sole fulfillment, perpetuating condemnation under a guise of ritualistic certainty. They are trying to substitute (replace Christ) with their good works or penance (their sacrifice) in order to atone for their sin.
Swing the pendulum to the other extreme, and ambiguity fuels the cry, "The letter kills, but the Spirit gives life!" (2 Corinthians 3:6). They are misreading the context as "Bible teaching = death; feelings/moves = life." Detached from the proper context (old vs. new covenant), it justifies in their minds unanchored "overshadowings"; quantum speculations on the virgin birth, chasing phileō affection for Christ without a doctrinal backbone.
Experiences become self-validating: Was that a "move of the Spirit" or emotion?
Who can tell, it's all relative because there's no objective test by the Word (1 John 4:1).
These peddlers of God’s word (2 Corinthians 2:17); modern influencers with gatekept comments, edited streams, and monetized "sincerity", farm engagement in this veiled fog. Silencing dissent as "persecution" while diluting truth like watered down wine.
This spirit of ambiguity is satanic sleight-of-hand (2 Corinthians 11:14, wolves in sheep’s). It hardens minds against bold hope (v. 12), preferring shadows to the Spirit’s light. Ambiguity is the crime scene, and the Scriptures suffer as the victim. Dogma proof-texts the Bible to prop up the "Church" system. Experientialism leaps from ambiguity as a vague springboard. Reddit threads for instance mirror this. Mixing covenants keeps the "veil unlifted" (2 Corinthians 3:14), pitting letter against Spirit while ignoring Paul’s contextual flow.
What is the proper context?
Veil removed only in Christ (v. 14) + freedom where the Spirit is (v. 17) + transformation by beholding the Lord’s glory in the gospel mirror of Scripture (v. 18; James 1:23-25) = The Fullness of the Gospel (no more proxies, no more vibes; direct gaze upon His glory).
This is no mere formula; it is the living dynamic of new-covenant life. Paul lays it out with breathtaking clarity, demolishing every partial gospel that stops short of this fullness. Yet, those who live under the veil will formulate their magisteriums, and deeper experiences to compensate for the crime scene where the Scriptures have been sidelined. Something must fill the void left by the ambiguous missing fullness. The absence of true freedom and ongoing transformation creates a spiritual vacuum, and into that vacuum rush human compensations.
Those under the veil of institutional dogma erect (or cling to) an authoritative magisterium. A structure that promises certainty and continuity, but quietly relocates final authority from the Spirit-illuminated Scriptures to human mediators. Christ’s all-sufficiency is supplemented by the ongoing voice of the institution. Paul's bold access becomes filtered access, through priests, prelates, or approved channels. Transformation is outsourced to sacraments administered by the system rather than wrought directly by the Spirit as we behold Christ in the Word.
And those under the veil of the unanchored spirituality chase ever-deeper, more intense experiences. Fresh anointings, new revelations, prolonged encounters, signs, and manifestations. So much excitement they are literally rolling in the aisles or producing head banging goosebump services. When these people can't be sustained by beholding Christ in Scripture, when the Bible feels insufficient (because the veil dulls the glory), something more spectacular must compensate.
The result is a restless pursuit of the next wave, the next impartation, the next breakthrough. Transformation becomes event-driven rather than Word-and-Spirit driven, and freedom morphs into an addiction to spiritual highs.
In both cases, the compensation betrays the underlying problem...the veil of ambiguity is still in place.
And so, rather than repent of the partial gospel and embrace the full dynamic context Paul describes, the solution is to build elaborate scaffolding around their deficiency.
Paul's response is plain, no magisterium can remove the veil, only Christ can. There aren't enough pedigrees to supplant the Scriptures. And no depth of experience can manufacture the freedom only the Spirit gives. The only remedy is to stop compensating and start turning. Turn away from every human authority that claims to stand in Christ’s place. Turn away from every experiential production that distracts from Christ’s sufficiency.
Turn fully, daily, to the Lord Jesus as He is offered in the Scriptures. There the Spirit waits, not to give us a better system or a stronger sensation, but to unveil our faces, set us free, and change us degree by degree into the image of the One we see. Refuse every compensation today. Settle for nothing less than the living fullness Christ has secured.
Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus, expose every compensation we have erected in place of Your fullness. Tear down our magisteriums of control and our altars of experience. Forgive us for living as though Your gospel were insufficient. Remove the veil anew. Draw us to behold You alone in the mirror of Your Word. By Your Spirit, give us the freedom and transformation that no human substitute can provide. We want nothing less than the full dynamic of new-covenant life. Amen.