A
covenant is an "agreement between two parties containing
their promises each to the other", according to Webster's
Dictionary. ...God
considers the breaking of human agreements as a breaking
of his covenant. (Eze. 17:18-19; Mal 2:10). He requires
his people to be faithful to the agreements they make
with one another. The
word "testament" is interchangeable with "covenant". The
King James Version sometimes translates the Greek word
diatheke as "testament" and sometimes as "covenant". Many
translations use "covenant" exclusively.
The
covenants of the Bible are of two types: A conditional
covenant is a proposal of God to man whereby He promises
to grant special blessings to man providing he fulfills
certain conditions. Man's failure to do so often results
in punishment. An unconditional covenant is a sovereign
act of God whereby He unconditionally promises to bring
to pass definite blessings and conditions. This covenant
is characterized by " I will."
Throughout Israel's
history, covenant was an important concept. They were the
"people of the covenant land" (Eze. 30:5); their ruler
was "the prince of the covenant" (Dan 11:22). An attack
on the Jews was considered an attack "against the holy
covenant" (11:28, 30). Paul noted that one of the
advantages of the people of Israel is that they had the
"covenants of the promise" (Rom 9:4; Eph 2:12).
. All
the spiritual blessings are ours in Jesus the
Messiah
whether we are Jews or Gentiles. And through His death on
the cross we reap spiritual benefits that would never be
ours otherwise.
The
Covenants with Israel
Only one
of the five covenants made with Israel is conditional:
the Mosaic Covenant. The other four are all
unconditional: the Abrahamic, the Land, the Davidic, and
the New Covenant. The nature of the unconditional
covenants made with Israel: First, they are literal
covenants. Secondly, the covenants are eternal and are
not altered by time. Thirdly, it is necessary to
emphasize that these are unconditional covenants, which
were not abrogated because of Israel's disobedience.
Because the covenants are unconditional and totally
dependent upon God for fulfillment, their ultimate
fulfillment can be expected. The fourth is that the
covenants were made with a specific people: Israel. ...
This point is brought out by Paul in Romans 9:4.
This passage clearly points out that these covenants were
made with the covenanted people and are Israel's
possession. Ephesians 2:11-12 states these covenants
belong to the people of Israel and Gentiles were
considered strangers from the covenants.
When
Jesus the Messiah was crucified, the middle wall of
partition, was broken down. That is why Gentile believers
today are partakers of Jewish spiritual
blessings..
Agreements should be
kept. God promised to keep His part of the covenant (Lev
26:9); He remembers it (26:45; 1 Chron. 16:15-17; Psalms
105:8; 106:45; 111:5). He will not break the covenant
(Lev 26:44; Judges 2:1) or forget it (Deut 4:31); He
promised to keep his "covenant of love" (Deut 7:9, 12; 1
Kings 8:23; 2 Chron. 6:14; Neh. 1:5; 9:32; Dan 9:4). His
covenant people are special to him (Ps 50:5). His
covenant will endure forever (111:9); He swears it with
an oath (105:9-10; Eze. 16:8).
He confirms his covenant
by giving blessings (Deut 8:18). He blesses those who
obey (Ps 25:10, 14). A psalmist, asking for intervention,
asked God to have regard for the covenant (Ps 74:20).
Jeremiah asked him to remember the covenant (Jer. 14:21).
And he intervened because of the covenant (Zech. 9:11),
and in the greatest remembrance, sent redemption through
Jesus - a horn of salvation in the family of David (Luke
1:68-75). ... The Israelites were exhorted, "Be careful
not to forget the covenant" (Deut 4:23; 2 Kings 17:38).
They were told to be monotheistic (2 Kings 17:35). And
some Israelites did keep the covenant (Ps 103:18). Levi
was commended for guarding the covenant (Deut 33:9); a
psalmist claimed to be true to the covenant (Ps 44:17).
God commended the eunuchs and the foreigners who held
fast to the covenant (Isa. 56:4, 6).
But Israel was for the
most part unfaithful, just as God told Moses they would
be (Deut 31:16, 20, 27). He pronounced curses on those
who would violate the covenant (Lev 26:15, 25; Deut 17:2;
29:21), and the resulting national disasters would be a
witness that the people had abandoned the covenant
(29:25). ... They violated the covenant soon after
entering the promised land (Josh 7:11, 15) and were again
warned of the curses of rebellion (23:16). But they
violated the covenant (Judges 2:20). Apostasy reigned
throughout the period of the judges and again in the
reign of Saul. David was faithful, and Solomon began that
way, but he eventually stopped keeping the covenant (1
Kings 11:11).
The nation became so
corrupt that Elijah thought he was the only faithful one
left (1 Kings 19:10, 14). The history of the northern
kingdom is summarized: "They rejected his decrees and the
covenant" (2 Kings 17:15; 18:12; Hosea 6:7;
8:1).
So they were sent into captivity; God was faithful to his
promised curses.
Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob
Of great importance today
are the covenants that God made with the patriarchs and
the nation of Israel. God called Abram out of Mesopotamia
and promised to give his offspring the land of Canaan
(Gen. 12:1-7). Abram went to Egypt, returned to Canaan,
was generous to Lot, rescued Lot and gave tithes to
Melchizedek (Gen. 12-14). ... God then reaffirmed his
promise that Abram would have offspring (15:1-4). God
promised that Abram's descendants would be as numerous as
the stars (15:5). This was a phenomenal promise, but
"Abram believed the Lord, and God credited it to him as
righteousness" (15:6). Paul develops this further in Rom
4 and Gal 3.
God then repeated
his promise to give Abram the land of Canaan, and Abram
asked for evidence (Gen. 15:7-8). So God asked for some
animals, and Abram cut in half a heifer, a goat and a
ram, and also offered a dove and a pigeon (15:9-10). He
arranged the pieces, but did not burn them. God caused
Abram to fall into a deep sleep, and in a dream God
affirmed that Abram himself would not possess the land,
but his descendants would. A smoking firepot and a
blazing torch then passed between the pieces of the
sacrificed animals. In ancient custom, people making a
covenant walked between the halves of a sacrificed animal
as part of their oaths (Jer. 34:18-19 shows this ancient
custom, as does the Hebrew idiom for making a covenant,
literally, cutting a covenant). ... In this dream and
covenant, God was giving Abram evidence that his
descendants would possess the land of Canaan. See also
Neh. 9:8 and Gal 3:17.
Many years later, God
confirmed his covenant again, changing Abram's name to
Abraham, since he would be the father of not just one
nation, but of many nations (Gen. 17:1-6). He promised to
renew the covenant with Abram's descendants, not only
that they would be numerous, but also that he would be
their God (17:7). This is more than the original covenant
promised. God also required more from Abraham and his
descendants: Circumcision was to be the sign of the
covenant (17:9-14). The covenant was both renewed and
expanded. Circumcision or cutting the foreskin was a
continuing reminder that God had cut a covenant with
Abraham and his descendants. This covenant is referred to
in Acts 7:8 and Rom 4:11. ... God promised that Abraham
would have children not only through Hagar but also
through Sarah (Gen. 17:15-17), and God promised to renew
the covenant with Isaac (17:19-21).
The
Abrahamic Covenant: ( Genesis 12:1-3,7; 13:14-17;
15:1-21; 17:1-21; 22:15-18.) . In this covenant Abraham
stood for the whole Jewish nation. First, a great nation
was to come out of Abraham, namely, the nation of Israel
(12:2; 13:16; 15:5; 17:1-2, 7; 22:17b). Secondly, he was
promised a Land; specifically, the land of Canaan (12:1,
7; 13:14-15, 17; 15:17-21; 17:8). Thirdly, Abraham
himself was to be greatly blessed (12:2b). Fourthly,
Abraham's name would be great (12:2c). Fifth, Abraham
will be a blessing to others (12:2d). Sixth, those who
bless Israel will be blessed (12:3a). Seventh, those who
curse Israel will be cursed (12:3b). Eighth, in Abraham
all will ultimately be blessed (12:3c; 22:18). Ninth,
Abraham would receive a son through his wife Sarah
(15:1-4; 17:16-21). Tenth, his descendants would undergo
the Egyptian bondage (15:13-14). Eleventh, other nations
as well as Israel would come forth from Abraham
(17:3-4, 6); the Arab states are some of these
nations. Twelfth, his name was to be changed from Abram
to Abraham (17:5). And thirteenth, Sarai's name was to be
changed to Sarah (17:15). These provisions are: to
Abraham; to the Seed, Israel; and to the Gentile
Nations.
Through
which son would the Abrahamic Covenant be confirmed? God
revealed that it was to be through Sarah's son Isaac
(Gen. 26:2-5, 24). Concerning Jacob, Isaac had two sons,
and God chose to confirm the covenant with Jacob, as seen
in Genesis 28:13-15. Next, it was confirmed through
all of Jacob's twelve sons, who fathered the twelve
tribes of Israel (Gen. 49).
At Bethel, God gave
similar promises to Jacob (28:10-15; 35:11-13). ... God
referred to his covenant with Jacob and his covenant with
Isaac and his covenant with Abraham, as if they were
three distinct covenants (Lev 26:42), but he could also
refer to them as one single covenant, since they
contained the same promises (Ex 2:24; 2 Kings 13:23). The
same basic covenant was renewed with each generation.
Peter mentioned the covenant that God made with the
fathers (plural), characterized by the promise given to
Abraham (Acts 3:25). This covenant is also referred to in
Ex 6:4-5.
The Land
Covenant is in Deuteronomy 29:1-30:10. and is
distinct from the Mosaic Covenant: "These are the words
of the covenant which Jehovah commanded Moses to make
with the children of Israel in the land of Moab, besides
the covenant which he made with them in Horeb." ...
First, Moses prophetically spoke of Israel's coming
disobedience to the Mosaic Law and subsequent scattering
over all the world (Deut. 29:2-30:1). The remaining
provisions speak of various facets of Israel's final
restoration. Secondly, Israel will repent
(Deut. 30:2). Thirdly, Jesus the Messiah will return
(v. 3). Fourthly, Israel will be regathered
(vv. 3-4). Fifth, Israel will possess the Promised
Land (v. 5). Sixth, Israel will be regenerated
(v. 6). Seventh, the enemies of Israel will be
judged. And finally, Israel will receive full blessing;
specifically, the blessings of the Messianic Age
(vv. 8-10). ... The importance of the Land Covenant
is that it reaffirms the title deed to the Land as
belonging to Israel. Although she would prove unfaithful
and disobedient, the right to the Land would never be
taken from her.The
Promised Land is described for us in detail in the Bible
"The Lord said to Abram 'Now lift up your eyes and look
from the place where you are, northward and southward and
eastward and westward; for all the land which you see, I
will give it to you and to your descendants forever...
Arise, walk about the land through its length and
breadth; for I will give it to you'" (Genesis 13:14-17).
"The Lord made a covenant with Abraham, saying, 'To your
descendants I have given this Land, from the river of
Egypt as far as the great river, the river Euphrates'"
(Genesis 15:18-21). "I will fix your boundary from the
Red Sea to the sea of the Philistines, and from the
wilderness to the River Euphrates" (Exodus 23:31). The
entire Land of Israel, including Judea and Samaria (the
"West Bank"), Gaza, the Golan Heights, and all of
Jerusalem, was given by the Lord to the people of Israel
in perpetuity.
The Covenant at
Mt. Sinai
God remembered the
covenant he had made with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and
he brought their descendants out of slavery in Egypt.
While they were on their way to the land of Canaan, God
made a covenant with them at Mt. Sinai. As their ruler,
he gave laws, and they agreed to keep them. "If you obey
me fully and keep my covenant," he told them through
Moses, "then out of all nations you will be my treasured
possession.... You will be for me a kingdom of
priests and a holy nation" (Ex 19:5-6).
The Ten Commandments
formed the core of this covenant. "The words of the
covenant --- the Ten Commandments" --- were written on
tablets of stone (Ex 34:28). Although the covenant was
equated with the Ten Commandments (Ex 34:28; Deut 4:13),
the covenant included all of Ex 20-23. The Lord wrote
"the law and commands I have written for their
instruction" (Ex 24:12). ... The tablets of stone were
called the "tablets of the covenant" (Deut 9:9, 11, 15;
Heb. 9:4). They were placed in the ark of the covenant
(Ex 25:16, 21; 31:18), thus giving a name to the ark, and
the covenant was said to be inside the ark (1 Kings 8:21;
2 Chron. 6:11).
The people said they
would do everything the Lord had said (19:8). After God
spoke the Ten Commandments, the people asked Moses to be
their mediator for the remainder of the covenant
(20:1-19). Through Moses, God then gave regulations about
altars (20:22-26), servants and slaves (21:1-11), murder
and sins against others (21:12-32), sins against personal
property (21:33-22:15) and other laws of social
responsibility (22:16-27; 23:1-9). There were rules about
blasphemy, cursing, offerings, firstlings (22:28-30),
Sabbath years and days, Holy Days and offerings
(23:10-19). God spoke all these laws, and then promised
to give the people the land of Canaan
(23:20-31).
While the Abrahamic
covenant stressed God's promise. The Sinaitic covenant,
stressed human responsibilities. Moses told the people
the laws, and the people said, "Everything the Lord has
said we will do" (24:3). And Moses wrote it all down.
The next day, they had
sacrifices, Moses read the book of the covenant, and the
people again agreed to obey (24:4-7). So Moses sprinkled
blood on the people, saying, "This is the blood of the
covenant that the Lord has made with you in accordance
with all these words" (24:8). As Heb. 9:18-20 says, the
first covenant was put into effect with blood. An animal
was cut, and the people came under the covenant by being
sprinkled with its blood.
In this covenant, the
people agreed to be servants of God, and he agreed to
protect them. The covenant was made not only with Israel
as a nation, but also with Moses as its leader (Ex 34:10,
27). Many of the laws in Ex 34 are quoted from Ex 23. It
was a covenant renewal with some variations. Heb. 9:1
says that original covenant also included regulations for
worship and the sanctuary (Ex 25-30). The covenant was
further developed as time went on.
Although the Sabbath was
part of the Ten Commandments (20:8-11), and part of the
larger covenant (23:12), it was made its own covenant in
Ex 31:16. Just as circumcision was an everlasting
covenant and a sign of Abraham's covenant (Gen.
17:10-11), the Sabbath was also called a sign and an
everlasting covenant (31:12, 16-17). Just as circumcision
was a covenant in conjunction with the Abrahamic
covenant, the Sabbath was a covenant in conjunction with
the Sinaitic covenant.
Also in conjunction with
the Sinaitic covenant was the weekly showbread, which was
also called an everlasting covenant (Lev 24:8). An
everlasting covenant was made with the priesthood also
(Num. 18:19; 25:13). Grain offerings were covenantized,
since God commanded, "Do not leave the salt of the
covenant of your God out of your grain offerings" (Lev
2:13).
Covenant
renewals
When the Israelites were
ready to enter the promised land, Moses repeated to them
the laws of God (Deut 1:1-5). He rehearsed some history,
reminded the Israelites to obey God and worship Him only,
and he repeated the Ten Commandments. Although the people
he was talking to were either not yet born or only
children at Horeb (Mt. Sinai), Moses said that God had
made the Sinaitic covenant with them, not with their
parents (5:2-3).
Moses not only repeated
the Ten Commandments, but gave numerous other laws as
well (Deut 6:26). After he described blessings for
obedience and curses for disobedience, he led the people
to covenant anew with God to be his people. Most of the
book of Deuteronomy then forms the "terms of the covenant
the Lord commanded Moses to make with the Israelites in
Moab, in addition to the covenant he had made with them
at Horeb" (29:1). The covenant was renewed and expanded.
This Deuteronomic covenant was built on the foundation of
the Sinaitic covenant, the Ten Commandments.
Moses reminded the people
that they were making a covenant with the Lord not only
for themselves but also for their descendants (29:12-14),
and he exhorted them to be faithful to this covenant
(29:9). This was a confirmation of the covenant God had
made with the patriarchs (29:13) it was a development
from that patriarchal covenant. Moses wrote down the
Deuteronomic law, and it was placed beside
(not
in) the ark of
the covenant (31:9, 24-26).
The covenant was renewed
in the days of Joshua (Josh 24:1-24), Asa (2 Chron.
15:12) and in the days of Joash (23:16). Hezekiah planned
to make a covenant with God (29:10). Josiah and the Jews
renewed the covenant, apparently the Deuteronomic law (2
Kings 23:3; 2 Chron. 34:31-32). Jeremiah called the
people to obey the terms of the covenant they had made
when their forefathers came out of Egypt (Jer. 11:2-6).
In Jeremiah's day, the people made a covenant with God
(34:15), but they were going back on it, and God would
treat them "like the calf they cut in two and then walked
between its pieces" (34:18). ... Yet another covenant was
made in the days of Ezra, in which the people agreed to
put away their foreign wives and children (Ezra 10:3).
The
Davidic Covenant ... (II Sam. 7:11b-17;
I Chron. 17:10b-15).
This
covenant was made between God and David, who stands as
the head of the Davidic house and dynasty, the rightful
claimant to the Davidic throne in Jerusalem. ... First,
David is promised an eternal dynasty
(II Sam. 7:11b, 16; I Chr. 17:10b).;
it will always be in existence. ... Somewhere in the
Jewish world members of the House of David still exist.
Second, one of David's own sons, specifically Solomon,
was to be established on the throne after David
(II Sam. 7:12). Third, Solomon would build the
Temple (II Sam. 7:13a). Fourth, the throne of
David's kingdom was to be established for ever
(II Sam. 7:13b, 16). It was not Solomon himself
who was promised to be established for ever, but the
throne upon which he would sit. Fifth, Solomon would be
disciplined for disobedience, but God would not remove
His loving kindness (II Sam. 7:14-15). Earlier
God did remove His lovingkindness from King Saul because
of disobedience. But the promise is made that although
Solomon may disobey and require God's discipline; God's
lovingkindness will never depart from him. Sixth, Jesus
the Messiah and His throne, house, and kingdom will be
established for ever (I Chr. 17:11-15). The
emphasis in the II Samuel passage is on Solomon, but
in the I Chronicles passage it is on Jesus the
Messiah. In the I Chronicles passage, God is not
speaking of one of David's own sons to be established
upon the throne for ever, but the Seed of one of his sons
coming many years later. Furthermore, in this passage it
is the Person Himself that is established upon David's
throne for ever, not merely the throne. The emphasis in
I Chronicles is not on Solomon, but on Jesus the
Messiah. That is why this passage does not mention the
possibility of sin as the II Samuel passage did, for
in the case of the Messiah no sin would be possible. So
Jesus the Messiah, as well as His throne, His house, and
His kingdom are to be established for ever. ... The
importance of the Davidic Covenant is that it amplifies
the Seed aspect of the Abrahamic Covenant. According to
the Abrahamic Covenant, Jesus the Messiah was to be of
the Seed of Abraham. This stated that He was to be a Jew
and could be of any of the twelve tribes. Later, in the
time of Jacob, the Seed aspect was limited to a member of
the Tribe of Judah only (Gen. 49:10). Now it is
further narrowed to one family within the Tribe of Judah,
the family of David.
The
New Covenant prophesied ... recorded in
Jeremiah 31:31-34.
The Sinaitic covenant had
regulations for worship, but it could not transform the
heart or the conscience (Heb. 9:9), ... Therefore, God
predicted a new covenant. He hinted at it even in the old
He said that, after his people had been sent into
captivity because they had broken the covenant, he would
regather them and "circumcise your hearts" (Deut 4:25-31;
30:4-10). ... The prophets predicted a new
covenant between God and mankind.
In a messianic prophecy
fulfilled by Jesus the Christ, Isaiah noted that God
would make the Servant "to be a covenant for the people
and a light for the Gentiles" (Isa. 42:6; 42:7 is similar
to 61:1, which is quoted in Luke 4:18). The Servant
himself would be the covenant and the basis of the
relationship for both Jews and Gentiles. This was
fulfilled in Jesus, for he shed his blood, and it is only
through him that we may enter God's holy presence. Mal
3:1 predicted that the Lord would be the messenger of the
new covenant.
Isaiah again predicted
that God would make the Servant to be a covenant for the
people in the day of salvation (Isa. 49:8). Just as God
had sworn to Noah that he would never again destroy the
earth with a flood, he will never remove this "covenant
of peace" (54:9-10). "Come to me, all you who are
thirsty," God calls (55:1), a scripture fulfilled in
Jesus the Christ (John 7:37). "Give ear and come to me;
hear me, that your soul may live. I will make an
everlasting covenant with you" (Isa. 55:3). ... "The
Redeemer will come to Zion," Isa. 59:20 prophesies, "to
those in Jacob who repent of their sins." God will make a
covenant with these repentant people. His Spirit will be
upon them, and his words will remain in them (59:21).
They will keep the covenant because they will be changed
on the inside. ... Isaiah 61 was also fulfilled by Jesus.
God's Spirit was upon him, so he preached good news,
freedom and comfort (61:1-2; Luke 4:18-21). Isaiah
predicted a nation of priests (61:6) who will receive a
great inheritance (61:7). God will "make an everlasting
covenant with them" (61:8).
Jer. 31:31-33, is quoted
in Hebrews. Jeremiah predicted a new covenant, which the
people will not break, because God's law will be in their
minds and hearts. All the people will know the Lord,
their sins will be forgiven (31:34), and God will never
reject the people (31:35-37). ... In other prophecies of
regathering, Jeremiah predicted an everlasting covenant
(32:40), in which the people will never turn away from
fearing God (32:38-40; 50:5).
Ezekiel also foresaw that
God would remember the covenant and regather the people;
he will then "establish an everlasting covenant with
you." He will make atonement for the people, and they
will be repentant (Eze. 16:60-62). After gathering them,
he will make "a covenant of peace" with them, an
everlasting covenant (34:25; 36:27; 37:26). Hosea 2:18
describes a similar covenant. ... All these prophets
predicted a new covenant, a new basis of relationship
with God. This covenant will not need to be replaced. It
will be an everlasting covenant of peace, a covenant of
reconciliation.
Jesus the Messiah
and the new covenant
At the Last Supper, Jesus
proclaimed that the wine-cup represented his own blood,
which would be the
blood of the new covenant (Mt
26:28; Mk 14:24; Heb. 10:29). The cup represented the
"new covenant in my blood" (Luke 22:20; 1 Cor 11:25).
Just as the Sinaitic covenant was sealed with blood, so
also the new covenant was ratified when Jesus' blood was
poured out on the cross. We renew that covenant and
reaffirm our commitment to it when we drink the wine and
eat the bread, remembering the Lord's death until he
returns. The Lord's Supper is a visible and tangible
reminder of the covenant.
The new covenant is
superior to the old, for it has been founded on better
promises (Heb. 8:6). The old covenant could never make
anyone perfect; no one could meet its righteous
demands.
Jesus the Christ is the
Messenger and Mediator of the new covenant (Heb. 8:6;
12:24). He is also the sacrifice --- he himself is
the new covenant. His teachings are the requirements of
the covenant. Faith is required for participation in it.
The Holy Spirit is given to transform the heart, and
eternal life is the promised inheritance. It is an
eternal covenant (13:20), guaranteed by Jesus (7:22). His
blood has made us perfect, and he is making us holy
(10:10, 14). The new covenant has phenomenal promises,
and all who believe them are counted as righteous. They
are considered as faithful to the terms of the covenant.
Their allegiance (loyalty and obedience) is given to
Jesus the Christ. ... Our relationship with God is based
on the new covenant. God takes away our sins (Rom 11:27).
God's Spirit gives us life (2 Cor 3:6). He puts the terms
of the covenant within our hearts and minds so we can be
faithful to him (Heb. 8:7-10; 10:16). We may therefore
"receive the promised eternal inheritance" (Heb.
9:15).
Terms of the new
covenant
The book of Hebrews
explains that the animal sacrifices, are discontinued and
done away. Many laws of the old covenant are continued
into the new. The Tenth Commandment, for example, is
quoted in the New Testament. As an example, we should
still obey Ex 22:22: "Do not take advantage of a widow or
an orphan." Even though this commandment is not quoted in
the New Testament, the principle is still valid. .. Other
laws are transformed in the way we apply them. Ex 22:19,
for example: "Anyone who has sexual relations with an
animal must be put to death." The prohibition is valid,
but the church cannot enforce the punishment. Today, we
would put such a person out of our fellowship until
repentance, instead of killing the offender. The
principle is taught in Gal 3:17: "The law, introduced 430
years later, does not set aside the covenant previously
established by God and thus do away with the promise."
Paul is not singling out ritualistic laws here. He is
talking about the entire package of laws that was given
four centuries after Abraham. The Sinaitic laws cannot do
away with the promises God gave to Abraham. ... In other
words, once a promise has been given, conditions cannot
be added (3:15). God did not use their disobedience to
abandon the promises he had given to Abraham.
The Galatian Christians
had received the Holy Spirit by believing the gospel
(3:2, 5). By believing, they became children of Abraham
(3:7, 29) and partakers of his blessing (3:9, 14). The
Galatian believers had the same covenant with God that
Abraham did, and so do Christians today. Paul is
explaining that our inheritance depends on promise
(3:18), not on the law of Moses. We are children of God
by faith, not by law (3:26). Our relationship with God is
based on faith and promise, just as Abraham's was. We are
justified by faith and saved by promise --- by grace.
Laws that were added at Sinai cannot change the promise
given to Abraham, nor can those laws change the promise
given to us, since we are Abraham's children by faith.
God gave his oath to Abraham. The promise still stands.
No one obeys perfectly.
Everyone breaks the law. Law cannot give life (Gal 3:21,
10-12). All it can do is condemn us. So what was its
purpose? It was added because of transgressions and was
to be a Schoolmaster to show us the way to Jesus the
Messiah " The law was put in charge to lead us to
Christ that we might be justified by faith" (3:24).
The law helps us see what sin is, our need for
forgiveness, our need for grace, our need for a Savior,
and our need for faith. ... "Now that faith has come, we
are no longer under the Schoolmaster of the law"
(3:25).
By establishing the new
covenant, Jesus did away with many ceremonial laws, but
he also reaffirmed many moral laws and stressed that
obedience should begin in the heart. He also added
commands not found in the old covenant at all. The new
covenant has many new laws of its own.
Righteousness by
faith
No one can be declared
righteous by observing the law (Rom 3:20). The law itself
cannot give eternal life (Gal 3:21). But the gospel
reveals a way in which we can be declared righteous --- a
way that was predicted by the Law and the Prophets (Rom
3:21; Acts 10:43). "This righteousness from God comes
through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe" (Rom
3:22). We can be "justified freely by his grace through
the redemption that came by Christ Jesus"
(3:24).
God gave his only Son as
a sacrifice so that God can, according to his perfect
justice, declare believers justified &emdash; righteous
(3:25-26). No one can boast about observing the law,
since the only way anyone can be justified is "by faith
apart from observing the law" (3:28). We are accounted as
righteous on the basis of faith, and we are given
salvation by grace. If we don't believe that salvation is
a gift, then it won't be given to us. If we want to be
judged by our works, we will be found guilty. But if we
believe that salvation comes only by grace, God forgives
our sins because Jesus died for us; it is because of his
one great sacrifice that God can forgive all our sins. We
are counted as acceptable to God if we have faith in
Jesus Christ. ... "Therefore, since we have been
justified through faith, we have peace with God through
our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access
by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we
rejoice in the hope of the glory of God" (Rom 5:1-2).
"Therefore, there is now
no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus,
because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of
life set me free from the law of sin and death. For what
the law was powerless to do in that it was weakened by
the sinful nature, God did by sending his own Son in the
likeness of sinful man to be a sin offering. And so he
condemned sin in sinful man, in order that the righteous
requirements of the law might be fully met in us, who do
not live according to the sinful nature but live
according to the Spirit" (8:1-4). As we remain in Christ
Jesus through faith in him, we are counted among the
righteous, not among the condemned.
In Gal 4:21-25, Paul drew
an allegory based on Abraham's two sons. Hagar
represented the covenant made at Sinai, Children of this
covenant are slaves, under the law. In contrast, Sarah
represents the new covenant, from above, because her
child was the product of promise.
Although faith is accompanied by works (Rom 1:5; 6:17;
12:6-21; James 2:14-17), it is the faith and not the
works that is the basis of our justification and the
basis of our relationship with God --- the basis of the
new covenant in Jesus Christ.
Old and new
in Hebrews
The book of Hebrews
explains more about the old covenant and the new. Jesus
is our eternal High Priest, but he is not a priest
according to the old covenant rituals, since he is not a
Levite. So the change in priesthood implies a change in
the nature of rituals and sacrifices (Heb. 7:12-14). ...
The former ceremonial regulation, with its Levitical
assignments, was "set aside because it was weak and
useless (for the ceremonial laws made nothing perfect),
and a better hope is introduced, by which we draw near to
God" (7:18-19). The new covenant has better promises, and
by it we are reconciled to God by the death of his Son.
We
have guaranteed access to God through Jesus the Messiah,
our High Priest. Because Jesus lives forever, he is able
to save us all (7:24-25).
The new covenant's better
promises include forgiveness, a cleansing of the
conscience, which the old covenant could not do. Each
person will know God (8:6-12); the people will be able to
meet the conditions of the new covenant. The animal
sacrifices and regulations about ceremonial cleanness
have been superseded by real forgiveness and cleansed
consciences (9:13-14).
The blood of Christ, the
blood of the new covenant, is able to cleanse our
consciences, so that we may serve God (9:14). We have
direct access, and we receive a better inheritance ---
eternal life --- which we already possess as a down
payment guaranteeing our future. Christ was sacrificed
once, bearing our sins. He has made us perfect (10:14).
He has declared us righteous. Can we believe these
promises of God? If we do, we have the faith of
Abraham.
"Therefore, brothers,"
the writer of Hebrews continues, "since we have
confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of
Jesus...since we have a great priest over the house of
God, let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full
assurance of faith" (10:19-22). ... Moreover, our
faith-based relationship with God has practical
consequences in our relationships with other people: "Let
us consider how we may spur one another on toward love
and good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as
some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one
another --- and all the more as you see the Day
approaching" (10:24-25). ...
Because of who Jesus is and what he has done for us, we
ought to do something in response. "Therefore, I urge
you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your
bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God ---
this is your reasonable service" (Rom 12:1).
"You were bought at a
price. Therefore honor God with your body" (1 Cor 6:20).
"Thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our
Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my dear brothers, stand
firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully
to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor
in the Lord is not in vain" (1 Cor 15:57-58).