The Three Great
Covenants
CHRISTENDOM
in general recognizes only two Covenants, the Old
or Law Covenant, with Moses as its mediator, and
the New Covenant, with Christ as its Mediator.
Christendom may be said to know nothing whatever
about the Abrahamic Covenant. When rarely they
recognize the Abrahamic Covenant at all, or enter
it into their calculations, they identify it with
the New Covenant. We all inherited this general
line of thought through Sunday-School sermons,
commentaries, etc. It is not strange, therefore,
that we all had this confused conception of this
subject. Gradually, as a part of the light due to
the Church in the end of this age, we got to see
that there are three Covenants, instead of two,
as we first supposed. We got to see that the
Abrahamic Covenant, the original one, is the
grandest and best of the three, and that from it
the other two proceeded. This light upon the
Divine purpose we began to set forth in the WATCH
TOWER in 1880, and later elaborated the same
thought in the Tabernacle Shadows of Better
Sacrifices. In the latter we set forth that
these Covenants are represented in the garments
of the High Priest, in the ephod of two parts,
with its shoulder-clasps and jeweled breast
plate. However, we did not discern so sharply as
we now do the clear-cut distinctions between
those three Covenants. And is not this in full
accord with the Lord's general dealing with us
and with all people throughout the age? Is it not
his proposition that the "Path of the just
shall shine more and more unto the perfect
day"? We believe that it is.
GROWING IN GRACE AND
KNOWLEDGE
What we
now see still more distinctly it is our duty and
privilege to lay before the Household of Faith.
We remind you, however, that as it took some of
us quite a while to get a proper focus upon the
Abrahamic Covenant, it may now take some of us a
considerable time to still further differentiate
between the Abrahamic Covenant and the New
Covenant. Remember also that a clear
understanding of every detail of God's Plan,
while desirable, is not necessarily essential to
our blessing thereunder. For instance, we
believed in the precious blood of Christ and were
justified thereby freely from all things, when we
did not at all understand the philosophy of the
Atonement--even as the majority of Christian
people do not understand it now. The increasing
knowledge did not bring increasing justification,
but it did bring increased appreciation and love
and devotion and opportunity for greater harmony
with the Divine purposes better understood.
I.--GRACE. II.--LAW.
III.-WORKS
St. Paul
pointed out to us most distinctly that the
original Covenant made with an oath to Abraham
was in every way the superior one and that it,
being a one-sided Covenant, an unconditional
promise, has no mediator. St. Paul tells us that
the Law Covenant was "added" to the
Abrahamic Covenant in God's dealing with the
nation of Israel. It is called a Law Covenant
because the benefits of that Covenant were
offered only to those who would keep the Law in
all its requirements--inviolate. He calls it the
Hagar Covenant, because it was a bondage and
because its offspring, the Jewish nation, could
not inherit the promised blessings and
privileges. He tells us that it made nothing
perfect, brought nothing to perfection. Although
faith had a place and the grace of God had some
manifestation towards Israel, yet neither faith
nor grace affected their Covenant, which was hard
and fast and demanded obedience to the works of
the Law--"He that doeth these things shall
live by them." Since none could do
perfectly, that Covenant of works brought only
condemnation of their imperfect works. It had a
mediator, Moses, but he was unable to accomplish
anything for the people, because of their
imperfection through heredity. We properly call
this the Law Covenant.
The
Apostle points that as Hagar's child was born
before Isaac, who represented The Christ, Head
and Body, "The New Creation," so the
nation of Israel, Moses and all the people
baptized into him in the sea and in the cloud,
"The house of servants," would be
developed before Spiritual Israel, the New
Creation--Christ and all the members of the house
of sons of spirit-begetting.
As the
Covenant of Grace (Sarah) existed before the Law
Covenant was added to it, so it continued to
exist after the Law Covenant was set aside as a
Covenant, its prize of life eternal having been
won by "the man Christ Jesus, who gave
himself a Ransom for all." So, then, the
Covenant of Grace (Sarah), which preceded the Law
Covenant (Hagar) four hundred and thirty years,
continued alive during the whole period of the
Law Covenant, but without children, and then
brought forth the Head of the Seed, Jesus. The
Law Covenant was then cast aside--"Cast out
the bond-woman and her son; for the son of the
bond-woman shall not be heir with the son of the
free-woman"--The Christ, the Heir of the
original promise, now being developed. From the
Scriptural standpoint the Resurrection is the
birth; as, for instance, our Lord is the
"First-Born from the dead, the First-Born
amongst many brethren," and "his
brethren," "his members,"
"his Bride" (three different names for
the "elect" Church), must all be
brought forth from the dead, all be
"changed" to spirit condition before
the Seed of Abraham will be complete.
"IF YE BE CHRIST'S,
THEN ARE YE ABRAHAM'S SEED AND HEIRS." GAL.
3:29
This is
the Mystery--the selection of the Church as the
Bride of Christ during this Gospel Age, to be
sharers with their Redeemer in the sufferings of
this present time, and also in the glory that
shall follow. Hence the Apostle was very
solicitous that he might have share in "His
Resurrection," The Christ Resurrection,
"The First Resurrection." Not until
that "First Resurrection" is finished
will the Seed of the Sarah Covenant be fully
born. This is quite in accord with the prophetic
statement, "Shall I bring to the birth
(deliver the Head), and not cause to come forth
(the Body)." (Isa. 66:9.) The intimation is
that so surely as Jesus, the Head of the Body,
was brought forth in the Resurrection, born from
the dead, so surely will all the members of his
Body share with him his glorious
"change" from mortality to immortality,
from earthly to heavenly nature.
What
about the Jews under the Law (Hagar) Covenant?
Were they on that account cut off from the very
privileges and blessings which they so
desired--of being Abraham's Seed and heirs
according to the promise? We answer, Yes. The
Apostle shows that the children of the bond-woman
could not be heirs with the children of the
free-woman. How, then, did the apostles and
others, who were of Israel according to the
flesh, come into relationship with Christ and the
Sarah Covenant (of grace)? The Apostle tells us
that as a human marriage is dissolved by the
death of one of the parties, so those of the Jews
who could recognize by faith that Christ's death
had fulfilled the terms of the Law Covenant could
realize that that Covenant was dead, and hence,
that they were freed from it and could become
married to another--united to Christ. On the
contrary any Jew who does not recognize that
Christ, by his death, has "made an end of
the Law, nailing it to his cross," and who
still continues to believe in that Covenant, is
as firmly bound thereby as though the Covenant
were still alive; just as a woman whose husband
was really dead, but she could not
conscientiously marry another.
"WHEN I SHALL TAKE
AWAY THEIR SINS"
The
Apostle explains that all of that nation who
lacked proper faith in Christ were cast off,
"blinded," not forever, but until the
completion of the House of Sons, the New
Creation, the spirit members of the spiritual
Body of spiritual Israel--The Christ. Ah! but,
says one, if they be cast off,
"blinded," until the elect Church is
complete, then they can have no part in it; and,
being under the conditions of the Hagar (Law)
Covenant, will they not be in an unsatisfactory
state, under a New Covenant? And according to
this evidence, did not God rather deceive the
nation of Israel, when he entered into the Law
Covenant with them at Sinai, knowing that they
could not keep it, and could not get life under
it, and yet permitting them, so supposing, to put
themselves under that bondage? Are not the Lord's
ways just and equal?
Yes, we
answer, and the full scope of the Divine purpose
when seen is glorious in its harmony. The
difficulty in the past has been that we have seen
as through an obscured glass, and not face to
face. Now we perceive that God intends to
recognize two seeds of Abraham, the one heavenly,
like unto the stars of heaven; the other earthly,
like unto the sands of the seashore. The attempt
of the Law Covenant to bring forth the natural
seed first was abortive--a failure. First must
come the spiritual Christ, Head and Body,
partaker of the divine nature, heir of all
things. Then God's favor will return to natural
Israel. But since the Law Covenant completed its
purpose and was demonstrated to be unavailable
for them, because of the weaknesses of the flesh,
God purposes to make with that nation, and with
that nation alone, a New Covenant. Not a single
statement of Scripture identifies the New
Covenant with the Gentiles. On the contrary, it
is Israel's New Covenant given to displace the
Old or Law Covenant. Let us note well that the
great mass of the early Church were Hebrews and
that the Apostle's references to the New Covenant
are almost exclusively in his epistle to the
Hebrews. One exception is in Rom. 11:27, where
the Apostle, although addressing Christians of
Gentile birth, tells them that natural Israel was
cast off for their sakes, but is still beloved
for the fathers' sake, and is again to have
Divine favor, under a special Covenant. The other
(2 Cor. 3:6) refers to the royal priesthood as
able (qualified) servants of the New
Covenant--dying with Christ for its
sealing.--Mal. 3:1.
The more
closely we investigate the New Covenant, the more
we must be convinced of this fact--that it
belongs to Israel alone, including the two
nations into which they divided at the death of
Solomon--Israel and Judah. Note the statement of
the Prophet, "Behold the days will come,
saith the Lord, when I will make a New Covenant
with the house of Israel and with the house of
Judah, not according to the Covenant [the Law
Covenant] which I made with them when I took them
by the hand and led them out of the land of
Egypt." The Apostle, endeavoring to prove to
the Jews that they could gain nothing under the
Law Covenant, points out this prophecy, and tells
them that the fact that God speaks of this as a
New Covenant implies that a preceding [Law]
Covenant had become old, valueless, and was
preparing to pass away--"In that he saith, a
New Covenant, he hath made the first old; now
that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to
vanish away."--Heb. 8:13.
THE OATH-BOUND COVENANT
SURE
HEB. 6:17-20
The New
Covenant is to take the place of the old and
unsatisfactory one. There were two old Covenants,
the Grace, or Sarah Covenant, and the Law, or
Hagar Covenant. Which did the Apostle mean had
grown old, valueless, and would pass away and
give place to the New Covenant? Surely there can
be no doubt or misunderstanding on this point. He
meant the Law Covenant, for he says so. He did
not mean the original Grace or Sarah Covenant,
for he points out that our claim to relationship
to God is under that original Covenant, as
members of the Body of Christ, members of the
Bride of Christ, Joint-Heirs with him. Our Lord
Jesus, by his obedience, became heir of all, heir
of the original Covenant and heir also of the Law
Covenant. Of the people there was none with him,
neither Jews nor Gentiles. But by the grace of
God there was provision made, as we have seen,
that any Jew, seeing that the Law Covenant was
dead, nailed to the cross, might become betrothed
to Christ. They did not need to wait for the New
Covenant, the provisions of which apply only to
those on the earthly plane. Instead, by a faith
justification and a consecration unto death, they
were counted worthy of begetting to the new
nature--betrothal to Christ. And similarly
Gentiles, favored of God by the hearing ear and
seeing eye of faith, were subsequently privileged
to go through the same process, except that they
did not need to reckon themselves dead to the Law
Covenant, because they never were under it.
Otherwise, recognizing Christ's death as the
blood of the original Covenant, typified by
Abraham's offering up his son, these also were
reckoned justified and, presenting their
justified bodies to the Lord as sacrifices, they
were begotten of the same holy Spirit as the
Jews, to be fellow-members of the same Body--the
Body of Christ.
We come
now to the other part of the question: What
provision has God made for those Jews who bound
themselves under the Law Covenant, from Moses'
day down to the first advent; and for those who
since then have not discerned the death of the
Law Covenant and who will not be made aware of it
until after the spiritual Seed shall have been
completed and glorified? If they have not lost
all share and privileges in connection with God's
special mercies, where do they come in? We answer
that Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and others before the
Law Covenant were not bound by it, yet were not
in the fullest sense justified to life until the
Abrahamic Covenant had been established at
Calvary. Their faith, then, entitled them to a
share in the merits of that sacrifice. Likewise
throughout the period of the Law Covenant, before
it was annulled at the cross, there were Ancient
Worthies who lived above the masses of their
time, and who, although bound by the Law, had
above it a living faith in the original
Oath-Bound (Sarah) Covenant of Grace. These in
the Divine records were entitled to their share
of that grace, as soon as the merit of Calvary's
sacrifice had been presented on behalf of
believers, when Jesus "ascended up on high,
there to appear in the presence of God on our
behalf." Although they lived while the Law
Covenant was alive, they foresaw its death and
trusted not in it, but in the superior Covenant
of Grace. Hence these in due time will come forth
to a life resurrection, not because of their
relationship to the Law Covenant, under which
they lived, nor because of their relationship to
the New Covenant, of which some of them knew
nothing, but because of their relationship to and
faith in the original (Sarah) Covenant of Grace.
Thus the
Scriptures account for the faithful ones of the
past under the Covenant of Grace. But what now
shall we say respecting those earthly Israelites,
who lived not on that higher plane of faith, but
of whom the Apostle says, "Our twelve tribes
instantly serving God day and night hope to
come" unto this promise. (Acts 26:7.) Were
they all deceived? Will they get those special
blessings?
GOD'S GIFTS AND CALLINGS
SURE.
ROM. 11:29-32
Nay, we
answer, the gifts and calling of God are things
not to be repented of. He who knew the end from
the beginning knew exactly what Israel would be
and do, and was not disappointed, and all of the
plans and promises to that nation were made from
the standpoint of this knowledge. Although the
chief feature of the Sarah Covenant was secured
by our Lord Jesus as a trophy of his victory over
sin and death, and although he laid down his
human nature completely to this end, nevertheless
the Divine arrangement is such that the blood of
Christ, the merit of his sacrifice of earthly
things, must accrue to the benefit of the natural
seed of Abraham, because it all goes to seal the
New Covenant, which belongs exclusively to
fleshly Israel. The opportunity granted to both
the Jews and Gentiles to become Joint-Heirs with
the Redeemer was based upon their offering
themselves to him in sacrifice, and his
acceptance of their offerings as his own--his
sacrificing them throughout this age as his own
flesh--and God's acceptance of them as New
Creatures, begotten of the Spirit, as brethren of
Christ, or the betrothed of Christ, or members of
his Body. Only by thus sharing with our Lord,
drinking his cup, being baptized into his baptism
of death, surrendering all into his hand, can we
have fellowship with him in his sufferings; and
his death (including ours) seals the New Covenant
in his blood, of which he said, "Drink ye In
his cup we are partakers, joint-sacrificers.--1
Cor. 10:16.
Thus
while natural Israel had been counted enemies for
our sakes, for the Gospel's sake, our only
opportunity for gaining the great prize is in
connection with the sealing of a New Covenant
between God and Israel. How beautifully the
features of the Divine program balance! Their
loss was our gain, and our gain through sacrifice
becomes their gain; and, altogether, the Lord
will be glorified!
As
already shown, the New Covenant will not be
sealed, ratified, until the sacrifices of The
Christ shall have been finished. And the
finishing of these sacrifices closes the work of
this great Day of Sacrifice and Atonement. With
the second presentation of the blood of Atonement
in the Most Holy, at the end of this age, the New
Covenant with Israel will be sealed, and the
blessing of the Lord will begin to Israel,
"For this is my Covenant with when I shall
take away their sins."--Rom. 11:27.
ABRAHAM'S TWO SEEDS
Not only
did the original promise indicate two seeds of
Abraham--one as the stars of heaven, and the
other as the sands of the sea--but St. Paul
elaborates this thought, saying of the promise,
"It is of faith, that it might be by grace,
to the end that the promise might be sure to the
seed; not to that only which is of the Law, but
to that also which is of the faith of Abraham,
who is the father of us all (including you who
are Romans); as it is written, I have made thee a
father of many nations." We have seen how
Abraham, as a type of God, is the father of the
spiritual Seed and how through Christ, by the
provision of the New Covenant, the Jewish nation,
dead under the Law Covenant, is to be regenerated
by The Christ, the Mediator of the New Covenant;
and that this regeneration will commence at the
close of this Gospel Age and the opening of the
Millennial Age. But these are only two--"the
(Church) holy nation," and the (Jewish)
chosen nation. How do all nations come in? It
will not do to say the Body of Christ, the Bride
class, fulfils this prophecy, because, although
they were taken out of the nations, they are not
all nations, and do not even represent all
nations. Each first died to his earthly estate
and nationality, before he was begotten of the
holy Spirit to be a member of the holy nation,
the New Creation.
The
Scriptures distinctly show that Christ and his
Church, spirit beings, must constitute the
Kingdom class, but they also show that the
Ancient Worthies, and through them the nation of
Israel under the New Covenant, will become the
representatives of the heavenly Kingdom amongst
men. It will be with these that the blessing of
the Lord in the Millennial morning will begin.
Thus we read of Jacob's trouble, that he shall be
saved out of it and that the Lord will restore
their judges as at the first, and their
law-givers as at the beginning--the Ancient
Worthies resurrected on the earthly plane. (Jer.
30:7; Zech. 12:7.) The New Covenant will be the
Law Covenant over again, only that it will have
the better Mediator--The Christ, Head and Body,
who will be able to make allowances for the
imperfections of Israel's heredity. The sins of
the past will all be forgiven, their physical
blemishes waiting for restitution. They will be
dealt with according to what they are, allowances
being made in each individual case, and each will
be required to heed the voice of the antitypical
Moses. "And it shall come to pass that every
soul which will not heed that Prophet, shall be
utterly destroyed from amongst the
people."--Acts 3:23.
HOPE FOR THE MANY NATIONS
Since
God's favors are thus marked out for the heavenly
and the earthly Seeds of Abraham--the earthly
through the heavenly--it follows that the
blessing of the other nations will come about
through their affiliation with these. In other
words, we may understand that the Divine
Government established in Israel in the hands of
the Ancient Worthies will be the center of Divine
favor, and the people of other nationalities must
come to this center for their supplies of truth
and grace. Thus the Prophet represents the
matter, saying, "Many nations shall go and
say, Come and let us go up to the mountain
(Kingdom) of the Lord, and to the house of the
God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways,
and we will walk in his paths; for the Law shall
go forth from Mount Zion (the spiritual Kingdom)
and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem (the
center of the earthly Kingdom)."--Micah 4:2.
As thus
all nations, peoples, kindreds and tongues shall
be brought gradually to an appreciation of the
Divine Plan; they shall all be blessed with
Restitution privileges and opportunities and with
an enlightenment from the rays of the Sun of
Righteousness, which then through the appointed
channels will be flooding all the earth. Thus
will the original Covenant have its amplified
fulfilment; first, in The Christ, the spiritual
Israel; secondly, under the New Covenant with
Israel after the flesh; and through these bless
all the families of the earth, so that all the
willing and obedient may gradually attain to the
standards of the children of God and be possessed
of the "liberties of the sons of
God"--freedom from sin, sorrow, pain and
death. As the old Law Covenant was with Israel
only, so the New (Law) Covenant will be with
Israel only. Other nations will share it by
becoming Israelites, "Proselytes of the
gate," not under the old but under the New
Covenant. (Ezek. 16:60,61.) "He that hath an
ear to hear, let him hear."
"Know
your calling." Let us who have accepted the
Divine call in Christ bear in mind that,
according to the Apostle's declaration, we are
the children of the Sarah Covenant. We are the
Bride of Isaac, and his Joint-Heirs, of whom it
is written, "If ye be Christ's, then are ye
Abraham's Seed and heirs according to the
promise." Our only relationship to the New
Covenant is that the Father drew us to Jesus and
Jesus covered us with his robe of righteousness
and thus made it possible for us to be called to
joint-fellowship with himself in the "better
sacrifices," in the "cup" of
suffering and death--"the blood of the New
Covenant"-- for the sealing of the New
Covenant for Israel, under which all the families
of the earth will get a blessing. Thus in the
divine purpose our Lord's death or blood
justified the Church and (with the Church's) will
seal the New Covenant for Israel and through
Israel will become effective to all of Adam's
race. "As all in Adam die, even so all
in Christ shall be made alive--every man in
his own order."
The
Church comes into Christ as his Members or Body
or Bride. Israel will come into The Christ family
as children. "Instead of thy fathers shall
be thy children." And this same privilege
shall extend to all--to become regenerated
"in the regeneration" when we shall sit
with him on his throne.
THE EVERLASTING COVENANT
Both the
Abrahamic Covenant and the New Covenant are
Scripturally styled "The Everlasting
Covenant," in contrast with the Law
Covenant, which passed away, a failure because of
its "unprofitableness." (Heb. 7:18.)
The one is perpetuated in the other, even as the
spiritual Seed (spiritual Israel) will rule and
bless through the earthly Seed (fleshly Israel).
Note the Scripture testimony that the original
Grace (or Sarah) Covenant is everlasting. (Gen.
17:7,13,19; 2 Sam. 23:5; Psa. 105:8-10.) Note
other Scriptures which apply the same term
prophetically to the New Covenant. (Jer. 32:40;
31:31,32; Ezk. 16:60.) Note carefully the context
in each instance, that the reference is to the
Millennium.
THE BLOOD OF THE
EVERLASTING COVENANT
The blood
of the Everlasting Covenant is the "blood of
Jesus," his sacrifice, through the merit of
which are now <"justified by
faith">under the Grace or Sarah Covenant
(not by the New Covenant which does not yet exist
and which is to be made only with Israel). And
the blood or sacrifice of Jesus is "the
blood of the New Covenant," yet to be
established with Fleshly Israel, just the same that
by the Father's good pleasure Jesus is now
accepting the "little flock" as his
members and counting their sacrifice or blood as
a part of his own.
Note how
this is set forth in Isaiah 55:1-3. Here
believers of this Gospel Age are described as
those who hunger and thirst after righteousness.
Under the Father's drawing they come to Jesus They
are not of those who, blind and deaf under
Satan's power, love darkness rather than light
and will need the Kingdom regulations and
corrections to make them bow and confess, under
the New Covenant arrangement with Israel and
indirectly with all nations.
To these
hungry, thirsty, seeing, hearing, believers the
Lord offers the "fatness" or cream of
the Everlasting Covenant, saying, Obey and your
soul shall live and I will give unto you the sure
or promised mercies of David. David means beloved
and is another name for the Redeemer, the
antitypical King of Israel by Divine appointment.
This
prophecy evidently, therefore, is the prophecy of
the call of this Gospel Age to share with Jesus
the glory, honor and immortality of the Kingdom.
Note the context, "A nation that thou
knowest not shalt thou call, and a nation that
knew thee not shall run unto thee." (V. 5.)
Unquestionably this is the Church--Spiritual
Israel, "a holy nation," a peculiar
people, chosen out of all nations to the heavenly
Kingdom of the Millennium.
Note the
description of Christ Jesus and his
"Body" in Isaiah 42:1-7. Note that
Messiah is <"given">for
[sacrificed in the interest of] a Covenant to people
(Israel) and for a light to the nations or
heathen, to enable them all to come in that light
under the blessings of Israel's New Covenant.
Come now
to Hebrews 13:20, "Now the God of peace who
brought again from the dead the Great Shepherd of
the sheep (Jesus), Does this refer to our
justification from Adamic guilt and
reconciliation to God? Not at all. The Father
will have nothing to do with us (except to
"draw" us to Jesus for justification
and consecration) until our justification. Then
his mighty power which brought our Great Shepherd
from the tomb to glory and immortality begins to
mightily "work in us to will and to do his
good pleasure." (Phil. 2:13.) If we abide in
his love he will perfect us as by the privileges
granted us of sharing in the sufferings of
Christ-- which as the New Covenant will bring
blessings to Israel and then to the world. The
Greek word here rendered "perfect you"
signifies "knit you together," that is,
make you completely one with the Shepherd as his
"members" both in sufferings and in
glory to follow.
Note also
that in Hebrews 10:29 it is the blood of the
Covenant that and not the blood that that, sinned
against, merits the Second Death. We were
justified by faith in the blood of Jesus. We were
sanctified by our consecration to drink of his
cup--the blood of the New Covenant. Only those
who have to this second degree and presented
themselves as sacrificers (Romans 12:1) and have
been accepted or sanctified by the begetting of
the holy Spirit, as members of the
"Body" of Christ and sons of the
Highest, commit the sin unto death. "If any
man [thus presented and sanctified] draw back my
soul shall have no pleasure in him. But we are
not of those who draw back unto
perdition"--Second Death.--Heb. 10:39.
Let us
now briefly refer to all the Scriptures which
mention the New Covenant, that we may note their
full harmony with the foregoing. We have already
examined the one statement connected with our
text and see that it applies to the closing of
this age--a shaking of the nations and everything
out of harmony with God, preparatory to the
establishment of the Kingdom, as the foundation
of the New Covenant blessings to the world during
the Millennium. There are just eight other texts
in the New Testament which refer to the New
Covenant:
(1)
"For this cause he is made Mediator of a
better Covenant [not better than the Grace or
Sarah Covenant, but better than the Law
Covenant], which was established upon better
promises." (Heb. 8:6.) Our Lord Jesus had
already begun the work necessary to his
fulfilling this office of Mediator of the New
Covenant. He had laid the foundation, but he had
not yet accepted to himself all the members the
Father intended and foreknew and predestinated.
We notice from the context that the contrast
still is between the Law Covenant and its
Mediator Moses, and the New Covenant, superior
because of its better Mediator, the Messiah.
Moses could offer only imperfect sacrifices, but
Christ, by antitypical sacrifices of the bullock
and goat (himself and his Body), makes
satisfaction for the sins of the whole world, and
prepares to mediate the New Covenant, which God
has promised shall be his channel for blessing
Israel and the world.
(2) In
the succeeding verse (8) the Apostle supports his
argument by a quotation from the Old Testament
promise to Israel of a New Covenant, saying,
"Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, when
I will make a New Covenant with the house of
Israel and with the house of Judah." Clearly
this does not refer to Spiritual Israel.
(3)
Neither does the next reference to the New
Covenant, which is a part of the same quotation
from Jer. 31:31, refer to Spiritual
Israel--"Not according to the Covenant that
I made with their fathers...For this is the
Covenant that I will make with the house of
Israel after those days, saith the Lord; I will
put my laws into their mind, and write them in
their hearts; and I will be to them a God, and
they shall be to me a people."--Heb. 8:8-10.
The days
referred to in the above are "after"
the days of this Gospel Age. The Apostle goes on
to say, "And they shall not teach every man
his neighbor and every man his brother, saying,
Know the Lord; for all shall know me from the
least to the greatest, and I will be merciful to
their unrighteousness, and their sins and
iniquities will I remember no more." This is
a description of what will take place during the
Millennium, and not a description of what we see
about us today. God has not yet put his laws into
the hearts of the house of Israel, and they are
not his people, as he states they will be at the
proper time in the end of this age when the New
Covenant becomes operative. Compare Acts 15:15.
(4)
"In that he saith, a New Covenant, he hath
made the first old. Now that which decayeth and
waxeth old is ready to vanish away." Notice
that the Apostle is not saying one word about the
New Covenant being for the Church of Christ. His
readers understood very well that they came in
under the Sarah Covenant. But certain Judaizing
teachers insisted that they must be under the
Hagar Covenant, as well as under the Sarah
Covenant. And this is what the Apostle is
disputing. He is making clear that the (Hagar)
Law Covenant would not continue, but perish, and
that, in God's due time, he would provide a New
Covenant to take its place with Israel.
(5) It
was necessary that Jews be redeemed from the
"dead works" of the Law Covenant and
that a New one be made for them by Christ--Head
and members. The old one was sealed by the blood
of but the New one by "better
sacrifices." Antitypically the blood of the
bullock has been offered, and soon that of the
goat will be presented.--Heb. 9:14-23.
(6)
"This is the Covenant that I will make with
them after those days, saith the Lord, I will put
my laws into their hearts and in their minds will
I write them; and their sins and iniquities will
I remember no more. Now, where remission of sins
is, there is no more offering for sin."
(Heb. 10:16-18.) The Apostle is arguing along
general lines. He would have his hearers
understand that when an acceptable sacrifice has
been offered to God for sins, the transaction is
a closed one, and the sacrifice needs no
repetition. He shows that this will be so in the
future for the world. When the "better
sacrifices," sealing the New Covenant, shall
have been offered to God by our Redeemer, and
accepted by him, it will mean the cancellation of
all condemnation. On the strength of this work
for the future the Apostle urges that we, the
Body of Christ, whose sins have been atoned for
by our Lord, the first sacrifice of the Day of
Atonement (in the type the bullock), may count
that our sins are completely canceled, and will
be remembered against us no more. "For by
one offering he (Christ) hath perfected forever
them that are sanctified": all justified by
faith, who proceed to full consecration and
sanctification. If numbered amongst the
sanctified, we may know that our sins are
completely obliterated from the Divine record, so
far as justice is concerned, and that we have
entered upon a new record as New Creatures and
will be held accountable only for trespasses
against our covenant to the Lord, our vow--by
which we became members of the Christ, the Seed
of Abraham, and heirs of the great (Sarah)
Covenant of Grace.
(7)
"For this is my Covenant to when I shall
take away sins. As concerning the Gospel are
enemies for sakes; but as touching the elect, are
beloved for the fathers' sake." (Rom.
11:27,28.) There is no room to doubt that the
Apostle here is referring to Israel's Covenant,
the New Covenant, which God will make with them
after this Gospel Day. The Apostle says the
Covenant will be made when, or at the time that
the Lord will "take away their sins."
That time has not yet come. Israel is still under
Divine condemnation, though we are now privileged
to speak comfortably unto them and to assure them
that the time for their deliverance is nigh, the
time when the Mediator of the New Covenant will
have taken on the last members of the spirit
Body, the Gospel Church, "changed" by
the power of the First Resurrection; the time
when he will mediate that New Covenant, satisfy
the demands of Divine justice on behalf of the
world, as he already has satisfied it on behalf
of the Church. Then he will become, as previously
intended and declared, the great Mediator of the
New Covenant between God and mankind in
general--the Church being the exception, under
the Covenant of Grace. Then will he begin his
Millennial Kingdom: "For he must reign until
he shall have put all enemies under his feet, and
the last enemy that shall be destroyed is
death." Then all who drank of his
"cup," the blood [sacrifice] of the New
Covenant, as members of the Spiritual Seed, will
reign with him.--Gal. 3:29.
(8)
"But ye are approached unto Mt. Zion,...to
the New Jerusalem,...to the general assembly and
Church of the Firstborns,...and to Jesus, the
Mediator of the New Covenant and to the blood of
sprinkling." (Heb. 12:24.) Here spiritual
Israel is pictured as an army marching and the
things at the farther end are seen and to be
reached. Jesus reached the end of the way long
ago, but the Church of Firstborns is not there
yet. Jesus is the Mediator, but he has accepted
the Church as his Bride, his Body, and waits for
her arrival. The picture shows that the New Law
Covenant will be established as the old Law
Covenant was, only on a higher plane and through
a greater Mediator and by better
sacrifices.--Acts 3:23.
Not one
of these references to the New Covenant makes the
slightest suggestion that it is applicable to the
Church. A reference to the original prophecy from
which the Apostle quotes shows that it could not
apply to the Church, for we there read that the
Lord "will take away their stony hearts out
of their flesh, and give them an heart of
flesh." This is exactly the Restitution Work
which will begin with Israel and extend to all
the families of the earth, but it is not at all
the work of this Gospel Age, which is far higher.
The Lord does not give the "little
flock" hearts of flesh, but, justified by
faith, allows them to the flesh, and begets them
to a new nature, the glorious Seed of Abraham,
through which all the families of the earth shall
be blessed, by the inauguration of the New
Covenant, sealed, made operative by the merit of
the blood of Christ.
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