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PART IX.
THE THREE GREAT COVENANTS.
A COVENANT is an agreement. God, who knows the end from the beginning,
never made a covenant which he could not and will not fulfill. Covenants
may be conditional or unconditional: where a conditional covenant was made, i.e.,
where each party to it was bound to do certain things, it was customary to
appoint a mediator--a person who stands between and whose business it is to see
that both parties keep their covenant. God has made several covenants, but three
in particular, which we wish now to consider briefly. These are, first, the
"covenant with Abraham;" second, the covenant of "the Law;"
third, the "New covenant."
The first one reads: "In thee
and in thy seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed." This
covenant we understand to cover two classes--Abraham and his seed through
Isaac, and he whom Abraham typified--Jehovah and his seed through Jesus. The
blessing comes first through the God-seed--Christ and his brethren, the church,
reaching, blessing and restoring the fleshly seed first, and through them
extending to and blessing all the families of the earth. Thus we see how the
blessing will "be sure unto all the seed."--Rom.
4:16. Now, we inquire, are there any conditions to this first covenant? If
there are--it is possible that Abraham and his seed might fail to keep their
part and so the conditions and covenant being broken, God may never fulfill
that covenant. But, we answer, there were no conditions. God did not say,
Abraham, if you and your seed after you will obey me, I will do thus and so,
but he simply tells Abraham what he intends doing. That covenant then cannot
pass away, nor be altered, nor added to,--(Gal. 3:15,17,)--it
must be fulfilled just as it reads. The seed must come and the seed shall bless
all the families of the earth. How much this is in harmony with the teaching of
a "restitution of all things!"-- Acts 3:21. If
further evidence that this first covenant was unconditional be desired, it is
found in the fact that no mediator was appointed; none was needed since there
was only one party [R282 : page 149] (God) who
covenanted anything--Gal. 3:20. That covenant was confirmed
by an oath.--Heb. 6:13-18. The second covenant we wish to
consider is "the Law." It was delivered to Israel
at Mount Sinai. Unlike the first, it had
conditions--if Israel
would obey the Law, they should be "a peculiar treasure above all
people:" for, says God, "all the earth is mine, and ye shall be a
kingdom of priests and an holy nation."--Exod. 19:5. Then
follows the words of their covenant.--Exod. 20 to 23. Moses
declares, (in harmony with Gal. 3:17,) "The Lord made
not this covenant with our fathers [Abraham, etc.] but with us, even us who are
all here alive this day. The Lord talked with you face to face in the mount out
of the midst of the fire, and I stood between the Lord and you at that
time."--Deut. 5:2-5.
The whole world were sinners but
knew not to what extent; they knew not that they were so depraved that they
could not keep God's law perfectly. And it was God's object in making the Law
Covenant, to prove to Israel
their own imperfection and inability to live in harmony with God. Therefore he
said to them, after making the conditions of the covenant and when the people
had accepted it, "Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgments which
if a man do he shall live."--Lev. 18:5; see also Rom. 10:5, and 7:7,12,13,16.
Therefore, when God made this second
covenant, he knew that Israel
would never realize the promises therein given, because they would not be able
to keep it--all being sinners--for "by the deeds of the Law shall no flesh
be justified." "That no man is justified by the Law is
evident."--Gal. 3:11. But the Law was of some service
to them, in that it furnished a check upon idolatry and immortality, and thus
as a schoolmaster, it prepared them for Christ and the new covenant.--Gal. 3:19, and 4:1.
The Law Covenant was ordained in the
hands of a mediator --Moses; and that covenant and its mediator were a shadow,
or type of the future "New covenant" and its mediator--Christ. Moses typically
bought all Israel
with the blood of the bullock and goat, which typically represented his own
blood--life. He typically bought them and left them the conditions of the Law
as a legacy. For a covenant is of force after men (the ratifiers or mediators)
are dead...."When Moses had spoken every precept to all the people,
according to the Law, he took the blood of bulls and of goats, with water and
scarlet wool and hyssop, and sprinkled both the book--(the Law)--and all the
people, saying: this is the blood of the covenant which God hath enjoined unto
you."--Heb. 9:16-20. When Jesus came he was born into
the [R282 : page 150] world--"under the
Law," and by perfect obedience to it he became the heir of all the earthly
promises contained in that Law covenant--but more, he was begotten of God and
was the Seed of Abraham, and as such was heir of the first covenant also. --Gal. 3:16. In the person of Jesus then, the second (Law)
covenant passed away, being fulfilled: and the first--(Abrahamic)-- covenant began
to be fulfilled: for it will not be completely fulfilled until "all
families of the earth" are blessed by Christ.
This blessing of mankind is made the
basis of a "New Covenant" between God and man. This, like the
"Law" covenant, has conditions, some of which bind God and some bind
mankind. Mankind will be required to keep God's perfect Law. [He could not give
an imperfect one--the Law given to Israel was "holy and just and
good."--Rom. 7:12.] Any other Law would be unjust and
bad then; consequently, God must give in substance the same Law which Jesus
said was briefly comprehended in this: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, with all thy mind, with all thy soul, and with all thy
strength, and thy neighbor as thyself." So far as man's obligations are
concerned then, they will be the same under the "New" that they were
under the Law covenant; the difference consisting in this, that under the "New"
God will actually take away man's sins instead of typically (as under the Law.)
When God actually takes man's sins away and its penalties (mental and physical
imperfections and death) then, and not until then, will they as perfect men be
able to keep God's perfect Law.
"Behold the days come, saith
the Lord, that I will make a New Covenant with the house of Israel and with the
house of Judah....This shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of
Israel after those days, saith the Lord: I will put my law in their inward part
and write it in their hearts, and I will be their God and they shall be my
people, for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no
more." "In those days they shall say no more, the fathers have eaten
a sour grape, and the children's teeth are set on edge, but every one shall die
for his own iniquity."--Jer. 31:29. "And in that
day, I will make a covenant for them with the beasts of the field and with the
fowl of heaven, and with the creeping things of the ground, and I will break
the bow and the sword and the battle out of the earth."--Hos.
2:18. See also Jer. 32:37-41; Ezek.
37:12,14,26. It may easily be seen that these conditions are not yet fulfilled.
The sour grape of sin still sets all mankind on edge--the law of sin, the stony
heart, still remains in mankind: [R282 : page 151] God
has not yet taken it away and given them instead a heart of flesh (perfect
manhood) with his law--Love--graven thereon. The beasts and fowl are not yet in
harmony with man. He was given dominion, glory, and honor, but through sin lost
it almost entirely; but soon he will be restored, and all nature will recognize
in man her ruler. But it may be asked--Upon what conditions will God take away
and blot out man's transgressions? We answer, unconditionally: according to the
provisions of the [R283 : page 151] first covenant,
a seed was to come, and secondly it was to bless all. The blessing is the
removal of man's load of sin, through the death of the seed, who died the just
for the unjust. This (third) "New Covenant" like its shadow, the Law,
has a mediator, because there are conditions, and two parties to the covenant. As
under the Law Covenant Moses was the mediator, so is
"JESUS
THE MEDIATOR OF THE NEW COVENANT,"
and to him God looks for the
fulfillment of the Law; and to him Israel and the world look for ability
to comply with its conditions, viz., restitution. As the mediator, or testator
then, Jesus must die to leave mankind the legacy--of forgiveness and
restoration promised in the New Covenant. He did thus die and bought all with
his own precious blood, and soon is to commence the great work of applying the
blood--cleansing from all sin. As typically Moses took the bunch of hyssop and
scarlet wool, and therewith sprinkled of the ratifying blood both the book
(Law) and all the people, (Heb. 9:19,) so with the New
Covenant, it must be ratified with blood, and the mediator gives his blood
(life) and then (soon we believe) he will begin the work of sprinkling with
this cleansing blood and with the pure water of truth. He will sprinkle both
the book (Law) and people, bringing the people into harmony with God's law-- "Love."
No longer will their teeth be set on edge; no longer will they, when they would
do good, find evil present with them; then, all shall know the Lord from the
least to the greatest, and the knowledge of the Lord shall fill the whole
earth.
But does some one inquire why the
new covenant did not at once go into effect as soon as the mediator died? Why
were not all the people sprinkled as soon as the blood was shed?
Ah! dear friends, that is the most
wonderful part of it all: that is the part which shows "the exceeding
riches of God's grace"-- "his loving-kindness toward us, in
Christ." This is what Paul repeatedly speaks of, as the "mystery"
hid during previous ages, viz., "Christ in you the hope of glory."--Col. 1:27. Jesus died [R283 : page 152] for
and is to bless and restore all men; but before entering upon the work of
restoring, he publishes among the great mass (all of whom he ransomed) the news
of their ransom, and to all who have an ear to hear it he extends the privilege
of taking up their cross and following him--of sharing with him in suffering
evil for good, and promises these that if they do walk in his footsteps they
shall be not only sharers of the sufferings, but also of the "glory that
shall follow." "To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in
my throne." We shall become heirs of God, joint-heirs with Jesus Christ
our Lord, if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified
together."--Rom. 8:17.
This is the reason why the Gospel
age intervenes between the death of Jesus and the blessing of the world: it is
an age of death, an age during which we may if we will--"fill up what is
behind of the afflictions of Christ."--Col. 1:24. We
are then, joined with Christ in the sacrifice of the human life--"dead
with him," and so far as the world is concerned, they are still waiting
until the little flock--the members of the body of the mediator or testator
(Christ) are "dead with him." We believe the sacrifice to be almost
ended, and soon all who have shared death with him as members of his body shall
be joined with him in the glory of power and share in the glorious work of
applying the blood--cleansing the people. Moses did the sprinkling in the type
and it will be the Great Prophet and Mediator in the antitype. "A prophet
shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him
shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. And it shall come
to pass that every soul which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed
from among the people."--Acts 3:22. This prophecy
belongs to the "times of restitution of all things," and is quoted by
Peter as applicable there.
That prophet, or teacher--"the
Christ"--head and body, is now being "raised up" (to power), and
soon the work of sprinkling and cleansing humanity begins; and the soul
(person) who will not then obey and be cleansed shall be destroyed. In that
age, the sinner a hundred years old will be cut off, though at that age he
would be but "a child."--Isa. 65:20.
In a sense, the operation of the new
covenant begins with the Gospel church, and lifts us from the plane of
degradation and sin to a justified or reckoned-perfect condition, from which we
can go forward in the "narrow way" becoming heirs of the first
covenant.--Gal. 3:29. Let us briefly review these covenants
as they are illustrated in a type or allegory.--(Gal.
4:22-31.) Paul [R283 : page 153] explained that
Abraham's wife, Sarah, was a type of the first covenant made with Abraham,
referring to "the Seed." As years rolled by, and no child came, they
began to look for a fulfillment in some other way, and Hagar takes the place of
a wife and bears a son, who apparently is to be the heir. So the original
promise of God meant Christ, but he was not born until "due time,"
and in the meantime "the Law" was given from Sinai, apparently taking
the place of the first covenant, and under the law covenant a fleshly seed was
developed--fleshly Israel.
But the first, or Sarah, covenant had not failed, and after the Hagar covenant
had borne fleshly Israel (typified by Ishmael), the true seed of Abraham and
heir is born, under the first (or Sarah) covenant; i.e., Christ Jesus and the
members of his body--spiritual Israel. This is as far as Paul carries the type,
because speaking only of the two seeds, natural and spiritual, and the two
covenants under which they come into existence. But as we find that God is to
make "a new covenant," "after those days," we naturally
inquire: Why was not this new covenant typified by a wife as well as the other
two? And upon examination we find it was so illustrated. Turning to Gen. 24:67, we read how Isaac receives Rebecca into Sarah's
tent, and she becomes his married wife, (illustrating how our heavenly Bridegroom
will receive his Bride at the end of her journey, and bring her into possession
of and associate her with himself, in the enjoyment of all things promised in
the first (or Sarah) covenant.) Then we read after Isaac's marriage: "Then,
again, Abraham took a wife, and her name was Keturah," thus illustrating
as plainly as a type can, the "New covenant."
Each of the first two covenants bore
but one offspring. The first, the "heir of all things," (Christ Jesus
and we his Bride,) and the second, fleshly Israel, beloved for the Father's
sake. But the New Covenant (Keturah) bears six sons, which, taken with the one
of Hagar, would be seven--a complete number--representing that all the fleshly
children would be developed under the Hagar and Keturah, or "Law" and
"New" Covenants.
The name Sarah means Princess; Hagar
means flight or cast out; Keturah means incense or sweet; all of which are
significant. Oh, how our covenant--the Royal--looms up above all the others! Let
us not forget that we must die with Jesus, if we would LIVE and share in the
glorious work of sprinkling and cleansing the world in the next age. "That
by means of death ...they which are called might receive the promise of eternal
inheritance."--Heb. 9:15.
W.T. R-282 a : page 148 – 1881 r.