Covenant

From New World Encyclopedia

A covenant is a religiously binding agreement between two parties, revolving around a promise (or promises) that each party holds out in relation to the other. Covenants are contractual in nature in so far as they have legal conditions attached: there may be property rights or access; a time limit (a perpetual covenant for instance); a curse or penalty for breaking the covenant; a responsibility or duty imposed; renewal options; intermarriage requirements; or any other conditions suitable to the covenanting parties. Covenants were often concluded in the presence of witnesses, and symbols were usually created to mark a covenant and to commemorate it at later dates. Quite often a ritual meal was required to seal the covenant, involving the use of salt or blood. Sometimes sacrificial animals were cut into halves and the participants stood between them while they ratified their agreement.

Biblical covenants underpin the Abrahamic religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam and are significant in the self-consciousness of these religions. According to Biblical tradition, there have been several covenants throughout history although the precise number is disputed. Some beluve that covenants have been rewnewed while others think still active. Covenants imply Godly concern for humanity and often tied to the ideas of faith and obedience to a God who pledges to fulfill his word in covenants. The concept of "Covenant" is also important in several new religious movements, such as the Unification Church.

Etymology

The term “covenant” is used in the Bible more than three hundred times and is well represented in both the Old and New Testaments. The Hebrew term for covenant is berith (berît), which means “agreement” and “arrangement”; however its etymological origins are more closely associated with the partaking of a meal (symbolically or actually) as well as with the concept of ‘cutting’, as in 'to cut’ a covenant. The Greek translation of this term is diath‘k‘ (*4"2Z60) which is often paraphrased as ‘last will’ or even as ‘testament’.

Views of Covenant in Antiquity

In the ancient world, there were many forms of covenants and legal agreements. The nations surrounding the Hebrews routinely entered into suzerainty covenants between rulers and their subjects. Typically, this type of covenant involved in an asymetrical relationship whereby one party was not equal in standing compared to the other, and one party dictated the covenant while the other party obeyed its conditions. More equal covenants between nations or tribes were termed ‘parity covenants’ and in such cases conditions were either negotiated or offered.

Many of the features pre-existing in covenantal concepts are found in Biblical tradition. However, Biblical covenants take on an implicitly greater significance than that of a covenant between mere mortal humans since one of the covenanting parties in the Biblical covenants is a supernatural being. When God is seen as the partner, or signatory, the conditions and terms take on a grander scale, often including all of humanity in their scope.

Number of Biblical Covenants

Scholars disagree as to the exact number of Biblical covenants, and the list varies from five to eight or more. It is said that some covenants have been renewed for various reasons. Some see the covenant of the Old Testament point to the figure of Jesus Christ in the New Testament and argue there are only two covenants with that of the New Testament being the only one of lasting significance and implication for modern times.

The Biblical covenants deemed to be of greatest significance follow in order of their invocation.

1) The Edenic Covenant (Genesis 1:26-30)

According to the Book of Genesis, God's first covenant with humanity is found at the end of the first creation account in the Garden of Eden. Humans are explicitly given dominion over the creation and implicitly are held responsible for its well-being because “God looked at everything he had made, and had found it very good” (Gen, 1:31). This covenant is a clear indication of the concern God has for what he creates. Humankind is special for it was created “in his image” and God bears responsibility for what he has created. To insure the ability of humans to undertake and accomplish such a responsibility, God then instituted the seventh day as a day of rest and regeneration.

Michelangelo's Creation, from the Sistine Chapel. Michelangelo shows God creating Adam, with Eve in His arm. While not strictly true to the Genesis account, this is one of the most famous depictions of the creation of Adam and Eve in Western art.

While this covenant seems to lack parity between the parties, God’s desire to create and commune with his creatures softens the ruler/subject distinction found in the earlier non-Biblical covenants. God is generous and powerful and can sustain those he has appointed to have dominion over the lessor objects of his creation.

2) The Noahide Covenant (Genesis 9:8-17)

The story of Noah's ark and the flood (deluge) are significant for the Biblical understanding of Covenant. Once again, this covenant is found in the Book of Genesis. Noah, and his family, have maintained obedience to God’s will by building an ark, and gathering the animals as instructed. Those who mocked Noah and were barred from the covenant and perished in the flood while Noah and his family's offspring survived due to their faithful obediance.

As in the usual covenant typology, blood was invoked in this covenant. In fact the blood comes from the slaying of all of humankind because the God-human relationship had been broken through human disobedience which entered the world shortly after the invocation of the Edenic Covenant. Once the blood sacrifice was provided, God entered into a perpetual covenant with Noah and those who followed him. God promised “that never again shall all bodily creatures be destroyed by the waters of a flood; there shall not be another flood to devastate the earth” (Gen. 9:11). As a covenantal symbol, God “set [a rain]bow in the clouds to serve as a sign of the covenant between [him] and the earth” (Gen. 9:14) The covenant is not only perpetual, but it extends to all of creation- God, creation, and humanity. The symbol of the rainbow joins God and humans in a reminder of the price for disobedience and the faith that ensures forgiveness. (For Christians, the ark, as the first saviour of all of humankind is a foreshadowing of the coming of Jesus Christ as their savior.)

(Add Noahide Laws here)

3) The Abrahamic Covenant (Genesis 12:2-3, 15, 17:1-14, 22:15-18)

God's covenants with Abraham are also very significant in the development of the Abrahamic religions, from which they derive their names. Abraham was a prosperous herdsman without progeny and he despaired of having offspring because of his and his wife’s great age. However, according to Biblical tradition, God had plans to use Abraham as a means of populating the earth with whom he would continue the God-human relationship. However, the plan hinged on the acceptance of Abraham to leave his familiar territory and strike out into the unknown at the request of God. In return, the faith shown by Abraham would be rewarded with great blessings: Abraham will be made into a great nation, his very name will be great and a blessing, and this blessing will extend to all the communities of the earth. Once again, there is a covenant mediated by God to a faithful individual, but extended beyond his time and place to all of humankind who choose to continue the relationship.

The next Abrahamic Covenant is recorded in Genesis Chapter 15, which reaffirms God's promise of progeny. Here we see the sacrificial animals are cut into two parts and God’s presence passes between them in the form of “a smoking brazier and a flaming torch” (v. 17). The completion of this covenant is almost thwarted by the presence of birds of prey (representing evil) who swoop down on the carcasses, but were prevented from doing so by Abraham. Clearly Abraham’s faith assisted him in warding off the effects of evil. This covenant confirms the numerous descendants promised earlier and it also forewarns the Egyptian captivity and eventual release documented in the Book of Exodus. The future territories to be awarded to God’s chosen people, Abram’s descendants, are detailed in this covenant. This theme will surface in later covenants.

The third Abrahamic Covenant, also known as “The Covenant of Circumcision,” is detailed in Chapter 17 and takes place when Abram is ninety-nine years old. God asks Abram to “walk in my presence and be blameless” (v. 1). Once again, the theme of relation and righteousness before God becomes a covenantal component. God has observed Abram’s faith and right conduct and builds upon his earlier promises of progeny by extending the promise to include “a host of nations” (v. 5) that will issue from Abram. This covenant is also associated with land and a symbol. The land is the entire land of Canaan and the symbol is the act of circumcision. Here we see that conditions are being imposed by God on the party and future parties of the covenant. They must have no other gods in their lives. Abraham and his male descendants will show they have only one God by being circumcised. Any potential heathen marriages will be stymied by this sign in the flesh of the Israelites for all generations. There is an ongoing element of ‘cut’ and blood in this covenant that remains consistent with the properties found in earlier covenants. Significant with this covenant is the name change of Abram to Abraham (verse?) . He is immediately obedient and ratifies the covenant by circumcising his whole male household.

The fourth Abrahamic Covenant is found in Chapter 22 and involves faith and obedience. Prior to this covenant, Abraham has a son, Isaac, from his wife, Sarah, and the earlier covenantal promises seem to be on the way to fulfillment. However, as a test of his faith, Abraham is commanded to sacrifice his only son. Not only is this disheartening from the paternal point of view, but it severely strains his faith in the promise of progeny that will become as numerous as the stars in the heavens.

"Abraham Sacrificing Isaac" by Laurent de LaHire, 1650

But Abraham is obedient and makes the arrangements, traveling to a place suitable for the sacrifice and preparing his son for the ritual. As he is about to complete the act, his hand is stayed by a voice from the Lord’s messenger. However, Abraham is supplied with a ram and the sacrifice is completed. The elements of this covenant also demonstrate faith, obedience, and God’s interest in an ongoing relationship. Once again the earlier promises of future nations are restated and Abraham is blessed by God. The act of Isaac, sacrificing the only son, is a foreshadowing of Jesus Christ where God sacrificing his only son.

4) The Mosaic (Sinaitic) Covenant (Exodus 19: 5-6)

This famous covenant is often described as an extension of the Abrahamic covenants and is addressed to those people whom God, acting through Moses, delivered out of bondage in the land of Egypt. Its location is the Israelite camp at the foot of Mount Sinai and Moses received it on behalf of the people. In restating the Abrahamic covenant, God tells Moses to tell the people “if you hearken to my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my special possession, dearer to me than all other people, though all the earth is mine. You shall be to me a kingdom of priests, a holy nation” (v. 5-6). At verse 8 is given the response of the people, “Everything the Lord has said, we will do.” Thus there is an understanding here of a special, of a covenantal relationship between the Israelites of the captivity and God. There is a further understanding of the sovereignty of God over all the earth and over all people, with a special concern for those who had suffered persecution because they were Israelites in a foreign land. The Book of Exodus makes a number of references to the suffering in the captivity and to God’s awareness of and response to their pleas.

The core of this covenant are the later conditions as laid out in the Ten Commandments (see Ch 20: 1-17). God, as supreme authority in the lives of the Israelites, sets out a code of conduct and right attitudes that will guide the relations of these people within the community and with God. This covenant, after reception of further legal and sacrificial prescriptions, was ratified in blood by Moses: Then having sent certain young men of the Israelites to offer holocausts and sacrifice young bulls as peace offerings to the Lord, Moses took half the blood and put it in large bowls; the other half he splashed on the altar. Taking the book of the covenant he read it aloud to the people, who answered, “All that the Lord has said, we will heed and do.” Then he took the blood and sprinkled it on the people [blood brothers], saying, “This is the blood of the covenant which the Lord has made with you in accordance with all the words of his” (Ex. 24: 5-8).

(Insert Ark of the Covenant)

5) The Palestinian Covenants, (The Covenant of the Repentant) Deuteronomy 30: 1-10 & (The New Covenant) Jeremiah 31:31-34:

These two covenants have some similarity in that they reaffirm the possession of the land of Palestine by the Israelites. The first is instituted after the giving of the final words of Moses to the people he led out of captivity. Their story is repeated and their legal obligations, along with penalties for violation, are enumerated by Moses. They have received the Law, but they will not always keep it, even though they are about to take possession of their promised land. Moses is prophesying their future periods of disobedience and their dispersals from the land that these will entail. They will be conquered and taken captive again for their occasions of disobedience. But there is an underlying theme of God’s forgiveness and desire to restore the God-human relationship with them. God’s pity will be activated when, in their hearts, they remember what was said and repent, relying once again on God’s guidance in their lives. No matter how far they are scattered they will return to possess this land once again.

Continuing the theme of blood and ‘cut’, in convenantal terminology, “The Lord your God, will circumcise your hearts and the hearts of your descendants, that you may love the Lord, your God, with all your heart and all your soul, and so may live” (v. 6). These words are reminiscent of the giving of the Ten Commandments of the previous covenant and they point to the establishment of an unending kingdom that is enumerated in the Davidic Covenant. Following this promise is the promise of bounty to be given from the fruits of their labors and the promise of offspring of the people and their animals as well as abundant crops. The land and the people will bear fruit as a sign of God’s pleasure when they are obedient.

The second covenant follows a period of dispersal when the people are returning once again to occupy the land of their inheritance. It again refers to the imagery of the heart. However, this New Covenant unites both the houses of Judah and Israel under a new formula. The former covenant was one of the Law. The Law could not always be fulfilled and required a penalty which was mediated through the priesthood. This new covenant’s laws will be interior, there will be a conversion of attitude that results in loving the Lord instead of fearing him. They will want to follow his guidelines out of recognition for his generosity and concern and not in fear of his retribution for failure. In fact, their transgression of the Law will no longer even be remembered. Additionally, knowledge of God will be extended to all nations. This covenant has implications for the future coming of Jesus Christ as both the “New Covenant” and as the exemplar of the priestly office.

6) The Davidic Covenant, 2 Samuel 7:9-16:

Here is a personal covenant that God generously makes to David, the second king of the Israelites. By extension its promises are extended to David’s subjects, God’s chosen people. This covenant has great implications for the various prophecies that point to Jesus as the future messiah. It is stimulated by David’s appreciation of God’s beneficence toward him and he notes the ark of God has only a tent while he is enthroned in palatial splendor. God begins this covenant by reminding David that God has been with him and he promises to make David’s name great. The covenant is then extended to the Israelites with a promise that they will dwell in their new lands without interference from their neighbors. David will no longer have to defend the people from attacks. The covenant then establishes the perpetual throne and lineage of David’s kingdom through his heirs. Again, this becomes prophetic for the future coming of Jesus. God also foretells the greatness of Solomon who will build the temple and perpetuate David’s name. The relationship between this family and God is established and will endure even through their future failings with God’s laws. Thus, the Kingdom of David will endure forever. This covenant reinforces the idea that covenants are not simply legal contracts, they are a state of being between the people and God.

7) The Covenant of Christ (The New Covenant), 2 Corinthians 3:7-18, Galations 4:24-31, Hebrews 9, Matthew 26:27-28:

Christians believe that the Old Testament covenants points to Jesus and are fulfilled in Him.

Matthew 26: 27-28 finds Jesus instituting the sacrament of the Eucharist the night before his arrest, trial, and death. He clearly proclaims the completion of his earthly mission when, taking the cup of wine, he tells his disciples, “Drink from it, all of you, for this is my blood of the [new] covenant, which will be shed on behalf of many for the forgiveness of sins.” Once again we see the covenantal linkage with the spilling of blood. We also see here that this will be the final blood that will be necessary to be spilled to establish and maintain the God-human relationship. And we see that there will no longer be any need for a Levitical priesthood to intercede in the sacrificial atonement for sin. This is the establishment of a final covenant not based on law, but on forgiveness and remission of sin. This sacrifice of Jesus on the cross will transform him into the exemplar of the priesthood and the final mediator between God and humans.

The question of covenantal status is addressed in many of the books of the New Testament. 2 Corinthians 3: 7-18 contrasts the Old and New Covenants. The veiled face of Moses is a passing condition but it is taken away by Christ. A veil remains over the hearts of those who hear the Book of Moses but it is removed when they turn toward the person of Jesus. In Jesus there is the (Holy) Spirit and this is a Spirit of freedom which transforms the faithful into the “same image [of Christ] from glory to glory” (v. 18). Here is the view that the Old Covenants have passed away in their importance and, more important, in their approach to God. The Old Covenants were legalistic and underpinned by adherence to the Law, but the New Covenant is a covenant of faith based on love as espoused by Jesus Christ and fulfill the earlier “New Covenant” written in Jeremiah 31:31.

This theme of greater freedom under the New Covenant is brought out in Galations 4:24-31. This is a comparison between those under the law, represented by Ishmael the son of the slave Hagar, and Abraham’s son Isaac, born of Sarah who was a free woman. This allegory ends at verse 31 which says, “Therefore, brothers, we are children not of the slave woman but of the freeborn woman,” thus maintaining the Old Covenants were restricting while the New Covenant is freeing.

Finally, the entire Book of Hebrews is filled with explanations of the priesthood of Jesus and his work of salvation. It also contains covenantal references which bear on the question of the supremacy of the covenants and their fulfilment. Chapter 9 is especially helpful for it notes the layout of the tabernacle which the Mosaic Covenant required for the atonement of violations of the Law. The priests were regularly required to enter it to perform the requisite sacrifices. But the high priest had to go inside the inner tabernacle annually to atone for his own sins and those of the people. In other words the priests needed to be reconciled with God in order to perform their duties. However, Christ, as the ultimate high priest, has performed for all time the redemption for sin through the shedding of his own blood. His blood has done more than the blood of all the sacrifices prior to his coming. “But now once for all he has appeared at the end of the ages to take away sin by his sacrifice” (v. 26). These, and other scriptural references, arguably point to Jesus Christ as the final covenant of the God-human relationship.

Other Covenants

The idea of covenant raises questions about how the status of covenants, how many there have been, and whether a covenant can be revoked if one or both parties reneges on its obligations. There are distinctions between conditional and unconditional covenants with speculation about their current validity since biblical history shows the nation of Israel was unable to consistently abide by them. Finally, there are questions about whether there will be future fulfillment of any covenants deemed unfulfilled.

References:

Cairns, A. Dictionary of Theological Terms. Ambassador Emerald International. Belfast, Northern Ireland. Expanded Edition, 2002.
Hastings, J. ed. Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible. Hendrickson Publishers, Inc. U.S.A., 2005.
Myers, A.C. ed. The Eerdmans Bible Dictionary. Grand Rapids, MI.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company,1987.
The Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible. Grand Rapids, MI.: Zondervan. 1975.
Kittel G. ed. Theological Dictionary of the New Testament. Grand Rapids, MI.: Eerdmans Printing Company,1964.
New American Bible. St. Joseph Edition. New York, NY.: Catholic Book Publishing Co., 1991.