Special Insights #14
The Promise
After a wonderful thirteen weeks of studying "The Promise," let us review briefly
thirteen points of the precious New Covenant message (these may not exactly parallel the
thirteen Quarterly lessons):
- The New Covenant is the same as "the everlasting covenant" of Hebrews 13:20. It was
established anciently in that far-off "counsel of peace . . . between them both"
when Father and Son agreed to redeem humanity if they should sin (Zech. 6:12). We
read of this divine pledge in Early Writings, p. 149: Christ "then made known to the
angelic host that a way of escape had been made for lost man. He told them that He
had been pleading with his Father, and had offered to give His life a ransom, to take
the sentence of death upon Himself, that through Him man might find pardon." Here is
the New Covenant in its beginning.
- When Cain let himself get angry with his brother to kill him, he was devoted to the
Old Covenant, right there just outside the gates of Eden. He had brought his own
offering of the works of his hands instead of one signifying total reliance on the
sacrifice of Christ.
- The New Covenant was expressed anew in the seven promises that God spoke to Abraham
in Genesis 12:1-3. Paul makes clear that nothing can
be "added" to that Covenant,
for God had ratified it (Gal. 3:15-19; Gen. 15:7-17). The law spoken at Sinai was not
an addendum; the word "added" means it was emphasized, or underlined, or set in bold
type. Thus the function of the law is to convict of sin; but not to cleanse from it.
- God asked no return promises from Abraham; his part was to believe the promises of
God (Gen. 15:6). That's all that God has asked of us (John 3:16); but such faith
on his or our part "works by love" (Gal. 5:6). Thus in the New Covenant there is no
disparagement of works: genuine faith is proven by our works. It always leads to
obedience "to all the commandments of God." (See Testimonies to Ministers, pp. 91,
92; for example, if one continues to transgress the Sabbath commandment while
professing to proclaim the gospel of Christ, he is mistaken, for his so-called faith
proves itself to be "in vain" (James 2:26; Matt. 5:19). Why then should we study
under commandment-breakers the meaning of the gospel?)
- Even after Abraham "believed God," he stumbled and staggered into Old Covenant
thinking. He listened to Sarai's unbelief and took Hagar as a second wife in order
to get a boy baby. His faith was not fully demonstrated as genuine until in
Genesis 22 he offered up Isaac.
- Sarai had her own battle with Old Covenant unbelief. She manifested unbelief at God's
wonderful promise and cherished enmity against Him as the cause of her infertility
(Gen. 16:1, 2). Even now, when we cherish unbelief and doubt that the Lord will
"give [us] the desires of [our] heart" (Ps. 37:4), we are repeating her Old Covenant
journey.
- The Lord healed her of this alienation by repeating to her directly the same wonderful
promises He had made to Abraham (Gen. 17:15, 6; 18:9-15). Then her name was changed
from Sarai ("contentious woman") to Sarah, "Princess and mother of kings." Thus we
learn that only New Covenant Good News can heal and reconcile alienated human
hearts.
- Sarah repented of her unbelief; she chose to believe the Good News that God had given
her. "Through faith also Sara herself received strength to conceive seed" (Heb. 11:11).
- But 430 years later, Abraham's descendants at Mount Sinai failed to appreciate their
experience of victory over unbelief. They did not have the faith of Abraham, nor that
of Sarah when she overcame. They re-invented Cain's Old Covenant unbelief, and that
of Sarai before her name was changed. As in Cain's case his unbelief led him to
murder his brother Abel, so Israel's Old Covenant unbelief led them eventually to
murder their Messiah.
- Thus it is clear that the Old Covenant is bad news all the way through. Paul says
it "gendereth to bondage" (Gal. 4:24). That's the last thing we want! No
re-crucifixion of Christ, please!
- Not only has God never asked us to make Old Covenant promises of obedience to Him,
the practice of making them is itself opposed to happy living. Steps to Christ
discloses the tragic failures that are involved: "Your promises and resolutions are
like ropes of sand. . . . The knowledge of your broken promises and forfeited
pledges weakens your confidence in your own sincerity, and causes you to feel that
God cannot accept you; but you need not despair. What you need to understand is the
true force of the will. . . . The power of choice God has given to men; it is theirs
to exercise" (p. 47). Children are often led to make solemn promises to God. Then when
they inevitably break them in childhood, unbelief and despair are encouraged. This is
the key reason why so many of our youth lose their way. They desperately need to
learn New Covenant truth, with no Old Covenant confusion mixed in.
- Paul makes clear that the gospel was as full in the days of Abraham as it has ever
been or will be (Gal. 3:8; cf John 8:56). Probably the first Jew ever to discern
rightly the significance of ancient Israel's Old Covenant detour of unbelief, Paul
says that the Old Covenant (law) was their disciplinarian ("schoolmaster") whose
work was to lead them (or drive them!) back to where their father Abraham was, that
they might experience justification by faith as he did (Gal. 3:19-25). In order to
understand our perplexing Seventh-day Adventist history, we too must see again how
our long involvement with the Old Covenant has functioned as a "schoolmaster" to
lead us back to the "most precious message" of justification by faith that "the Lord
in His great mercy sent" us in our past history.
- The end of the long detour is Good News: when we understand and believe the gospel
of justification by faith as Abraham did, then "the earth" can be "lightened" with
the New Covenant glory of the loud cry of the third angel (see Rev. 14:6-12; 18:1-4).