The
New Covenant
is
Older than you Think
By
Paul Kroll
Christians
are under the guidance and authority of the new covenant, not the old.
This brings up an important question: What is the relationship between
the two covenants?
It’s
sometimes said that the new covenant is a magnification of the old. In
an informal way of speaking, this may be acceptable. However, by
thinking of the new covenant as only a modification of the old, we may
be led to accept the erroneous idea that the new grew out of the old.
If the new covenant is only an expanded version of the old, so to
speak, then this creates a question. Perhaps some of the practices
(such as avoiding unclean meats) commanded under the old should also
be commanded in the new? After all, if something has been added to the
new covenant, why can’t it include at least some of what was in the
old?
Also,
to say that the new covenant comes after the old is to imply that the
new is only a Johnny-come-lately, whose existence depends on something
that came before it. We might be left with the wrong conclusion that
the old covenant is the real basis for the new. This is absolutely not
the case. That’s why the title of this article is “The new
covenant is older than you think.” This title insists on the ironic
conclusion that the new covenant existed long before the old covenant
did.
The
old covenant existed on a much lower, physical plane. It was, we might
say, a kind of teaching tool pointing to the intent of that which was
God’s original and ongoing purpose with humanity. This covenant had
a limited existence for a specific time in history for a
specific
people under special circumstances. The best it could do was point,
for a limited time and in a somewhat veiled way, to the reality of
God’s purpose in Christ—the new covenant.
On
the other hand, the new covenant should be understood as timeless. We
cannot attach an age to it, because it goes back to “the
beginning.” Since God’s eternal purpose is as good as the reality,
we can say the creation has never existed without the new covenant,
even though it was as yet an unrealized intent of God’s purpose.
The
New Testament insists that the new covenant goes back to the
beginning. Of course, such passages do not use the words “new
covenant.” For this reason we need to get a working definition of
the new covenant so we can understand when it is being spoken about.
Essentially, the new covenant can be defined in the following phrase:
the working out of God’s purpose to create human beings to transform
them out of their fallen condition into the image of his Son, and give
them eternal life.
But
here is where things get complicated. We infer from Scripture that God
purposed human beings to be created in such a way as to allow them –
if they choose – to become prisoners of the fallen world order,
which includes sin and death.
Bondage
to sin and decay
We
understand this aspect of the new covenant from the New Testament. The
apostle Paul, for example, summed it up with these words:
“The
creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by
the will of the one who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself
will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the
glorious freedom of the children of God. We know that the whole
creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to
the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the
firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our
adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we
are saved” (Romans 8:20-24).
Our
bondage to sin and decay forms the underlying problem the new covenant
is meant to deal with. Without the new covenant promises, every human
would die and decay into eternal nothingness. God’s purpose would be
stopped dead in its tracks. But we know the rest of the story—the
new covenant. God provided a means whereby sinning humans could be
rescued from the evil world order, from Satan (Ephesians 2:2; 1
Corinthians 4:4; Revelation 12:9) as well as from sin and death. God,
in the person of the Son or Word, became a human being (Jesus Christ),
would die for humanity’s sins, and be resurrected as Savior.
God
would forgive humans their sins, image them in his Son through the
transforming work of the Holy Spirit, and ultimately raise them from
the dead. Therefore, Jesus Christ is the embodiment of the new
covenant. (In a sense, Moses exemplified the old covenant.) Under the
new covenant, sin and death are defeated, and God’s purpose to
provide humans with eternal life comes to pass. That is the new
covenant in a nutshell
The
new covenant did not
come into existence with
Christ’s death, nor did it come
into existence with Abraham.
The new covenant came into
existence as God’s original
purpose
for the human race.
But to say it again,
the new covenant is much older—eternally older—than the old
covenant. (Since God’s purpose ultimately wins out, his purpose is
as good as done, even before it occurs in fact.) A number of New
Testament verses testify to the eternal existence of God’s plan, now
known as the new covenant. As stated earlier, they don’t use the
words “new covenant.” Rather, these scriptures refer to the
promise of Christ’s atoning work and God’s purpose to give eternal
life in him.
Christ
himself is the basis of the new covenant. Let’s see, in rapid-fire
fashion, how insistently these scriptures tell us of the eternal
existence of the new covenant.
·
The new
covenant is God’s “eternal purpose which he accomplished in Christ
Jesus our Lord” (Ephesians 3:11).
·
Jesus (the
Lamb) “was slain from the creation of the world” (Revelation
13:8).
·
We were
redeemed from our empty way of life by the blood of Christ, who “was
chosen before the creation of the world”
(1 Peter 1:18-20).
·
God’s
“work has been finished since the creation of the world” (Hebrews
4:3).
·
It was
God’s purpose to choose humans for salvation “before the creation
of the world” (Ephesians 1:4).
·
The kingdom
we are to inherit has been prepared “since the creation of the
world” (Matthew 25:34).
·
God’s
purpose to save us and call us to his grace “was given us in Christ
Jesus before the beginning of time” (2 Timothy 1:8-9).
·
The new
covenant has been eternally in existence. It is “the hope of eternal
life, which God, who does not lie, promised before the
beginning of time” (Titus 1:2).
Hidden
purpose
The
new covenant is extremely old. It appears new only because it didn’t
come into general force until nearly 2,000 years ago. The fact of its
existence before this time was generally hidden from human knowledge.
(Of course, the new covenant was discussed and could be found in the
Hebrew Scriptures, as we can see it there in retrospect because the
Reality has finally come.)
One
of Jesus’ purposes was to reveal the prior existence of this eternal
new covenant. Matthew, quoting one of the prophets, said of Jesus’
teaching: “I will utter things hidden since the creation of the
world” (13:35). Paul said God’s new covenant purpose to include
all people in his plan of salvation “has been kept hidden for ages
and generations, but is now disclosed to the saints” (Colossians
1:26). It was, said Paul, “God’s secret wisdom” (1 Corinthians
2:7). Elements of the new covenant, however, were presaged long before
the old covenant came to actual fruition. Here are some examples.
The
new covenant ministry of Melchizedek existed before the old covenant
ministry of Levi (Hebrews 7). The new covenant high priest in the
Melchizedek line existed before the old covenant high priest Aaron.
John tells us that the Logos existed before Moses. The new covenant
“fruits” of the Holy Spirit existed before the giving of the old
covenant law at Sinai. (After all, the Holy Spirit is eternal.) And
salvation was given by grace to people such as Abel, Enoch, Noah and
Abraham long before the old covenant people of Israel (Hebrews
11:5-12). In Galatians 3:8, Paul says God “announced the
gospel”—the new covenant—“in advance to Abraham.”
The
fact that the new covenant existed before the old has many
implications for us. As Christians, we would want to look to that
which came first—to the real thing—as our authority for truth and
that in which we put our hope. That’s the new covenant. We would not
look to the old covenant, which was but a temporary imitation—a copy
or shadow—of the new covenant that was from the beginning.
Since
the old covenant has become obsolete, it would of itself not determine
how we should worship God. The old covenant institutions—temple,
Levitical priesthood, law etched on stones, various worship
regulations and the sacrificial system—would not be normative for us
under the new. That is, we would not determine what must be done under
the new covenant by looking at the institutions of the old. The Book
of Hebrews makes this clear. So does Paul in his letters.
Shadow
and reality
Let’s
summarize the difference between the two covenants. The old covenant
institutions were the shadow; the new covenant is the eternally
existing reality. The shadow does not speak for the real thing. The
new covenant does not grow out of the old, neither is it a
magnification of the old. Rather, the old covenant grew out of the
new. Under the old covenant, Israel became the matrix or setting for
the coming of Jesus Christ and his redemptive work.
The
new covenant did not come into existence with Christ’s death,
resurrection
and coming of the Spirit (although that is when the old covenant
ended), nor did it come into existence with Abraham. The new covenant
came into existence as God’s original purpose for the human race.
For us, only one conclusion is possible: The very old “new”
covenant is our authority for how we are to live our lives in Christ
and the framework – through Christ – of our faith.
|