“In that He says, "A new covenant," He has
made the first obsolete. Now what is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready
to vanish away.” (Hebrews 8:13)
The Bible
provides a wealth of evidence of a New Covenant, which will supersede the Old. However,
the rabbis claim that the Mosaic Covenant will last forever and that it
provides everything that Israel needs, with only perhaps some minor adjustments
(Psalm 1; 119:32, 92, 104, 127, 144), and the Word of God doesn’t change (Isa.
40:8). If they are correct, then the New Testament has it all wrong, and our
faith is built upon a non-existent foundation. However, Jeremiah writes:
·
Behold,
the days are coming, says 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 that I made with their fathers in the day
that I took them by the hand to
lead them out of the land of Egypt, My covenant which they broke, though I was
a husband to them, says the Lord.
But this is the covenant that I
will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put My law in their minds,
and write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My
people. No more shall every man teach his neighbor, and every man his brother,
saying, “Know the Lord,” for they
all shall know Me, from the least of them to the greatest of them, says the Lord. For I will forgive their iniquity,
and their sin I will remember no more” (Jer.
31:31-34; Heb. 8:8-9).
This New Covenant will “not be according to the [Mosaic] covenant.” Doesn’t this settle the
matter? Hasn’t a “New Covenant” superseded the Old? Not according to Jewish
authorities:
·
“By
any objective reading of the text, one fails to see any reference to a
substitution of a new covenant which will supersede the old. There is nothing
in Jeremiah’s statement to suggest that the new covenant will contain any
changes in the Law (the Mosaic Covenant).” (Gerald Sigal, The Jew and the Christian Missionary: A Jewish Response to Missionary
Christianity (New York: KTAV Publishing House, Inc., 1981), 70)
However,
since Jeremiah writes that God will establish a “new covenant,” wouldn’t this
explicitly rule out the continuation of the Mosaic Covenant, which Israel
continued to break (31:31-32)? Not according to Gerald Sigal:
·
“Obviously,
Jeremiah’s ‘new covenant’ is not to be viewed as a replacement of the existing
(Mosaic) covenant, but merely as a figure of speech for the reinvigoration and
revitalization of the old (Mosaic) covenant.” (73)
According to
Sigal, the new covenant is the Mosaic covenant with a bit of a face-lift.
However, Jeremiah claims that this “new covenant” will not resemble the
Old (31:32). Why not? Because it was a failure, at least from the perspective
of Israel’s obedience to it! Israel “broke it” as naturally as breathing. It
had done its job and had to be scrapped and replaced by something new.
Furthermore,
when we examine the features of the “new,” we find that they represent more
than a mere face-lift, but a major overhaul. There will be laws (and some of
them will be brought over from the Old) but they will be inscribed upon the
heart, and forgiveness will be permanent, whereas under the Mosaic scheme,
sacrificial offerings had to be made on a continual basis for the sins of
the people.
What type of
evidence does Sigal offer in defense of his seemingly improbable
interpretation? For one thing, he says that many prophetic writings indicate
that Israel would ultimately keep God’s Mosaic ordinances. In support of this,
he cites Ezekiel 11:19-20:
·
“Then
I will give them one heart, and I will put a new spirit within them, and take
the stony heart out of their flesh, and give them a heart of flesh, that they
may walk in My statutes and keep My judgments and do them; and they shall be My
people, and I will be their God.”
Sigal wrongly
assumes that this transplant would occur under the Mosaic administration.
However, Ezekiel’s prophecy bears a strong resemblance to Jeremiah’s prophecy
of the “new covenant,” which also alludes to a change in heart. There is
nothing here to suggest that the Mosaic Covenant is still functioning. Instead,
the very fact that God will have to unilaterally take charge and convert Israel
suggests that the Mosaic wasn’t able to produce. Under this system, blessing
depended upon obedience. However, in the eleven chapters prior, Ezekiel paints
us a portrait of Israel’s unmitigated unfaithfulness. It’s therefore clear that
this promise of blessing isn’t the result of Israel’s faithfulness to the
Mosaic Covenant! Had it been the dominant factor, Israel would be cursed, not
blessed!
Sigal then
cites Psalm 111:7-8 and Isaiah 40:8. Both maintain that God’s Word doesn’t
change. However, a change in covenants doesn’t imply that God’s Word had
changed or had been wrong. It just implies that a new time and situation might
demand a new course of action. When Israel crossed the Jordan into the Promised
Land, God’s activity changed--the manna ceased falling—but God’s Word hadn’t
changed! He never promised that manna would always fall from heaven.
Sigal’s other
defense is more to the point:
·
“That
the covenant of old is of eternal duration, never to be rescinded or to be
superseded by a new covenant, is clearly stated in Leviticus 26:44-45.” (71)
If Sigal is
correct about this verse, it offers powerful support for his contention that
the Mosaic covenant can never be superseded, and he might then be somewhat
justified in his awkward interpretation to Jeremiah. However, this isn’t the
message of these verses:
·
“Yet
for all that, when they are in the land of their enemies, I will not cast them
away, nor shall I abhor them, to utterly destroy them and break My covenant
with them; for I am the Lord their
God. But for their sake I will remember the covenant of their ancestors, whom I brought out of the land
of Egypt in the sight of the nations, that I might be their God: I am the Lord." (26:44-45).
Is this
“covenant of their ancestors” the Mosaic covenant? Instead, the “ancestors”
must refer to those who came before Moses, to the Patriarchs—Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob. Moses is not an ancestor to the Israelites that he had led
into the desert just one short year prior! Furthermore, the Hebrew word for
“ancestors” (“rishone”) meaning the “first” further solidifies this conclusion.
It was the Patriarchs who had been the first Hebrews and the first
to receive the Promise.
Had we no
other context than the above two verses, this would be enough to dismiss
Sigal’s assertion. However, the preceding context allows us to pin down the
meaning of “covenant of their ancestors,” even more precisely:
·
“Then
I will remember my covenant with Jacob,
and my covenant with Isaac and my covenant with Abraham I will
remember; they will accept their guilt, because they despised My judgments and
because their soul abhorred My statutes,”
(Lev. 26:42-43).
This clearly
is not a reference to the Mosaic covenant, but the covenant that God had made
with the Patriarchs, one that was still in effect. It’s because of God’s
unchanging, unconditional promises to
the Patriarchs that Israel had hope,
not because of the Mosaic Covenant which brought condemnation to Israel
according to their deeds. This was the prime purpose of the highly conditional
Mosaic Covenant—to show Israel the extent of her damning sins and their need of
a Savior (Gal. 3:22-24). In this, the Mosaic is diametrically opposed to the
other covenants. While blessing under the Mosaic depended upon Israel’s
obedience, the promises to the Patriarchs were guaranteed by God Himself.
How could
Sigal have made such a mistake? Weren’t there other verses to which he could
have appealed to make his case that the Mosaic Covenant was everlasting? If so,
he doesn’t seem to be aware of them. Is there any evidence that the Mosaic is
everlasting and therefore won’t be replaced?
This question
intrigued me. Do the Scriptures consistently bear witness against the
permanence of the Mosaic Covenant, the centerpiece of the Hebrew Scriptures? They
should, shouldn’t they?
THE MOSAIC COVENANT WAS TEMPORARY.
As already
mentioned, Jeremiah prophesied that God would make a “new covenant” that would
not be like the Old one. Would the Old remain side-by-side with the New?
Evidently not!
·
“Then
it shall come to pass, when you are multiplied and increased in the land in
those days,’ says the Lord, ‘that
they will say no more, 'The ark of the covenant of the Lord.' It shall not come to mind, nor shall they remember it, nor shall they
visit it, nor shall it be made anymore’” (Jer. 3:16).
The “ark of
the covenant” represented the Mosaic Covenant. It was the receptacle for the
two tablets of the Ten Commandments, the centerpiece of the Mosaic institution.
When Jeremiah said that the “ark of the covenant” will “not come to mind,” he
was also referring to the Mosaic Covenant. Why will it not come to mind?
Because it will be replaced by another system which will “feed you with
knowledge and understanding” (Jer. 3:15)! If it will not be remembered, then it
will certainly not be in effect!
The Mosaic is
not merely limited in its duration; it is also limited to its Promised Land setting. Moses cautioned Israel:
·
“You
shall not at all do as we are doing here today--every man doing whatever is right in his own eyes-- for as
yet you have not come to the rest and the inheritance which the Lord your God is giving you” (Deut. 12:8-9).
As long as Israel was not as yet in the Promised Land,
they were free from many of the legal stipulations. The fact that the
Israelites born during their desert wanderings had not been circumcised
provides strong evidence for the fact that many of Mosaic stipulations were not
being enforced prior to entering Israel (Josh. 5:5). If this covenant pertained
only to a particular time and place, then it is difficult to argue for its
permanence.
The Mosaic Covenant is
Never Referred to as “Everlasting”
This isn’t
because covenants, in general, are seldom referred as everlasting. Many covenants
are so referenced, but never the Mosaic! The first time that the term
“covenant” is used is in regards to the covenant with Noah.
·
“The
rainbow shall be in the cloud, and I will look on it to remember the everlasting
covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is on the
earth," (Genesis 9:16; Isaiah 54:9-10).
The next
reference to “covenant” is the one made with Abraham, which was subsequently
extended to Isaac and Jacob.
·
“On
the same day the Lord made a
covenant with Abram, saying: ‘To your descendants I have given this land, from
the river of Egypt to the great river, the River Euphrates—‘” (Gen. 15:18).
This too was
an “everlasting” covenant (Gen. 17:19, 13; Psalm 105:9-10, 42; 1 Chron.
16:15-17). This same covenant was subsequently extended to the other
Patriarchs. (How could these covenants be called “everlasting” if the New
Covenant is also described as “everlasting?” Simply because their promises were
all absorbed by the New Covenant!)
So far, we’re
two for two. The Mosaic Covenant is the next at bat. This one formed the center
of Israelite thought and practice and had center stage throughout the bulk of
the Hebrew Scriptures. However, it is never referred to as
“everlasting,” “eternal,” or by any other term to that effect. This absence
is profound in light of the prominent place of this covenant and also that all
the other divinely appointed covenants are everlasting!
The next
covenant we encounter is a “perpetual covenant” given within the framework of
the Mosaic, the Sabbath: “It is a sign between Me and the children of
Israel forever; for in six days the Lord
made the heavens and the earth, and on the seventh day He rested and was refreshed,”
(Exo. 31:17). However, the Sabbath shouldn’t be understood to suggest that the
Mosaic is also “perpetual.” Had it been clearly established that the entire
Mosaic regime is everlasting, then it would have been redundant to state that
its various features were also everlasting. Instead, the Sabbath is
distinguished as perpetual because it was obvious that the Mosaic wasn’t!
The next
mention of a “covenant” is also found within the context of the Mosaic
Covenant. This was the promise to Phinehas of a “covenant of an everlasting
priesthood” (Num. 25:13). However, this covenant also stood in contrast with
the Mosaic Covenant. Had the Mosaic also been “everlasting,” it would have been
redundant to offer Phinehas, the Levite, an everlasting priesthood since all
the specifications of the Mosaic would have already been understood as
everlasting, including the provision of an everlasting priesthood for the
Levites. This covenant was also called “everlasting” because its promise was a
done deal. The promise would ultimately be fulfilled in the priesthood of all
believers (Exo. 19:6; 1 Pet. 2:5).
The next
mention of a divinely commissioned covenant is in regards to David. This too is
an “everlasting covenant.”
·
"Although
my house is not so with God, yet He has made with me an everlasting covenant,
ordered in all things and secure. For this is all my salvation and all my
desire; will He not make it increase?” (2 Sam. 23:5; Isa. 55:3).
It seems as
if the Mosaic covenant is deliberately contrasted with these others. Why is it
that a covenant so important and central is the one not mentioned as “everlasting?” Fulfillment of the other covenants
depended upon one thing—the faithfulness of God. The Mosaic depended upon the
faithfulness of humankind. Scripture
always places these two types of faithfulness into radical contrast. God is
always faithful while humankind has habitually perverted themselves.
The Mosaic Covenant was
Inadequate and would have to be Set Aside!
The New
Testament maintains that although the Mosaic Covenant wasn’t flawed, it was
inadequate (Rom. 8:3; 7:5; Heb. 7:18-19; 10:1). A hammer might be perfectly
crafted. However, it wasn’t designed to drill a hole. Likewise, the Mosaic Covenant was perfect,
but it wasn’t equipped to cut through sin and backsliding. Is this
understanding a pious Christian invention, or is this what we also encounter
within the Hebrew Scriptures?
It should be
obvious that the Mosaic Covenant was conditional. If Israel was obedient, she
would receive blessing; if disobedient, she would be cursed (Lev. 26; Deut.
28-29). In contrast, the Noahic covenant unconditionally
promised that God would never again
destroy the world with a flood as he had done saving only Noah and his family.
It would stand as such despite the extent of sin upon the earth. In contrast to
this, the Mosaic “promises” depended
upon the obedience of Israel to God’s commands.
This meant
that when sinful Israel required God’s mercy, she could not appeal to the
provisions of the Mosaic Covenant. These would only trigger condemnation.
Israel had to appeal to former promises from the “covenant of your fathers:
·
“When
you are in distress, and all these things come upon you in the latter days,
when you turn to the Lord your God
and obey His voice (for the Lord
your God is a merciful God), He
will not forsake you nor destroy you, nor forget the covenant of your fathers
which He swore to them” (Deut. 4:30-31, also Lev. 26:42-45).
.
The
Mosaic Covenant was Grace-Deficient!
Hope sprang
anew from “covenant of your fathers.” Which covenant was this? Undeniably, this
was the covenant of the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (Exo. 3; 13:5,
11; Deut. 8:18; 29:13; 30:5, 20; 31:7). Moses wasn’t their “fathers.” We find
no Hebrew prophet crying out, “God will remember the covenant that He made with
Moses and have mercy upon you!” However, just about all of the prophets
explicitly proclaim the restoration of Israel, but this will not be based upon
Israel’s obedience to the Law. Instead, the Law had brought condemnation. Its
requirement, that the curses had to be brought upon Israel (Deut. 27:26), would
have to be set aside in order for Israel to find mercy.
The Law was
inadequate. It could never provide what Israel needed. Israel’s problems were
much deeper. They required more than rules upheld by positive and negative
reinforcements. They required a change of heart, but this was the very thing
they lacked. Moses had promised “stiff-necked” Israel that sometime in the future
God would “circumcise your heart and the heart of your descendants to love the
Lord your God with all your heart
and with all your soul that you may live,” (Deut. 30:6). Israel would need a
“circumcised” heart in order to love God and live, but that this hadn’t
happened yet! This was like telling Israel that she was doomed to failure!
Even more to
the point, Moses told them, “Yet the Lord
has not given you a heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear, to this
very day,” (Deut. 29:4). Something had to change! Israel lacked the heart for
God despite all of her proclamations otherwise. She would turn her heart from
the Covenant, and tragedy would overtake her. Moses was prophetically explicit
about this in the Song he taught her: "Then he (Israel) forsook God who
made him” (Deut. 32:15).
Despite all
the Mosaic warnings, this is exactly what Israel would do in the future. Moses
was sure of it:
·
“For
I know that after my death you will become utterly corrupt, and turn aside from
the way which I have commanded you; and evil will befall you in the latter
days, because you will do evil in the sight of the Lord, to provoke Him to anger through the work of your
hands." (Deut. 31:29)
Joshua
reiterated this message of gloom to Israel in the midst of Israel’s
protestations to the contrary.
·
But
Joshua said to the people, “You cannot serve the Lord, for He is
a holy God. He is a jealous
God; He will not forgive your transgressions nor your sins.” (Josh. 24:19)
If hope
couldn’t spring forth from the Mosaic Covenant, there had to come something
else. The Mosaic couldn’t be everlasting. It would have been an everlasting
flop. It had to be replaced, but Israel had to learn her lesson first, the hard
way.
These types
of statements are not to be found in other religious or political literature.
What politician ever put forth a program and then stated, without any
equivocation, that it was doomed to fail? What religious leader ever tried to
promote a religion and then declared that it wouldn’t work, and the followers
wouldn’t receive anything they wanted? Why do the Hebrew Scriptures contain
such negative messages unless they were true and that the people were
completely convinced that they were God’s very words, even though they didn’t
like the messages?
Indications that the
Mosaic Covenant had to be Replaced!
Israel had
been promised that they would be a nation of priests (Exo. 19:6; Isa 61:6) and
that God would dwell in their midst (Lev. 26:11-12; Joel 3:17, 21). However,
their present situation stood in
direct contradiction to these promises. They couldn’t bear God’s presence (Exo.
20:19), and He couldn’t bear theirs (Exo. 33:2-3). Although He would meet with
Moses in the tent of meeting, this tent was placed far outside the camp and no
one, apart of Moses and Joshua, could approach it (Exo. 33:7).
The Temple
also communicated the same forbidding presence of the Lord. Only the priests
could enter into the Holy Place, and only the High Priest could enter into the
High Holy Place, but only once a year. When they did enter, it could only be
after they had fulfilled every specification (Lev. 16:2). God’s presence was a
terrifying reality. This was a far cry from what Israel had been promised.
Israel would be so intimate with God, that it was described as a marriage
(Hosea 2:18-19; Isa. 62:4). For this portrait to be realized, the Law and its
Temple curtain of separation would have to come down.
The
institution of the Temple offerings also conveyed the inadequacy of the Mosaic
Law and Covenant. The fact that they had to be continually offered meant that
they never covered subsequent sins. This meant that whenever an Israelite
entertained a covetous thought, he was again in sin and therefore deserved to
be cursed. This placed them continuously under God’s condemnation. Nor did
these offerings remove the discomfort of the thought of this terrifying God.
Indeed, discomfort was purposely a necessary part of Israel’s relationship to
her God. Israel was promised curses for any and every infraction (Deut.
27:15-26).
Perhaps most
significantly, the Mosaic Covenant never offered the promise of eternal life.
If Law-keeping couldn’t guarantee eternal life, what good was it? Paul had
stated that Christians were the most pitiful people if there wasn’t a heaven (1
Cor. 15:19). It wasn’t that there wasn’t any indication of eternal life within
the Mosaic revelation. Jesus had corrected the anti-resurrection beliefs of the
Sadducees with Exodus 3:6: “I am
the God of your father--the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob." This proved that the three Patriarchs still existed. God doesn’t
say that He was their God, but that He is their God! Instead, the
Law was disturbingly silent in regards to how to obtain this eternal life. Evidently, this was another way that God
covertly hinted to Israel that this Mosaic Covenant was just temporary and
would be superseded by a New Covenant that would guarantee eternal life.
In short, the
Mosaic stipulations and experiences do not represent the ultimate portrait of
Israel’s future blessedness. They’re miles behind! Something had to change.
The New Covenant will Supersede the
Old!
The Mosaic
Covenant is not pictured as part of the ultimate
answer. The portrait that emerges from Hebrew Scriptures does not show Israel
as finally developing more self-control and obedience to perform the Mosaic Law
successfully in order to secure blessing and deliverance.
According to
prophecy, God’s eventual deliverance will not come because Israel wakes up,
smells the coffee, and repents on her own. God will have to initiate Israel’s
return, and it will not occur because Israel will eventually deserve God’s
blessings. Rather, God will have mercy upon Israel.
·
"For
the Lord will judge His people and
have compassion on His servants, when He sees that their power is gone” (Deut. 32:36).
Instead of
doing something positive to warrant God’s mercy, it is Israel’s destitution
that will move God. According to Moses, Israel will violate the Mosaic Covenant
and bring down upon themselves the promised curses. It is God who then will
have “compassion.” How will He do this?
According to Jeremiah, it will be through a “new covenant” (Jer. 31:31-34), but
it will also be done in a radically different way. Moses knew that Israel would
fail and that her problem was one of the heart, and if Israel had a heart
problem, she would need a heart answer (Deut. 30:6).
Without a
changed heart, Israel inevitably went astray. They needed to be born again with
a new heart. They needed a covenant that would go far further than the Mosaic.
Ezekiel
states that even though Israel consistently disgraced God before the other
nations, God would act lovingly on her behalf:
·
“I
will cleanse you from all your filthiness and from all your idols. I will give
you a new heart and put a new
spirit within you; I will take
the heart of stone out of your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. I will put My Spirit within you…
(36:25-27; 11:19-20).
The very
thing Israel had lacked under the Old, they would receive under the New—a new
heart and the indwelling Holy Spirit. Jeremiah associates this necessary change
with a new and permanent covenant.
·
“Then
I will give them one heart and one way, that they may fear Me forever, for the
good of them and their children after them. And I will make an everlasting
covenant with them, that I will not turn away from doing them good; but I
will put My fear in their hearts so that they will not depart from Me,” (Jer.
32:39-40).
This is the guarantee of a hope which isn’t found
under the Mosaic Covenant. As a result of God’s grace, “they will not depart
from me.” This is why the Mosaic
couldn’t be called “eternal.” As long as blessing depended upon Israel, no
guarantee could be made, but if it depended upon God, He could make an ironclad
guarantee. God would succeed in securing Israel’s love only through changing
her.
In contrast
to Israel’s cycle of rebellion and devastation, the New Covenant would be
characterized by unending peace.
·
“Moreover
I will make a covenant of peace with them, and it
shall be an everlasting covenant
with them; I will establish them and multiply them, and I will set My
sanctuary in their midst forevermore. My tabernacle also shall be with them;
indeed I will be their God, and they shall be My people,” (Ezekiel 37:26-27;
34:25-26; Isaiah 54:9-10).
There’s no
reason to regard “sanctuary” and “tabernacle” as literal buildings (Amos 9:11;
2Sam. 7:11; Zech. 6:12-13). The intimacy between God and His people makes a
building unnecessary and counterproductive. He
will be the sanctuary! Walls will no longer separate. God will enter into the
most intimate form of relationship with His people. Hosea points to a future,
radical covenant that would ensure God’s unfailing love:
·
“In
that day I will make a covenant for them with the beasts of
the field…I will betroth you to Me forever; Yes, I will betroth you to
Me in righteousness and justice, in lovingkindness and mercy.” (Hosea 2:18-19;
Isa. 62:4)
This would be
a “forever” covenant. It wasn’t a covenant that had already been in place.
Hosea says, “I will make a covenant!” He lays down no conditions that
Israel must fulfill in order to enter into her blessedness as had been
characteristic of the Mosaic Covenant. Instead, God will enter into a permanent
relationship with Israel; He will marry His people. As Hosea had been
instructed to take his adulterous wife Gomer into seclusion, God would
unilaterally do the same for Israel.
The idea of a
marriage with God must have seemed somewhat blasphemous to Mosaic Israel. Her
experience had been characterized by God’s words to Moses-- "Tell
Aaron your brother not to come at
just any time into the Holy Place inside the veil, before the mercy seat which
is on the ark, lest he die” (Lev. 16:2)—a far cry from marriage!
Isaiah concurs that this “yet to be”
covenant would be “everlasting.”
·
“And
(God) will make with them an everlasting
covenant. Their descendants shall be known among the Gentiles, and their
offspring among the people. All
who see them shall acknowledge them, that they are the posterity whom the Lord has blessed," (Isa. 61:8-9).
Under the
Law, separation from the contaminating influence of other peoples was strictly
enforced. Under the New, God’s people would be among the nations!
Could the
Mosaic have merely been emended to accommodate these radical changes? No! A
covenant is a contract to which no one could add or subtract (Deut. 4:2). Changes
would require a new covenant and fresh blood to seal it! Therefore, the Mosaic
had to be replaced and would no longer be remembered (Jer. 3:14-16).
While there
are many verses that state that God will have mercy upon His people, there are no
verses that affirm that God will have mercy by virtue of the covenant He made
with Moses! This covenant had been instituted for a limited time and place
(Deut. 12:8-9). It wouldn’t figure directly into the establishment of the New
kingdom. Instead, God’s mercy is predicated upon something radically different,
but something to which the Mosaic bore witness. The prophetic passages look
beyond a redemption based upon the offerings mediated by the Levitical
priesthood, to a redeeming God’s unmediated intervention.
A New Atonement
Deuteronomy
32 contains a song God directed Moses to teach to Israel. It represented both a
disturbing warning and a prophetic overview of Israel’s blessing, rebellion,
and eventual deliverance. Surprisingly, the song ends on a positive note.
·
"Rejoice,
O Gentiles, with His people; for He will avenge the blood of His servants, and
render vengeance to His adversaries; He will provide atonement for His land
and His people" (Deut. 32:43).
If the Mosaic
system had been adequate, why didn’t this feat of “atonement” fall upon the
Levites, who had been divinely commissioned to provide atonement? Where are the
Levites and the Mosaic system at the time of Israel’s eventual deliverance? It
is never this system that comes to the rescue but God Himself.
·
“Help
us, O God of our salvation, for the glory of Your name; and deliver us, and
provide atonement for
our sins, for Your name's sake!” (Psalm 79:9; also 65:3).
A new High
Priest, in line with the priesthood of the enigmatic Melchizedek (Psalm 110:4),
will trump the Levitical priesthood, which required that all priests had to
come from the tribe of Levi. This “King of Righteousness” only took the
Scriptural stage once—three verses worth (Gen. 14:18-20)—but he made an
enduring impact. One reason that he is enigmatic is that he is both a king and
a priest, something forbidden under Mosaic Law. This suggests a change in
guard.
Zechariah
prophesied about a distant individual who would also be a “priest on His
throne.” This Person will “build the temple of the Lord” (Zech. 6:13).
Christianity understands that Jesus “built” this very temple through His
incarnation, taking on the form of a man and “tabernacling” among us” (John
1:14; 2:19).
Along with a
radically different High Priest, a new priesthood is prophesied. Israel was
promised that she would be a nation of priests (Exodus 19:6; Isa. 61:6),
something she had never experienced. This nation of priests, suggestive of the
New Covenant, would have to replace the Levitical Mosaic order that restricted the
priesthood to Levites.
At first
glance, this seems to come into conflict with the New Testament promise that
all believers would be priests (1Pet. 2:5, 9; Rev. 1:6). How could Israel
assume the promised priesthood while this was a standing promise to the
believers? This is easily understood by recognizing that Israel must also come to a faith in Christ in order
to receive their promised priesthood along with all other believers.
This
understanding also helps us reconcile the more difficult verses. Jeremiah said
that to the degree that God’s promises to David are unshakable, they are
equally unshakable to the Levites (33:18, 20-21; Num. 25:12-13). On the surface, this is troubling for
Christianity. If the Levitical priesthood remains, so too the Mosaic Covenant!
However, the prophecies do not say that the Levitical priesthood will remain unchanged! They merely state that God
will remain faithful to the Levitical priests. How will He remain faithful to them?
They would become priests according to the same promise that would make all
Israel priests. As we’ve seen, there are other ways to function as priests
besides offering animal sacrifices. God instructed Israel to offer the
“sacrifice (literally “calves”) of our lips” as her offering of repentance
(Hosea 14:2; also Psalm 69:30-31; 50:13-14), not actual calves.
God had to
pay the price of “atonement.” Levitical atonement was sorely inadequate. It was
this “atonement” that would provide the basis of the “everlasting covenant.”
·
“And
I will establish My covenant with you. Then you shall
know that I am the Lord, that you
may remember and be ashamed, and never open your mouth anymore because of your
shame, when I provide you an atonement for all you have
done" (Ezekiel 16:59-63 ).
This covenant
will not be established on the basis of any Levitical ministrations, but on the
basis of the unilateral grace of God as promised in the covenant God made with
Abraham.
Israel’s hope
had always been Messianic, not Mosaic. It looked towards a Redeemer who would refine
the Israel with His “fire,” rather than the sprinkling of the blood of animals,
which God never really desired (Psalm 51:16-17):
·
"Behold,
I send My messenger, and he will prepare the way before Me. And the Lord, whom
you seek, will suddenly come to his
temple, even the messenger of the
covenant, in whom you delight. Behold, He is coming,’ says the Lord of hosts. ‘But who can endure the
day of His coming? And who can stand when He appears? For He is like a refiner's fire and like launderer's
soap.” (Malachi 3:1-2).
“The
Messenger of the covenant” is no less than God Himself, coming to make His
atonement. He is “the Lord,” and it’s “His” temple. He is the “refiner’s fire;”
He will purify His people!
Blood of the New Atonement
A new
covenant requires a fresh blood offering (Exo. 24:8; Heb. 9:18). An everlasting
covenant requires a special blood offering!
·
“Thus
says the Lord: ‘In an acceptable
time I have heard You, and in the day of salvation I have helped You; I will preserve
You and give You as a covenant
to the people, to restore the earth, to cause them to inherit the desolate
heritages.’” (Isaiah 49:8; 42:6)
Presumably, God will “preserve” Him, because He will have
to endure an ordeal through which He will need to be rescued from the dead. Zechariah
adds that, “because of the blood of your
covenant, I will set your prisoners free from the waterless pit” (Zech. 9:11). To whom does the “your” refer? Obviously to the humble King
Messiah who comes riding on a donkey and who will “speak peace to the
nations” (Zech. 9:10). What role do the Levites play here?
None!
It’s clear
that Israel’s hope wasn’t in the Mosaic system but in a Savior who Himself
would provide atonement. That’s why He is often called the “Redeemer” (Job
19:25; Psalm 19:14, 78:35; Isaiah 41:14, 43:14, 44:6, 24; 47:4…). It is the
Redeemer who will ultimately provide the payment to deliver His people from sin
(Psalm 49:15). That’s why His people are called the “ransomed” or the
“redeemed” (Isaiah 35:9-10; 51:11; 62:12). Nor is redemption ever accomplished
on the basis of Israel’s righteousness, but upon the Lord’s (Isaiah 61:10)!
How does the
Mosaic Covenant fit into this gracious portrait? It doesn’t! Although it is
“holy and righteous” (Rom. 7:12; Psalm 119), It’s never portrayed as the source
of hope but as the source of condemnation, which points to the Hope.
Result of the New
Atonement
Under the
Mosaic regime, “righteousness” was a matter of an individual’s performance.
·
“And
the Lord commanded us to observe
all these statutes, to fear the Lord
our God, for our good always, that He might preserve us alive, as it is this day. Then it will be
righteousness for us, if we are careful to observe all these commandments
before the Lord our God, as He has
commanded us” (Deut. 6:24-25; 24:15).
Under the Messiah, this will all change. Righteousness
will no longer be something that we attain to through our efforts. Instead, we
will receive the Messiah’s righteousness through the grace of God alone.
·
"Behold,
the days are coming," says
the Lord, "That I will raise
to David a Branch of righteousness; a King shall reign and prosper, and execute
judgment and righteousness in the earth. In His days Judah will be saved, and
Israel will dwell safely; now this is
His name by which He will be called: THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.” (Jer. 23:5-6; 33:6; Isa. 45:24-25; Dan.
9:24)
This couldn’t have occurred
under the Mosaic Covenant, its antithesis (Deut. 6:25)! These prophecies
proclaim that it is no longer about us, but about a righteousness that will
come to us as a gift rather than an earned salary.
The New Testament is the revelation of these truths—not
that the Messiah will help us become righteous, but that He will become our
imperishable righteousness (1 Cor. 1:30; 2 Cor. 5:21).
Why then the Mosaic Law if it was only temporary and
would bring condemnation rather than salvation? Again, the New Testament
provides the perfect answer, which knits together all the pieces:
“Is the law then against the promises
of God? Certainly not! For if there had been a law given which could have given
life, truly righteousness would have been by the law. But the Scripture has
confined all under sin, that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be
given to those who believe. But before faith came, we were kept under guard by
the law, kept for the faith which would afterward be revealed. Therefore the
law was our tutor to bring us
to Christ, that we might be justified by faith.” (Gal. 3:21-24)
Throughout
the writing of this chapter, I had to stop and worship, awed as I was by the
beauty of God’s design. I enjoy movies whose ending brings a harmonious
resolution, knitting together all the loose ends. God’s Word does the same
thing. Not to say that there aren’t any remaining rough edges! There should be by
virtue of our limited understanding, but the overall contours are incredibly
harmonious. These point to a grand design, one that I think requires a Grand
Designer. If the Hebrew Scriptures were merely the product of various independent
writers sharing a common faith, such a congruent design would scarcely have
emerged.
Not only are
the Hebrew Scriptures elegantly crafted, they also march in lock step with the
New Testament. To behold this is awe-inspiring; it’s like seeing the face of
God.
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