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The
Millennium
The Millennium Series was taught by Dr. James Modlish
The
Different Covenants Explained
(Lesson
Three)
The
Abrahamic Covenant
The
Abrahamic Covenant is first stated for us in (Gen.
12:1-3). Notice no conditions are placed on the promise.
God
promised Abraham:
[1].
a land.
[2]. to make of him a great nation.
[3]. to make his name great and to make him a
blessing.
[4]. to bless all who bless Abraham and to
curse all who curse him.
[5]. through Abraham to bless all the families
of the earth.
(Gen
13:14-18) - God shows Abraham that the land is to be his
and to be his seed's forever.
(Gen.
15:1-18) - No conditions are placed on the
promise.
The
Abrahamic Covenant is confirmed
to Isaac in (Gen. 26:3-5) and to Jacob in (Gen.
28:13-15).
Some amils
claim that the Abrahamic Covenant was conditional and
that both Abraham and the Nation Israel failed to keep
the conditions of the covenant. (See Rom. 11).
Other amils
attempt to prove that the conditions of the Abrahamic
Covenant have already been fulfilled. They do this by
claiming that Israel possessed all of the land during the
conquest of Joshua, or by comparing (Gen. 15:18-31 with 1
Kings 4:21). They claim that these two scriptures taken
together show that Solomon possessed all of the land that
God promised to Abraham, and that, therefore, the
Abrahamic Covenant has been fulfilled. The land was
promised to the seed forever.
We know that
this interpretation is incorrect for there are many
references in the prophets that God gave after the reign
of Solomon promising the land to Israel. Some of these
references follow: (Isa. 60:20-22; Isa. 62:4; Jer.
23:5-8; Eze. 47:21).
The Mosaic
Covenant
The
Palestinian Covenant has to do primarily with the
possession of the land, and is recorded for us in (Deut.
28-30). There are conditions within the covenant but the
covenant itself was unconditional. In the Palestinian
Covenant, God is confirming the unconditional covenant
that he made to Abraham, promising to give the land to
him and to his seed forever. The children of Israel are
now ready to move into the land and God makes the
additional promise, "if you are good I will bless you; if
you are not, I'll curse you," His original promise
stands.
The Davidic
Covenant
The
Davidic Covenant is recorded for us in (2 Sam. 7:4-17).
Notice the seven "I wills" in these verses: (v. 10
(2), 11, 12 (2), 13,14). Every promise is unconditional.
If the seed of David is disobedient, they will be
chastened, but God will not take away His mercy from them
(v 15).
This
covenant secures:
[1].
A Davidic house; i.e. family.
[2]. A throne; i.e. royal authority.
[3]. A Kingdom; i.e. a sphere of rule
[4]. Perpetually; forever (v 16).
Since the
amillennial position is blasted if it can be shown that
this covenant is unconditional and everlasting, the amils
must of necessity seek to prove that it is not
everlasting, but if the words have any meaning at all,
the (89th Psalm) makes it unmistakably plain that the
Davidic Covenant is unconditional
and eternal.
(Psa. 89:3,4,20-27, 33-37)
See: (Gen.
9:16; 17:7,13,19; Lev. 24:8; 2 Sam. 23:5; 1 Chr. 16:17;
Ps. 105:10; Isa. 24:5; 55:3; 61:8; Jer. 32:40; Ez. 16:60;
37:26).
The New
Covenant
The
New Covenant, commonly called The New Testament, is given
in (Jer. 31) and found repeated in (Heb. 8). This also is
an unconditional covenant.
The third
major question we asked in lesson one was
"Is
the Church, spiritual Israel?"
Most
pre-millennial commentators will answer this question
with an emphatic "No!" I am afraid this is a defensive
move made to ward off all attackers immediately. The crux
of this whole concept lies in the Two Kingdoms, the
Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of Heaven. Abraham has two
seeds! A spiritual seed intended to be fulfilled in
Israel and a physical seed to be fulfilled also in
Israel. The New Covenant, a spiritual covenant, was
definitely intended to be claimed by Israel, (Jer.
31:31-40); But they rejected this in the crucifixion of
Christ and finally in the stoning of Stephen, (Acts
7).
The
Physical promise
- (Gen. 12:1-7; 13:115-18; Rom. 11:11)
The
Spiritual promise
- (Gen. 15:1-6; Gal. 4:14-16)
The
Seed is Christ
- (Rom. 4:13-18; Gen. 17:5-8) (See also Rom.
11:13-36).
With these
principles established read: (Rom. 2:28,29; Eph. 2:12;
Rom. 9:1-8; 1 Cor. 10:18) "Israel after the Flesh"; (Gal.
6:16)
Notice the
addresses of these scriptures, there is no "confusion"
until Paul writes his epistles. We are a spiritual Israel
in the sense that we are in Christ, Abraham's seed. This
is a spiritual seed in that it is a spiritual union not a
physical, fleshly union. The New Covenant was promised to
Israel (spiritual covenant) they rejected it, the Church
gets in on the blessing: Israel is not rejected by
postponed as a nation corporately gaining the New
Covenant, for today there is no difference between Jew
and Gentile, (Rom. 10:12). The church is a mystery not
revealed to the Old Testament prophets but to Paul, (Eph.
5:32,33).
This is one
of the key biblical issues today; every cult and many
major denominations steal the promises from Israel and
apply them to themselves. Jehovah's Witnesses; Armstrong
(British Israelites); Roman Catholics; Reformed Theology.
God has not rejected Israel but set them aside for a
short time. We have been made beneficiary of the
spiritual promises through their rejection, yet we do not
usurp the promise and negate their literal fulfillment to
Israel.
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