The Sinaitic covenant is the first of two covenants made with a people through a mediator. It was made with the Israelites at Sinai through Moses, so it is not quite accurate to call it the Mosaic covenant because it was not made with Moses. It is commonly referred to as the ‘Old Covenant,’ though in fact it is only called that once in the Bible, in 2 Cor 3:14. The writer to the Hebrews refers to it repeatedly as the First Covenant, which is most significant because it suggests that God views it as something different to those covenants that went before it.
The most prominent feature of the Sinaitic covenant is the law. It is interesting to observe its conditional nature in contrast to the covenants of promise.
Gen 9:11(Noahic). Thus I establish My covenant with you: Never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of the flood.”
Gen 12:2 (Abrahamic). “I will make you a great nation; I will bless you and make your name great; and you shall be a blessing……….And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”
1Chron 17:11 (Davidic). “And it shall be, when your days are fulfilled, when you must go to be with your fathers, that I will set up your seed after you, who will be one of your sons; and I will establish his kingdom.”
Exod 19:5 (Sinaitic). “Now therefore if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be a special treasure to Me above all people.”
The “I will” of the covenants of promise contrasts with the “if you will” of the Sinaitic. Note also the “He will” when the New Covenant is announced.
Matt 1:21. “…..And you shall call His name Jesus for He will save His people from their sins.”
Luke 1:32. “He will be great and will be called the Son of the Highest; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father, David.”
2 Cor, 20. ‘For all the promises of God In Him are Yes, and in Him, Amen, to the glory of God.’ The covenants of promise are fulfilled in Christ.
The prominence of the Law in the Sinaitic Covenant causes some to suggest that it was a republication of the covenant of works; that there was a second way of righteousness available to Israel; that if only they could have kept the Mosaic law then they would have been justified by God. This seems to me to be quite ridiculous. If Adam, coming perfectly pure and righteous from the hand of God, could not keep God’s commands, what chance had the sinful, fallen Israelites? None at all! The very existence of the Levitical sacrifices indicates that it was never supposed that the Israelites could live lives acceptable to God in their own individual strengths.
To understand the purposes of the Sinaitic covenant, we need to go back to the covenant with Abraham. In that covenant there was the promise of a Seed (Gen 12:3b; 13:14-15; Gal 3:16). But when we looked at the Abrahamic covenant we saw that there were promises to Abraham’s physical descendants (physical land, great nation, twelve princes- Gen 17:20) pictured by Ishmael. But the covenant is to the children of promise (Gen 17:21; Gal 4:21-31. cf. 3:7) pictured by Isaac. To them there are spiritual promises, obtained by grace through faith, through the true Seed, Christ (Rom 4:13-14; Gal 3:16; Heb 11:13-16). But the Seed, Christ, was to be born, according to the flesh, of the physical seed of Abraham. For this to happen, it was necessary that Abraham’s descendants should be preserved as a separate entity and kept from merging into the surrounding nations until Christ should come. Therefore, when Abraham’s progeny began to multiply, God brought them into Egypt, but still kept them separate in the land of Goshen (Gen 46:34).
These people were then taken out of Egypt, and at Sinai they were bonded into a nation and separated from the surrounding tribes by circumcision and the Mosaic Law until the coming of Christ. One was brought into Israel by physical birth and this was ratified by circumcision; faith was not a requirement. By contrast, one is brought into the Church of God by a second, spiritual birth, exemplified by faith (John 3:5; 1 Cor 1:2; 1 John 1:6; 1 Peter 1:3) which is then ratified by baptism (eg. Acts 8:12; 18:8). Problems arise when the old and new covenants are confused and Mosaic practices are imposed upon the churches of Christ.
The Sinaitic covenant did not replace or improve the covenant with Abraham. It was added (Gal 3:17) until the coming of Christ and the New Covenant, when it became obsolete and passed away (Heb 8:13). Those Israelites who had the faith of Abraham had it credited to them as righteousness as they looked forward, like Abraham, by faith to the coming Seed (cf. John 8:56; Luke 2:25-6). To those Israelites who lacked the faith of Abraham, the law had other purposes:-
Firstly, it restrained sin (Gal 3:19). This is the purpose of all law, secular as well as Divine. People are less disposed to commit murder, theft or traffic offenses if they know that they are likely to suffer a judicial penalty for their acts.
Secondly, it proclaimed the majesty and righteousness of God. ‘For what great nation is there that has God so near to it, as the LORD our God is to us…..and what great nation is there that has such statutes and righteous judgments as are in all this law that I set before you this day?’ (Deut 4:7f).
Thirdly, it was, and still is, a schoolmaster or tutor to lead sinners to Christ (Gal 3:24; Heb 10:1-4). Not all sins were expiable under the law (Num 15:27-31; Acts 13:39). A man like David, who had committed sins for which Moses’ law gave no way of atonement was locked up to the mercy of God ( Psalm 32:1-2; Psalm 51 esp. vs 16-17). It also reveals sin to those who were unconscious of it. Paul writes, “…..I would not have known sin except through the law. For I would not have known covetousness unless the law had said, ‘You shall not covet’” (Rom 7:7). It provoked sinners under the old covenant to look to the coming Christ. Consider Psalm 24: ‘Who shall ascend into the hill of the LORD? Or who may stand in His holy place? He who has pure hands and a clean heart, who has not lifted up His soul to an idol, nor sworn deceitfully.’ Who among us is going to say that his hands are perfectly clean, and his heart perfectly pure? That there has never ever been a rival to God in his heart and that he has been perfectly truthful all his days? There is only One who can truthfully claim that sort of perfect righteousness- the Lord Jesus Christ, our King, the Lord of glory (James 2:1). ‘Lift up your heads, O you gates, and be lifted up you everlasting doors! And the King of glory shall come in.’ As they offered the sacrifices required by law, the Israelites could look forward with the eyes of faith to the One who would conquer sin and death, establish a perfect righteousness, and sit down at God’s right hand (cf. Jer 23:5-6).
The Old Testament law was centred around the Decalogue or Ten Commandments, which are a summary of God’s eternal moral law. The Commandments were given before the Tabernacle was built. The Ark of the covenant was built next and the stone tablets on which God Himself had written the Commandments was placed inside it within the Holiest Place. The judicial and ceremonial laws were not given the same respect, showing that God desires moral righteousness more than ceremonial punctiliousness (cf. Isaiah 1:11ff; Jer 7; Amos 5:21-24). The Decalogue is eternal. You can find each of the Ten Commandments in the Bible prior to their publication in Exodus 20. Indeed, I suggest that they applied to Adam and Eve in the Garden. Imagine that Adam had strangled Eve, or built an altar to worship the sun; do you suppose that God would have said, “Oh, that’s alright, Adam! Just so long as you don’t eat the apple”? The Puritan, Thomas Boston shows quite convincingly that in his one act of disobedience, Adam broke most, if not all, the Commandments. Certainly, he listened to his wife rather than God, put his own desires before God's commands, coveted that which God had denied him and stole it; he dishonoured his heavenly Father and murdered all his descendants.
The Commandments are written on the consciences of all men (Rom 2:14-15), though their imprint is smudged and defaced by the Fall. They were written on stone tablets by the finger of God for the Israelites, and they are written again on the hearts of believers (Psalm 40:6-8; Heb 8:10 etc.). Thus the re-writing of the tablets after they were smashed by Moses in his distress at the golden calf incident (Exod 32:19; 34:4) wonderfully foreshadows their re-writing on the hearts of Christians after their defacement by the Fall.
The ceremonial and other laws were not without purpose in the mind of God. They stressed the purity and holiness of God and served to keep the Israelites separate from the heathen nations. The bloody sacrifices showed forth the coming atonement of Christ and pointed the Jews to their need of a righteousness outside of themselves. The judicial part of the law, in which death was prescribed for adulterers, homosexuals, sorcerers and others are by no means binding on believers today. They do, however, show forth the detestation of God for such practices, and those who practise such sins and do not repent will surely find themselves under His righteous wrath. But we do not stone adulterers today; rather, we emulate the Lord Jesus and bid them, “Go, and sin no more” (John 8:11).
[continued]
The most prominent feature of the Sinaitic covenant is the law. It is interesting to observe its conditional nature in contrast to the covenants of promise.
Gen 9:11(Noahic). Thus I establish My covenant with you: Never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of the flood.”
Gen 12:2 (Abrahamic). “I will make you a great nation; I will bless you and make your name great; and you shall be a blessing……….And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”
1Chron 17:11 (Davidic). “And it shall be, when your days are fulfilled, when you must go to be with your fathers, that I will set up your seed after you, who will be one of your sons; and I will establish his kingdom.”
Exod 19:5 (Sinaitic). “Now therefore if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be a special treasure to Me above all people.”
The “I will” of the covenants of promise contrasts with the “if you will” of the Sinaitic. Note also the “He will” when the New Covenant is announced.
Matt 1:21. “…..And you shall call His name Jesus for He will save His people from their sins.”
Luke 1:32. “He will be great and will be called the Son of the Highest; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father, David.”
2 Cor, 20. ‘For all the promises of God In Him are Yes, and in Him, Amen, to the glory of God.’ The covenants of promise are fulfilled in Christ.
The prominence of the Law in the Sinaitic Covenant causes some to suggest that it was a republication of the covenant of works; that there was a second way of righteousness available to Israel; that if only they could have kept the Mosaic law then they would have been justified by God. This seems to me to be quite ridiculous. If Adam, coming perfectly pure and righteous from the hand of God, could not keep God’s commands, what chance had the sinful, fallen Israelites? None at all! The very existence of the Levitical sacrifices indicates that it was never supposed that the Israelites could live lives acceptable to God in their own individual strengths.
To understand the purposes of the Sinaitic covenant, we need to go back to the covenant with Abraham. In that covenant there was the promise of a Seed (Gen 12:3b; 13:14-15; Gal 3:16). But when we looked at the Abrahamic covenant we saw that there were promises to Abraham’s physical descendants (physical land, great nation, twelve princes- Gen 17:20) pictured by Ishmael. But the covenant is to the children of promise (Gen 17:21; Gal 4:21-31. cf. 3:7) pictured by Isaac. To them there are spiritual promises, obtained by grace through faith, through the true Seed, Christ (Rom 4:13-14; Gal 3:16; Heb 11:13-16). But the Seed, Christ, was to be born, according to the flesh, of the physical seed of Abraham. For this to happen, it was necessary that Abraham’s descendants should be preserved as a separate entity and kept from merging into the surrounding nations until Christ should come. Therefore, when Abraham’s progeny began to multiply, God brought them into Egypt, but still kept them separate in the land of Goshen (Gen 46:34).
These people were then taken out of Egypt, and at Sinai they were bonded into a nation and separated from the surrounding tribes by circumcision and the Mosaic Law until the coming of Christ. One was brought into Israel by physical birth and this was ratified by circumcision; faith was not a requirement. By contrast, one is brought into the Church of God by a second, spiritual birth, exemplified by faith (John 3:5; 1 Cor 1:2; 1 John 1:6; 1 Peter 1:3) which is then ratified by baptism (eg. Acts 8:12; 18:8). Problems arise when the old and new covenants are confused and Mosaic practices are imposed upon the churches of Christ.
The Sinaitic covenant did not replace or improve the covenant with Abraham. It was added (Gal 3:17) until the coming of Christ and the New Covenant, when it became obsolete and passed away (Heb 8:13). Those Israelites who had the faith of Abraham had it credited to them as righteousness as they looked forward, like Abraham, by faith to the coming Seed (cf. John 8:56; Luke 2:25-6). To those Israelites who lacked the faith of Abraham, the law had other purposes:-
Firstly, it restrained sin (Gal 3:19). This is the purpose of all law, secular as well as Divine. People are less disposed to commit murder, theft or traffic offenses if they know that they are likely to suffer a judicial penalty for their acts.
Secondly, it proclaimed the majesty and righteousness of God. ‘For what great nation is there that has God so near to it, as the LORD our God is to us…..and what great nation is there that has such statutes and righteous judgments as are in all this law that I set before you this day?’ (Deut 4:7f).
Thirdly, it was, and still is, a schoolmaster or tutor to lead sinners to Christ (Gal 3:24; Heb 10:1-4). Not all sins were expiable under the law (Num 15:27-31; Acts 13:39). A man like David, who had committed sins for which Moses’ law gave no way of atonement was locked up to the mercy of God ( Psalm 32:1-2; Psalm 51 esp. vs 16-17). It also reveals sin to those who were unconscious of it. Paul writes, “…..I would not have known sin except through the law. For I would not have known covetousness unless the law had said, ‘You shall not covet’” (Rom 7:7). It provoked sinners under the old covenant to look to the coming Christ. Consider Psalm 24: ‘Who shall ascend into the hill of the LORD? Or who may stand in His holy place? He who has pure hands and a clean heart, who has not lifted up His soul to an idol, nor sworn deceitfully.’ Who among us is going to say that his hands are perfectly clean, and his heart perfectly pure? That there has never ever been a rival to God in his heart and that he has been perfectly truthful all his days? There is only One who can truthfully claim that sort of perfect righteousness- the Lord Jesus Christ, our King, the Lord of glory (James 2:1). ‘Lift up your heads, O you gates, and be lifted up you everlasting doors! And the King of glory shall come in.’ As they offered the sacrifices required by law, the Israelites could look forward with the eyes of faith to the One who would conquer sin and death, establish a perfect righteousness, and sit down at God’s right hand (cf. Jer 23:5-6).
The Old Testament law was centred around the Decalogue or Ten Commandments, which are a summary of God’s eternal moral law. The Commandments were given before the Tabernacle was built. The Ark of the covenant was built next and the stone tablets on which God Himself had written the Commandments was placed inside it within the Holiest Place. The judicial and ceremonial laws were not given the same respect, showing that God desires moral righteousness more than ceremonial punctiliousness (cf. Isaiah 1:11ff; Jer 7; Amos 5:21-24). The Decalogue is eternal. You can find each of the Ten Commandments in the Bible prior to their publication in Exodus 20. Indeed, I suggest that they applied to Adam and Eve in the Garden. Imagine that Adam had strangled Eve, or built an altar to worship the sun; do you suppose that God would have said, “Oh, that’s alright, Adam! Just so long as you don’t eat the apple”? The Puritan, Thomas Boston shows quite convincingly that in his one act of disobedience, Adam broke most, if not all, the Commandments. Certainly, he listened to his wife rather than God, put his own desires before God's commands, coveted that which God had denied him and stole it; he dishonoured his heavenly Father and murdered all his descendants.
The Commandments are written on the consciences of all men (Rom 2:14-15), though their imprint is smudged and defaced by the Fall. They were written on stone tablets by the finger of God for the Israelites, and they are written again on the hearts of believers (Psalm 40:6-8; Heb 8:10 etc.). Thus the re-writing of the tablets after they were smashed by Moses in his distress at the golden calf incident (Exod 32:19; 34:4) wonderfully foreshadows their re-writing on the hearts of Christians after their defacement by the Fall.
The ceremonial and other laws were not without purpose in the mind of God. They stressed the purity and holiness of God and served to keep the Israelites separate from the heathen nations. The bloody sacrifices showed forth the coming atonement of Christ and pointed the Jews to their need of a righteousness outside of themselves. The judicial part of the law, in which death was prescribed for adulterers, homosexuals, sorcerers and others are by no means binding on believers today. They do, however, show forth the detestation of God for such practices, and those who practise such sins and do not repent will surely find themselves under His righteous wrath. But we do not stone adulterers today; rather, we emulate the Lord Jesus and bid them, “Go, and sin no more” (John 8:11).
[continued]