Exodus and the Mosaic Covenant (pt. 1)

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With the Book of Exodus we bid adieu to the Patriarchal period and are thrown into the misery of slavery and hopelessness.  Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are long dead.  The covenant promise is all but a forlorn hope.  Even Joseph’s eminence in Egypt has been forgotten; at least by those who matter.  Genesis ends with a small tribe of “Israelites” leaving their homeland and descending in to Egypt.

Yet the first half of the Book of Exodus contains some of the most compelling narrative ever written.  Exodus is a book about redemption.  The redemption envisaged in the early chapters is predominantly a deliverance from servitude.  Many who came through the waters were not saved spiritually, as the incident with the golden calf (Exod. 32) proved. Exodus is also a book about how God and sinners can meet on His terms.  The condition of this meeting was covenantally grounded; firstly in the Abrahamic covenant (Exod. 2:24), since the whole saga was predicted at the time God initiated His covenant with Abraham in Genesis 15:13-16.  But the relationship between the newly formed nation “Israel” and their God is one of theonomy; of law-keeping.  The Law that was to be kept was in the Mosaic or Sinai covenant (Exod. 20-24).  Unlike the other divinely instituted covenants in the Old Testament, the covenant with Israel was bilateral; both parties swearing an oath to perform their part.  Of course, Israel as all people, could not deliver on their obligations, and it was only by grace, mediated through the sacrificial system within the law, that salvation and blessing were made possible.

The great event which punctuates the history of Israel is the rescue of the people from the Egyptian might by the miraculous hand of God.  The exodus deliverance is often recalled by the Lord in His overtures to His wayward people (e.g. Deut. 7:8; 9:26; 13:5; 2 Sam. 7:23; Mic. 6:4; Neh. 1:10 etc.).  The covenant at Mt. Sinai was perhaps above all a covenant of identity.  It established Israel as a nation apart.  Even though they would continually depart from God and the Law God would never totally abandon them.  This rootedness of Israel’s hope, not in the Mosaic covenant but in the soil of the Abrahamic covenant is what assured the survival of the nation.  Moses clearly understood this when he pled for Israel in Exodus 32:14!  The Mosaic covenant does not abrogate the original Abrahamic covenant.  The first covenant is unilateral and unconditional[1], whilst the covenant with Moses and Israel is bilateral and conditional.  And because its demands were too high for sinners to meet, it was also a temporary covenantal relationship.

Nevertheless, it is by means of the Mosaic covenant that Israel was set apart and preserved historically.  Because Yahweh had redeemed Israel through the waters (a constant refrain in Deuteronomy), the nation, if not always the individuals in the nation, were special to Him.  Moreover, the covenant at Sinai was also a kind of marriage covenant between Yahweh and Israel; a metaphor which the Prophets will afterwards take advantage of as they call Israel to repentance.[2]  As I hope to show, the Lord’s willingness to take back His erring “wife” in a “new covenantal” relationship is one of the great examples of forgiveness and reconciliation. But only if He takes back the same wife!

The calling of Moses at the Burning Bush was not just the calling of one man, it was the beginning of the making a nation of God’s people.  The great redemption through the waters of the Red Sea (Exod. 14), and the provision of manna (Exod. 16), not to mention the pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night (Exod. 13:21-22), show the care of Yahweh for His people.  Though there were challenges at Marah (Exod. 15) and afterwards, yet the God who called them would keep them.

So Israel comes to the Mountain of God to receive the Ten Commandments (ten words) and to institute the covenant of law.  But we must remember Exodus 19:6 where God tells the people that He wants them to be “a holy nation and a kingdom of priests”.  The meaning of this calling should not be missed.  Israel clearly has a ministry for the nation among the nations of the world.

Israel was to be kings and priests to God on behalf of the nations; they were to be… missionaries to the nations…, and they were to be partakers in the present aspects and coming reality of the “kingdom of God”.[3]

Verse 5 declares,

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; for all the earth is Mine. (my emphasis)

Here there is a distinct intention behind the calling of the nation.  Israel is to be a “special treasure” (cegullah) to Yahweh “above” all the other nations of earth.  The intent, therefore, was for Israel to dwell among other nations on earth yet to enjoy a peculiar position in God’s sight.[4]  As His “peculiar people” they were to serve God alone in the midst of an idolatrous world.[5]  Israel was to be prized as a wedding ring is prized.  Indeed, as already indicated, the Prophets would invoke marital language when describing the covenant relationship.

What this shows, I believe, is that the children of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were destined to live with their God upon the earth surrounded by other saved nations to whom they would minister as priests.  This is what is taught in the “blessing” part of Deuteronomy 28: the LORD your God will set you high above all nations of the earth – Deut. 28:1

Then all peoples of the earth shall see that you are called by the name of the LORD, and they shall be afraid of you.  And the LORD will grant you plenty of goods, in the fruit of your body, in the increase of your livestock, and in the produce of your ground, in the land of which the LORD swore to your fathers to give you.  The LORD will open to you His good treasure, the heavens, to give the rain to your land in its season, and to bless all the work of your hand. You shall lend to many nations, but you shall not borrow. – Deuteronomy 28:10-12 (My emphases)[6]

This note is also struck in the Psalms.

For instance, Psalm 102:21-22 speaks of a time when they will, “declare the name of the LORD in Zion, and His praise in Jerusalem, when the peoples are gathered together, and the kingdoms, to serve the LORD.”

It is implied in Psalm 72:17-19

His name shall endure forever;
His name shall continue as long as the sun.
And men shall be blessed in Him;
All nations shall call Him blessed.

Blessed be the LORD God, the God of Israel,
Who only does wondrous things!

And blessed be His glorious name forever!
And let the whole earth be filled with His glory.
Amen and Amen. (My emphasis)

The dramatic announcement of this aspect of God’s program at the quaking mountain surely underscores the incontrovertibility of the Divine intent.  This relationship and role for Israel is what He wants, and if he doesn’t get it now we should look for it in more conducive times in the future.  If it was the Lord’s original purpose to make Israel His special possession among the nations of the world, then we must ask – in view of their failure to live up to their part of their covenant oath – whether that part of the Creation Project was abandoned.  The question will be answered in the course of this study, but if the answer is yes, and I believe it has to be yes, then it will not do to forge a biblical theology wherein the New Testament Church, which is not a geo-political nation among other nations, supersedes or “expands” national ethnic Israel in the plan of God.  For God to do such a thing would be to change plans.  But we don’t worship an indecisive or incompetent Deity.  The covenants of God are designed to overcome the disqualifying and self-limiting barriers of sin, and bring God’s plan to its desired end through their eventual synthesis in the Messiah.

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[1] Again, in using the customary word “unconditional” I mean that no obligation for eventual fulfillment of the oath is placed on any human being.  However, there were obligations (conditions) on humans to be holy and obedient before God.  If the qualifications for fulfillment were not met (which they could not outside of full salvation), then the fulfillment would be postponed until they could be met.   So I agree with Schreiner when he says, “God certainly will fulfill his covenant, but it will not be fulfilled by a disobedient generation.” – Thomas R. Schreiner, The King in His Glory, 16 n. 90.  But it needs to be added that the fulfillment itself is fixed by God’s obligation to His sworn oath.

[2] See e.g., Jer. 3:14, 20; 31:20; Hos. 2:16; Isa. 62:4.  The passages in Isaiah 62, Jeremiah 31, and Hosea 2 are eschatological and speak of Yahweh taking back adulterous Israel and cleansing and forgiving her.  The Jeremiah passage comes in the context of the future New covenant to be made with Israel instead of the Mosaic covenant.  In essence this means a remarriage.  Cf. Hosea 3:1-5.

[3] Walter C. Kaiser, Jr.,” Exodus”, EBC (ed. F. Gaebelein), Vol. 2, 417 n.6

[4] Cf. Psalm 135:4: “For the LORD has chosen Jacob for himself, Israel for his special treasure.”  Also Psalm 148:14.

[5] See Willem VanGemeren, The Progress of Redemption, 147-148.

[6] Cf. Deut. 26:19; Num. 6:27

11 comments On Exodus and the Mosaic Covenant (pt. 1)

  • [[Correction needed in the 2nd paragraph:

    “Many who came through the waters were not saved spiritually, as the incidents with the golden calf (Exod. 32), It is unwise to  “]]

    On the Heidelblog, the second of three posts: “Three Things Dispensational Apologists Should Stop Saying” (https://heidelblog.net/2016/02/three-things-dispensational-apologists-should-stop-saying-2/) complains:

    “The second thing that Dispensational apologists should stop saying that Reformed theology is a “replacement” or “supersessionist” theology….This is a gross mischaracterization of Reformed theology and it begs the question, i.e., it assumes what it must prove.”

    “The charge is loaded with a premise that we do not accept: that “Israel” and “the church” are two distinct or parallel things. As we understand redemptive history the church has always been. There was a church, of sorts, even before the fall. The garden was a temple, a holy place, which Adam as prophet, priest, and king was to rule, guard, and administer. He failed. There was a church after the fall, beginning with Adam, then Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, etc.”

    Are Dispensationalists being fair in how they characterize Covenant Theology as supersessionist? Can the issue be stated in a way that is accurate from the CT point of view but also expresses the Dispensational concern?

    • I missed that cut-off sentence.

      I believe Paul has addressed this concern before, Ross. He’ll no doubt respond. In the interim, Mike Vlach has done some work in this area as well:

      https://www.tms.edu/m/tmsj20d.pdf

      • Michael presents “the existence of three variations of supersessionism—punitive, economic, and structural” which do not seem to cover the position promoted by Heidelblog. Michael does mention continuationism but does not elaborate on it. the Heidelblog seems to be promoting a type of continuationism where the church was there in the beginning and as the single covenant of grace unfolds through redemptive history, the Church might be said to slough off the national cloak and develop an international one.

        The Heidelblog may say their position is true to historic Covenant Theology while all the newbies Michael mentions are just not being true to the old path. I will run it by them and see if they will respond.

    • Ross,

      Thanks for spotting the incomplete thought.

      Thanks also for the Heidelblog material about whether “replacement theology” is a fair term. I believe it is and, if I get time in the next week or so, try to prove that assertion.

      Paul H

  • (https://heidelblog.net/2013/08/covenant-theology-is-not-replacement-theology/) is probably their best response.

    “First, the very category of “replacement” is foreign to Reformed theology because it assumes a dispensational, Israeleo-centric way of thinking. It assumes that the temporary, national people was, in fact, intended to be the permanent arrangement. Such a way of thinking is contrary to the promise in Gen. 3:15. The promise was that there would be a Savior. The national people was only a means to that end, not an end in itself. According to Paul in Ephesians 2:11-22, in Christ the dividing wall has been destroyed. It cannot be rebuilt.”
    ….
    “Dispensationalism reverses things. It makes the Abrahamic covenant a codicil to the Mosaic. Hebrews 3 says that Moses was a worker in Jesus’ house. Dispensationalism makes Jesus a worker in Moses’ house.”
    ….
    “For Reformed theology, the church has always been the Israel of God and the Israel of God has always been the church. Reformed covenant theology distinguishes the old and new covenants (2 Cor. 3; Heb. 7-10). It recognizes that the church was temporarily administered through a typological, national people, but the church has existed since Adam, Noah, and Abraham; and it existed under Moses and David; and it exists under Christ.”
    ….
    “Third, the church has always been one, under various administrations, under types, shadows, and now under the reality in Christ, because the object of faith has always been one.”
    ….
    “Fourth, despite the abrogation of the national covenant by the obedience, death, and resurrection of Christ (Col. 2:14), the NT church has not “replaced” the Jews. Paul says that God “grafted” the Gentiles into the people of God. Grafting is not replacement, it is addition.”

    • Yes. I had that article bookmarked, among a few others where he addresses dispensationalsim and Israel.

      • Paul makes some reference to it here at footnote 5:

        https://drreluctant.wordpress.com/2016/11/23/abraham-isaac-and-jacob-pt-3/

        Quote: [5] One of my chief reasons for rejecting covenant theology is that its eschatology firmly focuses revelation on the Church and not to those to whom it originally was given. To offset this problem covenant theology has often taught that the Church is in the Old Testament, in spite, as we shall see, of the fact that no Church qua the Body of Christ is possible without the resurrection of Christ. This makes a nonsense of the idea of a God who reveals Himself in history, and also of progressive revelation.

    • This is at once an excellent and repellent response to the charge of supercessionism. It highlights many of the facets of CT which I find so distasteful. This does not mean, of course, that those who hold these teachings are at all repellent.

  • Yes, a key element here is to allow the Scripture to define the Church = the body of Christ. Once that is done, we find that the Church involves Spirit-baptism which never occurred prior to the Day of Pentecost–and which could not occur until the fulfillment of several preconditions which John makes clear (John 7:38-39; John 16:7).

    Thus, assumptions that “the Church” existed prior to the coming of the Spirit at Pentecost are bound to lead to confusion about the discontinuities which exist between Israel and the Church and their relationship in the larger program of God.

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