"Know therefore that the Lord thy God, He is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love Him and keep His commandments."-DEUT.vii. 9.
MEN often make covenants. They know the advantages to be derived from them. As an end of enmity or uncertainty, as a statement of services and benefits to be rendered, as a security for their certain performance, as a bond of amity and goodwill, as a ground for perfect confidence and friendship, a covenant has often been of unspeakable value.
In His infinite condescension to our human
weakness and need, there is no possible way in
which men pledge their faithfulness, that God has
not sought to make use of, to give us perfect confidence
in Him, and the full assurance of all that
He, in His infinite riches and power as God, has
promised to do to us. It is with this view He has
consented to bind Himself by covenant, as if He
could not be trusted. Blessed is the man who
truly knows God as his Covenant God; who knows
what the Covenant promises him; what unwavering
confidence of expectation it secures, that all its
terms will be fulfilled to him; what a claim and
hold it gives him on the Covenant-keeping God
Himself. To many a man, who has never thought
much of the Covenant, a true and living faith in it
would mean the transformation of his whole life.
The full knowledge of what God wants to do for
him; the assurance that it will be done by an
Almighty Power; the being drawn to God Himself
in personal surrender, and dependence, and waiting
to have it done; all this would make the Covenant
the very gate of heaven. May the Holy Spirit
give us some vision of its glory.
When God created man in His image and likeness,
it was that he might have a life as like His
own as it was possible for a creature to live. This
was to be by God Himself living and working all
in man. For this man was to yield himself in
loving dependence to the wonderful glory of being
the recipient, the bearer, the manifestation of a
Divine life. The one secret of man's happiness
was to be a trustful surrender of his whole being
to the willing and the working of God. When sin
entered, this relation to God was destroyed; when
man had disobeyed, he feared God and fled from
Him. He no longer knew, or loved, or trusted
God.
Man could not save himself from the power of
sin. If his redemption was to be effected, God
must do it all. And if God was to do it in harmony
with the law of man's nature, man must be
brought to desire it, to yield his willing consent,
and entrust himself to God. All that God wanted
man to do was, to believe in Him. What a man
believes, moves and rules his whole being, enters
into him, and becomes part of his very life. Salvation
could only be by faith: God restoring the
life man had lost; man in faith yielding himself to
God's work and will. The first great work of God
with man was to get him to believe. This work
cost God more care and time and patience than we
can easily conceive. All the dealings with
individual men, and with the people of Israel, had just
this one object, to teach men to trust Him. Where
He found faith He could do anything. Nothing
dishonoured and grieved Him so much as unbelief.
Unbelief was the root of disobedience and every
sin; it made it impossible for God to do His work.
The one thing God sought to waken in men by
promise and threatening, by mercy and judgment,
was faith.
Of the many devices of which God's patient and
condescending grace made use to stir up and
strengthen faith, one of the chief was -- the
Covenant. In more than one way God sought to
effect this by His Covenant. First of all, His
Covenant was always a revelation of His purposes,
holding out, in definite promise, what God was
willing to work in those with whom the Covenant
was made. It was a Divine pattern of the work
God intended to do in their behalf, that they might
know what to desire and expect, that their faith
might nourish itself with the very things, though
as yet unseen, which God was working out. Then,
the Covenant was meant to be a security and
guarantee, as simple and plain and humanlike as
the Divine glory could make it, that the very
things which God had promised would indeed be
brought to pass and wrought out in those with
whom He had entered into covenant. Amid all
delay and disappointment, and apparent failure of
the Divine promises, the Covenant was to be the
anchor of the soul, pledging the Divine veracity and
faithfulness and unchangeableness for the certain
performance of what had been promised. And so
the Covenant was, above all, to give man a hold
upon God , as the Covenant-keeping God, to link
him to God Himself in expectation and hope, to
bring him to make God Himself alone the portion
and the strength of his soul.
Oh that we knew how God longs that we
should trust Him, and how surely His every
promise must be fulfilled to those who do so!
Oh that we knew how it is owing to nothing
but our unbelief that we cannot enter into the
possession of God's promises, and that God cannot
--yes, cannot--do His mighty works in us, and
for us, and through us! Oh that we knew how
one of the surest remedies for our unbelief-the
divinely chosen cure for it--is the Covenant into
which God has entered with us! The whole
dispensation of the Spirit, the whole economy of
grace in Christ Jesus, the whole of our spiritual
life, the whole of the health and growth and
strength of the Church, has been laid down and
provided for, and secured in the New Covenant.
No wonder that, where that Covenant, with its
wonderful promises, is so little thought of, its plea
for an abounding and unhesitating confidence in
God so little understood, its claim upon the
faithfulness of the Omnipotent God so little
tested; no wonder that Christian life should miss
the joy and the strength, the holiness and the
heavenliness which God meant and so clearly
promised that it should have.
Let us listen to the words in which God's
Word calls us to know, and worship, and trust
our Covenant-keeping God --it may be we shall
find what we have been looking for: the deeper,
the full experience of all God's grace can do in
us. In our text Moses says: "Know therefore
that the Lord thy God, He is God, the faithful
God, which keepeth covenant with them that love
Him." Hear what God says in Isaiah: "The
mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed;
but My kindness shall not depart from thee, neither
shall My covenant of peace be removed, saith the
Lord that hath mercy on thee." More sure than
any mountain is the fulfilment of every Covenant
promise. Of the New Covenant, in Jeremiah, God
speaks: " I will make an everlasting covenant with
them, that I will not turn away from them,
to do them good; but I will put My fear in their hearts,
that they shall not depart from Me." The
Covenant secures alike that God will not turn
from us, nor we depart from Him: He undertakes
both for Himself and us.
Let us ask very earnestly whether the lack in
our Christian life, and specially in our faith, is not
owing to the neglect of the Covenant. We have
not worshipped nor trusted the Covenant-keeping
God. Our soul has not done what God called
us to--"to take hold of His Covenant," " to
remember the Covenant"; is it wonder that our
faith has failed and come short of the blessing?
God could not fulfil His promises in us. If we
will begin to examine into the terms of the
Covenant, as the title-deeds of our inheritance, and
the riches we are to possess even here on earth;
if we will think of the certainty of their fulfilment,
more sure than the foundations of the everlasting
mountains; if we will turn to the God who
has engaged to do all for us, who keepeth covenant
for ever, our life will become different from what it
has been; it can, and will be, all that God would
make it.
The great lack of our religion is -we need
more of God. We accept salvation as His gift,
and we do not know that the only object of
salvation, its chief blessing, is to fit us for, and
bring us back to, that close intercourse with God for
which we were created, and in which our glory
in eternity will be found. All that God has ever
done for His people in making a covenant was
always to bring them to Himself as their chief,
their only good, to teach them to trust in Him, to
delight in Him, to be one with Him. It cannot
be otherwise. If God indeed be nothing but a
very fountain of goodness and glory, of beauty and
blessedness, the more we can have of His presence,
the more we conform to His will, the more we are
engaged in His service, the more we have Him
ruling and working all in us, the more truly happy
shall we be. If God indeed be thereby Owner
and Author of life and strength, of holiness and
happiness, and can alone give and work it in us,
the more we trust Him, and depend and wait on
Him, the stronger and the holier and the happier
we shall be. And that only is a true and good
religious life, which brings us every day nearer to
this God, which makes us give up everything to
have more of Him. No obedience can be too strict,
no dependence too absolute, no submission too
complete, no confidence too implicit, to a soul that
is learning to count God Himself its chief good,
its exceeding joy.
In entering into covenant with us, God's one object is to draw us to Himself, to render us entirely dependent upon Himself, and so to bring us into the right position and disposition in which He can fill us with Himself, His love, and His blessedness. Let us undertake our study of the New Covenant, in which, if we are believers, God is at this moment living and walking with us, with the honest purpose and surrender, at any price, to know what God wishes to be to us, to do in us, and to have us be and do to Him. The New Covenant may become to us one of the windows of heaven through which we see into the face, into the very heart, of God.