"But this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the Lord, I will put My law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be My people. And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, saying, Know the Lord: for they shall all know Me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them, for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more."--JER. xxxi. 33, 34.
ISAIAH has often been called the evangelical
prophet, for the wonderful clearness with which
he announces the coming Redeemer, both in His
humiliation and suffering, and in the glory of the
kingdom He was to establish. And yet it was
given to Jeremiah, in this passage, and to Ezekiel,
in the parallel one, to foretell what would actually
be the outcome of the Redeemer's work and the
essential character of the salvation He was to effect,
with a distinctness which is nowhere found in the
older prophet. In words which the New Testament
(Hebrews viii.) takes as the divinely inspired
revelation of what the New Covenant is of which
Christ is the Mediator, God's plan is revealed
and we are shown what it is that He will do in
us, to make us fit and worthy of being the people of
which He is the God. Through the whole of the
Old Covenant there was always one trouble: man's
heart was not right with God. In the New Covenant
the evil is to be remedied. Its central
promise is a heart delighting in God's law and
capable of knowing and holding fellowship with
Him. Let us mark the fourfold blessing spoken of.
1. "I will put My law in their inward parts, and
write it in their hearts." Let us understand this
well. In our inward parts, or in our heart, there
are no separate chambers in which the law can be
put, while the rest of the heart can be given up to
other things; the heart is a unity. Nor are the
inward parts and the heart like a house, which can
be filled with things of an entirely different nature
from what the walls are made of, without any living
organic connection. No; the inward parts, the
heart, are the disposition, the love, the will, the
life. Nothing can be put into the heart, and
especially by God, without entering and taking
possession of it, without securing its affection and
controlling its whole being. And this is what
God undertakes to do in the power of His divine
life and operation, to breathe the very spirit of His
law into and through the whole inward being. "I
will put it into their inward parts, and write it
in their hearts." At Sinai the tables of the Covenant,
with the law written on them, were of stone,
as a lasting substance. It is easy to know what
that means. The stone was wholly set apart for
this one thing--to carry and show this Divine
writing. The writing and the stone were inseparably
connected. And so the heart in which God
gets His way, and writes His law in power, lives
only and wholly to carry that writing, and is
unchangeably identified with it. So alone can God
realise His purpose in creation, and have His child
of one mind and one spirit with Himself, delighting
in doing His will. When the Old Covenant with the
law graven on stone had done its work in the
discovering and condemning of SIN, the New Covenant
would give in its stead the life of obedience and
true holiness of heart. The whole of the Covenant
blessing centres in this--the heart being put right
and fitted to know God: "I will give them an
heart to know Me, that I am the Lord; and they shall
be My people, and I will be their God; for they
shall return unto Me with their whole heart "
(Jer. xxiv. 7).
2. "And I will be their God, and they shall be My
people." Do not pass these words lightly. They
occur chiefly in Jeremiah and Ezekiel in connection
with the promise of the everlasting Covenant.
They express the very highest experience of the
Covenant relationship. It is only when His people
learn to love and obey His law, when their heart
and life are together wholly devoted to Him and
His will, that He can be to them the altogether
inconceivable blessing which these words express,
" I will be your God." All I am and have as God
shall be yours. All you can need or wish for in a
God, I will be to you. In the fullest meaning of
the word, I, the Omnipresent, will be ever present
with you, in all My grace and love. I, the Almighty
One, will each moment work all in you by
My mighty power. I, the Thrice-Holy One, will
reveal My sanctifying life within you. I will be
your God. And ye shall be My people,
saved and
blessed, ruled and guided and provided for by Me,
known and seen to be indeed the people of the
Holy One, the God of glory. Only let us give our
hearts time to meditate and wait for the Holy Spirit
to work in us all that these words mean.
3. " And they shall teach no more every man his
neighbour, and every man his brother, saying, Know
the Lord, for they shall all know Me, from the least
of them unto the greatest of them, saith the Lord."
Individual personal fellowship with God, for the
feeblest and the least, is to be the wonderful
privilege of every member of the New Covenant
people. Each one will know the Lord. That does
not mean the knowledge of the mind,--that is not
the equal privilege of all, and that in itself may
hinder the fellowship more than help it,--but with
that knowledge which means appropriation and
assimilation, and which is eternal life. As the Son
knew the Father because He was one with Him
and dwelt in Him, the child of God will receive by
the Holy Spirit that spiritual illumination which
will make God to him the One he knows best,
because he loves Him most and lives in Him. The
promise, "They shall be all taught of God," will be
fulfilled by the Holy Spirit's teaching. God will
speak to each out of His Word what he needs to
know.
4. "For I will forgive their iniquities, and I will remember their sin no more." The word for shows that this is the reason of all that precedes. Because the blood of this New Covenant was of such infinite worth, and its Mediator and High Priest in heaven of such Divine power, there is promised in it such a Divine blotting out of sin that God cannot remember it. It is this entire blotting out of sin that cleanses and sets us free from its power, so that God can write His law in our hearts, and show Himself in power as our God, and by His Spirit reveal to us His deep things--the deep mystery of Himself and His love. It is the atonement and redemption of Jesus Christ wrought without us and for us, that has removed every obstacle and made it meet for God, and made us meet, that the law in the heart, and the claim on our God, and the knowledge of Him, should now be our daily life and our eternal portion.
Here we now have the Divine summary of the
New Covenant inheritance. The last-named blessing,
the pardon of sin, is the first in order, the root
of all. The second, having God as our God, and
the third, the Divine teaching, are the fruit. The
tree itself that grows on this root, and bears such
fruit, is what is named first--the law in the heart.
1
The central demand of the Old Covenant, Obey My voice, and I will be your God, has now been met. With the law written in the heart, He can be our God, and we shall be His people. Perfect harmony with God's will, holiness in heart and life, is the only thing that can satisfy God's heart or ours. And it is this the New Covenant gives in Divine power, "I wil give them an heart to know Me; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people; for they shall turn to Me with their whole heart." It is on the state of the heart, it is on the new heart, as given by God, that the New Covenant life hinges.
But why, if all this is meant to be literally and
exactly true of God's people, why do we see so little
of this life, experience so little in ourselves? There
is but one answer: Because of your unbelief! We
have spoken of the relation of God and man in
creation as what the New Covenant is meant to
make possible and real. But the law cannot be
repealed that God will not compel. He can only
fulfil His purpose as the heart is willing and accepts
His offer. In the New Covenant all is of faith.
Let us turn away from what human wisdom and
human experience may say, and ask God Himself
to teach us what His Covenant means. If we
persevere in this prayer in a humble and teachable
spirit, we can count most certainly on its
promise: "They shall no more every man teach
his neighbour: Know the Lord, for they shall all
know Me." The teaching of God Himself, by the
Holy Spirit, to make us understand what He says to
us in His Word, is our Covenant right. Let us
count upon it. It is only by a God-given faith
that we can appropriate these God-given promises.
And it is only by a God-given teaching and inward
illumination that we can see their meaning, so as to
believe them. When God teaches us the meaning
of His promises in a heart yielded to His Holy
Spirit, then alone we can believe and receive them
in a power which makes them a reality in our
life.
But is it really possible, amid the wear and tear
of daily life, to walk in the experience of these
blessings? Are they really meant for all God's
children? Let us rather ask the question, Is it
possible for God to do what He has promised?
The one part of the promise we believe--the complete
and perfect pardon of sin. Why should we
not believe the other part--the law written in the
heart, and the direct Divine fellowship and teaching?
We have been so accustomed to separate what
God has joined together, the objective, outward
work of His Son, and the subjective, inward work
of His Spirit, that we consider the glory of the
New Covenant above the Old to consist chiefly in
the redeeming work of Christ for us, and not equally
in the sanctifying work of the Spirit in us. It is
owing to this ignorance and unbelief of the indwelling
of the Holy Spirit, as the power through
whom God fulfils the New Covenant promises, that
we do not really expect them to be made true to us.
Do let us turn our hearts away from all past
experience of failure, as caused by nothing but
unbelief; do let us admit fully and heartily, what
failure has taught us, the absolute impossibility
of even a regenerate man walking in God's law in
his own strength, and then turn our hearts quietly
and trustfully to our own Covenant God. Let us
hear what He says He will do for us, and believe
Him; let us rest on His unchangeable faithfulness
and the surety of the Covenant, on His
Almighty power and the Holy Spirit working in
us; and let us give up ourselves to Him as our
God. He will prove that what He has done for
us in Christ is not one whit more wonderful than
what He will do in us every day by the Spirit of
Christ.