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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

The Covenant of Grace



Another piece found on that old hard drive. ~MTR

THE COVENANT OF GRACE

The theological construction known as the Covenant of Grace as defined by confessional Reformed Baptists is under attack in our day on two fronts: from Covenantal Peadobaptism on one side and New Covenant Theology on the other. The first makes it an organizing principle and meta-narrative for all of their theology while the last seeks to eradicate its legitimate use.  This circular letter addresses how this idea of the Covenant of Grace is used in our common Confession and how it ought to be used to give our people instruction of the gracious work of God in Christ. 

THE THEOLOGICAL CONSTRUCTION

The compound term, “Covenant of Grace” is not found in the Scriptures by itself.  It is a construction of ideas about God and His work among men that is used to explain how the eternal decree of God in the Covenant of Redemption has been located among men in space and time.  The Covenant of Grace is therefore to be distinguished from the Covenant of Redemption.

All theologians (all men) have theological meta-narratives or presuppositions or theological a priori that drive theological reflection in a comprehensive manner.  Some of these transcendent ideas are justified; some are not.  They must all be tested by the Scriptures to see if they have been rightly deduced from God’s revelation of himself.  It is right to make doctrinal pronouncements based on the implicit statements of Scripture as well as the explicit.  The Confession speaks of those things that are “...either expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture.... (1.6).” Some things are revealed on the face of the Scriptures; others have to be dug out through hard work with the right use of reason comparing Scripture with other Scriptures.

Doctrines and doctrinal pronouncements are consistent with the Bible’s teaching about its own legitimate uses.  “The Word of God...is profitable for...doctrine. (II Tim 3:16)” To make systematic statements that are consistent with the entirety of God’s Word is itself consistent with the purposes for which the Holy Spirit breathed out the Word.  We should not shrink back from teaching doctrine or theologizing based on the Scriptures. We ought to engage our minds and energies to bring all thought captive to the Lordship of Christ.  Confessional statements are biblical statements as they are doctrinal pronouncements of what God has said and those things most surely believed among us.

The Scriptures teach ubiquitously that God operates with mankind before and after the Fall according to his grace.  It is his principle by which he works, reveals, directs, delivers, gives Law, and any other “good” thing.  As the Scriptures are examined, it is noted that this grace is often codified in covenants between God and man.  Thus this principle of covenant found throughout the scriptures is married to the ubiquitous grace of God therein to create an organizing principle by way of theological construction commonly called the Covenant of Grace.  This idea helps the reader to better understand the overall work and mercy of God.  It is in modern terms a “meta-narrative,” an idea that transcends all thought on a subject.  It is an implicit theological truth drawn from many inferences in manifold places.

Premise 1: The Word of God was given to teach Doctrine.
Premise 2: The Covenant of Grace is a doctrine taught in the Word implicitly and discerned by good and necessary inferences therefrom.
Conclusion: The Covenant of Grace should be taught as a biblical Doctrine.

THE CONFESSION

Presupposition: Since the Scriptures are given to teach Doctrine, any doctrinal statement consistent with the Word of God is a biblical statement in summary form. The Confession of Faith is such a statement. Therefore the Confession should be viewed as biblical in its content and in its form.  It is consistent with the first use of the Scriptures mentioned in II Timothy 3:16 (The Word of God is profitable for doctrine....).

Our Confession defines some important truths about the Covenant of Grace.  The foundation is poured in Chapter Seven, Of God's Covenant.

The gracious condescension of God to provide for man what man could not provide for himself This divine condescension comes by way of Covenant (7.1).

In 7.2 we have the first mention of the Covenant of Grace specifically. Among other important truths, it reads, “...it pleased the Lord to make a covenant of grace, wherein he freely offereth unto sinners life and salvation by Jesus Christ, requiring of them faith in him, that they may be saved; and promising to give unto all those that are ordained unto eternal life, his Holy Spirit, to make them willing and able to believe.” Herein is the grace of God operative upon sinners.  Note well, the Covenant of Grace in our common Confession is understood as between the Lord, and those he makes willing to believe. It is not understood as a middle ground between ordinary existence and saving faith.  It is made with those who God “makes willing to believe,” in other words, with the elect.

The Confession goes on to say how this Covenant was disclosed. “First to Adam in the promise...” “...until the full discovery thereof was completed in the New Testament.” There is a progressive nature to the unveiling of the Covenant of Grace. The Confession tells us that the Covenant of Grace is analogous to and founded upon but not equal to “that eternal covenant transaction that was between the Father and the Son about the redemption of the elect....(7.3)” The Covenant of Redemption has a defining effect upon our understanding of the Covenant of Grace.  It informs the content of those who will be found in both of these Covenants.  It is about the salvation of the elect, of all who believe.  Reading further, the Confession adds, “and it is alone by the grace of this covenant that all of the posterity of fallen Adam that ever were saved did obtain life and a blessed immortality, man being now utterly incapable of acceptance with God upon those terms on which Adam stood in his state of innocency (7.3).” In order for any to receive salvation, they must be made participants in the Covenant of Grace through the principle of grace. That is only possible if God has decreed to save them by the Lamb slain according to his eternal and irrevocable decree.


The comfort of inclusion in the Covenant of Grace has to do with God pledging himself to those he has truly granted faith and repentance unto a final salvation.  “...God hath in the covenant of grace mercifully provided, that believers so sinning and falling, be renewed through repentance unto salvation (15.2 ). The eternal decree found in the Covenant of Redemption is secured by the believer’s personal and corporate inclusion in the Covenant of Grace.  In the same Chapter, Repentance unto Life and Salvation, it says, “Such is the provision which God hath made through Christ in the covenant of grace, for the preservation of believers unto salvation, that although there is no sin so small, but it deserves damnation; yet there is no sin so great, that it shall bring damnation on them who truly repent; which makes the constant preaching of repentance necessary (15.5). Similar sentiments are found in the Chapter entitled On the Perseverance of the Saints.  “This perseverance of the saints depends not upon their own free will, but upon the immutability of the decree of election, flowing from unchangeable love of God the Father; upon the efficacy of the intercession of Jesus Christ, and union with Him, the oath of God, the abiding of His Spirit, and of the seed of God within them, and the nature of the covenant of grace: from all which ariseth also the certainty and infallibility thereof (LBC 17.2 ).” Thus, the Covenant of grace is not about man as much as it is about the openly-spoken, solemnly-sworn promises of God as regards his love for the Elect alone.

Those who have been recipients of God’s electing grace can be assured of their final salvation, not because of their wills, or ability to believe, but due to the sovereign grace of God finishing the work he has begun (Phil 1:6).  The Comfort and use of the Covenant of Grace is not to give false hope to our children, but a real, living and vibrant hope to those who are being saved.  True believers have God’s pledge of love in Christ.  It can and will never be revoked.

THE BIBLICAL NATURE OF THIS COVENANT

To discover the biblical nature of the Covenant of Grace, all the reader has to do is start “in the beginning” and read.  God created, then commanded, therefore, all creatures owed unswerving allegiance to him. Man did not do the works set before him in order to live. The fall of man was a tragic occurrence in God’s perfect world.  After the fall, whenever men are brought into special relationship with the Creator it is through his own voluntary condescension.  This is in perfect harmony with his gracious activity.  It is also within the context of either a representative head and/or the idea of a covenant. God provides the basis for restored fellowship with himself in these means. For example, God provided a covering for our first parents that they might be delivered from the immediate consequences of sin. God stooped down to man to restore in part what was lost.

Throughout the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments we find two sets of glorious words: “their God” and “my people”. They are often found together in the sovereign decree of God to take a people known by sin and rebellion against his holy character and to bring them into special fellowship with himself by making them to be “his people” and pledging himself to be “their God.”

Abram/Abraham was to be a father of many nations.  Through him the promise was given that all nations would be blessed.  The Israelites wandering through the wilderness were to be focused upon receiving what had been promised to them through Abraham their covenantal head. That covenant was mixed: some blessings were material and physical, others were spiritual.

Israel was to be the specially adopted people of God living as his testimony to these nations.  The Covenant God made with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob comes to fruition in God’s true people.  Yet the overriding principle taken from the specific historical covenants is that God operates by grace among men to accomplish God’s own holy purposes.

Moses was the mediator of the Law.  It was of grace that God’s expectations were made known to his people.  In the prologue of that covenant document we read, “I am the Lord your God.” God asserts his right to be their ruler and lawgiver.  He does so on the basis of who he is and the previous grace of deliverance through the Exodus. 

God functions according to grace given to undeserving sinners.  Grace is the operating principle whereby God makes men his own as he makes them willing to believe.  He brings them into fellowship with himself where he rules over them by his revelation.  This is the principle of grace within the Covenant of Grace in action. The grace of God permeates into every pore of his redemptive dealings with mankind.  Without God’s grace, there would be no salvation.  It is a transcendental idea, a meta-narrative that is so evident on the surface of Scripture that it barely needs to be proven.  That God is gracious in all he does redemptively is not questioned by those who disparage our understanding of God’s overarching graciousness in covenantal forms and language. They share this understanding while expressing it in different ways.  This understanding of grace and God’s willful condescension to man savingly in the person of the Lord Jesus Christ stands behind our understanding of all revelation.

All particular covenantal administrations give us similarities that when placed together give us knowledge of what God has done among his people who were or are in covenant with him.  These actual similarities allow us to construct universal statements about the works and ways of God.  A true universal statement is true in all of its particular manifestations. It is different from a generalization drawn from a select number of “biblical” facts.  Specific aspects of a historical covenant ought not to be imposed upon a universal summary of those covenants. For instance, many covenants have a sign to point to the reality promised.  The sign of one particular historical covenant ought not to be imported into the universal concept of the Covenant of Grace as is sometimes done from the sign to Abraham in Genesis 17 to the Covenant of Grace by our paedobaptist friends. The Covenant of Grace has no outward or explicit sign.  It signifies salvific inclusion in the work of God without an outward sign as found in the particular covenantal administrations.

The fullest expression of this motif of grace is found in the New Covenant.  A sampling of three relevant texts should suffice, though there are dozens, if not hundreds more with implicit relation to this topic:

“But this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the LORD: I will put My law in their minds, and write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people (Jeremiah 31:33).

‘They shall be My people, and I will be their God.... (Jeremiah 32:38).

“...[T]hat they may walk in My statutes and keep My judgments and do them; and they shall be My people, and I will be their God (Ezekiel 11:20).

It is God’s gracious activity that is revealed in the pages of Holy Writ.  It is his subduing the hearts of his enemies in order to make them his people that he does by this grace.  He calls them into covenantal relationship with him where he is their ruler and they his people.  This fellowship initiated by God is commonly called the Covenant of Grace.

It is God who makes the Covenant of Grace by his own gracious work on behalf of fallen and sinful man. It is God who speaks and decrees, it is God who makes Law to express his character and will.  It is this covenanting God who makes his own to walk in His ways.  And, this is all of His free grace. It is without any condition in any man and supernaturally accomplished.  Grace is the principle by which God operates as regards his people since the fall.

Wherever the presence of saving faith is found among the people in all of the Scriptures, there is a manifestation of the Covenant of Grace. The eternal plan and love of God has been manifest. In the Old Testament as believers looked forward to the Promise and in the New as many are found with precious saving faith.

To keep from us from presumption it is best to say we do not know who is in the Covenant of Grace until and unless they believe.  Their election with all the accompanying works of God, blessings and benefits (and those alone) shows their invincible union with Christ and their place forever in His Covenant of Grace.  What a blessed comfort to have the one true and living God, the Creator and Sustainer of all things, pledge himself to his people by way of this gracious covenant.  What a joy is ours, even in the midst of an awareness of our remaining sin, we can cry out in thanks for God’s gift of grace by faith.  Amen.

Monday, December 17, 2012

The “Covenant” in Theology



This was a presentation made many years ago. I found it on an old hard drive. 
It may still have some use, today. ~MTR

The “Covenant” in Theology: An Historical and Theological Overview


Introduction:

The doctrines of Covenant theology have been attacked recently as something new and therefore a theological innovation begun in the Reformation.  What has come under the special scrutiny of some is the notion of a specific Reformed Baptist Covenant Theology,  I hope to lay out before you some of the historical lineage of the theological idea of covenant as the foundations upon which Federalism and Covenant Theology are build, at least in part. And, in so doing, tie it to the idea of Covenant found in our Confession.

All “good” theological reflection ought to have a foundational exegetical component, a theological grid into which it fits and the test of history applied to it.  Good exegesis plus good systematics plus good historical theology yields good theological conclusions.  If any of the three methods are skewed, the results may be therefore tainted.  There is a lot of work to the theological craft, is one is to do it thoroughly.

The Concept of Covenant

The use of the concept and word covenant in theological musings is of an ancient pedigree.  It is not something entirely new begun during and after the Reformation.  Although that is when it achieves its main importance for our purposes. Covenant as a theological term is found in the Old Testament, especially in the writings of Moses and the Prophets.  It is used in the New Testament especially by Paul and the writer to the Hebrews. 

Apostolic Fathers

Covenant and specific covenants are found as important theological concepts in the history of the Church and her theology.  We find it early on in the writings of the Apostolic Fathers as they used the notion of compact or contract between God and man as regards salvation and man and man as regards Church membership. It is found in the Latin Fathers in abundance--relatively speaking. 

It must be admitted that the lion’s share of these references address issues of the Old Covenant, the New Covenant or the Ark of the Covenant (especially as analogous to the Christian with God’s Law secured on the inside). But there are other references that show the theological development of the idea of Covenant. 

The Greek and Latin Fathers

The shift of the language of theology from Greek to Latin gave Christendom some of her greatest challenges.  It changed the meaning of justification from a declaration about someone in Greek (dikaiw) to man being made righteous in Latin (justia facare).  Touching sanctification, the term in Greek had an ongoing character, in Latin a once-for-all reality.  The shift was devastating in its effect on orthodoxy. 

Federal Headship

Yet, for our interests, this is where the Latin terms of FAEDUS and FEDERALIS, meaning covenant and head come from.  A Federal Head is one who stands as a representative to speak and act for others.  The concept is important for the development of soteriology from the perspective of historical theology.  When Henry VIII declared himself to be the Head of the Church in England and Ireland he meant that he was now the representative civil head who would speak for the institution of Christ’s Church in his realm.  He did it as the sovereign of the land.  Many doctors were once called the chief of this discipline or that department.  It became politically incorrect. So, now they are Department Heads.  They represent their department to all who are above them.  They speak for those who are under them and bear responsibility for whatever happens in their departments.  This is the same notion of headship that we find in its theological usage.

A Specific Latin Illustration

One Latin theologian who used the idea of covenant specifically as well as compact and contract about 200 times in the context of representation was Leo the Great (390-461) a contemporary of the cherished Augustine.  We must be aware that the use of the word covenant in theological reflection did not arise in a vacuum.  It did not appear first in the Reformation. It has a long and storied past just like the notion of the Trinity or the hypostatic union. In my talk this morning, I want to lay some of that out for your edification, I hope.

Some Illustration:
Let me illustrate some of the early usage of this idea from the Early Church Fathers.

The Epistle of Barnabas: This work is to be distinguished from the notorious Gospel of Barnabas that was written by an unnamed Italian around the 14th Century to argue for toleration of and salvation for all by a likely apostate Christian become muslim.  This work is very different. It was known to Clement of Alexandria.  He cites it seven times in his writings. Origen cites it three times and by Jerome at least once.  Scholars are certain that it was not penned by Barnabas of the New Testament.  It is dated around 110-120 AD.  A nice early date close to the Apostolic Age.

Some of the Chapter headings are:

Chapter V. — The New Covenant, Founded on the Sufferings of Christ, Tends to Our Salvation, But to the Jews’ Destruction.

Chapter XIII. — Christians, and Not Jews, the Heirs of the Covenant.

Chapter XXV. — Both Covenants Were Prefigured in Abraham, and in the Labor of Tamar; There Was, However, But One and the Same God to Each Covenant.

The work is really the foundation of the use of Covenant in theologizing outside of the Bible’s own use of these categories.  Usually, in the Church Fathers we find just mention of the New Covenant, the Old Covenant, or the Ark of the Covenant in the writings of the Early Fathers.  However, in this Epistle, we find Covenant used as a concept by itself.  Covenant is not always found with a modifier.  There is a generic theological use of the idea of “covenant”. Chapter X111 is an anti-Jewish presentation showing that it was truly Christians who had the right to claim Abraham as their father. This was expressed in the language of covenant.  A word of caution--this does not mean the writer of the Epistle held to a full-blown Covenant Theology as we would use the term.  It is merely the foundation of extra-biblical theological reflection using the category of “covenant.” It is from early in the Second Century.

Novatian

The Anti-pope and leader of the “puritan party in the middle of the 3rd Century, Novatian, gives us a glimpse at the Early Father’s view of the Godhead in A Treatise of Novatian Concerning the Trinity. But he also shows us that they believed in the organic unity between the Old and New Covenant Scriptures. 

In Chapter XII of his work, we find this title: Argument. — That Christ is God, is Proved by the Authority of the Old Testament Scriptures. In Chapter XIII we read, Argument. — That the Same Truth is Proved from the Sacred Writings of the New Covenant.  In many ways, Covenant was viewed as simply a synonym for Testament--the representative writings of an era declaring God’s specific will.

The Unity of the Scriptures would be another important foundation stone used in 1300 years to reconstruct a right understanding of God’s Covenant mercy and revelation.
Gregory Nazianzus

In the third quarter of the 4th Century, Gregory of Nazianzus would use the idea of covenant in a theologically transcendent manner. He wrote in part, “Again he reminds them of the covenant of God, a covenant of life and peace.” His use is not specific to an historical covenant, but he uses a concept, the Covenant of God, in a more exclusive manner.

Naziansum is significant because, as far as my research has been able to uncover, this Gregory was the first to link the idea of covenant to baptism.  He wrote in Oration XL (40), “And this which comes to the aid of our first birth, makes us new instead of old, and like God instead of what we now are; recasting us without fire, and creating us anew without breaking us up, For, to say it all in one word, the virtue of Baptism is to be understood as a covenant with God for a second life and a purer conversation.” The theological plot thickens.  But, I hope you see how these ideas and their uses evolve as men interact with others and the Scriptures.  I find it fascinating. I love this stuff.

The Covenant of God

In less than 50 more years we find more maturation in the use of Covenantal language beyond specific historical covenants.  It shows the theological development of a theological construction known as the Covenant of God, which eventually becomes to be understood as a gracious Covenant or in the language we use, the Covenant of Grace. There is theological development from the Ancients to our day, just as there is in the doctrine of the Trinity, Christology, Pneumalology, etc.  The Scriptures get applied to the controversies of each age from attacks.  Some come from within the professing Church, some from without.

 See if you can identify the author of this next quotation:

“When it is said, “The male who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, that soul shall be cut off from his people, because he hath broken my covenant,”  some may be troubled how that ought to be understood, since it can be no fault of the infant whose life it is said must perish; nor has the covenant of God been broken by him, but by his parents, who have not taken care to circumcise him. But even the infants, not personally in their own life, but according to the common origin of the human race, have all broken God’s covenant in that one in whom all have sinned. Now there are many things called God’s covenants besides those two great ones, the old and the new, which any one who pleases may read and know. For the first covenant, which was made with the first man, is just this: “In the day ye eat thereof, ye shall surely die.” Whence it is written in the book called Ecclesiasticus, “All flesh waxeth old as doth a garment. For the covenant from the beginning is, Thou shall die the death.” Now, as the law was more plainly given afterward, and the apostle says, “Where no law is, there is no prevarication,”  on what supposition is what is said in the psalm true, “I accounted all the sinners of the earth prevaricators,”  except that all who are held liable for any sin are accused of dealing deceitfully (prevaricating) with some law? If on this account, then, even the infants are, according to the true belief, born in sin, not actual but original, so that we confess they have need of grace for the remission of sins, certainly it must be acknowledged that in the same sense in which they are sinners they are also prevaricators of that law which was given in Paradise....”

That is from Augustine’s De Civitas Dei, otherwise known as the City of God, Chapter 27. 

It is about man’s need of God’s grace in the context of breaking the covenant and being covenant-breakers by nature.  He used Covenant as a concept in two important ways.  As a general idea without specific modifier, God’s Covenant, even when he was referring to the Specific Abrahamic Covenant and he wrote, “Now there are many things called God’s covenants besides those two great ones, the old and the new” explicitly pointing us to more covenantal administrations beyond the Old and the New.  Therefore, there is strong historical evidence for the propriety of using the covenants and covenantal language to summarize and explain theological ideas, concepts, and truths.  It is not “new” with the Reformation. 

In Augustine’s Anti-Pelagian writings we find another example of his thinking on a Covenant that transcends man’s sin and God’s grace.  In Chapter 24 — What Covenant of God the New-Born Babe Breaks. What Was the Value of Circumcision.“...Let him tell us, if he can, how that child broke God’s covenant, — an innocent babe, so far as he was personally concerned, of eight days’ age; and yet there is by no means any falsehood uttered here by God or Holy Scripture. The fact is, the covenant of God which he then broke was not this which commanded circumcision, but that which forbade the tree; when “by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for in him all have sinned.”

The Covenant of God was in force in, at least, Eden and Israel. Very different circumstances, places and times.  Augustine believed in a timeless objective idea called the Covenant of God.  This is important.

It should not surprise us that some have said the Reformation was Augustine’s doctrine of the Church fighting against his doctrine of Grace.  The main theologian upon whom Calvin and Luther relied was Augustine.  Augustine is a man who the reformation sought to redeem and refute. 

In Chapter 41 and 49, of the same work, I think he agrees with our brother Fred Malone on his exegesis of Hebrews 8 and Jeremiah 31...as well as Jerome in his AGAINST JOVINIANUS Chapter 20, and ....  But that’s another study.....


Leo

A contemporary of Augustine, Leo the Great, or Leo I, also used the same sort of concept gleaned from this understanding of covenant and covenants. We have mentioned him already in the introduction.  He becomes important now.

Gregory

Gregory I or Gregory the Great become Pope in 590.  Building on Augustine’s doctrine of the Church and Leo’s theology of the Church as God’s Sacramental Community through which salvation must and can only come to man and his understanding that God intended the Church to rule and reign over all, Gregory was able to construct the system of Roman Catholicism that was so powerful and overwhelming during the Medieval Era.  The historians call the marriage of administration and theology of the sacraments the “Papal-Sacral” Order.  The Pope was the “VICAR” of Christ to rule upon the earth.  The Church rules the masses by controlling access to the sacraments--including national interdicts where entire countries were barred from the sacraments due to the “sins” of their earthly sovereigns. The Clergy was considered the First and highest estate in the emerging feudal system.  The Pope was Head of the Church and represented God to man as well as man represented before God.  He had become a mediator and head of those people he claimed and sometimes, even of others. 

Middle Ages

The Middle Ages are sometimes called the Dark Ages because of the state of learning, the depths to which culture in Christendom had fallen and the Crusades--a materialistic attempt on the part of some “Christians” to wrestle the Holy Land away from the “Pagans”.  The clergy were ignorant in general terms and the clerics were busy building their own little kingdoms.  The Papal-Sacral Order was efficient, but unable to bring the life needed to preserve and advance culture. There were pockets of believers who seemed to have an idea of what God expected, but we do not know a lot about them.

Renaissance

The Renaissance brought about a rebirth of learning. This rebirth of learning was fueled in part by the manuscripts that were brought back to the Universities in Europe.  As the Scholars dug into ancient writings, they recovered many of the foundations of European civilization.  The Arabs had preserved them in their great libraries.  The Christian scholars read manuscripts of the Scriptures in Greek and Arabic to which they compared the previous manuscripts they had used for centuries.  The scholars came in contact with the Church Fathers to see what the Apostolic Church and the early Church believed.  There was a reawakening that shook the very foundations of the Medieval world.  The world was abuzz with many questioning the status quo--including Erasmus, the Humanist and Luther, the monk. 

The Credibility of the Church was severely damaged in the Renaissance.  Challenges were made to the traditions and the notion of fides implicitum. The Renaissance fueled what became the Reformation.  The Reformation questioned everything in faith and practice.  New bases of articles of faith were being sought and debated.  One of the first was to tear down the notion of the Pope as the Head of the Church in order to replace Christ to his rightful place.  Reformed theologians looked at these new categories and saw only two heads or representatives of two groups of people.  Adam, the federal head of all men without Christ in whom all will die unless rescued by the work done by the other great federal head, the Lord Jesus Christ. This basic idea of headship gave rise to what we call federalism or Federal Theology.  In a technical sense, Federalism is the forerunner of Covenant Theology. Though the two are intimately related historically and theologically.  Over against the Catholic notion of the Pope as the HEAD or federal representative of the Church and therefore Christ’s earthly magisterial representative, Reformed Theologians developed vigorously this restored headship of Christ.  Besides sola scriptura and sola fide, it is the doctrine to affect the Church with the greatest force.  The Lord Jesus Christ was once again understood to be King over his glorious Kingdom. 

A word about sola scriptura:

Martin Luther did not start his career as a reformed by nailing his 95 Theses on the Castle Church door in Wittenburg. That is the theatrical beginning of the Reformation.  These 95 Theses were not Martin’s first concern.  In the Spring, probably March of 1517, he presented 99 Theses to the Faculty at Wittenburg for theological debate. The 95 touched on penance, repentance, indulgences and how a man can be right with God, but the earlier 99 touched on authority, tradition, scholasticism as it was presently used with human authorities and how a man can know what God has willed.  Scriptural authority over man was of greater concern for Luther as he worked his way through the maze of his own theological wanderings. I would rather we date the start of the Reformation from the Spring of 1517.

Medieval Scholasticism vested authority in ancient authors both biblical and otherwise on the same level. It was these authorities who had explained the Scriptures for the Church and to these authors that the Church looked authoritatively. This is what “tradition” was all about in Catholicism. In recovering the “Fathers” of the Church, humanist scholars started to write about the contradictory nature of theology as taught in the traditional way.  For a few centuries, Thomas had ruled the day in the Universities as supplemented with the sentences of Peter Lombard and others.  In the Renaissance, Augustine was rediscovered. This brought the tradition of Platonism as interpreted by Augustine in conflict with the unreconstructed Aristotellianism used by Thomas Aquinas.  This theological and philosophical impasse was extremely detrimental for the Catholicism being taught in the universities.  Religion was brought low because it was demonstrated to not be a compelling force. In the Universities and eventually in the Churches, man was no longer measured by God in all things.  Many scholars turned to a resurgence of Humanism man being the measure of all things. You see, the ancient philosopher’s writings had also been brought back to Europe and the universities during the Crusades.  The rediscovery of learning treated the sacred and profane with the same weight. The time was right to sort through the contradictory teachings of the Church and to debunk ungodly elements in philosophy in order to find a new way. This new way for the Reformers, was a recovering of the old, expressed in new ways. 

Back to the Covenant:

Sola Scriptura allowed the theologians and exegetes go back to examine the biblical foundations for theological ideas.  The Reformed, started to question everything, especially those items that impinged on the Crown rights of King Jesus and his rule over his people. 

Bullinger (1504-75), one of the formulators of the First Helvitic Confession, is usually credited with formulating a theology using the federal headship of Christ as the organizing principle as his summary of theology.  Formally, the system is called Federalism.  The idea of a God who sovereignly calls men into fellowship with himself became the analytical starting point for Reformed Theology.  The theologians had recovered the Gospel and now set out to question everything in their beliefs and practices through the use of sola scriptura with the Scriptures as the standard or canon, rather than tradition, schoolmen, or the word of a particular church.  The Scriptures were to be the measure.  The covenanting nature of God would be the starting point.

Ursinus (1543-85), the primary author of the Heidelberg Catechism does not use the idea of Covenant of Grace when he introduces his readers to these things.  He uses the Augustinian name, The Covenant of God.  If you have the P&R reprint edition of the 1852 Second American edition, the discussion begins on page 97. It is a wonderful statement making a transition between the work of the Mediator and the need of the Gospel.  It is good devotional reading and edifying to the soul.  It is clear that Ursinus viewed the Covenant of God as having been made with the elect alone--just like our Confession of Faith.  It is not until Ursinus discusses Infant Baptism in Question 74 (P. 365) that the Covenant of God is opened up to Infants with the presumption, not of their regeneration, but with the presumption of their election.  When Brother Fred Malone’s work on baptism comes out, read the section that explains the paedobaptist dilemma at this point.  It is too much to go into in this talk.

Francis Turretin (1623-87) is best known for the three-volume compendium of Reformed Theology known to us as the Institutes of Elenctic Theology.  He was an Orthodox or Reformed Scholastic who used the categories and methods of the Schoolmen to clear Reformed Covenantal doctrine from the errors of Rome, Socinians Amyraldians and emergent Arminians.  It is a work well worth the purchase and read.  Above all other theologies, it will make you a thinker--even in ways Owen won’t. 

Turretin is two theological generations removed from Bullinger and Ursinus.  In that time, Covenant theology/Federalism had strengthened its own position through thorough examination of it by its leading theologians and enemies. Turretin  has a wonderful way in which he uses the federal headship of the Lord Jesus Christ and the Covenant and Covenants to summarize the important points of the system.  Listen to what he says about the Covenant of Grace, the Church and the Elect:

            Second, from the nature of the covenant of grace which [the Lord Jesus          Christ] made with      the Church. Since it is eternal and will never be abrogated   according to the sacred oracles...it is necessary that the church, which is the         other covenanted party, should perpetually continue, that by receiving the             benefits of the covenant, she may also perform her duty toward God, to           which she is bound by the covenant.  And on this account the more because     the conservation of the world depends on the conservation of the church, since for no other reason does he sustain the world than to collect from it the             number of the elect, of whom the body of the church is composed (Institutes,   V. III, pp. 42f).

This is consistent with our Confession of faith as outlined in the circular letter. This is wonderful, doxological theology.  The Covenant of Grace is not so much about us as it is about the eternal purposes of God located in time and space.  It is about God’s love for himself.  A complete self-satisfied love whereby the Father gives an eternal love gift of the elect to his Son after sending him to accomplish their salvation.  The world exists, you and I exist and were converted that the Father might give this gift to his Son.  Nothing will make this world come to an end until all who are to be brought into the Church of the elect are brought to faith by the power and work of God’s Spirit. That we are a part of this eternal act of love should humble us and make us to cry out that we are unworthy sinners saved by God’s matchless covenanting grace.  I wish we could go into greater detail.

We also have Hermann Witsius (1636-78).  Witsius used the Covenant and the Covenants as the motif for his major theological work.  The Economy of the Covenants between God and Man is as the title continues, Comprehending a Complete Body of Divinity.  It is a marvelous piece of Christian Literature and theological art and is the most comprehensive seventeenth-century attempt at a systematic theology using the Covenants as the organizing principle and means of summary.  It takes the Divine Covenants as the starting point for a fully analytical theology.  In general, his view of the Covenant of Grace harmonizes well with our Confession. In his Book III, Chap. I (Vol 1, p. 281) he begins a discussion on Of the Covenant of God with the Elect. Using the term from Ursinus and Augustine, he sets out the reasons why this transcendental covenant must be understood as being between a Sovereign God and the elect he calls by grace.  It is an amazing chapter.  I only wish he had mentioned the Baptist Confession published in London on the year 1677.  It is the only thing missing.

Our understanding of the covenant of grace, may be different than the Westminster divines’s theological musings, but it is not however, inconsistent with other contemporary writers and the Federalism and Covenant Theology of the first generation of Reformed thinkers.  It is interesting that we,as Baptists in the Reformed tradition, have not deviated from what was rediscovered in the Reformation as men sought to recover the rightful place of the Lord Jesus as federal head over his church.  Our Particular Baptist forebears worked out the details with greater consistency to all of theology and practice. They applied sola Scriptura to the task of theology questioning everything to not only find a new basis for old truths, but a right foundation for all that was believed and practiced.   Yet, the use of “Covenant” as a transcendental idea remains a part of theological reflection from very early on in the history of theological development.  It is as old as the use of “Trinity” as a theological concept used to explain the nature and work of God. We should not fear what others might say.  It is a term that captured the essence of God’s saving work among men.  He brings men to himself, saves them from their sin and rebellion by his own dear son, applies it by his blest Spirit that the recipients of grace might become his people having their hearts subdued by divine grace.  This is the purpose of God found in the term the Covenant of God or the Covenant of Grace.  It is not a new thing.  It is as old as the decree of God and the Covenant of Redemption brought to man in the covenant of grace.

Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, to shed his covenanting grace on me. I once was lost, but now am found, of covenant mercy I sing.  Amen.