Am
I in Covenant With God?
The terms contract, agreement, treaty, and
covenant have the same basic legal interpretation. Two, or more sides, or
parties, have agreed to carry out obligations, or responsibilities, in exchange
for favors from the other party. We live with these kinds of agreements on a
daily basis. When we write a check, use a credit card, take out a loan, or sign
a lease, we are engaging in a covenant relationship with the merchant or
lender. With our signature on the check, credit card, or loan application, we
promise to pay for the goods or services in the future. However, we must be
faithful to carry out our regular payments or the agreement will terminated by
the other party. If either party becomes dissatisfied with the behavior of the
other party, the right to end the relationship is exercised.
When I hear the word covenant, I am
reminded of the marriage vows, most sacred of all covenants in our human world.
The man and the woman take vows to love
and support each other in the good times, as well as, the bad; and to forsake
all others while putting one another first. If one person breaks the covenant,
the relationship is tested, or perhaps broken.
So, how often do we hear or think about
the word covenant when describing our relationship with God? This idea
of covenant was important to the formation and continuation of the political,
military, and economical relationships among many of the ancient kingdoms. Alliances
and empires were built largely upon covenants-covenants which were often very
fragile.
God chose to pursue his people by the use
of this covenant idea. In Malachi 2 we find several references to this idea
that God reveals who he is through covenant-making. God’s covenant sets him off
from all other gods, and tells us that there is none other than him, he is a
God who keeps his promises, and his nature promotes obedience in us his people.
As we look deeper, we find that the covenant that God offers his people has a
quality that is not found in any of the other covenants. God’s covenant
includes grace, love, and is expressed by the Hebrew word hesed.
Hesed can be adequately defined as
“passionately loyal.” Both sides in the covenant “doing hesed” toward
each other. Scripture reveals that the ancient Hebrews soon realized that God’s
hesed was everlasting. Here was a God that kept on “doing hesed”with
them even when they had broken relationship with him.
John Oswalt writes in “Where Are You
God?” “What sort of God is this? Not only is he trustworthy, but persistently
trustworthy, not only loving, but insistently loving. It was
embarrassing! Had he no pride? Slowly, but surely, these ancient people
realized they had not found God, but that he had found them, and his very
nature was hesed.”
The God of the ancient covenant is the
same God of the Christian faith today. The invitation is the same today as we
hear the words, “I will be their God, they will be my people, if they turn
their faces toward me and surrender themselves completely.” Our God is a God
who is “passionately loyal” to us his people, desperately wanting to “do hesed,”
eagerly pursuing us.
So, we ask, “Am I consistently in covenant
with the God of hesed?”
Rev Tim McConnell Long’s
Chapel UMC January 13, 2013
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