A New Covenant; A New Dispensation; Gen. 12:1
Everything from the end of Genesis
chapter 11 to the end of the book we are told about has something to do with
the Abrahamic covenant, with either the land or with the promised seed that God
is developing. That becomes the structure for understanding and interpreting
Genesis. There is a dispensational shift at this point. Acts 1:6-7 occurs just
before the Lord’s ascension. “When they therefore were come together, they
asked of him, saying, Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to
Israel?” The very question that the disciples are
asking recognizes that they don’t have a kingdom at this point. Jesus’ answer
to them is clearly recognition of the fact that the kingdom hasn’t been given
at all. They are not in any kind of kingdom stage. Jesus tells them ten days
before the church age begins that it was not for them to know the times [CHRONOS/xronoj]] and the
epochs [KAIROS/kairoj]. The basic idea of CHRONOS is a
succession of events, one thing following another in the course of time. It is
a word that is used in Galatians 4:4 in terms of the fullness of time. Often
the word refers to events in fulfillment of prophetic prediction. KAIROS indicates a broader expanse of time, time periods that have certain
definable characteristics. We would compare it to our word “age.” A third word
that is used, though not in this passage, is AIONOS/a)iwnoj]. But just
twenty years later when Paul writes to the Thessalonians, he says, “Now as for
the time and the epochs, brethren, you have no need for anything to be written
to you.” The implication is they already know. What has happened between Jesus’
ascension in 33 AD and Paul’s epistle to the Thessalonians in about
50-53 AD is that the church age began and with it the giving
of special revelation called mystery doctrine of the church age. With that
package of information revealed to the apostle they are told things about
prophecy and the coming kingdom. So it is not that we are not to know anything
about times and seasons but that Jesus was telling the apostles right before
Pentecost that they didn’t need to know it then. But they have been informed of
it now; there was more revelation. AIONOS or age is
sometimes used in a double sense, and that means from age to age or eternity.
An age is similar to KAIROS indicating an age in human history, and an age
whether it is similar to KAIROS or AIONOS may include
several dispensations. The word dispensation actually doesn’t have a time frame;
it emphasizes the responsibility given by God. The other words have the
temporal element to them. So when we are looking at dispensations we are
talking about the fact that God delegates certain responsibilities in different
periods of time. He administers things differently. A dispensation is a
distinct and identifiable administration in the development of God’s plan and
purposes for human history—Ephesians 3:2; Colossians 1:25,
26. God manages the entirety of human history as a household, moving humanity
through sequential stages of His administration, determined by the level of
revelation He has provided up to that time in history. As we go through time
more and more revelation is given, and as we see the difference between the
church age and the Old Testament more divine enablement is given—we in
the church age are indwelt and filled by the Holy Spirit; we have a completed
canon of Scripture, so there are no revelatory gifts functioning today. Each
administrative period is characterized by revelation which specifies
responsibility, a test in relation to those responsibilities or an evaluation.
There is almost always a failure to pass the test because part of what God is
demonstrating is that man is incapable of doing anything apart from his
complete sustenance, and then God’s gracious provision of a solution when that
failure occurs. So these elements are what we look for to try to identify when
a dispensation changes. In a dispensation here is a time when one dispensation
ends and another begins, but there may be a transition period. For example,
there was a short transition period between the crucifixion of Christ, which
was the end of the law, and the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost some
fifty days later. The understanding of dispensationalism emphasizes the divine
administration of history. We have to recognize that in history God is the
ultimate cause. You can’t interpret history today or yesterday without a divine
viewpoint framework.
One thing we understand from this is
that new revelation will designate a shift from one dispensation to another.
That is what we have in Genesis 12—new revelation. God is going to single
out one individual and give him a whole new set of promises and responsibilities.
That means that something is happening. God does that with other people in
history but it is not a dispensational shift because he is still working within
the framework of what He has already done with Abraham. When we move from one
dispensation to another some things will remain the same and other things will
change. Another thing we learn is that each dispensation has its own
responsibilities and its own tests. Finally we learn that the dispensations
move us in a certain direction. Each dispensation is designed to demonstrate
different points in relationship to the angelic conflict.
In the dispensation of Israel
there is going to be the age of the patriarchs and the age of the law. The
foundation for this shift is an understanding of the covenants. We have the
initial covenants—Edenic, Adamic and Noahic—and then the first of
the Jewish covenants. These are unconditional, eternal covenants and are not
dependent upon the Jews’ obedience. The first of these, the foundational
covenant, is the Abrahamic covenant, and there are three elements to it: land,
seed, and blessing. The land covenant is further expanded in Deuteronomy 30,
the seed aspect in the Davidic covenant in 2 Samuel 7, and the blessing aspect
in the New covenant in Jeremiah 31. The Abrahamic covenant becomes the
foundational covenant for understanding not only the Old Testament but the New
Testament as well.
Genesis 12:1, “Now the LORD had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred,
and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will show thee.” The verb amar which is the Hebrew word for say
here is a qal perfect, and a perfect tense verb in the Hebrew. It can have a
sort of pluperfect sense: “the Lord had said to Abram.” Here we see that the
motivation to move to the land of Canaan
was from God. God is going to separate Abram from that pagan, rebellious
culture. Believers are to live a life separate and distinct from the cosmic
system around them. There was a physical separation in the Old Testament
because God was establishing a new nation on a new piece of real estate.
Genesis 12:2, “And I will make of
thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou
shalt be a blessing.” Here is the seed idea. Here is a childless man whose wife
is barren and God is going to regenerate in the physical sense as a sign of
spiritual regeneration as He builds this new nation.
Genesis 12:3, “And I will bless them
that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee: and in thee shall all
families of the earth be blessed.” So we see the three elements here of the
Abraham covenant: a land promise, an emphasis on the seed or the descendants,
and a promise of blessing.
Genesis 13:14-17 gives another
indication, “And the LORD said unto Abram, after that Lot was separated from
him, Lift up now thine eyes, and look from the place where thou art northward,
and southward, and eastward, and westward: for all the land which thou seest,
to thee will I give it, and to thy seed for ever. And I will make thy seed as
the dust of the earth: so that if a man can number the dust of the earth, then
shall thy seed also be numbered. Arise, walk through the land in the length of
it and in the breadth of it; for I will give it unto thee.” The separation from
Lot had to do with God fine-tuning Abram so that
there was no interference with the seed. In these verses we again have the
emphasis on the seed, the descendants, and on the land.
Genesis 15:1-21 extends the borders
of the land, from the northern borders on the Euphrates
all the way down to the south-western border of Egypt.
In the meantime Abram is to stay in the land as basically a stranger, and
eventually his descendants will go into slavery in Egypt.
Genesis 17:1-21 reiterates the covenant and gives the sign of the covenant which
is circumcision. In Genesis 22:15-18 there is a reaffirmation of the covenant
after Abraham’s test as to whether he would be willing to sacrifice Isaac. So
these are the basic scriptures.
Every covenant is actually a
contract. God is the party of the first part because He is the one initiating
the covenant or contract with Abraham, and Abraham is party of the second part
as the representative of what will be the Jewish nation. The thing that we have
to understand about a contract is that the provisions are written and spelled
out in order to keep everybody honest in fulfilling the obligations of the
contract. Abraham has no conditions placed upon him. God is giving this to him.
This is called a royal grant treaty in Old Testament studies because it follows
the pattern of a king who is willing to give or bestow a gift upon an obedient
subject.
There are thirteen provisions given
in the Abrahamic covenant. We extrapolate that from all of these different
passages.
1)
God promises to
develop a great nation from Abraham. Although there will be many nations the
primary focus is on one nation, and that is Israel.
2)
God promises an
actual piece of real estate. He gives the boundaries. Genesis 12:7; 13:14-17;
15:7-21; 17:8.
3)
Abraham was to
be blessed. This went into effect immediately. We see that by chapter fifteen
Abraham is probably one of the wealthiest men in the world.
4)
God promises
that Abraham’s name will be great. He will be famous.
5)
Those who bless
him will be blessed. Those who are positive towards his descendants will be
blessed.
6)
Those who curse
him [treat him lightly] will be harshly punished.
7)
In Abraham all
nations will be blessed. That is fulfilled in Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is the
seed, according to Galatians 3. So it is through Abraham that everyone is
blessed.
8)
He is told that
Sarah will have a son. Genesis 15:1-4; 17:15-21.
9)
God promises
that his descendants will spend 400 years in bondage in Egypt.
Genesis 15:13-15.
10)
Other nations
will come from Abraham, not just the Jews. Many Arab nations can trace
themselves back to Ishmael or Abraham’s second wide Keturah, Genesis 17:3-6.
11)
God changes his
name from Abram (Exalted Father) to Abraham (father of multitudes).
12)
Sarai’s name is
changed to Sarah, from My Princes to The Princes. Genesis 17:5.
13)
The token or
sign of the covenant is circumcision.
Everything changes. God changes
history because of a very private act to Abram. This is a private communication
to Abram, it is not trumpeted throughout the ancient near east.
How do we categorize these
provisions? First of all, God promises certain things to Abraham. That he would
be the father of a great nation; that he himself would possess the land; and
that is an important point because Abraham never possessed the land. So Jesus
is going to come along and use that as an argument for resurrection. Other
nations will come from him. Kings will arise from him. He is promised personal
blessings during his life time. He is promised that his name would be great.
There are also other promises to the seed, to Israel.
There is the promise that the nation will be great, that in its destiny there
will be an innumerable number, that they will possess this land forever, and
they are promised ultimate victory over their enemies. To the Gentiles there
are promises, that they will receive blessing if they bless the descendants of
Abraham and cursing if they curse them, and they are promised spiritual
blessings or salvation through the seed of Abraham.
The three basic themes of the
covenant are land, seed, and blessing.
Abraham had eight sons—Ishmael, Isaac, and six other
sons, from three different women, Hagar, Sarah, and Keturah. But God only
confirmed the covenant with one of those sons: Isaac. It is through Abraham and
Isaac that the line goes. Genesis 26:2-4, God confirms the covenant with Isaac.
“And the LORD appeared unto him, and said, Go not down into Egypt;
dwell in the land which I shall tell thee of: sojourn in this land, and I will
be with thee, and will bless thee; for unto thee, and unto thy seed, I will
give all these countries, and I will perform the oath which I sware unto
Abraham thy father; and I will make thy seed to multiply as the stars of
heaven, and will give unto thy seed all these countries; and in thy seed shall
all the nations of the earth be blessed.” This is a reconfirmation of the land,
seed, and blessing promises of he Abrahamic covenant.
Isaac in turn had two sons, Esau and
Jacob, but the covenant is only confirmed to Jacob. Genesis 28:13, “And,
behold, the LORD stood above it, and said, I am the LORD God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac: the land whereon thou
liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed; and thy seed shall be as the
dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad to the west, and to the east,
and to the north, and to the south: and in thee and in thy seed shall all the
families of the earth be blessed. And, behold, I am with thee, and will keep
thee in all places whither thou goest, and will bring thee again into this
land; for I will not leave thee, until I have done that which I have spoken to
thee of.” It is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob that is important. It is
the descendants through Abraham, Isaac and Jacob that makes one a Jew.
This sets the stage for the age of
the patriarchs, which covers the period in the Bible from Genesis 12:1 through
Exodus 18:27. The central person in this dispensation is Abraham, so the major
focal point is understanding Abraham. We call this the dispensation of the
patriarchs because this was the group through whom God worked. The
responsibility during this dispensation was to obey the Abrahamic covenant,
i.e. to keep the seed isolated from the surrounding pagan environment. He
failed to do it, so God had to take him out of the land and take him to Egypt
because the Egyptians were so racist they hated the Semites, and they were not
going to intermarry or having anything to do with the Semites at all. They
isolated them in the little room of Goshen and it was there that God protected
them and they grew from seventy individuals who went down to Egypt with Jacob
to a nation of about 2 to 3-million in just a short period of 400 years. The
test to see if they would remain separate and be a blessing: they failed
through intermarriage with the Canaanites and threatened the seed, and so God
judged them by sending them in slavery down to Egypt.
But in grace God preserved the nation and He delivered them from slavery to
bring them back to the land in order work out His plans and purposes.