Tuesday, July 4, 2017
There were several ways that blood was
used in the ratification of covenants with God.
The present focus will be on the cutting
in half of sacrificial animals and the participants of the covenant walking
between the two halves.
The cutting in half of the animals was
proof that the blood of the animals was shed.
If either of the parties involved in the
covenant, or treaty, did not live up to the terms of the covenant, they would
end up like the slain animals.
A very detailed example is found in
Jeremiah’s prophecy. The time was 586 BC. The Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar besieged Jerusalem and the other remaining cities in Judah. Deportation of the Jews to Babylon had already happened. Zedekiah was Judah’s final king at the time.
The specific example illustrated was the
freeing of slaves of the Jews at the agreed upon time period of 7 years.
When reminded that the 850 year old law
was still valid, all the Jews agreed to abide by it. But then the pressure from Nebuchadnezzar
lessened and the slave owners reneged.
“But
afterward they changed their minds and made the male and female slaves return,
whom they had set free, and brought them into subjection…” Jeremiah 34:11
God, speaking through Jeremiah, spoke
harshly against the breakers of the covenant.
God, in a cynical manner spoke thusly:
“‘Behold
I proclaim liberty to you,’ says the LORD, ‘to the sword, to pestilence and to
famine!’” Jeremiah 34:17
Then God pronounced specific judgment on
the covenant breakers as He reminded them of the covenant the Jews ratified
shortly after their deliverance from Egypt.
“And I will
give the men who…have not performed the words of the covenant which they made
before Me, when they cut the calf in two and passed between the parts of it –
the princes of Judah…the priests…into the hand of their enemies…” Jeremiah
34:18-20a
Note particularly that both government
leaders and priests ratified the covenant between Judah and God. The covenant applied to all Jews.
The fate of the covenant breakers?
“…Their
dead bodies shall be for meat for the birds of the heavens and the beasts of
the earth.” Jeremiah 34:20b
Now let’s go back to the first such
covenant where animals were cut in half and the covenant participants passed
between the divided animals.
The time was approximately 2075 BC. The covenant participants were Abram (Abraham)
and God.
Provisions of the covenant included, but
not limited to, the bondage and subsequent delivery of Abram and his
descendants from Egypt and
the future extent of the Promised Land from the river in Egypt to the great river Euphrates.
Abram was instructed to bring to God a
three-year-old heifer, a three-year-old female goat, a three-year-old ram and
several birds.
Then
he (Abram) brought all these to Him and cut them in two, down the middle, and
placed each piece opposite the other…”
Genesis 15:10
The blood of the animals was shed by their
being cut in two, and the covenant was about to be ratified.
“Now when
the sun was going down, a deep sleep fell upon Abram…And it came to pass, when
the sun went down and it was dark, that behold, there appeared a smoking oven
and a burning torch that passed between those pieces.” Genesis
15:12a, 17
Abram slept through the ratification
process. Only God passed between the
parts of the slain animals that had shed their blood.
Thus only God was required to abide by the
terms of the covenant! The covenant was
unconditional!
Note:
The words ‘cut’ and ‘divided’ are used interchangeably. Tradition reveals that the phase ‘to cut a
treaty’ stems from ancient Jewish law.
When God spoke through the prophet
Zechariah to the returning Jewish remnant after their 70 year Babylonian
captivity, He referred to His ancient covenant with Abram.
“As for
you…because of the blood of your covenant, I will set your prisoners free…even
today I declare that I will restore double to you…” Zechariah
9:11-12
God’s covenant with Israel is
forever, inasmuch as He is solely responsible for its terms. God’s attributes confirm that He cannot break
His covenant with Abram or his descendants.
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