Reading: New Covenant God Will Make by Jim Skillen
A New Covenant God
Will Make1
Dr. James W. Skillen directed the Center for Public Justice
from 1981 until his retirement as president in 2009. Prior
to 1981, he taught political science and philosophy at
three Christian colleges, including Dordt College. He ed-
ited the Center’s periodicals and has written or edited 15
books, including In Pursuit of Justice: Christian-Democratic
Explorations (2004), With or Against the World? America’s
Role Among the Nations (2005), and The Good of Politics: A
Biblical, Historical, and Contemporary Introduction (2014).
by James W. Skillen
Israel and the Covenants
In Jeremiah we read, “‘The time is coming,’
declares the Lord, ‘when I will make a new cov-
enant with the house of Israel and with the house
of Judah’” (Jer. 31:31). How does that divine prom-
ise relate to the original covenant God made with
Israel? And if Jesus is the embodiment of that new
covenant, as Christians believe, how is it that he
fulfills God’s promise to “the house of Israel and
with the house of Judah”?
In this essay I argue that God’s covenants with
Noah, Abraham, Israel, and David build on one
another in a progressive revelatory way that antici-
pates the new covenant promised in Jeremiah. This
progression is different from imagining that each
of those covenants displaced or replaced the one
preceding it, and it is different from saying that the
new covenant in Christ Jesus displaces all earlier
covenants, putting them in the past tense from the
moment of his resurrection. My thesis is that all
of the earlier covenants, including God’s covenant
with Israel, continue even now to bear witness to,
and anticipate the fulfillment of, the new covenant
God promised to make with Israel and Judah, the
covenant that the apostles proclaim has been re-
vealed in Jesus Christ. To understand this point, we
need to recognize that from our present temporal
point of view, God’s new covenant promises have
not yet been entirely fulfilled. Messiah Jesus has
come, but he has not yet returned. God’s kingdom
has not yet been fully established. With the new
covenant that God promised through Jeremiah,
no one would any longer need to teach neighbors
to know the Lord because “they will all know me,
from the least of them to the greatest” (Jer. 31:34).
That promise also has not yet been realized. Thus,
we need to look again at how the new covenant is
fulfilling the earlier covenants.
God’s covenants with Abraham on through to
David had the character of God’s pledged troth,
which entailed many promises that would be ful-
filled in the future, along the way. Think, for exam-
ple, of God’s covenant with Abraham that included
the promise that through his seed all nations would
be blessed (Gen. 12:2-3; 18:18; 22:18; 26:4; 28:14).
Editor’s Note: Dr. Skillen’s essay is part of a book project, tentatively titled God’s Sabbath with Creation, exploring (1) the
meaning of our creaturely responsibilities in relation to the progressive development of the biblical covenants and (2) the
relation of this age to the coming age—creation and eschatology.
Pro Rege—March 2017 21
And that was before Abraham had even one heir.
Moreover, the same promise was repeated to Isaac
and Jacob. There is a great mystery here, yet the pat-
tern of promise and anticipated fulfillment is clear.
The covenants with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
looked ahead to how and when God would fulfill
promises to them. We also know from the proph-
ets that many of God’s promises, which entailed
curses as well as blessings, have been fulfilled while
many others have not yet come to pass. That is why
the questions that tend to
arise in almost every discus-
sion of God’s covenants, old
and new, tend to focus on
the timing and the mean-
ing of their fulfillment. For
example, God promised to
establish David’s throne for-
ever and to restore Israel and
Judah to right standing with
God. Yet it does not appear
today that a son of David sits
on a throne of Israel or that Israel and Judah have
been fully restored to righteousness before God.
If we are to believe what is written in the Old and
New Testaments, therefore, we must still struggle
with the question of when and how God fulfilled,
is fulfilling, and will fulfill the covenant promises
to Israel. And if Jesus is the promised Messiah,
through whom God is establishing the new cove-
nant, how does (how will) that new covenant reach
fulfillment? Recall the final conversation that the
risen Jesus had with his disciples before ascending
into heaven (Acts 1:1-8). They asked him, “Is now
the time, Lord, when you will restore the kingdom
to Israel?” (Acts 1:6). Jesus did not reject their ques-
tion as irrelevant to his mission. He told them that
it was not for them to know the times and dates
God sets but that they would receive power from
the Holy Spirit to be his witnesses in Jerusalem, in
all of Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the
earth (Acts 1:7-8). The disciples’ question to Jesus
is still awaiting a final answer. The dates of fulfill-
ment are for God to decide. So again we ask, how
are God’s covenants with Noah, Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, and David related to Jesus?
Ben Witherington draws together, in the fol-
lowing way, several of the questions we’ve been rais-
ing. When Paul says in Romans 9:6 that “not all
who are descended from Israel are Israel,” he
does not speak of a ‘new Israel,’ nor does he speak
of the replacement of one Israel by another here.
His argument is about the way the one true people
of God have developed through history. He does,
however, redefine who the people of God are,
countering both popular Jewish notions about the
claim Jews had on God because of their physi-
cal descent..., but at the same time countering
attitudes that some Gentile
Roman Christians seem to
have had that suggested that
Gentiles had replaced Jews
as God’s chosen people
(11:19).2
If we follow Withering-
ton’s reading of Paul, where
will it lead us? How does
Paul understand the relation
of Israel to Christ and his
disciples? How can God remain faithful to Israel
and at the same time do something so new, so final
and climactic, that it redefines the people of God?
Creation, Election, and Covenant Promises
To get our bearings, look with me at the Bible’s
opening chapters together with the openings of
John’s Gospel, Hebrews, and Colossians. For we
cannot grasp the meaning of God’s covenant with
Israel and its relation to the revelation of Christ Jesus
apart from God’s creation purposes. According to
the biblical witness, all things have been created by
God through and for the Son of God, who became
flesh in Jesus Christ. All things hold together in
him (John 1:1-4; Col. 1:15-20; Heb. 1:1-3). God’s
creation order and purposes stand at the founda-
tion of all the judgment-redemption covenants
of the Old Testament and the New. “Part of the
point of covenant renewal,” writes N.T. Wright in
reference to Paul’s letters, “is that this was God’s
intended way of renewing creation itself; this is the
larger framework of thought within which Paul is
operating.”3
In the Genesis account of creation we can rec-
ognize an originating covenant4
in the sense that
it is God’s bond with the creation, including the
If we are to believe what is
written in the Old and New
Testaments, therefore, we must
still struggle with the question
of when and how God fulfilled,
is fulfilling, and will fulfill the
covenant promises to Israel.
22 Pro Rege—March 2017
terms of God’s commission of the human genera-
tions to serve as the stewards, rulers, prophets, and
priests of creation. In it, humans are appointed to
love and walk with God throughout their genera-
tions, exercising the responsibilities God has given
them. The orientation of their lives and the whole
creation is toward the praise of God, whose sab-
bath blessing will be their inheritance when all has
been fulfilled in righteousness (see Heb. 4:1-12).
That order of creation still stands and bears wit-
ness to the creator God. This is true even though
human disobedience has alienated the human gen-
erations from God and subjected them to the curse
of death. Yet God did not immediately carry out
the full penalty of death (Gen. 3) that would cut
off the continuation of the generations of human-
kind. Instead, God mercifully upholds the human
generations in order to fulfill the creation purposes
(Gen. 3:21-24), and the forthcoming judgment-
and-redemption covenants have everything to do
with that fulfillment.
The great flood-judgment (Gen. 6-8) nearly ac-
complished God’s curse of death on unrighteous
humanity, but in the act of saving the righteous
man Noah (a second Adam), God establishes a cre-
ation-renewal covenant with blessings and prom-
ises for the continuation of humankind’s earthly
stewardship and the creation’s continued fruitful-
ness (Gen. 9:8-17). God’s election of Noah and his
family makes possible a fresh start in the exercise
of human responsibility in accord with the origi-
nal creation covenant (Gen. 9:1-7). This covenant
again opens the way for the human generation to
anticipate fulfillment in God’s consummation of
creation. The Noachian covenant did not displace
or replace the creation order but builds on it and
takes place within it. We also see that the disobedi-
ence of Adam has not yet been eradicated from hu-
mankind, and the generations of Noah soon show
themselves to be as unfaithful to God as the earlier
generations were.
In God’s covenants with Abram/Abraham, we
see the next historical “calling out” (election) of a
representative from among the nations, but this
time it does not go hand in hand with the destruc-
tion of all others, as when God saved only Noah.
God’s purpose in electing Abram is again to restore
a righteous humanity—a great nation—that will
hear and trust and follow God and be the chan-
nel of God’s blessing to all nations on earth (Gen.
12:1-3; Ps. 47).5
God’s election of Abraham forces
the next question: what now comes of God’s earlier
promises to Noah for all of humanity, including
those not in the line of Abraham? Clearly, Abraham
is a son of Noah, not a replacement for Noah in
the sense that the Abrahamic covenant abrogates
the Noachian covenant. To the contrary, God’s
covenant with Abraham builds on the Noachian
covenant and will unfold within the same creation
order (see Is. 54:9-10). And part of what this means
is that through Abraham’s seed, all nations will be
blessed (Gen. 12:3).
From the seed of Abraham, only Isaac is elected
for God’s covenantal line, but that does not mean
God’s covenant with Abraham is abrogated when
Isaac is born or that all who are not of Isaac are
damned for all eternity. Ishmael, too, is protected
and blessed by God (Gen. 21:8-21). Then, from
the seed of Isaac only Jacob (Israel) is chosen. Yet
that does not mean the elimination of Esau from
God’s purposes for Israel and the nations. Nor
does it mean that God’s covenant with Isaac is su-
perseded when Jacob is elected. God’s blessing of
Jacob confirms as valid God’s faithfulness to Isaac
and Abraham. All too soon the children of Israel
find themselves enslaved in Egypt, and when God
liberates them from captivity, he sets them up as a
nation whose covenant elaborates the true way of
life for the redeemed. The children of Israel are to
shine like a light for all nations; they are to show
what righteous humanity ought to be. God’s cov-
enant with Israel is a further expansion and elabo-
ration of the meaning of God’s creation purposes,
God’s covenant with Noah, and God’s promises to
Abraham and Isaac. As Wright puts it,
Israel is to be God’s royal nation of holy priests,
chosen out of the world but also chosen for the
sake of the world. Israel is to be the light of the
world: the nations will see in Israel what it means
to be truly human and, hence, who the true God
is. For this purpose, Israel is given Torah.6
God does this not as a reward for the superior
character and worthy deeds of Israel but to reveal
God’s faithfulness, righteousness, redeeming love,
and glory (see Gen. 14:4; 15:1-21; 19:3-6; Deut.
Pro Rege—March 2017 23
9:1-6; Jer. 16:14-21; Ps. 106:6-12; 115:1).
These historically revelatory covenants do not
answer all the questions we might ask about God’s
final, eschatological disposition of every individual
person. The election of Jacob and not Esau does
not imply that every child of Esau is bound for
hell for all eternity and that every child of Jacob is
saved for eternity. That is not what this covenantal
history is all about. God’s
election of Abraham does
not imply that every person
outside Abraham’s blood-
line is condemned to inherit
God’s disfavor for all eter-
nity. Stanley Stowers offers
a helpful comment in this
regard:
Paul’s point [in Romans
9] is not that Ishmael and
Esau were damned. They
were not. Rather, Isaac and Jacob were made
instruments ‘so that God’s purpose of election
might continue’ (9:11).... Thus chapter 9 tells us
that one cannot find membership in a lineage by
works. Rather, God decides on the lines of de-
scent, and membership in the lineage comes by
birth.7
There is much about God’s election of covenant
partners that remains a mystery to us. Yet the
Scriptures are clear that God’s election of Israel
had in view other nations, the whole creation, and
God’s glory above all (see, for example, Is. 34-35
and Jer. 46-51).
In the wilderness after the Exodus and in the
promised land, Israel showed that despite God’s
special covenant with them, they too continued in
the line of sinful Adam and Noah. Part of the Sinai
covenant is God’s promised blessings and curses
of the chosen people, depending on how they re-
sponded to God’s will for them (Ex. Lev. 26:1-46;
Josh. 23:14-16; Ps. 50; 78; Is. 1:27-28; Jer. 16:10-
15; 17:5-8). After God’s judgment of Israel by the
Assyrians, only Judah and Benjamin were spared
for a time. In other words, even before the exile of
Judah, not all of Israel continued as “Israel”; God
kept only Judah and Benjamin in the land. Judah
was not all of Israel, nor was Israel all of humanity,
but each was chosen for the sake of God’s judging,
saving, and consummation of creation to reveal
the glory of God. Jews as a people of common de-
scent from Israel continue to bear witness to God’s
special covenant with Israel (as Paul emphasizes in
Romans 9:4-5). God’s covenant with Israel has not
been set aside, even with the curses carried out on
them; God’s judgments of disobedience are inher-
ent in the terms of the covenant.
The New Covenant is the
Eschatological Covenant
Again and again, God’s
faithfulness to the cov-
enants with Abraham on
through Israel at Sinai is
on display in the cutting off
of some and the saving of
a remnant in fulfillment of
God’s promises. Covenant
history unfolds histori-
cally under God’s protection and judgment, under
God’s blessings and curses, under the Lord of heav-
en and earth who is enthroned above. That is why
God’s covenants with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
point in promise and hope to a consummation of
creation beyond this age and not limited to certain
future events in this age (see for example Is. 54-58).
God’s covenant with Israel continues to stand in
testimony to that which God has been doing and
will do in fulfillment of it. That covenant stands as
an anticipatory witness to the new covenant that
God will make with the houses of Israel and Judah.
The preview of that consummation is seen
throughout the Scripture. In a dream, Jacob caught
a glimpse of the divine throne room (Gen. 28:10-
22). When God met with Moses, the glory of the
Lord was so great that Moses was not allowed to
see God’s face (Ex. 33:12-23), and thereafter Moses
had to wear a veil in the presence of the people be-
cause his own face was so radiant (Ex. 34:29-35).
Even though God called Moses to lead Israel out of
Egypt and into the promised land, God did not al-
low Moses to enter the land. Moses saw it only from
a distance (Deut. 32:48-52). But what he saw and
had come to expect of God was more than what
the earthly promised land could ever offer (Heb.
3:1-6).8
Even in building the temple, which David
was not allowed to build, Solomon was aware that
From the seed of Abraham,
only Isaac is elected for God’s
covenantal line, but that does
not mean God’s covenant with
Abraham is abrogated when
Isaac is born or that all who are
not of Isaac are damned for all
eternity.
24 Pro Rege—March 2017
it could not truly contain God: “The heavens, even
the highest heaven, cannot contain you [Lord].
How much less this temple I have built” (I Kgs.
8:27). When the Lord blessed Solomon and prom-
ised to “establish your royal throne over Israel for-
ever, as I promised David your father when I said,
‘you shall never fail to have a man on the throne of
Israel’” (I Kgs. 9:5), we again hear the promise of an
eternity. But within several generations the kings
of both Israel and Judah are destroyed, and Israel
and then Judah are driven into exile. The reason for
God’s judgment against Israel was offered in God’s
very pledge to Solomon: “But if you or your sons
turn away from me and do not observe the com-
mandments and decrees I have given you and go
off to serve other gods and worship them, then I
will cut off Israel from the land I have given them
and will reject this temple I have consecrated for
my Name” (I Kgs. 9:6-7).
Nonetheless, God’s promise to restore a rem-
nant and to establish David’s kingdom forever still
rings out from the Psalms and the Prophets. God’s
ways are not our ways, and they reach beyond the
confines of our earthly generations and sense of
timing. It is not for us to know “the times or dates
the Father has set by his own authority” (Acts 1:7).
The future king that Solomon is to anticipate will
rule forever and will be more than any human king
could ever be: “He will endure as long as the sun,
as long as the moon, through all generations.... He
will rule from sea to sea and from the River to the
ends of the earth.... All kings will bow down to
him and all nations will serve him” (Ps. 72:5, 8,
11). Isaiah, called by God to announce judgment
on Israel, also holds out the vision and hope of an
heir of David who will save his people: “Of the in-
crease of his government and peace there will be no
end. He will reign on David’s throne and over his
kingdom, establishing and upholding it with jus-
tice and righteousness from that time on and forev-
er. The zeal of the Lord Almighty will accomplish
this” (Is. 9:7). In the midst of Jeremiah’s prophecies
of judgment on the nations, including Judah and
Jerusalem, the Lord swears on his “covenant with
creation” (Jer. 33:20), “I will fulfill the gracious
promise I made to the house of Israel and to the
house of Judah. ‘In those days and at that time I
will make a righteous Branch sprout from David’s
line; he will do what is just and right in the land.
In those days Judah will be saved and Jerusalem
will live in safety. This is the name by which it
will be called: the Lord Our Righteousness’” (Jer.
33:14-16). Just as God assured Abraham and Sarah,
who were well past the childbearing age, that they
would have a son (Gen. 18:10-14), so God can see
through and beyond the desolation of Israel and
the destruction of throne and temple all the way to
the fulfillment of covenant promises made long ago
to those chosen from among the nations.
It is abundantly clear from the New Testament
witness that God’s covenant in Christ is the new
covenant prophesied by Jeremiah and Ezekiel. Yet
it is equally clear that the new covenant builds on
and fulfills the earlier ones; it does not discard them
at historical points in this age and leave them in
the past as no longer valid. Even after the coming
of Jesus and his death and resurrection, the end
has not yet come. Paul and the other apostles of
Christ Jesus—just like Abraham, Moses, David,
Solomon, Isaiah, and Jeremiah—saw with eyes of
faith something that is still not yet, something that
in its fullness transcends the time and scope of both
genealogical and historical possibilities and expec-
tations (see Heb. 11).
The revelation of Jesus as Israel’s Messiah, the
seed of Abraham through whom all nations will be
blessed, began with his incarnation, death, resur-
rection, and ascension. But the culminating full-
ness of God’s new covenant has not yet been dis-
closed. Jesus has not yet returned. The eschatologi-
cal fulfillment of the revelation of God’s glory is
still something we anticipate by faith. And all the
while, the testimony of God’s creation order, of the
rainbow sign to Noah, of God’s covenant promises
to Abraham, of God’s chosen people Israel, and of
the promise that David’s throne will endure for-
ever—the testimony of all of these—continues to
bear testimony to God’s covenant faithfulness that
is now reaching eschatological fulfillment in Christ
Jesus, until all is fulfilled.