Apr
11
2015
Doug Wilson’s Imaginary Covenant
Wilson: Who’s Harvey?
Miss Kelly: A white rabbit, six feet tall.
Wilson: Six feet?
Elwood P. Dowd: Six feet three and a half inches. Now let’s stick to the facts.
(Harvey, 1950)
It is a pity that this imaginary Covenant-of-obligations cannot be photographed and fingerprinted, let alone identified in the New Testament. Oh wait, it is mentioned in the New Testament. It is called the Law.
The best place to learn about biblical Covenants—what they are, what they look like, and how they operate—is the hallowed halls, past and present, of Reformed Theology. Strangely, this is also the worst place to learn about the New Covenant. It seems somebody did not get the system upgrade.
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2 comments | tags: Baptism, Covenant Theology, Doug Wilson, Federal Vision | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life
Apr
7
2015
…all of the Old Covenant sacraments, like the flood, were future tense and testified to the destruction of the flesh.
[A report from our London correspondent, Chris Wooldridge:]
A week ago, I attended two conferences delivered by Peter Leithart on the subject of the Sacraments. The first one was aimed at anyone interested; the second was addressed more to ministers and theological students.
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Comments Off | tags: Baptism, Chris Wooldridge, Communion, Covenant Theology, Federal Vision, Peter Leithart | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Mar
8
2015
Satan’s desire was always to turn the “pruning” of circumcision into an ax laid at the root of the tree of Israel.
A handful of treatments of the “massacre of the innocents” by Herod the Great see this bloodshed as the first of the New Covenant’s martyrs. But these miss the point of Matthew’s use of the word “fulfilled,” rendering it as good as meaningless. This massacre was the harbinger of the end of the old era and its promises. It said nothing about the promises of the new.
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Comments Off | tags: Acts, AD70, Babylon, Baptism, Circumcision, Communion, Covenant curse, Covenant Theology, Herod, Jeremiah, Joseph, Literary Structure, Matthew | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Feb
26
2015
Baptism is not a Covenant boundary but a staff uniform.
“I have kept for myself seven thousand men who have not bowed the knee to Baal.” (Romans 11:4)
There is much talk today about the dichotomy between the visible Church (those who physically participate) and the invisible Church (those who are truly regenerate). The dichotomy exists because it often seems, as it was in the first century, that “not all Israel is Israel.” But the Bible never makes this distinction.
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Comments Off | tags: Acts, Baptism, Covenant Theology, The Prophets | posted in Biblical Theology
Dec
8
2014
or Sacramental Sorcery and the Seed of Abraham
“O foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you?”
Having written a (basically word-by-word) commentary on Paul’s epistle to the Galatians, one which demonstrates his use of the biblical pattern of maturity at every point and every level, it amazes me how sacramentalists are not aware that their doctrine makes them the modern targets of Paul’s ire.
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Comments Off | tags: Baptism, Circumcision, Covenant Theology, Galatians, Peter Leithart, The Shape of Galatians | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Quotes
Nov
22
2014
Chiasms are everywhere in the Bible, yet “chiasm” is a word I had never heard before the age of 40. What’s up with Bible teachers? So, if you’re like I was, and totally unaware of these cool things, a chiasm is an occurrence of literary symmetry. Not only are these the way the entire Bible is constructed, you’ll always find them working at multiple levels. And they are not merely cool: they show us the shape of the work of God.
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Comments Off | tags: Chiasm, Covenant Theology, Eric Greene, Genesis, Jacob, Joseph | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Quotes
Nov
8
2014
What the Order of Melchizedek Means For Baptism
Jesus is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, and all His works are chiastic. Because of this, a solid understanding of any Covenant requires us to identify its “bookends.” According to Hebrews, the Melchizedekian bookends are crucial for a comprehension of the limitations of the Abrahamic Covenant.
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Comments Off | tags: Abraham, Baptism, Circumcision, Covenant Theology, Genesis, Literary Structure, Melchizedek | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology
Oct
25
2014
Why was the unique sacrificial rite in Genesis 15 required, and what did it signify? Was it simply a self-maledictory oath on the Lord’s behalf, or was there something deeper going on?
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Comments Off | tags: Abraham, Baptism, Covenant curse, Covenant Theology, Genesis, Melchizedek, Noah | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology
Oct
8
2014
After describing to an older Christian friend what happened in Jerusalem during the Jewish war, he replied, “Why have I never been taught this?”
Without their Covenant context and historical bearings, the pointy words of Jesus become so “generalized” that they seem inconsequential. In the wisdom of God, the tragic events of AD70 were recorded that we might understand the consequences of ignoring Jesus. They nail the New Testament Scriptures to the ground.
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Comments Off | tags: AD70, Covenant curse, Covenant Theology, Literary Structure, Matthew | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology
Aug
17
2014
For as in those days before the flood
they were eating and drinking,
marrying and giving in marriage,
until the day when Noah entered the ark…
(Matthew 24:38)
The Oath/Sanctions section of the Revelation seems to have three parts. The judgment begins in the house of God (Temple bowls – Garden), then follows the revelation of the “mystery” of the Woman and the kings of the Land, and finally the judgment reaches out to the borders of the World (the oikoumene). This corresponds not only with the Garden, Land, World architecture of the nations in Genesis 1-10, it brings an end to the “intermarriage,” the compromise of the Priestly people with idolatrous kings. It is fitting that the third part of this judgment (chapters 18-19) culminates in a Red Wedding.
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Comments Off | tags: AD70, Covenant curse, Covenant Theology, Josephus, Literary Structure, oikoumene, Revelation, Temple | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, The Last Days