I said in the last post that I would follow up with a post on what the idea of covenant means to you an me today. Well, while we may not be a culture that sees covenants in the same way as Abraham did, we enter into them all of the time. Contracts are covenants. If you have a cell phone, then you have entered into a covenant with your carrier. If you own a home then you have most likely entered into a covenant with a your mortgage holder. We covenant, or enter into a relationship in a formal nature all of the time.
In the cases mentioned above the covenants are not always seen as equal. They usually exist because we want something that the other person has or can get us. We sign our lives away to enter into these relationships so we can get something that we want.
We, if we call ourselves followers of Christ, are in another form of covenant, the New Covenant. This covenant is made available to us through the blood of Christ shed on our behalf on the cross. This covenant is one that restores us to our intended relationship and communion with God our Father.
In this case we are offered a chance to covenant with the one person that holds the key to the one thing that we really need, not just something that we want or desire. This covenant brings the eternal life that we lost through our rebellion of sin.
There is another difference with this covenant is that it is not made by one stronger to hold us the weaker in a state of ownership, but rather it is as the covenants of Abraham’s day when a covenant made in between a stronger party and a weaker party made the two equal. Yes, when God made the covenant with Abraham, He made Abraham equal to a child of His, with the right to all of the resources of the Father.
With this agreement came the right to speak differently to each other. Abraham could now argue with God and beg Him for things, Abraham had a right to ask for the full resources of God the Father, as a dearly beloved son.
We too, as part of the New Covenant, have the right to the full resources of God. The goal of this should not be for our own gratification or wealth, but to have the heart of Christ in the garden when He prayed to the Father:
“Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done.” Luke 22:42
Seeking the will of the Father should be the driving force of how we ask for and utilize the resources of the Father.
When is the last time you begged the Father for resources to make His will on this earth a reality? Maybe it is time to start.