Hello everyone,
I was reading through Douglas Van Dorn's book "Waters of Creation," and he brought up an interesting question.
He argues against baptism replacing circumcision as the sign of the covenant by pointing to the covenant of grace between the time of Adam and Abraham. He says that there was no covenant sign before the Abrahamic covenant.
My question based on this is, did the Covenant of Grace have a covenant sign before Abraham? and if so, why would there not be a covenant sign until Abraham?
Hello Daniel,
I do think the question is interesting, but likely not for the same reason that the author raised it. You yourself set forth the question in the straightforward way, which I paraphrase thus:
What was the covenant-sign before circumcision, or else,
Was there any covenant-sign given prior to the appointment of circumcision to Abraham? These are normal, reasonable questions when the story of Redemption is laid out before us in timeline fashion.
The short answer is:
there was none. This prompts the follow up question:
Why not? The author expresses doubt that baptism supplants circumcision, because (here I'm making an inference about his position since I don't have his view spelled out) the Baptist typically views the New Covenant as the
present (as opposed to promised)
gracious covenant of God, which is instituted along with an accompanying sign in fulfillment of earlier covenant arrangements. This covenant stands in sharp contrast with previous covenants of law or promise, which have other signs attached to them and for them, specifically. The older covenants over and done, any sign associated with such covenants should also be presumed done away with them.
All that is consistent with the Baptist perspective, but it does not have much impact on the P&R apprehension of the nature of "one covenant, many administrations." There is an eternal covenant of redemption within the Godhead, and this expressed will of God is manifest in history through that which we call the covenant of grace, bringing the Redeemer into union with his elect, one by one. The serial covenants of the OT (some overlapping others) post-fall are not discrete arrangements with purposes apart from the overarching design, but are component parts of a whole. Hence, if in the present New Covenant arrangement an earlier covenant sign is done away for economic reasons, if the source of the New Covenant institutes a fresh symbol better suited to his economy, it is fair to characterize the new institution as a substitute. One sign has indeed come in place of the previous, as evidenced by the fact the two signs perform almost identical functions and teach (through symbols) the same spiritual truths in their respective economies.
In order to answer the question,
Why no unique covenant-sign prior to Abraham?, unique in the sense that it is a sign for and borne by members of the church (thus different from the sign of the rainbow for Noah's covenant, being directed at all men and indeed all living creatures)--we must identify what is special about Abraham in covenant-history terms. Abraham is called the father of the faithful, Rom.4:16. He it is who, in the aftermath of all the preliminaries of history (Gen.1-11) is set forth as God's choice to inaugurate the formal, historical expression of covenant with a people, a holy nation, a called-out and separated community made forever distinct from the rest of humanity.
It is not the case that Abraham is the first saved man of the race, but salvation extended back even to our first parents who fell. How could they be saved, if not for the work of the Redeemer, the seed of the woman who was to come? How could they have a blessed relationship to him, if not by covenant? This is why we say there was the beginning of the covenant of grace even as those two were expelled from the garden. Yet, God did not choose then to institute a new and gracious formal covenant expression with humanity. He gave them sacrifices, but he did not "cut a covenant" as he would later in Gen.15, or give them a sign as in Gen.17--the same sign that would be appropriated through Moses for marking members of the covenant under the administration of the Law. The preliminaries were not complete. Still, "men began to call on the name of the Lord," Gen.4:26.
The calling of Abraham (or Abram as he was first named) marks a kind of conception moment in a "birth process" for the covenant of grace, one that will see the church come of age in the time of Christ and fulfillment. Up to that moment, there was a kind of "unformed and unfilled" aspect to the church's creation, comparable to God's calling the substance of creation into being in Gen.1:1 while still not yet done the work of ordering it. The protoevangelium has been uttered, and there are men who benefit from it, but there lacks shape and evidence of the design.
Another way of thinking about Abraham and the covenant God makes with him is by an analogy of a marriage contract. The call and promise of God, Gen.12, is akin to a betrothal. The covenant-making ceremony, Gen.15, is comparable to a marriage ceremony or feast. The covenant is also marked by a sign, Gen.17, while in our culture marriage is frequently marked by some sign as well, such as a ring symbolizing all that the marriage said and accomplished. The temporal gaps between those events are of little moment for the story of Abraham considered all in one. In other words, once we understand basically how Abraham and his covenant functions in the grand redemptive storyline, the institution of a sign to accompany the formal covenant arrangement fits the circumstances, and also continues (like a ring on the finger) to bear witness to what has taken place in history.
Abraham is tremendously seminal in the Bible story. Among other things, his role as the first
clearly defined typological mediator of the divine covenant is highly significant. He is the first named
prophet, Gen.20:7. Beside leading his people to an altar (e.g. Gen.12:7) he performs an important
priestly intercession when he pleads for the lives of the people of Sodom, but especially for Lot, Gen.18:23-32. He stands among and face to face with kings as their equal, Gen.14, and they are made to treat with him as if a
king. Abraham's role is taken up by his son Isaac, and Isaac by his son Jacob. This role is reprised in monumental form by Moses, which after him is not seen all together in one man so finely until a greater than Moses arrives. The priests and the kings of Israel persist in fundamental distinction until Jesus comes to do priestly service after the order of Melchizedek.
Returning to the substance of your question, the answer of
Why? is that the sign to be given and remain until Christ was not suitable for the eras prior to Abraham. The world and the church was not ready for the sign destined for the purpose, which should bring the Christ into the world at the proper time. But with the formal inauguration of the covenant the time had arrived, and so was given.