Hi Brian!
This week I want to share an article by one of our favorite Bible teachers, Bob Yandian. This one is on the Covenant of Blood and I found it to be very interesting!
What is a Blood Covenant?
In parts of the world, and in most
all times, a blood covenant was the strongest type of covenant two people could
enter into. It has been used in civilized as well as primitive nations to unite
two people together in marriage, business or friendship.
The covenant was made when the blood
of two individuals was mingled. It could be done by cutting the palms of the
individuals and then the shaking of hands combined the blood. It could also be
that a few drops of blood from each person could be mingled in a glass of wine
and then drunk by both, although the Bible forbid the drinking of blood. In
either case, the blood was mixed, thus indicating that two lives were mixed. Or
finally, an animal’s blood could be shed as representative of both individuals
mingling their lives together. After all, “the life is in the blood.” The
cutting of the skin and mingling of blood left a permanent scar as a reminder
of the covenant from that time on.
God’s Covenant with Man is Symbolized
by Blood Covenant
In Genesis fifteen, when God entered
into covenant with Abraham, substitutes were used. After all, how could God
bleed except through a substitute. God introduced the covenant by saying He now
would be Abraham’s “shield and exceeding great reward” (Genesis 15:1). God
would be Abraham’s protector and provider from that time on. Since God and
Abraham were in covenant with each other, they shared each other’s assets and
liabilities. Abraham had nothing but liabilities and God had nothing but
assets. Abraham certainly got the better end of the covenant with God. The
blood of a heifer, goat, ram, turtle dove and pigeon were mingled to represent
the blood of Christ shed for us on the cross. Through this act, God and Abraham
began a covenant which is still in effect today, faith in Jesus’ sacrifice for
us. The innocent shed His blood for the guilty and has given God’s life to
mankind ever since. We have been saved today "through the blood of the
everlasting covenant" (Hebrews 13:20).
The Covenant Between David and
Jonathan
“The soul of Jonathan was knit to the
soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul. Saul took him that day
and would not let him go home to his father's house anymore. Then Jonathan and
David made (cut) a covenant, because he loved him as his own soul. And Jonathan
took off the robe that was on him and gave it to David, with his armor, even to
his sword and his bow and his belt” (I Samuel 18:1-4).
The Hebrew word for “made” a covenant
means to cut. David and Jonathan cut a blood covenant with each other
because God brought them together, they recognized it, and mingled their blood,
thus joining their lives to each other. Like Abraham with God, David had more
to gain from this covenant than Jonathan. But, they were not in this covenant
to take, but to give. David was a shepherd, Jonathan was the son of the king.
David had few possessions to give. Jonathan had the riches of the kingdom at
his fingertips. David had a slingshot for his protection and Jonathan had the
military of Israel. They exchanged their robes, armor, sword and belts. This
meant that now, by the robe, the power and authority of the kingdom was as much
David’s as it was Jonathan’s. So it was with the armor, Jonathan would be
David’s protection. By the sword and bow, Jonathan would be David’s defender.
And, by the belt, all children to come in their loins, would be included in the
covenant. David and Jonathan were more than friends, they were covenant
friends. Jonathan and David loved each other as much as they loved themselves
(1 Samuel 20:4, 41, 42).
Mephibosheth
After David took the throne, he began
to look for an heir of Saul and Jonathan to bless. The blood of his covenant
with Jonathan was demanding that he find if anyone was still alive he could
share Jonathan’s generosity with.
“David said, "Is there still
anyone who is left of the house of Saul, so I may show him kindness for
Jonathan's sake?" And there was a servant of the house of Saul
whose name was Ziba. So when they had called him to David, the king said
to him, "Are you Ziba?" He said, "At your service!"
Then the king said, "Is there not still someone of the house of Saul, to
whom I may show the kindness of God?" And Ziba said to the king,
"there is still a son of Jonathan who is lame in his feet." So
the king said to him, "Where is he?" And Ziba said to the king,
"Indeed he is in the house of Machir the son of Ammiel, in Lo
Debar." Then King David sent and brought him out of the house of
Machir the son of Ammiel, from Lo Debar. Now when Mephibosheth the son of
Jonathan, the grandson of Saul, came to David, he fell on his face and
prostrated himself. Then David said, "Mephibosheth?" And he answered,
"Here is your servant!" So David said to him, "Do not
fear, for I will surely show you kindness for Jonathan your father's sake, and
will restore to you all the land of Saul your grandfather; and you shall eat
bread at my table continually. 13 So Mephibosheth dwelt in Jerusalem for he ate
continually at the king's table. And he was lame in both his feet." (2
Samuel 9:1-7,13)
Mephibosheth was the son of Jonathan.
He was included in the blood covenant with his father and David, but he never
knew it. He grew up hating David. He believed all the reports put out by his
grandfather Saul, that David stole the kingdom from the king he served and from
Jonathan, David’s best friend.
When Saul and Jonathan died,
Mephibosheth’s guardian grabbed him and ran for their lives. While she was
running she dropped Mephibosheth and he was crippled in his feet from that time
on. He was raised in poverty among Arabs and grew up all his life knowing he
was the one surviving heir to the throne but thinking David had stolen it from
Saul, Jonathan and him. He had spoken badly about David for years and secretly
feared the day David would find out about him, discover his location and have
him killed. Then one day his worst fears came to pass. He was taken by David’s
servants and brought face to face with David.
Seen Through the Eyes of the Covenant
But David saw Mephibosheth through
the eyes of the covenant he had made with Jonathan before he was killed. David
looked on Mephibosheth and saw Jonathan. What Jonathan had poured out in love
to David, David got to pour out in love on Jonathan’s son. When Mephibosheth
saw the benevolence of David poured out on him, he was shocked. He then called
himself a “dog” (vs. 8).
I’m going to take a small amount of
liberty with the story at this point. Putting a few things together from what
is written, I want to address what must have been going through Mephibosheth’s
mind. It must have first struck him that he had David figured out all wrong. He
had believed a lie about David. David was a man of love and not of
vengeance. David was thinking of Mephibosheth above himself. Why
would David do this to a poor son of Jonathan? Why would David treat a lame man
with such honor and give him back so much of what his father and grandfather
used to own? Why would David make Mephibosheth like one of his own sons?
As Mephibosheth laid in the floor,
David reached down to lift him up. Mephibosheth saw in David’s hand a scar.
That was the same scar he remembered in the hand of his father, Jonathan. And
suddenly he understood it. David and his father were in blood covenant together.
He was receiving a blessing into his life today that began before he was ever
born.
“But the king spared Mephibosheth the
son of Jonathan and grandson of Saul, because of the Lord’s covenant between
David and Jonathan the son of Saul” (2 Samuel 21:7).
He was not blessed by anything he had
done or could do. He was wealthy and powerful since birth and did not know it.
He lived poor because of ignorance, not because of David’s hatred.
Our Blood Covenant
So it is with our covenant. We
received God’s righteousness, not because of our own worth, but because of a
covenant made long before we were ever born. We are crippled in our feet
because of a fall also, the fall of Adam. God overlooked it when we came and
bowed before Him in total submission to Jesus Christ. God called us by name as
David did with Mephibosheth. God has given us an inheritance and called us to
eat at His table every day. Even though our feet are still crippled, we can eat
at a table which covers our feet. All we do is continue to feast at Jesus’
table and our crippled feet will never be seen. Oh, the power of daily
fellowship with God.
This covenant can never be broken. It
was really not drawn up between Abraham and God, but between God and Jesus
Christ. Neither one can break the covenant.
God, determining to show more
abundantly to the heirs of promise the immutability of His counsel, confirmed
it by an oath “that by two immutable (unchangeable) things in which it is
impossible for God to lie, we might have strong consolation, who have fled for
refuge to lay hold of the hope set before us” (Hebrews 6:7,8).
Our covenant can never be broken
because it was drawn up by two sides which will never change or break the
covenant, God the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ. We joined an unchangeable
covenant. We are one with God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. You can’t
tell where the Father stops, and Jesus begins or where Jesus stops and we
begin. We are truly united as one. And besides, how do you unmingle blood?
Knowing that WE have this unbreakable Covenant with Almighty God by the BLOOD of JESUS is one of the most powerful Truths! Your beautiful girls KNOW that they can count on you and Kristine for anything, and everything, that they need. WE should have that same confidence, peace and great joy because we KNOW that OUR FATHER has already provided for all that we will ever need! And His Word is GOOD! Here is Hillsong with "Your Word":
Love and Shalom from the Swoveys!