'The Hal Lindsey Report' - Hal Lindsey - www.hallindsey.com 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
To  understand God's plan for the world, it is vital to understand what, at first,  may seem like a dry subject - covenants. In the Bible, God makes two kinds of  covenants with human beings - conditional and unconditional. A conditional  covenant is predicated on God saying to man, "If you will." An unconditional  covenant is predicated on God saying to man, "I will." 
Conditional  covenants are like the contracts we humans make among ourselves. "If you give me  a certain amount of money, then I will give you a car." God makes conditional  covenants, too. He made one with Israel through Moses. In Exodus 19, He said,  "If you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be My own  possession among all the peoples, for all the earth is Mine; and you shall be to  Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation." 
Did  they obey His voice and keep His covenant? No. God offered them a deal, but they  didn't fulfill their part of the bargain. Does God then have to fulfill His  part? No. A conditional covenant means, "If you do this, then I'll do that."  
But  God also made unconditional covenants. In an unconditional covenant, God simply  says, "I will." Period. Once such a covenant goes into effect, there are no  conditions that have to be fulfilled by human beings. 
God's  covenant with Abraham - what theologians call "The Abrahamic Covenant" - is an  unconditional covenant. Through the years God reiterates and expands it, but He  never changes the unconditional nature of it. Indeed, He cannot change it or He  would be a liar and the Bible says in Titus 1:2 and elsewhere, "God... cannot  lie." 
To  add other conditions later would be like moving the goal posts just as the  football team is about to score a touchdown. It wouldn't be honest. God is not  tricky. He's trustworthy. Once the covenant went into effect, nothing could  change it. Later, God would reiterate the covenant and expand on it, but He  never changed the nature of it, nor did He add conditions to it. 
Those  who claim He did, have a fundamental problem. They're saying that God lied.  
Psalm  105 says, "He has remembered His covenant forever, The word which He commanded  to a thousand generations, The covenant which He made with Abraham, And His oath  to Isaac. And then He confirmed it to Jacob for a statute, To Israel as an  everlasting covenant, Saying, 'To you will I give the land of Canaan As the  portion of your inheritance.'" 
This  verse calls it a "covenant forever" and "an everlasting covenant." If it  depended on frail human beings, the Word of God could not call it "everlasting"  because somewhere along the line human beings fail, as Israel proved again and  again. 
The  Abrahamic Covenant is one of the great dividing lines of scripture. Disbelieving  it won't change God's Word, but it will change a person in profound ways. Among  other things, he won't understand what's going on in the world. 
Because  this is an unconditional covenant, it cannot end. It remains in effect today and  forever. That makes it fundamental to Bible prophecy. Whatever else happens, you  can bet the farm that God will keep His covenant with Abraham. 
So  if you want to look into the future, or have a better understanding of the  present, look at the things God promised to Abraham. He expressed them in a  series of direct and implied "I will" statements. "I will make you a great  nation. I will bless you. I will make your name great. I will make you a  blessing. I will bless those who bless you. I will curse those who curse you.  Through you, I will bless all the families of the earth." 
Romans  11:1 succinctly asks and answers the most pertinent point. "Has God cast away  His people? Certainly not!" That's just one of many New Testament passages  refuting "replacement theology" and affirming that God's covenant with Abraham  is still in effect. 
Not  only does this covenant help us understand what's happening in the Middle East  right now, it is foundational to the central meaning of all the Bible's teaching  - from the identity and purpose of Jesus, to "salvation by faith alone," to  Christ's coming to set up a literal thousand year kingdom on earth, to Christ's  secretly snatching up all believers to heaven before the great Tribulation  begins. 
Tune  in this week as I discuss "The Covenant." 
BE SURE TO CHECK OUT MY ALL NEW PROPHECY AND CREATION DESIGN WEBSITES.  THERE IS A LOT TO SEE AND DO..........
To  understand God's plan for the world, it is vital to understand what, at first,  may seem like a dry subject - covenants. In the Bible, God makes two kinds of  covenants with human beings - conditional and unconditional. A conditional  covenant is predicated on God saying to man, "If you will." An unconditional  covenant is predicated on God saying to man, "I will." 
Conditional  covenants are like the contracts we humans make among ourselves. "If you give me  a certain amount of money, then I will give you a car." God makes conditional  covenants, too. He made one with Israel through Moses. In Exodus 19, He said,  "If you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be My own  possession among all the peoples, for all the earth is Mine; and you shall be to  Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation." 
Did  they obey His voice and keep His covenant? No. God offered them a deal, but they  didn't fulfill their part of the bargain. Does God then have to fulfill His  part? No. A conditional covenant means, "If you do this, then I'll do that."  
But  God also made unconditional covenants. In an unconditional covenant, God simply  says, "I will." Period. Once such a covenant goes into effect, there are no  conditions that have to be fulfilled by human beings. 
God's  covenant with Abraham - what theologians call "The Abrahamic Covenant" - is an  unconditional covenant. Through the years God reiterates and expands it, but He  never changes the unconditional nature of it. Indeed, He cannot change it or He  would be a liar and the Bible says in Titus 1:2 and elsewhere, "God... cannot  lie." 
To  add other conditions later would be like moving the goal posts just as the  football team is about to score a touchdown. It wouldn't be honest. God is not  tricky. He's trustworthy. Once the covenant went into effect, nothing could  change it. Later, God would reiterate the covenant and expand on it, but He  never changed the nature of it, nor did He add conditions to it. 
Those  who claim He did, have a fundamental problem. They're saying that God lied.  
Psalm  105 says, "He has remembered His covenant forever, The word which He commanded  to a thousand generations, The covenant which He made with Abraham, And His oath  to Isaac. And then He confirmed it to Jacob for a statute, To Israel as an  everlasting covenant, Saying, 'To you will I give the land of Canaan As the  portion of your inheritance.'" 
This  verse calls it a "covenant forever" and "an everlasting covenant." If it  depended on frail human beings, the Word of God could not call it "everlasting"  because somewhere along the line human beings fail, as Israel proved again and  again. 
The  Abrahamic Covenant is one of the great dividing lines of scripture. Disbelieving  it won't change God's Word, but it will change a person in profound ways. Among  other things, he won't understand what's going on in the world. 
Because  this is an unconditional covenant, it cannot end. It remains in effect today and  forever. That makes it fundamental to Bible prophecy. Whatever else happens, you  can bet the farm that God will keep His covenant with Abraham. 
So  if you want to look into the future, or have a better understanding of the  present, look at the things God promised to Abraham. He expressed them in a  series of direct and implied "I will" statements. "I will make you a great  nation. I will bless you. I will make your name great. I will make you a  blessing. I will bless those who bless you. I will curse those who curse you.  Through you, I will bless all the families of the earth." 
Romans  11:1 succinctly asks and answers the most pertinent point. "Has God cast away  His people? Certainly not!" That's just one of many New Testament passages  refuting "replacement theology" and affirming that God's covenant with Abraham  is still in effect. 
Not  only does this covenant help us understand what's happening in the Middle East  right now, it is foundational to the central meaning of all the Bible's teaching  - from the identity and purpose of Jesus, to "salvation by faith alone," to  Christ's coming to set up a literal thousand year kingdom on earth, to Christ's  secretly snatching up all believers to heaven before the great Tribulation  begins. 
Tune  in this week as I discuss "The Covenant." 
BE SURE TO CHECK OUT MY ALL NEW PROPHECY AND CREATION DESIGN WEBSITES.  THERE IS A LOT TO SEE AND DO..........
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