God is the Master and Creator of the Universe. He is the
Divine Head, the Lord of creation, and as Lord he self-discloses himself to man
“by way [mode] of covenant” (Westminster
Confession of Faith, VII.I).
God is distinct from and sovereign over all of creation.
This means that there is a permanent-and-ontological difference at back the relationship
between God and the creation. Thus, we can say that there are two ontological
realities in this world:
1) the eternal and infinite Triune-God.
2) the
temporal and finite creation.
What are the implications?
For starters, this means that creation is ontologically and metaphysically
dependent upon God. In John 1:3, God revealed that through the Word, Jesus
Christ, all things were created: “All things were made by him; and without him
was not any thing made that was made.” Therefore, Jesus Christ is the “source
of all activity and life” (Marcus Dods, The
Gospel of John, vol. 1, The
Expositor’s Greek Testament, ed. W. Robertson Nicoll, (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, reprint 1983), 684).
Since man is temporal and finite and distinct from the eternal
and infinite Triune-Creator, there must be some way that God relates-to and
relationships-with Creation. According to Scripture, God freely chose to reveal
and relate to creation by way of covenant, that is, covenantally (Genesis 2:17,
6:18, 9:11; Exodus 6:4, Deuteronomy 5:3, Psalm 25:14, 89:3; Luke 1:72; Romans
10:5-20, 11:27; Hebrews 12:24, 13:20). The milieu of God’s covenant with man is
God’s law. “The law of God expresses God’s holy nature to man (Greg Bahnsen, Theonomy in Christian Ethics, (Nacogdoches:
Covenant Media Press, 3rd ed.), 141). Therefore, God's law is the axiomatic system of the covenant.
God expresses his holy nature to all of creation; God
relates covenantally with all of creation, but since man was specifically created
in God’s image, and as such is a representative of God to the rest of creation,
this implies that man has a moral and an ethical obligation to obey the
stipulations of God’s law. Since man has this ethical obligation to keep the
law of God, there are conditions and promises tied to God’s covenant with man.
The covenantal conditions and promises are sanctioned by God’s authoritative
declaration: on the one hand, blessings and life will be rewarded for
covenantal faithfulness and obedience, while on the other hand, curses and
punishment unto death will be rewarded for covenantal unfaithfulness and
disobedience (see Deuteronomy 27-30).
We see in Scripture that God has made two
covenants with man: the first was a “covenant of works” made with Adam, the
first federal head of humanity; the second was a “covenant of grace” made with
Jesus Christ, the second Adam, the federal head of restored humanity.
Adam failed to keep the ethical
obligations of the “covenant of works” that God made with him, and as the
federal head of humanity sanctioned curses and judgment unto death for himself
as well as all of his descendants. Thus, ever since Adam’s fall mankind has
attempted to make himself the measure of all things: sinful man’s aim is to be
absolute, sinful man’s aim is to be autonomous. By this vain attempt, sinful
man attempts to usurp God the glory for which He alone is due. Because of sin,
the relationship (covenant) is broken that exits between man and the Divine. Secondarily,
it is also important to note that man’s relationship with the entire
created-universe is broken.
Cornelius Van Til noted, when God created
Adam and put him in the Garden of Eden, Adam was supposed to be “a prophet,
priest, and king under God in this created world” (Christian Apologetics, ed. William Edgar (Phillipsburg: P&R
Publishing, 2nd edition, 2003), 41). God intended for Adam to “interpret,” “dedicate,” and “rule” the world,
not for the sake of himself, but for God. That is, for God’s glory! Sinful man,
however, does not execute the offices of prophet, priest, and king for God’s
glory, rather he twists that ingrained-innate-calling as he attempts to be
absolute and autonomous.
Thus, sinful man is always trying to do prophetic, priestly, and kingly
things in this world, but he does them while in a broken relationship (covenant)
with God. So, what proceeds is this: false interpretation, perverted
dedication, and corrupted rule and judgment – these things are not of God but
are of man, thus, the prophetic, priestly, and kingly things that fallen men
accomplishes are after the “tradition of men” and “not after Christ.” (cf. Colossians 2:8: “Beware lest any man spoil you through
philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of
the world, and not after Christ.” Paul is saying you need to fashion knowledge
and belief after (the knowledge and belief in) Christ, that is, after the
Creator, not after knowledge and belief of the traditions purported by sinful
men and a fallen created-universe.)
However, God freely chose to make a
“covenant of grace” with Jesus Christ, the second Adam, the obedient prophet,
priest, and king. Jesus Christ was obedient, he had covenantal faithfulness
and entirely fulfilled the ethical obligations of God’s law as prophet, priest,
and king. Jesus Christ, therefore, faithfully interprets, dedicates, and rules the
world for the glory of God!
So, what we know about God by way of the
covenant is that God is not only the Lord who created the universe, but that he
is also the Lord who mercifully restores sinful men and renews creation. God
does that by adopting sinners through propitiation, that is, through the obedient
and atoning prophetic, priestly, and kingly work of Jesus Christ, with whom God
made a “covenant of grace” – wherein God “offers unto sinners life and
salvation by Jesus Christ; requiring of them faith in Him, that they may be
saved” (Westminster Confession of
Faith, VII.III).
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