Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Kevin George on Covenant Renewal

  

Covenant Renewal

 

We see a commitment to a covenant relationship in David’s Psalm 51, after having committed sins that were classified as not atoneable. Notice how David acknowledges that a sacrifice is only legitimate after he has dealt with his personal internal problems:

 

You will not delight in sacrifice, or I would give it; you will not be pleased with a burnt offering. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and a contrite heart, O God, you will not despise . . . THEN will you delight in right sacrifices, in burnt offerings, and whole burnt offerings; THEN bulls will be offered on your altar.” Psalm 51:16, 17, 19

 

Jesus also referenced this same principle, that God wants your heart and relationships to be right before an offering is given. Notice also in this next passage that he did not consider an offering to be an acceptable substitute for repenting and repairing the offense that had been done to another. Furthermore, the offering is a gift to God, not payment. Jesus taught:

 

“So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift.” Matthew 5:23-24

 

Sadly, the PSA doctrine mostly views God being restored to the sinner by means of a transaction where Jesus is a substitutionary, propitiating (appeasing) gift offered to an angry God, often with no expectation of genuine relational reconciliation. The PSA-based reconciliation is merely a legal fiction! In fact, the erroneous sacrificial payment-for-propitiation idea is what apparently happened to God were a pagan deity who needed to be paid off. This was a corruption and it made God very angry. Compare the idea of paying God for sin versus what God said He really wants.

 

[author quotes Isa 1:11-18; 1 Sam 15:22; Prov 21:3; Psa 40:6; Matt 12:7]

(Kevin George, Atonement and Reconciliation: On what basis can a holy God forgive sin? A search for the original meaning, contrasted with Penal Substitutionary Atonement [2023], 39-40)

 

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