If you’ve spent much time reading the Bible, you’ve probably encountered the word
covenant countless times.
God makes a covenant with Noah. He makes a covenant with Abraham. He establishes a covenant with Israel at Mount Sinai. The prophets speak about a New Covenant. Yeshua (Jesus) speaks about the New Covenant at the Last Supper.
Yet despite how often the Bible uses this language, many believers are unsure what a covenant actually is. More importantly, many don’t realize that covenant is one of the primary themes holding the entire Bible together.
If you want to understand the Bible’s story, you need to understand covenant.
In Hebrew, the word for covenant is brit. While covenant can sometimes sound like a formal theological term, the biblical idea is very relational. At its core, a covenant establishes a committed relationship between two parties.
This is where a biblical covenant differs from a modern contract.
A contract is usually built around an exchange. Each side agrees to fulfill certain obligations; if those obligations are not met, the agreement has served its purpose. A covenant is different. It creates a bond and defines a relationship. This distinction helps explain something important about Scripture.
The Bible is not primarily the story of human beings searching for God. It is the story of a God who continually moves toward humanity and invites people into a relationship with Him. And from Genesis to Revelation, God’s covenants serve as the framework through which that relationship unfolds. We see this pattern early in the Bible.
After the flood, God establishes a covenant with Noah and promises to preserve the earth (Genesis 9). Later, He calls Abraham and enters into a covenant that will shape the future of an entire people (Genesis 12). One of the most powerful covenant scenes in Scripture occurs in Genesis 15.
In the ancient world, covenants were often established through a ceremony involving sacrificed animals. The parties would pass between the pieces, symbolically declaring their faithfulness to the covenant they were making. But in Genesis 15, something unexpected happens.
After God instructs Abraham to prepare the covenant sacrifice, Abraham falls into a deep sleep, and God alone passes between the pieces. The message is clear: While Abraham certainly has a role to play in the covenant relationship, the ultimate security of the covenant rests upon God’s faithfulness.
From the very beginning, covenant points us to a God who keeps His promises! This pattern continues throughout the rest of Scripture.
When God delivered the children of Israel from Egypt, He was not merely rescuing slaves. He was forming a covenant people. Again and again, God tells Israel, “I will be your God, and you will be My people” (Leviticus 26:12). Those words express the heart of the covenant.
The Bible’s covenants are not merely about blessings, promises, or obligations. They are about belonging, living in relationship with God, and participating in His purposes. This is also why covenant helps us understand many of the Bible’s other major themes.
Grace is covenantal.
God’s commandments are covenantal.
Even salvation is presented within a covenant framework.
When covenant is removed from the picture, many parts of Scripture can begin to feel disconnected. But when we understand covenant, we begin to see how the Bible’s various themes fit together into one unified story.
One of the richest covenant words in the Bible is the Hebrew word chesed. This word is often translated as mercy, lovingkindness, steadfast love, or faithfulness. Yet none of those English words fully captures its depth. Chesed describes God’s loyal covenant love toward His people. It is love that remains faithful even when circumstances become difficult.
Again and again throughout Scripture, God’s chesed appears when His people fail, wander, or struggle. His covenant faithfulness remains constant even when human faithfulness comes up short.
Understanding chesed helps us see that covenant is not merely a legal arrangement. Covenant is a relationship sustained by God’s enduring faithfulness. This covenant framework also helps us better understand the Gospel.
Many Christians understandably think of the Gospel primarily in terms of forgiveness. Forgiveness is certainly part of the Good News, but the biblical story is even bigger.
Through Yeshua/Jesus, God is restoring people into a covenant relationship with Himself.
The Gospel is not simply about having our sins forgiven. It is about being welcomed into God’s family, sharing in His promises, and participating in His purposes for the world. This is why Yeshua spoke about the New Covenant on the night before His death. He was announcing that God’s long-promised work of renewal was arriving. Through Him, people would be reconciled to God, hearts would be transformed, and the covenant story that runs throughout Scripture would move toward its fulfillment.
Understanding covenant also impacts how we understand our daily walk with God.
Faith becomes more than agreeing with certain beliefs. Prayer becomes more than presenting requests. And obedience becomes more than following rules. Each of these becomes an expression of a covenant relationship. Perhaps that is why covenant remains one of the Bible’s most important themes.
Covenant explains why God pursues humanity throughout Scripture. And it explains how the Bible’s various stories fit together. We see that from Genesis to Revelation, God has always desired a relationship with His people. Once we begin to see covenant through that lens, we discover that it is far more than a theological concept. It is one of the great threads holding the entire biblical story together.
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