Examination · Anakalypsis Editorial
The Covenant Thread
Tracing the biblical covenants from Noah through Abraham, Moses, David, and the New Covenant in Christ — how each builds on the last
A journey through the progressive covenants of Scripture — from God's pledge to Noah, through the promises to Abraham, the law given at Sinai, the royal covenant with David, and the New Covenant inaugurated by Christ — showing how each covenant advances God's redemptive plan while building on what came before.
The Bible is not a collection of disconnected episodes. It is a story held together by covenants — solemn, binding agreements by which God binds himself to his people and defines the terms of their relationship. The word appears hundreds of times in Scripture, and the very names "Old Testament" and "New Testament" are covenant terms. To understand the covenants is to understand the architecture of the entire biblical narrative.
A biblical covenant is more than a contract. It is a relationship established by oath, often sealed with blood, carrying blessings for faithfulness and consequences for breach. God is always the initiator. He sets the terms. And remarkably, he binds himself — the sovereign Creator takes on obligations toward creatures. This pattern of divine self-binding is one of the most distinctive features of biblical theology.
After the catastrophe of the Flood, God establishes his first explicit covenant — not with a chosen people, but with all living creatures. The Noahic covenant is universal in scope and unconditional in character. God pledges never again to destroy the earth by flood, and he sets the rainbow as the sign of this promise. This is the covenant of preservation: the stage upon which all subsequent redemptive acts will play out.
The Noahic covenant also establishes fundamental moral order: the sanctity of human life is grounded in the image of God, and the shedding of innocent blood demands an accounting. These are not temporary provisions — they are the permanent moral framework within which all later covenants operate.