Summary
The corpus develops a Reformed covenant theology position: the Mosaic Covenant was conditional, temporary, and has been fulfilled and superseded in Christ. Christians are not under Mosaic Law but under the Law of Christ (1 Cor 9:20-21). The Old Covenant's ceremonial and civil components have been fulfilled by Christ; the moral principles are elevated and internalized through the New Covenant. This position provides the theological foundation for refuting both the Hebrew Roots Movement and Christian Zionism.
Key Points
- Covenants are conditional: Jeremiah 18 (potter/clay) establishes that God's promises to nations — including Israel — are conditional upon obedience. They are not unconditional ethnic guarantees.
- Old Covenant made obsolete: Hebrews 8:13 — "In speaking of a new covenant, He makes the first one obsolete." This is the apostolic interpretation of the Mosaic Covenant's status after Christ.
- Law of Christ replaces Mosaic Law: 1 Corinthians 9:20-21 — Paul explicitly distinguishes being "under the Law" (Mosaic) from being "under the Law of Christ." Christians have undergone a covenantal jurisdiction change, not become lawless.
- Priesthood change = law change: Hebrews 7:11-14 — the Levitical priesthood and the Mosaic Law were established together. When the priesthood changes to the Melchizedek order (Christ), the law governing it necessarily changes.
- Ceremonial law fulfilled as shadow: Colossians 2:16-17 — OT ceremonies (Sabbath, feasts, dietary laws) were prophetic shadows; Christ is the substance. The Sabbath finds its fulfillment in Christ as ultimate rest (Hebrews 4:1-11).
- Three categories of law: Moral law (endures, elevated under Christ — the Sermon on the Mount intensifies it), ceremonial law (fulfilled and abolished in Christ), civil law (applied to national Israel, not normative for the Church).
- Justification by faith alone: Torah observance for justification or sanctification is a works-righteousness error. Galatians 5:4 — seeking justification through law-keeping severs one from Christ.
- True Israel = the Church: Romans 9-11 — "Israel" in the New Covenant context includes all believers (Jew and Gentile) in Christ. The olive tree is Christ; branches are grafted in by faith, not ethnicity.
Details
The Conditional Nature of OT Promises (Jeremiah 18)
Shamoun's analysis of Jeremiah 18 (the potter and clay) is the exegetical anchor for the entire corpus position on Israel and covenant. God tells Israel He can change His declared intentions based on their response — if a nation He planned to bless turns to evil, He can revoke the blessing. This establishes that OT promises to ethnic Israel were never unconditional. Christian Zionism's claim of an unconditional modern land promise to ethnic Jews therefore lacks biblical foundation — the condition (covenant faithfulness) was not met.
Hebrews as the Covenant Theology Manual
The Book of Hebrews provides the systematic New Covenant theology across several chapters used in the corpus:
- Heb 7:11-14: Priesthood change necessitates law change
- Heb 8: New Covenant is explicitly better; Old Covenant made obsolete
- Heb 9-10: Christ's once-for-all sacrifice supersedes the repeated Levitical sacrifices
- Heb 4:1-11: Christ Himself is the Sabbath rest believers enter
Paul's Covenant Transition Framework
1 Corinthians 9:20-21 is the clearest apostolic statement of covenant transition:
"To the Jews I became as a Jew, in order to win Jews. To those under the law I became as one under the law (though not being myself under the law) that I might win those under the law. To those outside the law I became as one outside the law (not being outside the law of God but under the law of Christ)."
Paul draws a categorical distinction: Mosaic Law is one jurisdiction; the Law of Christ is another. Rejecting Mosaic observance is not antinomianism — it is living under the governing covenant of Christ, which includes Christ's own authoritative teaching (the Sermon on the Mount and its intensifications of moral demands), the two great commandments, and the apostolic instructions.
Impossibility of Legitimate HRM Observance
Beyond the theological argument, the corpus notes a practical impossibility:
- Feast observance (Passover, Day of Atonement, etc.) biblically requires a Temple, Levitical priesthood, and animal sacrifices
- None of these exist; the Temple was destroyed in AD 70
- HRM feasts are therefore self-invented approximations, not biblical observance
- The Hebrew language being reconstructed (modern Hebrew) is not the biblical tongue
- Selecting which Mosaic commands to keep while ignoring others violates James 2:10 ("if you stumble at one point you are guilty of all")
Reformed Confessional Anchors
Westminster Confession of Faith 11.1 and the 1689 London Baptist Confession both affirm justification by faith alone — not by infusing righteousness but by pardoning sins and accounting the believer righteous for Christ's sake alone. These confessions frame the corpus's Reformed Protestant responses to HRM.
Key Speakers
- Sam Shamoun: Primary Reformed Protestant voice; extensive OT-NT covenant argumentation
- Pastor Adam Fannin / Matt Powell: Personal testimony + Baptist refutation of HRM
- Reformed Baptist and general Reformed Protestant tradition throughout
Cross-References
- concept_true_israel_and_ecclesiology — who constitutes Israel under the New Covenant; olive tree theology; land promises
- concept_hebrew_roots_critique — applied polemical use of this covenant framework against HRM
- concept_christology_and_trinity — Hebrews 7 priesthood/law change as Christological argument; Sabbath fulfilled in Christ
- concept_eschatology_and_salvation — justification by faith alone; finished work of Christ; theosis as New Covenant telos
- source_samaritan_woman_covenant_betrothal — Hosea 2:16–19 betrothal promise as covenant fulfilled in Christ; the betrothal→exile→return→re-betrothal arc; living water as covenant renewal language in John 4
- comparison_sola_scriptura_orthodox_critique — Septuagint vs. Masoretic canon problem; the apostles' OT was the LXX (quoted ~80% of NT citations); Masoretic standardized by post-Christian Rabbinic scholars centuries after the apostolic deposit was fixed
Source
Synthesized from 5 corpus notes:
- are_christians_still_under_the_mosaic_law_complete_analysis
- the_covenant_god_cancelled_what_your_pastor_wont_touch_complete_analysis
- hebrew_roots_movement_research_brief
- reformed_systematic_response_to_hebrew_roots_movement
- hebrew_roots_heresy_w_matt_powell_complete_analysis
Daily readings:
- 20260505_reading — Acts 10:21-33: the Spirit's extension of the covenant to Gentile God-fearers; Peter crosses the Jew-Gentile boundary; Eph 2:14 dividing wall broken down