What if your covenant with God never rested on you at all?Tucked inside a verse most Christians read quickly on their way to more familiar passages is a legal and relational reality strong enough to silence the loudest accusation the enemy ever whispers: Jesus Himself has become the Surety of a better covenant. Not merely its Mediator. Not merely its Messenger. Its personal Guarantor, standing legally and relationally responsible for its success, on both sides, forever.
In THE MYSTERY OF THE SURETY IN COVENANT THEOLOGY, Bishop Osei Tweneboah Koduah takes readers back to the tents of the Ancient Near East, where covenants were not signed on paper but cut in flesh and sealed in blood, and a guarantor was a flesh-and-blood man who staked his own life on another's obligation. From the Nuzi tablets to Judah's pledge for Benjamin, from God's own self-guaranteed covenant with Abram to the empty tomb that proves the debt was paid, this book traces one word, surety, through Scripture, history, and the ordinary loan offices, immigration interviews, and hospital waiting rooms of our own century, because the ache for a guarantee that will not fail has never changed, only its paperwork has.
Thorough enough for the serious student of covenant theology, yet warm enough to sit beside a grieving heart at two in the morning, this book carries fifteen chapters of careful biblical exposition, historical background, and real pastoral testimony, always held in careful balance: the settled security of a finished guarantee, and the grateful, wholehearted obedience that guarantee makes possible rather than optional.
Inside these pages, you will discover:? The meaning of the Greek word engyos, and why Hebrews reaches for this word rather than "mediator" to describe what Christ has done? How ancient Near Eastern suretyship, from the Nuzi tablets to Judah's pledge for Benjamin, illuminates the legal weight behind Hebrews 7:22? Why the New Covenant needed a Guarantor at all, traced through a sobering catalogue of covenant failure from Adam to Israel's kings? How Christ's blood, oath, resurrection, and eternal life combine into a guarantee that can never expire, be diluted, or be renegotiated? The seven dimensions of Christ's suretyship, legal, priestly, sacrificial, covenant, resurrection, inheritance, and glory, and a simple framework for applying each to a specific present fear? An honest, pastoral answer to the hardest objection this doctrine raises: does a guarantee this secure make obedience optional?? How the doctrine of the Surety shapes baptism, communion, marriage, church discipline, giving, and the Great Commission itself"It is thorough enough to satisfy the serious student of covenant theology, yet warm enough to sit beside a grieving heart at two in the morning." - from the Foreword by Presiding Bishop N.
A. Tackie Yarboi
What if your covenant with God never rested on you at all?Tucked inside a verse most Christians read quickly on their way to more familiar passages is a legal and relational reality strong enough to silence the loudest accusation the enemy ever whispers: Jesus Himself has become the Surety of a better covenant. Not merely its Mediator. Not merely its Messenger. Its personal Guarantor, standing legally and relationally responsible for its success, on both sides, forever.
In THE MYSTERY OF THE SURETY IN COVENANT THEOLOGY, Bishop Osei Tweneboah Koduah takes readers back to the tents of the Ancient Near East, where covenants were not signed on paper but cut in flesh and sealed in blood, and a guarantor was a flesh-and-blood man who staked his own life on another's obligation. From the Nuzi tablets to Judah's pledge for Benjamin, from God's own self-guaranteed covenant with Abram to the empty tomb that proves the debt was paid, this book traces one word, surety, through Scripture, history, and the ordinary loan offices, immigration interviews, and hospital waiting rooms of our own century, because the ache for a guarantee that will not fail has never changed, only its paperwork has.
Thorough enough for the serious student of covenant theology, yet warm enough to sit beside a grieving heart at two in the morning, this book carries fifteen chapters of careful biblical exposition, historical background, and real pastoral testimony, always held in careful balance: the settled security of a finished guarantee, and the grateful, wholehearted obedience that guarantee makes possible rather than optional.
Inside these pages, you will discover:? The meaning of the Greek word engyos, and why Hebrews reaches for this word rather than "mediator" to describe what Christ has done? How ancient Near Eastern suretyship, from the Nuzi tablets to Judah's pledge for Benjamin, illuminates the legal weight behind Hebrews 7:22? Why the New Covenant needed a Guarantor at all, traced through a sobering catalogue of covenant failure from Adam to Israel's kings? How Christ's blood, oath, resurrection, and eternal life combine into a guarantee that can never expire, be diluted, or be renegotiated? The seven dimensions of Christ's suretyship, legal, priestly, sacrificial, covenant, resurrection, inheritance, and glory, and a simple framework for applying each to a specific present fear? An honest, pastoral answer to the hardest objection this doctrine raises: does a guarantee this secure make obedience optional?? How the doctrine of the Surety shapes baptism, communion, marriage, church discipline, giving, and the Great Commission itself"It is thorough enough to satisfy the serious student of covenant theology, yet warm enough to sit beside a grieving heart at two in the morning." - from the Foreword by Presiding Bishop N.
A. Tackie Yarboi