THE LORD’S REAL COVENANT MODEL AND DISCIPLESHIP STANDARD [Part 1]
It allows for no deviancies or dissent, is always per the authoritative command of the Lord Jesus, and requires absolute trust and obedience (even unto death).
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It is also entirely unforced and voluntary. The Lord never uses coercion. He never utilizes religious demands, false fear tactics, or compulsion to gain converts and grow His congregation. He also never engages in the payoff to buy the services of others. His model and standard is so unlike any other which must use such illicit methods of conscription to force compliance, it is truly a wonder He is left with any community at all. Yet His following grew quickly by leaps and bounds. He also had none of the usual personal incentives, such as the desire for social credibility and acceptance, a good living and hope of greater prosperity, and worldly religious power. These facts demand an otherwise unknown component, one based on a pure heartfelt willingness to submit to servanthood toward the Lord and one another, regardless of its perceived negative effect on personal choice and natural liberty. This hidden factor must be something great that God has done for those He loves before they could ever possibly do anything for Him.
SPIRITUAL COVENANT
The Lord Jesus taught that all who are apart from God and not in relationship with Him are dead in sin. Not most. Not a mere majority. ALL. In this He perfectly agreed with all previous Old Testament teachings and prophetic pronouncements on the subject. The Word of God thus makes it clear that personal sin separates one from God. From God’s perspective, this was a horrifying development which grew ever more so as the gangrene of sin spread evilly outward as a plague on mankind. He knew people in that condition could never fix themselves or transcend their situation. Something had to be done, of course, but it would have to start with Him.
Yet it is not possible for God to be in fellowship with sinners. It is primarily because He is holy and pure, which requires those in right relationship with Him to be the same. Though in the beginning, humanity had been created in the image of God, the original visage had become greatly marred. Some yearned for a return to the Garden. Most, however, adapted to sin and became comfortable in their fallen state. If such separation from God is desired, it is also an indication that the willful sinner places more importance on whatever causes the broken covenant than he or she does toward God or a relationship with Him. Regardless, in reality, human beings were not only created by God but created for Him. We were designed to be in relationship with Him and without Him we have a hard row to hoe.
Adam and Eve discovered this early on. Rather than continue to honor her husband as she had been doing and remain faithful, she made the fateful decision to honor another above him. In this she violated her covenant with Adam, which, because she committed gross sin, also violated her covenant with God. When Adam discovered that Eve had violated herself in sin, something from which she would not be able to recover, it was his duty to remain faithful to God and make sure the same terrible circumstance did not befall him. To keep everything intact he should have shown Eve the door. Instead, he allowed her deception to violate his good conscience because he apparently could not fathom life without Eve.
In that critical though brief interval of time when Eve was hopelessly corrupted but Adam was not, the man made a much more grievous decision than had the woman. Why? Because other than Eve, who had made her choice, everything else could still be saved. Adam’s covenant relationship with God could remain pure. The Garden could remain perfect, growing, and fruitful. God’s original plan for man could remain intact. This, however, would have required Adam to become as the Lord and be a savior.
Speaking of which, remember when Jacob’s son Joseph saved his entire family and future nation? He did so because he had apparently already subjected himself as a young man to the will of God. He therefore allowed God to use him for great good though it would cost him everything but his own life and also thirteen years of terrible trial, pain, and misery. Nevertheless, Joseph remained faithful throughout and completed his course. The famine which would have wiped out the tiny emerging nation of Israel in the land of Canaan would, though just as deadly in Egypt, have a solution against it there, again by the hand of God through Joseph, which also allowed him to save the most important thing of all—the generational line going through the children of his brother Judah that would result many centuries later in the coming Messiah, the real and greatest SAVIOR of all mankind.
Would that Adam had accepted his savior assignment. Instead, he did the opposite. Instead of saving everything He turned his back on God and effectively embraced the serpent as had Eve. She convinced him to partake of the dirty deed as she had done, because from her new perspective eating the forbidden fruit had become the right and good thing to do. This meant her life with God was already in her rear view mirror and she was not changing her mind.
Perhaps Adam had no natural defense or immunity from such powerful manipulation in that there is only so much God can teach us in His attempt to persuade us from making stupid idiotic decisions, the bad result of which we cannot perceive. Such a thing comes down to faith and trust and that even though it may look like God could not be more off base and wrong one will honor and obey Him anyway. Had Adam done this by simply fighting through the great temptation, something he was certainly equipped to do, and stating unequivocally as his future descendant did—“Go, Satan! For it is written, ‘You shall worship the Lord your God, and serve Him only,’”—everything would have been saved, save for Eve.
He also could have saved himself future misery by giving Eve what she wanted post haste, which she would get eventually anyway, by escorting her to the Garden Gate pronto and wishing her well in the wild world beyond which she seemed desperate to experience, you know, to push the envelope and enjoy life and rumble off on a Harley with her snake friend and no longer be cooped up in a boring Garden or under subjection to a measly man with incorrigible discipleship standards instead of being hooked up with a powerful demonic personage. Yeah, sure. What fun. See ya, Eve. Watch out for that screen door…
But no. Adam ended up forcing God’s hand to kick them both out. For God, this revolting development was not a surprise and was even something of which He had already made future provision:
For since by a man came death, by a man also came the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all will be made alive. [1Corinthians 15:21-22][1]
© 2025 by RJ Dawson. All Rights Reserved. [To Be Continued…]
[1] Unless otherwise noted all Scriptures are taken from the New American Standard Bible, © 1960, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.
Posted on November 14, 2025, in Teaching and tagged Adam and Eve, Covenant, Discipleship, Joseph, Lord Jesus, New Covenant Teachings of Jesus, Real Christianity The Nature of the Church, Salvation in Jesus, Spiritual Warfare, The Fallen World of Sinful Humanity, The Great Awakening, The Last Adam. Bookmark the permalink. 4 Comments.



We should all be more like Jesus when interacting with others.
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Amen. Thank you Barb
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I have often thought, and sometimes said, that Adam loved Eve so much that he could not allow her to bear her sin alone. Of course, there are so many layers here, as in all human relationships, that it is hard to make any logical decisions about why Adam joined Eve in her sin. And as you say, God knew what would happen and already had a plan in place, for which all of mankind can be thankful to this day.
I read something yesterday that I thought you would enjoy. A man was sharing his tendency to be a people- pleaser, and the pain it caused him every time he felt he’d failed. Then he considered Jesus, the only perfect Man to ever live on earth. Even in His perfection, He did not please all the people all the time. He was judged, reviled, scorned, mocked, and tortured by the very ones who considered themselves to be spiritually superior. Jesus never, not even once, changed His behavior or His message in order to please people. His only goal was to please GOD, and to fulfill the task for which He had been born.
Simplifies things, doesn’t it?
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Yes. Does it ever. Thank you and AMEN. Very well said.
The Lord certainly put Himself out there. He didn’t hold back. As “God in flesh” He showed everyone who God was and what He was like. If people liked what they saw and heard, they joined Him. If not, and most of His people, as always, did not, did not join Him. Many if not most of these also opposed Him violently (again, as throughout OT history). This showed that such people had always had the same problem with God before and when God showed up among them He got the exact same response.
But praise the Lord for the believing faithful Remnant who not only appreciated Him but gave everything they had to Him, including their entire hearts forever. This proved they had what counted most of all—their everlasting love for Him.
This is what makes the Covenant with the Lord Jesus work—His love for whosoever will choose Him, which is a constant and forever love and predates the love of those choosing Him, and the love of His true followers. The dual love seals the deal. And this mutual love then makes the Lord’s will possible in a real Christian’s life, including one’s great cleansing of sin, total removal of it, and complete reconciliation with God.
This reminds me of an old preacher joke from when I was a rookie. He was an older man but had a great tongue-in-cheek cheerful attitude. This was back in the days when there was so much talk about the right length of women’s dresses and what not. I belonged to a church that believed and practiced a high level of modesty in dress which was frowned upon by the culture and thought excessive (though such proper modesty used to be just fine, accepted, and desired by the American culture just two or three decades before then). So this preacher brought this subject up, very lightly, and then stated his preference by quoting James 5:19:
Brethren, if any of you do err from the truth, and one convert him; let him know, that he which converteth the sinner from the error of his way shall save a soul from death, and shall hide a multitude of shins.
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