Canaan was to be a home for Israel . A home that would be a place of safety and peace where they could live in comfort – a place where there would be food and drink to sustain them, and protection from outside influences. Canaan was all this to them – a fertile and well watered country that provided a balanced diet for its occupants. The peace and safety was provided by the Lord.
But since the Land Covenant, which had expanded the land aspect of the Abrahamic Covenant, had made the occupation of Canaan conditional on obedience and faith, it was also an incentive to godly living. And as an incentive it was of five star quality - walk with God or lose your homeland – it could not be clearer. Moses, God’s spokesman, inspired in his oratory, reminded the nation that exile awaited any generation that turned from the Lord. Having used the carrot, that is, declaring that obedience brought blessing, he wielded the stick - disobedience brings judgment. “And it shall be, that just as the Lord rejoiced over you to do you good and multiply you, so the Lord will rejoice over you to destroy you and bring you to nothing; and you shall be plucked from off the land which you go to possess. Then the Lord will scatter you among all peoples, from one end of the earth to the other.” (Deut. 28:63-64) However, it is not as if the life and obedience demanded of Israel was onerous. The promise for obedience was not simply occupation of the designated territory, but blessing – blessing on the nation, blessing on families, blessing on crops. In addition, there would be protection from any nation that had ambitions to conquer. This was an agreement that was heavily weighted in favor of the nation. But sin makes a person foolish, and Israel played the fool with other gods that could neither bless nor protect. She reneged on her relationship with the Lord and was exiled as a result.
From our point in history we are very well aware of the periods of exile the Hebrew nation has suffered. The mass deportation of the ten tribes by Assyria was followed by the exile of the two tribes to Babylon . The most significant exile happened under the rule of the Romans, when Israel lost their Temple and their land for nearly two millennia. That was because they had rejected their Messiah. It was when the Babylonian exile was on the near horizon that Jeremiah prophesied of the New Covenant. The loss of Jerusalem , the Temple and the land was inevitable because, in his view, Israel no longer fulfilled their part of the Mosaic Covenant – the agreement had been broken by Israel ,[1] and broken to such a degree that from that time forward it would never again function in the way it was intended.
It is true that there was a return after seventy years in Babylon , which might suggest that the nation had repented and re-embraced the Law of Moses, but Jeremiah rather suggests the return was the result of the Babylonians themselves coming under the rod of God. He predicted that after their seventy years of exile God would punish the Babylonians: “‘Then it will come to pass, when seventy years are completed, that I will punish the king of Babylon and that nation, the land of the Chaldeans, for their iniquity,’ says the Lord; ‘and I will make it a perpetual desolation.’” (Jer. 25:12)
And the number of those that returned from
Next: The Davidic Covenant
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