{
  "id": "dict_001191",
  "term": "Covenant terms",
  "slug": "covenant-terms",
  "letter": "C",
  "entry_type": "theological_term",
  "entry_family": "theological_term",
  "depth_profile": "standard",
  "short_definition": "The stated provisions of a biblical covenant, including its promises, obligations, signs, blessings, and sanctions.",
  "simple_one_line": "The provisions that define how a covenant works in Scripture.",
  "tooltip_text": "Covenant terms are the specific promises, requirements, signs, blessings, and penalties attached to a covenant.",
  "aliases": [],
  "scripture_references": [],
  "original_language_terms": [],
  "related_entries": [
    "Abrahamic covenant",
    "Davidic covenant",
    "Mosaic covenant",
    "New Covenant",
    "covenant",
    "law",
    "promise"
  ],
  "see_also": [
    "Blessing and curse",
    "covenant sign",
    "covenant oath",
    "mediator",
    "covenant faithfulness"
  ],
  "lede_intro": "“Covenant terms” refers to the provisions that define a covenant relationship in Scripture. The phrase is general, so its content must always be read in light of the specific covenant being discussed.",
  "at_a_glance_definition": "The stated conditions and commitments that govern a covenant, including what God promises, what is required of the covenant people, and what consequences follow obedience or disobedience.",
  "at_a_glance_key_points": [
    "1. Covenant terms include promises, responsibilities, signs, and sanctions.",
    "2. Different biblical covenants have different terms.",
    "3. Some covenants are largely promissory",
    "others include explicit obligations.",
    "4. The New Covenant is fulfilled in Christ and grounded in God’s saving initiative."
  ],
  "description_academic_short": "In biblical theology, covenant terms are the provisions that define a covenant: its parties, promises, obligations, signs, blessings, and sanctions. The phrase is not a fixed technical doctrine but a useful summary expression that must be interpreted according to the specific covenant in view.",
  "description_academic_full": "In biblical usage, “covenant terms” is not a single technical doctrine but a general way of referring to what a covenant includes: its parties, promises, obligations, signs, blessings, and sanctions. Scripture presents several major covenants, and their terms are not identical. Some covenant passages emphasize God’s unilateral promise and initiative, while others stress the covenant people’s required obedience within the covenant relationship. A careful reading therefore asks which covenant is in view and avoids assuming that every covenant operates in the same way. In this sense, covenant terms are the stated provisions that define how a given covenant functions.",
  "background_biblical_context": "The Bible presents covenants as real relationship structures with stated commitments. The Abrahamic covenant emphasizes promise and blessing, the Mosaic covenant includes law, sanctions, and corporate accountability, the Davidic covenant centers on royal promise, and the New Covenant promises internal renewal and forgiveness through Christ. Reading covenant terms rightly helps distinguish these covenants without flattening them into one pattern.",
  "background_historical_context": "In the ancient Near East, covenants commonly included parties, stipulations, witnesses, blessings, and curses. Scripture sometimes uses familiar covenant forms, but it reshapes them under the lordship of the true God. Biblical covenants are therefore not mere political contracts; they are divinely established relationships with both promise and responsibility.",
  "background_jewish_ancient_context": "Jewish Scripture reading treated covenant as foundational to Israel’s identity, worship, and obedience. The Torah especially presents covenant life in terms of promise, law, sign, and sanction. Later Jewish reflection continued to recognize the importance of covenant fidelity, while the New Testament presents Jesus as the mediator and fulfiller of the promised New Covenant.",
  "key_texts_primary": [
    "Genesis 15",
    "Exodus 19–24",
    "Deuteronomy 28–30",
    "2 Samuel 7",
    "Jeremiah 31:31–34",
    "Luke 22:20",
    "Hebrews 8–10"
  ],
  "key_texts_secondary": [
    "Genesis 9",
    "Galatians 3",
    "Hebrews 9",
    "Hebrews 10"
  ],
  "original_language_note": "The English phrase is a descriptive summary rather than a single fixed biblical term. In Scripture, covenant language is expressed by Hebrew and Greek words for covenant itself and by the specific stipulations, promises, and sanctions attached to each covenant.",
  "theological_significance": "Covenant terms show that God relates to his people in ordered, meaningful commitments. They help readers distinguish promise from law, type from fulfillment, and the old covenant administration from the New Covenant established in Christ.",
  "philosophical_explanation": "The phrase names a covenant’s internal structure: who is bound, by what promises, under what responsibilities, and with what outcomes. It is relational and legal at the same time, because biblical covenants establish communion with accountability rather than abstract contract theory.",
  "interpretive_cautions": "Do not treat all covenants as if they have the same terms. Do not confuse covenant membership with automatic salvation. Do not reduce God’s covenant dealings to a merely human contract. Read each covenant in context and distinguish promise, command, sign, and fulfillment.",
  "major_views_note": "Broadly evangelical interpreters agree that biblical covenants contain stated provisions, though they differ on how the Mosaic covenant relates to the Abrahamic promise and the New Covenant. Dispensational, covenant, and other evangelical readings often distinguish the covenants differently while still recognizing that each has identifiable terms.",
  "doctrinal_boundaries": "This entry should not be used to deny grace, to collapse all covenants into one scheme, or to imply that salvation is earned by law-keeping. The New Covenant is grounded in God’s mercy and fulfilled in Christ, though covenant obedience remains a real biblical theme.",
  "practical_significance": "Understanding covenant terms helps Bible readers follow Scripture’s storyline, interpret law and promise correctly, and see how God’s faithfulness is displayed across the covenants, especially in Christ.",
  "meta_description": "Biblical covenant terms are the promises, obligations, signs, blessings, and sanctions that define a covenant relationship in Scripture.",
  "public_url": "/companion-bible-dictionary/covenant-terms/",
  "json_url": "/companion-bible-dictionary/data/dictionary/covenant-terms.json",
  "final_disposition": "PUBLISH_CANONICAL"
}