Foundation Study · יְסוֹד
בְּרִית חֲדָשָׁה

Renewed Covenant — Restoration, not replacement

Jeremiah 31:31 · Seven covenants — one unbroken blueprint

Foundation Study Jeremiah 31:31 · Genesis 15 berit (H1285) · chadash (H2318)
10·VRB בְּרִית חֲדָשָׁה — Berit Chadasha 10·VRB — Covenant / Relationships בְּרִית חֲדָשָׁה — Berit Chadasha ✦ The renewed covenant as deepening — seven covenants as one cumulative blueprint ✦ The new covenant as an eighth, replacing covenant — discontinuity with Sinai 01·ESS חָדָשׁ — Chadash 01·ESS — Essence / Motivation חָדָשׁ — Chadash ✦ Chadash (H2318) and kainos (G2537) — renewed in character, not neos (never before existing) ✦ New covenant as proof that the Torah has been abolished and replaced by grace alone 12·GBR בְּרִית — Berit 12·GBR — Events בְּרִית — Berit ✦ The covenant as YHWH's act in salvation history — Jeremiah 31:31 as anchor ✦ The covenant made with the Church as the new Israel, outside ethnic continuity
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Chadash (חָדַשׁ, H2318) — to renew, restore, bring to life again. Not: to replace. The common translation "new covenant" is a popular-theological translation loss that suggests a discontinuity not present in the text. The renewed covenant is the same berit, inscribed more deeply.

What is chadash canonically? How does the renewed covenant relate to the seven previously established covenants? And where does the covenant line end?

After this study you will understand:
Recommended preparation

Read the texts below slowly — as orientation, not as study. Ask yourself: what do I already know about this topic, and what do I expect to learn?

Texts to read beforehand (aloud) Jeremiah 31:31–34 · Ezekiel 36:26–27 · Hebrews 8:8–12 · Luke 22:20
Recommended prior study Covenants — the seven covenants as foundation · the renewed covenant is covenant number seven — you cannot understand it without the six that precede it

Berit — a cut deal, not a contract

The Hebrew word for covenant is בְּרִית (berit, H1285) — derived from karat, to cut. A covenant is cut: blood always flowed. This is not a legal contract that is simply dissolved upon non-fulfilment. A berit is a life-covenant — as intimate as a marriage, as unbreakable as an oath.

berit (H1285)BDB: covenant, alliance, agreement. Derived from karat (H3772) — to cut. Every berit was sealed with a cutting and blood-shedding: animals that were split, circumcision, sacrifice. Not replaceable. Canonical · H1285
chadash (H2318)To renew, restore — same root as in "new moon" (rosh chadash). Not: something entirely new that replaces the old. But: the same, renewed and brought to life. See Ps. 51:12. Canonical · H2318
diathēkē (G1242)Greek NT word for berit. Primarily: a unilateral binding decision of a higher party — alongside "testament/will." God makes a berit: he binds himself. Canonical · G1242

Always use "renewed covenant" instead of "new covenant." The Hebrew chadash (H2318) and Greek kainos (G2537) mean renewed, not replacing. The Greek neos (completely new) does not appear in the context of Jeremiah 31 or Hebrews 8. The translation "new" suggests discontinuity that the text does not support. Translation Loss · VI.ii.b

Genesis 15 — God walks through the pieces

When God makes a covenant with Abraham (Gen. 15), he puts Abraham into a deep sleep. Then God — as a smoking torch — walks alone through the split carcasses. In the ancient world this meant: "may this happen to me if I break the covenant." God binds himself on both sides: his own fulfilment and the forgiveness of Abraham's failure. This is why the Messiah had to die — not to abolish the covenants, but to fulfil God's promise when we broke the covenant. Canonical · Gen. 15:17

No covenant replaces the previous one

The Bible describes seven covenants. Each covenant adds something — no covenant cancels the previous one. The rainbow does not disappear when God calls Abraham. Circumcision does not disappear when Moshe receives the Torah. The Torah does not disappear when Yeshua establishes the renewed covenant. This is the architecture of God's salvation plan: cumulative, not replacing.

01 · AdamEden CovenantGen. 3:15 · Proto-gospel — seed of the woman
02 · NoahRainbow CovenantGen. 9:9 · Never again a flood — for all creation
03 · AbrahamPromise CovenantGen. 15 · Land, descendants, blessing for all nations
04 · MosheSinai CovenantEx. 19–24 · Torah as life-structure for the covenant people
05 · DavidRoyal Covenant2 Sam. 7 · Eternal throne for David's Son
06 · LandLand CovenantDeut. 29–30 · Return and restoration in the land
07 · RenewedHeart CovenantJer. 31:31 · Same Torah, now in the heart — for Israel and grafted-in nations

Jeremiah 31:35–37 — immediately after the covenant promise: "If these fixed orders depart from before Me… then the descendants of Israel also will cease to be a nation before Me forever." God ties the continuity of Israel to the continuity of creation. As long as the sun shines and the moon gives light, the covenant with Israel remains and the Torah stands.

Yeshua — the sacrifice of Genesis 15

When God in Genesis 15 walks alone through the pieces, he binds himself to the consequences of the broken covenant. God says: if Abraham's descendants break the covenant, I will bear the punishment. Yeshua is the execution of that oath — not the abolishment of the covenant, but the divine fulfilment of the guarantee God imposed on himself.

"For Messiah is the end of the Torah for righteousness to everyone who believes."

Romans 10:4 · telos = goal/completion, not abolishment Translation Loss: "end" as abolishment

The Greek telos (G5056) means goal, completion, end-point-of-a-movement — the word for the finish line of a race, not its cancellation. Yeshua is the goal toward which the Torah has always pointed: the living embodiment of everything the Torah promised. Not: "now the Torah is no longer needed." But: "now you see what the Torah was for." Canonical · G5056

Misunderstanding 1"There are two covenants: old and new"

Church history has divided the Bible into Old Testament (for Jews, past) and New Testament (for the Church, current). Jeremiah 31 speaks of seven covenants that are cumulative. There is no "old covenant" as a single thing — there are six covenants that precede the seventh. And the seventh replaces none of the six. Popular-theol.

Misunderstanding 2"God has released Israel and chosen the Church"

This is replacement theology. Jeremiah 31:35–37 explicitly excludes this: God will reject Israel only when the sun, moon, and stars cease to exist. Paul in Romans 11:1 — "Has God rejected his people? Absolutely not!" He uses the strongest negation in Greek: mē genoito. Canonical · Rom. 11:1

Historical noteWhere does replacement theology come from?

In the second century after Yeshua, a break arose between Jewish and Gentile believers. Church leaders like Justin Martyr wanted to distance themselves from everything Jewish. When Constantine made Christianity the state religion in 313, the Tanach as "the Jewish book" was marginalised. This is a theological and political decision by human beings — not an instruction from Yeshua or the apostles. Historical · Church Fathers

Incorporated, not adopted into a different system

As a non-Jewish believer you are not taken into a separate system called "the Church." Paul describes your position in Ephesians 2:12–13 as someone who "was a stranger to the covenants of promise" — but who has now "been brought near." And in Romans 11:17 as a wild olive branch grafted into the noble olive tree, which is called Israel. You are a fellow-citizen of the covenant people — not a separate people with separate rules. Canonical · Eph. 2:12 / Rom. 11:17

When Yeshua on the road to Emmaus explains the covenants (Luke 24:27), he begins with Moshe. He proves his Messiahship from the berit with Abraham, the prophecies from the Davidic covenant, the priestly role from the Levitical structure. Without the seven covenants, Yeshua's identity cannot be established. The covenant is not the background of the gospel — it is the content of it.

① What have I understood?
  • Berit means cut covenant — unbreakable, sealed with blood-shedding. God bound himself in Genesis 15 on both sides.
  • There are seven covenants, not two. Each adds; none replaces. The "renewed covenant" is the same covenant deepened, not a different one.
② Which misunderstanding has been corrected?
  • Did you think the New Testament replaces the Old Testament? What do you do now with the seven covenants as a structure?
  • How do you respond when someone says: "God has released Israel"?
③ The witness
  • How would you explain that the "renewed covenant" is not a replacement but a deepening?
  • What does it mean for your identity as a believer that you are incorporated into the covenants of Israel, not into a separate system?
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Sources & References