Kenneth Copeland — Covenant of Blood Part 3

Such blood agreements were very serious in
Abram’s day. That is why God chose to make a
covenant with him. He wanted to convince
Abram that His promises were true. He wanted
him to understand that the great El Shaddai
desired an unbreakable relationship with him and
with his children after him. God wanted Abram to
know (without a doubt) that He loved him and
that He would care for him, not because He had
to, but because He wanted to. By making blood
covenant with him, Almighty God proved that He
wanted to exchange His strength, His weapons
and His authority with Abram. He proved that He
wanted to bless man for a thousand generations.
Romans 4:21 tells us that Abram got the message.
He became fully persuaded that God was
able to perform that which He had promised,
and his life was never the same again. Even his
very name was changed to Abraham, meaning
“father of many nations.” And eventually Isaac,
the long-awaited son of promise, was born to
Abraham and his wife, Sarah.
Years after Isaac’s birth, that covenant was still
strong in Abraham’s mind. And nothing—not
even a request from God Himself—could shake
his confidence. We see this in Genesis 22. There
God asks Abraham to place his only son on the
altar and sacrifice him. How could He do this
after promising Abraham that he would become
the father of many nations through this son?
We would expect Abraham to be distraught
over such a request. We would expect him to
wring his hands and pace the floor all night in
grief and anguish. But we’re not as covenantminded
as Abraham was.
Abraham was confident in his covenant. He
went to sleep that night and rose up early the
next morning ready to go. And when he took
Isaac up on the mountain of sacrifice, he turned
to his servant and said, “Wait here—the boy and
I will be back.” He had a covenant!
Hebrews 11:17-19 says that Abraham, by
faith, had already received Isaac raised from the
dead. God had promised him Isaac would make
him the father of many nations, and he knew
God could not possibly break that promise. Even
though he’d never seen or heard of such a thing,
Abraham reasoned that God would just raise
Isaac back up from the dead if He had to. He
knew that God would do whatever it took to
keep their covenant.

