The Real New Testament Church
  • Home
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Plan
    • Plan - Kingdom >
      • Chapter 1 - Beginning
      • Chapter 2 - Errant Reasoning
      • Chapter 3 - Consequence
      • Chapter 4 - Adaptation
      • Chapter 5 - Original Earth
      • Chapter 6 - Renovated Earth
      • Chapter 7 - Degenerated Earth
      • Chapter 8 - Time, Space and Representation
      • Chapter 9 - Early Ages
      • Chapter 10 - Israelite Age
      • Chapter 11 - Gentile Age
      • Chapter 12 - Tribulation
      • Chapter 13 - Regenerated Earth
      • Chapter 14 - New Earth
    • Plan - Covenant >
      • Chapter 15 - Covenant
      • Chapter 16 - Major Covenants
      • Chapter 17 - Eternal Covenant
      • Chapter 18 - Renovation Covenant
      • Chapter 19 - Old Covenant for Israel
      • Chapter 20 - New Covenant for Israel
      • Chapter 21 - Church Covenant
      • Chapter 22 - Covenantal Celebration and Sign
  • New Testament Church
    • New Testament Church - Preparation >
      • Chapter 23 - Parables
      • Chapter 24 - Kingdom of Heaven Parables
    • New Testament Church Foundation >
      • Chapter 25 - New Testament Church
      • Chapter 26 - Eternal or Temporal
      • Chapter 27 - Calling
      • Chapter 28 - Description
    • New Testament Church - Composition >
      • Chapter 29 - Covenantal Headship
      • Chapter 30 - New Covenantal Headship
      • Chapter 31 - Practical Headship
      • Chapter 32 - Body
      • Chapter 33 - Governance
      • Chapter 34 - Women
    • New Testament Church - Incarnation >
      • Chapter 35 - Function and Form
      • Chapter 36 - Purpose and Mission
      • Chapter 37 - Manifestation
    • New Testament Church - Legality >
      • Chapter 38 - Law
      • Chapter 39 - Transgression
      • Chapter 40 - Justification
    • New Testament Church - Life (zoe) >
      • Chapter 41 - Life (zoe)
      • Chapter 42 - Progression of Life (zoe)
      • Chapter 43 - Birth
      • Chapter 44 - Perfect Example
      • Chapter 45 - Church Life
      • Chapter 46 - Sanctification
      • Chapter 47 - Rule of Life (zoe)
      • Chapter 48 - Life According to the Spirit
      • Chapter 49 - Return to Law
      • Chapter 50 - Faith
    • New Testament Church - Position >
      • Chapter 51 - Principle of Position
      • Chapter 52 - Position and Condition
    • New Testament Church - Confession >
      • Chapter 53 - Fellowship with God
      • Chapter 54 - Confession
      • Chapter 55 - Confession or Christ
    • New Testament Church - Doctrine and Practice >
      • Chapter 56 - Word of God
      • Chapter 57 - Values
      • Chapter 58 - Apostolic Teaching and Tradition
      • Chapter 59 - Christ-Centered
      • Chapter 60 - Simplicity
      • Chapter 61 - Prayer
      • Chapter 62 - Works
      • Chapter 63 - Giving
      • Chapter 64 - Practical Gatherings
      • Chapter 65 - Lord's Supper
      • Chapter 66 - Gathering Together
    • New Testament Church - Growth >
      • Chapter 67 - Biblical Church Growth
      • Chapter 68 - Practical Church Growth
      • Chapter 69 - Exponential Growth
    • New Testament Church - Simulation >
      • Chapter 70 - Temporal Simulation
      • Chapter 71 - Simulated Church History
      • Chapter 72 - Confirmation of Scripture
    • New Testament Church - Warfare >
      • Chapter 73 - Warfare
      • Chapter 74 - Utter Defeat
      • Chapter 75 - Freedom
      • Chapter 76 - Positional Warfare
      • Chapter 77 - Positional Armor
      • Chapter 78 - Cooperative Armor
      • Chapter 79 - Armor of God
      • Chapter 80 - Armor Appropriated
      • Chapter 81 - Full Armor
      • Chapter 82 - Life-Based Warfare
    • New Testament Church - Reformation >
      • Chapter 83 - Formation, Deformation and Reformation
      • Chapter 84 - Law and Life
      • Chapter 85 - Practice of Law
      • Chapter 86 - Practice of Life
      • Chapter 87 - From Law to Life
      • Chapter 88 - Doctrine, Desire and Dependence
      • Chapter 89 - Design, Decentralization, Demonstration and Divestment
  • Conclusion
    • Chapter 90 - From House to House: the Real New Testament Church
  • Endnotes
  • About
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Chapter 10 - Israelite Age
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After the Postdiluvian Age had served its intended purpose, God proceeded to introduce the next stage of His eternal plan. Through it He continued to vindicate His nature and repopulate His kingdom through the redemption of fallen human beings. Therefore, He initiated the Israelite Age. It endured from 2166BC to 586BC.
 
                                           Patriarchs


The Israelite Age began when God entered into covenant relationship with the original patriarch of Israel, Abram. Referred to as the Abrahamic Covenant, it was an unconditional covenant of promise that secured the presence of the kingdom of God on the degenerated earth. As a result, God could continue to vindicate His nature and repopulate His kingdom.
    
​Through the Abrahamic Covenant God requested that Abram do two things. Both were accompanied by unconditional covenantal promises:
 
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Divine Requests
References
1. “Go forth from your country, and from your relatives and from            your father’s house, to the land which I will show you.” 
Genesis 12:1
2. “And so you shall be a blessing …”
​Genesis 12:2
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God’s first request was for Abram to leave his country, relatives and father’s house and go to the land where He would direct him. If Abram obeyed, God promised three things for him: 
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Promises
References
1. “And I will make you a great nation,”
Genesis 12:2
2. “And I will bless you,”           
Genesis 12:2
3. “And make your name great …”
Genesis 12:2
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God's fulfillment of the three promises above would serve as the means by which Abram would satisfy God’s second request to “be a blessing” in the land of promise. By his willingness to obey, God would make Abram a source of divine blessing and fulfill three more covenantal promises for him: 
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Promises
References
1. “And I will bless those who bless you,”       
Genesis 12:3
2. “And the one who curses you I will curse.”
Genesis 12:3
3. “And in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.”
Genesis 12:3
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While Abram willingly traveled to the promised land, an extended passage of time without the satisfaction of covenant promises caused him to become skeptical. Therefore, he attempted to facilitate the fulfillment of the covenant promises for God. Relative to his lack of faith and resultant discouragement, God encouraged Abram (“exalted father”) by changing his name to Abraham (“father of many”). (Genesis 17:5) The name change provided reassurance to Abram that God would indeed fulfill His promised covenantal stipulations.

In time, God restated the promises of the Abrahamic Covenant to Abraham’s son Isaac and his grandson Jacob (after a night of wrestling with God, Jacob was renamed Israel, meaning “God prevails”). (Genesis 32:28) Thus, by divine appointment, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (Israel) served as the patriarchs or forefathers of the nation of covenant promise.

The divine fulfillment of the unconditional promises of the Abrahamic Covenant would eventually lead to the birth of a nation populated with the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Not only would it represent the kingdom of God on the degenerated earth but also provide the avenue through which the promised Messiah would descend to earth and bless all its families (nations).  

As recorded in Genesis 49-50, the Patriarchal Age concluded with the death of Jacob. His twelve sons (the leaders of the twelve tribes of Israel) buried him in the land of Canaan. Afterward, they returned to Egypt and lived in subjection to Egyptian rule for 430 years. (Exodus 12:40-41) 

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                                        National Israel
 
About 400 years after the death of Jacob, God led the twelve tribes of Israel out of Egypt. His purpose was to initiate the covenant promises He made to Abraham and later confirmed to Isaac and Jacob. By then numbering in the millions, the twelve tribes of Israel would begin to learn through great trial and tribulation what it would mean to become one nation under God.

God had planned beforehand to form the nation through a series of interrelated covenants. They included the unconditional Abrahamic Covenant, the conditional Mosaic Covenant, and the unconditional Davidic Covenant. Collectively, they have been referred to as the Old Covenant.

By the unconditional stipulations of the Abrahamic Covenant God promised citizenry, land, protection, and blessing. (Genesis 12:1-3; 7; 13:14-17; 15:1-21; 17:1-8; 18:18; 22:18; cf. Deuteronomy 29:1-30:10) Through the conditional stipulations of the Mosaic Covenant He provided the nation with a constitution. (Exodus 20:1-31:18) Enacted in the Sinai desert outside of Egypt, it prescribed the nature, functions, and limits of its representational religious and governmental practice. Leadership for the nation of Israel was initially appointed by God and subsequently promised according to His unconditional stipulations of the Davidic Covenant. (2 Samuel 7:4-17; 1 Chronicles 17:4-15; 2 Chronicles 6:16; Psalm 89:3-4)

The representation of God on earth through the nation of Israel endured from Moses to King Zedekiah (1446BC to 586BC). National disobedience to the conditional stipulations of the Mosaic Covenant eventually resulted in the suspension of Israel from the covenant plan of God and their privileged role of kingdom representation.

The suspension of Israel from the covenant plan of God was temporary. “For the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable.” (Romans 11:29) Their irrevocability was not conditioned on Israel's obedience but to the unconditional covenant promises of God.

It is important to remember that the promises of the Abrahamic and Davidic covenants were unconditional. Consequently, they would be fulfilled regardless of the actions of national Israel.

By design, the stipulations of the Abrahamic and Davidic covenants would be fulfilled through the future, unconditional promise of Israel’s New covenant. The unconditional fulfillment of the promises of the New Covenant was guaranteed by the blood of the Eternal Covenant. As a result, Israel’s future restoration to covenant plan and kingdom citizenship is indisputable. 

​Indeed, the Bible reveals a period in the future when Israel will become a nation whose greatness is unparalleled in history. Shortly after His return to earth, the Messiah will reestablish national Israel as one nation, restore it to covenant relationship through the initiation of the unconditional New Covenant, and commission it to represent Him on earth. (Isaiah 54:5-7; 60:1-22; Jeremiah 30-31; Ezekiel 20:33-38; 37:24-28; Daniel 9:24-27; Acts 1:6; Romans 11; et al.)


                                            Summary
 
The kingdom of God is “the sovereign authority of God manifested within the realm of both eternity and space-time for benefit of His creation.” The primary purpose of the kingdom of God manifested on the degenerated earth through national Israel was again to reveal the authority of God, vindicate His nature from angelic accusation and repopulate His kingdom.
 
According to plan, the kingdom of God continued to be manifested on the degenerated earth within redeemed human beings. They were again descended from the Hebrew lineage of Seth. Rather than individuals, however, they comprised a nation, the nation of Israel. It was formed in accordance with the future fulfillment of the foundational Eternal Covenant and the stipulations of the Abrahamic, Mosaic, and Davidic covenants.

Like the citizens of the kingdom before them, the Israelites were justified and regenerated by grace through faith alone and thereby, restored to a state suitable with the nature of God. Made glorious, holy, eternal, and alive to God, they were also legally representative, favorable for habitation by God, and provided for His authority to be recognized on earth. The Israelite Age on the degenerated earth lasted from Moses to King Zedekiah (2166BC to 586BC).

Concordant with the indwelling Spirit of God, the new citizens of the kingdom could be theocratically governed through the intimate rule of divine life. Cooperating by grace through faith alone, they willingly submitted to divine authority and provided for its mediation on the degenerated earth.

During the Israelite Age, by benefit of the future fulfillment of the foundational Eternal Covenant and the stipulations of the earthly Abrahamic, Mosaic, and Davidic covenants, the descendants of the patriarchs of Israel grew into the nation of Israel. By its obedience to unconditional covenant promise and conditional covenant law, the nature of God continued to be vindicated and His kingdom repopulated.

Nevertheless, the authority of God was again challenged by human rebellion. As previously, divine judgment ensued and the nation of Israel was dispersed into the Gentile nations. Consequently, unconditional covenant promises remained unfulfilled, the nature of God was not fully vindicated, and the kingdom of God was not fully repopulated.

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Category
Description
Primary
Purpose:
  • The revelation of the authority of God for the benefit of human beings.
  • The vindication of divine authority.
Plan:
  • The degenerated earth as a suitable habitat for human beings. 
  • Rather than the earth existing in the kingdom of God, the kingdom manifested on the degenerated earth within redeemed human beings legally representative and organically representational of God. 
  • Kingdom repopulation by human beings.
Citizenship: 
  • Holy spatiotemporal human beings specifically descended from the Hebrew descendants of Seth to form the nation of Israel. 
Realm: 

  • The spatiotemporal degenerated earth.
Character for Citizenship: 
  • ​​Glorious, holy and eternal (concordant with the nature of the divine king).​
Era: 
  • From Moses to King Zedekiah (2166BC to 586BC).  
Qualification
for Citizenship:
  • Holiness, spirituality, and immortality awarded by divine justification and regeneration.
  • Human cooperation by willing submission to the beneficent revelation of divine authority.
  • By grace through faith alone. ​
Governance:
  •  Theocratic.
  • In cooperation with human mediation.
  • Through union of life between God and the elect of the nation of Israel.​
Outcome: 
  •  By benefit of the future fulfillment of the Eternal Covenant, the elect of Israel justified and regenerated by grace through faith alone and consequently, made legally representative and organically representational of God.  
  • By the unconditional promises of the Abrahamic Covenant and Davidic covenants and the conditional stipulations of the Mosaic Covenant, the continued vindication of the divine nature and repopulation of the divine kingdom.
  • The authority of God again challenged by human rebellion.
  • Divine judgment leading to temporary suspension from the covenant plan of God and dispersion among the Gentile nations.  
  • The unconditional covenant promises to Israel remaining unfulfilled.
  • The kingdom of God not completely repopulated.
  • The nature of God not fully vindicated.​
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© 2025 James Hiatt
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