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Institutes 2.11.2 — THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO TESTAMENTS.

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**THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO TESTAMENTS.**

This will better appear from the similitude which Paul uses in Galatians ( Gal. 4:1 ). He compares the Jewish nation to an heir in pupillarity, who, as yet unfit to govern himself, follows the direction of a tutor or guide to whose charge he has been committed. Though this simile refers especially to ceremonies, there is nothing to prevent us from applying it most appropriately here also. The same inheritance was destined to them as to us, but from nonage they were incapable of entering to it, and managing it. They had the same Church, though it was still in puerility. The Lord, therefore kept them under this tutelage, giving them spiritual promises, not clear and simple, but typified by earthly objects. Hence, when he chose Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and their posterity, to the hope of immortality, he promised them the land of Canaan for an inheritance, not that it might be the limit of their hopes, but that the view of it might train and confirm them in the hope of that true inheritance, which, as yet, appeared not. And, to guard against delusion, they received a better promise, which attested that this earth was not the highest measure of the divine kindness. Thus, Abraham is not allowed to keep down his thoughts to the promised land: by a greater promise his views are carried upward to the Lord. He is thus addressed, “Fear not, Abram: I am thy shield, and thy exceeding great reward,” ( Gen. 15:1 ). Here we see that the Lord is the final reward promised to Abraham that he might not seek a fleeting and evanescent reward in the elements of this world, but look to one which was incorruptible. A promise of the land is afterwards added for no other reason than that it might be a symbol of the divine benevolence, and a type of the heavenly inheritance, as the saints declare their understanding to have been. Thus David rises from temporal blessings to the last and highest of all, “My flesh and my heart faileth: but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion for ever.” “My heart and my flesh crieth out for the living God,” ( Ps. 73:26 ; 84:2). Again, “The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance and of my cup: thou maintainest my lot,” ( Ps. 16:5 ). Again “I cried unto thee O Lord: I said Thou art my refuge and my portion in the land of the living,” ( Ps. 142:5 ). Those who can venture to speak thus, assuredly declare that their hope rises beyond the world and worldly blessings. This future blessedness, however, the prophets often describe under a type which the Lord had taught them. In this way are to be understood the many passages in Job ( Job 18:17 ) and Isaiah, to the effect, That the righteous shall inherit the earth, that the wicked shall be driven out of it, that Jerusalem will abound in all kinds of riches, and Sion overflow with every species at abundance. In strict propriety, all these things obviously apply not to the land of our pilgrimage, nor to the earthly Jerusalem, but to the true country, the heavenly city of believers, in which the Lord has commanded blessing and life for evermore ( Ps. 133:3 ).

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part_ofCalvin — Institutes of the Christian Religion (1559) source-manifest/institutes
translated_asInstitutes 2.11.2 — THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO TESTAMENTS. (ko) language_pack/inst-2-11-2-ko
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