Kenneth Copeland — The New Covenant Of Life!

Kenneth and Gloria Copeland

In the old covenant, we can see
that the power of sin was very much
in force. Satan took the authority that
Adam had given him and perverted
it, using fear and death against men
instead of the life and faith they had
in God. The power of sin was operating
throughout the Old Testament.
A man could make the decision to
live in line with God’s Word, but sin
would still plague him night and day.
For instance, Noah performed the
greatest act of faith known to man
and then got roaring drunk! This is
why the decisions of the Old Testament
saints spoken of in Hebrews 11
were such outstanding feats of faith.
The power of sin was still inside them
and spiritual death was lodged in their
hearts. Then Jesus came to earth. He
bore the penalty of spiritual death,
broke its power, and was raised from
the dead, triumphant over Satan and
his kingdom. When you made Jesus
your Lord, the power of eternal life
enveloped your spirit and a new man
was born inside you: “Therefore if any
man be in Christ, he is a new creature:
old things are passed away; behold, all
things are become new. And all things
are of God” (2 Corinthians 5:17-18).
This is the new covenant!

Wherefore then serveth the law? It
was added because of transgressions,
till the seed should come to whom
the promise was made; and it was
ordained by angels in the hand of
a mediator. Now a mediator is not
a mediator of one, but God is one.
Is the law then against the promises
of God? God forbid: for if there
had been a law given which could
have given life, verily righteousness
should have been by the law. But
the scripture hath concluded all
under sin, that the promise by faith
of Jesus Christ might be given to
them that believe. But before faith
came, we were kept under the law,
shut up unto the faith which should
afterwards be revealed. Wherefore
the law was our schoolmaster to
bring us unto Christ, that we might
be justified by faith. But after that
faith is come, we are no longer
under a schoolmaster. For ye are
all the children of God by faith in
Christ Jesus. For as many of you as
have been baptized into Christ have
put on Christ. There is neither Jew
nor Greek, there is neither bond
nor free, there is neither male nor
female: for ye are all one in Christ
Jesus. And if ye be Christ’s, then are ye
Abraham’s seed,
and heirs according
to the promise (Galatians 3:19-29).

Kenneth Copeland Ministries

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Kenneth Copeland — Abraham’s Covenant

Kenneth and Gloria Copeland

Let’s look at Genesis 17:1-5 for a
moment and examine this agreement
God made with Abram:

And when Abram was ninety years
old and nine, the Lord appeared to
Abram, and said unto him, I am the
Almighty God; walk before me, and
be thou perfect. And I will make
my covenant between me and thee,
and will multiply thee exceedingly.
And Abram fell on his face: and
God talked with him, saying, As for
me, behold, my covenant is with
thee, and thou shalt be a father of
many nations. Neither shall thy name
any more be called Abram, but thy
name shall be Abraham; for a father
of many nations have I made thee.

Notice particularly that God said,
“As for me….” You see, Abram did not
have to accept God’s deal. He was not
being forced to do anything—it was
his own free choice. God laid out His
proposition and Abram accepted it. It
gave God access to the earth and gave
man access to God. At this time man
had no real knowledge of God’s nature.
People only knew what their fathers
had passed down to them. After
Adam died and several generations
passed, no one really knew much
about God anymore.

You need to understand the authority
that was placed in the covenant. This
was an absolute agreement
between God and Abram, sealed on
both sides. God sealed His side of the
agreement by swearing by Himself
(Genesis 22:16). In other words, there is
no higher state that God can swear by,
so He swore by Himself. Technically, if
He ever broke the covenant, He would
have to destroy Himself.

The Hebrew word covenant means
“to cut where blood flows.” This is the
strongest agreement in any language.
A covenant is a contract, or agreement,
made between two parties and sealed
by the shedding of their blood. Once
this is done, the covenant can never
be broken. Every heathen tribe on the
face of the earth has a blood covenant.
The blood covenant between God and
man was marked and sealed in man’s
flesh through circumcision (Genesis
17:10-14). In other words, circumcision
was “the cut of the covenant.”

From that time forward, Abram was
a covenant man with God. God even
changed his name to Abraham. In
Genesis 18:17-33 we find God consulting
with His covenant man about the
destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Can you see the strength of this covenant?
It was powerful!

Kenneth Copeland Ministries

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Kenneth Copeland — The Law Of Genesis

Kenneth and Gloria Copeland

In the beginning God created the
heavens and the earth. Genesis
1:26-27 says:

And God said, Let us make man in
our image, after our likeness: and
let them have dominion over the
fish of the sea, and over the fowl
of the air, and over the cattle, and
over all the earth, and over every
creeping thing that creepeth upon
the earth. So God created man in
his own image, in the image of God
created he him; male and female
created he them.

From the dust of the earth, God
formed a man, named him Adam, and
placed him in the midst of the Garden
of Eden. This man Adam was given the
awesome authority of lordship over
God’s creation on earth. God gave him
dominion over every living thing on
the face of this earth. He was to
subdue the earth and replenish it. He
was given the right to be the father of
God’s family. He was to sire the human
race. What a privilege!

God set a law into motion at creation
which I call the law of genesis—or
the law of beginnings. According to
this law, every living thing was created
by God to produce after its own
kind. Man was no exception. God is a
Spirit, and Adam was created in God’s
own image and likeness—a spirit being.
They walked in close fellowship
and communion together, and Adam’s
descendants were to live in harmony
with God, their spiritual Father. But
something happened in the Garden
that caused a great and terrible change
to occur. Satan approached Adam’s
wife Eve and deceived her into disobeying
God’s command. Then Adam
willfully followed her in this rebellion.

According to the law of genesis,
man takes on the nature of his
spiritual father or lord. God was
Adam’s spiritual father. But when
Adam disobeyed God and bowed his
knee to Satan, he changed spiritual fa-
thers. Satan became the illegitimate
stepfather of mankind. Adam committed
high treason. At that point, all
the dominion and authority God had
given him was handed over to Satan.
Suddenly, God was on the outside
looking in.

Until this time, Satan did not have
any authority on earth. All his authority
had been taken away when
he led the rebellion against God in
heaven (Isaiah 14:12). He came into
the picture absolutely void of authority.
But by deceiving the woman, he
manipulated man’s authority into his
own hands and became the god of this
world (2 Corinthians 4:4). In Luke
4:3-7, when Satan tempted Jesus in
the wilderness, he took Jesus up on a
high mountain and showed Him all
the kingdoms of the earth. He said,
“All this power will I give thee, and
the glory of them: for that is delivered
unto me: and to whomsoever I will I
give it. If thou therefore will worship
me, all shalt be thine” (Luke 4:6-7).

Some people think this was just
one of Satan’s lies. But if it had been a
lie, it would not have been a temptation
and the Bible says that Jesus was
sorely tempted. This was real temptation,
brother! Satan had it to give.
Jesus was tempted, but He used the
weapon for which there is no defense.
He said, “It is written…” and Satan had
to flee from Him!

Kenneth Copeland Ministries

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Kenneth Copeland — Honor and Dishonor

Kenneth and Gloria Copeland

Therefore thou art inexcusable, O man, whosoever thou art that judgest: for wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things. But we are sure that the judgment of God is according to truth against them which commit such things. And thinkest thou this, O man, that judgest them which do such things, and doest the same, that thou shalt escape the judgment of God? (Romans 2:1-3).

Here Paul is talking about people who judge, including those who sit on the bench. This passage is true for anyone who takes it upon himself to sit in judgment of another person, whether he is a duly authorized court judge, pastor of a church or a father or mother over a family. In the eyes of God the only true judge is one who is appointed and ordained by Him. You and I have no business judging anyone.

If a criminal was brought up before me, and I was told, “Judge this man,” I would have to say, “I can’t; I don’t have the authority and power to judge him.” I could pronounce all kinds of judgment against him, but it would not mean a thing. Nobody would carry out my judgment. If anyone did, he would be as much a criminal as I or as the man I had judged.

We do not have the right to pass judgment on our fellow human beings made in the image of God. Why then do we address a judge as “your honor”?
Because he has been given the awesome authority and power to exercise legal dominion over the lives of other men and women.

What is that authority and power called? Honor. And it is a recognizable honor. Doesn’t that fit the pattern of honor? This authority and power is given to him to execute judgment that is written (Psalm 149:9). Now, what about a judge who is dishonorable? First, we must recognize that this is a contradiction in terms. Let’s see why.

What is dishonor? According to the Bible, if you give a person honor, you have given him dominion. You have given him authority. When that individual is dishonorable, he uses his authority and power to his own advantage—to better his own life, to increase his own power, prestige and position, to line his own pockets. He is using honor in a dishonorable manner.

A soldier, for example, is given the authority and power to carry a weapon. That is an honor. His government has entrusted him with a firearm. His country has bestowed upon him the right to use it against the enemy. For him to use that weapon for his own purposes or designs is wrong. What happens to such a person?

He is dishonorably discharged from the service for misusing the dominion that was given him. That is what Paul is talking about in Romans 2:1. Literally he is saying that the one who passes judgment on his neighbor is trying to clear his own conscience before God by being quick to condemn another person for the same offense he is guilty of himself.

Now let’s see how this applies to our daily lives. There is not much that you and I can do about a dishonorable county, state or federal judge—except to vote and pray, believing God for a solution to the situation. And don’t underestimate the power of prayer.

Similarly let’s take the Supreme Court as an example. You and I may feel that some Supreme Court justices have been dishonorable; but we cannot vote them out, because we did not vote them in. We can, however, pray them out.

I have been part of that. I have heard the Lord say to me in my prayer time, Pray this way. “Why?” I asked. “What are we doing here?”

His answer was, I’m going to change the Supreme Court. I’m going to change that situation, He told me. There are certain things I want you to pray. Most of it you will have to pray in the Spirit, because you do not
know what to pray for as you ought. Besides that, you have no business knowing much about the man.

That kind of thing is between God and the person in question. But we can pray the way God tells us, and He will take care of the situation for us.

This applies to the Church, and particularly the ministry. Listen to God and watch the situation so you can pray as you should—not so you can condemn, but so you can pray.

For instance, you may be told to pray for some preacher who is always criticizing women. He gets in the pulpit and preaches about their hair, their face, their clothes, their attitude and their actions.

He may start out preaching about the Resurrection, but the first thing you know, he is preaching about short skirts. He can’t seem to get off the subject of women. Watch out for such a man. It may be that he is trying to save his own spirit, trying to salve over his own conscience. It is likely that he is either chasing women or wanting to badly. He may even be into pornography, and it has a hold on him. So, it comes out in judgment. That isn’t always the case but many times it is.

When a person comes down on men and women of faith, it is often a sign that something is wrong with him on the inside. If the truth were known, you would find jealousy. You would find a person who has very little faith. He knows it and is embarrassed about it, so he tries to cover up and excuse it every way he can. Then judgment starts to come out in his life.

What is that? Dishonor

That man is using a position of honor in the wrong manner. He needs our prayers. That is what I meant when I said a dishonorable judge is a contradiction in terms. The same is true of a dishonorable Christian, whether a minister or not. Each of these individuals by definition is a person of honor. For one of them to act in a dishonorable manner
is contradictory. This is what Paul is telling us in Romans 2.

Kenneth Copeland Ministries

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