You Are in Covenant With God

There is a word that changes everything when you truly understand it: covenant. Not a contract, not a transaction, not a temporary agreement. A covenant is a bond sealed in blood, a promise so permanent that God Himself staked His name on it. And the most extraordinary truth of the Gospel is that you are in one if you are a Christian.

The Foundation of the Relationship

God did not invite you into a performance based arrangement. He drew you into family. When Jesus took the cup at the Last Supper and said, “This is the new covenant in my blood,” He was not establishing religion. He was establishing relationship. The communion table is not a ritual to complete. It is a reminder of who you are and whose you are.

Every time you receive communion, you are declaring: I am covered. I am in relationship. I belong to something ancient and unbreakable. The body broken for you addressed your wholeness. The blood poured out for you addressed your standing before God. You come to the table not to earn favor but to remember the favor that was freely given.

Identity Flows From Covenant

One of the most powerful things covenant does is settle your identity. When you know you are in covenant with God, you stop striving to become something and start walking in what you already are. You are not trying to get God to love you. He already does. You are not working to be accepted. You already are, in Christ.

This is the finished work. Jesus did not leave anything undone. The cross was complete. The resurrection was confirmation. And now, seated at the right hand of the Father, He intercedes for you as your covenant partner, your high priest, your elder brother.

Remember and Walk Forward

The purpose of remembrance is not to stay in the past. It is to build confidence for the future. When you remember what God has already done, your faith rises for what He is about to do. Covenant means He will not abandon the work He began. It means His promises over your life are yes and amen.

Live like someone who is in covenant with the Most High God. Because you are.

-Terrence Burton

Remember What Jesus Did: The Transforming Power of Covenant Consciousness

There is a battle happening in the mind of every believer, and it is more subtle than most people realize. It is not a battle between good and evil in the dramatic sense. It is a battle over what you remember. Do you spend more mental and emotional energy remembering your failures, your shortcomings, and your past mistakes — or remembering what Jesus did? The teaching of communion, rightly understood, is God’s divinely designed tool for winning that battle.

Communion Was Designed to Shape Your Memory

When Jesus took the bread and the cup in Luke 22, He said something remarkable: “Do this in remembrance of me.” He did not say, “Do this to remember how badly you have failed.” He said, “Remember Me.” Remember what I did. Remember what the cross accomplished. Remember what the blood purchased. Communion is not merely ritual or ceremony, it is a deliberate act designed to orient your consciousness around the finished work of Christ. Every time you participate in the Lord’s Table, you are making a declaration: the sacrifice of Jesus, the blood covenant, forgiveness, union with God, and your new identity in Him are more real to me than my past failures. This is not denial. This is covenant consciousness. And 1 Corinthians 11 reveals that believers who participate without this understanding miss the very thing communion was designed to produce.

The Blood Was About More Than Forgiveness

Many believers understand that the blood of Jesus removes sin. That truth alone is staggering and worthy of a lifetime of gratitude. But the depth of what the blood accomplishes goes even further. Ancient covenant tradition, understood that when two parties entered blood covenant, what some cultures called becoming blood brothers, they were not just forming an agreement. They were merging lives. Their resources, their enemies, their futures became shared. What the blood of Jesus established was not just forgiveness; it was union. Shared life. Oneness with God. The New Covenant through Christ’s blood imparts God’s very life to humanity. The spiritual death that entered through Adam’s fall, the separation, the alienation, all of it was dealt with at the cross so that you could be brought into the very family and life of God. Hebrews 8:12 seals it: “Their sins and iniquities will I remember no more.” God is not interacting with you based on what He remembers you doing wrong, because the blood covenant settled that issue permanently.

No Condemnation Is Not Just a Verse — It Is Your Address

Romans 8:1 declares: “There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus.” God condemned sin in the body of Jesus so that you would not have to live under condemnation. This is the conclusion of the covenant. The enemy works overtime to keep you focused on what you did, because he knows that a guilt-ridden believer is a powerless believer. But a believer who knows who they are in the covenant…forgiven, accepted, indwelt by the Spirit, crowned with glory and honor, is dangerous to the kingdom of darkness. If you have drifted from the Lord’s Table or approached it with fear and shame, this is an invitation to return. Not to perform a ritual, but to realign your mind with what heaven has already declared. Examine yourself, yes, but the examination is not so you can measure your worthiness. It is so you can bring your life back into agreement with the love and covenant God has already extended to you.

Remember what Jesus did, not what you did, because God doesn’t remember it anymore. Let that truth change how you see yourself today.

-Terrence Burton