The Davidic Covenant

Second Samuel 7:8–16 records a covenant established by God with David, wherein God made three major promises to David. First, God promised that David’s “house” (his physical line of descent) would endure forever (v. 16; cf. 2 Chr. 21:7; Ps. 89:3–4, 36). Second, God pledged that David’s “kingdom” would never pass away permanently (v. 16), guaranteeing that; although that kingdom might not function at all times, it would always have the potential of being restored to its full role. Third, God promised that David’s “throne” (the ruling authority that David exercised) would never pass away permanently (v. 16), assuring that a royal descendant of David would always be available to exercise ruling authority when circumstances permitted (cf. 2 Chr. 7:18; Ps. 89:3–4; Jer. 33:17).

God did not specify any conditions in the Davidic Covenant when He established it; thus, it is unconditional in nature, totally dependent on the faithfulness of God for the fulfillment of its promises.

The Major Issues of the Davidic Covenant

The genealogies in Matthew 1 and Luke 3 indicated that Jesus Christ is a physical descendant of David. The angel Gabriel announced that God would give Jesus the throne of His ancestor, David; that He would reign over the house of Jacob forever; and that His kingdom would never end (Lk. 1:31–33). Peter declared, “God had sworn with an oath to him [David], that of the fruit of his loins, according to the flesh, he would raise up Christ to sit on his throne” (Acts 2:30). Isaiah prophesied concerning the Messiah, “Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with justice and with righteousness from henceforth even forever” (Isa. 9:7).

Through these significant statements, the Bible indicates that God’s three major promises to David in the Davidic Covenant are fulfilled ultimately in Jesus the Messiah. The major issues related to the Davidic Covenant are when and how God’s promises to David will be fulfilled in Jesus Christ.

Some have proposed that Christ is fulfilling these promises now (during this age, before His Second Coming) in His present rule over the church or human hearts as He sits at God’s right hand on the throne of God in heaven. According to this view, the kingdom over which Christ rules in fulfillment of the Davidic Covenant is solely a spiritual kingdom, and the throne of David is the throne of God in heaven. Others believe that Christ will fulfill these promises in eternity future after the present earth has been destroyed at His Second Coming. According to this view, the future Kingdom of God foretold in the Bible, over which Christ is to rule, will never be a reality during the present earth’s existence. It should be noted that these two views agree that Christ will never reign over a literal, earthly, political kingdom on the present earth.

By contrast, a third view asserts that Christ will fulfill these promises in the future when He returns to earth in His Second Coming and establishes and reigns over a literal, earthly, political kingdom for a thousand years on this present earth and for eternity on the new eternal earth.

The Distinctiveness of the Throne of David

Contrary to the first view, several biblical facts indicate that the throne of David cannot be equated with the throne of God in heaven. First, several descendants of David have sat on his throne, but only one of his descendants, Jesus Christ, sits on the right hand of God’s throne in heaven (Ps. 110:1; Heb. 8:1; 12:2; 1 Pet. 3:22).

Second, David’s throne was not established before his lifetime. By contrast, because God has always ruled over His creation, His throne in heaven was established long before David’s throne (Ps. 93:1–2).

Third, decades after Jesus ascended to the throne of God in heaven, He drew a clear distinction between His throne and God’s throne in heaven (Rev. 3:21). Because God promised to give to Jesus the throne of David (Lk. 1:31–33), it can be concluded that Jesus’ throne is David’s throne. Thus, the distinction that Jesus drew between His throne and God’s throne indicates that the throne of David and God’s throne in heaven are not the same.

Fourth, David’s throne was on earth, not in heaven. By contrast, God, whose throne is in heaven, exercises His ruling authority in and from heaven (Ps. 103:19; Isa. 66:1; Mt. 5:34; 6:9–10).

The Future Fulfillment of the Covenant

The Scriptures indicate that God’s promises to David in the Davidic Covenant will be fulfilled by Christ in the future in conjunction with His Second Coming. First, Jesus declared that He would sit on His throne, judge the Gentiles, and send believers into the kingdom in conjunction with His glorious Second Coming (Mt. 25:31–46). Thus, He put His throne and kingdom at the time of the Second Coming rather than before it.

Second, Zechariah 14:4 and 9 indicate that the Messiah will be King after His feet touch the Mount of Olives when He comes in His Second Coming and destroys the armies and rulers of all the Gentile nations of the world (cf. Ps. 2; Rev. 16:12–16; 19:11–20:6).

Third, according to Psalm 110:1–2 the Messiah is to sit at the right hand of His Father in heaven until it is time for Him to rule. Thus, the Messiah’s rule as King will not begin until after His present session with the Father in heaven.

Fourth, Jesus stated that He would sit on the throne of His glory as the Son of man when the earth is regenerated (restored to its pre–fall condition after the curse of man’s sin is lifted from it, Mt. 19:28; cp. Rom. 8:18–22). Such a regeneration of the earth has not yet happened, and Peter indicated that it will not happen until Israel, as a nation, has repented and Jesus returns and is physically present on the earth (Acts 3:19–21).

The Earthly Fulfillment of the Covenant

The Bible indicates that Christ will fulfill God’s promises to David in the Davidic Covenant by reigning over a literal, earthly kingdom on this present earth. First, according to Zechariah 14:4 and 9, after the Messiah’s feet touch the Mount of Olives at His Second Coming, He will be “king over all the earth.” Thus, He will rule not just over the church or individual hearts yielded to Him but over all the earth (cp. Ps. 72:8; Dan. 2:35, 44–45; Zech. 9:10).

Second, Jeremiah 23:5–8 promised that when the Messiah, a righteous branch of David, reigns as King, He will execute judgment and justice “in the earth.” During the days of His rule the people of Israel will “dwell safely” and will “dwell in their own land.” The language of this passage implies that Christ will rule over all the earth.

Third, in Daniel 7 the kingdom that God will give to the Messiah, the Son of man, when He comes with the clouds of heaven (vv. 13–14) is described as “the kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven” (v. 27). The expression under the whole heaven indicates that Christ’s kingdom will be on the earth (cp. Rev. 11:15).

Fourth, the prophets foretold dramatic changes in nature during the Messiah’s reign (cf. Acts 3:19–21), such as abundant production in wilderness and desert areas (Isa. 35:1–2; 41:18–20; 51:3); a tame animal kingdom that is vegetarian in diet (Isa. 11:6–9; 65:25): healing of all diseases and deformities (Isa. 29:18; 33:24; 35:5–6); and restoration of longevity of life (Isa. 65:20–22).

…Christ will reign for a thousand years on this present earth after His Second Coming but before this present earth is destroyed, before history is concluded, and before eternity future begins.

Fifth, the chronological order of future events presented in the Book of the Revelation indicates that Christ will reign for a thousand years on this present earth after His Second Coming but before this present earth is destroyed, before history is concluded, and before eternity future begins (Rev. 19:11–21:1). Revelation teaches that after the thousand-year reign of Christ, Satan will lead a revolt of the unsaved people on the earth against the rule of Christ and His saints (20:7–9). Several factors in this passage indicate that this revolt will take place on the earth. Satan will deceive the nations located “in the four quarters of the earth,” the rebels will go up “on the breadth of the earth,” and divine judgment will come “down from God out of heaven.”

The Political Fulfillment of the Covenant

Scripture indicates that Christ will fulfill the Davidic Covenant by reigning over a kingdom that is political in nature. First, Isaiah 9:6–7 states that when the Messiah sits on David’s throne ruling His kingdom, the government will be upon His shoulder, and the increase of His government will have no end. The word government implies literal political rule.

Second, when the Messiah reigns, He will exercise control over international relations, resulting in peace among the nations (Isa. 2:4; Mic. 4:3).

Third, during the Messiah’s reign His capital city, Jerusalem, will be the legal center of the world. Out of it will issue forth the law by which the nations of the world will be governed (Isa. 2:1–3; Mic. 4:1-2).

Fourth, just as David functioned as supreme judge over the affairs of his subjects, so the Messiah, when He reigns as the branch of Jesse and David, will function as supreme judge over the affairs of His subjects (Ps. 72:1–4, 12–14; Isa. 11:1–5; Jer. 33:14–16). He will protect the poor, needy, and meek, punish the oppressors, and execute the wicked. These are the functions of a political government (Rom. 13:1–7).

The Certain Fulfillment of the Covenant

The certain fulfillment of the Davidic Covenant is emphasized several times in the Bible. In Psalm 89:28–37, God declared that His covenant with David will stand fast, that He will fulfill its promises in spite of disobedience by David’s descendants, and that He will not permit His faithfulness to fail. God said, “My covenant will I not break, nor will I alter the thing that is gone out of my lips. Once have I sworn by my holiness that I will not lie unto David” (vv. 34–35).

In Psalm 132:11, God asserted that He will not turn back from what He has sworn to David; and in Jeremiah 33:20–21, He stated that just as people cannot break the day and night cycle that He has established, so His covenant with David cannot be broken. In addition, God declared that He will set up a righteous descendant of David to rule as king (Jer. 23:5–6: 33:14–17), and He later stated His intention to fulfill the promises of the Davidic Covenant in Jesus Christ (Lk. 1:31–33). In all of these assertions, God never stated any conditions or left any doubt concerning the covenant’s fulfillment.

Conclusion

In light of the biblical facts examined, it can be concluded that Jesus Christ will fulfill God’s promises to David in the Davidic Covenant in the future (after His Second Coming to the earth). He will do this by establishing and reigning over a literal, earthly, political kingdom for a thousand years on this present earth, just as His ancestor David reigned over a literal, earthly, political kingdom on this present earth.

5 thoughts on “The Davidic Covenant

  1. Well in earnest there has to be a literal person sitting on the literal throne of David until Jesus Christ comes, or as Ezekiel 21:25-27 states “He whose right it is” (referring to the Christ).

    That covenant God would not break for nothing, thus the parallel as God mentions in Jeremiah 33 about breaking the covenant of the day and of the night and if a person could break it, so too would the covenant with David be broken.

    Someone has to be sitting on that throne until Jesus returns. The question is where is that throne? Its really simple when one looks deep enough into History, folklore, and Biblical scriptures.

    Ezekiel 21:25-27 talks about the throne of the lineage of David was going to be different than what it had been up to the point of Zedekiah’s rule. That YHWH would take that wicked king off the throne and overturn it 3x’s and at the 3rd overturn it would remain as such until He whose right it is (Jesus) comes.

    So got to look into History where the line of David went during Babylonian captivity and was also a leader or king of the people. Definitely wasn’t in Babylon. Jeremiah is told that Coniah (Jechokian) would never again have a descendant on the throne and he was the only known descendant of David.

    The leadership transferred over to a daughter of Zedekiah who managed to escape from the destruction (Jeremiah 41:10 tells where the daughters of the king went). In the book of Numbers, we see that daughters could inherit their father’s land and possession if there was no son to inherit it. Zedekiah’s sons were slain before his very eyes by Nebuchadnezzar.

    Remember, in Ezekiel 21 “it wasn’t going to be as the same”. If you continue reading in Jeremiah, the remnant in the land decided to go in Egypt despite God saying not to. This included the daughters and even Jeremiah who got swept away by the people.

    God spoke to Jeremiah in Egypt saying to leave Egypt along with a few people that were still faithful to God. Sadly, the book of Jeremiah doesn’t talk about where they went, yet History and piecing puzzles and other things together does!

    Jeremiah was tasked to build and tear down, uproot and plant. He hadn’t built or planted in his book related ministry yet. So he took one of the daughter’s of Zedekiah who was still alive and faithful, along with Baruch, a handmaid for the daughter, and another person and voyaged out of Egypt into the “isle of the sea” (Ireland).

    This was the first overturn that Ezekiel spoke of. The overturn happened when the daughter (Teia Tephi is her name) married Eochiad Heremon, who was a descendant of Zarah (the twin brother with the scarlet thread whose mother was Tamar). The transference (or overturn) meant that the line of Pharez (where the lineage of David came through) was not to have a king and it was Zarah’s turn.

    The second overturn came to Scotland, and the 3rd came to England where it has stayed all this time. In the 3rd overturn it was transferred back to the Davidic line through King Robert where it has remained to this day. The throne is in England, and soon to be, Charles will be that king that descends from David.

    One day our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, will pick up the kingship and sit again on that literal throne. To Him whose right it is, may He have an everlasting kingdom, and His reign be a reign of peace and righteousness.

  2. Yes, Jesus will reign 1000 years on the literal earth. However, the Bible never indicates it will be on this present earth. Revelation 21 and22 in agreement with Acts 3:21 and with passages in Isaiah, Ezekiel 48 and Zechariah 14 indicates Hwe will reign on a re-created earth restored to its Edenic conditions. Nature and earth are no longer under the old curse with the exception of the serpenrt whom Isaiah prophesied would still eat dust.

    1. In relation to Jesus ruling upon David’ throne you state a fundamental error Jesus is a descendant of David as a man the flesh man,” And the word became flesh and dwelt amongst us”. The scripture does not say He unshackled His manhood. Jesus as man is now seated on the throne as God’s right hand, having conquered the enemy and now holds the title as our nearest Kinsman & King of Kings. A righteous man never existed in heaven until Jesus’ ascension. He is still the Word of God, & is still part of the Godhead, anointed as King to sit as King on the throne of David to fulfill the promise of God to David, that He would set up a righteous descendant of David to rule for ever. Whether on this earth or a new earth is not relevant where ever He is, the righteous will be also. Jesus the Word of God is our forever King.

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