Inside the Book
No one signs a contract unless they read it through carefully, particularly the small print, otherwise it could cause them problems at some time in the future.
But how many Christians realise that the word covenant in the Bible means an agreement between two people, one being God Himself, and contains legally binding responsibilities for both parties?
The covenant God made with Noah, Abraham and David, all required something from the human participant without which it was null and void.
The New Covenant is a contract between an individual believer and God, and all aspects of the agreement can be found in both testaments of the Bible. Unless an individual believer reads the Bible for themselves there is always the possibility the covenant they make with God has the potential to becomes null and void with disastrous results.
This book explains what covenant means and why the word testament is used in regard to the two sections of the Bible. Read it. Your eternal future just might depend on it.
Meet the Author

In hindsight Peter realised God had chosen him from birth and personally trained and directed him throughout his life. A Jew asked him to write on Genesis, and his rabbinic brother to write on Moses’ Tent of the Meeting.
Peter writes purely by inspiration of the Holy Spirit, and has the gift of leading people into a deeper spiritual understanding of the word and a closer union with God. He led the rabbi to a personal meeting with his Messiah through his writing. See A Tale of Three Men.
A Malawian believer said, “Your books have changed my life.”

