This study treats the five covenants Scripture itself most explicitly names: Noahic, Abrahamic, Mosaic, Davidic, and New. Other texts use covenant language in ways worth noting briefly.
The Edenic / Adamic question
Scripture does not use the word covenant for God’s relationship with Adam in Genesis 1–3. Hosea 6:7 says they like Adam have transgressed the covenant — though some translations read they like men; the Hebrew is ambiguous. Some teachers reasonably argue that the elements of a covenant (parties, promise, prohibition, consequence) are all present in Eden, even if the word is not. Others hold that respect for the text’s own vocabulary calls for not calling it a covenant. This study takes the latter view, while acknowledging the question.
The Palestinian or Land Covenant
Deuteronomy 30 promises Israel that if they return to the Lord with all their heart, He will restore them to the land — even after exile. Some teachers count this as a distinct covenant; others treat it as an expansion of the Mosaic. The substance is real either way: God’s commitment to restore Israel to the land was honored at the return from Babylon and remains a theological touchstone.
The priestly covenant with Phinehas
After Phinehas’s zeal at Peor, the Lord granted him My covenant of peace… the covenant of a perpetual priesthood, because he was jealous for his God (Num 25:12–13; cf. Mal 2:4–5). This is a covenant within the Mosaic framework, regulating the priesthood. Hebrews argues that Christ’s priesthood — after the order of Melchizedek, not Aaron — supersedes this priestly arrangement (Heb 7).
A “covenant” with creation
Jeremiah 33:20–21 speaks of God’s covenant for the day and My covenant for the night, that day and night will not be at their appointed time; and Hosea 2:18 speaks of a covenant with the beasts of the field. These are evocative uses of covenant language to underline God’s ordering of creation, not separate covenants with man.
How the covenants relate to one another
Later covenants do not cancel earlier ones unless explicitly stated. The Noahic still stands (the earth still has rainbows). The Abrahamic still stands (the gospel goes to all nations). The Davidic still stands (Christ reigns). Only the Mosaic was declared obsolete in Hebrews 8:13 — and even there, what was obsolete was the specific arrangement of priesthood, sacrifice, and ceremonial law that had picture-purpose; the moral law summarized in the Ten Commandments is reaffirmed in the New Testament (Rom 13:8–10; Eph 6:2–3).
Companion spokes
The Lamb God Provides traces the same redemption arc through the lamb imagery from Abel to Revelation. The Tabernacle spoke shows the Mosaic covenant’s ceremonial structure as a shadow of Christ’s priesthood. The Kinsman-Redeemer spoke shows the kinsman pattern fulfilled in Christ. All four spokes converge on the same fulfillment in different keys.