Have you ever thought how precious to a teenager is the Bible truth of the New 
Covenant? In accepting baptism, he begins to realize that he is a child of 
Abraham--provided of course that he has been correctly instructed about the New 
Covenant promises God made to "our father Abraham."
Teenagers generally are the most worried segment of humanity. They are just 
becoming aware that life stretches out before them; what to do, what to be, 
perplexes them. They often agonize about which way to go. It's impossible to 
overestimate the encouragement that a conscious awareness of God's New Covenant 
promises can give to them. First, of course, the youth must clearly see himself 
as the "heir" to all the promises God has made to Abraham and his "seed" (Gen. 
12:2, 3; Rom. 4:13-16). Which are:

(1) "I will make you a great nation." In other words: I will make you to be a 
very important person. (Says the teen, "Wow!")

(2) "I will bless you," which means, I will make you to be a happy person all 
your life. (Girls, if you're thinking of marriage, grab that one, and hold on 
to it. Keep yourself until you know for sure that God, not selfish desire, has 
led you. Believing the New Covenant will save you from untold agony.)

(3) "And make your name great." In other words, you will not merely BE somebody 
great but you'll always be KNOWN as such (in the way you really want to be).

(4) "And you shall BE a blessing." Every healthy teen wants to become someone 
useful to society; not to live only for self. Here's the Good News about it; 
believe it and you've got purpose from now on.

(5) "I will bless those who bless you." You'll be surrounded by people who love 
and trust you, and they will realize that their happiness is bound up with 
yours.

(6) "I will curse him who curses you." The New Covenant-educated teen will fear 
no enemies. (That's a direct parallel to Psalm 23, "You prepare a [banquet] 
table before me in the presence of my enemies.") You walk through life as a 
prince or princess, head held high (and yet always gifted with appropriate 
common-sense humility; Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Oxford, Cambridge, can never 
give you that sense of poise).

(7) "In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed." Not that you will 
be as famous as Abraham, "the father of the faithful," but when you come to the 
end of life you will know that wherever your steps have taken you, you have 
left behind a trail of happiness for people you've touched. In other words, 
"your cup runs over."

Warning: the Old Covenant can do none of this for you.

--Robert J. Wieland

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