What is the Most Important Word in the New Covenant?

We who preach grace like to draw lines between the old and new covenants. We say things like, “In the old covenant, the emphasis was do, do, do, but in the new it is done, done, done.”

We talk about how everything changed after the cross, and how we are no longer under law but grace.

Instead of encouraging people to make promises to God, we proclaim God’s promises to us.

We ask questions like, “what makes the new covenant new?

As a new covenant preacher, I love these sorts of contrasts. Clear lines in the sand illuminate the way of grace while warning us to beware dead works.

With that in mind, I want to suggest what may be the most important word in the new covenant. (If you have a different suggestion let me know in the comments.) The most important word is found in this verse:

Therefore as you have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him. (Colossians 2:6)

In the old covenant we gave, but in the new covenant we receive.

We receive the word (Mark 4:16), we receive love (1 John 4:19), we receive grace (Rom. 5:17), we receive faith (2 Pet. 1:1), we receive salvation (Rom. 6:23), we receive Christ (Col. 2:6), we receive the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38), we receive righteousness (Rom. 5:17), we receive peace (John 14:27), we receive wisdom (Jas. 1:5), we receive the crown of life (Jas. 1:12), we receive the reward of our inheritance (Col. 3:24), and we receive rest (Matt. 11:28–29).

Do you see?

In the new covenant, every blessing comes to us as a free gift from God. Knowing what you have received will keep you from being deceived.

And being deceived is the danger.

Read the above verse in context and you will find it comes after a warning about not being led astray by persuasive arguments (Col. 2:4). We need to take care that we are not seduced by those who promote humanistic philosophy (Col. 2:8), religious rules and rituals (Col. 2:16–18, 20–23), and mystical visions (Col. 2:18).

How do we protect ourselves from being deceived?

“You began your walk by trusting Christ,” says Paul. “Keep doing that” (see Col. 1:23). To your faith, add no dead works, no sacrifices, and no rules.

Having received Christ by faith, walk in him by faith. It’s faith from first to last.

You might say that “faith” is the most important word in the new covenant. Faith is certainly essential. But people can get so hung up on faith (do I have enough faith? do I need more?) that they take their eyes off Jesus.

But with the word “receive,” the focus remains squarely on the Giver.

Jesus was often reminding the disciples to receive. “Ask and you shall receive” (John 16:24). “Everyone who asks receives” (Matt. 7:8). “He who receives me receives him who sent me” (John 13:20). “Whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child will not enter it at all” (Luke 18:17). “Receive the Holy Spirit (John 20:22).

The new covenant is not about what you will do or give to God. It’s about what God has done and given to you. He has given you his Son, his love, his acceptance, his favor, his peace, and everything you will ever need.

The only question that remains is this: Have you received from the abundance of God’s grace, and are you continuing to receive?

If you liked this, you will love my new verse-by-verse commentary, The Grace Bible: Philippians, Colossians & Philemon.

What readers are saying about the Grace Bible: “A tool I wish I had 25 years ago.” “A verse-by-verse wonder.” “A breath of fresh air.”

15 Comments on What is the Most Important Word in the New Covenant?

  1. Unknown's avatar Terri Simon // March 27, 2025 at 3:12 am // Reply

    Another great article, Paul. Thank you for preaching the true gospel of grace.
    John 1:12
    NIV
    12 Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God
    This has always been a favorite verse of mine
    receive + believe 🟰 become

  2. Hello Paul, I have been deeply blessed by your commentary on Ephesians. It has a real depth to it that I did not anticipate. It is excellent. Do you offer any online classes or similar video resources?

    Also, I would love to know if any of your commentaries address passages like Matthew 28:19-20, where Jesus tells his apostles to “teach all future believers to obey everything I have commanded you.” I ask this genuinely because I’m trying to understand the implications of Christ’s and the apostles’ commands. There are many “imperatives” in the epistles that seem like commands to the body that should naturally flow from a life endowed by grace. Any thoughts you have on this would be greatly appreciated.

    Bless you in your work, Paul!

    Brad Herman Arsenal Books

    • Hi Brad, thanks for the feedback. I encourage you to check out my online Grace Commentary.

    • Unknown's avatar electronicdreamccb78d620e // April 15, 2025 at 3:34 am // Reply

      I think the short answer to Matthew 28:19-20 is that Jesus taught that anyone wanting to relate to the Father through the law has to obey the law perfectly. Matthew 5:48 (Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect.) sums this concept up, well, perfectly.

      Holiness preachers water down this verse in a variety of ways to avoid the obvious conclusion that Jesus wanted us to reach: We can’t meet that standard. The stunning beauty of His new covenant is that this impossible standard becomes a blessing as we have received the righteousness of Christ and so ARE perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect.

      Remember that Jesus told His disciples at the (so called) last supper that He still had a lot of teaching to give them (John 16:12). Paul says he received his understanding of the gospel directly from Jesus (Galatians 1:11-12). Include that in the context of the great commission.

      I hope this helps.

  3. Unknown's avatar drivendutifully56c85298a9 // March 27, 2025 at 4:24 am // Reply

    I like the picture on this week’s post with that kid receiving, I can’t stop looking at it.

  4. Very well put! The Pharisees lacked compassion, which was not encouraged by the Romans either. Jesus depended on His Father’s Love, unlike man: mercy and grace then leads to His imputed righteousness we have already received as believers, says Paul, who then warned of Judaizers that wanted to mix grace with law; doing so misses Jesus’ compassion to the believer that overflows naturally. It is He who Initiates, and we that Receive. Always in that order. The glory is to Him as each transform and “grows up” in His GRACE. What the Holy Spirit teaches is our inheritance of having already been completed as He reveals His new creation workmanship within each of us.

  5. Thanks, Paul. I received your gracious message loud and clear.

  6. “We believe in the one in whom we receive in grace” – from the song Live and Breathe.

  7. Unknown's avatar Ely Esparza // March 27, 2025 at 11:10 am // Reply

    Hello Paul, I understand the concept of receiving. However, when it comes to faith and receiving blessings, I always get tripped up by Romans 12. Romans 12:3 says: “For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has distributed to each of you.”

    So does this scripture mean there is a limit to receiving? In other words, how do you reconcile Jesus making you the head and not the tail, above and not beneath, abundantly prosperous, etc etc when at the same time we should think of ourselves within a limited capacity? This verse seems like it is saying if your faith is great, you will do great things, but limit yourself as much as possible and be sober and don’t think of yourself doing great things at all.

    I’ve just never understood how to really take on the meaning of this verse. Any thoughts?

  8. Unknown's avatar Real Paquette // March 27, 2025 at 7:25 pm // Reply

    Thanks

  9. Very well spoken again Paul, receive, unpack, do not forget, and being transformed.
    Erik

  10. It would be difficult to beat Paul’s excellent suggestion of the word RECEIVED as the most important word in the new Covenant. However, I’ll throw out another word, CHOSEN, to consider. God chose us before the foundation of the world in Eph 1:4-5, and many other verses including Col 3:12; 1 Thess 1:4; 1 Pet 2:9; and John 15:16 that describe God’s grace in choosing us.
    I am a child of God chosen by Him, so I have value, purpose, and most important an identity as His child. It brings me hope, comfort, and a family of God that I belong to.

  11. Unknown's avatar drivendutifully56c85298a9 // May 15, 2025 at 4:45 am // Reply

    This is one of my all time favorite articles from Escape to Reality and I love the picture of kid with his hand out to receive.

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