OPC'n
Puritan Board Doctor
You are misapplying the unequally yoked passage for one thing Sarah. If you signed a contract at work concerning any issue or for any benefit you have bound yourself to things that you are claiming to be evil. Even in doing a loan or binding yourself to any sort of situation as a deal. Even with a handshake. There are unregenerate men who do those things and even orchestrate them.
Sarah, read the Standards on the Moral Law and the Covenants. Take some time to think about this. The world is already bound to the Covenant of Works in Adam. We are still bound to doing the law even if it isn't considered a Covenant of Works to us any longer. It is a grace to Society that we have the Law and are bound to it. And we still are. The Fall didn't eliminate any responsibility to do the law. Once we are saved the Gospel Law is even more bound to us according to Jeremiah Burroughs and the Confession. The Covenant Law reveals our fallen estate. It reveals what we should be. It reveals what God is like (which is something we should want since it reveals His beauty and goodness). It restrains men from harming each other in many situations when he would be naturally inclined to. Even unregenerate men are bound to the Law, whether they want to be or not, as we are all bound to God's judgment and mercy every morning. It is not sin for a man to place his Covenant Child under the Yoke of Christ and God's law when the child is born in sin and corruption. It isn't a sin for a Nation to submit to God's Covenant Law and require others to either. They are responsible for rewarding men with liberty and rewarding men with punishment or chastisement when that law is violated. I don't see what all the fuss is about. Read all of the Confessional Standards slowly and it will help you see a bigger picture I believe.
I never said that the unregenerate wasn't bound to God's law. They are responsible for their actions which they will pay for in hell if they are not of the elect. In fact, I stated that very clearly in many of my comments. I also stated in one of my comments that we do have covenant children of believing parents who belong to the church. Mankind being bound to God's law is a whole different ball of wax than binding a nation to God as a covenantal nation. You talk about covenants made by us and banks or at work etc. That has nothing to do with the linked sermon which claims that Scotland is God's (not a bank or work) covenantal nation. We don't marry heathens bc it impacts our spiritual walk with Christ and bc Scripture tells us not to. Getting a loan from a bank doesn't impact our walk with Christ. This is the "unevenly yoked" meaning about which I'm speaking. Perhaps we have a different definition of covenant. The first covenant was the covenant of works which was broken by Adam unto each person formed in the womb. Another covenant was made and that was the covenant of grace (I know you know this). So mankind is under the first covenant which they break until they by Christ are brought into the covenant of grace. If they never are brought into the covenant of grace, they remain under the law. In other words, God holds them to the covenant of works. God's part in the covenant never changed. However, man's part in the covenant of works changed in that he broke the covenant and has to pay (hell) or have payment (Christ's work for us) for breaking it. In my opinion, the Scottish men who wrote up the covenant "trying to make Scotland a covenantal nation, were renewing their commitment to the covenant of works through the covenant of grace. If they were only renewing their commitment to the first covenant (which as Christians they wouldn't bc no one can please God in and of themselves), then they wouldn't have just said a few countries were God's covenantal nations bc every person formed in the womb is under the first covenant which of course they break. So their renewal of their commitment was to that of both the first and second covenant (you can't have one without the other as Christians). They, therefore, were trying (I'm sure not deliberately they just didn't think it through) to bring unsaved ppl into both covenants since there were unsaved persons among them.