One People, Two Covenants
The Church is not a replacement for Israel. It is Israel renewed from within, opened to the nations, and reconstituted around the Messiah of whom Israel's whole history was the preparation.
The continuity between Israel and the Church is the hardest question in biblical theology, and the most important one for Catholic apologetics. If the Church is a new institution with no roots in the Old Testament, it is open to the charge of novelty. If it is the fulfilment of what Israel always was, it carries the full weight of the covenant history behind it.
Paul's theology of the Church is relentlessly Old Testament in its imagery: the olive tree (Romans 11), the body (which is the New Testament term for the corporate Israel, the qahal), the bride (Israel's relationship to God in the prophets), the temple (the dwelling place of the Shekinah). None of these are new images. They are all drawn from the vocabulary of Israel's covenant life and applied to the new covenant community.
Six prefigurements are treated here. Taken together, they show that the existence of a visible, structured, covenanted community as the ordinary context of salvation is not a Catholic innovation. It is the oldest form of the relationship between God and humanity.
Israel — The Covenant People
Israel is not merely a nation. It is a theological reality: a people called out of the nations by God, constituted by covenant, given law and priesthood and sacrifice, and promised a future that encompasses all nations.
Genesis through Deuteronomy establishes the pattern: God calls one man (Abraham), makes him a people, gives that people a law and a worship, settles them in a land, and promises to bless all nations through them. The structure is particular before it is universal. A specific, visible, historically located community is the vehicle of God's purposes for the whole world.
The Church inherits this structure exactly. It is called out of the world (the word ekklesia, "church," translates the Hebrew qahal, the assembly of Israel). It is constituted by a new covenant. It is given new law (the Sermon on the Mount), new priesthood (the Melchizedekian order), and new sacrifice (the Eucharist). It is promised that all nations will belong to it. The structure is the same: particular before universal, visible before spiritual.
The Israel-Church continuity matters apologetically because it establishes that the visible, structured, sacramental community the Catholic Church claims to be is the natural form of the people of God from the beginning. A purely spiritual and invisible "church" has no Old Testament precedent. The qahal of Israel was a specific, traceable, historically located community with real leadership, real laws, and real consequences for membership.
The Twelve Tribes — The Twelve Apostles
Israel was constituted as twelve tribes descended from twelve sons of Jacob. Christ constitutes his community around twelve apostles. The number is not coincidence; it is the announcement that the new covenant community is the reconstitution of Israel.
The twelve tribes are the structural unit of the covenant people. The number twelve organises Israel's life: twelve stones on the High Priest's breastplate, twelve loaves on the table of presence, twelve pillars at Sinai, twelve scouts into Canaan. The twelve-tribe structure is how God organised the people he claimed for himself.
Jesus calls exactly twelve apostles and names them "the twelve." When Judas falls, the apostolic community immediately replaces him to restore the number (Acts 1:15-26). The restoration of the twelve is an ecclesiological act: the new Israel must have twelve pillars as the old Israel did. Revelation 21 describes the New Jerusalem with twelve gates named after the twelve tribes and twelve foundation stones named after the twelve apostles. The two twelves are the two phases of the one people of God.
The twelve-tribe/twelve-apostle parallel grounds the apostolic succession. If the reconstituted Israel requires twelve pillars, and those pillars are the apostles, then the continuation of the apostolic ministry is as necessary to the Church as the continuation of the tribal structure was to Israel. The Church without apostolic succession is Israel without the twelve tribes.
The Sinai Covenant — The New Covenant
The Sinai covenant is the constitutional document of Old Testament Israel. Every major element of New Testament ecclesiology corresponds to a Sinai covenant element, fulfilled and deepened.
Exodus 19-24 records the covenant: God and Israel meet at a mountain. Blood is sprinkled on the people ("the blood of the covenant"). A law is given. A meal is eaten on the mountain by the elders (Exodus 24:11: "they beheld God, and ate and drank"). A priesthood is established. The covenant is ratified in blood and sealed in a covenant meal.
At the Last Supper, Christ says: "This is my blood of the covenant" (Matthew 26:28) — the exact phrase Moses used at Sinai (Exodus 24:8 LXX). The covenant is ratified in blood, sealed in a meal, and accompanied by the gift of a new law (written on hearts rather than stone, per Jeremiah 31:33). The Church is the covenant community constituted by this new Sinai.
The Sinai-Church parallel is the foundation for understanding why the Church has a structured liturgical worship with a sacrifice at its centre. The covenant community is always constituted by sacrifice and maintained by a covenant meal. This is the pattern from Sinai. The Eucharist is not an addition to the Gospel; it is the covenant meal by which the new Sinai community maintains its covenant relationship with God.
The Promised Land — The Kingdom of God
Canaan was never the final inheritance. The Promised Land was always pointing toward something the land itself could not provide.
God promises Abraham a land (Genesis 12:1). That land is conquered, settled, and eventually lost. The prophets speak of a restoration that exceeds any geographical territory: "a new heavens and a new earth" (Isaiah 65:17). The land itself becomes a type of something greater.
Hebrews 11:9-10, 16 states that Abraham "was looking forward to the city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is God." The patriarchs "desired a better country, that is, a heavenly one." The land was always a type of the Kingdom. The Church is the community already living in the foretaste of that Kingdom, the new covenant people whose inheritance is not territory but the life of God.
The Promised Land type guards against two errors: the error of treating the Church as a merely spiritual and invisible reality (the land was real and particular) and the error of treating it as the final form of the Kingdom (the land was a type, not the destination). The Church is real, visible, and particular, and it is on the way to something greater.
The Cumulative Argument
The six prefigurements treated here are not isolated proof-texts assembled to support a position already decided on other grounds. They are the actual building blocks of the Old Testament narrative, each one carrying a specific aspect of what it means to be the covenant people of God. The Church claims to be that people, continued and renewed in Christ. The claim is not arbitrary. It is grounded in a typological structure that runs through the entire Old Testament and is named as such by the apostles themselves.