The Importance of Understanding Earnest: What Judah and Tamar have to do with Baptism, the Spirit, and Buying a House

Three cryptic times in the New Testament (Ephesians 1:14, 2Co 1:22 and 2Co 5:5), Paul speaks of the Spirit as an arrabōn, which the KJV translates as “earnest.” But it’s clearly a noun, AN earnest, not an adjective like, “an earnest woman.” So what’s Paul talking about?

This post contains Amazon Affiliate Links.

If you’ve ever bought a house, you know that you start by putting down “earnest money.” It’s a small prepayment— relative to the cost of the house— to show you are committed to buying. As it turns out, this is an entirely accurate modern sense to bring back into the New Testament, because arrabōn is a financial term.

Functioning mainly as a legal term in the language of business and trade, the word refers to a payment deposited by the purchaser to secure a property or article being bought (this money would be forfeited if the balance was not paid); in some cases such a payment served to render a contract legally binding
New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology and Exegesis (this useful series is accessible to people with no training in Greek, especially in conjunction with free Logos software.)

 Further, it turns out the word is fairly rare in Greek, probably because it was borrowed from Semitic languages. In Hebrew and cognate languages like Akkadian and Ugaritic, we find ‘ērabōn used meaning “a pledge, a deposit, a downpayment, surety” (Pro 11:15, Pro 17:18, Neh 5:3, etc.) The Greek translation of the Old Testament uses arrabōn in only three places, all in the story of Judah and Tamar, Genesis 38. Judah is carrying no money, but offers his cylinder seal— used to validate contracts, the equivalent of signing  his name— as an arrabōn or pledge, proof that full payment was forthcoming.

Paul says that the Spirit is the “arrabōn of our inheritance” (Ephesians 1:14); to expand on that, when baptized, we are born again, as God’s covenant children; And “if children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ” (Rom 8:17) On the connection between covenant and kinship, like “father-child” see my article here, under Redemption.

Free image

So as covenant children of God, heirs of the kingdom, if faithful and “victorious” (Gr. nikē), we will “inherit all things.” (*Rev 21:7.) God gives us the spirit as the downpayment on the rest of our forthcoming heavenly inheritance. That is what the “earnest of the spirit” means, which is why the NIV translates expansively as “a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.” 

*There’s a great article, “Seven Promises to Those Who Overcome: Aspects of Genesis 2-3 in the Seven Letters,” in The Temple in Time and Eternity, which doesn’t seem available online. There IS a chart here though.

** And of course, my title is a riff on Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. The 2002 adaptation is a great film I can’t resist plugging here: Colin Firth, Reese Witherspoon, Judi Dench, Tom Wilkinson, Rupert Everett! Good stuff.


As always, you can help me pay my tuition here via GoFundMe. *I am an Amazon Affiliate, and may receive a small percentage of purchases made through Amazon links on this page. You can get updates by email whenever a post goes up (subscription box below) and can also follow Benjamin the Scribe on Facebook.

Amazon updated 09-19-2023

2 Comments

  1. This is one of those things that makes so much sense and seems so simple I feel dumb for never raising this. Thanks for the article!

    Brandi

  2. I’ve been saying for years that going to law school was the best preparation I’ve ever had for understanding the King James Version of the Bible. Your essay confirms my hunch. Thanks.