Are you saying that the whole point of creation within the Covenant of Redemption was for all men to die once and face judgement? Heb 9:27-28 was written post fall and would make no sense without the fall.
That is mostly incorrect.
No, I am not saying the whole point of creation within the covenant of redemption was for all men to die once and face judgment. The whole point of creation within the covenant of redemption was to be fruitful, multiply, subdue the earth and rule over it. But, more specifically, the point of creation is not the covenant of redemption. The "Covenant of Redemption" is an extra-biblical construct. The CoR is a theological concept describing an agreement among the Father, Son, and Spirit to provide salvation for humanity. There is no need to provide salvation for humanity
if humanity does not fall into sin. Therefore, the construct, or concept, is
by definition a contingency. A contingency is a future event or circumstance which is possible but cannot be predicted with certainty. The alternative is that God determinatively knew sin would occur as an
inevitability and planned initiated the CoR based on that (fore)knowledge. That necessarily implies a flaw in the plan for, or point of, creation because (again) there is no need for the CoR
if there is no fall. Either way makes God dependent. Either way makes God dependent on sin. Both dependencies are contrary to divine simplicity, aseity, self-sufficiency, and omni-attributes. Therefore, the CoR must be tied to something other than the fall into sin
and the fall into sin must be viewed as an addition to the CoR, not its instrument.
This also adversely affects Christology because if ALL of Jesus' identity, purpose, and existence is limited to the role of salvation then, again, everything about him is dependent upon sin, whether possibility, probable, or inevitable. There's no need for a Savior if redemption is tied
solely to sin and there is no sin.
Yes, Hebrews 9:27-28 was written after the fall
(as was everything in the Bible) but, no, it was not written solely about post-fall conditions. Humans were created mortal, not immortal. That means they were always going to die unless some means of not-dying was provided
subsequent to creation of humanity. In the garden of Eden that means was the tree of life. After Adam sinned and brought sin into the world, all access to the tree of life was prevented for a season. The tree of life by which all humans might
live forever was revealed in the last times of the New Testament era. The tree of life existed prior to Genesis 3:6-7. It was supposed to be partaken of without A&E sinning. It provided life (redemptive life) apart from sin.
People die twice. The die in sin
and they die physically. Jesus covers both circumstances, not just the former. Limiting the CoR to only the former is a mistake.
When Paul wrote, "
But someone will say, 'How are the dead raised? And with what kind of body do they come?' You fool! That which you sow does not come to life unless it dies; and that which you sow, you do not sow the body which is to be, but a bare grain, perhaps of wheat or of something else," he was writing that after the fall, but the words apply to the pre-disobedient creation. He followed that up with clarifying words, "
So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown a perishable body, it is raised an imperishable body; it is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body." When was humanity made perishable? At creation,
not at Genesis 3:6. Had Paul been referring to the post-disobedient state he would have said the seed is sown
perished, not
perishable. Which body is natural verses spiritual? Was
pre-disobedient Adam a natural or a spiritual being? According to
verse 45, he was natural, not spiritual, in the pre-disobedient condition. When was humanity
dishonorable? The common sense impulse is to answer, "
When he fell into sin," but the larger truth is that as long as humanity was corruptible there was always some dishonor relevant to Christ (the
perfect, blemish free bondservant of human appearance). The problem to be solved by the CoR is not solely the problem of post-sin corruption. The problem to be solved by the CoR is
both the problem of corruptibility and the problem of corruptedness. Humans were sown perishable, not perished. Humans were "sown" mortal, not immortal. If eternal life was the goal, then they were always going to need a Savior - whether they ever sinned or not.
Eternal life is found in only one person: Jesus Christ. From what are we saved? 1) death, 2) sin, and 3) wrath commensurate to sin. Humans were made mortal.... it was appointed to them to die once and then face judgment. The sinless human was till in need of the tree of life. Salvation from the created state of mortality is just as much by grace through faith as salvation from sin. No one can work their way out of the grave.
The CoR covers
both circumstances: sinless death AND sinful death.
According to the Scripture in the account of creation. even if they were created corruptible and mortal, they would not have died as long as they had access to the Tree of Life.
I completely agree. Is the existence of Tree of Life (ToL) understood as part of the Covenant of Redemption, or not? Is the dependent need to eat from the ToL to avoid mortality viewed as part of the CoR, or not? If not..... then an explanation for how God is not, therefore, dependent upon the existence of sin for his covenant to have justification and how He Himself is not dependent upon the existence of sin for his covenant plane to work will have to be provided.
It even implies that that could have lived even after having been corrupted by eating of the forbidden fruit if they still had access to the Tree of Life.
Yep. That is certainly the implication
(based on Gen 3:22) of the tree of life.
A&E were mortal and would die at some point
if they did not eat the fruit from the tree of life. There is an implication within this implication, though, because they'd have to believe, true, have faith that fruit would provide life. Whether pre-sin or post-sin, the partaking of the tree of life is still a function of grace through faith. Furthermore, living forever on earth in a world that still needs subduing and sovereign rule is much different than living on an earth described in Revelation 21-22. The former is not the goal.
It was corruption---sin---that brought the penalty of death and being barred from the Tree of Life.
Hmmmm.... not quite. Sin did bring
a penalty of death, but that death is not the same death as a sinless mortality. Transgressional death
(death due to transgression) or sinful death
(death due to sin), is much different than physically dying without ever having sinned. It is very important to understand transgression and sin are not necessarily the same thing. There are ways to sin apart from transgressing the Law
(this is why a hamartiology based solely on 1 Jn 3:4 is incomplete and thereby wrong). In point of fact, sinless death is sinful

. Yep. How is sinless death sinful? The word "sin" means missing the target. What is the target?
Perfection.
As long as a person is corrupt
ible, s/he is imperfect. It does not matter whether an actual transgression has ever been committed, the existence of the possibility is part of the problem to be solved. To word it an entirely different way, God made humans good and sinless, but he did not make them
complete. The good and sinless individual still had to die once and be resurrected.
When people say eating the fruit from the tree of life would have provided a means of never having to physically die they are usually neglecting the premise that fruit might have killed Adam and then resurrected him

. Jesus
is the resurrection and the life! That means the tree of life is the resurrection. There is no other way to God but Jesus, the tree of life. There is no life apart from Jesus. There is no resurrection apart from Jesus and the only way to be resurrected is to first die

. Jesus is the prototype. He lived a sinless life and then he died. He died knowing he'd resurrect because he is the tree of life.
So do not be so quick to reject or deny the Covenant of Redemption covers sinless conditions and definitely do not be so quick to limit the CoR only to sin.
They were created already perfect and walking with God. God breathed his very life (spirit) into Adam. I agree that God through the person and work of Jesus is creating a new man who is immortal and incorruptible. But he is doing that by first the defeat of the power of sin and death for those united with Christ, and ultimately the total destruction of the source of evil and all who reject Christ. And he is creating a new creation that has no sin in it. Without sin in those who he redeems there would be no one to redeem and through whom to conquer sin.
Sorta. The angel is in the details. God is not creating a new man
first by defeating the power of sin and death. There are several acts or steps that occur way before Calvary. The first is the choice by Christ to lay aside all claims of equality. The incarnation is a first step in creating a new man and that does not require sin. The perfect life lived by Christ is a first step (and he lived that perfect life for multiple reasons, which we can detail and discuss if necessary). There is no uniting with Christ if the perfect life isn't revealed, nor if it is not lived. In addition, the post does not actually stated this, but the implication is that of an unstated "
onlyism." For example, God is creating the new man [only] by the defeat of sin. If that is true, then (again) God is dependent upon sin for His covenant to exist and succeed. The Law Maker is dependent on lawlessness and the Ever-Faithful is dependent on faithlessness. This ends up compromising divine ontology in the arena of aseity.
The doctrine of the CoR was developed to avoid that problem, not commit it.
Right. It is not an obstacle. It is the means.
That makes God and His plan, His covenant dependent on sin.
What God intends to occur always occurs. There would be no contingency involved if God intended Adam to fall for his larger purpose.
Define "
intended." The word normally means planned, meant, purposed, or designed. There is a fundamental difference between "
God planned sin," and "
God planned for sin's occurrence." There is a huge difference between "
God planned Adam to fall for His larger purpose," and "
God planned for Adam's fall." There's even a larger difference between "
God designed Adam to fall," and "
Adam's fall fell within God's purpose for creation."
Therefore, clarification of, "
God intended Adam to fall," is warranted because it cannot mean God authored sin, and it will have to be clarified in a manner that avoids the problem of dependence, the problem of a compromised aseity.
Now you are conflating intended and wanted. They are not always the same thing. Decretive will and revealed will. Now you have entirely substituted 'intended" with "wanted".
Read it again. That sentence is a hypothetical. I did not say God wanted sin to occur. I rhetorically argued the premise is untenable. More importantly...
Let's keep it civil and calm, listening and not just speaking, since I do disagree with you on some points.
Then please do not accuse anyone of conflation, especially where none has occurred.
Keep the posts about the posts and not the poster and say something like, "
That statement appears to conflate intent and want."
"
Now you are conflating....." is not civil or calm. It's accusatory and provoking. Go back and re-read what was posted, understanding the "To say...." clause is simply indicative of an argument against a common viewpoint solely for the purpose of stimulating discussion. Nothing more.
To be continued. I have to shorten the post.
I see the multiple posts

. I will take up the rest when we've reached some consensus on the premise the Covenant of Redemption is limited to and solely dependent upon the existence of sin - or not. I believe the CoR is not thusly limited (for the reasons already posted).
More importantly, because I have provided an explanation for how and why the CoR is NOT limited to the existence of sin my prior appraisal of the question as a red herring has been provided. Some consensus must be reached on this.
I will add this: Most books on the subject of Covenant Theology, and particularly on the Covenant of Redemption don't go into the sort of detail I have posted. Most never even consider the matter of dependency, much less provide commentary. Doctrinally speaking, the WCF has made it clear God did not author sin but its occurrence was ordained and ordained without violence to creation or the creature. It should be obvious and go without saying but God ordained all without doing violence to Himself, either. Limiting the CoR to the existence of sin does God violence.