Sinai covenant, conditional agreement between God and the people of Israel that takes place at Mount Sinai. Building on the covenant made with Abraham, which first established a relationship between God and Abraham’s descendents, the basic agreement of the Sinai covenant is God’s affirmation of the Israelites as his people on the condition that they accept certain rules of conduct. The event at Mount Sinai is depicted in Exodus, one of five books (Torah) of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) that together are said to contain God’s revealed law to the Israelites.
The establishment of the Sinai covenant occurs after the liberation of the Hebrews from Egypt and their journey to Mount Sinai under Moses’ leadership. In Exodus 19, after Moses and the Twelve Tribes of Israel arrive at the base of the mountain, God calls Moses up the mountain. God makes Moses the messenger of the covenant and tells him, in verses 5–6:
Now, therefore, if you obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession out of all the peoples. Indeed, the whole earth is mine, but you shall be for me a priestly kingdom and a holy nation.
As the mediator between God and the Israelites, Moses is told to relay to the Israelites to avoid Mount Sinai and prepare for God’s appearance in three days by washing their clothes. On the third day, to the sound of heavenly trumpets, God appears in a storm to the Israelites. Because the Israelites are commanded to avoid the mountain, Moses alone goes up to meet God at the mountaintop where God begins to lay out the terms of the covenant.
The terms of the covenant start with the Ten Commandments, or Decalogue, in Exodus 20–23, which are summarized as the following:
Immediately following the Decalogue is the Book of the Covenant (or the Covenant Code). The Book of the Covenant starts with a passage on ritual ordinances and transitions into social and civil law. Included in the latter section are prescriptions for how to treat enslaved persons and how to approach different crimes. The book ends with more ritual ordinances. The Book of the Covenant is similar in content and form to ancient Middle Eastern law codes such as Hittite law.
After the presentation of the Book of the Covenant, God instructs Moses about the creation of the Tabernacle, a portable sanctuary to host God’s presence, as well as the creation of the Ark of the Covenant, a chest to hold the tablets engraved with the precepts given on Mount Sinai and liturgical matters. After these tasks are completed and the Tabernacle is consecrated through burnt offerings and animal sacrifice, the covenant is completed and God and the people of Israel enter into their contractual relationship.