A sermon on the binding of oaths, the bounds of nations, and the difference between keeping a word and merely saying one.
Brethren, there is a river in the south of this country called the Sarstoon, and along its banks two nations have stood at unease with one another for the better part of two centuries. Not far from where I write, men in uniform have eyed each other across that water, each persuaded that the ground beneath the other’s feet is rightly his own. And in the great court at the Hague, lawyers in robes are even now turning over papers signed in 1859 by men long dead, asking whether a promise made then still holds the living to account today. Oral arguments in the territorial claim between these two neighbors opened before the International Court of Justice in late November of 2025, and the court is not expected to render its final judgment until somewhere near the close of this decade.
I want to speak this day about treaties — about the sworn word that binds nation to nation and man to man — and I want to speak about it from the Scriptures, because the Scriptures have a great deal to say about it, far more than most suppose. And I want to bring that word of God to bear not only upon that quarrel over this river, but upon a fashion that has spread through the speaking-halls of the wealthy nations of the earth, the fashion of the land acknowledgement, where men rise to confess that the ground they stand on once belonged to others, and then sit down again having given nothing back.
Turn with me first to a heap of stones in the hill country of Gilead, near four thousand years ago.
I. The Heap Called Galeed
In the thirty-first chapter of Genesis, Jacob is fleeing from his father-in-law Laban, and Laban overtakes him, and after much hot accusation on both sides the two of them do a thing that men have done ever since: they make a covenant, and they set up a marker. “And Jacob took a stone, and set it up for a pillar. And Jacob said unto his brethren, Gather stones; and they took stones, and made an heap.” They ate together upon the heap, and Laban called it in his tongue Jegar-sahadutha, and Jacob called it in his Galeed, and both names mean the same thing: the heap of witness. And Laban said the word that has stood over every honest boundary from that day to this: “The LORD watch between me and thee, when we are absent one from another.”
Now I want you to see what is happening here, because it is the foundation of everything I have to say. These two men do not trust each other. There is no love lost between them. And yet they do not settle their quarrel with the sword, nor do they leave it festering and unsettled. They draw a line, they pile up stones upon the line, they swear an oath across the line, and they name God as the watchman over the line. The boundary is not merely a fact of geography; it is a covenant guarded by the Almighty. To cross it in hostility is not only to trespass against a man — it is to defy the One who was named as witness.
The Hebrew has a single word, berith, and it is the word for covenant and the word for treaty both. When God cuts covenant with Abraham, that is berith. When Joshua makes a league with the Gibeonites, that is berith. When Solomon makes his league with Hiram of Tyre, that is berith. The Scriptures do not divide the world the way we do, with the sacred covenant of religion in one room and the secular treaty of statecraft in another. To the biblical mind there is one kind of sworn bond, and it is holy whether it joins a man to his God or a king to his neighbor, because in every case the oath calls God down as witness, and God does not consent to be called as a witness and then ignored.
So before we ever come to Belize and Guatemala, before we come to the speaking-halls and their acknowledgements, let this be fixed: a treaty in the sight of God is not a convenience to be kept while it profits and discarded when it galls. It is a heap of witness. The LORD watches between the parties. And the stones do not forget.
Mark this also, brethren: when the two governments along this border last took their dispute seriously enough to settle it on the ground, what did they do? In 1931 they exchanged notes and set concrete markers along part of the boundary line drawn in the old treaty, each side confirming the work of the other. They made, in their own modern way, a heap of witness. They piled their stones. And the question now before the court at the Hague is whether one of the parties may walk back from that heap, may say the stones were laid in error, may unsay what was sworn. That is an old question. It is Laban’s question and Jacob’s. And the Scriptures answer it.
II. The Land Is the LORD’s
But we cannot rightly speak of who may keep a boundary until we have asked a deeper question, the question that lies underneath every land dispute and every land acknowledgement alike: whose land is it in the first place? And to that the Scripture returns an answer so plain and so sweeping that I marvel it is so seldom spoken.
In the twenty-fifth chapter of Leviticus, in the law of the jubilee, the LORD gives the reason that no Israelite may sell his inheritance away forever. Hear it: “The land shall not be sold for ever: for the land is mine; for ye are strangers and sojourners with me.” The land is mine, saith the LORD. Not the land was mine and is now yours. Not the land is yours by right of birth or blood or first arrival. The land is mine, and you — even you, my chosen people, planted in the land I swore to your fathers — you are gerim and toshavim, strangers and tenants, dwelling on my ground at my pleasure. The twenty-fourth Psalm says it without qualification: “The earth is the LORD’s, and the fulness thereof; the world, and they that dwell therein.” He made it; He holds the title; and every nation under heaven holds its acreage as a tenant holds a field, by grant and not by possession.
Now follow this where it leads, because it leads somewhere the modern world does not expect. If the land is the LORD’s, then He is the one who portions it out among the peoples. And the Scripture says exactly that. In the second chapter of Deuteronomy, as Israel marches toward the promised land, God forbids them again and again to seize the territory of certain neighboring peoples, and He gives His reason each time. Of the children of Esau in Mount Seir: “I will not give you of their land, no, not so much as a foot breadth; because I have given mount Seir unto Esau for a possession.” Of the Moabites: “Distress not the Moabites, neither contend with them in battle: for I will not give thee of their land for a possession; because I have given Ar unto the children of Lot for a possession.” And of the Ammonites likewise. The God of Israel is portioning out the earth, and He is portioning it to Edom and Moab and Ammon — to nations outside the covenant, to peoples who do not worship Him — and He calls those portions their possession, given by His own hand.
Paul preached this very doctrine upon Mars’ hill to the philosophers of Athens, men who knew nothing of Moses. He told them that God “hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation.” The bounds of their habitation. The very borders of the nations — when each people should rise, how long each should hold its ground, where the lines should fall — are appointed by God, who scatters and gathers and settles the peoples of the earth according to His own counsel.
Here is a thing the second chapter of Deuteronomy tells us that should sober every man who imagines any people holds its land by some pristine original right that no one held before them. When God gave Seir to Esau, the land was not empty. “The Horims also dwelt in Seir beforetime; but the children of Esau succeeded them, when they had destroyed them from before them, and dwelt in their stead.” The same is said of the Emims and the Zamzummims and the Avims and the Caphtorims. Layer beneath layer beneath layer — peoples who came and dwelt and were succeeded by others who came and dwelt in their stead, and over the whole long churning of it the hand of God, “who removeth kings, and setteth up kings.” There is no patch of inhabited ground on the face of the earth that has known only one people. The history of the world is the history of the migration of nations, and the deepest movements of that history are not in the hands of conquerors or settlers or empires, but in the hand of the God who determines the bounds of habitation.
I lay this foundation because it cuts two ways at once, and we shall need both edges. It cuts against the proud conqueror who imagines that because he holds the land he owns it absolutely and may do with its peoples as he pleases — for he is only a tenant, and the Landlord is watching. And it cuts against the doctrine, fashionable now, that some one people holds an absolute and original and inextinguishable claim to a piece of ground that overrides every settlement and treaty and boundary made since — for there is no such original claim. Every people received its land from the hand of God, and that same hand, in His own time and judgment, gives and removes and gives again. The land is the LORD’s. We are all, every nation of us, strangers and sojourners with Him.
III. The Oath That Binds When the Bargain Was Flawed
Now let us come to the hard and necessary heart of the matter, for here is where the men at the Hague are really contending, and here is where Scripture speaks with a force that ought to make the strongest litigator pause.
The question being argued is essentially this. A treaty was made in 1859 between Great Britain and Guatemala — men call it the Wyke-Aycinena Treaty — in which Guatemala recognized British sovereignty over the territory that is now Belize, and the boundary lines of the modern country were drawn. But the treaty also contained an article promising a road, a mutually beneficial road, which was never in fact built. And so, less than a century later, Guatemala renewed its old claim, arguing that because the promise of the road was broken, the whole treaty was thereby made void. That is the argument in its essence: a flaw in one article unmakes the whole sworn bargain, and the boundary dissolves, and we may reach back across the generations and undo what our fathers swore.
Now I am no court, and I will pronounce no verdict on the law of nations. But I tell you that the Scripture has tried this exact case before, and more than once, and its judgment is not in doubt.
Turn to the ninth chapter of Joshua. Israel has crossed Jordan, the walls of Jericho are down, and the Gibeonites, a people of the land marked for dispossession, come to Joshua by a ruse. They put on old clothes and carry mouldy bread and pretend to be ambassadors from a far country, and they beg a league. And Joshua and the princes of Israel, the Scripture says, “asked not counsel at the mouth of the LORD,” and they made a covenant with them, and they sware unto them by the LORD God of Israel. Three days later the deception is discovered. The Gibeonites are no distant nation; they are near neighbors, the very people Israel was charged to drive out. The whole congregation murmurs and demands that the league be broken. And here is the verdict — write it on the doorposts of every chancery in the world: “We have sworn unto them by the LORD God of Israel: now therefore we may not touch them. This we will do to them; we will even let them live, lest wrath be upon us, because of the oath which we sware unto them.”
Consider what is in that judgment. The treaty was obtained by fraud. The party that swore it was deceived as to a fact most material to the whole agreement. By every standard of mere advantage, Israel had grounds to walk away. And the rulers of Israel said: we may not. We swore by the LORD. The oath stands though the bargain was crooked, because the oath was not finally made to the Gibeonites — it was made to God, and God heard it, and God will not unhear it.
And lest any man think this a small or merely ceremonial thing, hear what came of it generations later. In the days of David there was a famine in the land, three years, year after year, and David inquired of the LORD, and the LORD answered: “It is for Saul, and for his bloody house, because he slew the Gibeonites.” For Saul, in his zeal, had broken the ancient league and put Gibeonites to death. Centuries had passed. The men who swore the oath were long in their graves. The deception that obtained it was long known. And still the broken treaty cried out of the ground, and God brought famine upon a nation for the breaking of a sworn boundary that one of its kings had thought himself free to violate. The oath outlived the men, outlived the kings, outlived the very memory of the fraud that birthed it. The heap of witness does not forget.
Now turn to the seventeenth chapter of Ezekiel, for here the Scripture speaks of a treaty between an Israelite king and a foreign, pagan emperor, and the lesson is sharper still. Zedekiah, the last king of Judah, had sworn an oath of vassalage to Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon — sworn it, the text is careful to say, by God. And then Zedekiah broke it, rebelling and sending to Egypt for horses. And the word of the LORD through Ezekiel falls upon him like a hammer: “Seeing he despised the oath by breaking the covenant, when, lo, he had given his hand, and hath done all these things, he shall not escape… As I live, saith the Lord GOD, surely in mine own place where the king dwelleth that made him king, whose oath he despised, and whose covenant he brake, even with him in the midst of Babylon he shall die.”
Hear what God is saying. The covenant Zedekiah broke was a treaty with a heathen empire — with the very Babylon that would burn the temple. It was not a covenant of religion; it was a hard political submission imposed by a conqueror. And yet because Zedekiah had sworn it by the name of the living God, God Himself took up the cause of pagan Babylon against His own covenant people, and avenged the broken treaty with the death of the king who broke it. “Shall he prosper? shall he escape that doeth such things? or shall he break the covenant, and be delivered?” The question answers itself. A sworn treaty is the LORD’s, even when sworn to an enemy, even when the bargain galls, even when a man would give half his kingdom to be free of it. To break it is to despise the oath, and to despise the oath is to despise the One whose name was invoked in it.
So I bring these two witnesses — Gibeon and Zedekiah — to the river Sarstoon, and I ask the question plainly. If a treaty obtained by outright fraud yet bound Israel for centuries on pain of famine; if a treaty of submission to a pagan empire yet bound a king of Judah on pain of death; then what shall we say of a boundary treaty made openly between two governments, ratified by both, and then honored and acted upon by both for some eighty years together — even to the setting of concrete markers along the line — until one party, disappointed of a road, declared the whole thing void? For that is the actual history: the treaty was ratified by both sides and acted upon for some eighty years, and Guatemala has never in fact occupied the territory it claims. The biblical verdict is not obscure. A disappointment in one article does not dissolve a sworn boundary. The unbuilt road is the mouldy bread of the Gibeonites — a real grievance, perhaps, a genuine failing in the bargain, but not a key that unlocks the oath. The oath was sworn to more than a neighbor. It was sworn under heaven, and heaven watches between the parties still.
Let me say a hard word to the strong here, lest this become mere partisanship. The same God who will not let a boundary be lightly broken is the God who avenged Babylon upon Zedekiah and the Gibeonites upon Saul — which is to say, He is no respecter of the powerful. If there is real and ongoing wrong in how a settled boundary came to be — if there were oppression in the swearing of it, if the weak were ground down in the making of it — the biblical answer is never to pretend the oath does not bind, but neither is it to wash the hands of the wrong. The God of the heap of witness is also the God of the widow and the stranger. He holds both the broken oath and the unrepented injury to account. The keeping of treaties and the doing of justice are not enemies in Scripture; they are kinsmen, and a faithful people must honor them both.
IV. Remove Not the Ancient Landmark
Out of this comes a particular commandment, repeated through the law and the wisdom of Israel, and it speaks to our subject with peculiar directness. “Thou shalt not remove thy neighbour’s landmark, which they of old time have set in thine inheritance,” says the nineteenth of Deuteronomy. And among the curses pronounced from Mount Ebal: “Cursed be he that removeth his neighbour’s landmark. And all the people shall say, Amen.” And the wisdom of Solomon takes it up twice: “Remove not the ancient landmark, which thy fathers have set,” and again, “Remove not the old landmark; and enter not into the fields of the fatherless: for their redeemer is mighty; he shall plead their cause with thee.”
The landmark — the gebul, the boundary stone — was in old Israel a sacred thing, because it was the visible token of a portion given by God and confirmed by oath. To move it under cover of night, to plough it under and pretend it had always lain a furrow further over, was reckoned among the works of darkness, a curse-bearing crime, theft against a neighbor and contempt against the God who set the bounds. And mark whom the proverb names as the special victim: the fatherless, the field of the orphan, the inheritance of the one too weak to defend his own stone. The landmark law is not finally a law for the strong to keep the weak in their place. It is a law to keep the strong from devouring the portions of the weak.
I want you to feel the wisdom of God in this, because it is wisdom the modern world has half-forgotten. A settled boundary, honored across generations, is a mercy. It is one of the chief mercies of a peaceable life. Where the landmark stands and is respected, the farmer may plant in the spring with confidence he will reap in the autumn; the child may inherit what the father held; the neighbor need not arm himself against the neighbor. But where every boundary may be reopened, where any man with a grievance and a clever argument may plough up his neighbor’s stone and say it never should have stood — there is no peace, there is no security, there is no rest for the labor of one’s hands. The endless relitigation of settled boundaries is not justice; it is the unraveling of the very fabric that lets justice be enjoyed.
And so to the quarrel along this river I would say: the path of peace, the path the Scripture commends, is the honored landmark and not the reopened grievance. It is telling that the broad weight of international precedent leans the same way — that even where great treaties have been gravely breached, courts have been most reluctant to declare the treaty itself dissolved, holding instead that the sworn instrument survives. The wisdom of the nations and the wisdom of God here run in one channel. Let the stones stand. Let the heap of witness be respected. Let the dispute be brought, as indeed it now is being brought, to a peaceable settlement before a tribunal rather than to the gunboats on the Sarstoon — and then let the settlement, once made, be honored as a settlement, lest the children’s children be still ploughing up the same stone two hundred years hence.
V. The Acknowledgement That Acknowledges Nothing
And now I come to the second thing I promised to speak of, the fashion of the land acknowledgement, and I will speak of it as a biblicist must — not with the sneer of the partisan, but with the discrimination of one who tests all things by the word of God.
You will have heard them, brethren, or read them, in the wealthy nations of the north. Before a lecture, before a concert, before a meeting of some council or board, a person rises and reads a prepared statement: that the building in which they are gathered stands upon land that once belonged to such-and-such a people, that it was taken from them, and that the speakers wish to acknowledge this. And then the statement ends, and the lecture begins, and the concert plays, and the meeting proceeds, and nothing whatever changes. The land is not returned. No restitution is made. No life is altered. The words are spoken, the conscience is soothed, and the world goes on exactly as before.
Now I want to be careful and fair, for there is a true thing buried under this fashion, and we must not despise the true thing because the form is hollow. The true thing is that wrong has often been done in the taking of land — real wrong, oppression and treachery and the grinding of the weak — and the conscience that feels this and wishes it otherwise is feeling something the prophets felt. So far, good. But test the form, brethren. Test it by the Scripture, and see what it lacks.
When Zacchaeus the publican was converted, in the nineteenth of Luke, he did not rise in the synagogue and read a statement acknowledging that his wealth had been gathered by extortion. He stood and said: “Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor; and if I have taken any thing from any man by false accusation, I restore him fourfold.” That is the biblical pattern. The law of restitution in Exodus and Leviticus and Numbers does not ask the thief to acknowledge that he has stolen; it requires him to restore what he took, and to add to it. “He shall restore that which he took violently away… and shall add the fifth part more thereto.” Repentance in Scripture is never the mere naming of a wrong. It is the turning from the wrong and, where the wrong has a price, the paying of the price. John the Baptist told the soldiers and the publicans not to feel the right feelings about their extortions but to “do violence to no man” and “exact no more than that which is appointed.” Words were never the currency of repentance in the kingdom of God. Deeds were.
And so the land acknowledgement, weighed in the biblical balance, is found to be the very thing the Apostle James condemns. “If a brother or sister be naked, and destitute of daily food, and one of you say unto them, Depart in peace, be ye warmed and filled; notwithstanding ye give them not those things which are needful to the body; what doth it profit?” The land acknowledgement is the “be ye warmed and filled” of the question of justice. It speaks peace to the dispossessed and gives them nothing. It performs the posture of contrition while withholding the matter of restitution. And — this is the sharpest point — it actually lowers the standard that Scripture sets. The world thinks the acknowledgement is a costly and demanding thing. The biblicist sees that it is a cheap thing pretending to be costly, and that the real biblical demand is far heavier: not to say words, but to make right. If a man has stolen a field, the word of God does not ask him to acknowledge it before his colleagues; it asks him to give the field back, with a fifth part added. The acknowledgement is not too much. It is far, far too little. It is a way of feeling absolved of a debt without paying it.
There is more, and it touches what we said earlier about the bounds of the nations. The land acknowledgement rests on a picture of the past that the second chapter of Deuteronomy will not allow — the picture of an original and innocent people who held the land in pristine right until the colonist came and broke the peace of Eden. But there was no such peace, and there was no such pristine original. The Horim held Seir before Esau, and someone held it before the Horim. Every inhabited ground on earth has known the coming and going of peoples, the strong succeeding the weak and the weak in their day having succeeded someone weaker still, all of it under the hand of the God who determines the bounds of habitation. To single out one displacement in that long churning and to name it the original sin — to acknowledge the land of one prior people while saying nothing of the peoples that people displaced — is not history; it is a kind of myth, and a myth that flatters the speaker by giving him a clean villain and a clean victim where God’s word shows only the long and tangled migration of strangers and sojourners across a ground that belongs to none of them and to God alone.
Mark too, brethren, the strange thing that the acknowledgement is, in its very shape, a liturgy. It is a ritual confession, recited before a gathering, in fixed words, performing the work that confession and absolution once performed in the religious assembly. The wealthy and the secular, having put away the worship of God, have not put away the human need to confess and be absolved; they have only invented a new rite to do it, a rite with confession but no Redeemer, with a sin named but no blood to cleanse it, with a priest of sorts at the lectern but no sacrifice and no restitution and no amendment of life. It is religion with the heart cut out of it. And like all religion with the heart cut out of it, it leaves the worshipper exactly as guilty as it found him, only now persuaded that he is not.
Here is the same disorder we found in the Guatemala claim, and I want you to see that they are the same at the root. Both reach behind a settled present to appeal to a prior condition. The one reaches behind the treaty of 1859 to a Spanish inheritance and an unbuilt road; the other reaches behind the present holding of the land to a pre-colonial occupancy. Both say: never mind the heap of witness, never mind the oath, never mind the generations of settled possession — there was an earlier claim, and the earlier claim trumps all. And to both the word of God says the same word. The land is the LORD’s, and He portions it among the nations in His own time. The settled boundary, sworn and honored, is not to be lightly removed. And where there is real and ongoing wrong, the remedy is not endless destabilization of every boundary by appeal to a prior grievance, nor is it a verbal formula that costs nothing — the remedy is restitution, real and costly and particular, made by those who actually owe it to those who are actually owed.
VI. The God Who Keeps Covenant
I have spoken of treaties and boundaries and the binding of oaths, and I have spoken hard things about the breaking of sworn words and the cheapness of mere acknowledgement. Let me close where every biblical word must close, with the God who is Himself the great keeper of covenant, and with His Son Jesus Christ.
For all this talk of the heap of witness rests on something deeper than statecraft. It rests on the character of the God we serve. Why does a sworn oath bind even when the bargain was flawed? Because the God in whose name it was sworn is a God who keeps His word though it cost Him everything. “God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?” The whole weight of biblical morality concerning oaths and treaties is the weight of God’s own faithfulness pressed down upon human dealing. We are to keep our word because He keeps His. We are not to remove the ancient landmark because the God who set the bounds of the nations does not remove them in caprice. We are to make restitution rather than mouth acknowledgements because the God we serve does not speak peace where there is no peace, but Himself paid the price He required.
And here is the gospel, brethren. When the human race had broken every covenant — Adam’s, Noah’s, the covenant at Sinai broken almost before the tables were dry — God did not respond as men respond, declaring the whole bargain void because we had failed of one article. He did not say, the road was never built, therefore the treaty is dissolved. He bound Himself the more deeply. He sent His Son Jesus Christ to be the mediator of a better covenant, and Jesus Christ kept the covenant that we could not keep, and where the covenant required a price for our breaking of it, He paid that price in His own blood. He is the true heap of witness, the marker God set up in the earth that can never be moved, the boundary stone between the holiness of God and the guilt of man, against which all our removing and relitigating breaks like water against rock. He did not acknowledge our debt and pass on. He restored what He took not away, and gave us besides the inheritance He alone had earned.
So what shall we do, we who name His name? We shall be a people of our word, in the small treaties of our households and our dealings as much as in the great treaties of nations — letting our yea be yea and our nay nay, swearing not at all rashly, but keeping faithfully whatever we have once bound ourselves to keep, even when it galls, even when a better bargain beckons, even when we have found the mouldy bread to be fresh after all. We shall honor the ancient landmark, and reckon the settled and peaceable boundary a mercy of God and not a thing to be ploughed up by every fresh grievance. We shall do justice — real justice, the costly and particular justice of restitution where we owe it — and we shall not deceive ourselves that the warm word spoken in the assembly is the same as the field returned to the man we wronged. And in all of it we shall remember that we are strangers and sojourners with God upon a ground that is His, tenants under a Landlord who watches between us and our neighbor, and who will require an account of every oath sworn and every stone removed.
The quarrel on the river will be settled in its season, by the court or by the providence of God, and the bounds of these small nations of Central America are as surely in His hand as were the bounds of Edom and Moab and Ammon. And the fashion of the acknowledgement will pass, as fashions do, and be replaced by another, and men will go on needing what only the gospel gives — not a rite to soothe the conscience, but a Redeemer to cleanse it, and the power to turn from wrong and make it right.
The LORD watch between thee and me, brethren, when we are absent one from another. And let all the people say, Amen.
A note on the factual claims about the boundary dispute: the account of the 1859 Wyke-Aycinena Treaty (Guatemala’s recognition of British sovereignty, the boundary lines, the unbuilt-road article, and Guatemala’s later argument for nullity), the roughly eighty years of implementation, the 1931 exchange of notes and boundary markers, and the current status of the case (oral arguments before the ICJ opening in November 2025, with judgment expected near the end of the decade) draw on the Wikipedia entry “Belizean–Guatemalan territorial dispute,” reporting from the San Pedro Sun and Amandala, and Government of Belize Foreign Ministry communications. The observation about treaties surviving even grave breach reflects the Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros precedent (Hungary v. Slovakia, 1997) as discussed in that Belizean legal commentary.












