Depends upon how you view the first covenant. If the first covenant was with Adam and Eve, then the second covenant was with Noah (Genesis 6:18). If the first true convenant was with Noah, then the second covenant was with Abraham. (Genesis 15:18)
In the Bible, God made a covenant with Adam called the Covenant of Works. This covenant required Adam to obey God's command not to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden.
This first covenant was a conditional covenant. As such, it required obedience on Adam's part to enjoy the blessing. God gave Adam all the fruit and greens to eat, but Adam was prohibited from eating the fruit of the tree in the middle of the garden. This was the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. God warned Adam that if he ate of the fruit of that tree he would die. We can assume from this warning that Adam was created to live forever. However, he did eat of this fruit and he did die, both spiritually and then physically.
God's covenant with Adam and Eve before they left the Garden of Eden was that they would no longer be able to live in perfect bliss, as they would be subject to suffering and toil. They would also be subject to death, and would no longer be able to partake in the Tree of Life. Additionally, God cursed the serpent for deceiving them, and promised that there would be enmity between it and the woman, and that Eve's offspring would crush the serpent's head. Adam and Eve would no longer be able to live in perfect bliss, as they would be subject to suffering and toil. They would also be subject to death, and would no longer be able to partake in the Tree of Life. God cursed the serpent for deceiving them. God promised that there would be enmity between the woman and the serpent. God promised that Eve's offspring would crush the serpent's head.These were the terms of God's covenant with Adam and Eve before they left the Garden of Eden.
That would be Adam.
God's covenant with Adam was a promise of protection and provision in exchange for obedience. This covenant established a close relationship between humanity and divinity, with humans being given dominion over the earth but also being held accountable for their actions. The covenant emphasized the importance of following God's commands and living in harmony with His will.
Adam and Eve are considered to be the first humans in the Bible, and they are not specifically identified as Jewish. The concept of Judaism as a religion and cultural identity developed later in history, with the establishment of the Israelite nation and the covenant with God through Moses.
Firstly let us see just what a Covenant is. In the gospel sense, a covenant is a binding and solemn compact, agreement, contract or mutual promise between God and a single person or group of chosen persons.Adam was the first man to receive and to make covenants with God. Accordingly many righteous men have had covenants and made covenants with God, Abraham and Noah are but two.Two covenants stand out in mind which God has made with man. 1. The new and everlasting covenant, meaning the fullness of the gospel and 2. A new and everlasting covenant of marriage. Both covenants are when man makes covenants of exaltation.Remember to keep the covenants God has made with His chosen people.AnswerIt depends which covenant? There was one with Noah, with Abraham, with Moses and the final replaceall, the new covenant sealed with Christ's blood. A biblical Covenant is more than a promise or an agreement, it is a complete giving of oneself to another being. In this case, the "being" is God. There was only one Covenant in the Bible. The Covenant was the creation of man and then the Sabbath. The Covenant with Adam & Eve was the 2nd part of the Covenant. Noah was the 3rd part, Moses the 4th, and the Covenant sealed with Jesus' blood was the last part of the Covenant.
If you believe in the creation, the answer would be Adam. Adam, who came to be alongside Eve.
Adam and Eve broke the golden law of god that they should not eat from the forbidden fruit of the tree of knowledge, but Satan tempted them and they did eat.
Genesis 3:22Another Answer:The Edenic Covenant with Adam in the Garden of Eden - sometimes called the "Covenant of Works" and is the first covenant that God made directly with man (Genesis 2:16-17). Disobeying this covenant as noted in Hosea 6:7, had its negatives of toiling the ground all the days of human life. The Scripture does not mention a blood sacrifice as humans were probably vegetarian then.But God did not give up on mankind, and shortly after the expulsion from the Garden of Eden, God made another covenant with Adam & Eve of redemption (see Genesis 3:14-24) pointing to the future sacrifice of Jesus. There have been others afterwards, ending with the New Covenant that was only instituted at the Last Supper with the symbolic cup of wine representing Christ's blood. It will be fully implemented during the Millennial Reign.All Covenants between God and mankind are contracts of marriage. The Old Covenant ended when Jesus died - effectively the death of the groom.
That would be Adam in the story of creation in Genesis.