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The Price of a Birthright (9AM)

May 21, 2023 • Curt McFarland • Genesis 25:27–34

Have you ever agreed to buy, or sell, something only to regret your decision soon after the deal went through? Here are two I regret: both involving cars.


Example 1: I gave my mom’s 1967 VW Bug to a family member. Instead of saving it, fixing it, and driving it, he sold it for a song. I offered it, he sold it, the deal was done. I liked that little ol’ Bug and wished I had never given it away. The value of those old VW’s continues to climb.


Example 2. After graduating from college, I needed a car. Someone suggested I buy a car that looked good on the outside but needed an engine. I paid for the car before fully checking it out. Bad decision. After paying I realized it was not the kind of car I wanted. I regretted my decision immediately. I got the car running and drove it for a couple of years. One day I drove it to a junkyard and handed over the keys. That day was a better day than the day I bought the car.

 

Abraham’s son Isaac, and Isaac’s wife Rebekah, had two boys. Although raised in the same house, by the same parents, these brothers couldn’t have been more different. If one liked this, the other liked that. If one wanted this, the other wanted that. One lived in the outdoors under the stars, the other preferred living in a tent. One was rough, the other quiet. One was favored by their father, the other by their mother. 


One day, the older of the two, exhausted and hungry after a long day working the field, made a rash decision. He agreed to sell his birthright to his younger brother in exchange for some bread and stew. What is a birthright anyway? What good is a birthright if you feel like you’re starving? Esau made a rash decision he regretted as soon as he made it. 


His brother took advantage of him … and Esau knew it. For years he would despise what he had traded away, and he would despise his brother too. Each of us has a God-given birthright.  The question is … what is our birthright and what will we do with it? Decide carefully.

Jacob Returns to Bethel 11am

July 2, 2023 • Dennis Whitcher • Genesis 35:1–15

Genesis 35:1–15 describes the fulfillment of Jacob's vows made to the Lord some thirty years earlier. Then, Jacob encountered God after fleeing from Esau. Now that Jacob has returned safely to Canaan and resolved the conflict with Esau, God commands him to build an altar at the place of their first meeting, Bethel. Jacob rids his family of all of their false idols returns to Bethel. God appears to him, confirming the covenant promises once more. Jacob responds to God's appearance and blessing by building a stone pillar and pouring a drink offering and oil over it.   This sets a pattern for us as well. Coming back to God begins by recognizing from God’s word that you maybe you are not where God wants you to be. Jacob was in Shechem; God wanted him in Bethel. Then we respond in obedience to the command of God to arise, go up, and worship Him.   What will it look like to obey the Lord? Getting rid of idols - those things that take the place of God in your life. Cleansing ourselves by confessing our sins before God. Then demonstrating that inward repentance by our outward behavior, bearing “fruit worthy of repentance.”   Do you have a Bethel in your life, a special place where you first met God? Have you ever set up stone pillars in your mind to remind you of times that God has spoken to you and it has made a change in your life, or has brought your focus back to the true treasure of your heart, the Lord Jesus Christ?  

Jacob Returns to Bethel 9am

July 2, 2023 • Dennis Whitcher • Genesis 35:1–15

Genesis 35:1–15 describes the fulfillment of Jacob's vows made to the Lord some thirty years earlier. Then, Jacob encountered God after fleeing from Esau. Now that Jacob has returned safely to Canaan and resolved the conflict with Esau, God commands him to build an altar at the place of their first meeting, Bethel. Jacob rids his family of all of their false idols returns to Bethel. God appears to him, confirming the covenant promises once more. Jacob responds to God's appearance and blessing by building a stone pillar and pouring a drink offering and oil over it.   This sets a pattern for us as well. Coming back to God begins by recognizing from God’s word that you maybe you are not where God wants you to be. Jacob was in Shechem; God wanted him in Bethel. Then we respond in obedience to the command of God to arise, go up, and worship Him.   What will it look like to obey the Lord? Getting rid of idols - those things that take the place of God in your life. Cleansing ourselves by confessing our sins before God. Then demonstrating that inward repentance by our outward behavior, bearing “fruit worthy of repentance.”   Do you have a Bethel in your life, a special place where you first met God? Have you ever set up stone pillars in your mind to remind you of times that God has spoken to you and it has made a change in your life, or has brought your focus back to the true treasure of your heart, the Lord Jesus Christ?  

A Wrestling Match (9AM)

June 25, 2023 • Alex Rule • Genesis 32:22–32

This is the story of Jacob's encounter with God. Jacob, has been deceiving many people for most of his life to get the benefits and resources he needs to not only live a good life, but to survive. He wants to always be ahead of others no matter what, but this time he is going to face his creator; this time he will wrestle with God to get His blessing. He wants to get this blessing even if it costs him something and he becomes disabled. After his encounter with God, Jacob learned to hold God's hand and to depend on Him always. In this story, God changed Jacob's name to Israel and changed his life forever. Fortunately, we don't have to wrestle with God to get blessings from Him, what we need is to be faithful and ask him to bless us in our daily prayers. For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives.”  It is for discipline that you have to endure. God is treating you as sons. For what son is there whom his father does not discipline? Hebrews 12:6-7