Audio Transcript:
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Good morning, welcome to Mosaic Church. My name is Jan. I'm with the pastors here at Mosaic, along with Pastor Shane and Pastor Andy. If you're new or visiting, welcome. We're so glad you're here. We'd love to connect with you either through the connection card in the worship guide, the physical one, or you can get the one online on our website or in the app.
One quick announcement, we are celebrating baptisms today after the second service, so if you weren't planning on coming back, now you can go to brunch after the service, come back, and we're celebrating two people getting baptized as a testimony to what Jesus did in their life by saving them. With that said, would you please pray with me over the preaching of God's holy word?
Heavenly Father, we thank you that you are a faithful God, that you are immutable; the same yesterday, today, and forever more. And because you are the same, when you promised to pour out your love on us; by the power of the Holy Spirit, when you draw us to yourself, you make an eternal covenant and you never turn your back on that. We thank you that you're faithful even when we are faithless.
Lord, we don't just acknowledge, we repent of areas in our lives where we have not obeyed you fully, where we have not been faithful to your word, to your commandments, to your will, to your desire. And we haven't just broken commandments, we've broken your heart.
We pray today that you show us from the example in the story of Abraham that you are faithful to your relationship with us and you call us to do the same. As a spouse, you love us with a sacrificial, eternal, unending, unconditional love.
We pray, Holy Spirit, come into this place today and show us that when you come, when you call, when you summon us, we have no choice but to follow, but to do your will, and that's where blessing is found. We pray that you bless our time with the holy scriptures. We pray this in Jesus' name. Amen.
Today, we are starting a new sermon series called Jesus in Genesis Season 2. One was Season 1; Season 1 was in 2016. You can get those sermons online. And what we're doing is we're looking at this ancient text and we're showing that it's actually incredibly relevant to our day and age today.
One of the reasons why it's so relevant is despite that world is changing materially, it hasn't changed spiritually. The same God, the same Satan, the same spiritual principles either for blessing or for curse. And the same principles that we see operating in Genesis, when we take those principles and we apply them to our life, God uses that incredibly.
Today we look at the story of Abraham. He's one of the two or three most consequential people, men, to have ever lived. Jesus, Saint Paul, and then it goes Abraham. Three of the main world's religions revere him; Judaism, Islam, and Christianity.
He is the great patriarch of Biblical history. He's the great exemplar of faith and of faith by grace, that faith is a gift, salvation is a gift. We know more about his life than anyone else in Biblical history except for Moses, David, Saint Paul, and the Lord Jesus himself.
What made this man so remarkable that God would call him a friend? He's a friend. He's the father of all those who believe in Jesus Christ, scripture says. Jesus even said that Abraham was a believer in him even in his own lifetime. Jesus said, "Abraham rejoiced to see my day and was glad."
Paul uses Abraham's life as the crowning illustration and demonstration; this is what the life of a Christian looks like. This is what it means to believe and to be saved. God himself, when he introduces himself, he says, "I am the god of Abraham. I'm that guy's God." Incredible.
Great though he be, in the very first text where we are introduced to this man who leaves everything to follow God, to obey God, in the same text, he disobeys God so egregiously that it's actually shocking that this text was included in scripture; where he sells off his wife to Pharaoh in order to save himself.
What's the lesson here? The lesson here is that there's a tug of war for your soul, and that tug of war is between heaven and hell, that's how precious your soul is; God and Satan are vying for it. And God calls Abraham and says, "That guy's mine. He belongs to me."
The very next text, Satan comes and tempts him; tempts him with doubt, temps him with unbelief, tempts him with disobedience. And what we see here is that there's a so-called spiritual schizophrenia that on the one hand, we see incredible juxtaposition of faith and doubt, obedience and betrayal, heroism and cowardice, we see it in the text.
And the reason why, this is how I'm framing the text, it's because we see it in ourselves. One day you are on fire for God, you love him with all your heart, soul, strength and mind. The next day it's as if you've never met him, it's as if you are, spiritually, practically an atheist. So how do we deal with that today?
Well, this is what we'll talk about from Genesis Chapter 12. Would you look at this incredible text with me? Genesis 12. "Now, the Lord said to Abram, 'Go from your country and your kindred and your father's house to the land that I will show you. And I will make of you a great nation, I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you; and him who dishonors you, I will curse. And in you, all the families of the Earth shall be blessed.'"
So Abram went as the Lord had told him, and Lot went with him. Abram was 75 years old when he departed from Haran. And Abram took Sarai (his wife) and Lot (his brother's son) and all their possessions that they had gathered and the people that they had acquired in Haran and they set out to go to the land of Canaan.
When they came to land of Canaan, Abram passed through the land to the place at Shechem, to the Oak at Moreh; and at that time, the Canaanites were in the land. "Then the Lord appeared to Abram and said, 'To your offspring I will give this land.' So he built there an altar to the Lord who had appeared to him."
"From there, he moved to the hill country on the east of Bethel and pitched his tent with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. And there he built an altar to the Lord and called upon the name of the Lord. And Abram journeyed on, still going through the Negeb."
And there was a famine in the land, so Abram went down to Egypt, to sojourn there, for the famine was severe in the land. When he was about to enter Egypt, he said to Sarai, his wife, "I know that you are a beautiful woman in appearance. And when the Egyptian see you, they will say, 'This is his wife.' Then they will kill me, but they will let you live. Say you are my sister, that it may go well with me because of you, and that my life may be spared for your sake."
When Abram entered Egypt, the Egyptians saw that the woman was very beautiful. And when the princes of Pharaoh saw her, they praised her to Pharaoh and the woman was taken into Pharaoh's house. And for her sake, he dealt well with Abram. And he had sheep, oxen, male donkeys, male servants, female servants, female donkeys, and camels.
The Lord afflicted Pharaoh and his house with great plagues because of Sarai, Abram's wife. So Pharaoh called Abram and said, "What is this you've done to me? Why did you not tell me that she was your wife? Why did you say, 'She was my sister,' so that I took her for my wife? Now then, here is your wife. Take her and go." And Pharaoh gave orders concerning him and they sent him away with his wife and all that he had.
This is the reading of God's holy inerrant, infallible, authoritative word. May write these internal truths upon our hearts. What in the world is going on here?
The first thing I was meditating on this week is the conversation that Sarah and Abraham had as soon as she was released. When he looks at her and says, "Is this going to be a 20-minute fight or is this a week-long fight? I don't know what's going on."
My wife when she gets mad at me, she hits me with two hands. I think that's what was going on there. We'll deal with that. What's going on in this very sordid text? And what's fascinating is this text is the beginning of the Christian faith, not just the Christian faith, but Judaism.
And Islam looks to Abraham as the father of their faith. So what is going on this text? What can we learn? And how can we apply this to our life? Three points: tremendous faith, tremendous faithlessness, and tremendous faithfulness.
First, tremendous faith. God shows up and he speaks to Abram, and this is how God reveals himself to each and one of us. He's always revealed himself like this, through speaking through his word. The Lord said to Abram, "Go from your country and your kindred and your father's house to the land that I will show you."
How did the Lord speak? How did Abram hear his voice? We're not told. God speaks in different ways, communicates to human hearts in a myriad of ways; sometimes it's in dreams. We hear about this from the Muslim world that God, Jesus himself, appears to people in dreams and saves them miraculously even today.
Most often, he speaks to people through his word. When you're reading his scripture, you hear his scripture read or preached and you feel like God himself, the voice of the living God is speaking to you.
Abram, here's God, and for him it's enough. It's the self-authenticating word of God. And God comes and he doesn't just say, "Go." It doesn't say, "Come." It's not an invitation. It's, "Go." It's a commandment.
God reveals himself, offers Abram a relationship... By the way, the names, if you're not familiar, Abram later will be changed to Abraham. But it sounds weird so I just keep Abraham. Sarai becomes Sarah. And that's to show that God has, he has authority to change our identity by changing our name.
So God calls Abraham, speaks to him. What we see here, what's fascinating is there weren't many faithful people to God in that day. One guy we do know is Melchizedek, in chapter 14 we meet him. So there were other faithful believers in God, but this one is special because God, through this one, through Abraham, God promises to bless all the nations by sending the Messiah.
So he meets God, he changes absolutely everything. This is awesome. And you look at this and you say, "This guy had an encounter with God. Where did he come from? What did he do to deserve this? Has he always loved and sought after God? Is he being rewarded for his faithfulness?" And scripture says no.
Scripture says, in Joshua 24, that actually Abraham and his family were all idol worshipers. So he doesn't come from a Christian family, he doesn't come from a faithful family. He comes from a family that wanted nothing to do with God. They worshiped creation rather than the creator.
And that's the problem that every single one of us wrestles with until God calls us, is we're all living for something and for something that we find to be worthy of our time, our energy; be it pleasure or comfort or significance etc., it's physical things. We're worshiping physical things, we're worshiping creation instead of creator.
So what changes his mind? What changed the trajectory and the nature of his life? He heard the voice of God and he obeyed. He didn't just hear God, he heard God. He didn't just listen, he heard God and he obeyed. And this is how the Christian life begins, with God speaking, our listening, our obeying and trusting, believing. And this is how we continue to grow in the Christian faith.
What's fascinating is I love how real the story is, did Abraham obey immediately? Did he obey immediately? Is he like, "Oh, God just told me, now I'm going?" Well, actually, I don't think so.
And we can get this from Genesis 15:7. "And he said to him," in 15:7, "I am the Lord who brought you out of Ur of the Chaldeans to give you this land to possess." So God calls Abraham out of Ur of the Chaldeans, which is Babylonia at that time. So Abraham wasn't Jewish yet. He was a pagan, he was a Gentile. God calls him out of Ur of the Chaldeans.
So he's living in Ur of the Chaldeans, God calls him out. And then what we find fascinating is in Genesis 11:27-32, we see that he's not living in Ur of the Chaldeans. Look at the text. And this is the genealogy of Abraham.
Now, these are the generations of Terah. Terah fathered Abram, Nahor and Haran, and Haran fathered Lot. So remember that; Haran is the father of Lot. Haran died in the presence of his father Terah, in the land of his kindred in Ur of the Chaldeans. And Abram and Nahor took wives. The name of Abram's wife was Sarai and the name of Nahor's wife was Milcah, and the daughter of Haran, the father of Milcah and Iscah. Now Sarai was barren; she had no child.
Terah took Abram (his son) and Lot (the son of Haran), his grandson, Sarai (his daughter-in-law), his son Abram's wife, and they went forth together from Ur of the Chaldeans to go into the land of Canaan. But when they came to Haran, they settled there. And the days of Terah was 205 years, and Terah died in Haran.
So there's two Harans here. One Haran is a name, this is Lot's dad, and then Haran is a place. So here we see that they live in Ur of the Chaldeans and they were on their way to Canaan, they were on their way to the promised land, and they get to a place called Haran and they stay there. They stay there.
And you connect that with Genesis 15; Genesis 15, God said, "I called you out of Ur of the Chaldeans." So God called the whole family of Abraham, including Abraham's dad, including all his brothers. "I'm calling all of you from Ur of the Chaldeans, pagan, idolatrous city, to this promised land in Canaan." And they're going, they're on their way. They obeyed. And then they get to this place called Haran, and scripture says they settled there.
They're called, they go, they stop halfway. God comes again to Abram a second time, by the grace of God, and says, "I didn't call you to Haran, I called you to Canaan." And Abraham, at this moment, finally obeys. And I love this as an illustration for faith today, that there has to be growth in the faith, growth in obedience; but you can't just settle, you can't settle for halfway obedience or halfway faithfulness. That's not where God's blessing is found, so Abraham finally obeys.
What's fascinating is when God saves us, he doesn't just save us from sin, he saves for something. What he saves us for, is for his mission. So he saves us from our sinful life of idolatry and he wants us to go to this place, whatever this place is for you, in order to be part of the mission of God.
He saves a guy and says, "Go," and continued to bless. And that's verse 2, "I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great so that you will be a blessing." God is a God who loves to bless, he loves to be generous with us. And the greatest blessing that he can give us is himself, the blessing of his presence in a relationship.
So God is saying, "Go," but he's also saying, "Come and follow me to this place." But in order for us to experience the fullness of the presence of God, God first tells us to leave things behind that don't glorify God.
Verse 3 says, "I will bless those who bless you; and him who dishonors you, I will curse. And in you, all the families of the Earth shall be blessed." He uses the word 'blessed' in these very few verses five times. Why is that important? Because in Genesis 1-11, scripture uses the word 'blessed' five times.
So in a few verses, we have a trajectory changing a few verses to show that God hasn't left people in their sin. So Genesis 1-3, everything is perfect. Genesis 3 comes the fall; and then the fall is Genesis 3-11, is just the regression of people from the purpose of God. And God finally says, "No, I'm not leaving you in your sin. I'm going to come, I'm going to bless."
So Abram goes, verse 4, "So Abram went, as the Lord had told him, and Lot went with him. Abram was 75 years old when he departed from Haran." Leaves everything, closes his eyes so to speak, takes the hand of God and goes.
What's he leave behind? He leaves behind family, friends, most likely his business, most likely accumulated property through generations. And he goes, leaves everything behind to follow God at 75.
My parents immigrated from the Soviet Union in 1989. My dad was 30 years old, my mom was 27. 30 years old, zero English. My dad thought he was going to Germany, so he studied German. Now, zero English, shows up with three kids, fourth on the way, because he felt like God said, "Go."
I look back at him, I'm 38 now, I look back, "30 years old, you did that. That's nuts." Abraham was 75, seventy-five. That's 10 years into your retirement. You're chilling. What are 75-year-olds thinking about? They're thinking about, I don't know, vacation, relaxing, rest. They're not thinking about starting a brand new purpose in life, a mission in life.
Granted, years were different back then. Because we find out that Sarah was 65 and apparently she was really good-looking at 65. I think food was different; no GMOs, it was all organic. They lived a lot longer. I don't know. The aging might be different, so 75...
The point here is he's set in his life, he's set in his patterns. 90% of people that come to faith as Christians come to faith before the age of 18, why? Because after the age of 18, it's hard to change your patterns of thinking. God comes and he saves a guy who has no Christian background, no Christian friends, no Christian parents, and he saves him and just converts him radically, and it shows just the grace of God.
A quick chronology of Abram's life; 75 he's called, he enters Canaan. 86 is the birth of Ishmael. At 99, he gets the covenant sign of circumcision. At 100, Isaac is born. Between 115 and 125, he was commanded to sacrifice Isaac. 137, Sarah died. 140, Isaac was married. And 175, Abraham died.
So Abraham does obey God, he leaves everything in chapter 5, and Abram took Sarai (his wife) and Lot (his brother's son) and all their possessions that they had gathered and the people that they had acquired in Haran and they set out to go to the land of Canaan. When they came to the land of Canaan, Abram passed through the land to the place at Shechem to the oak of Moreh. At the time, the Canaanites were in the land.
So Abraham doesn't go from one idolatrous pagan center of worship to a place where there were believers, no, he's the only believer. There's no Christians in Canaan, there's no Christians in Ur of the Chaldeans.
So God saves this guy and sends him as a missionary into this place where there's pagans. And this is why the place at Shechem and the oak are mentioned. Why are you mentioning an oak? Because the oak was the place where the pagans worshiped their tree gods because they thought they connected them with Heaven and these were their fertility gods, and that's why there's a prohibition law of Moses against planting trees like this in the temple precinct.
So Abraham goes to the place, he passes through Shechem, a Godless place, and then verse 7, "The Lord appeared to Abram and said, 'To your offspring I will give this land.'" He says, "Do you see this land? This land full of pagan worshipers, people who don't love God, who love sin, who actually hate God because they love sin. I'm going to give you this land."
So he built there an altar to the Lord who had appeared to him. Why is Shechem important? Shechem has been this place where God has his people make a decision.
Abraham, in the same way that you made the decision are you going to obey God or not, the people of God had to make a decision at Shechem a few times. At Shechem, the people of God had to make a decision between the mount of curse, Ebal, and the mountain of blessing, Gerizim.
At Shechem, Joshua gives a final address to the people of God and says, "Who are you going to worship from this day forward?" At Shechem, Solomon's kingdom was divided. And God brings Abraham to Shechem in the very shadow of the Canaanite shrine to idols and he promises him, "I'm going to give you this land." And what Abraham does is he builds a defiant declaration to the fact that God called him through this altar that, "We claim this place and we will worship the Lord here."
Remember in verse 8 and 9, "From there, he moved to the hill country on the east of Bethel and pitched his tent with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. And there he built an altar to the Lord and called upon the name of the Lord. And Abram journeyed on, still going toward the Negeb."
What's fascinating is he leaves, most likely, a luxurious life. And I say luxurious because we see that he had a lot of cattle but I also say luxurious because Sarai was barren so they didn't have kids. So if you're in 75 and 65 and you've been working your whole life without kids, you've got a lot of disposable income.
So a luxurious life, most likely a huge house. Now he goes and he pitches a tent. And this is a sign that this is by the grace of God. "I'm going to live here, an impermanent structure." And before he pitches that tent, he builds something, he builds an altar to the Lord.
And this in the Hebrew is a play on words. He pitches something, an impermanent structure for himself, and builds a permanent structure to God here in the altar, so we see his priorities. And then scripture says, "And they called upon the name of the Lord." And this isn't just, "I'm going to pray to God." They had a corporate worship gathering.
So Abraham, what he's doing is he actually started a church, he planted a church in a Godless place, in a place called Shechem, and he said, "Here, this is our place, this is our town, this is our city, and we are going to worship God here and declare God." So I see incredible faith. Abraham, this is incredible. You left everything.
I hear stories of missionaries that leave everything and they go to the Middle East to preach the gospel. You left... That's awesome. So you have this incredible faith, that's point one.
And I want to just pause there and say, praise God for Abraham's faithfulness, praise God. Abraham, when I get to heaven, man, high five, good job. Thank you for obeying God, awesome. And then, all of a sudden, there's a change in the text, and this is point two: tremendous faithlessness.
Verse 10, "Now, there was a famine in the land, so Abram went down to Egypt to sojourn there, for the famine was severe in the land." Egypt was a typical place of refuge when there was a famine, why? Because the Nile provided water, so food, Egypt.
Did God, Abraham, tell you to go to Egypt? No, he did not. God told you to go to Canaan, he actually told you twice, "Go to the land that I will show you." So there's no reason to think, in the text, no reason to think that Abram thought he was free to leave the land. And when scripture is silent on something this big, that's of significance.
God doesn't tell Abraham to go to Egypt. Abram then when he does go to Egypt, he doesn't do what he's done already twice, is build an altar to God. Something's shifted with Abram. Was the famine real? Yes. Did God tell Abram to go to Canaan? Yes. But in Canaan, he experiences trouble, he experiences obstacles.
When God calls you to something, when you know that God called you to something, you need to know that you will meet difficulty. Because if God calls you to something, that is his will. And there is an enemy who hates God's will, and he will challenge you with everything you have.
Where in the world do we get the idea that ease is a sign that you are in the will of God? Where in the world do we get the idea that comfort is a sign that you are in the will of God? Smooth sailing is a sign that you are in the will? Where did you get that idea? Joel Osteen, that's where. It's not true. It's not true. It's not true.
Actually, if you study the lives of believers in scripture, the more committed they are to the will of God, the more trouble there is, the more obstacles there are, the more suffering there is, Abraham. Because when God gives you the gift of faith to do something incredible for God's glory, God is going to allow that faith to be tested, so that it can be strengthened.
So Abraham goes down to Egypt, he went down. And it's fascinating, in the Hebrew it says 'down', he went down to Egypt. And then when he comes back in Chapter 13:1 it says, "Abram went up from Egypt." And yes, this is a way to describe travel a common way, but scripture also uses this language to describe spiritual movement.
He came down as he left the place where God called him, and then he goes up when he leaves the place that he wasn't supposed to be. So you see the temperature shift in his spiritual life and spiritual health.
Scripture also says that he went to Egypt to sojourn, which suggests that he was planning on living there for a significant period of time, and he stayed there long enough to accumulate great wealth. So afraid for his safety, afraid for his comfort, afraid for his prosperity, he goes to Egypt; first compromise.
As soon as he gets to Egypt, we see a second compromise, where he's willing to actually lose his wife, lose his marriage. When confronted with trouble, it's as if his faith deserts him. God promised, God said, "I'm going to bless you. I'm going to make of you a great nation. I'm going to make your name great." Which that promise assumes that no one's going to kill you, not yet, not until you have a kid.
"And whoever curses you, I will curse," God said. So God promised that, "I will be with you." And Abraham, he makes a decision as if God had never spoken, as if God isn't there. And he disobeys God and that begins with disbelief. It's a thing called spiritual amnesia, and every single one of us we struggle with this. And I know every single one of us struggles with this because I struggle with this.
Good Friday comes, Easter comes, wonderful weekend, everything's amazing, everything's tremendous. And by Tuesday, I'm like, "Did Jesus come back from the dead?" Yeah, he did. "Pastor Jan, go online, listen to your sermon again." Yes, he did. Jesus came back from the dead. God is with us. God still loves us.
And this is why we need the word of God, this is why we need time with God, in order to remind ourselves; because our predisposition, our set mode isn't to believe in the Lord.
Verse 11, "When he was about to enter Egypt, he said to Sarai his wife, 'I know that you are a woman beautiful in appearance.'" Great start, Abraham. "And when the Egyptians see you, they will say, 'This is his wife.'" That's true. "Then they will kill me, but they will let you live." Why is this? Because we know this from archaeological accounts that Pharaoh could take any sojourners' or immigrants' wife or children.
So he says, "Say that you are my sister, that it may go well with me because of you, and that my life may be spared for your sake. Say that you are my sister." What's weird is that it's technically true. That's weird. It's his half sister. Technically it's true, but he's hiding that truth with a lie, so technically it's true, so let's just say this.
And by the way, this says a lot about... So people are like, "Abraham, Father Abraham, he's the father of our faith." He did some weird stuff in Haran. Apparently, this was allowed in Haran. And what does Haran mean in the Hebrew? It means West Virginia, where you can marry your half-sister, so that's just weird.
And by the way, this is incredible proof of the veracity of scripture. Because if I were inventing a religion, I would not say that the founder of our religion married his half-sister, that's weird. And then in the law of Moses in Deuteronomy actually says you can't do that, that's actually forbidden. So Abraham didn't know... It's to show that this is actually true.
But Abraham, he knows that he is risking death. So he enters into Egypt and he says, "Okay, go along with this," and she does. And she does.
And verse 14, "When Abram entered Egypt, the Egyptians saw that the woman was very beautiful. And when the princes of Pharaoh saw her, they praised her to Pharaoh and the woman was taken into Pharaoh's house." The words "taken into Pharaoh's house" assumes already a formal relationship, perhaps marriage, so she's included in his harem.
And then later in the text it says that Pharaoh already called her his wife, so we see a progression in the text. And verse 16, insult to injury, "And for her sake, Pharaoh dealt well with Abram; and he had sheep, ox and male donkeys, male servants, female servants, female donkeys, and camels." And this is suggesting that Pharaoh pays Abraham off.
So basically he bought... Abraham sold his wife. There's other words for that. But basically this is sexual trafficking, selling his wife. This is as bad as it gets. In order to save himself, and in order to get prosperity, in order to get comfort, he is willing to give up on his covenant relationship with his wife. This is as dark as it gets.
But God, praise be to God, he doesn't leave him here. He doesn't allow this to happen in verse 17, "But the Lord afflicted Pharaoh and his house with great plagues because of Sarai, Abraham's wife." God intervenes, that's the point here. God rescues Abraham's marriage.
It's as if the Lord is saying, "I'm more invested in your marriage than you are. I need you married because I made this promise." So God intervenes. God is faithful when we are faithless. It doesn't say how Pharaoh connected the fact that there was a plague with Sarah, it doesn't say, but clearly the plague had to... It was clear that this plague is on account of Sarah. We don't know what there is, but clearly there's something there. And obviously, in some way, the Lord made it clear.
So Pharaoh calls Abraham and says, "What is this you have done to me? Why did you not tell me that she was your wife? Why did you say, 'She is my sister,' so that I took her for my wife? Now then, here is your wife. Take her and go."
Genesis 12:20, "And Pharaoh gave men orders concerning him and they sent him away with his wife and all that he had." And that's how the text ends. Starts with this incredible crescendo of faith; this man leaving everything to follow God, and it ends with darkness and despair and gloom, period.
Thanks be to God, that's not where the story ends; because, thanks be to God, Jesus Christ redeemed this story as well. And this is point three: tremendous faithfulness. You can ask this question, "How is Abraham even in the Bible after this?" Every single time God enters into covenant with a person, you just need to know that God promises, "I'm entering the covenant with you." Every single time the covenant is betrayed from the people's side.
As soon as God makes a covenant with Noah, Noah betrays that covenant with sin. No sooner that God makes his covenant with Abraham, Abraham throws the entire covenant to jeopardy with his unbelief. And the point here is that we all are like Abraham, that's why he's the prototype for the believers, this is why he's the prototype for what it means to be a follower of God.
We start in this place of God-forsakenness where we have been unfaithful to God, that one day we believe, the next day we're a sniveling coward and seeming to not believe at all. Every believer, every single one of us, we suffer from this spiritual schizophrenia, this mixture of spiritual sanity and loss of one's spiritual mind, faith and unbelief, courage and cowardice, obedience and flagrant disobedience.
At one moment, Abraham has this incredible trust and then turns his back, and this happened with every single person in scripture. Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, David, Hezekiah, Josiah, Judah, the Apostle Paul himself, the great Apostle Paul who saw Christ. Christ, the resurrected Christ, revealed himself to Saint Paul.
And Saint Paul tells us himself that throughout his Christian life, through all his years of following Jesus Christ, all his days and nights and various Roman prisons, through all his stonings, throughout the beatings, throughout the scorn, throughout the humiliation, throughout all the hard work, throughout all his victorious preaching and missionary work, evangelism and church planting, throughout all of it, he was sick to the heart because of his own sin.
And he writes this in Romans 7:14-25, "For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am of the flesh, sold under sin, for I do not understand my own actions; for I do not do what I want, but do the very thing I hate. Now, if I do what I do not want, I agree with the law that it is good. So now it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells within me; for I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is in my flesh. For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing."
"Now, if I do what I do not want, it's no longer I who do it but sin that dwells within me. So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am."
This Saint Paul, end of his life, has done so much great things for God. He's a believer for decades, he says, "Wretched man that I am. Who will deliver me from this body of death? Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then, I myself serve the law of God with my mind, but with my flesh I serve the law of sin." Saint Paul said this. This is tug of war between flesh and spirit.
David could have said this. When we talk about King David in scripture, which King David do we like? Do we like the King David who fights Goliath by incredible faith? Yeah, I love that King David. The King David who writes the psalms? I love that King David. The King David who just defeats a military with his army, I love that King David.
But then there's another King David, the King David that commits adultery with another man's wife and then kills her, the King David that neglects his own family so much so that it tosses the house of Israel into disarray for centuries; there's that King David.
Or which Peter, which Peter do we love? I love the Peter that falls down at the feet of Jesus Christ after the haul of fish when he obeyed Jesus and says, "Wicked man that I am, Jesus, depart from me." And we struggle with the Peter who, right before the crucifixion, in pure unadulterated cowardice, denies Jesus Christ three times.
Same thing with Abraham here. In the face of danger, he's willing to give up his wife because he disbelieves in God. He struggled with the same thing. So Abraham himself needs a savior. So where do we see Jesus in Genesis here? Where do we see Jesus in chapter 12?
We see it in chapter 12:3, "In you, God promised him, in you, all the families of the Earth shall be blessed." How? And I love this because God here doesn't leave humanity on their own in their sin. The God of the Old Testament is a missionary God, saving people, on mission to bless the Christ, the gospels and the missionary Messiah. The Holy Spirit of the book of Acts is a missionary spirit. The church of the New Testament is a missionary church.
In this verse right here he says, "In you, all of the nations will be blessed." How is this working? The deeper sense here is the promise in Genesis 3:15 where God says, "I'm going to send a seed. I'm going to send an offspring, one who will crush the head of the serpent. Through this seed, through the Messiah who will come in human form, all of the nations will be blessed."
And the reason Abraham could be called, spoken to, forgiven time and again, the reason why he's called righteous is because of Jesus Christ who came through his genealogy, through his line. Jesus was faithful, because Jesus was faithful, because Jesus never obeyed halfway, never compromised in the face of greatest temptation and pressures, in the face of even death itself. Jesus Christ went to the death for his bride, which is the church, because he loves with a covenantal love. Jesus was faithful to the death.
And Genesis 12:7, I don't know if you caught this in the text, said, "The Lord appeared to Abram." In verse 1, it said that God spoke to Abram. Here it says the Lord appeared to Abram. "To your offspring, I will give you this land. So he built there an altar to the Lord, who had appeared to him."
Whenever a word is repeated twice in a sentence in the Old Testament, you're gonna go like this is important. He appeared to him. How did he appear to him? Perhaps in a vision, or perhaps this was a Christophany. This is perhaps, perhaps, Jesus Christ himself.
And you say, "Where did you get that Pastor Jan?" Hold on. Hold on. And you should be very skeptical. Is it from scripture? Is it from scripture? I'm going to show you a couple of places that makes me think maybe, maybe.
In John 8, Jesus Christ is having a conversation with the Pharisees and he says this, "Your father Abraham rejoiced that he would see my day. He saw it and was glad." That's an interesting, interesting turn of phrase. But on first reading, what I'm thinking is, "Oh, Abraham, by faith, believes that he'll see by faith that Jesus will come," right? That's the first reading. But is that how the audience understood it?
So the Jews said to him, "You're not yet 50 years old and have you seen Abraham?" So the original audience, when they saw that Abraham will rejoice to see my day, how they interpreted, how they understood what he just said is: "You're telling me you saw Abraham?" And what's the response? Jesus said to them, "Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am." Because he's God. And they picked up stones to throw at him, but Jesus hid himself and went out of the temple.
Did Jesus see Abraham? I think so. I think so. And this is the reason why Abraham can be called the father of faith, can be called the righteous, because he knows that he, in and of himself, has no righteousness; but there is one who, through him, will come to save him, and Abraham believed.
So what made Abraham great wasn't just his faith, because it shows that he was also a sinner, it was his faith in Jesus Christ, knowing that he will be forgiven despite his sin. Galatians 3:7-9 gives us something similar, "Know then that it is those of faith who are the sons of Abraham. And the scripture foreseen that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham."
So God preaches the gospel beforehand to Abraham saying, "In you, shall all the nations be blessed." So then, those who are of faith, are blessed along with Abraham, the man of faith. The beauty of Christianity is no matter how back and forth we are in the faith, God always remains faithful. He will continue pursuing you if you are his.
And Jesus has made the church into a family so numerous that it's impossible to count. This is the nation that he's talking about. All the nations will be blessed, exceeding all borders, nationalities, ethnicities, social classes, etc. Thanks be to Jesus that when you repent of your sin, when you respond to the voice of God, the word of God, when you turn to him, you are justified at that very second.
And Martin Luther used the phrase "Simul justus et peccator", "I'm simultaneously justified, although yet a sinner." And that's all of us. And the way that we grow in our faith is by receiving the word of God, listening to the word of God, obeying the word of God.
I'll close with this; Abraham was called a friend of God. Abraham was called a friend of God, even though Abraham turned his back on God in this text, and turned his back on his wife. Abraham did not understand covenantal love, not yet, but he did afterwards when he understood that God did not leave him even when he turned his back, that God loved him with a love that he didn't even love his wife with.
And Abraham is called a friend of God. And I find that fascinating because if you... He should be called a sinner, a coward, a person that gave up his wife, but he's not. And what's fascinating is that God views us through the grace of Jesus Christ, that's the beauty of it.
And I'll just connect that with Job. Scripture says, "You have heard of the patience of Job." You have heard of the patience of Job. What's fascinating is that you read Job, and he's not very patient. For 38 chapters, he's just whining, and for good reason. But God looks at Job through the work of Jesus Christ and says, "Look at the patience of Job."
So how can God call Abraham a friend? Because he looks to Abraham through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, that's why he can be called a friend of God. Why all of this? Because of the work of Jesus Christ on the cross. And that's why when he is faithful, he's faithful to the end.
I'll close with 2 Timothy 2:11-13, "The saying is trustworthy, for if we have died with him, we will also live with him. If we endure, we will also reign with him. If we deny him, he also will deny us. If we are faithless, he remains faithful, for he cannot deny himself."
Let's pray. Lord Jesus, we thank you that you are faithful you are faithful to the end, that when you chose to come and save us, even in the face of great suffering, you went to the end. We thank you Jesus that when you call us to yourself, you give us the power of the Holy Spirit. And we thank you Holy Spirit that you are with us.
And if there's any vacillation in our faith, any of this to and fro, I pray that you, by the power of the spirit, solidify us in the gospel. We thank you for the example of Abraham. We thank you that he was faithful in responding to the call. And even when he was faithless, you remained faithful and you came and saved him from himself, from his sin. And I pray that you do that with each one of us. We pray this in Jesus' name. Amen.
Spiritual Schizophrenia
Genesis 12
April 11, 2021 • Genesis 12
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Jesus in Genesis, Season 2