Genesis: Part 5
Genesis 12:1-9; 15:1-6
SERMON TRANSCRIPT
We are going to be continuing in our Genesis series this morning, so if you want to flip over or maybe pull up an app on your phone, tap over. We're going to start in Genesis chapter 12, and this is a little bit of a jump. If you remember last week, Andrei was nowhere near chapter 12. And so this is going to kind of jump a few chapters, and we're going to jump in and talk about Abraham this morning. And the big picture in this series is within Genesis, we wanted to kind of connect the dots. That sometimes we can read this book of Genesis, which is crazy. I think we were doing some research this week. Genesis covers like 800 and something years, which is absolutely crazy. Just like one book, and I think I butchered that number just now. But one book's covering hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years, and it's just like the beginning of the Bible. And then you have all the rest of this. It's absolutely crazy. And so what our heart in this Genesis series was to do was to connect dots, to see kind of how God moves and his character in Genesis doesn't just stay in Genesis, right? But to see how he connects to the whole scripture, and ultimately how even Genesis directly connects into the New Testament and the Gospels with Jesus. And we're going to touch on that this morning in talking about the covenantal faithfulness in the life of Abraham. And so if you wanted to jot down some thoughts this morning or to take some notes this morning, here's where I want to go today. I want to remind us to live by faith. To remind us to live by faith and to emulate Abraham's actions, even in the midst of unknown, uncertainty, delay, society chaos, the world around us. Does that sound familiar to these last few weeks? Of the chaos that is happening around us that even in the midst of all of this, we can rest in the faithfulness of God. Amen?
And so knowing that these promises that we're going to read about here, even in Genesis, a couple thousand years before a man by the name of Jesus who comes to earth, God is fulfilling those and that Jesus Christ is the yes to all of Abraham's questions. And we're blessed because we get to have kind of this backward perspective to see all throughout history, to see the life of Jesus, and then to make the connect to Abraham. Abraham didn't have that. Abraham just had what was in front of him and what God was calling him to, and he was called to be faithful. So we're going to jump in Genesis chapter 12 verse 1, and we're going to have it on the screen, but I really want us to pay attention to what's happening right here. And it says this, it says, "The Lord had said to Abram," okay, time out real quick. I have already said Abraham, right? Right? So a little context here for you. Abraham is his original name, okay? And it isn't, I believe, until chapter 17 or 18 in Genesis, does Abraham, or actually God, change Abraham's name to Abraham. Okay, so this morning, we just said it, Abram and Abraham, we're just going to use those interchangeable, okay? We understand kind of where it's going, where it's headed, and so I may say Abraham, and I might say Abram, but we're just going to keep tracking with me here with this, okay?
So the Lord said to Abram, "Go from your country, your people, and your father's household to the land I will show you. I will make you a great nation, and I will bless you. I will make your name great, and you, Abram, will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you, I will curse. And all the peoples of the earth will be blessed through you." So Abram went, as the Lord had told him, and Lot went with him. Abram was 75 years old when he set out for Haraan. He took his wife Sarai, whose name also will be changed later to Sarah, Sarai, his nephew Lot, so we know the relationship, uncle, nephew, all the possessions they had accumulated and the people they had acquired from Haraan, and they set out for the land of Canaan, and they arrived there. Abram traveled throughout the land as far as the site of the great tree of Morah at Shechem, and at the time the Canaanites were in the land. The Lord appeared to Abram and said, "To your offspring I will give you this land." So he built an altar there to the Lord who had appeared to him. From there he went through the east hills of Bethel and pitched his tent, with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. There he built an altar to the Lord and called on the name of the Lord. Then Abram set out and continued toward Negev.
So right here at the beginning of this, we kind of, just a few short verses, we come on scene and Abraham, he's hanging out, 75 years old, and he's just living life in Haraan. Life's great, business is great, he's making wealth, his fucks are booming. He couldn't be happier where he's at. Life is fabulous. But then in the midst of all this, he receives this divine summons from heaven. God comes down to him and says, "Hey, I want you to pick up, I want you to go from your country, your people, your father's household, where he had been, so Abram is actually the tenth great-grandson from Shem, who was the son from Noah. So Abraham is actually a direct descendant of Noah himself, who after the flood, you guys, if you know some of your Bible, the flood waters receded and then it was Noah and his family and their wives, and then they were in charge of repopulating the earth. And so it's probably understood that Haraan was where the family settled, and then generation after generation after generation after generation, they're building up their big family and they create cities and communities and homes, and here we come to Abram. And so he's living nine generations deep in this just beautiful world that is just going great financially, but spiritually is in the tank. We know that we read from Joshua 24, too, that the sins of the people had started to grow again. And that was kind of the problem that began with the flood, that the people had grown so wicked apart from Noah and his family that God said, "I've got to hit the reset button here." And so God hits the reset button and then we go through the Tower of Babel and all these other bad things that are happening in Sodom and Gomorrah and all these things. And so we kind of find ourselves in the same place and God's like, "I need to get my guy Abram out of this land because I want to take him to what's going to be understood that we hear about later through Exodus and Joshua and all that into the promised land." So God is kind of setting this thing up and he calls out Abram and he says, "Hey, I need you to leave." And we kind of just in a one short verse we read and it says, "And Abraham went." But what we forget is like the divine nature of this and the steps of faith that Abraham had to take to just pick up roots of his whole life that he knew in this land of Haraan. But what happened here, we're going to see this pattern of back and forth. God moves and God begins to provide a sovereign initiative.
There is something bigger that God is doing in this moment that we just read in one tiny little sentence of what God is trying to set up for the future. And God in here in this divine invitation, he layers in some pretty extravagant promises. Did you guys catch those? He said he's going to forge Abram into a great nation. He's going to bless and magnify his name. He's going to curse those who curse him. But most profoundly, he's going to channel blessing through him to all the people of the earth. That's pretty amazing. And if you guys were ever in Sunday school growing up, Father Abraham had many sons and many sons had Father Abraham. The problem is right now, Abram and Sarai, they don't have no sons. All they have is Lot, his nephew, which probably at this point would be assumed that that's his son. Abraham sees his nephew Lot as his son because he doesn't have any biological children. So even at this moment, Abram has an immediate and worshipful response even though there's still so much unknown. There's still so much that Abram's like, "Okay, I don't know how you're going to do this, God, but you know what? I'm going to be faithful." And there's an immediate worshipful response. And so Abraham packs everything up and starts a 400-mile trek over to this land that God is calling to. The problem is that where he is and where Canaan is, there's a giant desert in the middle. And so Abraham actually has to go up and over all around the desert because there ain't no way that he can just shoot straight through. They would die in the desert. So 400 miles they start traveling. And then they arrive. They show up at Shechem. It says, "Beneath the sacred oak." I don't know where that is. It sounds like it would be a pretty cool place to be. And so 400 miles, I don't know how long the journey would have taken, years, they finally arrive and they see this massive oak tree and God just pours out onto Abraham and says, "You have arrived." And so what is the first thing that Abraham does? He builds an altar and he worships God. Immediate worship. And then he does it again or he travels on to Bethel and does the exact same thing in verse 6 through 9. These are heartfelt markers of a life oriented towards God. And in this we see a couple things.
The first thing we see, we see obedience is the hallmark of faith. Obedience is the hallmark of faith. See, this early testament move from Abraham is actually the same thing that Jesus calls us to today, right? What does it say? It says in Matthew 16:24, "Whoever wants to be my disciple, they must deny themselves to take up the cross and follow me." True faithfulness thrives not in safety but in surrender. Abraham had the safety in Haraan. He was set. He was probably going to be set for many generations after him. But he knew that God was calling him to something greater than that. And we have to, in ourselves, in our lives, we need to prioritize God's voice over cultural ties or personal security. Sometimes God's going to call us to step out. And we need to be obedient in that to step out, not to delay, not to go, "Hey God, I need to know a little bit more detail. I need to know what my net worth is going to be when I get over to the land of Canaan, God. I need to have some hard numbers in front of me. I need a spreadsheet. I need to see that ROI really going up to the right before I'm going to make any move here, big guy." But that's not what Abraham did, right? He was obedient immediately and stepped out. And then too, in that, we see that worship is the fruit of responsive trust. These altars that Abraham built, they integrated faith into the very fabric of Abraham's life. And that every time that he would go back, he would pass those altars, he goes, "I remember what God did there." And the generations that would come after Abraham, we'd pass by those altars and go, "Remember when grandpa came through here with all of his people? God was here. God was in this space. God showed up." The reminders that we worship where God meets us, even in the midst of the unknown.
So then we go into the next chapter, and I'll kind of give you a synopsis here, that basically it comes to the land of Canaan and his nephew Lot and Abram. They start having their own herds and their wealth and all this start growing, and there's not enough land. And so Abraham tells Lot, "Hey, I don't want to get into more conflict than where we're at. You choose whatever land you want around here, and I'll go the opposite. You go your way, I'll go my way. I don't want to fight with you anymore. It's getting too hard. Family, right? Come on." And so he goes out. They go out to a hillside, and Abram goes, "Where do you want to go, Lot?" Lot sees this really beautiful green land right near the city of Sodom and Gomorrah, and he goes, "I want to go towards the green." And Abram goes, "Okay, you go that way. I'll go this way." And so they kind of split ways for a little bit, and what starts to happen is Lot starts going and hanging out in Sodom and Gomorrah. Maybe one weekend a month, and then a couple weekends, and then he's staying there for like a whole week, and things are not good in Sodom and Gomorrah. And what happens is this military power rises up and actually comes in and captures Lot and takes all of his wealth and all of his hurt and all this stuff, and then Abraham hears about his nephew and goes on a rescue mission. Good old Uncle Abraham coming in hot and captures back Lot, takes back all of his wealth that he had passed on to Lot, and they capture everything, and he brings Lot and all of his family back to where he is. And so at this point, there's a little bit of anxiousness that's happened in Abraham, right? He kind of has this reality check of who he thought was going to be his heir because, again, still no children. And in Lot, he realized the fragility of life, that at any moment, his heir, his future could be taken from him. And so he kind of starts to get anxious, and he has this hard reality check that he remembers previously that God had promised to him that he was going to be a great nation, that he was going to bless all the peoples of the earth through him, that he was going to have all this extra stuff, but he's going, "God, how is that going to work? I have nobody." And what I love about this is that even in the midst of Abraham wrestling with this, God's not forgotten about Abraham.
And it says this, chapter 15, it says, "After this, the word of the Lord came to Abraham in a vision, 'Do not be afraid, Abram, I am your shield, your very great reward.' But Abram said, 'Sovereign Lord, what can you give me since I remain childless? And the one who will inherit my state is Eliezer of Damascus.' And Abraham said, 'You have given me no children, so a servant in my household will be my heir.' Then the word of the Lord came to him, 'This man will not be your heir, but a son who is your own flesh and blood will be your heir.' He took him outside and said, 'Look up at the sky and count the stars. Indeed, you can count them if you can count them.' Then he said to him, 'So shall your offspring be.' Abraham believed the Lord, and he credited it to him as righteousness.”
It's pretty amazing what we see in this. Is that even in the midst of everything that's happening to him right now in this moment, that God's faithful reassurances come to him. And God meets him where he's at, that decades have passed in this, that the promise with no error in sight, and the flesh of perils of rescuing Lot just recently, that these fears begin to surface, and yet, God invades him in the night with a vision. "Do not be afraid, Abraham. I am your shield, your very great reward." God addresses Abraham's real, raw lament. Everyone's like, "Dude, I got nobody. You keep saying I got somebody, but I don't have anybody." And God goes, "I'm not done yet. I'm not done yet. In fact, let's go outside. Go outside. Take a look at the stars." You guys ever been camping and looked up at the stars? Get away from city light, like pitch black darkness, and look up at the stars? It's like holy buckets. And God kind of jokingly, I feel like, he's like, "Abraham, go ahead and count them, bud. Like, go ahead. I'm waiting. I have all of eternity. Go ahead." And God's like, "This is what I'm doing." And I think about how many times post this, even before, spoiler alert, he gets a son. Okay, sorry. Season two, a little early. But how many times would Abraham, when he's feel discouraged, I could see him going out, laying down at night, just staring up at the stars, and falling asleep in the peace of God? What a blessing. What a blessing that God's faithful reassurances don't go away. That this cosmic illustration counters our human limitation with his divine vastness. Because I guarantee you, there ain't no counting those stars. We have telescopes today that Abraham never had, and we can't even keep counting the stars. You hear about scientists discovering new stars, millions and millions of light years away. Each day it feels like. That God's still working. And what's Abraham's response? He has a vulnerable, yet victorious belief.
Here's how he responds. It says, "Abraham believed the Lord and accredited him as righteousness." There's this word in here, pistis, which is an idea of faith. But a faith that is active, as relational, that is not just a passive nod, but a defiant hope. As we read that in Romans 4:18, it says, "Against all hope." Abraham believes. Abraham believes at a depth I don't know that he's ever believed before. And probably deeper than any of us have ever had to have a faith in our lives here and now. That despite barren wombs and advancing years for both him and his wife Sarai, he continues to have faith. And this enduring faith, even amid delay and doubt, Abraham holds strong. Paul, the Apostle Paul in the New Testament in the book of Romans writes about the faith of Abraham. And he said, "It did not weaken his faith, but it grew strong through what he believed." See, I think the greatest acts of faith in God come in the midst of the waiting, not in the receiving. The greatest thing that we can receive in our faith, the gift of God, is received in the waiting, not in the receiving. And that this idea of righteousness is a gift of trust, not effort. Righteousness is something that we can only receive when we have trust in God. And it's really a prototype for us and the Jews and the Gentiles in the early church that Abraham reveals Jesus' justification. That faith alone activates God's accounting of righteousness as seen in Galatians chapter 3. And it's faith, not works. A truth that is essential to the gospel. Nothing that we have done. At this point, Abraham has done nothing except be obedient to go.
And there's a portion after this in chapter 15 of Genesis where God has a covenant before Abraham. And traditionally in that culture, what they would do when two people would have a covenant, there's a couple different versions of them, but one of them would be done with animals. And each party would bring an animal to the covenant and they would literally, it starts getting a little gross, they would cut the animals in half and they would lay them out in front of them with space between the two animals, with each having their own personal sacrifice in this commitment. And the two of them would walk through the animals together signifying that we both have committed to this, we both have sacrificed into this, and we both play a part in this. This isn't just a one-sided deal. These are both parties coming together in a full commitment till death. And so God has Abraham bring in a calf, a ram, an ox, I think there's birds involved, a lamb. And all these animals are sacrificed. And do you know who walks through that? God. God as a pillar of smoke and a fire representative walks through that path of the animals. And this is powerful because for the first time on earth, a covenant is being made by one party. And God is signifying to Abraham that I am the one that sustained this, I am the one that will fulfill this, that I am the one of this covenant. And this is so powerful. God, we could do like an eight-week series on covenants. It's pretty amazing. I know this one's a little gory, but it is a beautiful picture that God is giving Abraham that I alone am the one that will fulfill this, sustain this, and I will redeem you. I will keep my word. And so in this we see that God is moving in powerful ways. And that God actually has this inviting covenant and calling on Abraham's heart.
And so when we see this, we read about this covenant and we see this calling that's echoed throughout Scripture as God's eternal love, not based on foreseen merit, but sheer grace. And so what is our response? Our response, just like Abraham, is to have an urgent and personal calling. See, God breaks into the ordinary of Abraham and he calls him out. He says, "Go, I will make, I will bless." God is wooing him, drawing him from the earth's pagan altars into a destiny of divine partnership. Abraham hasn't done anything yet. And yet God is giving him this promise. God is calling him and inviting him to co-labor in the redemption on a grand narrative. And even amidst vulnerability and not understanding, God calls Abraham deeper. He says, "Fear not, look towards heaven. Look up to the scars. Look up, look up. See what I have promised to you." And he makes a vow. He says, "I, God, am a God of my word. I don't break covenants. I don't break promises." God is the one that will faithfully sustain this bond. And so God sees and has a key demonstration for us to be invited into his protection, into his blessing, into his safety, into his love. And just like a shepherd caring and calling his flock, God woos his shielding presence and overflowing bounty, drawing out of our fears to replace them with awe-inspiring trust in who God is. See, a covenant was not broken. That covenant that God made with Abraham was fulfilled.
Because when we look at the bigger picture from Genesis down the line, we see Abraham, he gets his new name Abraham. He has a son Isaac, and then comes Jacob. And then all the way down we come to King David. And then from King David we come down, and this is like in Matthew chapter 1, all of the names that we read through, it might take us like an hour to get through all these names. We go literally person by person, point by point, connect the dots, all the way to a man who shows up out of Nazareth by the name of Jesus. That even at this time of Abraham calling, or God calling Abraham out to take him to the land of Canaan, to the promised land, would then fulfill and start a trek towards the redemption of the true, fulfilling covenant in Jesus Christ. That this new covenant as seen in Hebrews chapter 8 is the fulfillment of the Abrahamic call. And God declares, He says, "I will put My laws in their minds and I will write them on their hearts. I will be their God and they will be My people." No longer is there just this unknown of what's going to happen. God lays it out with Abraham. And He says, "I am beginning the redemption party." And it's going to start with Abraham. And I'm going to redeem him and his family in this moment as well. And we ultimately know that in the end, the old law is fulfilled in Jesus, and that from one man's obedience becomes a multitude's adoption into God's family. That even while Abraham is childless, God already has the redemption plan with a giant party for eternity in heaven ready to go. And that all who believe, and they said in Galatians chapter 3, that all who believe are called the sons and daughters and the heirs of the most high God.
o where does this leave us? Well, it leads us to a place of we ourselves as followers of Christ get to share in Abraham's inheritance through the blood of Jesus Christ on the cross. And that we not inherit just promises, but a calling to mirror Abraham's trust in responsiveness, in worship, and endurance. And as we bask in this new covenant superiority where Jesus' blood seals what Abraham alters had foreshadows, a practical exhortation of our daily living is played out. That was a big, real large word sentence to say we live it every day. And part of our vision and mission to be making disciples in the everyday stuff of life. You and I are called to be faithful followers of Jesus in the everyday things that we do. That in our mowing of the lawn, we are faithful to God. In our taking our kids to school, we are faithful to God. In our shopping, we are faithful to God. In our errands, we are faithful to God. In our work, every single day, the hours we put in, we are faithful to God. We are faithful to God in our retirement that we, every day, God doesn't have the calling of the workplace, but he has a calling probably for a family life, right? To love our spouse, we are to be faithful to God. To how we parent our children, we are to be faithful to God. How we take care of our bodies, we are to be faithful to God. Abraham stepped out in bold faith. He had to leave the life behind where he was living to step into the calling of the new life that God had for him. And this models the same response of obedience that we have and the submission of even that Jesus had to God to willingly go to the cross for our sins. And that Abraham's faithful steps foreshadow the ultimate covenant being fulfilled in Jesus Christ, which then trickles into the calling that Jesus gave us before he went back to heaven to go and make disciples. Turning this abstract covenant fulfillment into a practical daily living of missional obedience. We have to nurture belief even in the seasons of delay. Abraham had to wait years before God gave him that son.
I think sometimes, Andrei and I, we were looking at, we have this book in our office that has like the timeline of people in the Bible. And sometimes there were hundreds of years that passed before God answered a prayer. We get frustrated if it doesn't happen in the next 24 hours, right? 200 plus years, God still fulfills his promises. And that all of God's promises are answered as a yes in Jesus Christ. Abraham shows us in the New Testament of firms in Hebrews 11:6, that without faith it is impossible to please God. Just this. It's only by faith. And then we see Abraham's response when he arrives in the land of worship by building altars to remember what God has done, remembering how he moved, remembering his fulfillment. A journey that long, there was no guarantee that you would arrive at your destination. So I think even arriving in the land that God said I'm going to give you was a blessing and an answer to prayer by itself. And this is a call for us to build altars of praise in our lives. Maybe this is done in personal worship. Maybe this is done corporately together. That's why we gather every single week. We are making an altar to God to remember his faithfulness and his promises and his covenant. To celebrate God's drawing, wooing faithfulness, which sustains us against a culture of provisional vows. So God's faithfulness, or faithfulness in itself, equals bold, obedient steps, steadfast belief, and enduring worship. Christian, live by faith. If you call yourself a believer in Jesus, you're a disciple of him, be encouraged today. Live by faith. Maybe you've been praying for something for a really long time and you don't know if God's going to come through. God will come through. I promise you that. Live by faith, but don't live by a passive faith. Live a faith that is active, that is enduring, that isn't just sitting and waiting, but that is still on mission for Jesus. Where you live, where you learn, where you work, where you play and have fun. Worship God.
I've got three questions for us to ponder as we close out this morning. I want us to think about how does Abraham's immediate obedience challenge areas in my life where I'm hesitant to follow God's call? Where's God currently calling me to step out or maybe wooing me out of my comfort into a deeper dependence in him? Maybe you think about how can I respond with Abraham's openness that when God says, "Go," Abraham says, "Yes, I will go." Second question. In your waiting seasons, how can I practice Abraham's active faith? What intentional steps can I take? Even when we're tempted to doubt, which we all are, right? We're all fallible. We're sinful. We freak out. We try to take control. We try to do it ourselves. We try to fix it, right? Even when we're tempted to doubt, what does choosing belief over despair look like for you? And then finally, in what ways can I build an altar this week to remind me of God's faithfulness? What can you do this week? Maybe you need to take some time intentionally and block out on your schedule and go on a prayer walk. Maybe go find a quiet place in a park. Maybe take a drive out into the nature. I don't know, maybe you're driving up to Lake Tahoe this week. Just to sit along the shore, bask in his glory, and to take a moment and be very intentional in a worship to him. Building an altar. Maybe you need to start a prayer journal and you just call it "my altar." And every day you're going to write something down in that. And you can go back when times are hard. You can go, "God, I remembered when you did this." How can we build altars of worship in our journey, deepening our trust during uncertainty? Abraham is an amazing man of faith. Called him, I think, called the father of faith. Even in the midst of everything that was coming against him, he stood strong, he stood bold, and he worshiped.
Let's pray. Jesus, I thank you for the man who Abraham was. And Jesus, we know that right now in eternity, he's there worshiping you. That even in the midst of everything that came up against him, he was still faithful to you. And God, that you divinely invaded his life with an audacious call to go to the promised land where God was going to establish his people through the lineage of Abraham. And that even while he was having no child, there was failed attempt after failed attempt after failed attempt with him and Sarai. God, you gave him the promise of your covenant with him. So God, as we sit where we sit in our life today, where we feel like you might be so far away, where you're not listening to us, or you're not hearing our cries, God, I pray that we would continue to cry out to you, that we would continue to worship you in our waiting, that even in the midst of that, God, we may take time to even tonight go outside and look up at the stars and begin to count them to know that you gave that starry promise to Abraham. God, that you have a promise to us to fulfill our eternity. That through the lineage of Abraham would come David, who would come Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world. And that in receiving Jesus Christ, we receive in the same covenantal inheritance promised to Abraham thousands of years ago. So Jesus, I pray that we would continue to trust, we would continue to endure, we would continue to have the faith, the father of faith, Abraham, and that we would worship where our feet are in front of us. We thank you, Jesus. We love you. Amen.