In Genesis 29, the deceiver Jacob gets his payback only not from the expected source, his brother Esau. This passage is a sure illustration of the Biblical principal that your sin will find you out. Rather than trusting in God to secure his blessing, Jacob practiced deceit at his mother's urging. Now Laban returns the favor by deceiving Jacob. The passage emphasizes the link between Laban's deceit and Jacob's previous deceit by highlighting common elements. Jacob is fooled by a disguise just as he fooled his dad. And Leah is described as having weak eyes, the very condition that allowed Jacob to trick his father. Clearly Jacob receives in Genesis 29 what he did to Esau. Three important lessons emerge here:
1. Treat others as you would be treated.
2. Wait on God to fulfill his promises. Don't take matters into your own hands like Jacob and Rebekah did.
3. God is a God of justice. In mercy, he chose Jacob. And Jacob's sin does not override God's mercy. But Jacob still reaps the reward of his own poor choices
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
A Taste for Stew
This week our sermon will be on Jesus' question: "What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul?" Apparently that would have been a question that Esau would have done well to consider. It boggles our mind that anyone would sell their inheritance for stew (some scholars think it should rightly be called a bowl of lentil soup), but Esau was a man of strong passions, and he did not take time to consider what the filling of his passions would cost him. In many ways, Esau would have fit right into the twenty-first century. We too live in a time of strong passions, where people are willing to mortgage the future for what they desire. This is true not only in terms of credit card debt, but it also true in terms of spiritual price. Esau's bowl of stew cost him his blessing from God and ultimately his soul. And many today are willing to pay the same price for temporary, passing pleasure. The story reminds of Esau reminds us that pleasure often comes at a high price.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Kierkegaard on Abraham's Sacrifice of Isaac
Here is a brief snippet of Soren Kierkegaard's take on Abraham's near sacrifice of Isaac. I'm sure you're tired of always hearing what I think!
"There was many a father who lost his child; but then it was God, it was the unalterable, the unsearchable will of the Almighty, it was His hand took the child. Not so with Abraham. For him was reserved a harder trial, and Isaac's fate was laid along with the knife in Abraham's hand. And there he stood, the old man, with his only hope! But he did not doubt, he did not look anxiously to the right or to the left, he did not challenge heaven with his prayers. He knew that it was God the Almighty who was trying him, he knew that it was the hardest sacrifice that could be required of him, but he knew also that no sacrifice was too hard when God required it- and he drew the knife" [Fear and Trembling, 36].
Would we agree that no trial is too hard when God requires it? And could we be so unflinching in giving up for God even that which is most precious to us?
"There was many a father who lost his child; but then it was God, it was the unalterable, the unsearchable will of the Almighty, it was His hand took the child. Not so with Abraham. For him was reserved a harder trial, and Isaac's fate was laid along with the knife in Abraham's hand. And there he stood, the old man, with his only hope! But he did not doubt, he did not look anxiously to the right or to the left, he did not challenge heaven with his prayers. He knew that it was God the Almighty who was trying him, he knew that it was the hardest sacrifice that could be required of him, but he knew also that no sacrifice was too hard when God required it- and he drew the knife" [Fear and Trembling, 36].
Would we agree that no trial is too hard when God requires it? And could we be so unflinching in giving up for God even that which is most precious to us?
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Terah
Genesis 11 marks the end of one section of Genesis with a transition to a new section. In Genesis 12, we will begin the story of Abraham and of the ultimate birth of the nation of Israel. Genesis 10 prepares us for that transition by telling us how the sons of Noah multiplied into many nations. Yet, none of those nations would have the relationship with God that would be had by the descendants of Shem through Abraham. Israel would stand alone as God's chosen nation.
What interests me as Genesis 11 closes is the story of Terah, Abraham's father. Verse 31 makes it clear that Terah left his homeland for the very long and dangerous journey to Canaan, the place that would ultimately become the Promised Land. Why did Terah go? We don't know. Was it related to the death of his brother Haran? Did he perhaps have some directive from God like Abram would? We don't know. All we know is that Terah never made it to Canaan. Along the way he became comfortable in the Ur of the Chaldeans and stopped there short of his final destination.
Does the same thing often happen with us? Does God call us but we fall short of his best because we get comfortable in situations other than the one to which God has called us? Do our service and obedience stop because a half way commitment seems easier than finishing the journey? Terah is a reminder not to get too comfortable in our walk with God. Instead, we need to keep pressing for the blessings that God has for us in Jesus.
What interests me as Genesis 11 closes is the story of Terah, Abraham's father. Verse 31 makes it clear that Terah left his homeland for the very long and dangerous journey to Canaan, the place that would ultimately become the Promised Land. Why did Terah go? We don't know. Was it related to the death of his brother Haran? Did he perhaps have some directive from God like Abram would? We don't know. All we know is that Terah never made it to Canaan. Along the way he became comfortable in the Ur of the Chaldeans and stopped there short of his final destination.
Does the same thing often happen with us? Does God call us but we fall short of his best because we get comfortable in situations other than the one to which God has called us? Do our service and obedience stop because a half way commitment seems easier than finishing the journey? Terah is a reminder not to get too comfortable in our walk with God. Instead, we need to keep pressing for the blessings that God has for us in Jesus.
Monday, January 3, 2011
Blameless and Faithful (thoughts on Genesis 5-6)
Genesis 5-6 paint a picture of gloom and despair. In Genesis 5, we get the genealogy of Adam to Noah and we see that the world is in the full grip of the curse. Verse after verse we read "then he died." While all the men of Genesis 5 lived many, many years, their outcome with the exception of Enoch was very much the same. They all died.
Genesis 6 isn't any better. There the grip of the curse is seen not in death but in wickedness. At the start of the chapter, there is a suggestion that fallen angels mated with human beings. (In the Old Testament, the term "sons of God" is always used to refer to angels. See also 2 Peter and Jude for their commentary on this passage) This sexual immorality is seen as a sign of greater and constant wickedness.
Things are bad. So bad that God decides to wipe out the earth and start over. Except, in God's grace, one man catches his eye. 5:8 says, "But Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord" (NIV). What was it that made Noah stand out? Verse 9 says, "Noah was a righteous man." And why was Noah found righteous? He was "blameless among the people of his time and he walked faithfully with God." In other words, Noah stood out among the people of his generation in terms of his character and his relationships. In addition, he walked with God, having a constant relationship with Him. The phrase of walking with God hearkens back to what Adam and Eve did in the Garden before the Fall. Noah cultivated a deep, personal relationship with God.
We live in dark times like Noah. Thanks to the work of Christ though, we can be righteous. We can be blameless among our generation. Perfect? No. But we can live lives that show a character that is different than the people around us. We can be kind and goodhearted and selfless. And we can cultivate a relationship with God- praying and reading the Bible daily and following the promptings of the Holy Spirit. In a world still in the grip of the curse, we can be people who stand out like Noah.
Genesis 6 isn't any better. There the grip of the curse is seen not in death but in wickedness. At the start of the chapter, there is a suggestion that fallen angels mated with human beings. (In the Old Testament, the term "sons of God" is always used to refer to angels. See also 2 Peter and Jude for their commentary on this passage) This sexual immorality is seen as a sign of greater and constant wickedness.
Things are bad. So bad that God decides to wipe out the earth and start over. Except, in God's grace, one man catches his eye. 5:8 says, "But Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord" (NIV). What was it that made Noah stand out? Verse 9 says, "Noah was a righteous man." And why was Noah found righteous? He was "blameless among the people of his time and he walked faithfully with God." In other words, Noah stood out among the people of his generation in terms of his character and his relationships. In addition, he walked with God, having a constant relationship with Him. The phrase of walking with God hearkens back to what Adam and Eve did in the Garden before the Fall. Noah cultivated a deep, personal relationship with God.
We live in dark times like Noah. Thanks to the work of Christ though, we can be righteous. We can be blameless among our generation. Perfect? No. But we can live lives that show a character that is different than the people around us. We can be kind and goodhearted and selfless. And we can cultivate a relationship with God- praying and reading the Bible daily and following the promptings of the Holy Spirit. In a world still in the grip of the curse, we can be people who stand out like Noah.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)