Genesis
11,12
Peace be with you, listening friends. We greet you in the name of
God, the Lord of peace, who wants everyone to understand and submit to the way
of righteousness that He has established, and have true peace with Him forever.
We are happy to be able to return today to present your program The Way of
Righteousness.
In past lessons, we have been learning
about God and His way of righteousness. We have seen Adam and Eve,
Cain and
Abel, Seth and Enoch, Noah and the people of his generation, and Nimrod and the
tower of Babel. Only a few of our ancestors followed God and His way of
righteousness; most followed Satan and his way of unrighteousness.
Today we have come to the story of a
man whose name is well known in the Word of God, and who had an important place
in God's plan to redeem the children of Adam. The Scripture refers to this man
as "the friend of God" and "the father of all who
believe." Do you know who it is? It is the prophet of God, Abraham {Ibrahim
in Arabic}. The Holy Scriptures speak a great deal about Abraham. His name
appears in the Writings of the Prophets more than three hundred times. Therefore,
God willing, today and in coming lessons, we will search the Scriptures to
discover what they teach concerning this man who was called the friend of
God. Today we intend to look into the beginning of the story of Abraham, to
see how God called him to follow Him, and why He called him.
Before we begin, you should know
that, at first, Abraham's name was not Abraham, but Abram.
Two lessons from now we will see why God changed Abram's name to Abraham.
Today, however, let us keep in mind that Abraham was first called Abram. In
chapter eleven of the book of Genesis, we learn that Abram belonged to the descendants
of Shem. Do you remember Shem, Ham and Japheth? They were the three sons of
Noah. Between Shem and Abram, there were ten generations, just as there were
ten generations between Adam and Noah. Abram's father's name was Terah. The
Scripture says: "Terah became the father of Abram, Nahor and Haran. And
Haran became the father of Lot." (Gen. 11:27) Lot was the son of
Abram's older brother. Lot's Father had died {Note: in Wolof culture that would
make Abram Lot's functional father}. Abram's wife's name was Sarai. "Now
Sarai was barren; she had no children." (Gen. 11:30) Abram and Sarai
had the same father, but not the same mother.
Abram lived in a city named Ur,
which was located in the country of Chaldea, known today as Iraq. This city was
not far from where Nimrod tried to build the city of Babel with its tall tower.
The people of the land worshiped idols. Like all of Adam's offspring, Abram
was born in the darkness of sin. Abram's father did not know the true God
and neither did Abram.
However the Scriptures tell us that
one day the Lord God revealed Himself to Abram and spoke with him. You
need to know that in early times, God occasionally spoke directly with people,
because they did not yet have the Writings of the Prophets. Today God speaks to
people through the Holy Scriptures. That is why we no longer need words
which resound from the sky, or visions, or angels in order to know God's way of
righteousness. When we meditate upon the Holy Scriptures, we are listening to the
voice of God.
Let us listen now to what God said
to Abram. In chapter twelve, verse one, we read: "The Lord had said to
Abram, 'Leave your country, your people and your father's household and
go to the land I will show you.'" (Gen. 12:1) Did you hear what God
commanded Abram? He told Abram to leave his father's house, bid farewell to his
relatives, leave his country, and move to a country to which God would lead
him. To man's way of thinking, what God asked Abram to do was extremely
difficult, but God had plans to greatly bless him.
Let us now reread this verse and the
two verses which follow, to know why God called Abram to leave his home
and go to another country.
"The Lord had said to Abram,
'Leave your country, your people and your father's household and go to the land
I will show you. I will make you into a great nation and I will bless
you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless
those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on
earth will be blessed through you." (Gen.
12:1-3)
Why did God command Abram to move to
another country? This is why: God planned to make of Abram a new nation from
which the prophets of God and the Savior of the world would arise. That is
why God promised Abram saying, "I will make you into a great nation…and
you will be a blessing…and all peoples on earth will be blessed through
you."
Here is a great truth. Do you
understand it? God chose Abram to become the father of the ancestors through
which the promised Redeemer would come into the world. This Redeemer was
destined to be the Savior for all the peoples of the world, so that whoever
believes in Him, might be saved from the dominion of sin and Satan, and from
the eternal fire. Thus, we see that when God called Abram, He was moving
forward with His plan to send the Savior of sinners into the world. Abram
himself was not the Savior of the world, but he was to become the father of
a nation from which the promised Savior would come.
That is the promise {or covenant}
God made to Abram-on the condition that he leave his country and go to the
place that God would show him. Did Abram obey God? What do you think? The Word of
God tells us:
"So Abram left, as the Lord
had told him…Abram was seventy-five years old when he set out from Haran.
He took his wife Sarai, his nephew Lot, all the possessions they had
accumulated and the people they had acquired in Haran, and they set out for the
land of Canaan, and they arrived there."
(Gen. 12:4-5)
Why did Abram obey God, turning his
back on his father's home and religion? There is only one reason. Abram had
confidence in God. Abram did not know where he was going, but he believed
the word of the Lord which said, "Move out! If you move, I will greatly
bless you!" Abram had confidence in God and left his country as the Lord
God had told him. And God, in His faithfulness, led Abram to the land of Canaan,
which today is called Palestine or Israel.
Next, the Scriptures say: "Abram
traveled through the land…At that time the Canaanites were in the land. The
Lord appeared to Abram and said, 'To your offspring I will give this land.'"
(Gen. 12:6-7) Thus we learn that God, who promised to make Abram the father
of a new nation, also promised him a new country as well. That is what God
meant when He appeared to Abram and promised him, "To your offspring I
will give this land."
Again, we see something which
surpasses human wisdom. The land of Canaan had people living throughout it. How
could Abram and his descendants possess it? Abram was seventy-five years
old. His wife was sixty-five and childless. Could two elderly people have
enough children and descendants to fill the land? How could this happen?
Let us try to illustrate what God
promised Abram. It is like an elderly man who has no children and comes from a
far off land to visit Senegal. He comes with his elderly wife, who has never
been able to conceive. When they arrive, someone says to them, "One day
you and your descendants will possess the whole land of Senegal!" The old
man laughs and says, "You are very funny! My descendants are going to
possess the land? I do not even have any descendants! I am an old man; I have
no children, and my wife is unable to conceive--and you say to me that my
descendants are going to multiply and possess Senegal? Are you ill?"
Perhaps this illustration seems a
little absurd; nonetheless, this is the kind of promise God made to Abram-to a
man who was old and childless, with a wife who could not conceive. Listen to
what God promised Abram in chapter thirteen. He said,
"All the land that you see I
will give to you and your offspring forever. I will make your offspring like
the dust of the earth, so that if anyone could count the dust, then your
offspring could be counted. Go, walk through the length and breadth of the
land, for I am giving it to you." (Gen.
13:15-17)
Did God do what He promised? Did He make of Abram a great nation? Did He give the land
of Palestine to Abram's descendants? He surely did! In future lessons we will
see that Abram became the father of the Hebrew nation to which God gave the
land that, today, is called Israel.
Next, the Scriptures say:
"So [Abram] built an altar there to the Lord, who had appeared to
him. From there he went on toward the hills east of Bethel and pitched his
tent…. There he built an altar to the Lord and called on the name of the
Lord." (Gen. 12:7,8) What was the first thing that Abram did, upon
arriving in the new country which God had promised to give him? He slaughtered
an animal and burned it on an altar he constructed. Just as Abel, Seth, Enoch
and Noah did, Abram, in the same way, offered up animal sacrifices to God. Why
did Abram do this? He did it because God had not done away with His law which
states: "Without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness of
sin!" (Heb. 9:22) Abram, like all of Adam's offspring, was a
sinner. The only reason God could overlook Abram's sins was because Abram
believed God and brought to Him the blood of a sacrifice, which was an
illustration of the holy Redeemer who was to come into the world to die
in the place of sinners.
Our time is about up. What we have
studied today is very important and must not be forgotten. Do you understand
now why God called Abram to turn his back on his father's house and move
to another country? Yes, God intended to make of Abram a new nation,
which would be a "door of blessing" for all peoples of the
earth. What God planned to do with Abram was part of the wonderful plan
that He announced in the Garden of Paradise on the day that our ancestors, Adam
and Eve, sinned. Do you remember how God had promised One who would come into
the world to deliver the children of Adam from the power of Satan? Two thousand
years later, in the time of Abram, God had not forgotten His promise.
Today we have seen how God, in His
faithfulness, called Abram so that he might become the father of a nation
through which the promised Savior would come into the world. That was why God
promised Abram saying, "I will make you into a great nation and I will
bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will
bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples
on earth will be blessed through you." (Gen. 12:2,3)
Have you grasped today's lesson?
Allow us to ask you a couple of questions which summarize what we have studied
today. First: Why did God call Abram to leave home and go to another
country? Because God planned to make of Abram a new nation. Second: Why
did God want to make of Abram a new nation? Because it was through this
nation that God planned to give us the prophets, the Scriptures and at last,
the holy Redeemer Himself. Thus, in summary, we see that when God called Abram,
God was moving forward with His plan to bring into the world the Savior of
sinners.
Friends, we must stop here today. In
our next lesson, God willing, we will learn why Abram was called "the
friend of God."…God bless you as you meditate on His promise to Abram:
"I will make you into a great
nation. You will be a blessing…and all peoples on earth will be blessed through
you." (Gen.
12:2,3)
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