Reflection on Genesis 28:10-19

genesis28

Passage: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+28.10-19

Scripture

Jacob woke from his sleep and said, “Surely the presence of the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.”

Observation

Jacob comes to a certain place and lies down for the night. He dreams of a ladder reaching from earth to heaven and angels ascending and descending on it.

The Lord appears to Jacob and repeats His promises to Abraham and Isaac. These are promises of land, offspring and blessing.

Jacob wakes from his sleep and says, “Surely the presence of the Lord is in this place and I did not know it. This place is the house of God.” He anoints the stone he slept on and names the place Bethel, that is house of God.

Application

We christians have the Holy Spirit in us, and so every place we go is Bethel, for we are each one the house of God.

There are times when the Lord surprises us, perhaps speaking to us or acting for us in ways we did not expect.

The presence of God becomes obvious to us in these moments. Every day in all that we do, we should try to be aware of God. He is with us in all the moments of all our days.

Many years ago a monk known as Brother Lawrence wrote a book called “Practising the Presence of God.” The title itself is a clue- we need to practise listening and discerning God’s presence with us in the minutiae of daily life.

We can learn to take the opportunities to seek out the Lord in our daily routines. I know of one lady who assigns a prayer point to each household task. Others take a minute each hour to stop and ask “Lord what are you saying to me right now?”

It is so easy to miss appointments with God when we lose ourselves in the world. We need to seek out God in the unlikely places of our lives and declare with Jacob, “Surely the presence of the Lord is in this place.”

Prayer

Father in heaven, help me to seek you in everything I do. Please reveal yourself to me in my daily life. Amen.

Reflection on Genesis 25:19-34

6892d474-5367-43b0-b03b-004fda15856b

Passage: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+25.19-34

Scripture

Thus Esau despised his birthright.

Observation

Isaac, Abraham’s son, marries Rebekah. He prays to the Lord for a child as she is barren. She then becomes pregnant with twins.

The children struggle within her womb, so Rebekah prays and the Lord tells her that she has two nations inside her, and the elder will serve the younger.

When the twins are born, the first-born is covered in red hair so she names him Esau. The younger is clutching Esau’s foot so they name him Jacob.

Many years later, Esau returns from hunting one day to find Jacob cooking up a red stew. He demands some from his brother, but Jacob requires Esau to give his birthright to him, which he does.

Application

Esau despised his birthright. He was so driven by his flesh that he was willing to trade off his inheritance and position in the family for a bowl of stew.

It can be dangerously easy for christians to trade off their spiritual inheritance for some potentially short-lived fleshly desire. It might be sexual sin, an addiction or greed that leads us into a place where we are willing to give up our relationship with God, eternal life even, for some worldly gain.

The problem is that we see with our physical eyes rather than the eyes of faith, physical vision not spiritual vision.

Unlike Esau, the birthright can be regained if only we will confess our sins and walk in fellowship with the Lord.

The Lord has a birthright for every one of His children. We must not despise it.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, please protect me from every temptation to despise my birthright, the inheritance that I have in you. Let my eyes not be tempted by anything that leads me away from you. Amen.

Reflection on Genesis 22:1-14

abraham-sacrifices-isaac.png

Passage: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+22.1-14

Scripture

Abraham named the place Yahweh- Yireh which means “the Lord will provide.”

Observation

The Lord tests Abraham’s faith. He tells Abraham to take his son Isaac to the mountain to be a sacrifice to the Lord. Abraham does this.

Along the way, Isaac notices that they are missing an animal for the sacrifice and asks his father about this. “The Lord will provide,” Abraham declares.

Abraham builds an altar and places Isaac on it. Just as Abraham is ready to kill Isaac, an angel appears and stops him. Abraham looks up and sees a ram caught in a thicket.

Abraham names the place, Yahweh-Yireh, the Lord will provide.

Application

Isaac was God’s answer to years of prayer. He was provided by the Lord. He was literally Abraham’s hope for the future and the embodiment of every promise that the Lord had given to him.

Sometimes God calls us to sacrifice the things we hold dear, or things which represent long-awaited answers to prayer.

We must let go, for the blessings He gives us are not always ours to keep.

It could be a marriage, a dream job, a fulfilling ministry. Even though it seems cruel to have to yield it, the only way to grow in our faith is to let go.

When we do this we find that the Lord truly is our provider. Everything we give up for His sake is restored to us. It may not be exactly the same thing that we gave up but it will be better.

It is God’s nature to be our provider. This is who He is. This is what it means to call Him Yahweh Yireh. He restores what is taken from us and gives more as well.

Yahweh Yireh- the Lord will provide. For Abraham it was a sacrificial ram. For others it is what is needed in the moment.

My role is to trust and obey. I obey what God tells me to do, always trusting that He will provide what is needed.

Prayer

Thank you Lord for this example of faith by Abraham. Just as you provided what Abraham needed at that point of sacrifice, I know that you will provide for me as I seek to obey you. Amen.

Reflection on Genesis 21:8-21

stdas0548

Passage: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+21.8-21

Scripture

Then God opened her eyes and, she saw a well of water. She went and filled the skin with water and gave the boy a drink.

Observation

After Isaac is born, Sarah becomes jealous of her servant Hagar and Ishmael, the son she had born to Abraham. She tells Abraham to cast mother and son out into the wilderness so that Ishmael will not inherit what should be Isaac’s.

Abraham is distressed by this, but the Lord tells him that Ishmael will become a nation as well as Isaac. Reluctantly, Abraham sends Hagar and Ishmael away.

Hagar runs out of water and is ready to die along with her son. Then God sends an angel to bring words of comfort, and opens her eyes to see a well.

Application

Ishmael was conceived from unbelief. He was Sarah’s way of making God’s plan work when it was obvious that they needed a miracle.. Yet, because of his father, God still honoured him and provided for him.

God cares for the outcast.

God is not ashamed of our shame.

God accepts us In out rejection.

When we fell that we deserve nothing from God’s hand, then we are ready to receive all things from Him.

Sarah failed to believe in God’s power when she hatched her plan to help Him out. But now Hagar is desperate- there is no life without God’s intervention.

Sometimes when we are in a place of desperation we need to see God’s provision. We might fear God has not answered our prayer. In those times we need to ask God to open our eyes to see what is already there.

Prayer

Lord, please help me to see the well that you provide, the answer to desperate prayer that is already here. Amen.

Reflection on Genesis 18:1-15

Book_of_Genesis_Chapter_18-1_(Bible_Illustrations_by_Sweet_Media)

Passage: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+18.1-15

Scripture

Is anything too wonderful for the Lord?”

Observation

The Lord appears to Abraham in the form of three men. Abraham asks the men to stay for a while, and he prepares food for them. He has Sarah prepare some bread, and a servant kill a calf.

While the men are eating, one of them says that Sarah will soon have a son. Sarah is listening from inside a tent and she laughs at this statement because she is so old.

The Lord says to Abraham, “Why did Sarah laugh and say ‘Shall I bear a child in my old age?”” He then repeats the promise that Sarah will have a son.

Application

The Lord asks Abraham the rhetorical question, “Is anything too wonderful for the Lord?”

Human wisdom says that God is irrelevant to our lives. Faith says nothing is too hard for God.

Do I put my trust in God or in myself and my own resources?

Humanly speaking, it was impossible for Sarah to have a child. But now God brings a promise of something that seems impossible or too good to be true.

Surely I cannot have a child.

Surely I am too wicked to be forgiven.

Surely I cannot be healed

Surely I have missed my opportunity.

Faith says with God all things are possible.

Faith says God loves me and wants the best for my life.

Faith says that God is able to save, able to heal, able to give back what others have stolen.

Life can knock us around through hurt, disappointment, dashed dreams. But God can redeem these things, turning them around for our good.

Sarah didn’t have faith to receive the promise- not even a mustard seed of faith- but He acted anyway. How much more could she have received if she believed the promise?

Do not think “it could never happen for me.” Instead, remember nothing is too wonderful for the Lord.

Prayer

Today Lord I choose to believe your promise for me. Nothing is too wonderful for you. Hallelujah!

Reflection on Genesis 1:1-2:3

creation

Passage: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+1:1-2:3

Scripture

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.

Observation

In the beginning God created. Over six days, God set about forming a bleak and dull universe into something beautiful and capable of sustaining life.

There is a method, a process, of firstly forming the heavens, the water and sky, and the earth, and then filling them.

At the end of the sixth day, God proclaims it is very good, and then sets aside the seventh day as the Sabbath rest.

Application

In the beginning God…

God is at the beginning of creation. Nothing is made without Him. Nothing lasts without Him.

Our lives should be the same- every plan, every thought , every deed should find its beginning in God. It is when we move away from the source of all things that we move towards sin and death.

In the beginning God created…

It is in God’s nature to create, to bring into being things that were not. We are created in God’s image, and therefore we are creators. Every human being has the capacity to create things- art, poetry, movies, buildings, inventions, more people.

When we believe that we are not creative, then we are in bondage to sin- satan has lied to us about our destiny and our purpose.

In my lifetime, I have seen an explosion in wealth around the globe due to creativity. Some of this is in harnessing God’s creation (agriculture and mining), some of it from turning God’s creation into human creation (industry), but much of it is in services where human ingenuity is harnessed, for example in the software that runs our apps and internet services. Financial services multiply wealth when money- intrinsically valueless in itself- generates more money as it is transformed into different states.

Creativity is a blessing from the Lord the creator. It is an exceptional sign of the image of God in human beings.

Of course, due to sin we can corrupt this to destructive and sinful ends. God calls us to build up not pull down and to create not destroy.

Prayer

Lord God, how amazing it is to think that before all things came into being, you were there. How awesome to contemplate that this world, for all its problems, is a product of your design and not a chance arrangement of atoms. Amen.

Reflection on Genesis 3:1-7

temptation3156

Passage: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+3.1-7

Scripture

The serpent said, “Did God really say…”

Observation

The serpent says to Eve, “Did God really say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree in the garden?’” Eve replies that they were allowed to eat from any tree except the one in the middle of the garden.

The serpent then entices Eve with the prospect of knowledge of good and evil, and that this is something that God is trying to keep from them.

So Eve takes the fruit and eats it, and then offers some to her husband. Then their eyes are opened, and they know that they are naked.

Application

At the heart of every temptation that comes to the follower of Jesus is the question, “Did God really say…?”

When we are torn between what our fallen nature wants to do and what God wants us to do, then satan comes along wit the deadly question, “Did God really say?”

Sadly, there are too many christians who do not know what God has said in His word, and so they can’t accurately or confidently answer this simple question.

There are people who know the word of God intellectually but do not carry it in their hearts. These people perform the most amazing mental gymnastics to justify their own sins. When the devil says “Did God really say that homosexuality is an abomination?” they will twist the words, redefine terms and deny the plain meaning of the text to say “No, God didn’t really say that?”

We need to know the word of God. We need to understand the will of God for our lives.

In Ephesians 6, the word of God is described as the sword of the Holy Spirit, If we know the scriptures, we can quickly cut satan down with this powerful weapon.

Prayer

Help me, Lord, to know, understand and take into my heart your wonderful word. When I am tempted with the question, “Did God really say?”, may I always have the grace to say, “This is what God has said!” Amen.

Reflection on Genesis 15:1-18

genesis-15

Scripture

After these things the word of the Lord came to Abram, “Do not be afraid, Abram. I am your shield; your reward shall be very great.”

Observation

The Lord promises Abram that he will have a great reward. But Abram is worried about his lack of heirs. The Lord promises that his descendants will be as numerous as the stars in the sky.

Abram then asks how he can know that God’s promise to give him land will come true. The Lord tells him to get a heifer, a goat, a ram, a turtledove and a pigeon. When the sun goes down a smoking firepot and a torch pass through the carcases, acting out a covenant ceremony. So the Lord solemnly promises to give land to Abram’s descendants.

Application

Sometimes it is hard to see how God’s promises can possibly some to pass. We may feel inadequate to a task laid before us. Perhaps the promise we have been given seems impossible in any human means.

When God acted out the covenant ceremony, He was using the most solemn vow possible to say to Abram “You have my word. You will have both land and descendants.”

What seems impossible with man is always possible with God, who always keeps His promise.

Prayer

Lord, I recognise that you always keep your promises. Help me to trust you in this. Amen.

Where was Adam?

Like Adam in the picture above, I sometimes scratch my head at what people come out with in church and in Bible Studies. Often what they say is actually the gospel according to some celebrity preacher who obviously must know more than I do because I’m just a country hack preacher without a TV show.

So last night we were watching a part of a DVD asking about death and sin, and there was a re-enactment of the temptation of Adam and Eve. In the dramatised version, it showed Adam nearby watching the interaction between the woman and the serpent (which actually had a human rather than a snake-like form).

At the end of the presentation discussion was dominated by an assertion that Adam wasn’t there when Eve was tempted and he came along later, and then she gave him the fruit and then he ate it. This theory is based on Paul’s assertion in 1 Timothy 2:14 that it was not Adam who was deceived but the woman. So clearly Adam wasn’t in on the temptation part and must have come later.

In three years of theological college and 30 years of pastoring, I hadn’t heard that one before. I can’t even see how you derive a doctrine on such a thin bit of text. The whole section of 1 Timothy 2:11-15 is difficult because of its use of language, including a word translated as “to have authority over” which is used only once in the whole of the New Testament and probably means more along the lines of to domineer or to intimidate rather than to merely teach or lead.

So I did some research and found that this view that Adam wasn’t there for the temptation is not uncommon. For example it gets a run at Answers in Genesis. It seems to have been formulated by Reformer John Calvin, and its popularity in some evangelical circles goes back to him, and is often used as a reason to keep women in an inferior position in the church.

If you look at the story in Genesis 3:1-6 you notice that it is closely written and that it does seem to happen quickly. We don’t know how long the conversation went on with the serpent. We know in our own experience that temptation can happen in a flash or it might take years to ferment before an action occurs. You could speculate that the serpent was on Eve’s case day after day- we just don’t know the time scale. We do know that even in a perfect environment, sin is always a possibility.

So on the day of the sin, the temptation comes again (or maybe for the first time). This time Eve looks at the forbidden fruit and her desire for it is awakened. In Hebrew, verse 6 is written with a narrative form called the “vav (or waw) consecutive.” This means each phrase is introduced by the letter “vav” which means “and”. It could be written as “she took some and ate and gave it to her husband who was with her and he ate it.”

We are meant to see this as one rapidly occurring action with each step following swiftly from the one before. There is no time delay.

The text even says “her husband who was with her”. The Hebrew word iym which means “with” suggests not just near proximity but common purpose (as in the name for Jesus Immanuel- God is with us).

There is no gap implied in the text. Adam was there right on the spot when she was looking at the fruit. He knew what she was thinking, and not only did he fail to stop her from sinning, he joined right in.

Paul says that Eve was deceived but Adam was not. But Paul says in Romans 5 that sin entered the world through Adam, not Eve. To me that says that Eve had an excuse, but for Adam it was just plain rebellion.

The most important rule of Scripture interpretation is this: The plain meaning of Scripture is usually the one that is right. You make allowances for context and literary types, but Scripture should be, and usually is, easy to understand.

The second rule is this: Allow the Scriptures as a whole to help interpret a specific text. Sometimes you will find a New Testament reference to an Old Testament passage and that will give some added insight into the meaning of both.

Finally, try to allow God’s holy word to speak for itself. Ask Holy Spirit to give you understanding and try to keep your preconceived notions to one side. That way we allow God to speak to us rather than us telling God what He should believe.

Reflection on Genesis 17:1-16

Scripture

Abram fell face down and God said to him, “As for me, this is my covenant with you: You will be the father of many nations.”

Observation

When Abram is ninety-nine years old, the Lord appears to him with a covenant. The promise is that the Lord will give Abram many descendants- he will be the father of many nations.

God will not just be Abram’s God, but the God of all this descendants. He will give Canaan as an everlasting possession to Abram and his descendants.

The sign of faithfulness to the covenant is that Abram and every male descendant, including slaves bought from others or born in his household, are to be circumcised.

Application

It seemed impossible to Abram that at the age of ninety-nine years, and his wife Sarai being well past child bearing, he could become a father of many nations.

Abram is thinking Ishmael, but the Lord has bigger plans than Abram can imagine.

This is always true for all of us. We see with limited vision, but God sees unlimited potential.

When we walk in humble obedience to our Father, the seemingly impossible becomes real.

Prayer

Father, you are the God of the impossible. Please let your miracle breakthrough come into my situation. Amen