June 28, 2020 "Eyes open, can we see?"
Welcome to today’s installment of "God's Unlikely Promises!" Have you ever noticed that many of the Biblical Stories, especially those in Genesis, are presented like a television Soap Opera. Each event fits into the whole saga of God's involvement with the people Israel. But in order to appreciate what God is about, the listener must follow the story from beginning to end. Each chapter begins someplace, describes a situation, presents a problem or task and then provides what a plausible a solution. We find drama, danger, intrigue, confusion and even a little sex! And only after all the events have taken place, does it make any sense at all.
For instance, God promised Abraham that his descendants would number more than the stars. At 75 years of age, he sets out with Sarah, his wife for an unknown destination. Along the way, they are told that the land occupied by hostile people would one day be theirs. Not only is Abraham not able to take the land, but there is a famine, which is so bad that they leave to go to Egypt, where he passes off his wife, Sarah as his sister. So much for God's promise of nationhood!
After leaving Egypt, the people of Abraham and the people of his brother, Lot quarrel, endangering whatever possibility they had of securing great nationhood. They go their separate ways and after a few wars with neighbouring tribes, Abraham receives another blessing and a specific promise that he shall have an heir, who would produce countless descendants!
What kind of God makes nursery-promises to childless, elderly couples? Surely this God cannot provide. But as we heard, Sarah had a plan since God's plan didn’t make sense to an old woman and it wasn't working. "Take Hagar my maidservant. Have a child with her. Surely this is what God must have known that we would do. What other alternative do we have?" So they do and an heir, Ishmael is born. But God says there would be another. God announced to the now 99 year old Abraham, that he and Sarah will have a child.
Fat chance of that! ¬
¬But they do, which doesn’t end the drama, for now there are two sons, both loved, both with a future. From whom shall come the nation? How will division, political intrigue, civil war and strife be avoided?
Last week we heard of the insidious and evil treatment of Hagar and Ishmael at the hands of Sarah and Abraham and we heard how God heard they distress and provided! God saw to it that each heir would bequeath a nation. Each received God's blessing.
So, now we can settle into the story of the evolutions of God's people, as was promised. But wait, what is this? God, it would appear, has asked for the death of Isaac, the child of laughter, the miracle baby. With his death, who would be the progenitor of the promised people? Ishmael had been driven out. Surely Sarah wouldn’t have another child? What kind of God makes promises and then destroys them. What foolishness. What is it all about?
The story of the "binding of Isaac" is complicated and one which has given many a preacher and bible student a head-ache. It's one thing to speak of gods of whom it was believed required the sacrifice of children but how can we follow the directions of a God who provides such torture, pain and possible death? It doesn't make sense. Well, tune in tomorrow for another chapter in "God's unlikely promises!"
Some have suggested that this story is a polemic against human sacrifice which was practiced by some other surrounding nations, or as a transition in Israel's own traditions; replacing human sacrifice for animal sacrifice. While the early history of Israel may have set the stage for this story, it is not the reason why this story was reported.
This soap opera about God's dealing with a people called Israel has many characters but its lead character is no one of them. It is God. The soap opera is about God and God's promises which can always be trusted, even when they seem unlikely to come to pass, or appear on the surface to be cruel, outrageous or sinister. For at the end of the day, they are not and demonstrate an abiding love and care for the creatures which God has brought into being.
Our hero Abraham is presented as a individual with tremendous faith. But how deep is his faith? Does he have the stuff upon which God can build a people; a people who will remember, for all time, their ancestor, and will come to know more about their God by remembering this man Abraham and this woman Sarah and how they responded?
Surely, a 99 year old man whose wife has never borne a child and then gives birth would believe and trust in this God. Have you ever heard of such events? But what would happen if this child had never been. Would Abraham have trusted God as much as now? Against unbelievable odds and circumstances, he has persevered; but what if he were asked to relinquish the tangible proof of God's providence, his son Isaac, his laughter?
What will happen? God does not know for certain? What will happen at the appointed place of execution? Abraham does not know for certain. Like Job, this is Abraham's final test. Will he persevere, will he endure to the end? Will he trust?
When called by God, his son and the angel, Abraham's reply is a simple one, "here I am!" "Where is the lamb for a burnt offering?" "God will provide the lamb for a burnt offering, my son." An equally acceptable translation could be that God will see to it my son. Whenever else this Hebrew word is used, it refers to sight. We’ve heard that God hears in the Hagar and Ishmael sage but here God sees, in the sense of God's knows what God is doing even though it does not make sense to us. God shall provide, what ever is needed.
Abraham passes his test for he trusts God implicitly, no matter what; no matter how foolish, how sinister, how unbelievable the promise. Then and only then does God announce, "Now I know, for you have not withheld your son."
This is a story and a declaration about Abraham's faith and God's promise. For in God we can trust, says the biblical story teller. God will hear, God will see to it, God will provide.
Sometimes, we wonder what our future will look like; what our lives will offer; when will they end? We fret about the unknown, the unseen. But the assurance from this story is that God provides; God will provide; God will see to it and even if tested, if we must endure suffering, temptation, God will see to it, for God sees even in situations when we do not clearly see God or the future.
It is most significant that in later generations, the Israelites would build their Temple, their place of worship on the very site where some scholars believe that the binding of Isaac took place, on Mount Moriah which means God will provide and God shall be seen. Through our worship, our praise, our examination of our faith, God shall be seen and God's ways shall be made known.
Hagar's eyes were opened and she saw the well and she and Ishmael survived. Abraham's eyes were opened and saw a ram caught in the thicket and knew again that God was faithful and could be trusted in all things. This day causes us to see, to know, to believe and trust for God leads us onward
Let us think on these things. At least that’s the way I see it.