DAY
11
WHICH
WAY ARE YOU LOOKING?
THE
GOD OF ABRAHAM, ISAAC & JACOB
Genesis 27 & 28 and Matthew 8:18-34
When you
read the Scriptures which way do you look, or do you look both ways?
In Genesis 27 & 28 if you look at it
in one direction, the direction of what the humans are doing, then you get one
impression. You see in Genesis 27 Jacob and his mother manipulating the
situation, lying, and in verse 20 he invokes the Lord in his ruse. In Genesis
28 we see Esau out of anger purposely marry someone his family isn’t fond of. You
have to love the Bible’s sheer honesty in portraying life. If these stories
were made up, then they no doubt would have been sanitized.
Look the other way, toward God, and we see a different story. We see God’s
remarkable response to Genesis 27, He reaffirms his promise. The promise He
made to Abraham, the promise he made to Isaac, He now makes to Jacob,
immediately after Jacob has stolen the birthright! You might have thought God
would have taken a stricter action. The manner of God engaging Jacob is
dramatic; a dream, Jacob’s Ladder as it is called. At the top of the ladder is
God who then pronounces the promise.
The
point when you look this way: God’s behavior is not dependent upon ours.
Matthew 8:18-34 continues the short
bursts of Jesus that we have been addressing in the last few days. We have
moved from short sayings now to action. Jesus discusses the cost of following
him, calms a storm, and then heals two demon-possessed man.
I
find it curious that in the Old Testament I am reading all these machinations
of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob while at the say time observing God in action. In the New Testament Jesus is so prominent, so directly showing God’s nature that I do not see the "human direction" per se. It is there, but Jesus' presence overshadows it for me as I read.
In fact since the beginning of chapter 5 Jesus has been remarkably front and
center. Sooner or later there will be the errant comment from Peter, and sooner
than later the Pharisees will begin the harassment in earnest. For now however
Jesus is reinforcing what I see about God in the two Genesis chapters – that
God is not dependent on our behavior. Jesus certainly bears this point.
Maybe in the
end that is why God can describe himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob. When I think about this description, after all I have read about these three gentlemen, it is obvious that God condescends to describe himself so. For God this condescension is not an issue. He
knows himself, and who he is working through, often regardless and in spite of
themselves.
We have
learned much about human nature, and about God in these first 28 chapters, I
suggest when reading the Scriptures, make sure you look both ways.
Just one quick comment tonight. Matthew 8 31 And the demons begged him, saying, “If you cast us out, send us away into the herd of pigs.” 32 And he said to them, “Go.” So they came out and went into the pigs, and behold, the whole herd rushed down the steep bank into the sea and drowned in the waters.
ReplyDeleteBe careful what you ask God for!
I went back to look at this to help prep me for teaching this OT lesson for Sunday School tomorrow. What a wonderful reminder this lesson is that no matter how short we fall (even employing trickery to get our own way), God keeps His promises to us and still uses us! Amen!
ReplyDeleteHi Suzi, thanks for the comment, it is encouraging. And yes, I think it isn't that God is less interested in that we "fell down", I think it is just that he very much wants us to "get back up" and go to him!
DeleteI am playing catch up with my readings. I am always taken aback by the destruction of the pigs. I know they were filthy animals to the Jews but were someone's property.
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