God Becomes the Sacrifice

5-5

“What does this reveal about God and His salvation?”

That’s the question the Israelites, the original readers, asked when they read their Bibles. When they asked Genesis 22 this question, they got three answers.

God demands sacrifice

The first readers of Genesis were Israelites. They would not be surprised when they read in Genesis 22 that God demanded a sacrifice from Abraham. That was par for the course; it was normal, everyday life for them.

“Of course God demanded sacrifice. He is holy, He is offended by sin, and He demands sacrifice to cover sin, appease His anger, and restore fellowship with sinners.”

What was surprising in Genesis 22, indeed stunning, was the nature of the sacrifice – Isaac!

God dictates the sacrifice

Isaac! Sacrifice Isaac! Abraham, offer your son, your only son, the son you love, as a burnt offering.

From Cain and Abel onwards, Israel was used to the idea of God determining what sacrifice would be acceptable and what would not. It wasn’t up to sinners to decide. As the offended party, God alone could dictate the terms.

Both Abraham and Isaac comply. They know that the wages of sin is death and if God says , “Isaac must die,” then who were they to argue? God dictates the sacrifice.

God substitutes the sacrifice

The idea of substitution, an animal life in exchange for human life, was present from the first sin onwards in Genesis 3. But never had a human life come so close to actually becoming a sacrifice.

The Israelites had watched animal sacrifices. They had even participated in sacrificial rituals like the Passover, where they laid their hand on the lamb’s head to transfer their guilt, slit the lamb’s throat, collected its blood, and burned the carcass.

But they had never been personally bound on an altar of wood; they had never had a knife raised above their heads. That’s what makes this narrative so unique, so revealing, so powerful, so shocking.

When God stopped the sacrifice of Isaac at the last moment, Abraham heard a bleating sheep and turned round to find a ram caught in a bush. No further instructions were necessary. Isaac and the ram exchange places, the knife is raised again, and this time it plunges deep into the ram, the fire is lit, and the flames leap heavenwards.

Imagine those spiritually intense and intimate moments as Abraham and Isaac watched the flames, smelt the smoke, felt the heat.

“That could have been you, son.”

“That should have been me, Dad.”

God provided a substitute sacrifice.

God becomes the sacrifice

Neither Abraham, Isaac, nor any Israelites at that time could have ever fully grasped that God would one day not only demand sacrifice, dictate the sacrifice, and substitute the sacrifice, but would also actually become the sacrifice.

The Son of God understood it, as He watched from heaven and anticipated that awesome day. He also increasingly understood it as He grew in knowledge of His Bible, especially of Genesis 22, during His time on this earth.

And when it came for Him to not just understand but experience Genesis 22, He willingly stretched out His life on the altar as a sacrifice to cover human sin completely and satisfy divine justice totally. And when the knife was raised and the fire set, there was no “Baa!”

There was no substitute for Him, so that there would be one for us.


This episode of Living the Bible lines up with Expedition 5: Day 5 in  Exploring the Bible Together: A 52 Week Family Worship Plan and Exploring the Bible: A Bible Reading Plan for Kids. You can catch up with previous episodes of the Living the Bible podcast here or subscribe on iTunesSpotify, and Google Podcast.


Why is my teenager feeling like this?

Do you have a teen suffering with anxiety and depression? Wondering what you can do about it?

When it comes to a parent’s role in helping depressed and anxious kids, the key words are balance, flexibility, teamwork, hope, and communication.

Here’s the second in a series of videos to help teens suffering from anxiety or depression. If you’ve got a question about teen anxiety or depression, leave a comment and I’ll try to answer it in a future video.

You can read more about the subject in Why am I feeling like this? A Teen’s Guide to Freedom from Anxiety and Depression. 


Great Words for Great Losses

5-4

These past few months have been a time of great loss.

We’ve lost our health and maybe even our loved ones through Covid-19. We’ve lost jobs or at least income with the lockdowns. We’ve lost friends and social contact through the quarantines. Our kids especially have lost education, opportunities, trips, and experiences they had looked forward to. We’ve lost church, at least -in-person church. We’ve lost a sense of security with all the uncertainty. We’ve lost our national unity as protesting and riots have divided us on race.

If there’s one thing we need to hear when we are feeling our losses and fearing more losses, it’s this, “God will provide.” That’s what Abraham kept telling himself when he thought he was losing everything in Genesis 22:6-10 when God called him to sacrifice his son, Isaac.

I’M LOSING EVERYTHING

At every step of the way, Abraham was reminded of his impending massive loss.

  • When he packed (6a)
  • When he travelled (6b)
  • When he talked (7-8)
  • When he made the altar (9a)
  • When he tied Isaac on the alter (9b)
  • When he raised his knife (10)

Abraham wasn’t just losing his son,
he was losing his salvation.

What can comfort us in our own times of loss? What comforted Abraham? God’s provision (8).

GOD WILL PROVIDE

These three words supported Abraham:

  • When he packed (6a)
  • When he travelled (6b)
  • When he talked (7-8)
  • When he made the altar (9a)
  • When he tied Isaac on the alter (9b)
  • When he raised his knife (10)

How did Abraham do this? By faith.

By faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises was in the act of offering up his only son, of whom it was said, “Through Isaac shall your offspring be named.” He considered that God was able even to raise him from the dead, from which, figuratively speaking, he did receive him back (Hebrews 11:17-19).

When you fear “I’m losing everything,”
have faith that “God will provide.”

LIVING THE BIBLE

Abraham renamed that place “God will provide” (22). He used God’s past provision to encourage him in God’s future provision. When we are feeling our losses and fearing more losses, remember God is providing and God will provide.


This episode of Living the Bible lines up with Expedition 5: Day 4 in  Exploring the Bible Together: A 52 Week Family Worship Plan and Exploring the Bible: A Bible Reading Plan for Kids. You can catch up with previous episodes of the Living the Bible podcast here or subscribe on iTunesSpotify, and Google Podcast.


Trust the Tester when he Tests your Trust

5-3

None of us like exams or tests, do we? I suppose some brilliant geniuses do, but for the rest of us exams and tests mean stress, fear, and sometimes exhaustion. Not a pleasant experience is it? But we can persuade ourselves to keep going if we remind ourselves of the aim or purpose of these exams and tests. We step back and re-frame the test to endure and succeed in the test.

We can experience the same unpleasant feelings when it comes to tests of faith, can’t we? Stress, fear, and even exhaustion. Let’s look at how God tested Abraham’s faith in Genesis 22:1-5 to help us endure and succeed in our own tests.

TESTS ARE DESIGNED BY GOD (1)

  • God chooses the student to be tested
  • God chooses the timing of the test
  • God chooses the subject of the test

Tests are providential not accidental.

How testing will these tests be?

TESTS GET TOUGHER (2)

  • Tests start easy
  • Tests more difficult
  • Tests have a final

Tough tests form firm faith 

What will I learn from these tests?

TESTS REVEAL WHO WE ARE (3-5)

  • No complaint from Abraham
  • Full compliance by Abraham

God will test our trust to see if we trust the tester.

LIVING THE BIBLE

When our faith is tested, let’s remember that the test is from God, the test is toughening our trust, and the test is exhibiting our trust.

Trust the tester when he tests your trust.


This episode of Living the Bible lines up with Expedition 5: Day 3 in  Exploring the Bible Together: A 52 Week Family Worship Plan and Exploring the Bible: A Bible Reading Plan for Kids. You can catch up with previous episodes of the Living the Bible podcast here or subscribe on iTunesSpotify, and Google Podcast.


God’s Shelter in the Gathering Storm

5-2

The persecution of Christians is growing both around the world and in our own nation: verbal persecution, physical persecution, financial persecution, media persecution, political persecution, judicial persecution, academic persecution, online persecution, and corporate persecution. It’s why Al Mohler has called his most recent book, The Gathering Storm. Sometimes we can feel under siege and wonder if we will survive, or if our children will survive, or if the church will survive.

Genesis 21:8-14 has a sobering yet encouraging message for us. It reminds us of the inevitability of persecutors, but also of the invincibility of the persecuted.

CHILDREN OF THE PROMISE WILL BE PERSECUTED

  • Children of God’s promise rejoice in God (8): As we’ve seen in the past couple of podcasts, there’s been a ton of joy and laughter in this home recently. They celebrate the child of promise, the one chosen by God, through whom the world would be blessed.
  • Children of the human effort hate God (9): Ishmael abused Isaac verbally and physically, illustrating what all children of the promise can expect in their lives (Gal. 4:29).

When God’s children rejoice, God’s enemies rage. God’s blessing rejoices his children but enrages his enemies.

How will infant Isaac survive this Satanic onslaught?

CHILDREN OF THE PROMISE WILL BE PROTECTED 

  • Sarah protects the child of promise (10-11): Sarah saw the spiritual jeopardy, the spiritual danger. This was not just bullying; this was the seed of the serpent trying to extinguish the Seed of the woman (Gen. 3:15)
  • God protects the child of promise (12): Abraham was reluctant to go so far as to cast out Hagar and Ishmael, but God said, “Yes, this is necessary for the protection and salvation of the children of promise.” God promised to look after Ishmael (13), but he had to separate the child of promise from the child of human effort so that there would be more children of promise (Gal. 4:30).

The seed of the serpent launched an all-out assault on the seed of the woman, but God kept his promise to the children of the promise. Ishmael said to Isaac, “You will be extinguished,” but God said to Ishmael, “You will be exiled.”

When Satan bites and bruises your heel, remember you will crush and crunch his head (Rom. 16:20)

LIVING THE BIBLE

Make sure you’re a winner not a loser. Make sure you are on the winning side, not the losing one. There are only two teams: children of the flesh and children of the promise; those who are trying to be saved by human muscle and those who are being saved by God’s muscle. This passage warns us that if our hope of salvation is in God’s muscle, we will suffer at the hands of human muscles (and mouths). But it also encourages that God’s muscle and mouth are far greater than any amount of human muscles and mouths. Take shelter in God’s promise in the gathering storm.


This episode of Living the Bible lines up with Expedition 5: Day 2 in  Exploring the Bible Together: A 52 Week Family Worship Plan and Exploring the Bible: A Bible Reading Plan for Kids. You can catch up with previous episodes of the Living the Bible podcast here or subscribe on iTunesSpotify, and Google Podcast.