Faithful
Abram
by Lois Tverberg
"The
LORD 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."
Genesis
12:1-3
God
chose Abram to begin His great plan to redeem the world. His fame comes
from his faith in God, which we will see most strongly when he is asked
to sacrifice his son Isaac and willingly does everything God asks until
God tells him not to follow through.
If
we read the story of Abram's call knowing its cultural context,
we see his faithfulness even in the beginning of his story. God's
first words to him were to leave his country, his people and his
family. In that day, that would have been almost as difficult
of a test as the sacrifice of Isaac. In his time, every kind of
security that a person had was bound up in their clan and their
land. There were no such thing as police, so if a person was
robbed or assaulted, the only protection they had was in their
clan. Without children, Abram also would have no security in old
age that anyone would take care of him. Abram's extended family
would have been his only place to go for help. So God was asking
Abram a huge thing in asking him to leave his people, because his
identity in that culture, his family, his protection and his future
security would all be left behind.
On
the other hand, God's promise to Abram would have meant much more in ancient
times than it did today. We think of success as becoming very wealthy,
or having power in government. But in Abram's time success was tied to
family-- the greatest hope a person could have would be that he or she
would become the mother or father of many descendants. By offering to
make of him a great nation, God promises him a huge prize in return for
th huge risk that he is taking.
Abraham
and Sarai and their little group were taking a huge risk when they left
all for the Lord. The fact that they were childless at 75 when they heard
the call may have made them wonder if a God who didn't wouldn't give them
children up until now would do so now. And then 25 more years of childlessness
didn't do anything to make them feel more confident that God would fufill
His promises.
Through
all the doubts, Abram remained faithful. And because of his faithfulness,
he is not only father of all the Jews, but all the faithful who
come to believe in his descendant, Jesus. Because
of his faithfulness, he became the father of a family that numbers
more than the sands of the sea. |