Lot's
Choice
by Lois Tverberg
"Lot
looked up and saw that the whole plain of the Jordan was well watered,
like the garden of the LORD, like the land of Egypt, toward Zoar.
(This was before the LORD destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah.) So Lot
chose for himself the whole plain of the Jordan and set out toward the east. The two men parted company:Abram lived in the
land of
Canaan, while Lot lived among the cities of the plain and pitched
his tents near Sodom.
Now the men of Sodom were wicked and were
sinning greatly against the LORD."
Genesis 13:10-12
Even
though the Lord makes Abram wait for years to have the thing he most longs
for, a son, God starts to bless Abram materially immediately by multiplying
his flocks and Lot's too. At a certain point, Abram's and Lot's families
have to part ways because their flocks are too large for the land that
they have for them.
In
this story, the difference between Abraham and Lot's character becomes
very obvious. Abraham graciously offers Lot first choice of the land,
and Lot immediately takes advantage of the offer to choose the best and
nicest for himself. In doing so, he abandons Canaan, the land God promised
them in order to choose what was, in his opinion, better.
Interestingly,
Jewish commentaries point out that the way Sodom is described is a subtle
commentary on what it is really like. It looks like the "garden
of God", meaning the garden of Eden. They point out that even though
Eden was paradise, it was the place of human disobedience from which humans
finally were exiled. Sodom will be the same way - it is a place of great
disobedience to God from which Lot will have to leave when God's judgment
comes. Next, Sodom is compared
to the land of Egypt in beauty. But
the Egyptians were known for their sexual immorality, and Abram feared
that they would kill him to get his wife. That is another picture of Sodom,
which is known for its sexual perversion. This
is a hint, once again, to what Sodom is really like.
Then,
Lot gets pulled in entirely into the life of Sodom - when he moves there, he doesn't just camp
away from people where his sheep can graze, he moves close to the city
people who are known for their perversity. Lot was even involved
in city
affairs, "sitting in the gate" (the community center of the
city), fully a participant in an evil culture.
Lot
was truly foolish. He abandoned the good things God
had offered to choose something that at first glance seemed
better. But while it was attractive on the surface, underneath
its appearances, it was a place of sin and rebellion. Not only
did he choose it, he sank deeper and deeper into sin once
he had moved there. Because of Lot's foolish choices, he
lost all of his inheritance,
all of his wealth, and he even lost his wife when he had to flee.
Unlike Abraham who lived not by sight, but by clinging to God's
promises, Lot ran after what looked good on
the surface,
even though it would later cost him dearly.
Aren't
our own choices too much like that sometimes?
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