Abraham and Isaac, part two

“Do not lay a hand on the boy,” said the angel of the Lord. “Do not do anything to him. Now I know that you fear God, because you have not withheld from me your son, your only son.” (Genesis 22:12)

Last week I wrote about how, in his relationship with Abraham, God does not withhold anything.  And Abraham goes on to demonstrate to God, that in being willing to sacrifice his son, Isaac, he will not let anything come between himself and God.

The Sacrifice of Isaac, Caravaggio, 1605

Yet God does not allow Abraham to go though with this sacrifice.  Instead, as Abraham foresaw, “God provides himself the lamb for a burnt offering” (v. 8.14) – and God does so, not only for Abraham and Isaac, but much later for Abraham’s many descendents.   For as the evangelist John tells us, God sacrifices his own beloved Son, Jesus, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world (1:29).  At a place called, Calvary, not far from that ancient land of Moriah, God demonstrates he will withhold nothing from those who are children of Abraham – the literal ones as well as the spiritual ones.

And through his beloved Son, God invites us into the kind of relationship he had with Abraham. We, too, can enter into dialogue with God about the things that are important to us.  We, too, get to press God on what he has promised. Yet, as with Abraham, we, too, must not withhold anything from God.  If we cannot place everything we hold dear, including our Continue reading

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Abraham and Isaac, part one

Then God said, “Take your son, your only son, whom you love—Isaac—and go to the region of Moriah. Sacrifice him there as a burnt offering on a mountain I will show you.” (Genesis 22:2)

The story in Genesis where God calls Abraham to sacrifice his son, Isaac, is one that falls very hard on modern ears.  The notion that God would even consider asking Abraham to kill his own, or any, child is horrific.  What kind of God asks such a thing?  And then there’s Abraham who doesn’t even raise his voice in protest.  What kind of father would carry out such a directive, without even putting up a fight?

The Sacrifice of Isaac by Marc Chagall, 1960-66

But questions about motive and feeling, which are quite appropriate when discussing great works of literature, sometimes obscure our way when reading the Bible.  Attempting to identify and understand the inner workings of the characters in a biblical story in the same way as we would with a William Faulkner novel, for instance, will not lead us to the conclusions we need to reach in this passage.

Instead, the most important questions to ask Continue reading

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Bringing Home the Faith (nineteenth installment)

Bringing Home the Faith: a Pastor writes to her teenage son about Christian belief is a series of ten letters I wrote for my son addressing his doubts about Christian faith and answering his questions about what Christians believe and why.  Each letter is preceded by an Introduction which introduces its particular topic.

Please share these weekly installments of Bringing Home the Faith with someone in your life, whether young or old, who wants uncomplicated and honest answers to their questions and concerns about Christian faith.

Last week in letter No. 6: Why Becoming Like Jesus is What is Best for Us, I explained how Jesus can begin to bring out in us the good that we cannot do on our own.   This week I conclude the letter by writing about how true freedom is only found by submitting to Jesus’ will.

Jesus understood how strongholds such as pride, fear and idolatry make it impossible for us to be truly free and happy.  He was able to overpower them in his life and he can do the same in our lives, too.   In the gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke we hear that Jesus was tempted by the devil after he had reached adulthood and just before he began his ministry.  The temptations were designed to trip Jesus up so he would fail in his mission to set us all free from the power of sin.

Jesus tempted in the wilderness, James TISSOT, 1886-94

First the devil tempted him with fear and unbelief.  Jesus had been fasting and praying for forty days and he was hungry and without food at hand.  The devil tried to instill fear, Continue reading

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