Read Genesis 22.
No parent would want to face this test. Isaac was the long awaited heir
to the future fulfillment of the promises of God. In Hebrew the word
"test" means "prove". It is one thing to say we
believe in God, to say that we trust Him, to say that we are followers of His.
It is quite another to actually put it into practice. It means putting
our faith in action. It is walking the talk.
Dr. Crawford Loritts, in his excellent book Leadership as an Identity,
devotes the last three chapters to what he calls "radical, immediate
obedience." No matter how strange or unthinkable it may have
seemed to Abraham, he arose early in the morning and set out to do what God had
commanded.
What was Abraham thinking? He did not know how it would turn out.
He did not know when or if God would intervene. He only knew one thing
and that was all that he needed to obey. "God will provide..."
(v.8). It is from this statement that we learn one of the names of God--Jehovah-Jireh,
the LORD will provide. Hebrews 11 helps us to further understand
how much Abraham trusted God during this test. "He considered
that God was able even to raise him from the
dead..." All of God's promises to Abraham and future
generations were on the line. Yet, he believed God would be faithful to
His word.
There are four discoveries as a result of this one test that our faith
needs today.
1. This is a proof of Abraham's willingness.
God did not
want Abraham to kill his son. He wanted Abraham to be absolutely
willing to do whatever God asked him to do; radical immediate obedience.
2. This is a proof of God's trustworthiness.
The commands
of God in His Word and the Biblical principles of life are most often
counter intuitive. Sometimes what God wants us to do does not make
sense to us. Human nature wants to see the outcome in advance. But
the believer has been called to walk by faith. If what God wants is
clear we will discover 100% of the time that God is worthy of our complete
trust.
3. This is a proof of God's faithfulness.
He did
provide at exactly the right moment. We all wish God would provide in
advance so we could avoid a crisis. But faith does not grow in a comfort
zone.
4. This is a proof of God's truthfulness.
God made an
everlasting covenant to Abraham and his descendants. Then, He
miraculously provided Isaac to continue fulfilling that promise. To slay
Isaac seemed to contradict all that God had said. However, God did not
change His mind or His Word. In verses 17-18, the angel repeated the
promise again. God's promises are true and completely reliable in
every test.
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