Introduction
The account of the
sacrifice of Isaac is a dramatic record of remarkable crisis in Abram's life.
It is a story without precedent or parallel in Old Testament.
It was without precedent
because Jehovah God had never demanded human sacrifice.
It was without parallel
because no one else had ever been commanded to do it.
Scene - heartache,
brokenness, lack of understanding, illogical - son of promise now to be
sacrificed to the God who provided him. Surrounding pagans had regularly
offered their children as a sacrifice to their gods, but not to Jehovah. It all
seemed so improbable and impossible - and unnecessary. Why? That question must
have pierced Abram's heart.
And what would he tell
Sarah? How could he face her? No imagination could reveal the tumult and
turmoil in Abram's heart and mind as he journeyed into Moriah.
Think what it meant to
Isaac. He was young, energetic - now life was to be taken from him. Note vs. 6,
8. "They walked on together." The key is that God was
"testing" Abram.
Notice some things about
life's longest journey.
I. The
Certainty of this journey - v. 1
"After these
things." It must and it does come. And for many, it comes often. God cares
about your heart. He tests the purity of your love and the consistency of your
obedience.
Rom. 14:10-12, "For
we must all stand before the judgment seat of God. For it is written: As I
live, says the Lord, every knee will bow to Me, and every tongue will give
praise to God. So then, each of us will give an account of himself to God."
2 Cor. 5:10, "For we
must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each may be repaid
for what he has done in the body, whether good or bad."
Your testing will come.
God is serious about your relationship with Him. What things? Things that are
common to men and women of all times and cultures.
·
Relocation: from Ur of Chaldees to Haran and finally to the area
near Hebron. At different times Abram lived in Shechem, Bethel, Hebron and
Beer-sheba.
·
Sorrow: his father Terah died in Haran.
·
Economic collapse: famine drove him to Egypt for survival.
·
Deception and failure: he lied about Sarai being his wife.
·
Success: he become wealthy and powerful near Bethel.
·
Family argument/disagreement: separated from Lot. Lot, in Sodom,
captured by Elamites. Abram goes to rescue. "Blood is thicker than
water!" There
is magnetic appeal of family! Meets Melchizedek and is blessed by this
mysterious priest. Gives tithe to Melchizedek. God promises Abram a son.
Lacking in faith, Sarai offers Hagar to Abram. Ishmael born. Transforming
encounter with God. Names changed to Abraham and Sarah. Ishmael mocked Isaac -
he and Hagar expelled. Then came the test on Moriah.
These are things common
to humanity. This journey came to pass "after these things." And it
will for each of us.
II. The
compelling urgency of this journey: v. 2
"Take your son . . .
and go . . . ." It must be dealt with now. It cannot wait! God's time is
always "now."
2 Cor. 6:2, "Now is
the acceptable time, look, now is the day of salvation."
Heb. 3:7-8, 15; 4:7,
"Today if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts."
James 4:13-14, "Come
now, you who say, "Today or tomorrow we will travel to such and such a
city and spend a year there and do business and make a profit. You don't even
know what tomorrow will bring - what your life will be! For you are a bit of
smoke that appears for a little while, then vanishes."
Imagine the difficulty of
this journey, the heartache and the grief.
III. The
consistent provision of this journey: v. 2
"land of
Moriah." "Moriah" means "provided by Jehovah." These
mountains in Moriah are gifts of His unfailing love and grace. Without this
experience we would succumb to the most dread kind of bondage. We would be
utterly dependent upon the temporary things around us. Fear of loss would
paralyze us. The Mountains of Moriah free us from the cruel chains of fear.
IV. The
clear purpose of this journey: vv. 15-18
"Now I know ...
bless you." The eternal purpose of God is to bless us and to bring us ever
back into His loving arms, freed from earthly fear of loss, danger or failure.
Secure in his presence:
Ps. 91:1-2, "The one who lives under the protection of the Most High
dwells in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say to the Lord, 'My refuge and my
fortress, my God, in whom I trust.'"
V. The
competing priorities of the journey: v. 2
"your only son whom
you love . . . offer him as a burnt offering."
The gift of God had
become more important to Abraham than the God who gave the gift. Perfectly
right and normal for father to love his son, but the great commandment is,
"Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with
all your strength" (Deut. 6:5).
Abraham's son had taken
God's place in his life. God will never allow that to happen without whispering
in your ear, "Take now thy son . . . ."
This conflicting of
priorities happens to us so easily. We confuse His gifts and His possessions
with Him, and soon we have left our first love. Rev. 2:4, "I have this
against you: you have abandoned the love you had at first." The church at
Ephesus made a deliberate choice. Lit. "abandoned their first love."
Choosing between priorities, we often make the wrong choice.
Do you remember how it was
at first? How sweet, fresh and real your love for Jesus was? Fresh love is
willing to give all for Him.
God knows where or when
your obedience of love became the obedience of duty, and you went about doing
His work, but not His will. Perhaps it first began to show in our speech. We
talked about the things of Jesus rather than Jesus: i.e. His house, His
children, His kingdom, His interests, His joy, His peace, His blessing, etc.
These things that take
His place could be:
·
Family: Mark. 1:20 (James & John)
·
Possessions: Mark 10:21 (Rich Young Ruler)
·
Position: (Job)
·
Church/fellowship: Matt. 17:8 (saw Jesus only)
·
Dreams/Ambitions
There are many mountains
in Moriah, and so there are many mountains for you in your journey. When we
fail to heed His gentle reminders - suddenly hear that awesome call: "Take
now . . . " and you fill in the blank. What is it that stands between you
and God today? What is it that is more important to you than Him?
It will be a difficult
journey. For Abraham it took three days' journey into the desert. But it was
worth it! It will be the hardest journey you have ever made. It must come to
pass in order for God to bless you with Himself.
Illustration: Karen
Watson, killed in Iraq, wrote a letter to pastor to be opened at her death:
"You should only be
opening this letter in the event of my death. When God calls there are no
regrets. I tried to share my heart with you as much as possible, my heart for
the Nations. I wasn't called to a place. I was called to Him. To obey was my
objective, to suffer was expected. His glory was my reward. His glory is my
reward.
"Care more than some
think is wise. Risk more than some think is safe. Dream more than some think is
practical. Expect more than some think is possible. I was called not to comfort
or success but to obedience."
And that is His call to
us all!
VI. The
conquering grace of the journey: v. 11-14
"Do not lay a hand
on the boy or do anything to him, for now I know you fear God, since you have
not withheld your only son from me. Abraham looked up and saw a ram caught by
its horns in the thicket. So Abraham went and took the ram and offered it as a
burnt offering in place of his son. And Abraham named that place the Lord Will
Provide, so today it is said: "'It will be provided on the Lord's
mountain.'"
Ps. 56:3
God never intended to
take Isaac - only to test Abraham. And the test was not for God's sake, but for
Abraham's. God intended to bring Abraham to full surrender to Himself and to
full faith.
Note vv. 4-5 (The boy and
I will come back). Note Heb. 11:17-19, "By faith Abraham, when he was
tested, offered up Isaac. He who had received the promises was offering up his
unique son about whom it had been said, 'In Isaac your seed will be called.' He
considered God to be able even to raise someone from the dead, from which he
also got him back as an illustration."
And it was on a mountain
in the land of Moriah that our Lord became our sacrifice (2 Chron. 3:1).
Amazing Grace!
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