This morning we’re
going to begin a new sermon series that’s going to take us up to and into
Advent. And it’s a kind of series that I haven’t attempted before. We’re going
to be looking closely at just one Biblical character and following his story
from beginning to end to see what we can learn from him – not just from his
faith, but from his faults and his failings too. Because the more you read
these stories, the more you realise that the so-called heroes and heroines of
the faith are just as human and fallible as we are.
The person we’re
going to be travelling with is Abraham, whose story is found in the early
chapters of the book of Genesis.
So why Abraham?
Well, there are a few good reasons why he’s especially worth our attention.
The first few chapters
of Genesis sound almost mythical in places and to this day the church can’t
agree on how to interpret the accounts of Adam and Eve, The Tower of Babel and
Noah. Some would go to the stake to defend their historicity; others would be
equally convinced that they’re legends; albeit legends that teach us important
truths about ourselves and God.
But Abraham is the
first Biblical character of real significance to emerge from those shadowy mists
and be seen in clear definition. He really was. We know his story. And in many
ways, his story sets the trajectory for the whole Biblical narrative. It’s no
exaggeration to say that we are here in church today because of him.
The promises God
made to Abraham were worked out through the history of the people of Israel , but
found their ultimate fulfilment in Christ; and that’s why, perhaps more than
any other Old Testament figure, the New Testament writers keep taking us back
and back again to the story of Abraham.
And that story
continues to have huge resonances for us in today’s world. 2 billion
Christians, a billion Muslims and twelve million Jews claim some kind of
spiritual or ethnic heritage from this one man.
As we’ll discover
later, God changed his name from Abram to Abraham – which means ‘father of
nations’ - and that’s exactly what history has proven him to be.
In an age when
religious tensions continue to simmer, perhaps it’s no bad thing to remember
that for all our differences, we do share a common ancestor and at least some
common ground.
We join Abraham’s
story at the beginning of Chapter 12 in Genesis when he’s still known as Abram,
and we find him living with his father’s people in the town of Haran . His father, Terah, had set out from
the city of Ur in Babylonia with a view to
travelling to Canaan, but for reasons that are never made clear, he abandoned
that idea and settled in Haran in Mesopotamia .
Abram is married
to Sarai, but they’ve been unable to have children and largely because of that,
they take a particular interest in Abram’s nephew Lot ,
whose father died when he was still young.
That’s where we
pick up the story – in Chapter 12.
LET US PRAY
A Rabbi once
wrote:
Birth is a beginning
And Death a destination
But Life is a journey,
A going - a growing
From stage to stage.
From Childhood to Maturity
And Youth to Age.
From Innocence to Awareness
And Ignorance to Knowing;
From Foolishness to Discretion
And then perhaps to Wisdom.
From Weakness to Strength
Or Strength to Weakness--
And often back again.
From Health to Sickness
And back, we pray, to Health again.
From Offense to Forgiveness,
From Loneliness to Love,
From Joy to Gratitude,
From Pain to Compassion,
And Grief to Understanding--
From Fear to Faith.
From Defeat to Defeat--
Until, looking backward or ahead,
We see that Victory lies
Not at some high place along the way,
But in having made the Journey,
Stage by stage;
A sacred pilgrimage.
Birth is the beginning
And Death a destination
But Life is a journey,
A sacred pilgrimage
Made stage by stage--
From Birth to Death
To Life Everlasting.
Abraham’s story is
the story of a journey within a journey. We can mark out his progress on maps,
see where his travels took him, geographically. But the more important journey
is the one that was simultaneously happening inside him – the journey of faith
that led him deeper into God and into himself.
And that journey
began with one word from God that came to him as he lived and worked in Haran among his father’s
people – and that word was ‘leave’.
The Lord said to Abram – “Leave”.
We’ll get to the significance
of that in moment, but as a wee aside, I wonder how you react when you hear
that phrase “The Lord said”?
These phrases tend
to wash over us because we’re so familiar with them in the Biblical narrative,
but they’re worth pausing to really listen to.
The Lord said.
How did he say?
How did he speak to Abram?
I only ask because
not to ask puts this kind of story on a different plane from you and me right
away. Subconsciously we put Abram in a box labelled ‘super spiritual’ and
assume that he belonged to a different order of humankind for whom direct words
from the Almighty were nothing out of the ordinary.
And I’m not sure
that’s either right or helpful for us.
If God is God, we
have to allow him to communicate with us as he will, and we can’t rule out
direct communication. But equally well, we have to say that that doesn’t seem
to be the norm for most of us. Most of us aren’t hearing audible voices telling
us what to do in life; indeed, if we were, it might well give our families
cause for concern.
For most of us,
guidance and discernment come slowly and they’re confirmed over time. We hear
the voice of God through circumstance, through wise counsel, through the
naggings and desires of our own heart that refuse to leave us alone; through
the words of Scripture.
Most of the time,
this is how we’re guided. We move towards a growing sense of what’s right and
what’s needed.
Years ago when I
was thinking about ministry and went along to the selection conference, one of
the things they were most keen to discuss was the nature of my call to this
kind of work. Where had it come from?
And the truth is,
it didn’t come in a Damascus
road moment; though it may have done for others. For me, it grew over time. I
had a growing sense that this was the path I needed to take in life; scripture
seemed to be pointing that way, friends, whether Christian or not, were
positive about the idea; my desire and my gifting seemed to be taking me in
that direction. Over time, those different strands of thought were wound
together like the strands of a rope, forming strong conviction that this was
the right way forward for me.
In retrospect, I
could speak about that call as though it were a sudden thing. But in practice
it took a lot of time to grow.
Now there have
been other times, when I’ve felt a sudden prompting from God to do something or
visit someone, or say something. These things happen too. And maybe if I were
more open to God, they would happen more often.
But the key thing,
I think, is not to worry too much about how God speaks – whether suddenly or
over a long time – The key thing is to cultivate the kind of attentiveness we
need in order to hear from him at all.
Abram, it seems,
was cultivating that kind of listening. And God’s voice, as it so often does, brought
a challenge and a promise at one and the same time.
“Leave” he says.
“Leave your country, your relatives and your father’s home”.
Think about that
for a moment. How would that command make you feel, given that it came in the
days before long-distance travel, telephones and Skype? Not to mention civil
rights, land law and the welfare state!
At a time, in
middle age, when most of us have settled down and the only big thing on our
horizon is retirement, Abram’s being asked to leave everything: the part of the
world he’s grown up in; the people and the culture he’s spent his life among;
the family who have nurtured him from his mother’s arms.
God is asking him
to leave. To leave not just his country, his relatives and his father’s home,
but all that they stand for. His security, his livelihood and his very identity.
Why would God ask
that of him? And why on earth would he say ‘yes’?
Let’s take those
questions one at a time:
Why would God ask
that of him?
To see if he’s up
for it! If you’ve planned an expedition
to conquer Everest and within a few hours of leaving some of your colleagues
are missing their comfy armchairs and
their regular fixes of Coronation
Street , chances are you’ve got the wrong
companions.
The road God wants
Abram to travel is a difficult one – lonely, nomadic and outright dangerous at
times. He has to know that he’s up for it.
But he also has to
instil within Abram the understanding that from now on his security and his
identity are to be in God and in nothing else.
We define
ourselves in so many ways – where we’re from, what we work as, the nature of
our family relationships. But the argument of Scripture is that before any of
these things, no matter how important they are, we need to understand ourselves
as belonging to God.
The author Gerry
Hughes tells a story about a friend of his called Donald who’s fond of winding
people up. They were at a church meeting together and the group were doing that
thing when you go round in a circle and say a few words about yourself by way
of introduction. And it was all the usual stuff – “I’m Susie and I’m a teacher.
I’m David and I’m a mechanic”. And when they got to Donald he gave a wee smile
and said “I’m Donald, and I am a unique manifestation of God’s creative
genius”.
Funny story, but a
serious point. How do we define ourselves? By our jobs? By our roles? By our
family connections? By our place of birth?
All of these
things are fine. More than fine – they’re good and they’re necessary. But all
too easily they can come to define us: squeezing God out of the picture
altogether, or relegating him to the role of a bit-part player in the story of
our lives.
Here, in our
story, God intervenes with Abram to make sure that doesn’t happen. “Leave” he
says, intentionally stripping him of all the insulation that family and place
and culture provide, and bringing him to the place where he has nothing and
no-one to fall back on but God himself.
There comes a
point in the life of a young eaglet when its mother pushes it out of the nest
and sends it plummeting into the void. It’s a moment of huge risk, but the
young bird has to learn to trust its wings, and read the currents that can help
it fly. It seems harsh, but it’s the quickest way to learn.
Perhaps this
command to ‘leave’ is God’s way of helping Abram fly.
And as we know, he
accepts the command. But why, when it seemed so taxing?
The answer, I
think, lies in the promise God makes to him in verse 2. “I will give you many
descendants, and they will become a great nation. I will bless you and make
your name famous, so that you will be a blessing”.
“I will give you
many descendants”.
I wonder if that
was the clincher for Abram. Already he and Sarai have tried to have children
and haven’t been able to. They may well have given up hope of ever having a
family. Is it that yearning within him that makes him set out at God’s command?
That promise of a better future?
Did he dream of a
son with Sarai’s eyes?
I’m sure that’s a
part of the reason he responded, and in that, I think we see an example of a
pattern that happens time and time again in the Bible. God calls his people to
walk on difficult paths, but only for the sake of a better future.
The parallels
between today’s story and the call of Jesus’ first disciples won’t be lost on
you, I’m sure. Abram was to leave family, place and livelihood. Jesus’ call to
James and John, Peter and Andrew, also took them away from home and family,
boats and nets. Why did they go? Because this enigmatic rabbi promised that
they could share in what he was doing. He would make them fishers of men. Men
with a deeper purpose in life; something that wasn’t just about getting by, or
existing, but spoke to the very core of who they were and what they longed for.
And we see the
very same thing in the life of Jesus himself. In a wonderful passage in the
book of Hebrews the writer says that: for the joy set before him he endured the
cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.
Do you see the
pattern?
Sometimes the
paths God leads us on are difficult, but he only takes us along them because
there is the hope of a better future ahead.
And perhaps that’s the key thing to take away from our reading this morning.
Sometimes the
right thing to do is not the easy thing to do. It would be easier to stay put,
say nothing, batten down the hatches. Resign yourself to how things are.
Inertia and fear of the unknown are powerful forces in many of our lives.
But at the same
time, there’s something within us that yearns for things to be different – we
dare to think that God might want them to be different; but we’ve no idea what
the journey ahead of us is going to look like.
And we’re left
with a decision to make. Do we resign ourselves to how things are, or do we
dare strike out in the faith that God is taking us somewhere better, even
though the way may prove to be challenging?
I wonder if any of
you are at that kind of a place this morning? Maybe you’re sitting here today
and you’re resigned to how things are. This job; that relationship; this
pattern of living that you find yourself in.
Maybe God’s word
to Abram is his word to you today. Leave.
Either leave the
situation itself, if that – under God – is what you need to do. Or leave behind
the mindset that makes you resigned to how things are. Physically stay, but set
out on the journey of faith that’s going to see things change, remembering that
you don’t travel alone. God goes with you.
And God promises
not only that you will be blessed, but that in your going, you will become a blessing
to others.
You will find, in
the words of the Rabbi’s poem.
that Victory lies
Not at some high place along the way,But in having made the Journey,
Stage by stage;
A sacred pilgrimage.
May God bless us
all as we listen for him, and journey with him in the week that lies ahead.
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