Genesis 12:1-8 · The Call of Abram
A Faith-Life To Emulate John W. Cobb
Genesis 12:1-8
Sermon
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The Christian’s story really does not begin with the saga of Abraham. Remember, Jesus said, "Before Abraham was I am." Yet, as a practical matter Chapter 12 of Genesis is about the first episode that can be dated with fair accuracy and so may be considered a "beginning" that would cause this name to be remembered henceforth as "father of the faithful." In recent years genealogical studies have become very popular. Some from very noble motives, others merely as an expression of family pride or an ego trip. According to both Matthew and Luke Jesus’ progenitors in the flesh included Abraham, son of Terah. We may be grateful that there were those in ancient times who were concerned to write down such information. Yet, even though Jesus must have been aware of his own lineage, there was something of greater importance. In his controversy with the sons of Abraham Jesus affirmed "Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day. He saw it and was glad." (John 8:56)

Let us examine some of the qualities of Abraham in order to try to understand his place in salvation history.

Abraham was decisive. Scripture does not reveal to us the circumstances surrounding the cause of the migration of Terah’s family from Ur of the Chaldees toward Canaan but for some reason the caravan stopped at Haran, remaining there until the death of Terah. Did the patriarch become ill? Was there need for a period of organization? For whatever cause the caravan halted. The father died. Now, a decision had to be made, as is so many times the need in the family upon the death of the father. And Abraham, perhaps being the oldest of Terah’s three sons, would be the one to decide what to do.

Let us imagine some of the elements that went into the making of the decision to proceed. First, Abraham was a son whose early experiences included sharing life with a father who as an old man had a vision. The destiny of his descendants would be in another land. For whatever reason Terah was willing to leave the place the world knew as the "fertile crescent" to journey into the unknown.

This quotation of King George V of England, made in his 1939 Christmas message to his people during the darkest days of World War II, seems to express the spirit that motivated Terah and was likely caught and shared by his eldest son.

I said to the man who stood at the gate of the year "give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown." But the man replied, "Go out into the darkness and put your hand into the hand of God. That will be for you better than light and safer than a known way."

And so after Terah died, Abraham, who shared his father’s vision, decided to press on to Canaan, meanwhile confronting the overwhelming logistics of moving a large caravan of family and animals into a new and possibly hostile environment. This was no mere emotional response to God’s command. It also involved both intellect and will, the response of his whole being. There are those who would have us see in this story merely a record of one of the migrations of peoples in that area of the world, but for the faithful there is more beginning with the obedience of the spiritual father of a people.

Abraham was obedient. God spoke the word "go" and Abraham "went." For Abraham it could not have been easy to obey. He left the safety of the community he knew. He faced the task of packing and moving a herd of sheep and cattle, of caring for wives and nephews and many others. This seems so simple, and yet one knows that obedience to God’s commands required much more. A prior relationship must have been established. Abraham must have recognized the one giving the order. He must have been willing to put aside personal considerations for the sake of a larger cause, acknowledging that God was in charge. And ultimately he needed the will to carry out God’s command even in the face of the unknown. It was the same spirit that prompted the Apostle Paul to say: "I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision." (Acts 26:19)

Abraham was trusting. The element of trust is vital to the life of faith. It goes far beyond the mere intellectual assent suggested in the term "belief." Paul says it well: "Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness. And these words ‘counted to him’ have not been written for him alone but for us as well; faith will be counted to us as we believe in him who raised our Lord from the dead." (Romans 4:23-24) It is only a short step from obedience-in-trust to the response of God’s people in Christ. "If you are Christ’s then you are Abraham’s seed." (Galatians 3:29) One can recite his creed a thousand times, but if it does not become trust and obedience then one has not found faith. With such trust there is always the ethical responsibility demanded. Later in the Genesis story God says: "I have taken care of him on purpose that he may charge his sons and family after him to conform to the way of the Lord and to do what is right and just; thus I shall fulfill all that I have promised for him." (Genesis

18:19-20)

Abraham worshiped. It may seem a minor detail that the story of Abraham includes various references "And Abraham built an altar there" at Shechem, at Bethel, at Hebron. The commitment of obedience and trust is worship - always. How can one possibly acknowledge the God-man relationship with the expression of awe primarily in the act of worship? Perhaps this becomes the acid test of religious life today. The most recent estimates among the so-called "moderate Protestants" in America indicate that only forty-one percent of those professing church affiliation are regular attendants at worship. Another twenty-three percent worship "occasionally" and thirty-five percent are simply "nominal" members, that is "seldom worship in the company of fellow-believers." Little wonder then that worship, primitive though it may have been, was a vital part of Abraham and his tribe.

Abraham was rewarded. This is the concept suggested in the term "blessed." "All the families on earth will pray to be blessed as you are blessed." (Genesis 12:3) Abraham’s reward involved a divine relationship. As Hebrews 11:16b has it "God is not ashamed to be called their God; for he has a city ready for them." Abraham’s blessedness involved a sense of his own self-sufficiency, because he depended on God and the deep knowledge that his own blessedness was to become a blessing to the whole earth.

And so for us, heirs also of the promises of God, we believe the everlasting covenant has found fulfillment in the person of Jesus Christ, a son of the tree of Abraham. Paul says it well: "If you are Christ’s then you are Abraham’s seed." What a glorious inheritance! What a faith-life to emulate! How much we owe to the covenant and obedience of a lonely man of long ago that we know who God is!

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,