Genesis 18:16-33 · Abraham Pleads for Sodom
Dust And Ashes
Genesis 18:16-33
Sermon
by Erskine White
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Behold, I have taken upon myself to speak to the Lord, I who am but dust and ashes. (Genesis 18:27)

Tonight begins the forty-day season of Lent: forty days which correspond to the time Jesus spent in the desert wilderness being tempted by Satan. It is not a season we should enter into unadvisedly or lightly, for this is the most important part of the Christian year. Here we encounter our faith in all its fullness: in all its depth and height, in all its darkness and ligh, in all its pain and glory.

Lent is a somber time, a time for reflection and growth, a time to change our ways and deepen our commitment. Our Lord entered into suffering and death during this period on our behalf. The least we can do is enter into the spiritual demands of the season for Him.

This Lenten season will carry us through the next five Sundays. We will walk in the shadow of the Cross. We will taste the dryness of the desert and feel the loneliness of the wilderness. If we truly step into the spirituality of the Lenten season, we will feel like we have walked through the valley ar shadow of death itself.

Then we will come to Holy Week. We will see the triumph and tension of Palm Sunday, when Jesus rode into Jerusalem and set the stage for His final passion. We will see the trial and tribulation of Maundy Thursday, when Jesus was arrested and condemned to death. We will stare into the unspeakable darkness of Good Friday, when our Lord hung on a Cross to die.

And then, finally, we will come to the bright light and magnificent redemption of Easter morning. The Resurrection will be real and meaningful to us because we will have walked to Calvary to get there. Again, if we really enter into the spirit of Lent in the forty days ahead, we will be happy and grateful for our Lord's victory when it finally comes on Easter Sunday.

But tonight we begin with dust and ashes. Tonight we begin by hearing Abraham speak for all of us: "Behold, I have taken upon myself to speak to the Lord, I who am but dust and ashes."

Who among us would care to say this about ourselves? How many of us can be as honest as Abraham? It goes against the grain, doesn't it, this spirituality of dust and ashes.

It stands in contrast to the superficial piety and self-seeking silliness which too often passes for religion today. It contradicts the religion of self-esteem; it violates the "Praise the Lord and give me the goodies" religion which this self-satisfied age is content to hear. But scripture says that to everything, there is a season. There is a time to "make a joyful noise unto the Lord," and there is a time for dust and ashes.

Tonight is Ash Wednesday. It is a time to strip away our vanities and delusions. It is a time for dust and ashes.

"Behold I have taken upon myself to speak to the Lord, I who am but dust and ashes." It may not sound so at first, but this spirituality of dust and ashes is good and healthy for us. It leads us to admit our frailty and confess our sin.

Of course, we're not surprising God or telling Him anything new, since God already knows our sin; but we are telling ourselves, and that is good. It is no accident Jesus began His Sermon on the Mount by saying, "Blessed are the poor in spirit ... (Blessed are those who know their need for God)" (Matthew 5:3).

The Bible teaches that spiritual pride is the most fundamental of all sins, because it keeps us from knowing our need for God. But Abraham knew. He stood before God and said, "I am but dust and ashes." The great King David confessed, "For I know my transgressions, and my sin is everywhere before me" (Psalm 51:3). The apostle Paul, one of history's most towering Christians, cried out, "Wretched man that I am!" (Romans 7:24).

In marked contrast, the spirit of this present age wants to say, "I'm okay and you're okay." But which is the more honest, more spiritual assessment of who we are in this fallen world?

Yes, the spirituality we find in scripture requires honesty in oneself. In fact, the first letter of John says it with unavoidable clarity: "If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us" (1:8).

But our confession of sin also means that we respect the integrity of God. If we are at all impressed with the majesty and holiness of God, then we must also be impressed with our own lowliness, and with how far we fall short of His glory.

The timeless confessions of Abraham and David and Paul are so great and powerful precisely because they hold God in awe, and this is what so many Christians miss today. When we fail to grasp the depths of our sin, we fail to grasp the glory of God, and our faith is all the poorer for it.

We begin with dust and ashes tonight, but it is important to know that we do not end there. Finally, it is the goodness and mercy of God we dwell on, not just our own unworthiness.

We see this in our text this evening. Abraham makes his magnificent confession as he bargains with God, but the whole story is about God's mercy! If there are fifty righteous people in Sodom, God will spare the city. For the sake of forty-five and then forty good people, He won't destroy the city.

Finally, for the sake of ten, God says, "If, in the whole city of Sodom there are but ten righteous people, I will spare the city." Most people focus this story on Sodom's sin or Abraham's plea. What they miss is God's mercy! God is bending over backwards to be merciful to the sinful human community.

We are worshiping in that spirit tonight. We began by confessing our sins, but we end here at the table, the place of our redemption and reconciliation with God.

So tonight, I invite you to be like Abraham in this Lenten season, and tell God who you are. Tell God boldly, even joyfully, for confession starts the path to redemption. Let us all make bold to speak to the Lord from the depths of our hearts, we who are but dust and ashes. The amazing thing is: God loves us still and is always there to listen. Amen.

Pastoral Prayer

Almighty God, who judges all the earth and everyone in it, and who knows our sin better than we can know it ourselves, hear the prayers which we, Your weak and faithless servants, bring before You now:

For the times we have done wrong even as we knew it was wrong; hear our prayers, O Lord.

For the times we have spoken the ill-considered word or failed to offer the comforting word when it was needed: hear our prayers, O Lord.

For the times we have let fear drive out faith and preferred comfort over commitment: hear our prayers, O Lord.

For our indifference to others in need, our callousness to their pain and our ignorance of their plight; for our easy conscience in a world where millions groan under the burden of poverty and the yoke of injustice: hear our prayers, O Lord.

Most merciful and patient God, who sets before us the bread of life in the midst of our death, forgive us. Accept us at the table tonight. Ease our hunger and quench our thirst with this sacred meal, that we who are but dust and ashes may partake of Your grace and share in Your salvation. We ask all these things, putting our trust not in ourselves, but in our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, THE VICTORY OF THE CROSS, by Erskine White