Genesis 15:1-18 · God’s Covenant with Abram
The Promise Of Belief
Genesis 15:1-18
Sermon
by Rodney Thomas Smothe
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There are times in our lives when we are confronted with a challenge so overwhelming that we struggle to believe that even God can bring about a positive outcome. We recite scripture verses, think positive thoughts, ask our friends to pray for us, and look for the signs of God's positive intervention. We want to believe, but we still have lingering thoughts of failure. What is there about human nature that allows doubt to creep in and the fear of failure to ruin our faith? This state of unbelief has been called by some a doubt storm or as Leonard Sweet calls them, "Faithquakes."

What separates our belief in the promises of God's word from the application of those promises in our daily lives? We confess faith and confidence in the word of God. We say that we have faith but sometimes we will take matters into our own hands. In the midst of our wavering confidence, God many times reminds us of his covenant with us.

Our text begins with God ratifying his promise to Abram. "Fear not, Abram, I am your shield; your reward shall be very great." "I am your shield," your divine protector. What a powerful statement of assurance. Instead of Abram responding in faith, he like many of us missed God's promised initiative and responded with doubt. "O Lord God, what wilt thou give me, for I continue childless?" Abram's preoccupation with his own selfish desire to have an heir prevented him from believing God although God had already shown Abram that he would keep his promises.

This is the same God who said to Abram back in Genesis 12:2-3: "I will make you a great nation, I will bless you, I will make your name great so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you and him who curses you I will curse and by you all the families of the earth shall be blessed." This blessing from God that accompanied God's call of Abram included inheriting land, becoming a great nation, and becoming a blessing to other people. God's promised covenant with Abram contained the assurance of an heir, but because it had not yet come to pass, Abram doubted.

God's covenant with Abram continued when God rescued Sarai from becoming part of Pharaoh's harem in Egypt (12:10-20). God's promise was again seen in the victory over the four eastern kings that were defeated by Abram's small but victorious army (14:1-16). After all of that we would think that Abram would have total confidence in God's promise. No, Abram's response: "But God, I am still childless."

Sometimes because God doesn't act when and how we think God should, we respond in doubt. I know a young couple whose lives were tragically interrupted when their young son drowned in the swimming pool of a friend. Grief turned to anger, anger to blame and eventually the couple separated.

With the prayers, counsel and encouragement of believing Christian friends they reconciled and began to rebuild their lives. Their reconciliation well under way, they were faced with another challenge, a troubled pregnancy. They questioned God, "What have we done to deserve this unending tragedy in our lives?"

Their search for meaning led them to study and fellowship with mature Christian believers who helped them discover God's promise and covenant relationship with them. As they grew in their belief and spiritual maturity they found the strength to accept the challenges that tragedy sometimes brings. They are now the parents of three beautiful children. As heirs of the covenants of God we grow to understand that difficult circumstances in our lives can either become obstacles or opportunities, depending on how we believe.

The promise of belief does not come only with words: it comes with action. After God took Abram outside and assured him that his descendants would be as numerous as the stars, our text says, "And Abram believed" (trusted in, relied on, remained steadfast to) "the Lord; and he counted it to him as righteousness" (right standing with God, 15:6).

Promise, belief, covenant, while used interchangeably, have slightly different meanings. Promise means to make a declaration or assurance with regard to an upcoming specified act. Belief is trusting in, resting in, or taking refuge in something or someone. Covenant is an agreement, obligation, or binding contract.

This Lenten season provides for us an opportunity to examine God's promise, our belief, and the covenantal relationship that exists between God and us. When Abram finally confessed his trust in God's promise even though no heir had yet been born, God counted that as righteousness and a covenant ceremony took place (7-12 and 17-18).

While we are no longer required to offer animals as a sacrifice, the season of Lent offers us many opportunities to affirm and demonstrate our covenants with God. The spiritual disciplines of the 40-day period of penitence, prayer, reflection and witness can be for us a reminder of the sacrificial nature of Christ. How, might you ask?

The story of Abraham and Sarah begins a continuous biblical journey of God working through ordinary people like you and me to bring about God's will. Sometimes like Abraham and Sarah God challenges us to believe in spite of what our eyes see because God's ability and desire to demonstrate the covenant relationship is best expressed when we can't see with our eyes, but must learn to trust God for the outcome. Much of our doubt comes from the fear of failure. Some of us fail to try because we are afraid of failing.

The season of Lent gives us opportunities to look beyond our abilities and remember God's promises and the covenantal nature that exists between God and humankind. The promise of belief is not just found in the historical acts of God. The promise of belief is also found in the covenantal nature of God in our lives today.

The promise of belief turns our faith into power: the power that comes with believing. Jesus comforted his disciples by saying, "I tell you the truth, any one who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these, because I am going to the Father" (John 14:12). This covenantal nature of God through faith that begins with Abraham continues today with the covenantal nature of God through Christ, you and me.

We're invited during the Lenten season to remember the promises of God, the covenantal nature of God, and our response as we act on what we believe. The promise of belief begins with trusting God. Trust becomes belief, belief becomes assurance, assurance is then expressed as promise, and promise is lived and acted on through our acts of faith in God.

She stood before the congregation and asked for prayer: The doctors had discovered cancer. She boldly proclaimed, "I'm believing God for my healing." One year later she stood and shared the good news. She reminded us that not only had God answered her prayer a year ago, but God kept his promise -- she was still cancer-free. Yes, it does make a difference what we believe.

CSS Publishing Company, TURNING OBSTACLES INTO O, by Rodney Thomas Smothe