
February 19, 2008

Genesis Chapter 26
A Picture of God’s Guidance
To receive the
greatest possible blessing from this Bible study, please take a moment to
read the passage.
For previous lessons on Genesis or
previous Bible studies, please visit our archives:
http://www.twosmallfish.org/Archives/index.html
For a
Printer friendly Page Click
HERE | Genesis 27
¼
Prayer:
Heavenly
Father, although I have wondered here and there searching for the truth, You
continued to guide me to and settled in the place You prepared for me by the
well of Living Water. As I refresh my soul daily, I praise You. In Jesus’
name, amen.
¼
Introduction:
In our young and foolish days, my husband and I belonged to a
four-wheel drive club. At one event, we participated in an adult Easter egg
hunt. Childish? Not really. It was plain stupid. With verbal commands, the
co-pilot (me) directed the blindfolded driver (Gene) through the course
getting him close enough without hitting the trees to grab eggs, which
dangled on threads from the limbs. Not only did we have to get the most
eggs, we had to have the best time to win the event. We did! One of the few
things we have ever won. And what was the grand prize worth risking neck and
limb for? A sleeping bag. Hee-haw! The event definitely gave new meaning to
the term “driven out of your comfort zone.”
¼
The Lesson:
When Almighty God drives
us out of our comfort zones, it often feels like He has blindfolded us and
is leading us through an obstacle course. The LORD
has a myriad of methods to get us to step on the
accelerator and move to the designated location at His pace. For Isaac, a
famine prompted him to roam in unfamiliar territory.
On the way, the LORD
appeared to Isaac with specific instructions.
1.
“Do not
go into Egypt”
no explanation is given and none necessary.
Spiritually speaking
Egypt is synonymous with rebellion and oppression of God’s people.
The LORD warns His people, Take heed to yourself
that you be not snared by following them [heathen nations],
after that they be destroyed from before you;
and that you enquire not after their gods, saying, How did these nations
serve their gods? even so will I do likewise. You shall not do so to the
LORD your God: for every abomination to the LORD, which he hates, have they
done to their gods (Deuteronomy 12:30-31a).
Currently, many
Christians are “enquiring after other gods” through such practices as
transcendental meditation, mysticism, and yoga. Without going into depth,
such practices are religious whether we use them to honor pagan gods or not.
They were derived with the intentions of connecting with the spirit world in
ways that God strictly forbids His children to do as the above verse clearly
notes. In relying on these exercises, we refuse to accept God’s choice of
communication with us. Thus, it is an act of rebellion. (a spiritual Egypt.)
Christians need not
transcend to God. He has promised to be with us and dwell among us.
Throughout history, God has come to man. In the beginning, He walked with
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. He appeared to Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob. Through Jesus Christ, God descended to humanity in human form to take
our sins and reconcile us to Himself. Almighty God has never implied that we
must transcend to Him. It would be like a father expecting a distressed
infant to jump into his arms instead of the father bending down to pick her
up. Before His crucifixion, Jesus promised:
And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that
he may abide with you for ever; Even the Spirit of truth’ whom the world
cannot receive, because it sees him not, neither knows him” but you know
him’ for he dwells with you , and shall be in you (John
14:16-17). We have no need to attempt to connect with God through
transcendental means. He connected with us through Jesus Christ. There is no
greater stress reliever than to know that my prayers need go no higher than
my tearstained pillow because God is here with me always.
As disciples of Jesus
Christ, we are required to obey Him. He owes us nothing, least of all
explanations of His basic commands.
2.
“Go to
the land which I shall tell you of”
God doesn’t give Isaac anything specific here, just a
basic “follow my lead.” When you’re driving a vehicle blindfolded, you learn
quickly to listen to every detail and follow instructions precisely.
Likewise, we have no choice but to follow Jesus’ commands precisely if we
desire to please Him and receive our promised reward. Jesus warns us to
follow closely, Enter the strait gate: for
wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leads to destruction, and many
there be which go in thereat: Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the
way, which leads to life, and few there be that find it
(Matthew 13-14).
3.
“I will
be with you and bless you”
God reaffirms His
covenant, which He made with Abraham. Praise God, we don’t have to survive
on hearsay. He reaffirms His salvation plan and our eternal inheritance to
each of us individually as we submit our lives to Jesus Christ.
Jesus answered and said to him, If a man love me, he
will keep my words: and my Father will love him, and we will come to him,
and make our abode with him (John 14:23).
Almighty God
led Isaac into the land of Gerar where Abimelech king of the Philistines
dwelt. This man apparently is not the same king with whom Abraham had
acquaintance (chapter 20). The word Abimelech is another title for a king as
is the word Pharaoh.
Our children
learn our mannerisms and behaviors—good or bad—without much effort on our
part to teach them. Isaac was no exception. When he entered Gerar, he feared
for his life and lied about his relationship with Rebekah just as his father
had lied about Sarah. God shielded him despite Isaac’s obvious lack of
faith. It was no coincidence that Abimelech observed Isaac “sporting” with
Rebekah signaling their true relationship. Nor can we surmise anything less
than God’s provision when the king set a decree protecting both Isaac and
Rebekah.
Isaac sewed in that land, and received in the same
year an hundredfold: and the LORD
blessed him
(Genesis 26:12). Do you
remember Abraham’s encounter with the other Abimelech? The king asked
Abraham to take his wife and leave, but not without presenting him with
livestock and servants. This illustrates God’s mercy and grace on each of
us. He chooses the best for all of us. Can we say that God provides only
when the pleasures of this life come in abundance and with ease as with
Abraham? No! More frequently, God chooses to bless us as He did Isaac,
through our labor.
The time had
come for God to move Isaac from his present comfort zone. As his flocks,
herds, and “store of servants” grew, the Philistines envied Isaac to the
point that Abimelech asked him to depart from them. Again, we observe the LORD
driving Isaac from point
to point through the vice of conflict between him and his neighbors. In the
end, Isaac continued to follow God’s commands and found a place of rest and
favor with the LORD.
¼
Conclusion and Challenge:
Although
God’s directions may seem to demand blind obedience, He has good reason for
not allowing us to “see” the course. Perhaps, we’d panic and refuse to move
forward. But I think the possibility that we’d zoom forward without
carefully following His instructions is a greater risk. While God does not
desire us to respond to Him in blind faith, at times, He does require blind
obedience. Almighty God has given us irrefutable evidence of His existence,
His mercy, His love, and His guidance to enable us respond to Him
intellectually as well as emotionally.
The LORD
does not always lead us in paths of still waters. At times, the water is
deep and turbulent. He doesn’t often give explanations of the path His
chooses for us. But He always expects obedience and praise. And rightfully
so. His will for us is to shape us into the likeness of His Son, our Savior
until we, like Job, can say, Though he slay
me, yet will I trust in him. . .He also shall be my salvation
(Job 13:15a and 16a). Job was clueless to why he suffered, but he
realized that all things including disaster came from God’s hand. That maybe
blind obedience, but blind faith—NEVER!
The toughest
assignment we can receive from the Teacher Jesus is to endure hardship and
praise God for it while we do not understand the reasoning behind it.
Almighty God desires witnesses and at times, our greatest testimony is our
actions during affliction.
Start a Ministry
Start a new ministry.
Print some business cards with a picture of a penny and the slogan “In God
We Trust.” Under the slogan write: But are we trusting the one true God? If
you like, place my website on it or yours or your church’s site. Hand them
out—with your tip a restaurants, to passers-by, to cashiers, put them in all
your outgoing mail. Pray earnestly for our nation’s revival.
If you don’t have a
computer or time to make cards, but would like to invest in this ministry,
write to me via e-mail and I’ll send you some-FREE.