Friday, July 13, 2012

Backsliding - Genesis 20



Sermon Nuggets Mon July 9 Backsliding                                                    

Verses: Gen 20:1-18

Backsliding
Now I really don’t keep up with Oprah Winfrey eating habits, but more than once while I am at the grocery store I keep seeing these tabloid papers with photos of her thin then heavy then skinny again with a new diet, then overweight, realizing she struggles like most of us with backsliding when it comes to the temptation of food.
Now backsliding might be going backward with personal goals, or it can be the same with sin. We seem to be conquering some old habit only to find us slip back into the same old patterns again that seem to have some grip on us. For some it is the temptation of money, or sex, or power, or lying, or stealing, or gossip, or pornography, or drugs or alcohol, or temper, or compromising principles.
Sin is a reality of the world in which we live, but so are the consequences of that sin. What we sow we shall also reap. We spoke about the destruction of the Sodom and Gomorrah and the sins of Lot and his daughters, but now we see what happened to our most righteous of men who found favor in God’s eyes-Abraham. Let the record show that we have an example of one who you’d think would have learned his lesson 24 years ago but falls into temptation once again and backslides in his faith.
And I would look to look at some of the contrasts of dealing with temptations as illustrated in this passage. 20:1,2  Now Abraham moved on from there into the region of the Negev and lived between Kadesh and Shur. For a while he stayed in Gerar, and there Abraham said of his wife Sarah, “She is my sister. ” Then Abimelech king of Gerar sent for Sarah and took her. But God came to Abimelech in a dream one night and said to him, “You are as good as dead because of the woman you have taken; she is a married woman.”
As we read the story it seems as if we are reading the 12th Chapter all over again. Abraham travels to a foreign land and instead of telling people that Sarah is his wife, he says she is his sister. There is the pagan custom that the king or ruler can take any woman into his harem as a wife or concubine and so he takes Sarah.
Comparing the two stories, in 12th chapter they are in Egypt with the Pharoah as king, now they are in Negev with King Abimelek  In the earlier account Abraham is still somewhat new in his faith walk, where as now he has been in relationship with God for 24 more years. Another apparent difference is that God inflected serious diseases on Pharaoh and his household because of Sarah and that is how Pharaoh realized he was lied to by Abraham. Abimeleck became aware of Sarah being married by God speaking to him in a dream. His household apparently couldn’t have children. Surprisingly, in both situations Abraham makes out pretty well. He leaves with a good deal of gifts. What caused him to back slide again to the former ways?
We will address some of those tomorrow.

Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Tues July 10 Fear

Verses Gen 20: Then Abimelech called Abraham in and said, “What have you done to us? How have I wronged you that you have brought such great guilt upon me and my kingdom? You have done things to me that should not be done. ” 10 And Abimelech asked Abraham, “What was your reason for doing this?”
11 Abraham replied, “I said to myself, ‘There is surely no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife.’12 Besides, she really is my sister, the daughter of my father though not of my mother; and she became my wife. 13 And when God had me wander from my father’s household, I said to her, ‘This is how you can show your love to me: Everywhere we go, say of me, “He is my brother.”’”

Fear

What leads us to backslide?

This story is of Abraham’s backsliding.

What caused him to lie and allow the king to take her away from him? It began with the fear - In both incidents in Chapter 12 when he was in Egypt and here Negev. Abraham was a foreigner in a foreign land. It is easy to want to be like the others, and not stand out. It is easy to adapt to customs of a foreign land if you are going to live there for awhile.

We talked about that digression in Lot and the influence the evil society had on him in Sodom. Now, however, we see Abraham was afraid of his life and his property that he would be killed and his things taken away if they knew that Sarah was his wife. In killing Abraham then others would be free to take his wife and without legal sons, perhaps his property.

            Abraham is influenced by the fear of man over the fear of God. From the beginning he is conscious of the realization he is an outsider and people do not deal kindly with people of other races.  Abraham's motive is his, and perhaps also Sarah's protection. Despite being a man of faith, he went to such lengths in order to protect himself. He was not acting in faith, but in the flesh.

May we be warned. We too may be more worried about our situation and circumstances, concerned about the possibilities of an uncertain future. God invites us at times such as these to cast all our care upon him. Why? Because he cares for you.

            Now as a parenthesis Sarah must be some woman. Who at the age of 90 years is so attractive that the king desired her and wanted to include her as part of his wives or concubines. I don’t know what she was using, oil of Olay or some skin conditioner, but if they discover that formula, ladies, buy it.

Why did Abraham fear man instead of God? I wonder if it is the old understanding that certain gods ruled over certain peoples. The gods of different nations prevailed in certain areas was the common thought. Maybe Abraham had the false understand that His God was also geographical. If he left the area to another area, then another god of those people prevailed? I don’t know. One thing is sure he wasn’t looking at God’s wisdom and word, but his own ideas which got him and gets us into trouble.

One more observation must be made concerning Abraham’s fears for his own safety. His conduct differs little from that of Lot in Sodom and Gomorrah. Lot, by inviting the two strangers under his roof, assured them of protection. Rather than break this commitment, he was willing to sacrifice the purity of his two virgin daughters and give them over to the men outside his door. Abraham, fearing for his own safety, was willing to give over his wife to the king to protect himself from harm.

God had clearly revealed to Abraham and Sarah that together they will bear a son through whom the covenant promises will be realized. More than this, the conception of the child must be near at hand, for he was said to have been born within the space of a year. as Abraham’s faith at a low ebb? It must be so.

Pastor Dale

Sermon Nuggets Weds July 11 Compromise

Verses Gen 20: 11 Abraham replied, “I said to myself, ‘There is surely no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife.’12 Besides, she really is my sister, the daughter of my father though not of my mother; and she became my wife. 13 And when God had me wander from my father’s household, I said to her, ‘This is how you can show your love to me: Everywhere we go, say of me, “He is my brother.”’”

Compromise

Another area of temptation that leads us to backsliding is compromising  morals, ethics and values. Too often we think just a little bit won’t hurt until we are caught into the web of consequences.

We see how compromising with addictions soon draw people back.  For one who stopped smoking, just one cigarette won’t hurt.”  Some think “To take just a little bit of alcohol” soon slips back into old pattern. “I’ll just take a quick peek at this website.” Soon finds one look isn’t enough. And the slippery slope like a shoot cause one to fall back again.

            For Abraham it was the half truth, not really a lie. We will see that later, but we find that indeed Sarah and Abraham did have the same father, but different mothers, so he could say, “See I wasn’t really lying I told the truth.” He was compromising truth. 

Compromise is moving the borders of truth. There are many people who have no problem with lying straight out. There are some people who you can never believe because lying is such a part of their character. Facts can be and often are used in such a way as to convey falsehood. Wasn’t that the words that President Clinton used when he talked about sex? It was a half truth in a deceiving manner. When asked point blank he make the statement in a most self righteous way. “I am not having relations with that woman” making the present tense of the verb makes all the difference.

As the political campaigns heat up more of lies and half truths to deceive compromise occurs. Who do we trust?

Now I am tempted at more times than I care to admit, to say truthful words in a deceiving way, so one can look at the words and say I am not lying, but conveying something very different. That is compromise.

            I found it interesting on one of the morning news stations of the report that some teachers were lying and cheating to keep their jobs by giving students the answers on standardized tests. One defended his action by saying, “It’s okay if you don’t get caught.” Is that what God thinks? 

            Dr Pat raised and interesting dilemma. What do the Christian Sudanese widows do when they have no food to feed their children? Should they compromise their faith in order to live? Will they be willing to have their loved ones killed or suffer for the sake of honor or conviction, or instead convert to Islam by marrying a Moslem in order to have life and protection?

Is that question different really from what is facing Abraham in his mind? It might be safer to not tell the truth, so we won’t be harmed. 

At what point is backsliding really a lack of faith and trust in God working things out if we are faithful? Hard questions which too often become man’s ways of rationalizations.

Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Thurs July 12 Excuses

Gen 20: Abraham replied, “I said to myself, ‘There is surely no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife.’12 Besides, she really is my sister, the daughter of my father though not of my mother; and she became my wife. 13 And when God had me wander from my father’s household, I said to her, ‘This is how you can show your love to me: Everywhere we go, say of me, “He is my brother.”

 Excuses

As we are looking at some of the reasons for Abraham’s backsliding he answered Abimelech. “What was your reason for doing this?” What was going through your brain? You sinned against me. You sinned against my kingdom. God nearly killed me. Why?

            Abraham gives three reasons for his deceptive behavior. First, Your people don’t fear God. V 11. The truth was that Abraham was the one who didn’t fear God enough. When he looked around he was more afraid of Abimelech and his kingdom than he was of God. If he had truly feared the Lord, he would have obeyed and trusted God. It seemed as if Abimelech had a greater fear of the Lord when the Lord revealed to him the true situation..

            Secondly, Abraham said,  “I didn’t really lie.” V. 12. He claims that he did not totally lie since he told a half truth. So he excuses his deception looking at the letter of the law, not the spirit.

            Lastly, his excuse is that it’s really Gods’ fault. V. 13. God had me wander. The implication is that if God had not told him to leave his fathers house, he would not have ended up in Abimelech’s kingdom. Then he would not have had to lie. Therefore its not really may fault, it’s really Gods fault for bringing me into your kingdom to begin with.”

When someone makes excuses instead of facing up to their faults they are not taking any responsibility. Still Abraham no indication of acceptance of responsibility for sin, nor of sorrow or repentance. While his arguments fail to satisfy us, as they did not impress Abimelech, they did seem to satisfy Abraham.

I heard an interesting excuse for sin on a TV interview. One of the commentators was interviewing a young man who was pirating music and movies off the internet for free that was copyrighted material. The young man did not think he was cheating because they charge too much for CDs anyway. That is an interesting excuse. “Not my fault it’s their fault I’m stealing their material. If they didn’t charge so much then I probably wouldn’t do it. “

People have a hard time facing up to wrong and sin and come up with lame excuses. One person wrote on their accident report that a telephone pole hit them. Here are other excuses turned into the insurance companies: The telephone pole was approaching fast. I was attempting to swerve out of its path when it struck my front end. A pedestrian hit me and went under my car. The guy was all over the place. I had to swerve a number of times before I hit him. I was driving my car out of the driveway in the usual manner, when it was struck by the other car in the same place it had been struck several times before. An invisible car came out of nowhere, struck my vehicle and vanished.

It is interesting when kids are caught with a lie how many excuses they can come up with. People will continually lie to cover up another lie.
           
Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Fri July 13 Presumptions

Gen 20: 11 Abraham replied, “I said to myself, ‘There is surely no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife.’

 Presumptions.

When it comes to backsliding, or yielding to sin as a person of faith, we can be influenced by our prejudices and presumptions. Abraham presumed he was dwelling around evil people and coming to those conclusions felt endangered and therefore reacted in ways there are not in keeping with his faith. He felt it wise because of his prejudices to lie. We created false ideas of how things might turn out so we justify our behavior. If we presume we will get a ticket when speeding some will justify a lie as to the reasons for making excuses. If we presume we will keep more of our money we might lie when filling out tax reports. Even if we keep more of our money we presume that is more justifiable because we presume it will bring us happiness. 

We do deal with the lusts of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life as James tells us when we face temptations. There are fears, and excuses, and our minds can also presume things from an earthly point of view that we see as consequences which either we are attracted to or from. A person my make presumptions about something he wants an steals it. Or he might presume something will give him great pleasure even though he knows it is wrong. He might act out of the fear of being fired, or hired and do things that are not in keeping with Christian, or godly conduct. Our presumptions can take the place of prayers.

Next week we will look at the rest of the chapter from the eyes of King Abimelech who had been wronged by Abraham. Because Abraham presumed he was an evil and wicked king who did not fear the Lord he acted in ways that put his family in more danger. But God knew how to deal with the problem. Instead of Abraham being a blessing to the other nations, in this incident he was a curse.

His ways were influenced by his prejudices. We carry lots of prejudices around without not always knowing it. Our presumptions can influence behavior when we distrust. It can keep us from the truth if we are filled with pride compared to those around us. Some justify their behaviors when they thing the people around them are inferior. Prejudices result from presumptions.

A Chinese proverb, “Lose an ax and suspect the neighbor”, tells about this attitude. A man who lost his ax suspected his neighbor’s son of stealing it. To him, as he observed the boy, the way the lad walked, the expression of his face, the manner of his speech- in fact everything about his appearance and behavior betrayed that he had stolen the ax.

Not long afterwards the man found his axe while digging in his cellar. When he saw his neighbor’s son again, nothing about the boy’s behavior nor appearance seemed to suggest that he had stolen the ax

 Abraham was God’s elect, God’s chosen, but he still floundered and failed. Abraham was God’s prophet, but that did not make him more pious than others. Abraham prospered both in Egypt and in Gerar, but it was not because he attained a higher level of spirituality. The most dangerous doctrine for the Christian is that which suggests that Christians can be above temptation and failure in their Christian lives, even after years of service or in a privileged position.

Beware, Christian of backsliding when you think you are spiritual, lest you fall. When you think you are better than others like Abraham did. Beware when you fear men and not God, or compromise your values or morals in little ways, or make excuses.

Pastor Dale