Abraham's Covenant: A Call to Faith and Obedience

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"Amen. So our reading from Genesis 17 today takes us to kind of the next step on our journey along the essential sea of a constructing Christianity program that we're focused on this year. Here, we've talked a lot about creation. And last Sunday, we introduced the second building block of our constructing Christianity program, which is covenant." [00:04:06] (25 seconds)


"And today, we're sort of taking the next step with it. So what was started with Noah, has now been brought to Abraham. So what is, in order to get us to this kind of point, we need to talk a little bit, well, who was Abraham? Abraham was a pretty important guy." [00:04:32] (21 seconds)


"So as the progenitor, father, patriarch, of the three great monotheistic religions in our world today, the promise that God makes to Abraham is that he will be the father to, the descendants of, and so there's no end to that. That generational, generation by generational promise is embedded in the story that we just read to you." [00:06:04] (33 seconds)


"Abraham is an extraordinarily important person. We're looking at around 3,500 years ago, perhaps 4,000 years ago, depending on how you sort of do the mathematics on all this. But a man whose call from God, is still very relevant and real in our world today. And if you don't see the connection, you're just not paying attention enough to what's happening in this world." [00:05:31] (33 seconds)


"And it is a promise of that, that we started the service this morning, this promise of being to him a great nation and that his name will be great. So that changing of the name is significant. And the God in this encounter in Genesis 12 is called El Shaddai. So it's one of the names, Hebrew names for God, which is different than Yahweh and Elohim." [00:09:52] (29 seconds)


"So that's when the covenant words are reestablished, the connection back to Noah, those things we talked about last Sunday, the notion of being fruitless, fruitful and multiplying, being the progenitor to all generations and a great nation and the descendants of, that all sort of takes shape in Genesis 15. And there is the promise of land that comes with this." [00:11:44] (32 seconds)


"And it's interesting because there's this moment where Abraham expresses some doubt about having an heir, for example. The text tells us, he has a good laugh about that in 17. There's some duplication between 15 and 17. But it's this notion that all of his descendants will be as numerous as the stars, the text tells us in Genesis 15." [00:12:23] (29 seconds)


"But the promise comes with obligation. And Genesis 17 tells us that. That the renewal of this covenant comes with certain very specific requirements. And gentlemen, I hope you're a little uneasy when you start hearing all this. All this talk about circumcision. Because that's a pretty big commitment." [00:15:02] (30 seconds)


"God is saying, I am entering into a relationship with you. This relationship has meaning. It has significance. It has purpose. It is beyond you to fully understand it. It extends through all the generations. But God is desperately desiring to be in relationship with the human society." [00:15:43] (23 seconds)


"And it is a promise that, yes, it's given expression in a ritual. It's a ritual act of circumcision. But it's reflective of a much bigger and more significant requirement. And that is the notion of being obedient to God. So if we look at what's happening here, we see four fundamental commitments that are associated with this covenant." [00:16:17] (33 seconds)


"The first is that the promise God makes is real. It's real estate. It's about a temporal connection to... It's not just an ethereal, spiritual experience. It's a very real expression about human society, human civilization coming together. It's about building, nurturing, flourishing society. And everything that comes with that, which will be given much more substance when we get to the commandments." [00:17:02] (31 seconds)


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