To be chosen by God is both a profound blessing and a weighty responsibility. God’s selection of Abraham and his descendants was not based on their merit, but on His sovereign purpose to bring redemption to all the families of the earth. This chosenness means being set apart, entrusted with God’s truth, and called to reflect His holiness, even when it brings misunderstanding or hardship. The blessing is to be near to God and to be a vessel of His blessing to others, but the burden is to live differently, to carry a unique calling, and to endure the scrutiny and expectations that come with it. [01:53:13]
Genesis 12:1-3 (ESV)
Now the Lord said to Abram, “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”
Reflection: In what ways do you sense God calling you to be set apart for His purposes, even when it feels uncomfortable or misunderstood by others?
In a world filled with many voices and opinions—even from those who claim to speak for God—it is essential to process everything through the unchanging truth of Scripture. The Word of God is the standard by which all things must be tested, and the Holy Spirit guides us into discernment. Rather than relying on our own understanding or emotions, we are called to be so immersed in God’s Word and Spirit that we can recognize His voice and reject what is false, even when it is popular or passionately presented. [01:07:43]
2 Timothy 3:16-17 (ESV)
All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.
Reflection: What is one area of your life where you need to pause and intentionally filter what you’re hearing or believing through the truth of God’s Word today?
God’s people are called to be a light to the nations, not for their own glory, but so that God’s salvation and ways may be known among all peoples. This calling is not about convincing others by force, but about sharing truth in love, listening well, and allowing the Holy Spirit to do the work of transformation. Even when rejected or misunderstood, we are to remain faithful, knowing that our role is to reflect God’s light and leave the results to Him. [01:44:36]
Isaiah 49:6 (ESV)
He says: “It is too light a thing that you should be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob and to bring back the preserved of Israel; I will make you as a light for the nations, that my salvation may reach to the end of the earth.”
Reflection: Who is one person or group you can intentionally listen to and gently share God’s love and truth with this week, trusting God with the outcome?
God’s covenant with His chosen people is everlasting and unbreakable, regardless of their failures or the opinions of others. Even when Israel stumbled, God did not reject them; instead, He used their journey to bring salvation to the nations. The faithfulness of God’s promises stands as a rebuke to any who would presume to “unchose” those whom God has chosen. Our security and hope rest not in our performance, but in God’s steadfast commitment to His word and His people. [01:55:18]
Romans 11:1-2 (ESV)
I ask, then, has God rejected his people? By no means! For I myself am an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham, a member of the tribe of Benjamin. God has not rejected his people whom he foreknew.
Reflection: Where do you need to trust in the unchanging faithfulness of God’s promises, even when circumstances or voices around you suggest otherwise?
One of the greatest obstacles to spiritual growth is the belief that we already know it all. God often has to unteach us before He can teach us, calling us to lay down our pride and listen afresh to His voice. Living in a state of repentance and humility allows us to be continually shaped by God, to recognize our need for His guidance, and to walk in surrender to His will. This posture is essential for thriving in God’s kingdom and for being effective witnesses in a world that desperately needs His truth. [01:07:43]
James 1:21-22 (ESV)
Therefore put away all filthiness and rampant wickedness and receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls. But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.
Reflection: What is one area where you need to let go of your own assumptions and humbly ask God to teach or correct you today?
Today’s reflection centers on the profound reality of chosenness—its blessing and its burden—tracing the story of God’s relationship with humanity from creation to the calling of Abraham and his descendants. The journey begins with God’s act of creation, the gift of Shabbat, and the placement of Adam and Eve in the garden, where the first act of rebellion sets the stage for the ongoing tension between God’s purposes and human will. Even in judgment, such as the flood, God’s mercy is revealed through the selection of Noah, a man who walked with God, showing that divine chosenness is always linked to relationship and obedience.
As history unfolds, the pattern of rebellion and redemption continues. The scattering at Babel is not merely a punishment but a redemptive act, creating the context for God to choose a family—through Shem, then Abraham—through whom all nations would be blessed. Abraham’s calling is both a privilege and a heavy responsibility; he is to leave all that is familiar and become a sojourner, carrying the promise that through his descendants, God’s blessing would reach the rebellious families of the earth.
This chosenness is not about superiority but about stewardship. Israel is chosen to be a light to the nations, to carry God’s truth, and to invite the world back to Him. Yet, with this calling comes a unique burden: a higher standard, a call to holiness, and the weight of representing God’s character among the nations. The narrative warns against the arrogance of thinking we can replace or “unchoose” those whom God has chosen. Instead, it calls for humility, gratitude, and a recognition that Gentiles, too, are grafted into this story—not to supplant, but to participate in God’s redemptive plan.
The story of chosenness is ultimately about God’s faithfulness. Despite human failure, God’s covenant remains irrevocable. The challenge for all who are called—Jew and Gentile alike—is to embrace both the blessing and the burden, to walk in trust rather than self-reliance, and to be a fragrance of God’s love and truth in a world that often resists both.
We stand poised between the already and the not yet. Glimpsing snapshots of redemption while continuing to experience brokenness and darkness in our world and in our lives. As we remember daily that God is indeed king and as we commemorate every Shabbat and hopefully every day in our homes, his kingship in our lives by living in a state of repentance that is required in order to thrive in God's kingdom. [00:57:25]
As we watch and wait and pray for the ultimate redemption, may we wrap ourselves in the conquering love of God every day and in every way. May we learn of his ways, of his truths, and walk pleasing in full surrender to his will. Amen. [00:58:37]
The question that most determines the future of the church and how it operates will be determined by its relationship with Israel. This is the 20th century, early in the 20th century, well before Israel became a nation or became the prominent nation that it is. [00:59:16]
From God's perspective, Israel is in the center of everything of importance. All spiritual developments of global perspective are related to Israel. The God whom we serve will always be the God of Israel. We do not worship just the one and only God Almighty who is distanced from human history. We worship the God who appeared within man's history and indeed in many ways wrote man's history. [01:02:15]
Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Um, I happened to find this comic and I thought it was both uh funny and and not so funny. Y'all can read that, right? Says, "Those who don't study history are doomed to repeat it. Yet those who do study history are doomed to stand by helplessly while everyone else repeats it. You can't say amen, say omi. Because I see it literally every minute of every day today." [01:03:26]
When we talk to people about God and about the truth, what is our job? What is our responsibility? be a light to the nations in an individual conversation. What is our responsibility? Is it our responsibility to convince somebody to believe the way we believe? Our responsibility is to share from the heart. [01:10:00]
Our responsibility is to pray and recognize perhaps where they're at. Our responsibility is to connect with them in a way that we are being a better listener than we are a a a speaker, if you will, that we're using the two organs we have instead of the one in the middle of our face. more to recognize where they're coming from and to use our spiritual ears to hear from the Holy Spirit on how to share. [01:10:44]
But our job is never to try to convince somebody. That's the Holy Spirit's job. And there will be people who will reject what I'm saying, what you're saying, and thereby reject us. And the question is, are we okay with that? Especially if it's your son or your daughter or your mother or your father or your husband or your wife. Are you okay with that? [01:11:18]
He put him in a garden to eat of anything, any truth, any knowledge, any wisdom, any nutrient, spirit, soul, or body that he could have except the one that says that you, Adam, you, Eve, can decide what is good and what is evil. everything else. You can understand the wisdom of the universe, how I created it, everything. [01:18:32]
And so the biblical narrative, the the scriptural narrative opens with this series of incidences which depict our ancestors. These are our ancestors, right? As rebels against God. And these stories form the early points of the biblical redemptive narrative. Adam and Eve featured here establishes sort of the the backdrop, the foundation in which all their descendants would become protagonists, will become the re the rebels, the great curse has begun. [01:21:34]
And so this rebellion continues. Are you guys following me? This is the history of the world from God's perspective. Genesis 6, Adonai saw that the people on earth were very wicked. That all the imaginings of their hearts were always of evil only. So imagine we deal with these things from moment to moment, time to time. [01:23:41]
God chose somebody. There was a chosen one. He didn't just kill everybody and destroy everything and start over. Although he said it a few times, there was a chosen one. But Noak, it says, found grace in the sight of Adoni. Here is the history of Noah. In his generation, Noah was a man righteous and wholehearted. Why? Because Noah walked with God. [01:24:22]
Out of all of humanity at that time, God chose one man and his family. He was the chosen one. Can you imagine that? Can you imagine being Noah. Now, let's look at the other side of that coin. Every single person that Noah knew that his family interacted with, every animal that didn't go onto the the boat was going to be killed the blessing. [01:26:36]
So these people who were recently scattered throughout the earth, one group, the Shemmites, were still in this area that they were scattered from. And God's plan from the start was to take this one family to entrust them with his oracles, his truth, teach them his ways, and through them to restore the families of the earth. [01:35:00]
The psalmist shares the same conviction that Isaiah and all the prophets that Israel's blessing is for the turning of the nations back to God. That their blessing was not intended for their enjoyment. It was in order that the way of God would be known among the rebellious families. [01:45:46]
It is here that we find the paradox that being chosen is both a blessing and a huge burden. Those things that the other nations can get away with, Israel cannot. It turns out being in an eternal covenant and having an irrevocable calling from the God of Israel is no walk in the park. Being a holy people and stewards of the holy things compels holy behavior. [01:52:40]
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