God of the Rivals

God of The Rivals

The God of Abraham - Part 8

Sunday, October 22, 2023
Genesis 25:19-34; 33:1-10

Two nations are in your womb;
   two different peoples will emerge from your body.
One people will be stronger than the other;
    the older will serve the younger.

Genesis 25:23


Listen to this Week’s Sermon here:

Craig J. Sefa
God of the Rivals
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The complicated story of Jacob and Esau is but one of many great sibling rivalries throughout scripture and indeed throughout human history.  It would appear that such rivalries, the choosing of sides between “us” and “them” is simply the natural way of things.  In some texts, it almost appears to be God’s design.

 [But] can it really be true that the God who created the world in love and forgiveness, setting his image on every human being, loves me and not you?  Or you but not me? Sibling rivalry exists in nature because food is in short supply.  It exists in human society because material goods—wealth and power—are, at any given moment, zero-sum games.  It exists within the family because we are human and sometimes parents have favorites. But can the same possibly be said about God’s love or forgiveness or grace?  Are these in short supply, such that if God gives them to you, God must take them from me?  There is something odd, discordant, about such an idea.

- Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, Not in God’s Name, 102.

 

Jacob and Esau make a perfect case study to examine this issue.  After all, scripture seems clear that God loves Jacob and hated Esau (Malachi 1:3, Romans 9:13).  But what if it’s not as clear as we think?  Can God really “hate” Esau, or anyone else for that matter? 

In scripture, as in the ancient world, “love” and “hate” are often used as covenantal language.  In other words, to “love” someone means I have chosen to make a covenant with them and to “hate” someone means I have not made a covenant with them.  There is no emotional attachment to these words and the acceptance of one does not imply a rejection of the other.  It is simply defining a different type of relationship.  It would be like saying “I love my wife” but “hate all other women.”  Obviously I don’t “hate” other women, and we would never say that today, but the language of “love” and “hate” in the ancient world often implies a different kind of relationship, an exclusive, covenantal relationship that I do not have with others.  It is not a rejection of those who are not in that particular relationship.

This is what Jacob struggles with his whole life.  From before birth he grasps onto Esau, taking Esau’s blessing as the firstborn, trying to become Esau out of his own jealousy.  In his wrestling with “God”, he is reminded that his blessing doesn’t come from being someone else or from taking a blessing away from his brother.  Rather, he and his brother are equally loved and equally blessed, but in different ways and for different roles.  In coming to grips with the fact that he is enough in himself, he is finally able to reconcile with Esau and live into the special call God has on his life. 

We must do the same.  We must give up the idea that we have some exclusive claim to God’s favor or love.  We must accept the fact that God’s love for others does not mean a rejection of us.  We cannot build ourselves up by tearing others down.  We must lay aside this endless sibling rivalry and see the face of God in each other.  There is no “us” or “them”, only WE, the beloved of God.

 

 

  



 

 

God of the Generations

God of The Generations

The God of Abraham - Part 7

Sunday, October 15, 2023
Genesis 24:34-67

[Her family] called Rebekah and said to her, “Will you go with this man?”  She said, “I will go.” So they sent off their sister Rebekah, her nurse, Abraham’s servant, and his men. And they blessed Rebekah, saying to her, “May you, our sister, become thousands of ten thousand; may your children possess their enemies’ cities.” Rebekah and her young women got up, mounted the camels, and followed the man. So the servant took Rebekah and left.

 The servant told Isaac everything that had happened. Isaac brought Rebekah into his mother Sarah’s tent. He received Rebekah as his wife and loved her. So Isaac found comfort after his mother’s death.

Genesis 24:58-61, 66-67

Listen to this Week’s Sermon here:

Craig J. Sefa
God of the Generations
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Most of us are uncomfortable with our own mortality.  As one doctor said to a newly diagnosed cancer patient, “We all have a terminal illness.  It’s called life.” 

While I don’t know that I would call life an “illness”, there is definitely truth to the fact that it is a terminal condition.  One of the worst parts of that truth is that no matter how long we live, we will always leave something seemingly unfinished.  We long to know what will happen beyond us.  We want to leave a lasting legacy. 

The good news is that God is a God of the generations. 

Abraham barely saw a glimpse of God’s promise.  He never even lived to see his grandchildren, yet God remained faithful to Isaac, Jacob & all the rest. 

Let us live with this eternal perspective, in faith and hope because God is faithful in every generation. 

Amen.

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 Hymn: God, We Spend a Lifetime Growing

Tune: 8787D, ODE TO JOY, BABILONE (Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee)

 

God, we spend a lifetime growing,
learning of your love and care,
planting seeds you give for sowing,
working for the fruit they’ll bear.
Now we honor faithful servants
who, with joy, look back and see
years of growing in your presence,
lives of fruitful ministry.

 Thank you, Lord, for ones who teach us
what has brought them to this place!
May their faith-filled witness reach us;
may we glimpse in them your grace.
Strong in you, their strength uplifts us
from our birth until life’s end;
Spirit-filled, they give us gifts, as
prophet, mentor, guide, and friend.

 Christ our Lord, you walk beside us,
giving daily work to do;
years go by and still you guide us
as we seek to follow you.
If our sight fails, weak hands tremble,
minds forget the things we’ve known,
Lord, we trust that you remember,
hold us close, and see us home.

 

— by Carolyn Winfrey GilletteText: Copyright © 2001.

All rights reserved.

 


God of Life

God of The Invisible

The God of Abraham - Part 6

Sunday, October 8, 2023
Genesis 22:1-18

The messenger said, “Don’t stretch out your hand against the young man, and don’t do anything to him. I now know that you revere God and didn’t hold back your son, your only son, from me.”  Abraham looked up and saw a single ram caught by its horns in the dense underbrush. Abraham went over, took the ram, and offered it as an entirely burned offering instead of his son. Abraham named that place “the Lord sees.”  That is the reason people today say, “On this mountain the Lord is seen.”

Genesis 22:12-14

Listen to this Week’s Sermon here:

Craig J. Sefa
God of Life
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Perhaps one of the most difficult and gut-wrenching passages of scripture is the famous story of God asking Abraham to kill his son Isaac as a human sacrifice to prove his loyalty and faithfulness.  And of course, as a man whose faith is credited to him as righteousness, he willingly offers his beloved child up to die.

Yes, we know the end of the story.  We know how God spared the boy and sent the ram.  There are volumes of theological texts explaining how God sent a ram instead of a lamb because the lamb would be his own son, Jesus, who would willingly give his life as a ransom for sin. 

I don’t want to diminish God’s faithfulness to Isaac or the redemptive work of Jesus in his own sacrificial love, but if we’re really honest, none of these outcomes are sufficient to help us process what to do with a God who would ask such a thing in the first place.  Yes, Abraham lived in a different culture and time, but to simply say OK to some mysterious voice in the sky who tells you to kill your child and assume that voice comes from a loving God is not something most rational human parents would do. 

In Abraham’s culture, human sacrifice was not uncommon.  It would not be surprising for him to assume that such a sacrifice would be required as a faithful response to God’s blessing.  But instead of accepting the sacrifice, God steps in to definitively put an end to this whole ordeal.  “Do not stretch your hand out against him.”  Throughout the prophets God rejects the sacrifices of his people, declaring that he seeks mercy, justice, and humility rather than violence and bloodshed. 

What if the question or “test” is: “Would you make the same offering to me, your God, as the Canaanites make to their gods?”  Or to look at it another way, what do we do when what we are sure God is calling us to do actually runs counter to God’s character?  Is it possible that when we use God’s word to do harm, that we have misunderstood or misused God’s word?

It's easy to take everything God “says” in scripture at face value, but if we’re honest, we put words into God’s mouth all the time. We take a particular view on an issue and find verses to support it, claiming God’s absolute agreement with our position.  What if the Biblical writers did too?  What if they were doing the best with what they had, trying to paint Abraham as absolutely loyal and faithful as possible in the only way that would be expected according to their cultural norms?  But then God steps in and writes a different story. 

When we look at God through the lens of Jesus, we see a God who will do anything to re-write the human story of violence and death.  No matter what scripture may appear to say at first glance, God is always a God of life!

 

 

  



 

 

God of the Sinner

God of The Sinner

The God of Abraham - Part 5

Sunday, October 1, 2023
Genesis 18:16-33

The men turned away and walked toward Sodom, but Abraham remained standing in front of the Lord.  Abraham approached and said, “Will you really sweep away the innocent with the guilty  What if there are fifty innocent people in the city? Will you really sweep it away and not save the place for the sake of the fifty innocent people in it?  It’s not like you to do this, killing the innocent with the guilty as if there were no difference. It’s not like you! Will the judge of all the earth not act justly?”

The Lord said, “If I find fifty innocent people in the city of Sodom, I will save it because of them.”

 - Genesis 18:22-26

Listen to this Week’s Sermon here:

Craig J. Sefa
God of the Sinner
0:00 / 0:00

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People are quick to use the story of Sodom & Gomorrah as a condemnation of entire people groups with whom they disagree.  When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, several so called Christian TV personalities claimed it was God’s judgment upon the city because they allowed the sins of Sodom to run rampant.    Even then, I  found the picking and choosing ironic, as I had lived through several devastating hurricanes in Florida and no one claimed God’s judgment on our small town. 

There is much we can learn from these infamous cities in Genesis, but this claim of divine wrath over some particular sin is not it.  In fact, God explicitly declares the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah through the prophet Ezekiel and it’s not at all what most people think.

This is the sin of your sister Sodom: She and her daughters were proud, had plenty to eat, and enjoyed peace and prosperity; but she didn’t help the poor and the needy (Ezekiel 16:49).

This is an age old story about pride, greed, inhospitality, rejection of the poor, and even violence toward those on the margins.  It’s a story that is repeated in every empire and nation throughout history as power becomes more and more corrupt.  Those in power will do anything to stay in power, even Christians.  How much harm has the church done throughout the centuries and even in our own day just to maintain some degree of cultural dominance, influence, and comfort?

The bigger question for today, however, is how we might respond to sinners less like a judge, jury and executioner rolled into one, and more like Abraham in his conversation with God, especially since we ourselves are among those sinners, no matter how righteous we think we are.

Abraham pleaded for mercy on this corrupt city, even for the sake of only 50 good people.  Eventually he went all the way down to 10.  He didn’t ask that only the righteous ones be protected, but that the whole city be saved for the sake of those few.  We might argue that God destroyed them anyway so it doesn’t matter, but notice that God shared Abraham’s heart for the guilty and innocent alike.  God did not argue with Abraham.  God was readily willing to extend mercy.  God wanted to show mercy. 

There is of course far more to this story, but for now let us consider two key points.

  1. God desires mercy and wants us to desire mercy.

  2. It only takes a few faithful people to save an entire city.  10 people is not some magic number, as though there were only 9 so the city had to burn.  Rather, it reminds us that every little bit of faithful love makes a difference. 

Seeing sinners through the eyes of love and mercy can truly transform the world.