Abrahamâs Faith & Obedience
In the last two weeks, I have examined the lives and faith of Abraham and Sarah. We read in Genesis that God promised that from Abrahamâs descendants, all the families of the earth would be blessed. But twenty-four years have passed since the Lord first spoke to Abraham and Sarah about having a son, and their faith has weakened. God, however, appears to them in Genesis 18 and tells them that Sarah shall conceive and have a son by the set time next year.
Is anything too hard for the Lord? At the appointed time I will return to you, according to the time of life, and Sarah shall have a son.â Gen. 18:14 NKJV
As promised, Sarah gave birth to the son of promise,
And the Lord visited Sarah as He had said, and the Lord did for Sarah as He had spoken.â Gen. 21:1 NKJV
What promise have you been waiting for? Remember, He is God Almighty, El-Shaddai, âthe all-powerful God who is enough! He is able to do for us what we cannot do for ourselves!â
Abraham and Sarahâs son of promise, and the promise of many descendants, was to rest upon El-ShaddaiâAlmighty God. Their future prosperity and posterity were not found in their ability, but in Godâs ability. So it is for us.
Abraham is highlighted 74 times in the New Testament, second only to Moses. Abraham is the only person in the Bible called a friend of God (Jam. 2:23)âperhaps the highest honor anyone can receive. He was not perfect in his walk with God, yet scripture records him not only as Godâs friend, but his âfriend foreverâ (2 Chr. 20:7).
Abraham is the father of faith and the faithful. Throughout his life, faith is exemplified. Even when Abraham was weak in faith, God saw him as a person of faith.
Abraham and Sarah learned through their journey that they could trust and obey God. They werenât perfect, but they trusted God through the process. From this âfriend of God,â we learn that faith is not perfect character or integrity. Rather, it is simply taking God at His word and trusting Him. By doing so, Abraham became the model of faith for all believers.
Abraham and Sarah had to align their lives with Godâs prophetic promise to see it fulfilled.
Abraham discovered God as a FatherâOne who deeply loves us. God communicates vision to us through loveânot demand. Itâs an invitation to journey with Him. He builds us up through His promise revealed and inspires us to partner with Him to impact our world.
The Father is looking for friends! Jesus said to those who would follow Him, âI no longer call you servants but friendsâ (John 15:15). God loves us unconditionally; performance is not required to earn Godâs love and favor. Yet, from a place of intimacy with Father God, He invites us to believe His prophetic promises and risk. Prophecy reveals the perfect heart of Father GodâHis love and goodness.
Abraham had to start with some âbasic stepsâ to fulfill Godâs purpose for his life. He had to believe Godâs promise, obey Godâs promise, and give himself to Godâs eternal purposes. The same is true for you and I if we are to see prophetic promise fulfilled in our lives.
By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to the place which he would receive as an inheritance. And he went out, not knowing where he was going. By faith he dwelt in the land of promise as in a foreign country, dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise; for he waited for the city which has foundations, whose builder and maker is God. By faith Sarah herself also received strength to conceive seed, and she bore a child when she was past the age, because she judged Him faithful who had promised. Therefore from one man, and him as good as dead, were born as many as the stars of the sky in multitudeâinnumerable as the sand which is by the seashore. Hebrews 11:8-12 NKJV
Abraham Believed Godâs Promise (Hebrews 11:9)
Abraham and Sarah dwelt by faith in the land of promise and patiently waited for the son of promise, Isaac. Prophetic promise enables you to see when circumstances cloud the promise. Like a marathon runner getting a drink, hearing Godâs voice (promise), refreshes and strengthens you to keep running your race (Heb. 12:1-2).
Impossible circumstances didnât bring Abraham into unbelief; rather, his faith was strengthened as he waited in faith upon Godâs promise. Abrahamâs faith grew stronger rather than weaker. He continued to give glory to God as he waited for the promise. The promise releases grace to believe.
Contrary to hope, in hope believed ⊠and not being weak in faith, he did not consider his own body ⊠he did not waver at the promise of God through unbelief, but was strengthened in faith, giving glory to God, and being fully convinced that what He had promised He was able to perform. And therefore âit was accounted to him for righteousness.â Rom. 4:18-22 NKJV
Donât stop believing Godâs promise to you. When faith weakens, prayer ceases!
Faith occurs when we cease trying to do something by our own efforts and simply trust God! Romans 10:17 says that âFaith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.â (NKJV) It doesnât say âfrom having heardâ, but by âhearingâ a God breathed word for now. Itâs the intimate, communing heart in the present tense that is ready for Godâs deposit of faith. Hearing now is a key to faithâAbraham had to hear ânow,â and so it is for you and me.
Faith is fastened to the heavenly realm. Unbelief is attached to the natural (seen) realm. Faith lives from the invisible toward the visible. Use your promise as a foundation for prayer!
Faith that hears, believes, and obeys God promises isnât always easy. It involves trust, patience, and a willingness to risk. It means waiting upon God, believing in Godâs goodness when others might easily give up.
Paul writes that each of us has been, âgiven a measure of faithâ (Rom. 12:3 NKJV); it is up to you to develop your faith that âseesâ clearly what God is offering in His unseen kingdom realm. Measure is from the Greek metron, and implies a unit of measure, with dimensions or volume. Youâve been given a portion of faith from God; you must cultivate what He has given to see faith increase. Your ability to believe His promises is connected to your stewardship of the faith given to you.
You must also, âimitate those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.â (Heb. 6:12 NKJV) The Greek word for patience means patient endurance, longsuffering. Enduring faith in Godâs promise and prophecy is needed to fulfill your purpose and destiny. Your faith is sustained with patience and endurance.
Remember, you are responsible for Godâs promisesâyou must steward what God has given you! Others arenât responsible for your promise to come to passâyou are.
The Holy Spirit reveals the plans God has for youâto give you hope for the future (see Jer. 29:11). God reveals by His Spirit things that your eye hasnât seenâthings God has prepared beforehand for you. Your mind canât conceive it, but the Spirit reveals those plans God has for you (see 1 Cor. 2:9-10). Your mind will eventually believe and conceive the reality of Godâs plans.
Prophecy releases Kingdom identity. You may have taken a wrong turn, but with God, your destiny is redeemable through surrender. He is a loving Father! Identity, calling, and destiny are discovered through a FatherâSon, or FatherâDaughter relationship.
Abraham Obeyed Godâs Promise (Heb. 11:8)
Abrahamâs faith was demonstrated by leaving his family in Haran and journeying to unknown lands. He lived in Canaan, the land of promise, waiting for the son of promise, Isaac.
When God spoke to Abraham to âget up and get out to a land I will show you,â he had to believe and obey (See Gen. 12:1-4). God led Abraham and Sarah on a 1500-mile journey that began with believing and obeying Godâs directive. This theme of God speaking to His people, and Godâs expectation for us to believe and obey, is repeated throughout the Old and New Testaments.
Like Abraham, weâre walking a faith walk that requires obedience even when we donât understand. Godâs promise empowers us to act and obey. God was saying to Abraham, âtake the first step and Iâll show you the second!â It took years for everything to unfold, but they had to begin by going to the land of promise.
Itâs one thing to âhearâ Godâs directive, but another matter to believe and obey God.
Later, Abraham is told to view the land before him, and God said, âAll that you see in front of you is yours and your descendants forever.â (See Gen. 13:14-17) He doesnât even have the son of promise yet, just a word!
Oswald Chambers, an early twentieth-century Christian evangelist, teacher, and author of the devotional My Utmost for His Highest, stated regarding faith, âFaith never knows where it is being led, but it loves and knows the one who is leading it.â Intimate relationship with God yields strong faith that trusts God even when it doesnât know where it is being led.
After Isaac was born, God tested Abraham. It required extreme faith and obedience to God.
Take now your son, your only son, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you. (Gen. 22:1-2 NKJV)
Abraham and Isaac are a type and shadow of the Father offering His only begotten Son, Jesus to die in our place (John 3:16). Godâs love for us has provided forgiveness for our sinâGodâs love never fails us in Christ! Godâs requirement to sacrifice Isaac was the supreme test that demonstrated Abrahamâs trust in God and his confidence in Godâs faithfulness to keep His promise.
Abraham is ready to sacrifice his son and the angel calls out to him to stop. God provides a lamb in the bushes that Abraham can offer up instead. God commends Abraham for his faithful obedience and reaffirms the covenant with Him. Abraham named the place âJehovah-Jirehâ which means the Lord will provide. (see Gen. 22:1-19)
Jehovah-Jireh, or more accurately from the Hebrew Yhwh–rÄÊŸÄh, which means God who provides what is needed. But rÄÊŸÄh also means to see, to perceive by sight, to understand, to have prophetic vision. [1]
Before Abraham saw the ram in the thickets, he had to see God as the One Who provides!
What if Abrahamâs love for Isaac prevented him from fully trusting God? God was bringing Abraham into a deeper level of authority and fatherhood. It required him to be willing to let go of the âpromiseâ for Godâs greater purpose to be accomplished. Sometimes our love for the promise fulfilled prevents us from moving into a greater sphere of influence or ministry that God desires. When God says, âlet go,â trust Him!
Remember, Godâs provisions are available along the road of faithful obedience! Like Abraham, this doesnât mean your walk of faith is perfect. No, it means that you discover your life in God is a journey, and as you endeavor to stay close to Him, God promises to care and provide for you. Prayer keeps you in an intimate place with God to believe Him and then act upon what He reveals.
I heard the Lord say while praying this week, âI rejoice over every prayer you make!â
Let us then approach Godâs throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need. Heb. 4:16 NIV
Every prayer we make is a delight to our heavenly Father. Confidently approach Him, itâs in the secret place of intimacy and worship where God reveals His secrets to friends, and He gives more grace to believe! Faith for the promise and provision is realized when we are close to His heart.
Your Job is Your Jordan
While on a mission trip in 2003, the Lord invited me to leave the comfortable for the unknown. The moment reminds me of Abraham and his call to leave home and family to go to the land of promiseâthe land of Canaan 1500 miles away. The writer of Hebrews states, âBy faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place that he was going to receive as an inheritance. He went out without knowing where he was going.â (Heb. 11:8 CEB).
At the time, I was a bi-vocational pastor, working a full-time job to support my family while pastoring our new church plant, Passion Church (www.passiontucson.org). During that time, the church grew but it was not enough to support a full-time pastor. In fact, we were the main financial givers in the church, but we gave and labored with joyâwe were following Jesus.
During the trip, we had a time one morning of training and prayer for pastors and leaders. Afterward, along with many of the Brazilian leaders, I found myself consecrating my life and ministry afresh to the Lord. Godâs tangible presence was heavy. I can still see the floor of the church in Rio de Janeiro as I writeâit became holy ground for me.
As I lay yielded to God at that moment, the Holy Spirit spoke to me, âBob, your job is your river Jordan and I need you to âcross over.â The church cannot become what I intend it to be until you leave your job and pastor full-time.â I was undone and shaken. I knew Godâs voice and I was sure this was Him speaking, but what He had just spoken challenged me.
I was making an excellent salary with good benefits. We had money in savings, but not enough to sustain us for very long. Yet I kept hearing, âBob, your job is your river Jordan and I need you to âcross over.ââ Oswald Chambers once said, âFaith doesnât know where it is being led, but it loves and knows the one who is leading.â True faith responds out of relationship and obeys Godâs guidanceâno matter how bizarre. Faith does not rely on the natural senses or the wisdom of man to decide when to respond to God. It hears and obeys.
When I arrived home from the trip, I immediately shared this experience with Carolyn. To my surprise, she calmly said to me, âBefore you left, God had been preparing me that you might be leaving your job soon.â I think she had more faith at that moment than I did. We both continued to pray and seek God for confirmation during the next few weeks. Each time we prayed, we sensed that this was Godâs will and that I was to leave my comfortable and secure job.
I spoke to my supervisor at work, explaining to him about the church we started the previous year, and that I needed to attend to it full-time. To my surprise, he was supportive of my decision. He offered me a part-time position, but as we prayed, God reaffirmed to us that he needed us at the church full-time. With some trepidation, I turned in my notice to leave the company. We trusted that âas God guides, He provides,â and provide He did.
Our savings ran out within a few months, but the church had grown and was able to pay me a small salary. God was providing. Random people would show up at our home at odd times with groceries. God continued to provide. By faith, we hired a worship leader and moved him and his family across the country to Tucson. Somehow, all the bills were paid, and God kept providing. God also directed us to purchase church property during this season. God was in the details, and all He needed was for us to trust and obey Him. He kept providing.
I am convinced that our church and our ministry is where it is today because we said âyesâ to God when He asked me to leave the job. Our promised land was on the other side; we just had to trust God and cross over. We had to leave familiar territory for the inheritance we couldnât fully see. Your “yes” to God is all that He needsâlet your yes be louder than doubt and unbelief!
Is there anything God has told you to do that you may be delaying? Perhaps you have taken a short-cut or two hoping to fulfill His mandate? Could it be that the heavens are closed, that Godâs blessings are withheld because of your partial obedience? Find out what the Spirit is saying and be obedient to do that!
Abraham Gave Himself to Godâs Eternal Purposes (Heb. 11:10)
Abraham waited for the âcity,â Godâs eternal dwelling place. His natural eyes couldnât see it, but He could see it as ârevealedâ by the Spirit to him. Abraham saw the Church and the heavenly Jerusalem, Godâs tabernacle among humanity. We have come to Mt. Zion, the city of the living God through Christ and the New Covenant. We have become the very âcity of God!â (see Hebrews 12:22-24)
We want to live from that which was promised, with an expectant eye on the future. Abraham lived from prophetic expectancy based on Godâs promise. Yet, Abraham and Sarah didnât see the fullness of the promiseâlarger than them. Abraham looked for the city that is now ours. He gave himself to the very eternal purposes of God. He kept his eye on that which was unseen, yet eternal.
The Church should live in expectancy that is larger and later. Live from expectancy. Expect means: to look forward, to be pregnant. We live best from expectancyâanticipating, yearning for what we hope for.
Many in the body of Christ are expectingâcarrying somethingâready to birth something! We carry His glory and influence our world with the weightiness of His presence (Col. 1:27). Godâs Glory should build in our midst and across the globe.
How can we give ourselves to Godâs eternal purposes?
What is God doing in your life, your family, your church, your city, and nation? Do you see with Godâs eternal perspective for these areas? When you do, things begin to look differently, and you will act differently!
Cultivate an intimate relationship with Jesus (John 15:7).
Walk in unity and love with one another (1 Pet. 3:8-9).
Follow and obey your leaders and others. Be submissive to one another (Heb. 13:17; 1 Pet. 5:5).
Get involved with small groups and fellowship consistently with others (Acts 2:46).
Make a commitment to your local church and become a servant leaderâeach of us is called to this. Support your church with tithes and offerings. Give God the best of your time, treasure, and talentsâsteward well what you have been given in the local church community God has placed you in.
Final Thoughts
Abraham was a man who heard Godâs voice and simply obeyed. Abraham believed in what God spoke. He was convinced, based on Godâs character and nature that if God promised something, God had the ability and the desire to bring it to pass. Abraham gave himself to Godâs eternal purposes. In a similar manner, you can believe and obey God to fulfill your purpose and participate in Godâs eternal purposes.
Abraham believed Godâs promises and walked with Him faithfully, and this friendship created a divine partnership that greatly impacted our world. His life demonstrated that relationship with God transcends our failures. God chooses to use those He calls friends, despite their mistakes, to partner with Him here on earth. Therefore:
Believe Godâs promises to youâin His written word and those He has spoken to your heart. Obey what He has revealed. He knows how and when to bring His promises to you to passâyou donât!
Do not fear when Godâs promise and leading take you in a direction you donât understand. God knows what He is doingâtrust Him! Faith embraces adventure!
Godâs nature is to provide for us. As you follow the Lord, expect His provision to follow you in life. we can trust God will provide as He promises. Godâs nature is to provide! Jesus is the good shepherd who loves His sheep and provides for them!
For a more in-depth look at this topic, watch the Passion Church message, “Abraham’s Faith and Obedience”
[1] The Lexham Analytical Lexicon of the Hebrew Bible (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2017).