The Bible Recap - Day 017 (Genesis 16-18) - Year 5
Episode Date: January 17, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Win a trip to Israel! - Listen to Way FM ... FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - The Bible Recap Contact Page SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
If you've ever wanted to go to Israel and you want to go with me, for free, stick around
after today's episode for more info on how you can win a trip.
Today is going to be longer than usual because because this text is packed, and I'm still
going to barely skin the surface.
So buckle up, and if you're listening faster than 1x,
you might want to slow this down to normal speed.
In fact, you may even want to listen to this one twice.
Yesterday, we ended with God making a covenant with Abram,
and today we picked up to read a little bit of Sarah's story.
By this point, she's at least 75 years old,
and she still has not had a child, even though
God had promised Abraham a child when he visibly appeared to him.
So she does what many of us do when we feel like God is holding out on us.
She takes matters into her own hands.
In those days, servants were considered possessions, which, let me pause here to say this very important
thing.
This is one of those things in Scripture that is descriptive, not prescriptive. It's telling us what is happening, not what should happen.
This is not condoning treating people like possessions. But in that ancient culture,
that's what was happening. And basically, anything a servant owned, the master owned, so the child
of a servant was considered the property of the master. Sarah used that cultural norm as her logic
behind making her servant have sex
with her husband. Because then, if the servant had a child, Sarah owned it. Sarah was tired
of waiting. She wanted to take a shortcut. Have you ever been there? Let me give you calls
to reconsider. Sarah's fear and impatience has yielded millennia of war and destruction
that's still happening around the world today.
What am I talking about?
Sarah's servant Hegar became pregnant with the child she would name Ishmael,
and Ishmael is widely considered to be the line through which Islam began,
because Muhammad's ancestry is traced back to Ishmael.
Years later, when Sarah and Abram finally had their first child together, whose name was Isaac,
he begins the line of Abram finally had their first child together, whose name was Isaac,
he begins the line of Abram from which the Israelites descend.
Genetically, the Israelites of the Old Testament are the Jewish people of today.
And in case you aren't up on politics or world news, Muslims and Jews have been at war
for basically 4,000 years.
Point being, our sin affects others.
We never sin in isolation.
So unlike Sarah, don't let your fears
or your mistrust of God determine your actions.
Okay, moving on.
After Hagar got pregnant, Sarah abused her
and Hagar fled from the home into the wilderness.
Pregnant, abused, and alone.
Then in 167, something very important happens.
Let me set this up for us.
Sometimes in Scripture we see the term an angel of the Lord. That phrase refers to a messenger angel who shows up on the scene to deliver a message sent by God to humans.
But in this instance, the text says, the angel of the Lord. And that's entirely different. When you see the phrase the angel of the Lord, or more specifically, the messenger of Yahweh,
it's referring to the pre-incarnate Jesus.
The term pre-incarnate just means before he was born.
So all signs point to this being God the Son,
appearing on Earth before he was born as a human named Jesus.
The word for these kind of divine earthly appearances is theophany,
which means a visible manifestation of God. And this earthly appearances is theophany, which means a visible manifestation
of God.
And this particular kind of theophany where God the Sun shows up is called the Christophany
after Christ.
Yesterday, we talked about a different kind of theophany where God the Father appeared
as fire in the covenant ceremony with Abram.
But in this instance, God the Sun shows up as a man.
You're probably like, no, no,
terribly, it was an angel, not a man.
You're right, and so am I.
First of all, forget what you know about angels
from Renaissance paintings.
Most of those artists appear to have not read the Bible at all.
Exhibit A, they give us a blonde-haired blue eyed Jesus,
even though he was a Jewish man who likely wore a turban.
And exhibit B, they give us flying hay-load angels with two wings.
No angels in Scripture have two wings.
Messenger angels like the ones that showed up on Earth to speak to people have zero wings.
Scripture always depicts them as human males who speak the local language.
And some people believe they are really large in imposing, especially since the possibly
related nephilim from Genesis 6 were giants.
If angels are giants, that could account for why people are so afraid of angels when
they show up on the scene.
That could also be because they seem to materialize out of thin air.
Personally, I like to think it's both of those reasons.
There are a few forms of created beings that do have wings, but none of them are specifically
messenger angels.
There are cherubim, which have four wings and four faces, and seraphim, which have six
wings.
And for both of those creatures, their wings are covered with eyeballs.
You will never see that in a Renaissance painting.
But how do we know this angel man was God?
A few reasons.
In 1610, he says, I will multiply your offspring. Angels can't do that. Only God can do that.
Then 1613 says, it was the Lord who had spoken to Hegar. I have to speed through chapter 17 here,
even though it covers a lot of important stuff. Like how God changes Abram's name to Abraham, how he
again promises Abraham the land of the Canaanites, how he orders Abraham and
all his male descendants to be circumcised. And by the way, verses 23 and 26 tell us that Abraham and
Ishmael were circumcised that very day. Abraham was not playing around with delayed obedience.
God also changes Sarah's name to Sarah, and he promises to bless her, even though we don't have
any evidence of her repenting for how she mistreated Hegar. God visibly appears to Sarah, and he promises to bless her, even though we don't have any evidence of her repenting for how she mistreated Hegar.
God visibly appears to Abraham again and repeats his promise to give Abraham a child, but
this time God clarifies that Sarah will be the birth mother of the child, even though
it should have been obvious, so that there's no more this nonsense where they try to find
a loophole.
Both Abraham and Sarah laugh at this promise at different points, because Abraham is like
100 and Sarah is 90. Abraham actually fell on his face and laughed. It's hard to tell if that's
worship or irreverence. We get another Theophany in chapter 18. Today is just chock-full of God's
earthly appearances. Again, their references to the Lord appearing to him in verse 1, along with
two other men who are identified later in 191 as angels.
Also, you may have noticed that when it said the Lord appeared,
that was an all-caps L-O-R-D, like we talked about on day one.
This is Y-H-W-H, God's personal name, often pronounced Yahweh or Jehovah.
Abraham is a pretty powerful, rich man,
but he was so struck by God's appearance on earth that he bowed down in reverence and offered worship, and he did not want God to leave.
He wanted to stay in God's presence.
Verse 10 confirms again that this was God by saying the all-caps, Lord, said, I will surely return to you about this time next year.
Verse 19 confirms this again when he says, I have chosen him. I could keep going, but I'll finish with this last one. In verse 25,
when Abraham is begging God not to destroy Sodom, which God is saying he's going to do,
Abraham respectfully refers to him as the judge of all the earth. Now, I go back and forth on this,
but I mean, cliente believes that this particular theophany was not a Christophany, that this was not God the Son. This was, I believe, God the Father, showing up as a human.
I'm used to the idea of God the Son's divine appearance as a human because he was Jesus,
but not God the Father with skin. It honestly just blows my mind and makes me want to stop talking.
But I can't stop talking before we cover our God's shop for today.
What was yours?
Mine was early on in the passage when the story zooms in on Hegar,
the slave who had been forced to sleep with their 85-year-old master,
then was basically driven out of her home and forced into the desert,
where God shows up.
He rebukes her a little bit, but then he makes her promise.
To be clear, Ishmael is not the child of the promise, but God still promises to multiply
Heghar's offspring, and he fulfills that promise. Honestly, God really has no reason to pay special
attention to her as far as loyalties are concerned. His commitment is to a specific family that she
doesn't belong to. But because she is lived with that family, she knows who he is and she knows what he is capable of.
She even gives him a name, El Roy, which means the God who sees, or the God who sees me.
The pre-incarnate Christ shows up in the form of an angel man for telling the birth of
her child. And it might have been kind of a downer because he also tells her how that child-ish male
in his offspring would become an enemy of God's people.
But I bet in that moment she cared far more about the fact that God spoke to her at all
in the midst of her plight. God sees, and he's merciful, and he is where the joy is.
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