A is for Abraham

ABC Wednesday is begin­ning Round 9 this week. This time, I’m going to (attempt) to go alpha­bet­i­cally through the #1 best­selling book of all time, but the least read…the bible. And what better place to begin than with Adam. No wait, Roger already did that one. Okay, let’s go with Abraham.

Abraham is the father of the three major reli­gions of the world. Judaism, Christianity and Islam. But why was Abraham so spe­cial? Abram (his orig­inal name) lived in what is now modern day Iraq. His father made idols for a living. Not exactly the lin­eage of a poten­tial patri­arch candidate.

God spoke to Abram to leave his home­town for an unknown place…that he would tell him later. “I will make you into a great nation…and you will be a blessing…and all peo­ples on earth will be blessed through you.”

And he did. Abram agreed to move lock stock and camel. Eventually he set­tled in Canaan (modern day Israel/Palestine). God then told him, “All the land that you see I will give to you and your off­spring for­ever”… which must have sounded ridicu­lous to Abraham, his wife Sarah and all the neigh­bors since everyone knew they couldn’t con­ceive children.

So we have the son of an idol wor­shiper and his barren wife who pick up and moved to a new country not knowing a soul. And from these two, a new nation would be cre­ated in which all people would be blessed. Oh, and one more thing. Abraham and Sarah were 75 and 65 years old. So much for the golden retire­ment years. And when they were finally told they would become par­ents, it’s written that they laughed.

But God did keep His promise. Sarah gave birth to a son, and at age 100, Abraham became a father to Isaac…who started the ball rolling on the unique covenant that would give birth to the Jewish nation of Israel…and even­tu­ally Christianity. BTW, in Hebrew, Isaac means “laughter.”

That God…he has such an ironic sense of humor.

He took the son of a pagan and made him the father of three major monothe­istic world faiths…even when Abraham doubted and did the exact oppo­site of what he was told.

He gave Sarah a son when all human hope was gone; laughing in the face of human impos­si­bility and skepticism.

He for­gave Abram and Sarah for taking things into their own hands with a sur­ro­gate ser­vant. And although the covenant would be ful­filled through Isaac, God blessed first-born Ishmael anyway for good measure.

I believe there are two impor­tant lessons from this story.

1. God does not cut us out of the will when we stray from his plan and doubt his promises. Over and over, Abraham went down his own bunny trails; but the impor­tant thing is that he never com­pletely lost faith and turned his back on God.

2. Genuine faith does not exist out­side of chal­lenges, strug­gles and seem­ingly impos­sible odds. Sometimes it’s a real struggle to wait on God. We expect inter­ven­tion and when it doesn’t happen according to our time­line, we get dis­cour­aged, angry and frus­trated. We want results and we want them NOW. But that’s not always in The Plan.

I know, because my life motto now is:

We plan.
God laughs.
We adjust.

There must a lot of LOLing going on in heaven.

Submitted for ABC Wednesday

 

 

 

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