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Genesis 22:15
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<< Genesis 22:14   Genesis 22:16 >>


Articles, Bible studies, and sermons that contain Genesis 22:15:

Genesis 22:15-18
Excerpted from: The Promise and the Kingdom

Now, let us take a look at one more statement of the promise, this time we will skip over to Genesis 22. (We were here on Monday. Mike Ford spent a lot of time here. John retouched upon it.) This incident takes place just after God aborted the sacrifice of Isaac.

God here promises that the influence of Abraham will stretch far beyond their immediate geographic bounds, but will extend all the way to their enemies' gates.

As another example, we all understand that from Abraham have come numbers of kings, historically, and numbers of great nations, foremost of them being modern-day Ephraim and Manasseh. Again, we understand that modern-day Israelite nations possess (or have possessed) their enemies' geographic gates.

As a third point, we will focus on that predominate thread we saw in so many of God's promises to Abraham—lots of descendants (population). Did this promise preach the gospel of the Kingdom to Abraham? If so, how?

Again, there have been typical fulfillments of this promise. We certainly cannot deny that fact. I will not ask you to turn to I Kings 4:20, but I will just read it very quickly. There it tells us that, in the days of Solomon, "Judah and Israel were as numerous as the sand by the sea..." It uses that same metaphor, that same type of terminology we found in the Genesis promises, that Israel will be populous today. And, Israel will be populous in the Millennium, a time when God "will multiply them... and they shall not diminish" I will refer you to Jeremiah 30:19. There God says, "I will multiply Israel and they shall not diminish." There are certainly national fulfillments (in type) of this promise.

But this promise of God to Abraham has its final fulfillment in the context of the Kingdom. I am going to string together a bunch of scriptures. I will not ask you to turn to them. I will just go through them rather quickly for lack of time. You know them very well. In II Peter 3:9, the Apostle Peter tells us that,

All. That is a lot of people. As well, I would refer you to I Timothy 2:4. The Apostle Paul tells us of God's commitment to save as many as possible.

Does Paul not tell us that "All Israel shall be saved?" (Romans 11:26). The Prophet Isaiah, as recorded in Isaiah 2, makes it clear that "all nations shall flow" to the nation of God. And as another example you might want to take a look sometime at Isaiah 9:7. Here Isaiah writes, "Of the increase of His government and peace there will be no end." The Prophet does not simply assert here that the government of God will not end (of course that is true) but what he says is that it will never cease to grow. It will forever increase. It will forever get bigger. How many sons will Abraham have 50 billion of years from now? The very thought challenges the fringes of our imaginations.

The fifth point (and it is the final point), let us consider God's promise in the book of Genesis that "[I]n [Abraham's] seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed." We saw that in Genesis 22:18. This promise as well preaches the gospel to Abraham.

And at God's command, that is exactly what we have been doing today. We have been going back to Abraham. You can go right back to Abraham to see the principles of faith in God. He, we are told, "believed God and it was counted unto him for righteousness." Can you not see, then, that all those who believe God are the real sons of Abraham? The scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the gentiles by faith, really proclaimed the gospel centuries ago in the words spoken to Abraham, "In [you] shall all nations be blessed." All men of faith share the blessing of Abraham who believed God.

I need to make a statement about that last sentence. What we understand that to mean is all men of the faith"—not just any faith—will share in the inheritance of God's Kingdom. Let us now drop down to verse 16. Paul here is absolutely explicit. He could not be any more explicit. The promise to … . . .

Genesis 22:15-17
Excerpted from: Samson and the Christian (Part 2)

Now the promises and blessings are sure.

This was a huge step in the plan of God. Abraham proved to God that he had been totally steadfast, and he becomes a great example of faith to us.

Now, things are really moving because now in Isaac's seed all the nations shall be blessed. Big, terrific step in God's plan has just been set upon.

Genesis 22:15-18
Excerpted from: One God and One God Only

So the physical promise becomes unconditional here, because Abraham obeyed God, because Abraham put God first.

Genesis 22:15-18
Excerpted from: Abraham (Part Twelve)

No significant commentary.

Genesis 22:15-18
Excerpted from: Teaching the Good News of the Promise

Genesis 22:9-18
Excerpted from: The Angel of God

Genesis 22:15-19
Excerpted from: Abraham's Sacrifice (Part Five): Promises Confirmed


Bible Studies

God's Master Plan  
God's Non-Transmittable Attributes (Part Three): Omniscience  

Sermons

The Doctrine of Israel (Part Eleven): Genesis 49 and Deuteronomy 33  
The Doctrine of Israel (Part One): Origins  
The God of Abraham, Isaac Jacob, and Moses  



<< Genesis 22:14   Genesis 22:16 >>



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