Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The Bible-Part 1 From Death to Life Genesis 22:9–10 3/3/13



Sermon 3-3-13 the bible part 1 – from death to life

Will read scripture later

Everyone here has a story, -
·        I have a story. You have a story.
·        Some read like tragedies, some like comedies.
·        Some are mysteries, and others are romances.
·        Some are much longer than others, and some are just getting started.
·        But everyone has a story.

All of our stories, different as they are, are part of a bigger story:
·        A story that is older than any of us,
·        a story that defines all of us,
·        and can—if we let it—guide us, too.
·        It is the story told in the pages of your Bible,
·        from the first words of Genesis to the last lines of the book of Revelation.

Starting a new series  w history channel The Bible
we are going to discover some of the most gripping stories from the Bible––
stories that are more than just stories;
stories that tell us something about ourselves,  our lives,
and God’s hopes and plans for us. 

the series starts with a look at an incident from the life of Abraham
[tell the story of Abraham, sarah and issac]
the book of Genesis, the twenty-second chapter.
It is sometimes called “The Binding of Isaac,”
and we’ll look at it first on video,                                              VIDEO

Wow is that painful or what………

the story of a father who was so obedient to God
that he was willing to make the greatest sacrifice imaginable
some years ago, my son was sick……… God and I had some long talks.

This story is usually told from the fathers perspective
But have you ever looked at it from Isaac’s perspective?

That’s how we will approach it today.
It is not just Isaac’s story;
it is the story of all of us  - in at least three very important ways.

1.   My life is an uncertain journey (Genesis 22:1–8).

Dad says we are going on a trip
You aren’t told lots of the details – the whole thing is a mystery

That is true of your life and mine.
We are all on a journey–– an uncertain journey.
We don’t know what lies ahead.

A pastor and songwriter named Ira Stanphill once wrote,
I don’t know about tomorrow;I just live from day to day.
I don’t borrow from its sunshineFor its skies may turn to grey. …
Many things about tomorrowI don’t seem to understand
But I know who holds tomorrowAnd I know who holds my hand.[1]

None of us knows what is to be.
No matter how much you may know,  no matter how educated you are,
no matter how much you have figured out, your life, like mine, is an uncertain journey.

That’s one way in which Isaac’s story is my story, and yours, too.
But there is another way in which his story is true of each of us,
and that is:

2.   death appears certain (Genesis 22:9–10).
Genesis 22, verses 9 and 10, say this:
When they reached the place God had told him about, Abraham built an altar there and arranged the wood on it. He bound his son Isaac and laid him on the altar, on top of the wood. Then he reached out his hand and took the knife to slay his son (NIV).

Can you imagine?

I have to stop for a commercial
I Cant imagine harming one of my children
Parents that hurt their children, is beyond understanding

In fact, I invite you to think hard with me about the concept of hurting another human being ever.
Cars - We hurt people With road rage cutting people off.
What is the point.
Why would we want to do this at all?
War In time of war people get hurt.  Innocent people too…..
Quakers are pacificsts
Part of me wants to be so as well.

Now, commercial over….. back in Isaac’s shoes.
Can you imagine his amazement, his horror?

Did his father surprise him?
Did Abraham explain what had to happen?
Did Isaac resist?

We don’t know for sure.
At some point, he realized that his death was certain.

Can you imagine this moment?
Abraham raised the knife to “slay” his son!

Talk about your life flashing before your eyes!

Some of us have had such a moment.
Maybe it was a cancer scare.
Maybe it was a car accident or an operation.
When we are kids we think we are invincible…….
When we grow older we start to understand that we are not here forever.

But Isaac’s story is your story, and mine, regardless.
The Bible says, Romans 5:12
12 Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man,(X) and death through sin,(Y) and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned

Ever since the first human beings ate the forbidden fruit,
we have all gone astray.
We have all rejected God’s way and chosen our own way … repeatedly.
And the awful consequence of the sin that touches us all
is the death that awaits us all.
it’s not a question of if death is coming,
it is only a question of when.

We all know our time on this earth, in this life, is limited.
We all know that the human condition is terminal.
We know that the death rate is 100%.

We may hope it’s not today.
We may feel like we’ve got all the time in the world.
But none of us knows.

But, happily, that is not the end of the story.
Or, at least, it doesn’t have to be.

Because there is one more way that Isaac’s story is my story,
and it is this:

3.   our  salvation has been provided Let’s look at the text.
Genesis 22, verses 11–14, says this:
But the angel of the Lord called out to him from heaven, “Abraham! Abraham!”
“Here I am,” he replied. “Do not lay a hand on the boy,” he said. “Do not do anything to him. Now I know that you fear God, because you have not withheld from me your son, your only son.” Abraham looked up and there in a thicket he saw a ram caught by its horns. He went over and took the ram and sacrificed it as a burnt offering instead of his son. So Abraham called that place The Lord Will Provide. And to this day it is said, “On the mountain of the Lord it will be provided” (NIV).

On the way to the mount Isaac asks where the sacrifice is
Abraham said to Isaac... God will provide.
God always carries us through the pain. He walks us through the dark valleys even when we are the most distant, He is there for us. God draws near and provides for us.
You may think that you are alone, but God is there
so the angel of the Lord called out to Abraham......, and the next thing you know, a ram appeared, tangeled in a bush nearby. A ram. A sacrificial animal. A substitute. And Isaac was saved.
You might have noticed in the clip there was a lamb instead of the ram. This wasn’t an accident, the producers of the miniseries are making a point. Because just as He did for Isaac, God provided us a substitute.... a lamb. He provided a Lamb for all of us. For me. For you. When we put our trust in Him we go from death to life..
Romans 6 says
The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23, NIV).

But your story doesn’t end there, 
The rest of the verse says
but the gift of God is eternal life in[b] Christ Jesus our Lord.

Because just as he did for Isaac,
God provided salvation for you …  a substitute.  A Lamb.

John the Baptist announced to everyone:
“Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29).

God provided a Lamb for all of us.  For me.  For you.

Transition
Let me ask you to put yourself in Isaac’s shoes—or sandals—one last time
The knife is up.  But then his father is stopped.  The ropes are cut
Can you picture him climbing down from that altar?
Do you imagine that he wiped his brow and said, “Whew! That was close”?

I would like to think that he embracing his father.
I would like to think that he dropping to his knees in gratitude for the salvation God provided

What about you?
When you think of what God has done -do you have a sense of gratitude?

But God has provided - A ram.  A substitute
Instead of rejection, a welcome
God has provided a savior for you.
This is not merely an acceptance and then you get on with your life. 
This kind of sacrifice creates a bonding,
          Randy Ross’s story
A realization that you life is now hidden in Christ.
A leaving of yourself for him
It is the losing yourself in the love of another

Has god saved you from something? 
I want in invite you to nod to this, but there is more
I want you to enter into the divine embrace?
I want you to feel the joy of salvation.

Thank God.  In Christ, we all can go from death to life.  Thank God.

let’s pray together:
“Lord God, thank you for your great salvation.  Help us—each one—to live in gratitude and constant joyful awareness that we have been delivered, we have been spared, in Jesus’ name, amen.”


From: Jeff Brinkman [mailto:JeffB@woodschapelchurch.org]
Sent: Friday, March 01, 2013 2:45 PM
To: Sherri Swanson; Jeff Brinkman
Subject: sermon notes.......for me, still too long........will keep working on paring it down to an outline.

Sermon 3-3-13 the bible part 1 – from death to life

Winnie the pooh
Nearly a hundred years ago,
a little boy in England received a stuffed bear as a gift on his first birthday.
Soon after, his father, a playwright and novelist,
began writing stories that featured the little boy, his bear,
and other toys in the boy’s playroom, as characters.
You know the bear as Winnie-the-Pooh.
You know the boy as Christopher Robin.

Since then, these stories have been  translated into more than fifty languages, and loved by millions
But it all began with a little boy and a stuffed bear  as characters in a simple story.

Everyone here has a story, - whether you have a stuffed bear or not.
·        I have a story. You have a story.
·        Some read like tragedies, some like comedies.
·        Some are mysteries, and others are romances.
·        Some are much longer than others, and some are just getting started.
·        But everyone has a story.

All of our stories, different as they are, are part of a bigger story:
·        A story that is older than any of us,
·        a story that defines all of us,
·        and can—if we let it—guide us, too.

·        It is the story told in the pages of your Bible,
·        from the first words of Genesis to the last lines of the book of Revelation.

Starting a new series  w history channel The Bible

Our hope is that at the eend of this series you will:
1) See stories from the Bible like you never have before;
2) Gain a better appreciation for God’s redemptive plan
3) Experience greater insight into God’s love for you.

Through it all,
we are going to discover some of the most gripping stories from the Bible––
stories that are more than just stories;
stories that tell us something about ourselves,  our lives,
and God’s hopes and plans for us. 

the story we will start with today is an amazing incident
the book of Genesis, the twenty-second chapter.
It is sometimes called “The Binding of Isaac,”
and we’ll look at it first on video,                                VIDEO

Wow is that painful or what………

It is a story of great faith,
the story of a father who was so obedient to God
that he was willing to make the greatest sacrifice imaginable.

It is a story usually told from Abraham’s perspective,
as a display of his great faith.

But have you ever looked at it from Isaac’s perspective?

That’s how we will approach it today.
Because that story, from Genesis 22, is not just Isaac’s story;
it is the story of all of us
in at least three very important ways.

The first way that Isaac’s story is my story is this:

4.   My life is an uncertain journey (Genesis 22:1–8).

Put yourself in Isaac’s shoes. Or sandals, as the case may be.
Dad says we are going on a trip
You aren’t told lots of the details – the whole thing is a mystery

That is true of your life and mine.
We are all on a journey–– an uncertain journey.
We don’t know what lies ahead.

A pastor and songwriter named Ira Stanphill once wrote,

I don’t know about tomorrow;I just live from day to day.
I don’t borrow from its sunshineFor its skies may turn to grey. …
Many things about tomorrowI don’t seem to understand
But I know who holds tomorrowAnd I know who holds my hand.[1]

As the wise “preacher” and author of Ecclesiastes once said,

No man knows what is to be, and who can tell him what will be after him? (Ecclesiastes 10:14b,).

None of us knows what is to be.
No matter how much you may know,  no matter how educated you are,
no matter how much you have figured out, your life, like mine, is an uncertain journey.

That’s one way in which Isaac’s story is my story, and yours, too.
But there is another way in which his story is true of each of us,
and that is:

5.   My death appears certain (Genesis 22:9–10).
Genesis 22, verses 9 and 10, say this:
When they reached the place God had told him about, Abraham built an altar there and arranged the wood on it. He bound his son Isaac and laid him on the altar, on top of the wood. Then he reached out his hand and took the knife to slay his son (NIV).

Can you imagine?

I have to stop for a commercial
Camp on the moment when the knife is raised.
I Cant imagine harming one of my children
Parents that hurt their children, is beyond understanding
Children that hurt their parents, is beyond understanding

In fact, I invite you to think hard with me about the concept of hurting another human being ever.
In time of war people get hurt.  Innocent people too…..
We hurt people With road rage cutting people off.
What is the point.
Why would we want to do this at all?
Quakers are pacificsts
Part of me wants to be so as well.

Now, commercial over….. back in Isaac’s shoes.
Can you imagine his amazement, his horror?

Did his father surprise him?
Did Abraham explain what had to happen?
Did Isaac resist?

We don’t know for sure.
But it seems likely that, at some point, Isaac understood what was happening.
At some point, he realized that his death was certain.

And, while the biblical account doesn’t give us much detail about how things got to this point, it supplies excruciating detail at this point:
Abraham raised the knife to “slay” his son!

Talk about your life flashing before your eyes!

Some of us have had such a moment.
Maybe it was a cancer scare.
Maybe it was a car accident or an operation.
When we are kids we think we are invincible…….
When we grow older we start to understand that we are not.
Anyone that has had a major surgery or lost a close loved one……..
You start to see that life reminds you that we are not here for ever.

But Isaac’s story is your story, and mine, regardless.
The Bible says, Romans 5:12
12 Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man,(X) and death through sin,(Y) and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned

Ever since the first human beings ate the forbidden fruit,
ever since they ignored God’s warning and did things their own way,
we have all gone astray.
We have all rejected God’s way and chosen our own way … repeatedly.
And the awful consequence of the sin that touches us all
is the death that awaits us all.

There is a scene in The Bible miniseries dramatization of the Exodus,
in which Moses has to explain the final plague to his people,
and he tells them, “Death is coming for us all.”

It’s true.
You may not be tied hand and foot and placed on an altar.
The angel of death may not be sweeping through your house tonight.
But death is coming for us all,
one way or another,
sooner or later.

Every one among us is facing physical death, just like Isaac did on the altar;
it’s not a question of if death is coming,
it is only a question of when.

We all know our time on this earth, in this life, is limited.
We all know that the human condition is terminal.
We know that the death rate is 100%.

We may hope it’s not today.
We may feel like we’ve got all the time in the world.
But none of us knows.

But, happily, that is not the end of the story.
Or, at least, it doesn’t have to be.

Because there is one more way that Isaac’s story is my story,
and it is this:

6.   My salvation has been provided (Genesis 22:11–14).

Let’s look at the text.

Genesis 22, verses 11–14, says this:
But the angel of the Lord called out to him from heaven, “Abraham! Abraham!”
“Here I am,” he replied. “Do not lay a hand on the boy,” he said. “Do not do anything to him. Now I know that you fear God, because you have not withheld from me your son, your only son.” Abraham looked up and there in a thicket he saw a ram caught by its horns. He went over and took the ram and sacrificed it as a burnt offering instead of his son. So Abraham called that place The Lord Will Provide. And to this day it is said, “On the mountain of the Lord it will be provided” (NIV).

On the way to the mount Isaac asks where the sacrifice is
Abraham said to Isaac... God will provide.
God always carries us through the pain. He walks us through the dark valleys even when we are the most distant, He is there for us. God draws near and provides for us. I know that for me personally when I have gone through my most difficult times in my life... it has been challenging to see the good or to sometimes lean on God and let Him guide me. But in the end God has been my strength to get me through....He has seen me through the death of both my parents------
Now the angel of the Lord called out to Abraham......, and the next thing you know, a ram appeared, tangeled in a bush nearby. A ram. A sacrificial animal. A substitute. And Isaac was saved.
You might have noticed in the clip there was a lamb instead of the ram. This wasnt an accident, the producers of the miniseries are making a point. Because just as He did for Isaac, God provided us a substitute.... a lamb. He provided a Lamb for all of us. For me. For you. When we put our trust in Him we go from death to life..
You may not be physically bound, hand and foot,
but like all of us,
you know what it’s like to be tied up in knots.
You know the shackles of sin.  We know the brokenness of humanity
You might even know that the Bible says,

The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23, NIV).

But your story doesn’t end there,  any more than Isaac’s story ended on Mt. Moriah. 

Because just as he did for Isaac,
God provided salvation for you
a substitute.
A Lamb.


John the Baptist announced to everyone:
“Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29, NIV).

God provided a Lamb for all of us.  For me.  For you.

Transition
Let me ask you to put yourself in Isaac’s shoes—or sandals—one last time today.
Can you picture him climbing down from that altar?
Do you imagine that he casually wiped his brow and said, “Whew! That was close”?

I see him embracing his father.
I see him dropping to his knees in gratitude for the salvation God provided

When you think of what God has done for you do you have a sense of grattitude?

But God has provided - A ram.  A substitute
Instead of rejection, a welcome
God clothed the nakedness of adam and eve
God saved noah and his family from the flood
God saves the Israelites from Egypt

God has provided a savior for you.
This is not merely an acceptance and then you get on with your life. 
This kind of sacrifice creates a bonding,
A realization that you life is now hidden in Christ.
A leaving of yourself for him
It is the losing yourself in the love of another

Has god saved you from something? 
I want in invite you to nod to this, but there is more
I want you to enter into the divine embrace?
I want you to feel the joy of salvation.

Thank God.  In Christ, we all can go from death to life.  Thank God.

let’s pray together:
“Lord God, thank you for your great salvation.  Help us—each one—to live in gratitude and constant awareness of our deliverance from sin, and guilt, and death, in Jesus’ name, amen.”





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