"Cutting" the
Abrahamic Covenant. Genesis 15:7-20
We
know that the only source real dependency and day to day stability is the Lord
Jesus Christ, that God is the same today, yesterday and forever. So that the
solution to our fear in all the problems that we face is in the character of
God. This is what we see when we come to Genesis 15:7, “And he said unto him, I
am the LORD that brought you out of Ur
of the Chaldees, to give you this land to inherit it.” The first point that the
Lord is making is a reference to His own character. Remember that in this
chapter we have an ongoing dialogue between God and Abraham. But what under
girds this conversation are two doctrines. The first is that man is oriented to
fear apart from God, and the second is that God is faithful and dependable, and
when man trusts God there is stability in the life.
What
the Scripture shows is that doctrine is important, that imputation, the
crediting of Christ’s righteousness to the believer, is the ultimate foundation
for all stability in life because that is where our salvation begins. That was
the starting point of stability for Abraham, Genesis 15:6. The verb that is
used in that verse, “he [had] believed in the Lord,” is from the Hebrew verb aman,
and it has as its root the idea of that which is steadfast or stable, putting
focus on that which is unshakeable. And so we have this idea of faith. Faith
isn’t this wishy-washy kind of thing that modern man claims it is, that after
you get past all empirical knowledge and all human reason and just you can’t
have any certainty, then you just sort of make this existential leap of faith,
and so faith isn’t really knowledge. Human viewpoint systems always juxtapose
faith to knowledge. But the Bible doesn’t, the Bible sees faith as another form
of knowledge, it is the evidence of things not seen, the assurance of things
hoped for. It is as sure and certain as anything we might see, but because the
source is God we know that we have a certainty that goes beyond even the
knowledge to be gained from empiricism. Doctrine really matters, it really
makes a difference in life, but we have to learn how to think it through. So
that when we go through life and get hit with these things that blind-side us
and suddenly we are aware of the uncertainties and vagaries of life in ways
that we haven’t been before, and all of a sudden we realize how tenuous things
really are, we have to have the mental discipline to go back to the Word and
say, Okay what is my starting point? The starting point, first of all, is God
and His character. That is what God is saying to Abraham in verse 7, “I am Yahweh,
who brought you up out of Ur of the Chaldees.” He reminds Abraham of how he has
trusted Him in the past. It is not just this sort of empty faith in faith, it
is not just believe me in a vacuum. It is, See, I have a track record, Abraham;
I am the God you trusted when you left Ur of the Chaldees and went to Haran. I
am the God who continued to provide for you. All of the other things in Abraham’s
life that have transpired since then have been overseen by God. There is a
promise there related to possession. God brought Abraham out of Ur of the
Chaldees for a purpose and He is going to accomplish His purpose. The same
thing is true for us, that God has saved us to accomplish a purpose.
So
when we think about fear we should recognize, first of all, that the solution
for all fear is the begin with the character of God. We need to just work our
way through the essence of God—His sovereignty, righteousness, justice, eternal
love, etc. When we think about the fact that God is eternal and our problems
are temporal, then our problems begin to shrink in size. When we think about
omniscience we realize that God knew about all of these problems from eternity
past. We know that God is omnip[resent, so we know that He is just as much
present with us today in the midst of a crisis as he was yesterday when
everything was going well. God is omnipotent, which means He is more powerful
than any problem I can face. So the next time we hit something that is a crisis
and feel that sin nature want to shift into the fear mode and the panic mode,
the place to start is a focus on the character of God. Read the Psalms
sometimes. It is amazing how many times when we read the Psalms David starts
off with what theologians call a lament, he is focusing on his problem. That’s
where we all are, we start off focusing on that problem, that self-absorption,
the problem is bigger than us, woe is me, etc. Then as David presents the issue
before God he begins to talk about God as his rock, his fortress, God has the
one who has worked in his behalf in certain situations in the past. And as you
go through the psalm you can see David’s attitude shift as he moves his focus
from the problems to the God who is greater than the problems.
We
have to recognize that Jesus Christ controls history. We have seen this in
Hebrews 1:2, He is the one who made the ages. This is indicated by the purpose
clause that God brought Abraham out of Ur of the Chaldees to give him the land
to inherit it. That is future tense. Abraham never possessed the land in his
lifetime. The writer of Hebrews refers to that in Hebrews chapter eleven
because Abraham constantly looked forward to that city that was built without
hands. He never got there in his life so he knew eventually there would be a
resurrection and he would eventually possess it. But we can only have that
level of certainty when we recognize that Jesus Christ controls history, but He
also superintends the circumstances of our lives as individuals. God has this
remarkable way of bringing circumstances to bear in our lives that put the
pressure right on that sin nature arrogance that easily besets us. God has that
ability to bring to bear in our lives just the right circumstances, problems
and tests that are specifically designed to challenge our sin nature in its
area of operation where we are most likely to succumb to sin, because He is
trying to teach us at that point to trust in Him and not to rely on our
comfortable sin nature reactions.
Just
as God brought Abraham out of Ur for a purpose, God saved each of us for a
purpose. He has a purpose of bringing us into conformity with the image of
Christ, so there is a design behind the apparent chaos of our lives at times:
that no matter what happens, no matter how unplanned things may be, we know
that Jesus Christ is in control.
We
also know that there will be times of testing, times of adversity, times of
hardship. We can count on it. Nevertheless, God is in control. No matter how
chaotic things may seem, no matter how unjust things may seem at times, no
matter how irrational life may appear, we know that ultimately there is a
purpose and a reason and a guiding hand behind everything.
The
issue has always been to teach us doctrine, to give us opportunities to
evaluate the doctrine that is in our soul, to see what we learn, to watch Him
provide in the midst of those circumstances.
But
the greatest hindrance to success when we get into any test is always arrogance.
We get caught up in our own circumstances, we obsess on the details of our
lives, our own plans, our own agendas. What happened in the garden was that
Adam chose an alternative plan than God’s. When he ate the fruit he suddenly
realized how flawed his reasoning was. He comes face to face with his own
inability to control the details of life and he sees the chaos that he has
brought into his life. But at the same time there is this fear and anxiety that
we can’t accomplish the agenda that we have, but in arrogance we hold on to
that agenda; we just don’t want to release it, so we get into operating on the
arrogance skills.
The
arrogance skills include five aspects. The first is self-absorption. We just
focus on our own plan, our own agenda. When we get hurt we focus on our hurt.
When we are disappointed we focus on our disappointment. When somebody
maltreats us or doesn’t respond or behave the way we think they should, or if
they reject us, whether it is real or perceived rejection, what happens is that
we focus on that rejection, that hurt, how they failed us. At the very center
of the pain is this focus on who we are. That leads to self-indulgence. If we
are absorbed with our agenda then we focus on that agenda, and that agenda
becomes more important than Bible doctrine. It is incredible how few people as
Christians really come to understand that once they become saved, if they are
positive, doctrine becomes their life. It is not just something they do on
occasion. But we have to learn to think doctrine, we have to learn to think
biblically. It is an overhaul of our life, not just something we pick up by
going to Bible class once a week or listening to a tape every now and then, or
showing up when we don’t have something better to do.
So
we start indulging our own agenda. Before long that leads to a certain
blindness and we get into self-justification. We rationalize our behavior and
we are experts at this. Every single one of us becomes an expert at
rationalizing and justifying our sin patterns—to the point that by the time we
have reached our teenage years most of us a pretty blind to the sin patterns in
our own lives. They are so comfortable, those are our habits; that is how we
make things work, that is how we handle uncertainty and insecurity, and how we
handle the environment around us.
Then
we start believing this we are then in self-deception. In self-deception we
don’t know how to accurately apply the Word. That is why spiritual growth takes
time. The more we grow the more we realize all of the different layers of
self-deception we have in our life.
The
next arrogance skill is self-deification. We put ourselves in the place of God.
We have fulfilled the temptation that caused Adam’s original fall. The serpent
said, “If you eat of the fruit you will be like God.” As we get into
self-absorption and when we are cranking on our arrogance skills we get caught
up into a complex of mental attitude sins. Mental attitude sins are the most
devastating of all the sins that we get involved in. Other sins are simply the
manifestations of what is going on inside the soul.
In
self-absorption, what happens is that we start generating mental attitude sins.
Mental attitude sins all flow out of arrogance. Arrogance is the primary
orientation that drives the list patterns inside the sin nature. These mental
attitude sins develop in several different areas. There are four complexes.
First there is the fear complex. Fear is motivated with the sense that our
security, our stability, our future, our physical safety is threatened, our
emotional safety is threatened, our future plans and hopes and dreams are
threatened. Fear often goes along with several other mental attitude sins such
as worry, anxiety, and dread. We obsess that things can go wrong. So fear links
up with worry, anxiety, dread, and then often if we feed it and don’t deal with
it instantly in terms of confession and application of doctrine, claiming
promises, then it can develop into a general pessimism about life. As fear
develops we think that things are just going to go wrong, and when things do go
wrong it is just a self-fulfilling prophecy and we are convinced that
everything will go wrong. And yet the Scripture constantly challenges the believer
to hope. Hope is positive; hope is a confident expectation of a glorious
future. That doesn’t mean that we have our heads in the clouds somewhere,
thinking that everything is just going to be wonderful, but the believer has a
true realism because of understanding of the world, the cosmic system, and what
is going on, but at the same time he knows that God is in control and can have
an optimistic confidence in the midst of negative circumstances. It is a true
and real confidence based upon Bible doctrine.
Fear
often operates at core level, along with anger or frustration. When people feel
like their life is threatened or their agenda is blocked, they don’t get their
way, how do they respond? They get irritated. If irritation is not dealt with
through application of doctrine it leads to anger. When serious things occur in
life that prevent us from achieving our goals, whatever they may be, then fear
can develop into anger.
Another
complex of mental attitude sins that often plague us are related to envy. Jealousy
and envy develops from a covetousness, lust for material things, lust for
money, lust for the things that money can buy, like the status, the prestige. The
materialism classified in the Bible as covetousness and greed are linked with
idolatry in two passages: Colossians 3:5 and Ephesians 5:5. When we are
operating on material lust and money lust that is putting money and material things
in the place of God.
Then
comes the vengeance complex. This is what happens when we perceive that someone
rejects us or maltreats us, and perhaps they actually have, but instead of
relying upon God to handle things from the Supreme Court of Heaven we give in
to revenge, we nurture thoughts of hate and malice, we look forward to certain
ways that they will suffer so that we can enjoy their suffering because of the
suffering that they have brought into our own lives. We become resentful when
they seem to do well and we don’t.
There
is the bitterness complex. There is a progression here. We go from fear and
anxiety and it is often expressed in one direction toward the envy complex. In
another direction that can be expressed in the vengeance complex, and then when
nothing seems to happen or this state of affairs goes on and we continue in
carnality, nurturing our mental attitude sins, then what happens is bitterness.
Bitterness destroys the soul. Bitterness generates even more intense hatred. We
become resentful of others, and negative and pessimistic about others’
happiness or success. We become resentful of those who are applying the Word
and seem to have stability in their lives. We become angry at God and angrier
at other people, and then we begin to blame others for personal problems.
At
the core of all this is that we are just absorbed with our own live, our own
problems, our own circumstances and our own failures. And we are blaming
everybody in the world but ourselves and our own volition. God never promised
us a life without problems, heartache, or difficulties, but He said in the
midst of those difficulties and disappointments He would teach us where the
real source of security and happiness and stability was to be found; and that
is in His character. So that is what we see going on at the foundation of this
passage in Genesis 15. God is reminding Abraham of His faithfulness. He reiterates
the promise of a seed in the first five verses, and then starting in verse 7 He
is reiterating the promise of the land, that no matter how uncertain and
unstable things may appear at times for Abraham, He was giving this land to him
to possess it, to inherit it.
Genesis
15:8, “And he said, Lord GOD,
whereby shall I know that I shall inherit it?” It is interesting that God has
just made this promise, twice He has stated it, and Abraham wants a little
confirmation. Just give me something just a little more stable than just your
word! God in His grace doesn’t rebuke him. He always meets us where we are. God
in His omniscience knows the threats that are going to come into Abraham’s life
and so He gives him confirmation. This confirmation is such that even now, some
4000 years later, we still know that this is true. We still know that the
promise, though not fulfilled, will eventually be fulfilled. God is going to
establish a contract with Abraham on a legal basis. It is set up according to
the standards of the ancient world.
Genesis
13:9, “And he said unto him, Take me an heifer of three years old, and a she
goat of three years old, and a ram of three years old, and a turtledove, and a
young pigeon.” There is a problem in this passage. The first problem has to do
with the meaning of the word “three” in the Hebrew. Among the Rabbis from the
time before Christ up through the Talmudic period there was intense debate over
whether or not this was three-year-old animals or whether it was three animals.
What the debate was over was that it was unusual to find a three-year-old
heifer (an un-bread female calf). So it is very unusual to find a
three-year-old heifer. But what is interesting is the animals that are used
here. The word used for the heifer is a Hebrew word which is different from the
word used for the red heifer. The heifer was also used in a couple of different
sacrifices, specifically in the cleansing ritual in Deuteronomy 21:1-9 when
there had to be a cleansing of a town when a murder had taken place. In order
to cleanse the area they would sacrifice a heifer. The heifer could also be
used as a peace offering—Leviticus 3:1, but it was not to be used for a burnt
offering and it was prohibited from that is Leviticus 1:3. So it was used for a
peace offering but not for a burnt offering or for a sin offering. In 1 Samuel
16:2 it is used for a peace offering.
The
next animal that is mentioned is the female goat [etz]. In Numbers 15:27
the female goat was used for a sin offering, and it is interesting that the
male goat was used as a scapegoat offering. A third animal mentioned in the
ram. It is used for a trespass offering in Leviticus 5:16, 17; used for a burnt
offering in Leviticus 8:18; and as a peace offering in Leviticus 9:4. It is
tempting to go to these animals and say that each one of these represents a
different dimension of these offerings that are later described in Leviticus.
But that is not the point. Remember that these events took place in about 2000
BC. The revelation related to the different categories of the Levitical offerings
doesn’t take place until about 1400 BC in the regulations for the Mosaic law. Tempting
as it is, the point is not to break down these different animals and try to say
that each one represents a different dimension of salvation. In their totality
they represent every class of animal though that is used to represent
salvation. So rather than going in and saying the heifer represents a cleansing
offering and try to tie that to confession, or that the female goat represents a
burnt offering (none of that has been revealed yet), the best thing to do is
take each one, including the turtledove which was a substitute sacrifice used
for the poor, as well as the young bird translated “pigeon,” and see that all
of these together represent the total work of Christ on the cross. Even though
the work of Christ on the cross is yet future, all the sacrifices of the Old
Testament foreshadow the work of Christ on the cross. The fact that some of
these animals, for example the ram, could be used for either a trespass
offering or a burnt offering or a peace offering, tells us we can’t go in here
and say it is one of the other. So the whole picture here is one of the future
redemptive atoning work on the cross, and it is Christ’s work on the cross that
becomes the ultimate foundation for all of the covenant promises that God makes
in Scripture. So the foundation for the covenant is the work of Christ on the
cross as pictured in these sacrifices.
So
Abraham brings all these to God and he cuts them in two. There is some debate
among scholars that this is the origin of the idiom that you find in the Hebrew
language for entering into a covenant. It is called “cutting a covenant.” The
verb that is used is the Hebrew word which means to cut. So it is tempting to
say that in this ceremony where there is a sacrifice and the animal is cut in
half that that is where the word came from, and it could be. The practice was
that where two people were entering into this covenant they would take their
sacrificial animals, cut them in two, one half representing each of the parties
in the covenant, and lay them side by side, and then the two people who were
entering into the covenant would walk between the animals. What is being
pictured is the seriousness of the contract. In effect, what they were saying
was. May this be done to us if we break the contract. That is why it is sealed
in blood.
Genesis
15:11, “And when the fowls came down upon the carcasses, Abram drove them away.”
There is an assault on this covenant. Unclean animals, the vultures, come down
on the carcasses and Abraham drives them away. This is a picture of the fact
that there will constantly be attacks on the Abrahamic covenant down through history,
but God is going to provide a solution.
Genesis
15:12, God causes Abraham to go to sleep. It is not up to Abraham to secure the
covenant, God is going to secure it. “And when the sun was going down, a deep
sleep fell upon Abram; and, lo, an horror of great darkness fell upon him.”
This is a recognition of all of the assaults that would come against the Jews
down through history, the assaults against the Abrahamic covenant, the demonic
assaults that would seek to destroy the Jews. While Abraham is in this state
God speaks to him.
Genesis
15:13, “And he said unto Abram, Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a
stranger in a land that is not theirs, and shall serve them; and they shall afflict
them four hundred years.” There are going to be problems, tests, hardships, and
assaults. But what God is going to do through him and his descendants isn’t going
to just happen over night. It is not some simple thing, there will be these
problems. So we have this prophecy related to the bondage in Egypt.
Genesis
15:16, “But in the fourth generation they shall return here: for the iniquity
of the Amorites is not yet complete.” This shows God’s grace to the Canaanites.
He gives them time again and again to turn back to Him. So for four hundred
years He will keep the Jews out of the land until the Amorites have fully
demonstrated their sin, depravity and perversion. The essence of this passage
is somewhat challenged. It seems to be conflicting with a couple of other
passages in the New Testament. Here we are told they will be in bondage for 400
years and there is one other way of expressing this in the Scriptures. In Acts
7:6 there is a reiteration of this where Stephen said, “And God spoke on this
wise, That his seed should sojourn in a strange land; and that they should
bring them into bondage, and entreat them evil four hundred years.” The issue
is, what is the starting point and the end point of this 400 years? The
starting point of the 400 years has to do with their bondage; it is 400 years
of bondage.
So
they were going to be in bondage for 400 years. This means that if we were to
chart this out we know that in 1446 BC we have the Exodus. Prior to that there
are 400 years of bondage, so it was about 1846 when the bondage occurred and
they go into slavery. Then there were thirty years before that, and this takes
us back to the last time in Genesis when the Abrahamic covenant is confirmed to
Jacob. This gives us 400 years of bondage plus another thirty years. Why are we
brining that other thirty years in? Because there are other passages in the New
Testament that mention 430 years, and the Old Testament as well. For example,
Exodus 12:40, “Now the sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in
Egypt, was four hundred and thirty years.” The prophecy was 400 years, but
remember, Genesis 15 says they would be in bondage for 400 years. Exodus 12:40
just says they would be in Egypt 430 years. So they were there for thirty years
before the bondage began. Then in verse 41, “And it came to pass at the end of
the four hundred and thirty years, even the selfsame day it came to pass, that
all the hosts of the LORD
went out from the land of Egypt.” This is reiterated in Galatians 3:17, “And
this I say, that the covenant, that was confirmed before of God in Christ, the
law, which was four hundred and thirty years later…” Later than what? Later than
the last confirmation of the covenant. So what we see is that the Scriptures
clearly support each other and there is no contradiction when it comes to the
numbers. There s one other passage that relates to this, Acts 13:19, 20, “And
when he had destroyed seven nations in the land of Chanaan, he divided their
land to them by lot. And after that he gave unto them judges about the space of
four hundred and fifty years, until Samuel the prophet.” The phrase there is “about
450 years.” If we add this up again we have 400 years in slavery, 40 years
after the Exodus in the wilderness with the Exodus generation, and then we have
seven years during the time of the conquest. That comes to 447 years, and remember
the passage said “about 450 years,” so it is a divinely inspired approximation.
Genesis
15:14, “And also that nation, whom they shall serve, will I judge: and
afterward shall they come out with great substance.” That was exactly what happened.
They left Egypt with the spoils of Egypt.
That
is the first part of the prophecy, it has to do with the destiny of his people.
The second part has to do with Abraham’s own stability. Genesis 15:15, “And you
shall go to your fathers in peace; you shall be buried in a good old age.” Notice
how God directly addresses the issue: “Abraham, don’t be afraid.” Then He tells
him, “I am the Lord your God who brought you out of ….” Then he tells him the
future: “You will go to your fathers in peace.” God is comforting Abraham in
the midst of this contract with the certainty of God’s provision.
But
He reminds him (v. 16) that they will return here. They are going to meet
hardship, they will be out of the land, you will die in peace, but they are
going to come back. The question for us is to determine how this contact was
fulfilled. Was it fulfilled literally or allegorically? Were these numbers
precise or were they just spiritualized? They were precise. We see from other
passages that the numbers were to be interpreted literally. God is showing us
this early in Genesis that prophecy should be interpreted literally and not in
a figurative or spiritual manner.
Genesis
15:17, “And it came to pass, that, when the sun went down, and it was dark,
behold a smoking furnace, and a burning lamp that passed between those pieces.”
These two elements, the smoking oven and the burning torch—there is fire here
and light, and this is a picture we see many times in the Old Testament of the
holiness of God, of His integrity. And it is his character that secures the
covenant.
Genesis
15:18, “In the same day the LORD
made a covenant with Abram, saying, Unto thy seed have I given this land, from
the river of Egypt unto the great river, the river Euphrates.” At no point did
the Jews control all of that land. Just as God promised this in a contract it
will be fulfilled literally in the future. We know that Abraham must be
resurrected to come back and possess that land, and we know that eventually God
will restore the Jews to that land, and that is why this has been the
centerpiece of a battle for 4000 years, because Satan is seeking to prove that
God’s character can’t be trusted and his goal is to try to break the Abrahamic
covenant. One of his tools for doing that is anti-Semitism.