Grace Orientation,
Impersonal Love, Intercessory Prayer. Genesis 18:16-33
In Genesis 18:16-23 we see another test: grace orientation’s big brother, i.e. the tough problem-solving device, impersonal or unconditional love. It has to do with Abraham and his exhibiting love for Lot. Lot has tried to cheat him and there is a certain antagonism between the two camps but it all flowed from Lot’s side, not from Abraham’s. Lot is a believer but he is completely messed up in his whole scale of values. He is the real issue here in this test because he has now taken up residence in Sodom and God is about to completely destroy Sodom and in the process is going to disclose this to Abraham. It is that disclosure that tests Abraham. That is, am I going to say something, am I going to intercede for Lot, am I going to act as his advocate before God, or am I just going to let God go down there and judge and destroy everybody, including Lot? Is Abraham going to respond out of human viewpoint and out of his sin nature or is he going to operate on the basis of divine viewpoint, grace orientation, and impersonal love.
In
conjunction with this we see this test for Abraham related to impersonal love,
but in the process as Abraham is growing to maturity now is going to sort of
test God. God sets up a test for Abraham but in the midst of this test for
Abraham, Abraham is going to test God. The test that he has for God, once he
learns of this judgment, has to do with understanding how God’s justice and
righteousness work together. The basic question that Abraham is asking and
which underlies all of this dialogue is the question: Is God trustworthy with
regard to carrying out His justice in human history? Can I really trust God to
do the right thing?
In
verse 25 Abraham makes a statement: “Shall not the Judge of all the earth do
right?” We have to go back to the character of God, to understanding His
righteousness and His justice—His integrity—and that every human being has
violated His righteous standards and therefore in justice God is bringing
suffering or allowing suffering in the world, and what we see today is nothing
compared to the eternal suffering that those who reject Christ will encounter.
Cf. verse 19: “For I know him, that he will command his children and his
household after him, and they shall keep the way of the LORD, to do righteousness and
justice.” The key word in the chapter is righteousness, and that is the
underlying issue here. There is a test for Abraham but within the context of
this test for Abraham, Abraham is validating or verifying that God is a
righteous God who will judge correctly and will not arbitrarily destroy the
righteous along with the wicked. This is the framework for understanding these
particular events.
The
first section goes from verse 16 down to verse 19. This involves God testing
Abraham with respect to the blessing imperative in the Abrahamic covenant. In
the previous section the test focused on the seed; in this section it focuses
on the blessing. In verse 16 we see the circumstances. They finished their
meal, they have rested, and now the three men stand up. Two of the men in verse
16 are referred to in 19:1 as angels. Throughout Scripture angels always appear
as male. It doesn’t mean that the angels are identified by sex. They don’t have
the ability to procreate because angels are not a species. Each individual
angel is created individually.
As
they are walking away, v.17, “And the LORD said, Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do?” The
implication is that, no it shouldn’t be hidden from Abraham, he should be told.
This information is going to provide a test for Abraham. There are two aspects
to this test. The first is that Abraham needs to be tested because he, i.e. his
progeny, descendants, will become a great and might nation. Verse 18, “Seeing
that Abraham shall surely become a great and mighty nation, and all the nations
of the earth shall be blessed in him.” In other words, because of Abraham’s
position as the source of blessing for all nations he needs to be trained in
understanding righteousness and justice. He has to understand the integrity of
God.
Impersonal
love: According to Collins’ Dictionary the term means something that does not
involve a personal knowledge or personal relationship with something. So “impersonal”
easily communicates the idea that you don’t have to have a personal
relationship with the object of love. The problem is that the second dictionary
meaning of impersonal is that it is something that is devoid of warmth, care,
or something that is mechanical or cold. And that is what a lot of people think
of when they think of “impersonal,” so the word in connection with love seems
to be a contradiction in terms. Perhaps a better term is “non-personal,” because
the idea that we are trying to get across is that there does not have to be a
personal relationship. Another term that is used to communicate this concept of
love is the idea of unconditional. What unconditional seeks to emphasize is
that we don’t place a condition on our love. But another word is the word “unmerited.”
That means you don’t do anything to earn or deserve the love. When we look at
what is going on here we see that the emphasis is on righteousness and justice but
the test is whether or not Abraham has learned his lessons from grace
orientation and he is going to stand as an intercessor or advocate for Lot,
even though Lot has mistreated him, abused him, and taken him for granted in
the past. Is Abraham going to understand this connection between righteousness
and justice and love? Abraham does pass this particular test. The reason this
test exists is that Abraham is going to be great, the father of a great nation,
so he needs to be trained. The purpose of all testing is to train us for future
roles and responsibilities.
Genesis
18:19, the second element of the test. “For I know him, that he will command
his children and his household after him, and they shall keep the way of the LORD, to do justice and
judgment; that the LORD
may bring upon Abraham that which he hath spoken of him.” The phrase “come to
know him” is a term for having an intimate relationship with someone. This is
the same idea of intimate relationship that we see indicated in the euphemism
for sexual intimacy in Genesis 4 where is says that Adam knew Eve. Notice
in this verse that it is setting Abraham up as an example to his descendants. That
is part of what goes on in any test that God brings into our lives: that we can
be an example to others, that we can be a testimony to the grace of God in our
lives, both to people around us as well as to angels. What is “the way of the
Lord”? It is defined in context by the next phrase: “to do righteousness and
justice.” The way of the Lord is the application of righteousness and justice
within the sphere of human relationships. Before we can understand how to apply
that within our human relationships we have to understand it in terms of God’s
character. That is why we have to study the Scripture. We have to study the
Scripture so that we can know who God is, and we have to understand the Scripture
so that we can then take these things and apply them in terms of every day relationships.
The Scripture, then, gives us the models here and there on how to do this. This
is what this chapter does.
Genesis
18:20, God’s second statement. “And the LORD said, Because the cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is great, and because
their sin is very grievous; I will go down now, and see whether they have done
altogether according to the cry of it, which is come unto me; and if not, I
will know.” God’s actions toward Sodom are viewed anthropomorphically. God is
omniscient and knew from eternity past what was going to happen in Sodom, but
this is talking in language of accommodation for us as if it just happened and
God was just now hearing this cry. The fact is, God has been aware of this all
along and He has been dealing with the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah in
grace. God has all the information so that His judgments are certain and
absolutely right, they are consistent with the absolute standard of His
righteousness. The emphasis here goes to His omniscience, which means that His
justice is sure and certain.
At
that point God doesn’t go anywhere, the two men (angels) go. God has delegated
the authority to them and they are going to go down and look at the situation.
God knows what is going to happen, and there is a dual purpose in this because
they will be involved in the rescue of Lot. Genesis 18:22, “And the men turned
their faces from thence, and went toward Sodom: but Abraham stood yet before
the LORD.”
Then
we see Abraham test the Lord in verses 23-33. He is going to test God to see if
God is truly trustworthy in terms of how He deals with men. He is specifically
concerned about Lot.
Genesis
18:23, “And Abraham drew near, and said, Will you also destroy the righteous
with the wicked?” What does he mean by righteous and wicked? He doesn’t mean
that Lot is morally pure and clean and that he has no ethical problems down
there living in the midst of Sodom. Neither does he mean that the men and women
in Sodom don’t have some good points. What he means by righteous and wicked is
that they are not rightly related to God. The terms righteous and wicked in the
Old Testament have to do with one’s position before God in relationship to the
covenant. If we bring that over into the terminology we use in the New
Testament righteousness refers to positional righteousness, i.e. someone who is
saved, and wicked has to do with positionally lost and they are unsaved. It
doesn’t have to do with their experience because we know that Lot is
experientially unrighteous. But he is called “righteous Lot” in 2 Peter 2:7,
which is a reference to his positional standing before God. So Abraham’s
question is, if there are fifty believers living in Sodom are they going to be
wiped out along with everybody else? He doesn’t question God’s right to wipe
them out and destroy them. Then at the end of verse 25 Abraham asks, “Shall not
the Judge of all the earth do right?” The implication of the question is, yes,
of course. Because God is the judge of all the earth He will do that which is
right. What we need to note here is that this is a sign of real doctrinal boldness
on the part of Abraham. He is able to do this because of the doctrine that is
in his soul. The point here is that God is not going to destroy these wicked
unbelievers at the expense of any believers that are there. God is going to
deal graciously with believers and He will bless by association the unbelievers
that surround the believers.
What
God is going to do in the execution of his judgment is, since He will not judge
the Sodomites while there are believers there, He will remove the believers and
then He will judge them. In that is a type of the Rapture. Before God will
destroy the earth in the judgments of the Tribulation He first removes the
church, and then He brings judgment.
Genesis
18:33, the conclusion. “And the LORD went his way, as soon as he had left communing with Abraham: and
Abraham returned unto his place.”
This is a picture of the doctrine of intercessory
prayer
1)
Intercession
means to act as an advocate or a mediator between someone else and God. We are
to do that in prayer. Every believer is to pray for one another, as well as to
pray for the lost.
2)
Intercession
in prayer occurs when a believer petitions God on behalf of others.
3)
Intercession
is a function of grace orientation and impersonal love for others. We are to
pray for other people, even for out enemies. The key verse for this is James 5:16. The core part of that verse
is to pray for one another “that you may be healed.” The word for healing there
isn’t the word that we associate with physical healing, it is one that deals
with spiritual recovery because of spiritual failure.