Sodom: The Attraction and
Judgment of Pagan Culture. Genesis 19
Genesis 19:1, the two angels came to Sodom in the evening and we see Lot sitting outside at the Gate of Sodom. That is significant because it tells us that Lot has a position of respect in the society of Sodom. He is well respected and is looked up to. The judges met at the gates of the city and that is where cases were adjudicated and decisions made. It means Lot is in a position of authority, and this means he has become totally assimilated into the society and the culture of Sodom. We have to remind ourselves that Lot is an Old Testament believer though he has totally compromised his spiritual life with the cosmic thinking, the world thinking, that characterized the culture of Sodom and Gomorrah and the five cities that were located around the south eastern shore of the Dead Sea. This reminds us that even believers can imitate unbelievers and their life may not appear to be any different from an unbeliever.
Lot
met the angels, he bowed himself to the ground, which was an ancient Near Eastern
custom of prestige, and it showed that he recognizes that they have some
position.
Genesis
19:2, “And he said, Behold now, my lords, turn in, I pray you, into your
servant's house, and tarry all night, and wash your feet, and you shall rise up
early, and go on your ways. And they said, No; but we will abide in the street
all night.” Why did they say that? First of all, they were testing Lot to see
if he is really being genuine and if he is really being hospitable. Secondly,
they are there perhaps to investigate the nature of the culture and to
demonstrate the perversity and degradation of the Sodomite culture. But Lot
continues to insist that they come in and stay with him.
As
we look at the culture of Sodom we have to recognize that it is portrayed here
as the lowest point of pagan culture, of Canaanite culture at that day. It is a
city that is dominated by sexual licentiousness and perversity. It is not just
homosexuality, these folks just don’t care how they are going to get their
sexual pleasure. We often focus on the homosexual nature of this encounter,
which is definitely there, and this is where we get our English word “sodomy”
which is the technical term to describe homosexual relations, but we have to
understand that from this point throughout the Scripture the Bible portrays
homosexuality as a sin. It is pictured as, in relative terms, one of the sins
of the worst kind. All sin is sin, but different sins have different social
consequences and different sins affect those around us in different ways. It is
clear from Romans chapter one that homosexuality is viewed by God as part of
His judgment on a culture, so it is not just another sin. There are certain
consequences to it that are devastating to a society.
When
a culture deteriorates so much that it removes restraint from these sins that
have tremendous social consequences then that culture is already on the path to
self-destruction, and it becomes necessary in the plan of God at times to
remove that culture. There are many cultures in history that are much worse
than Sodom and Gomorrah, so why is it that God is going to judge Sodom and
Gomorrah? We have to understand the role of Sodom and Gomorrah in terms of their
location and in terms of God’s plan for Israel. God is removing Sodom and
Gomorrah and the cities of the plain because He is protecting Abraham and Abraham’s
progeny from the influence of this extreme sexual licentiousness. He is going
to do the same thing in another 400 years when He brings the Israelites back
from Egypt and they are to completely annihilate the Canaanite culture. There
is a reason for that.
Genesis
19:4, “But before they lay down, the men of the city, even the men of Sodom,
compassed the house round, both old and young, all the people from every
quarter.” Notice how this is belabored in the text. Darkness has already come
and darkness is often a shroud for the sinful activities of man. This is a
reference to the males of the city and it is not just the homosexuals in Sodom,
it is both old and young from every quarter—the wealthy, the poor, the middle
class. This demonstrate that this perversity has permeated every level of Sodom’s
culture. There is a huge crowd surrounding the house and they start beating on
the door.
Let’s
stop a minute and think about Lot. We don’t have to guess at this because we
have a New Testament commentary provided by Peter under the inspiration of God
the Holy Spirit to tell us what is going on in Lot’s soul. 2 Peter 2:4ff. The interesting
thing about 2 Peter is that Peter is demonstrating in the second and third
chapter the righteousness and the justice of God in condemning and judging man
for sin. He is laying out an argument where he is saying that God has clearly
judged the human race in cataclysmic judgments several times in the past, and
so we can know with certainty that God will eventually judge the human race in
a cataclysm in the future and we need to be ready. That is where all this is
going, starting in the second chapter and going down through the third chapter.
He focuses on these key cataclysmic judgments, beginning in verse 4: “For if
God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down to hell, and
delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judgment; and
spared not the old world, but saved Noah the eighth person, a preacher of
righteousness, bringing in the flood upon the world of the ungodly; and turning
the cities of Sodom and Gomorrha into ashes condemned them with an overthrow, making
them an ensample unto those that after should live ungodly; and delivered
just Lot, vexed with the filthy conversation of the wicked: (For that righteous
man dwelling among them, in seeing and hearing, vexed his righteous soul from
day to day with their unlawful deeds.)” This shows that we have to pay
attention to Genesis chapter nineteen because it shows a divine pattern on
judgment for certain social sins. The Greek word used here for “ungodly” is ASEBES [a)sebhj]. The “A” is a negative,
and the root is the word SEBES, which
we will see in another word, EUSEBEIA
[e)usebeia].
The EU prefix means well or good
or beneficial, so the word EUSEBEIA,
often translated “godliness,” has to do with our positive spiritual growth. So ASEBES has to do with that which
is ungodly, it describes people who have no spiritual relationship with God, a
person who actively practices that which is the opposite of biblical
spirituality. So they are involved in extreme immorality. It is an extremely
strong word for sexual perversion and immorality. So God judged them as an
example to those who would be willing to give in and allow their sin nature to
have free reign in the area of sexual sin.
God
delivered “righteous Lot.” This is the grace of God. Three times in 2 Peter 2
Lot is described as righteous. He is not righteous in terms of his personal
morality, his experiential morality. It is very clear that one of the key
lessons in Genesis 19 is that when we as believers become so immersed in the
values of the cosmic system around us that it destroys our own spiritual life
we are more concerned about the things of the world than we are the eternal realities
of the Lord Jesus Christ. But Lot is righteous because he has positional righteousness.
Lot was oppressed by the licentious conduct of the wicked. That is interesting
because Lot doesn’t appear to be someone who is oppressed. He is living there in
that culture, has assimilated it, and is very happy living there enjoying all
of the details of that the culture of Sodom has to offer. It is a very affluent
society for its times, very comfortable, and he likes that. He is willing to
give up his walk with the Lord in order to enjoy all of this. The word “oppress”
is the Greek word KATAPONEO [kataponew], and it means to be vexed,
to be weary, to be oppressed or afflicted. It means at a level in his soul there
is a conflict going on. Because he is a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ and
he knows the truth, even though he is living there and is enjoying it, when it
is in those wee hours of the morning and is lying in his bed awake looking up
at the ceiling, he knows he shouldn’t be there. That is a reality for every believer
in the Lord Jesus Christ. The reality is that the believer in the Lord Jesus
Christ is not going to be able to just live immersed in a pagan culture without
the Holy Spirit convicting them of sin. They are not just going to be able to
relax. Lot was oppressed by the licentious conduct of the wicked. This is the
Greek word ASELGEIA [a)selgeia] which is an extreme form of licentiousness. In some cases it has the
idea of brutality. It indicates that all restraints are removed. These are
called “the wicked,” the Greek word athesmos
[a)qesmoj].
They are lawless, licentious, unprincipled, amoral men. Lot is living in the
midst of this completely perverted culture and society and he is trying to find
some level of comfort, but he is tormented to some degree. The word translated “vexed”
or “tormented” is the word BASANIZO [basanizw] and it means to be tortured, afflicted with pain, harassed
internally. He just can’t fully relax inside this culture, even though he is
fully attracted to it. This is an interesting insight into the psychology of
the believer who is living in rank carnality.
Then
in verse 9, “The Lord knows how to deliver the godly out of testing, and to
reserve the unjust unto the day of judgment to be punished.” The point that we
get from 2 Peter is that the application from Genesis 19 is that God can
deliver the righteous no matter what circumstances he is in, no matter how far
he has fallen into whatever the sin is, there is the grace of God that can meet
him where he is and there can be recovery.
In
Genesis 19:4-11 we see the attempted sexual assault on the angels that occurs.
In vv. 4, 5 the men of Sodom surround Lot’s home and start beating on the door
in order to have him turn these visitors out so that “they can know them,” a
Hebrew euphemism fore sexual relations. Vv. 6, 7, “And Lot went out at the door
unto them, and shut the door after him, and said, I pray you, brethren, do not
so wickedly.” The Hebrew verb for “wickedly” is ra’a, normally
translated to do “evil.” The Bible uses this word as a synonym for the word for
sin, except that it deals with more extreme forms of overt sin. In a vast
number of references in the Old Testament the word “evil” relates to idolatry. So
here it is clear that God labels homosexuality as a sin; it is “evil.” Evil is
defined in terms of what people do, not in terms of their personality.
Now
Lot shows that he has completely absorbed the values of the pagan culture
around him. Verse 8, “Behold now, I
have two daughters which have not known man; let me, I pray you, bring them out
unto you, and do you to them as is good in your eyes: only unto these men do
nothing; for therefore came they under the shadow of my roof.” Isn’t this a
wonderful protective father! This is another characteristic of paganism: men no
longer protect women, and the parents are no longer functioning as protectors
of children. So Lot is going to bargain with his virgin daughters. Another
thing we see here is that physical abuse becomes normative and acceptable is a
pagan society.
In
verses 9-11 we see another characteristic of paganism and that is the
self-righteousness of moral degeneracy. We see this in our own society whenever
anyone stands up for the truth and the absolutes of Scripture the hatred, the
venom, the anger that comes at them from the culture at large is just
horrendous. Verse 9, “And they said, Stand back. And they said again, This one
fellow came in to sojourn, and he will needs be a judge: now will we deal worse
with thee, than with them. And they pressed sore upon the man, even Lot, and
came near to break the door.” The Sodomites, after Lot has tried to bargain
with his daughters, tell him to get out of the way. Lot is not judging them at
all, he is just trying to barter with them and in the process is compromising
his own family. They have twisted the whole situation: “He is just trying to
judge us, he is condemning us.” They almost break the door down and the angels
rescue him: “But the men [angels] put forth their hand, and pulled Lot into the
house to them, and shut to the door.”
1)
Sexual
degradation and perversion becomes commonplace and socially acceptable in a
pagan culture. The more a culture is divorced from the absolutes of the Scripture
the more sexual deviancy becomes “normal” and accepted. The more it becomes
normal and accepted, the more accustomed, even believers become. They may not
be comfortable with it but they no longer experience the same level of shame
and embarrassment when certain things are talked about than when they first
came up. We hear about certain things on TV and in the news and we become
desensitized to the shame of these acts and actions that are taking place in
our culture. As a result of this there is an increase in violence.
2)
Women
are no longer protected and valued.
3)
There
is a total breakdown as a result of that over all distinctions. It is no
coincidence that at the same time that we have the rise of radical feminism,
which as as its core the idea there is total and complete interchangeability
between men and women and the workplace and the rise of homosexuality among men
and women, which says the same thing sexually, that men and women are
completely interchangeable as sexual partners. The idea is: It doesn’t matter
whether my sexual partner is a man or a woman just as long as I have my
gratification. So there is a breakdown of role distinctions and there is
evidence in women assuming male authority positions and a failure of male
leadership in the culture. So women want to assume male authority positions such
as a pastor, or they take male positions in terms of bi-sexuality. All of this
reflects a breakdown in the culture because we no longer understand the role of
men and women as image bearers as God created them. So women become sex objects
and men become tyrannical and abusers, and it leads to a complete breakdown of
marriage and of the family, and eventually society.