Abraham’s test
(Genesis 22: 1-14 & Matthew 10: 40-42)
“God tested Abraham. He said
to him, ‘Abraham!’ And he said, ‘Here I am.’ He said, ‘Take your son, your only
son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as
a burnt offering on one of the mountains that I shall show you.’ So Abraham
rose early in the morning, saddled his donkey, and took two of his young men
with him, and his son Isaac; he cut the wood for the burnt offering, and set
out and went to the place in the distance that God had shown him.”
God said to Abraham… ‘take
your son & offer him there as a burnt offering’ and Abraham said …?
Nothing. Not a word. No
argument, no need for an explanation, no qualms. God said sacrifice your son
& Abraham saddles the donkey, loads it with wood, and sets off with Isaac…
to kill him. Because that’s what God has just told him to do.
I hope we haven’t heard this
story so often that we’ve lost the sense of outrage we should feel.
I have an outraged question.
Where is Sarah?
Did Abraham pop into the
tent and say ‘I’m just off to make a sacrifice, dear’ and did she even ask ‘what
are you sacrificing?’ so that he could say
‘Oh, you know – our son…our
only son.. our beloved son… Isaac’. Where is Sarah? Why is there no account of
her standing in front of the donkey with an even bigger knife than the one
Abraham is carrying, saying ‘put the boy DOWN’.
We might feel we know what
this story is about.. God tests Abraham. Abraham has to have faith – has to do
what God says – and because we’ve just heard the end of the story we know
there’s a ram in the bush & Isaac is perfectly safe all along because ‘God
himself will provide’. God tested Abraham – and Abraham passed because he trots
off on his donkey with the intention of murdering his son because that’s a
perfectly reasonable thing for God to ask, isn’t it?
Except – no, it isn’t.
What sort of God asks a
father to sacrifice his son like that? What kind of father silently acquiesces?
Abraham has a kind of faith: we might call it blind faith, or total faith, or
wild-eyed murderous extremism.
And we only have to look
around our world today to see that we need less, not more of that kind of
religious extremism.
God tested Abraham.
But what was the test? What
kind of faith did God want to see in Abraham – blind extremism or a deep
reflective faith?
God and Abraham have quite a
few conversations in the book of Genesis.
The Lord comes to Abraham in
Harran and says ‘leave your own country and go where I will show you’… and
Abraham goes.
The Lord says, in Canaan, ‘I
am giving this land to your descendants’ and Abraham builds an altar.
The Lord says to Abraham
when he’s settled at the terebinths of Mamre ‘Do not be afraid. I am your
shield. Your reward will be very great’ and Abraham says ‘But I’m childless’
and God say to Abraham ‘Look up at the sky & count the stars – so many your
descendents will be’ & Abraham put his faith in the Lord.
God says ‘I will give you
this land’ and Abraham says ‘how can I be sure?’ and God performs a ceremony to
seal the deal.
Then, after Abraham has had
a son, Ishmael, with Sarah’s slave girl, because Abraham & Sarah reckon
they’re too old for their own children, the Lord says ‘Sarah will have a son’
and Abraham laughs and says ‘Can’t you bless me through Ishmael?’ but the Lord
says ‘Sarah will bear you a son’. That son is eventually born – and named
Isaac.
And just before the story we
started with today the Lord tells Abraham that he is going to destroy the
cities of Sodom & Gomorrah. And Abraham argues with God and says ‘what if
there are 50 innocent people there? You can’t destroy them’ and God agrees: and
Abraham says ‘what if there are 45 innocent people?’ and God agrees he won’t
destroy the cities then.. and Abraham goes on and on, 40, 30, 20.. until he
gets God to agree that even if there are just 10 innocent people, the cities
won’t be destroyed. However the bad news for Sodom & Gomorrah is that
they’re all a rotten bunch and God destroys the cities.
Looking at these stories,
have you noticed that Abraham seems to be getting increasingly ‘lippy’ with God
as time goes on? Maybe it’s that over time Abraham has a relationship with God,
in which they talk together about things. So when the Lord tests Abraham &
asks for Isaac’s life wouldn’t you expect a ding-dong battle at least as good
as the one over Sodom & Gomorrah?
But what God gets is –
silence and a saddled donkey.
God tested Abraham. But did
Abraham pass the test, or fail it?
Was God looking for blind
obedience from Abraham, or trying to start a conversation? You might think we
don’t know the answer to that question – but I think there’s a clue in the
story itself. When Abraham & Isaac reach the top of the mountain “Abraham
reached out his hand and took the knife to kill his son. But the angel of the
LORD called to him from heaven, and said, "Abraham, Abraham!" And he
said, "Here I am." He said, "Do not lay your hand on the boy”.
It is not God who talks to
Abraham, tells him to spare Isaac, and points out the ram who will be the
sacrifice instead. It is God’s angel, God’s messenger. In fact if you look in
the book of Genesis you’ll find that God never speaks to Abraham again. God
tested Abraham. And perhaps Abraham failed
the test & God decided he’d better not risk telling Abraham anything ever
again, because Abraham had stopped asking questions & had begun to do what
God said without stopping to think for himself at all.
God tested Abraham.
Was he prepared to accept
God’s demands blindly? Or was he still prepared to test what God said against
what seemed right and good and reasonable – and indeed to test it against what
God had already said because God had promised all these descendants through
Isaac and the boy was only 12 years old.
Was God calling Abraham to
an extremist, fundamentalist faith? Or to a faith which seeks understanding, an
on-going and growing relationship with God?
In a world of extremism,
where people offer us clear cut right and wrong – can we pass the test and be
prepared to engage with God and grow in deep faith instead?
Meanwhile, Matthew’s gospel
gave us Jesus’ answer to the danger of religious extremism and exclusion.
Jesus said, "Whoever welcomes you welcomes me, and whoever welcomes
me welcomes the one who sent me…whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one
of these little ones in the name of a disciple - truly I tell you, none of these will lose
their reward."
Jesus offers a totally different
approach to life from the approach of fundamentalism. In place of judgement of
others, of exclusion, of seeking to know who is right and who is wrong, Jesus
tells us to offer welcome. Abraham shows us that people of faith are required
to engage engage in relationship with God, not las out blindly, and Jesus shows
us that people who follow Jesus are required to engage in relationship with
others – to offer welcome to the lonely and a cup of water to the thirsty.
The answer to religious extremism is
the same as it has always been – love God and love your neighbour.
May we be challenged to live this
week and all our lives as true followers of Jesus. To God’s glory. Amen.
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