Part
2 – Israel's God-Given Destiny
Equipping
God's Saints (Believers of Christ) through the Prophecies of the
End Times …
In
Part 1 we met Abraham (100 years old) and Sarah (90 years old). God
had made a covenant, two unbreakable promises with Abraham:
- The promise of the Promised Land
- The promise of the Promised Seed
God
gave Abraham and Sarah a miraculous son named Isaac. As the years
passed, everything seemed to be going wonderful for Abraham as his
relationship with his son, Isaac, developed, and Abraham continued to
walk with God.
The
time came when God needed to test Abraham. If God is going to make
Abraham the pivot of human history... The father of the physical
people of God upon the earth ~ The Jews. The father of the spiritual
people of God upon the earth ~ The Church... He's got to make sure
where Abraham really stands in his loyalties. In Genesis 22:1-2
“And
it came to pass after these things, that God did tempt Abraham, and
said unto him, Abraham: and he said, behold, Here I am, and he said,
take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get
thee into the land of Moriah, and offer him there for a burnt
offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.”
Wow!
What a test God was giving Abraham. He told him to take the joy of
his life, his long awaited promise and prove to God which he loves:
God, himself, or does he simply love God's blessing, God's promise.
God needed to know which one Abraham loved the most. Abraham's faith
was tested.
God
led Abraham to Moriah. Why is that important? Because Mount Moriah,
1,000 years later, was destined to be the Temple Mount. King David
built the first Temple there and it is still known as the Temple
Mount, today. Where we are today, God was planning this all out in
2,000 BC.
When
Abraham, Isaac and their servants get to the mountain, Abraham tells
his servants to “stay there and the lad and I will go to yonder
mountain to worship and RETURN.” What a declaration of faith.
Abraham
had a promise and he knew that God never failed His promises. The
promise he had in Isaac was that, “All your seed is going to be
blessed”. Abraham probably thought in himself, “How is God going
to do this? If He wants me to kill my only son, Isaac, and my seed is
to be blessed in Isaac, and Isaac has no children yet, God is either
going to stop me before I kill him, or He will raise Isaac from the
dead. God cannot break His covenant.
Abraham
and Isaac get up there and Abraham binds Isaac's hands and legs and
lays him on the alter. He raises the knife over the son he loves so
dearly.
This
is going to happen to everyone of us who walk with God. Sooner or
later God is going to ask you for the very thing that you love the
most because He wants to know that we love Him more than we love
anything else in the world.
In
Genesis 22:12-13 is the account of what happened as Abraham had the
knife drawn and almost ready to plunge it downward, suddenly the
voice of an angel spoke,
“And
he said, lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither do though any thing
unto him: for now I know that thou fearest God, seeing thou hast not
whithheld thy son, thine only son from me.
And
Abraham lifted up his eyes and looked and behold behind him a ram
caught in a thicket by his horns: and Abraham went and took the ram,
and offered him up for a burnt offering in the stead of his son.”
This
was a foreshadowing of the fact that you and I were destined to die
and yet God provided himself a sacrifice. He made Himself a body and
said, “I will die in their place.”
What
does God want to know about you and me? He wants to know if we love
Him more than anything else. He also wants us to know that He has
provided for us a sacrifice
Remember
the promise in Genesis 22:18
“And
in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because
thou has obeyed my voice.”
This
is the acid test for all of us. Do we obey God's voice in our life?
We have His Word, the Bible. That's His voice. We have His Spirit.
That's His voice. That's what God wants to know, not just from
Abraham, but from all of us. Have you obeyed My voice?
Notice
that “...in thy seed...” is singular. The Apostle Paul made a big
deal about that this word was singular. He said in Galatians 3:16
“Now
to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to
seeds, as of many; but as of one. And to thy seed, which is Christ.”
All
the promise was pointing to the answer of God for the human race,
Jesus Christ. So when He said “in your seed all the nations will be
blessed...” He's saying in the Messiah. In Jesus Christ will all
the nations of the earth be blessed.
Isaac
lives and has 2 sons. Everything was wonderful. These sons were twins
named Esau and Jacob.
Esau
was born first, so he had the birthright and the patriarchal blessing
due to him, however, Jacob yearned for the things of God. Esau didn't
really care. Esau liked to hunt and hang around with dad. Jacob had
this consuming hunger for God and he thought, “If there is a
birthright, I want to get it.” He began to plan how he could get
this birthright from his brother.
The
Bible says, “Seek and ye shall find” and “they that hunger and
thirst after righteousness shall be filled.”
One
day Esau had been cooking pottage and Jacob had been out on a deer
hunt. Jacob comes into the house weary and feint. He drops down into
a chair and tells Jacob to give him some of his pottage. He's so
tired, he's about to die. He cannot go another step.
Jacob
tells him he'll give him a bowl of his pottage if Esau will sell
Jacob his birthright. It's a good trade. It's just a piece of paper.
Esau
thinks about the offer a moment and thinks it is no good to him. He's
about to die. The birthright meant nothing to him. The spiritual
things meant nothing to him. Esau was all for the here and now. He
was all for the material, the physical. So he sold his birthright.
Later
on, Jacob also managed to get Esau's blessing. Jacob then had to run
for his life because after the fact, Esau became very angry,
especially when he lost the patriarchal blessing. He didn't care that
much about the birthright, but he wanted to be a blessed person. So
Jacob has to run for his life when his brother, Esau, realizes that
Jacob has stolen his blessing.
Jacob
ends up going to the household of Laban who is related to Abraham's
family. There, he marries 2 wives, Leah and Rachel. He ended up
having 12 sons. These 12 sons became the heads of the 12 Tribes of
Israel. Now the nation of Israel is being born.
After
Jacob had these children, he decided it was time to get his life
straightened out. He knew he couldn't keep running forever. He wanted
to see his parents again. He wanted to see his brother, Esau, again.
He knew it wasn't right to continue to be at odds with Esau. Jacob
had spent all his life cheating and cutting corners and trying to
take other people's places and he was sick of living this way. He
needed to have peace in his life and his heart. So Jacob heads back
toward his homeland.
Esau
hears Jacob is coming and he goes out to meet him. Jacob knows that
Esau is a mighty hunter and he knows that Esau had great wrath
against him. The last time Jacob saw his brother, his brother wanted
to kill him. So Jacob knows tomorrow might be the crossroads for him.
That
night Jacob sends all of his wives, all of his children, all of his
servants and all of his cattle across the brook and he says, “I've
got to be alone with God.”
All
of us will come to a place like that in our own lives.
As
Jacob began to pray, the Bible says an angel shows up and the angel
begins to wrestle with Jacob. And Jacob wrestles with the angel.
Jacob says, “You know, I've got the chance of a lifetime. I've got
a visitation of God on my life and I'm not going to miss this.”
He
grabbed hold of the angel and they wrestled through the night until
finally the breaking of the day. The angel said to Jacob, “You've
got to let me go. People are going to be coming by. They are not
allowed to see me.”
Jacob
said, “I don't care what you say. I will not let you go until you
bless me. I'm tired of my lifestyle. I'm tired of not really being
right with God. I'm not really being right with my brother.”
Finally
the angel said, “Ok. Alright. Tell me your name.”
Jacob
said, “My name is Jacob,” which means cheater, supplanter.
The
angel said, “Your name is not going to be that anymore. I'm
changing your nature and I'm changing your name to Israel. As a
prince, thou has prevailed with God and with men.”
That's
when the name Israel was born. The name goes on and we have the
nation of Israel with us today.
The
promise was repeated. This promise of the Promised Land and of the
Promised Seed was not simply to Abraham. Notice in Genesis 50:24
“And
Joseph said unto his brethren, I die: and God will surely visit you,
and bring you out of this land {they were in Egypt} unto the land
which He sware to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.”
So
this was not simply a promise to Abraham, only. This was a promise
made to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
Next, we are going to skip ahead 1,000 years. You won't want to miss
what's coming up.
Resources:
The anointing of the Holy Spirit and God Almighty, who I am
accountable to. I have prayed diligently and am led to follow and
support the teachings of Pastor Irvin Baxter from Endtime Ministries
and his teachings of Understanding the End Times. I encourage you to
visit his website at endtime.com.
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