Reflections on Genesis 12-14

God calls Abram to leave his country and family and go to a land God will show him. God promises to bless him and make him into a great nation. Notice:

  • Abram’s faith – Abram believes God and goes. He doesn’t know what the land will be like or how he can become a great nation, but he believes God and obeys. Has God been calling you to do something? Will you trust him and obey? Is your life a struggle? Will you trust God and press on? Are you facing persecution for doing what is right? Will you trust God and continue?
  • Abram’s lack of faith – In Egypt, Abram chooses to lie about his wife rather than trust God with his safety. Are there areas in your life where you are failing to trust God?
  • Abram’s prayer life – As Abram travels through Canaan, he eventually comes to Bethel. There he builds an altar to the Lord and calls upon the name of the Lord (12:8). Later after a lapse of faith in Egypt, he returns to Bethel and again calls on the name of the Lord. What is your prayer life like?
  • God’s blessing – God promised to bless Abram, and he does. God graciously intervenes in Egypt. God delivers Abram’s enemies into his hands when his enemies took Lot captive. How has God been there to help you?

Genesis 12-17: Abraham

(12, 13, 15, 17) What promises does God make to Abraham in these verses?

12:1-3, 7 –

13:14-17 –

15:1-6, 18-20 –

17:4-8 –

How do these promises relate to you? (See Galatians 3:7-9, 16, 23, Psalm 3:3, Hebrews 8:10)

(12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17) Abraham is known as a man of faith. What is faith according to Hebrews 11:1? Put it in your own words.

Describe the ups and downs of Abraham’s faith in the Lord. How do you see this in your own life?

When he failed to trust in the Lord, what was he trusting in? What else are you tempted to trust in?

How did his faith in God or other things influence his actions? What were the results? How do you see this in your own life?

In 15:6, Abraham believes God, and it is counted to him as righteousness. How does this pattern relate to us today (see Romans 4:1-5, 13-25)?

How do you need to grow in your faith in the Lord?

Reflections on Genesis 9-11

Following the flood, God makes a covenant and gives instructions – instructions which the people of Babel refused to obey in their quest for glory. Observe:

  • God’s covenant – God makes a covenant with Noah and his descendants (including us!). He mercifully promises to never flood the entire earth again. He places a rainbow in the sky as a sign of this covenant. Next time you see a rainbow, remember God’s mercy to you.
  • God’s instructions broken – God commanded people to fill the earth (9:1), but the people of Babel disobeyed. They began building a city, lest they “be dispersed over the face of the whole earth” (11:4). Search your life. Are there any ways in which you are in active rebellion against God’s commands? This is a dangerous place to be! Take time now to repent and confess your sin to God.
  • A quest for glory – The people of Babel wanted to make a name for themselves (11:4). They chose to live for themselves rather than God. Nothing much has changed. People today still want to make a name for themselves rather than honor God. Whose name are you seeking to lift up? Who are you living for?

Reflections on Genesis 6-8

God sends a flood on the earth, but saves Noah and his family. Consider what we learn about God and Noah, and how we should respond:

  • God’s judgment – God hates sin. He sees the evil intentions, thoughts, and actions of mankind, and he purposes to make an end of it. Are you tempted to treat your sins lightly? Remember God hates your sin.
  • God’s mercy – God shows favor to Noah (6:8), by making a covenant with him (6:18). In the midst of the flood, God remembers Noah (8:1). And God still shows his favor today by inviting us to enter into a new covenant through faith in Jesus Christ. Have you passed from God’s judgment into his mercy?
  • Noah’s walk with God – The passage tells us that Noah walked with God (6:9). What did this walk look like? It was characterized first by faith. Noah believed God’s announcement of the flood and the way of escape. We could reasonably conclude from 5:32 and 7:6, that Noah spent 100 years acting on that faith by building the ark. His faith led to action. Twice we are told Noah did all that God commanded him (6:22, 7:5). His walk with God also gave him a testimony – he was a righteous man, blameless in his generation (6:9). He was not perfect, but he stood out from all the evil going on around him. How is your walk with God? Is it characterized by faith leading to action? How is your testimony among the people you know? How do you need to move forward in your walk with God?

Genesis 6-11: Two Ways

Describe the way of wickedness from these verses:

6:5 (dissect the verse word by word) –

6:11-13 –

8:21 –

9:20-23 –

11:1-4 (compare 9:7, 12:2) –

In what ways are we tempted to follow the sins of Babel? Why don’t we need to? What should we do instead?

In summary, what do you learn about humanity from these verses? (Compare Romans 3:10-18, Ephesians 2:1-3)

In contrast, Noah walked with God. From Noah’s example, what does it look like to walk with God? (See also Genesis 3:8, 5:21-24, Psalm 89:15, Hebrews 11:7)

What is required if we are going to walk with God (6:8, Hebrews 11:7)?

How do you need to grow in your walk with God?

Reflections on Genesis 3-5

Genesis 3 is the saddest story ever penned, as mankind rebels against their Creator. Notice:

  • Satan tempts Eve to question God’s goodness and honesty. When are you tempted to question God’s goodness and the truth of His Word?
  • Eve chooses to seek satisfaction (“good for food…delight to the eyes”) in forbidden fruit rather than in her Creator and the good things he gave her. What forbidden fruit tempts you?
  • Rather than give glory to God, Eve chooses to seek her own glory (“you will be like God”). Whose glory are you seeking?
  • Sin brings misery, not satisfaction. Their perfect relationship with God is broken (they hide from God and are cast out of the Garden). Their perfect relationship with each other is broken (Adam blames Eve; later Cain kills Abel). Pain enters God’s creation (childbearing will be painful). Work which was a joy now becomes toilsome, as creation is cursed with decay and thistles. Separated from the tree of life, Adam and Eve will die, as will their descendants (note the terrible repetition in chapter 5 – “…and he died”). When tempted by sin, remember the consequences.
  • And yet in this sad story of our fall into sin, there is a small seed of hope in 3:15. Satan will bruise the heel of the woman’s offspring on a cross many years later. There on that cross, this man will defeat Satan by bruising his head. The penalty for sin will be paid, so that mankind might yet walk with God!

Application Questions

After meditating on God’s Word, I often find God pointing to one or two ways that I need to apply the passage to my life.  These applications just “jump” out at me.

But what if an application doesn’t jump out?  Or what if we want to consider further possible applications?  Here are some good questions to help us apply God’s Word to our lives:

  • Is there a promise to claim?
  • Is there a truth to believe?
  • Is there a false way of thinking (from our culture) that I need to reject?
  • Is there a desire to embrace?
  • Is there a corrupt desire (from our culture) that I need to reject?
  • Is there a sin I need to confess and repent of?
  • Is there a command I need to obey?
  • Is there a good example I should follow?
  • Is there a sinful example that I should learn from and avoid?
  • How should this passage affect how I relate to God?
  • How should this passage affect how I relate to people?

Reflections on Genesis 1-2

In Genesis 1-2, we are immediately introduced to God as the Creator of all things. In his role as Creator, we see:

  • His Power – He simply spoke and it came to be. His power extends over all of his creation. There is nothing that can come against you that God cannot handle.
  • His Wisdom – He ordered all things perfectly. If God can perfectly order all of creation, can you not trust him to wisely order your life?
  • His Beauty – Having created such a beautiful world, what must God Himself be like? What joy to spend our lives and all of eternity getting to know Him better!
  • His Provision – He provided the plants for food, a garden to live in, and a companion to enjoy. How many ways has he provided for you? Give thanks!
  • His Authority – He made man and then commanded him. As our Creator, he has the right to command; we have the responsibility to obey.
  • His Assignment – He gave man a task – to cultivate the earth and use it for his needs. God did not make you to be idle, but to serve him by working as he gives you strength.
  • His Relational Nature – God says, “Let us make man in our image.” That “us” is the first hint of the Trinity – that God is one God in three persons enjoying eternal relationship with each other. When God created people, he entered into a relationship with them too. God is relational, and he made us in his image to be relational too. Our relationship with God and others is central to what it means to be human. How are you cultivating those relationships?

Genesis 1-5: Temptation

Here are some questions to explore the theme of temptation in Genesis 1-5:

Describe the temptation in Genesis 3; compare to I John 2:15-17. What similarities do you find in your own temptations?

Describe the temptation in Genesis 4. When are you tempted in a similar way?

What did Cain need to do? Compare to I Corinthians 10:13.

How can we overcome temptation according to Matthew 4:1-11, 6:13, Galatians 5:16-23, and Titus 2:11-14? In one word?

Where did temptation come from in Genesis 3? In Genesis 4?

Compare the ways that Adam and Eve, Cain, and Lamech each respond to their sin. Is there a downward trend?

What are the consequences of sin in chapters 3, 4, & 5?

Reading the Bible in 4 Years

This week our church begins a new Sunday School series with the plan to read and discuss our way through the entire Bible in four years.  Each week we will focus on 4-6 chapters.  Questions we will be asking each week include:

  • What observations do you make about this passage?
  • What do you learn about God?
  • What do you learn about people, sin, and our need of a Savior?
  • How does this passage point us to Jesus and salvation?
  • How do I need to apply this passage to my life?

In addition to those questions, we will be focusing on one theme from each week’s passage which I will post here each Monday.  And I have written two reflections for each week that I will also be posting here.

If you don’t have a Bible reading plan, I invite you to join us.  The schedule for the next four weeks:

January 4-10: Genesis 1-5
January 11-17: Genesis 6-11
January 18-24: Genesis 12-17
January 25-31: Genesis 18-23