BiblicalMastery Buddy's bible blog

April 17, 2020

Defining Moments- Exodus

Filed under: Defining Moments — admin @ 4:55 PM

From the time of Joseph to the beginning of the story of Moses there was a lapse of over 300 years. The preparation for the Exodus to follow eighty years later begins in chapter one where we are told that Amram and Jochebed decided to hide Moses from a likely death at the hands of Pharaoh’s men. That act was in a direct violation of Pharaoh’s edict to have all male Hebrew babies killed at birth.

(Ex. 1; Acts 7:20; Heb. 11:23)

God used two women to assure the continuation of the nation of Israel. For Shiphrah and Puah, Hebrew midwives it was more important for them to fear God and obey Him than it was to follow the dictates of the king of Egypt. God had already commanded the Israelites not to take a human life. Those two women understood to kill the babies was a sin against God. Because of their faithfulness God blessed each one of them. (Ex.1:17, 20-21)

When we come to the life of Moses and the role he would play in the history of Israel, there are three events or periods of time that should be considered defining moments for him. He could not have orchestrated them, but God used each of them to shape the man he became. The ones I reference in what follows are prior to his confrontation with Pharaoh. That discussion will come later. What I am talking about here begins with his murder of the Egyptian and ends with the encounter he had with God in the desert. The last of the three would have never taken place without the first two. The first shows us God uses even our failures to grow us

The path Moses took to becoming the leader of the Israelites is an important part of his life and must never forgotten. A defining moment came when he tried to develop a relationship with his people. What began in his mind as a good idea actually ended in disaster. On one of his visits he saw and Egyptian mistreating an Israelites. In his eagerness to help the man he killed the Egyptian. Of course, that kind of act cannot be hidden from others. When he tried to break up an argument between two Jews one of them confronted him with the what he had done the day before. Moses had assumed that they would understand that because of his position he would be able to help them.

(Ex. 2:11-14)

Because he killed an Egyptian, even though he was the adopted son of Pharaoh’s daughter, he would not be exempt from being punished by the Pharaoh for his crime. This was especially true since he was a Hebrew. The victim was a citizen of Egypt. At that point Moses had no choice but to flee for his life.

(Ex. 2:15)

His flight into Midian turned out to the benefit of Moses. Although he had to leave Egypt for all the wrong reasons, what happened to him over the next forty years would prepare him for leading the Israelites out of Egypt. In ways that Moses could not understand God was working out the future of His people in precise detail.  It was no accident, but God’s ordained plan, that he would meet the daughters of Jethro, a priest in Midian. From his father-in-law, he would come understand the role that humility in one’s life and the skills that would be needed if he was going to accepted as a servant leader by his people. Gone were the self-confidence and arrogance that had led him to using brute force to prove what an important man he was. He would find the way back to Egypt in front of a flock of sheep. Here was a one-time prince of Egypt doing one the lowest dirtiest jobs that could be performed in society. Shepherds were looked down upon as unclean people in culture. One of the things that would be discovered is that it took a great deal of patience to take care of a bunch of dumb animals that have a mind of their own.

(Ex. 2:15-4:19)

Although a shepherd may be held in contempt by others it was to such men to whom the announcement came that a Savior had been born into the world. The lowly shepherds of Bethlehem became the first to proclaim the Good News to others. In fact, the most famous ancestor of our Lord began as a shepherd boy before becoming a king. One of the titles often used in the New Testament spoke of that king. Jesus was called the Son of David by Bartimaeus and even used the description for Himself.

(Matt. 20:29-34, 22:41-45; Luke 2:8-20)

In was while performing his duties as a shepherd that the encounter with God took place. That meeting would forever change the direction of his life. He would go from being a shepherd to the man God called to lead the people out of Egypt. Even here we see a process taking place that was needed to remove from Moses the mindset of a failure to one with God’s help could accomplish great things. Part of the defining moment was the honest dialog that Moses had with God.

It is not always an easy thing to move a person from acceptance of the status quo to one of a totally new direction of being willing to take risks. The former is always going to be comfortable while accomplishing little. The latter brings with it all kinds of exciting possibilities. For Moses fear of going back to the place from which he had fled was in a way paralyzing. To go where God was going to send him would take real faith, but in the meantime would free him from his past.

It might appear from what has been written that the defining moments just pop up out of no- where. Just the opposite is true. I discovered that quite often there is a process that occurs that brings a person to the fork in the road where decisions really do affect one’s destiny. In the case of Moses, we must not forget there, would have been no trip to the back side of the wilderness or burning bush without all of the challenges He face in the forty years preceding that moment when God met him.

In all of our lives where are today is dependent on all the steps we have taken along the way. Most of us do not even take the take to consider how even what appear to be baby steps have impacted who we are. Many of you may not be familiar with a tool called a “Spiritual ProfiIe” originally developed by Rick Warren, pastor of Saddleback Church in California.  It is used in conjunction with discovering a person’s SHAPE, which is an acrostic for Spiritual Gifts, Heart, Abilities, Personality, and how Experiences good or bad play a part in one’s spiritual growth. One of the exercises the participant is asked to do related to experiences is to go back to his/her earliest years and write down all the things that can be remembered. Those recollections are to be of those things in which he or she believes were done well. Taking those experiences, I would like to suggest another way of looking at them. Let’s view them from the perspective of what they would look like them if viewed as encounters with God.  It is those encounters we have through His word, prayer, events, or associations with others that truly shape us to be what God desires for each of us,  

Moses did not find the encounter easy because quite often the expression comes with personal risks.  We have already mentioned that Moses to do what God asked his to do might end with rejection by his people to death at the hands of Pharaoh. We truly need to be prepared for the consequences of following him with full confidence that He will be with us every step of the way.

Let’s take a journey back to that encounter with God. How did Moses react?  If you have gone through the exercise mentioned above, did you see God’s hand in what has happened in your life? What was your reaction and response to His calling? See if you can picture yourself in some of the arguments that Moses offered by to God.  You might even come up with some variations of the same struggle he had with venturing into the future.

As we shall see in one of Moses’ most important moments, his encounter with God at the burning bush there was a certain process in play. I view it with four words beginning the letter E.

They are:

  1. Equipping- This is the preparation that takes place in one’s life. They are the lessons learned from different venues, whether education, spiritual life, family etc.
  2. Encounter- This points to the actual meeting that takes place with God.
  3. Expectations-What impact the time has on each of us in understanding His purpose for each of us.
  4. Expression- Once God lays before us the expectation, He has for carrying out His ministry, are we going to follow through with the plan He has for us?

Equip
To be equipped or prepared for the encounter or experience with God, what criteria is to be used to judge equipping?

1.  What has been your preparation for worship God this week?
a. Bible reading
b. Prayer
c. Or has it been to put the family in the car and show up at the front door wearing your church face.

2.  Even though it may appear that the experience is spontaneous God never springs it on someone who He has not prepared for that special time.  We may see it as unexpected but there are years of growing, suffering, learning etc. behind that encounter.

For example Moses, like David, had many hours to reflect on all of the events surrounding his life as he shepherded the sheep during those forty years in the desert..  How could he forget the way in which he was saved by the courage and wisdom of his mother from certain death after his birth as was the fate of so many of the Hebrew boys by order of Pharaoh.  Then to have Pharaoh’s daughter find him and for his own mother to nurture him during the formative years had to make a great impact on his life.  She possibly was his nurse and caregiver for the first seven or eight years of his life.  His thoughts could have turned to the training he received in the courts of the palace only to have to flee because of the murder he committed.  Now after 40 years in the desert as a shepherd of his father-in-law’s sheep he was more ready to do God’s bidding than he could comprehend.
     

Another way of looking at the way we have been prepared to meet God is a different acrostic. It pretty much presents the same criteria as was seen above in discovering one’s SHAPE.  Wayne Codeiro in his book, “Doing Church as a Team,” shares that each of us has a specific spiritual identity that uniquely equips us for our relationship with God and His Church.
He calls it DESIGN.


Again, each letter refers to the way God has wired us for His purpose. They are:

  1. Desire.  Are passions, drives and motivations
  2. Experience.  Unique experiences that specially equip us to serve God
  3. Spiritual Gifts.  There are at least 16 service gifts listed in the Scriptures.  Each follower of Christ has a least one
  4. Individual Style.  Personality
  5. Growth Phase.  The path you have taken in becoming a mature follower.
  6. Natural Abilities.  Examples would be math skills, writing, athletic etc.  God-given talents.

Once the preparation has been made then there is the experience itself and the lessons God wants us to learn.

From Moses’ burning bush experience there are certain things that can be discovered.
It is all about God
1. It is God’s agenda.  It is He who sets the conditions.  Moses was told to take off his shoes. 
2. God made the spot where Moses was standing holy.  Can you imagine that a sandy, hot, desolate place could be declared holy?
3. It is God who speaks.  He spoke out of the burning bush
4. It is He who gives the instructions, the directions the challenges.  I am going to send you to Egypt.
5. He does not have to listen to us any more than He would accept the sacrifices of the Israelites when their hearts were not committed to Him.  Most of our responses are but weak excuses when we are in His presence.  Moses said I cannot go because I do not speak well.
6. He determines the place and the time. Moses surely would have walked over that same ground many, many times before, in his 40 years in the desert.  In all that time he had never seen a burning bush before.  When the cries of the Israelites reached their peak, God said it is time.

When God approaches us as we come into His presence, we discover worship is not about us it is all about Him.  

Do we really think that this was a comfortable situation for Moses?
1. He was told to take his shoes off.  Out there in the burning desert in the heat of the day God says remove your shoes. 
2. Would it not be disconcerting to realize that the God of the universe was actually talking with you?
 

Expectations.
God has a plan and purpose and part of the experience must always be to try and discern what that purpose entails.  This is the hardest part to understand about experiencing God.  He never allows the person to leave that time unchanged.  He truly wants a transformation to occur in each person’s life.  Because this may all be new to us, He never expects anything but baby steps at first.  For those who have been in His service for a while He calls for greater commitment

Moses was going to be no different.  He was going to leave that time spent alone with God with a tremendous responsibility for the nation of Israel.  He was going to be God’s leader for that time and the next forty years.  Moses did not believe himself to be equipped to face the uncertain future.  God however did not allow Moses to escape his responsibilities with a false sense of humility and inadequacy.  God held his feet to the fire.

Expression.
God has spoken since time began that to experience Him will always result in service or sacrifice.  There is a cost
In Ephesians 2: 8-10 we are told. “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast, for we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works.

Paul in Romans 12:1-2 says, “Therefore, I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.  And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.

In Phil 3: 10 he writes, “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His suffering, being conformed to His death; In order that I may attain to the resurrection from the dead.”

Wayne Codeiro writes, “that God is worthy of our very best.”  He goes on to say, “Because everything we do is for an audience of One, everything matters!” (Page 83)

Moses responded by going to Egypt. This service did not come without pain and suffering.  He had to deal with the same kinds of attitudes and situations we face.

So how do we equip ourselves for this experience?
The first prerequisite is to come into that personal relationship with God through His Son Jesus Christ.  Then and only then will you experience that true encounter.
Learn your SHAPE/DESIGN
Listen to God through His word
Come before Him with an attitude of service.  Someone has written that there is no such thing as a non-serving Christian.

(Ex. 3:1-4:19)

There is one more incident that occurred before Moses arrived in Egypt that must not be overlooked. It took place on the trip back. Remember Moses had been in Midian for forty years. During that time to sons were born to him Being a Jew he was to follow the covenant given to Abraham. All male children who were descendants of Abraham were to be circumcised. Whether Moses forgot or did not believe it necessary to do so since he was living in a foreign land we shall never know. One thing for sure God had not forgotten the covenant and it was important to Him. His people, especially Moses who was to lead a whole nation out of Egypt, was to be obedient to God’s commands. How could he be the leader of his people if he was disobedient to God. Luke wrote something that applied to this situation. Jesus said, “From everyone who has been much, much will be required; and to whom they entrusted much, of him they will ask all the more.” (Luke 12:48) It was his responsibility and his alone to circumcise his sons not his wife’s. What almost took place could have changed what God had planned.  As a consequence of his disobedience, God was about to kill him. If it had not been for quick action of Zipporah, Moses would have died never carrying out the purpose of God for His people. Her rebuke of him was necessary. She called him “a bridegroom of blood.

(Ex. 4:24-26)

Although he had been warned by God that Pharaoh would not allow the people go except under duress, Moses was called off guard by his reaction. God had to intervene to keep Moses and Aaron from giving up the cause even before God begun to deal with the king and the Egyptians. How easy it is to quit when the going gets rough. The old saying that says, “When the going gets tough the tough get going.” This certainly was going to true for Moses, so it was good that he learned that lesson well early in the process.

(Ex. 3:19-20; Ex. 5:1-2)

The moment everything changed in Pharaoh’s life did occur when he commanded the Egyptians to enslave and oppress the Israelites. (Ex. 1:10) It also did not happen when he gave the order to have all of the male babies killed. (Ex. 1:16,22) When, however, he said to Moses, “Who is the Lord that I should obey His voice to let Israel go? I do not know the Lord, and I will not let Israel go,” began his downfall. With that one statement he set in motion the devastation of his nation and loss of his own firstborn son. He reached, by his actions, the point of no return. We are told in Scripture that God hardened his heart. I believe what really took place was God’s confirmation of the condition of Pharaoh’s heart that already existed.

(Ex. 5:2; 10:7; 12:29)

Each plague that took place in Egypt which were judgments against all of the gods of the Egyptian people accomplished two things. First in help to increase Moses’ faith in God’s ability to carry out His plan. It also demonstrated God’s power over false gods that the people in the land worshipped.

(Ex. 7:1-10:29)

Although all of the previous plaques did not get the desired results for the Jews, the final one would break the will and spirit of the people. Because of his stubbornness Pharaoh would see all of the first born of Egypt die on the night of the Passover. Egypt would never be the same again but would always be a second-rate nation.

(Ex. 12:29-30)

The Passover was to be a day of national identity for the Israelites. It was a sign of salvation from the oppression of the Egyptians and the beginning of their journey to the Promised Land.

(Ex. 12:2, 11-14, 17,27,42, 51: Heb. 11:28)

Pharaoh’s continued stubbornness had cost him everything. Now as a last act of defiance toward God he sent his entire army to total destruction in the Red Sea.

(Ex. 14:2-31)

Aaron listened to the voices of the people and gave into their demands for a god to lead them back to Egypt.  He rather than proving he was a leader of men. If was obvious that even if Moses did not return, he was not capable leading the people forward into the Promised Land. He lacked the important attributes of courage, commitment to the goal or understanding of who God was. Instead his place would be as a follower not a leader.

There was another man Saul who listened to the demands of the people and lost a kingdom. (1 Sam.) Aaron certainly proved here that he could not be trusted with the responsibility given him. Never again he would have such an opportunity and always live in Moses’ shadow.

(Ex. 32:1-5: Acts 7:39-41)

As a result of worshipping the golden calf three thousand of the Israelites were killed by the sword at the hands of the Levites. Many more had their names removed from the Book of Life.

(Ex. 32:27-28, 32-33)

It took the sin of the people to bring Moses to the point of understanding his purpose in what God was doing with the Nation of Israel. His identity was now bound up in the future of his people in a way that he had not allowed himself to be before this test. The first indication that a shift in his thoughts had taken place was his willingness to have his name removed from the Book of Life if God did not forgive His people. We see this same commitment in Romans 9:3 where Paul was willing to give up his own salvation for his brethren and kinsmen among the Jews.

Secondly, He was unwilling to leave Mt. Sinai without the leadership and presence of God. Moses understood that he could not lead the people unless the Lord was with him. When a person reaches a moment of ultimate commitment there comes with it a different mindset. Moses desired

  1. To find favor with God
  2. To know His ways
  3. To truly know Him. The first two will never occur without the intimate knowledge that each of us need so badly.
  4. To find favor in God’s sight
  5. To identify himself with God’s people.

 (Ex. 32:32; 33:13, 15-16; 34:9

Defining Moment- Genesis

Filed under: Defining Moments — admin @ 4:50 PM

In the first couple chapters God showed that He created man to be in the image of the trinity. One of the characteristics that is exclusively given to man by God is freewill, the ability to make choices.

Adam was given simple instructions about his responsibilities and what he was to accomplish in obedience to God. He was to:

  • Be a good steward of the creation over which he was given authority to rule. (Gen. 1:26, 28)
  • Be fruitful and multiply to continue mankind. (Gen. 1:28)
  • Eat vegetation given to him. (Gen. 1:29)
  • Not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. This command issued by God, demanded obedience from Adam and Eve. To disobey would bring death to them and the possibility the end of mankind itself. (Gen. 2:17)

To be all of what God meant man in total obedience to be is a true definition of one who is created in God’s image. God provided Adam with the opportunity that no man has experienced. He was to be in perfect harmony with His creation and relationship with Him.  As we shall see in chapter 3 and probably preceding the description of God walking in the garden in the cool of the evening, that special time with the Lord had surely been going on from the time man was first created. There was nothing to spoil the perfect world of Eden as long as man was in perfect communion with the Father.

All of that was about to change as man asserted his free will. From the events seen in chapter 3 it appears that having a perfect world was not enough for man. The man and woman were easy targets for the wiles of the devil.

Eve was about to commit acts that would radically redefine the course of history and showed her open rebellion to God’s authority. The apostle John summed up what we shall see in his letter to the church at Ephesus. He wrote about the trap the world offers into which Adam and Eve were caught. He said, “For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world”. Of the things man believes are so important are temporary at best for he wrote, “The world is passing away, and also its lusts.” 1 John 2:16-17

Falling for the serpent’s sales pitch she turned her attention once more to the tree of the knowledge of good and evil with a new level of interest. At the time of her decision Eve did three things that clearly showed a heart attitude of rebellion against God’s authority. She:

  • Determined the fruit was good for food.
  • Liked its physical appearance.
  • Believed it would be the source of wisdom.
  • Actually, Eve ate of the fruit and then gave some to Adam to eat. By doing so she involved him in her conspiracy against God.

Sadly, with the eating of the fruit she received the very thing she desired because the eyes of both of them were opened.  But with all of man’s rebellion against God the results are never what God had determined was the best for them. (Gen. 3:6-7

The only difference between what Eve did and Adam’s sin is she allowed herself to be deceived while he voluntarily took the fruit from her hand and ate it. They now had the knowledge of good and evil. As a consequence of that one act on the part of both of them every generation since that time has been cursed with a sin nature. (Gen. 3:6)

Things did not turn out as expected. Instead of becoming like God they were soon to discover that God did not relinquish His throne and authority. Instead of being:

  • Wise they became ashamed of their nakedness and were afraid to face God.
  • In God’s earthly paradise called the Garden of Eden they found themselves outside with no way to return.
  • God’s steward of His created world Adam would now have to toil to harvest food by waging a continuous battle against the thorns and weeds that the land would now produce.
  • A god Eve found herself under the authority of Adam, who now himself was a sinful individual.
  • Joyful for the progeny that would be born through her the ordeal would be one filled with pain, but even with the pain she would still desire relationship with her husband. (Gen. 3:16-19)

It is interesting that God pronounced His judgments on the serpent before laying out the future for Adam and Eve and all of those would follow after them. For his part in the devil did not get the outcome he hoped for out of the incident.  Knowing that Jesus was going to come in the future, I believe he either hoped to dominate the couple or that God would destroy man because of sin and Christ would never be born. God stated three things to the serpent. He would:

  • Be the eternal enemy of man
  • Move around on its belly
  • Eventually meet with complete defeat at the hands of the Savior of the world.

       (Gen. 3:14-16)

It is a commentary on the condition man that after the fall there is no reference in the Bible of God speaking communing with the two of them again. Man had broken the relationship.  Nothing He would say could repair the damage caused by their rebellion. Man would have to wait thousands of years before redemption came in the form of the God/Man, the second Adam.  From that point own the Scripture is full of the failures of man to be reconciled with the Father.

In the story of Cain and Abel is seen the sin of man after the fall being played out for all to see. At some point both men seemed to acknowledge the reality of God.

Each person who is saved comes to Christ in a unique way. The common factor is the realization that he or she is in need of a Savior. To acknowledge that fact brings about the defining moment of beginning a life in Christ. What is different for each person is the way he comes to that decision.  Many can tell the exact moment when he became a Christian. To others the understanding of the need for Christ comes over a period of time and many experiences feed into the story. For every person salvation is in a way a mystery. How is it that the Almighty Creator of the whole universe has provided a way for each person who desires it to have a personal relationship with Him?  As we read through the Scripture, we are not always told the exact point in time when a person moves from being lost to gaining eternal life. The other mystery is that only God knows when the decision made is genuine and will lead one into eternity.

This is true of the two brothers, the first children of Adam and Eve.  The Bible tells us that the men knew God, at least knew of Him.  Surely their parents had told them all about what God had done in creating the world and their part of the story.  Each man reacted differently. Their sacrifices brought to Him reflected the view they had of God. The practice of worship would lead to the defining moment in the life of one of them. I say just one because by the time the story reaches its climax Abel would be dead. It is obvious that Abel had a deeper relationship with the Father than Cain.

Somehow, he understood it was not enough to just bring some of the harvest as Cain did by the best and the first of his possession to be presented as an acceptable sacrifice.

This may have become a pattern in Cain’s life to present to God enough to get by.  Finally, God came to him to settle accounts.  It reminds me of the number of times Jesus spoken of being faithful with what God has put into the hands of man to manage for Him. Cain had been remiss in honoring God with the sacrifices He deserved.

Rather than being repentant of his sin his response was to become angry and despondent. God provided Cain with a second chance. He first asked him a question. “Why are you angry? And why has your countenance fallen?” He then provided him with a solution to his sinful attitude. He said, “If you do well, will not your countenance be lifted up? And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door and its desire is for you, but you must master it.” (Gen. 4:6-7) 

Here is the second recorded defining moment in the life of Cain. The first was the acknowledgement of God.  The second was the opportunity to repent and return to the Father who had given life and blessings.  At that moment Cain chose to rebel against God.  He took out his anger and frustration on his brother Abel and killed him. Because of anger and jealousy, we have the written account of the first murder in the world. (Gen. 4:8)

As usually happens people will lie to cover up their guilt. Cain could not however hide what he had done from God. God declared him guilty by stating that He knew what had taken place. The very thing that keeps a man alive, the blood that courses through his veins had been spilled out and Abel’s blood was seen in heaven as evidence of the crime committed. Cain’s life was spared because God had not yet established the law that said that a man was to be executed when he killed another human being.  In a way Cain’s sentence was fitting. He was cast out into the strange and unfamiliar world to roam and fear all of his life with no place to call a permanent home.

Sin is lurking at the door of every man’s life to destroy his relationship with the Father. Paul admonished the Romans to be careful with these words, “Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its lusts.” (Rom. 6:12) Cain did not heed the warnings he had received from God.  He chose to give into that sin. He allowed it to become his master.  After a defining moment is reached, any act that follows is just an extension of that decision. That moment was a turning point in Cain’s life from which there was no turning back. (Gen. 4:3, 5-7, 13-14; Rom. 6:12; Heb. 11:4-5)

One of Cain’s descendants, Lamech followed in his footsteps. In him was seen the same kind of rebellion against God in full bloom. In the killing of both man and boy he set himself as judge and jury in deciding to mete out the extreme punishment against the two of them. Gen. 4:23. Neither of the acts committed against him would justify murder on his part. Not only that, he set himself up as greater than his father, Cain. His statement to his two was a good indicator of the pride that filled his life. He said, “If Cain is avenged sevenfold, then Lamech seventy-fold.” (Gen. 4:24)

After that one glimpse into the life of Lamech and his evil actions, he is never mentioned in Scripture again. I think that this incident was inserted to show just how far a man would go in turning away from God. His defining moment made him an infamous character in the annals of time.

When Cain was banished to wander on the earth as a vagrant there was no one to preserve the line of Jesus. Adam and Eve however were determined to carry out the mandate of God to multiply and inhabit the earth. To them was born Seth. At the time of his birth Eve spoke the following words, “God has appointed me another offspring in place of Abel. For Cain killed him.” Through him the ancestry of Jesus continued and was not destroyed, as the devil may have desired. (Gen. 4:25) Notice he was to be listed in the descendants of Adam. Cain was excluded, although there were children born to him. 

After Seth, Enosh his son was born. More importantly it was the writer put it, “Then men began to call upon the name of the Lord.” (Gen. 4:26) Why am I including the tow verses 25-26 in material on defining moments? It seems to me that the Moses was trying to show his listeners that the world had come through a time of apostasy. Both Cain and Lamech had brought a new level of evil and rebellion into the world.  It was now time for men to turn back and begin to worship the Lord.  Probably the manifestation of this was a return to the presenting sacrifices. We first were exposed to them in the life of Abel and men were once again beginning to acknowledge the Lord in their lives.

It is interesting that the mention of man calling on the name of God occurred at the beginning of the genealogy of Adam following the birth of Enosh. We are told, first of all, “When God created man, He made him in the likeness of God.” (Gen. 5:1) Moses then goes on to said, “He created them male and female and He blessed them and named them Man in the day they were created.” (Gen. 5:2)

It is obvious that it was important because author spoke concerning man and woman and their relationship to Him and to each other more than once.  The normal God given relationship He set up from the very beginning was between man and woman. Through their union eventually the Savior of the world would come.

It would be in the life of Enoch, seven generations from Adam, that we see a man who in ways revealed to us came to know God in a personal way.  We shall see it again, but it is still a wonderful mystery to see the way God works in the lives of men. Enoch at some point had his defining moment. We are given a clue because from the time of the birth of his son Methuselah when he was sixty-five years old, he spent the rest of his three hundred sixty-five years walking with His Father. We have to ask ourselves what cause that one man to have such faith.  Although, it is an amazing fact that unlike any of us he had available combined wisdom of all of his ancestors dating back to Adam were still alive during his lifetime. We would think that the stories told by them would have influenced the spiritual life of each person to the extent that they would have been like Enoch. The question is how was Enoch different? What moved in his heart that completely changed his life in a way that made him unique among the early patriarchs?  It was obviously the Holy Spirit working is his heart that brought him into the personal relationship with God.  We to this day do not understand how out of a family or a group of people that one person will be attuned to the calling of Christ while those around him do not hear the call.

Not only was Enoch a true follower of God but also a prophet. In naming his son Methuselah he spoke a prophecy of the judgement on mankind that would take place because of the depravity of each man’s heart that was becoming rampant in the world. The fulfillment of those words would take place at the end of Methuselah’s life. The meaning of his name was “When he dies, it will come.” (Gen 5:22-24)

His reward for his faithfulness was to be translated into heaven without having to go through the pangs of death. We can now have that same experience because of what Christ did for each of us on the cross.

None of us know the impact our descendants will have on the world. Lamech, Enoch’s grandson and Methuselah’s son spoke words about his son that could have only been a hope. He seemed to be depending on the next generation to make the world a better place to live.  We hear this all the time when it is said, “what kind of world are we going to leave to our children?” Or “I hope they can straighten out the mess we have made of things.” To me it is a sad state of affairs when we try to live vicariously through our children and taking responsibility for the time we are given here on earth. Lamech said basically:

  • Give us rest so we do not have to work so hard.
  • It was God’s fault for making life so difficult in our labor. 
  • It was God’s, not man’s fault that the ground was cursed. 

(Gen. 5:28)

When a man recognizes the part, he plays in this fallen world, it is the beginning of working towards solutions. We can never accomplish anything by continually blaming others.  No one gets anywhere by constantly throwing pity parties. God wants us to confess our sins so that He can forgive us. Only then can anyone be used for the benefit of the human race.  We are not given the responsibility to fix the whole world, but we surely can try to make where we are a better place.  Misplaced as it was for Lamech, like him each person does have hope that his or descendants will add to the world and not be weight that drags it down.

God was preparing for the future. Noah could not know lay ahead.  We are told before the story unfolded for him, he had three sons, Shem, Ham and Japheth through whom the whole world would be repopulated.

By the time Noah had reached the age of five hundred the world had become an immoral and evil place. Sexual immorality had become prevalent with children being born who did know or want to have anything to do with God.  For the most part godless parents will produce godless children. It was at critical period in the history of Adam’s descendants that God determined to bring judgment on His creation.

In the midst of such a trying time there stood out one man who was different than all others. Not even Noah’s father or grandfather found favor with God as both lived well after God’s prophecy to destroy the world had been given. In fact, Methuselah lived up to the year of the great flood.

Once again, we see God working in a man’s heart in spite of the circumstances swirling about him. Noah is described as:

  • One who found favor with God
  • A righteous man
  • Blameless in his time
  • One who walked with God (Gen. 6:8-9)

Although Noah was a man after God’s own heart, he still had to face his hour of decision on his own. It had to be difficult for him to comprehend that God was going to bring judgment on the earth with a great flood when there had never been rain up until his day.  Then to be told to build a great boat because the rain was going to come at some point in time took a lot of faith.  True to his character the Scriptures tells us, “Thus Noah did according to all that God commanded him, so he did. (Gen. 6:22; Heb. 11:7)

It took a hundred years, but the floods came just as God had promised. Because Noah had been willing to be obedient from the first moment God came to him, he and his immediate family and the animals were saved from being destroyed along with every other living being on the face of the earth. (Gen. 7:23)

There turned out to be one dark spot in the story of Noah. The decisions of each of his three sons when their father became drunk and lay naked in his tent would affect the lives of each of them from that moment on until this day. Each of the son’s responded to Noah’s situation in a different way. In patriarchal society when the father was to be respected and held in high esteem Ham did just the opposite by sharing with his brothers their father’s condition. Both Shem and Japheth acted to protect Noah’s name. Each of them took a blanket, backed into the tent and covered their father without looking at him. We do not know how he knew that it was Ham who had shown such disrespect, but it is obvious from the prophecy he proclaimed that he did. While the two older brothers received a blessing the family of Ham through his son Canaan was cursed forever. The land the Israelites would eventually conquer was named after Noah’s grandson.

When the people began to spread out over the face of the earth a number of them came to the land of Shinar. There they decided to build a city and a tower to establish a name for themselves. The tower was an effort to show that man did not need God to succeed. They could build a building that would reach all the way to heaven. It would ultimately become the city of Babylon. God would not put up with such arrogance but so long. He came into the presence of the people involved and not only scattered them but changed their language so they could not understand one another any longer. 

The attitude of man is still the same as in the day of the Tower of Babel. He is continually attempting to make a place for himself without God. As He did with the people, who were rebelling against Him, God will intervene and bring about judgment.  One thing for sure God will not be ignored by any people and not suffer the consequences of that decision. (Gen. 11:4-9)

For each of us there, if we are honest with ourselves, is the realization that the relationship with God that is growing in our lives is not a straight line from conversion to a committed true disciple of Jesus Christ. There are fits and starts, hills and valleys, mistakes, right and wrong decisions. Sometimes we stay on the path toward godliness, but quite often we stray in many different directions. As we take a look at Abraham’s life there are many aspects that we can identify in ourselves that are reflected in his walk.

The life of Abram who would later be called Abraham is an interesting study in human nature.  He would be called a friend of God and a man of righteousness, but in his life, there were many decisions made that seem to be in conflict with those descriptions of him. Like us the development of his character was a slow process. It would take more than twenty-five years for his faith to become strong.  However, from the very first that we hear of him in Genesis God saw the potential end results of complete devotion for Him, He would obtain from Abraham. 

Even though it would be one of the important incidents occurring in his life that would be a defining moment for him, we have mistakenly thought it was Abram who decided to leave Ur of Chaldeans. In Actually, it was Terah, Abram’s father who led the expedition from his home country of Ur to Haran in present day Syria. His plan was to ultimately proceed into the land of Canaan. Terah, however died there in Syria.  Abraham thus became the patriarch of the family at that point in time. He probably would have settled down there in Haran if the Lord had not intervened. The earlier decision of his father did however position Abram and his family to follow through on Terah’s original plan to move into Canaan. (Gen. 11:31-32)

There were many events that would occur in Abraham’s life leading to a greater and greater relationship with the Father. Of course, none of the others would have taken place unless he had been obedient in to leaving all that was familiar and comfortable. God had plans had for him he could not even begin to comprehend. Until the death of Terah he had been under the authority of his father. He was now to make decisions that would affect the future of his family. Those choices would define him as a man of God.

The Bible never explains why Terah decided to leave Ur of the Chaldees in the first place. There could been many reasons, but there have been a couple of possibilities. It may have been the need for new grazing land for his flocks of sheep.  He may not have been very concern about the influence that the pagan culture was having on his family. We will see a weakness in Lot later on that might give credence to the latter idea. It is a mystery known only to God why such a drastic change would be brought about in the life of a family. We do not have an explanation from Scripture to let us in on God’s decision- making process. There only one way we know about the events that took place. It was while in Syria that Abram received instructions for the next phase of his life.

Having said that it would not be an unusual situation for a family to pick up and move from one place to another. Abram’s family was probably nomads as shall be seen by his travels throughout the rest of his life.

What would have been different was the method by which Abram was called to leave Haran.  The actual act of moving would not seem strange for a man who had an adventurous nature and was always looking for greener pastures. However, to be directed to go into a land completely unknown to him took courage and a certain degree of faith. This mindset may have played a part in his willingness to move.  From the very beginning of time individuals have been curious about what lay ahead around the next bend of the road. (Gen. 12:1-4; Acts 7:3-4; Heb. 11)

As was mentioned above, Abram who would become Abraham was a man of many contrasts. On the one hand we are told that Abram was declared righteous because of his faith. He then turned around and did things that spoke of a man who thought he was in control of his own future.

Thankfully, God did not turn His back on Abram but was with him both in Egypt and Gedar.

(Gen. 12:1-4; Acts 7:3-4; Heb. 11)

Fits and starts are terms that could be used to describe Abram’s process toward truly becoming the man of God through whom the covenant would be realized. Some of those experiences that would occur along the path toward God included:

  1. God’s command to Abraham was for him to leave everything and everyone behind before entering into the land God was going to give him. He disobeyed by taking his nephew, Lot with him. That decision would later on cause him problems when the conflict started because of their possessions. (Gen. 12:5)
  2. Abraham’s decision to go into Egypt. This act would lead to the conflict between Lot and him over the lack of grazing land available for of the livestock the two owned.

(Gen 12:10)

  • Abraham asked Sarah to pretend to be his sister in order to keep from being killed by the Egyptians. Here again is seen how weak Abraham’s faith was. God had already told him that he would be the founder of a great nation. If he had been truly listening, He would have realized that in order for that to happen God was going to protect him no matter where he went.  To not bring Abraham through difficult circumstances would mean that God was a big enough God to carry out the promises He had made. (Gen. 12:10-20)
  • Displaying a tentative faith. When God told him that he would be the father of a great nation and possess the land where he was living, he sought a sign to prove that what he was being told was true. (Gen. 15:6)
  • His decision to take matters in his own hands to have a family by having a child by his wife’s slave, Hagar. That one act has had a detrimental effect on history from that time on to this day. Ishmael would be the ancestor to the Arab world who are present day enemies of Israel, Abraham’s descendants. (Gen 16)
  • Once again using his old tactic to protective himself while in Gerar.  Abraham had not learned in lessons from his first trip into Egypt. Once again, He was willing to put Sarah and the future of the promised covenant in danger by asking her to pretend to be his sister. (Gen. 20:2-13)

Lot, the albatross around Abraham’s neck comes into the picture. He reminds me of the son who is still living in the basement of his parent’s home until he is thirty expecting them to take care of him in the same way they did when he was young. Even it was common in that culture for a number of generations to live together two things stand out about the relationship between Abraham and Lot. First, Lot was not Abraham’s responsibility because he was not his son but a nephew. Secondly, God had specifically commanded Abraham to leave all of his family behind in Haran before going into the land of Canaan.  It was time for Lot to separate from his uncle and begin a life on his own. Following the journey into Egypt there arose a conflict between the herdsmen of Abraham and those taking care of Lots livestock.  There was not enough grass for the combined livestock to feed. Abraham allowed Lot to choose any of the land for his new home. Abraham would then go in the opposite direction. Lot’s defining moment came when he decided to move toward Sodom and Gomorrah. Like so many choices made during a person’s lifetime his move looked like a good idea at first. He chose a land with plenty of water and as the Bible says, it was “like the garden of the Lord.” Although, initially he located his family close to the two evil cities he eventually moved into Sodom. (Gen. 13:10,12) 

It was Lot’s decision to move to Sodom which set in motion the events that would be devastating to his family. It brought about:

  1. Compromise with a pagan society
  2. The capture by pagan kings and rescue by Abraham. It appears by this time Lot had lost all that he possessed before moving away from Abraham.
  3. Death of his wife
  4. Acts of incest with his two daughters

(Gen. 14:11-16; 19:1-38; Luke 17:32)

As was mentioned earlier, one of his mistakes was having Absalom by Hagar at the insistence of Sarah.  His lack of faith of not waiting for God’s timing in having a descendant led to conflict in his family. Ultimately, after Isaac had grown into childhood things came to a head when Sarah commanded that Ishmael and his mother be sent away. Ishmael grew into a man who was at odds with those around him. The world is still experiencing the evil that came from Abraham taking the future in his own hands.  (Gen. 16: 1-12; 21:9-21)

The child of promise was born to Abraham and Sarah. God’s covenant to Abraham was beginning to come to fruition at the birth of Isaac. (Gen. 21:1-8)

It is an amazing thing that for all the experiences Abraham had in his over one hundred years it took his willingness to offer Isaac as a sacrifice to have God say to him what had never been part of their conversation before. God was about to test him in a way that had taken place in his life. To offer one’s only son would be ultimate sacrifice that a parent could make. Abraham was obedient in a way that not many people would be.  Of course, this was a picture of what God would do with His own Son. Jesus willingly laid down his life as a sacrifice for all of us. The moment that would decide to whom He owed everything was being willing to give up that one who was his only true hope for the posterity of his family and future of God’s chosen people. His name was Isaac.  At this decisive moment, Abraham heard God speak. He said, “I know that you fear God, since you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me.”   

In that one moment Abraham’s life was turned from one of self-preservation to total commitment. He understood that God was the One truly in charge of his life and the events surrounding him. In faith was evident in the fact that he believed that God would provide the lamb for the sacrifice or somewhat raise Isaac from the dead.  Figuratively, he did receive his son back from the dead.

(Gen. 22:8,10-12,16-18: Heb. 11:17-19)

It was only after Abraham offered the substitute for Isaac did God speak to him and then made one of the greatest promises of all. He was told that He would be the ancestor of the Savior of the world. (Gen. 22:16-18)

Abraham had gotten old and there was no suitable candidate for a wife for Isaac to be found among the people of Canaan.  Therefore, Abraham sent his trusted servant to Syria to find a wife for Isaac from the family of Laban, his nephew.  We discover the next defining moment in the sequence of events leading up to the choice of Rebekah to be Isaac’s wife. We might find it amazing that she would decide to go with Abraham’s servant whom she had never met and travel to a foreign land to marry someone she did not know. Her willingness to leave her family would eventually lead to the birth of Jacob and Esau who would continue the lineage of Abraham which would lead to the birth of Christ.

(Gen 24:58)

The story shifts from Isaac to certain important events in their lives that would impact history from that point on. That is exactly what defining moments do in each person’s life, some on a much larger scale than others as we shall see in the lives of the grandsons of Abraham.

In a way the destiny of each of them was established before they were born. Rebekah was told by God what the future held for the two boys. The family of one would be stronger than the other. The promise that would turn decorum on its head was that the older would serve the younger son, thus given him first place over his brother. As the events unfolded in each of their lives it will be seen how decisions made by each of them would bring the prophecy to pass.

It was Esau who set the stage for Jacob to become the inheritor of the promises made to Abraham and thus become the more dominant brother. By his actions Esau disqualified himself from being used by God.

Esau married a Hittite woman from the descendants of Canaan, the son of Ham. As we read earlier Canaan had received the curse from Noah and would become servants of Shem. This marriage displeased Isaac and Rebekah and excluded him from being an ancestor of Jesus.

(Gen. 26:34-35)

The second major decision, to sell his birthright for a bowl of bean soup set the stage for the others that would affect his place in history down the road. It showed a man who was more concerned about his physical needs which brought immediate gratification without regard for the future consequences of his action.

(Gen. 25:29-33)

The final act that sealed his place in history was completely out of the hands of Esau. It was a request made by his father and a deception perpetrated by Jacob and Rebekah. That act of deception became the truly defining moment of her life. It came a great personal cost to her. The sequence of events that were all part of her desire to ensure the position of Jacob to receive the portion of Isaac’s estate which would have normally gone to the eldest son. Rebekah:

  1. Influenced Jacob to deceive his father.
  2. Although mentioned in the Bible probably lost the trust of her husband. After all was accomplished surely, he would have known that Jacob could not have accomplished the act alone.
  3. Angered Esau to the point that he considered murder of his brother. To retaliate for what was done to him, he took additional wives from pagan societies.
  4. Never saw Jacob again. If she did those times were never recorded in Scripture.

One has to wonder if later in life reflected on her actions. She had to ask herself was the consequences she experienced worth the deception that she has carried out against her husband.

(Gen. 27:5-41)

After Jacob had stolen the blessing intended for Esau, Esau came to the stark realization of what he had so flippantly given up for a bowl of bean soup.

(Gen. 27:36-38; Heb. 11:20)

What seemed like a good idea at the time would cost Jacob 20 years of his life as he had to flee from his brother and leave the home he had always known.  During those years with Laban his father-in-law he married two sisters and had 12 children in all. Benjamin was not yet born. He finally fled from Syria to return back to his father in Canaan.  As he travelled, he was confronted by none other than Jesus.

(Gen. 27:43-32:33)

While waiting to meet Esau, for the second time in his life Jacob found himself completely alone. The first time was he fled from his brother and found himself at Bethel. It was completely different from his current situation. The previous time he had nothing to lose because everything had belonged to his father. Even though he had the birthright and the blessing they were just empty possibilities because he did not know what the future held for him. His circumstances were now different. He had responsibilities for all he possessed. There was now a family, slaves and livestock of various kinds to be considered.  There was a possibility that he could lose all of it when he met his brother.

Only when he had faced his greatest challenge in life by wrestling with God’s messenger would he receive the name, “Israel”. Indeed, God gave him a new name which mean one who strives with God and man and succeeds. Although that event was to be defining moment for Jacob, the one thing it did not accomplish immediately was killing his old human nature. His old sin nature was still evident in his subsequent meeting with his brother.

(Gen. 32:14-30)

When thinking about Esau it is easy to write him off as one of the lesser characters in the Bible. This may be a natural tendency because we read in Malachi 1:2 and Romans 9:13 that God loved Jacob and hated Esau. If Esau was not important to God, why should we give him much attention. There are some practical concepts about forgiveness and overcoming circumstances that are seen in his life.  He held onto the promise from Isaac that he would eventually break the yoke of servitude from around his neck. (Gen. 27:40) So, let us step back a take another look at Esau’s life and what God can do in one person we might view as a second class.

It is evident as we shall see that sometime during the period of the twenty years since Jacob had left that God had been working in Esau’s life. No, he could not get the birthright or blessing back because they were no longer his.  The one thing he had the power to do was to forgive his brother. No longer did he hold onto the hatred he had for Jacob but had relinquished it long before he was to meet with his brother. As we see in the Scripture in a way the shoe was on the other foot so to speak. Jacob possibly because of guilt had a great fear of meeting his brother face to face again. Esau had forgiven Jacob and thus was a free man long before Jacob knew that he was free from the penalty of his sin.

Jesus brought forgiveness to each of us long before we knew that it was available to us. We walked around with the guilt resulting from our old sin nature until God met us where we were and said we were free and part of His family. Like, what Jesus did for all mankind, Esau was offering reconciliation between Jacob who did not deserve forgiveness and himself. Esau was making the offer even before Jacob knew it was available to him. The forgiveness of Esau was a foreshadowing of what was done for each of us through the death of Jesus on the cross. He brought two parties who were at enmity with each other brought them together in a new relationship.

One other point that needs to be made before moving on. It is clear that a new view of the relationship that might be available to him was important enough for Esau to go to Jacob. If he had still wanted to kill Jacob all he had to do was wait until he had gotten closer to home. He made the journey from his place of comfort to go to meet his brother not knowing what awaited him. Again, this has to remind us of Jesus who left His home in glory to become just like the man He came to save not knowing how He would be received.  His sacrifice offered every person the opportunity to have his own personal defining moment of be reconciled to God.

(Gen. 32:6)

What was taking place in Jacob’s heart was just the opposite. If there was to be any relationship with his brother reestablished it would be on his terms.  Everything he contrived was for, ultimately his own self-preservation.  This was obvious from the grand performance he put on to attempt to placate Esau. What is seen in his excuses his mistrust of his brother. One of the reasons given was so full of holes that it should have been plain to see by all what Jacob was doing. He had presented Esau with a gift from his herds and flocks to be taken back by Esau to his home.  When Esau suggested they travel together Jacob basically said that his animals were not up to the trip. Those presented as gift were from the same herds and flocks as the one’s Jacob claimed could not be pushed. To his credit and showing the kind of man he had become, Esau returned home with the gift and without Jacob and all that belonged to him. Esau had changed but at that point Jacob appears to be same man he was before the whole episode.

(Gen. 33:1-13)

Jacob still had many lessons to learn, but that was the beginning point of the changes that need to take occur in his life. There in Peniel he received the blessing and promise, not from man but from God. He believed that God had preserved him even though he had seen the very face of God and lived.

(32:24-30)

An incident involving Jacob’s daughter occurred because he did not follow through on his promise to continue his journey until he came to the place where Esau was living. Establishing a residence among the people of Shechem led to rape of Dinah and the subsequent death of all the men in Shechem.

Of course, not all of the responsibility need fall on Jacob’s shoulders. Shechem the son of Hamor was old enough to control is emotions and not rape Dinah.  The act, even though Shechem tried to play down the severity of his actions by offering to marry the girl. His offer did not placate the anger of her brothers leading to the destruction of a whole city.   

(Gen. 33:18-34:31)

Jacob was commanded to travel to Bethel and live there to reestablish the relationship he had. He wisely followed God’s command. His first time at Bethel had been when he was fleeing from Esau.  It was there that Jacob had been a rudimentary altar and promised that if he returned to the land that God would be his God and that he would tithe all that he had. (Gen. 35:1)

The decision to share his dreams with his brothers and then his father would forever alter the course of Joseph’s life. It started a sequence of events that would take him all the way to Egypt.

(Gen. 37:5-10)

Not only was it a defining moment in the lives of Joseph and his brothers but also a breaking point in a relationship that was fragile at best and was to get even worse.  Even though it might seem that the dreams Joseph were the cause of the hatred his brothers had for him, the roots went very deep in the dynamics of the family’s life.  They were only the tipping point that drove the brothers to take drastic measures against him. The decision to sell their brother would have a permanent effect on each of their lives from that point on. Every day they had to live with the consequences of their actions. I will cover some of the forces at work when I write specifically about Judah. Although he played a major role in what took place in this narrative, I would prefer to view the changes that God brought about in his life by the time he made the second trip down to Egypt.

(Gen. 37:26-35; 42:21-22)

Without going into a lot of detail before looking at the future events in Joseph’s experiences in Egypt there is one point to be made here which will emphasized again. Joseph’s time of testing and trials came about partly because of Jacob’s partiality towards him. He was his father’s favorite son and the affection he had for him was on display for everyone to see. We can see how this would breed jealousy in the hearts of his brothers.

(Gen. 37:3)

As mentioned, Joseph was his father’s favorite son. This led to an attitude of superiority towards his brothers. The beginning of his downfall came when he tattled to his father bringing “a bad report” about them to Jacob. (Gen. 37:2) Compounding the situation were the dreams that placed Joseph as ruler over the other brothers and then over the whole family including Jacob and Leah. (Gen 37:5-10)

From that point on they could not even speak to him because of their anger. Their opportunity came to get rid of the pest. Jacob sent him to find out how his brothers were doing while watching over the sheep. They all saw his appearance, first as an opportunity to kill him so they would longer have to put up with him. They changed their minds and decided to sell him to Midianite traders. They could not of course see by killing him would eventually put their own lives and those of their families in jeopardy. They were also short-sighted in not thinking how their actions would affect Jacob when they presented to him supposed evidence of Joseph’s death. (Gen. 37:18-35)

Before we return to Joseph this would be a good place to look at Judah’s part in the future of Jacob’s family. To do so we will not be covering the events in the rest of Genesis in chronological order. More important than the order we have an opportunity how the events in one’s life do become defining moments that change a man’s life.  God does truly is the One working behind the scenes moving a person in a particular direction.

Some of the things that occurred in Judah’s life were completely beyond his control. In a way God would take even the wrong decisions and use them for His purpose and glory. Let’s look at see how Judah got to the point of being God’s instrument.

  1. Judah was the fourth son born to Leah. His name actually means praise. Although Leah was Jacob’s first wife through deception, her husband actually loved Rachel, Joseph’s mother more than the other wives.
  2. Although we are not told this in the Bible we can be assured as Judah and the others got older, they would have been aware that their mother was not the first chose of Jacob.
  3. When Joseph came along, he became the favorite son leaving the others to get the scraps of his affection.
  4. Early on it was obvious the he rather than Reuben was going to be the leader among his brothers.
  5. Judah was the one who suggested that they should sell Joseph rather than kill him.
  6. For some reason Judah decided to move away from the rest of the family. During that time, he married Shua a Canaanite woman by whom he had three sons. His wife died and two of his sons died because as the Bible said God took their lives because they were evil leaving Tamar the wife of both them as a widow.
  7. After the death of his two sons Judah had sexual relations with Tamar.  It would appear that Tamar would go to any lengths to preserve the name of her husband, even to pretending to be a harlot. Under the practice of the Levirate tradition she should have become the wife of Shelah. When she saw that was not going to happen, she took matters into her own hands. Her actions were not without risks. There was good possibility that she could have been executed because she committed fornication. From her union with Judah two additional sons were born. One of them whose name was Perez would become an ancestor of Jesus.
  8. Years later when a famine had come upon the known world the sons of Jacob made two trips to Egypt to buy food. During that first trip Joseph, who his brothers did not recognized demanded that they would not be allowed to buy anymore food unless the returned with their younger brother. Jacob delayed sending the men back to purchase more food even when offered his own two sons be sacrificed if he did not return with Benjamin.  Even with such a promise he was afraid something might happen to Benjamin, Joseph’s younger brother.
  9. We begin to see the what God had been doing in Judah’s heart. The one who was callous in selling his brother now promised his father that he would protect the boy. Although the decision to sell Joseph was ruled by a mob mentality, Judah would now be faced with his own defining moment. He could not begin to understand what it meant when he said to his father, “I myself will be a surety for him; you may hold me responsible for him (Benjamin). If I do not bring him back to you and set him before you, then let me bear the blame before you forever.” Jacob saw before him in Judah one who had changed and could now be trusted with Benjamin’s safety. Notice that Jacob now relied on Judah as a man of his word and not Reuben, the oldest son. The indiscretion of Reuben with Bilhah had diminished his standing in his Father’s eyes. Judah along with all of his brothers, including Benjamin, set out on their second and what would be a very eventful journey. We shall see in the next chapter whether the changes in Judah were real. Would he be a man of his word when faced with a challenged he had never experienced before. (Gen 43:9)
  10. When Benjamin was accused of stealing Joseph’s cup, Judah stepped forward and offered himself as a replacement to take his younger brother’s punishment. He lived up to the promise he had made to his father. (Gen. 44:15-34) Unlike Benjamin who was falsely accused we are guilty of sin deserving death, but Jesus stepped before His Father and offered Himself as our substitute.
  11. In his plea to Joseph there is a picture of a mature man who had outgrown his jealousies, had forgiven his father for the neglect that he and his brothers had experienced and had come to have a deep love for Jacob.  The last thing that he would want to see happen was for Jacob again go through the deep time of grief when he thought Joseph had been killed. (Gen. 44:15-34)

For Judah to reach the level of maturity he showed in the things that took place in Egypt, at some point made the life changing decision to become a servant of God. He could not have shown such a willingness to sacrifice himself without the love of God living within him.

We have all made mistakes for which we are truly sorry and are thankful for God’s forgiveness. Like Judah we are to grow from those experiences and have a desire to be a stronger and wiser disciple of Christ.

Jacob in his last blessing to his sons, clearly identified the characteristics that were operative in their lives and what it portended for each of their families in the future. What they were was going to affect what the future held for each of them. In a way it was a defining moment for each of them based on past decisions and actions. Let us take a looked at how Jacob viewed each of his sons. I will focus on five of them. Those brothers would play a significant role in the future of Israel. Although all twelve would become the patriarchs of the tribes not much was written of them in the Scriptures.

  1. Reuben- Although he was the oldest lost the blessing to Joseph and the leadership role to Judah because of his uncontrolled behavior having slept with one of Jacob’s wives. He would not be preeminent
  2. Simeon- Had a violent nature. Both he and his cohort in crime were men full of anger and self-will. His family would not have an inheritance they could call their own but be dispersed in the midst of the land given to the tribe of Judah.
  3. Levi- Because of his alliance with Simeon he would not have an inheritance but would be scattered throughout the land that would be given to Israel. This prophecy became true as the Levi’s descendants through Aaron would become the priests and located in cities given to them throughout Israel.
  4. Judah- One who was praised by his brothers. Although, Joseph received the blessing. The kingly line came through him.  Eventually he would be the ancestor of the Messiah. 
  5.  We cannot leave Genesis without looking into the life of Joseph and seeing how the events in his life shaped the kind of man he became. God still uses men like Joseph in every aspect of the world today. Many will have and are suffering in much the same ways as Joseph did. We will begin at the same place of his interaction with Judah. It is interesting how their lives were connected at the beginning and the end of the narrative found in Genesis. As with Judah there were events in his life that were completely out of Joseph’s hands but were critical in shaping the kind of man he became.

 Like Joseph no man may know when those events might occur that bring about major     changes the direction of his or her life.  There may be a decision that you have been thinking about but putting off because of circumstances   Your thoughts may be on a job change, getting married, making a move to a new location, or mending some fences with someone.  It could be the ultimate decision of becoming a follower of Jesus Christ.

There is not a single one of us who have not made choices that have impacted our lives for good or bad, success or failure.  I don’t know if any of you are familiar with what I would call a decision tree used in witnessing tools like Continuing Witness Training (CWT) or Evangelism Explosion (EE).  It is also used in certain sales training.  It goes something like this.  For every yes or no answer there is a certain path you take until you get to the next yes or no answer.  This continues until either, a sale is made, or someone accepts Christ, or you can see that any further conversation is useless.

History is full of examples of those who came to that turning point when they went down a path that led them to being part of our world.  I think of those men who have brought about great destruction and oppression like

Stalin

Hitler

Marx

Lenin

At the opposite end of the spectrum we find

Billy Graham

Charles Colson

And many others we could name.

Even churches arrive at a defining moment, when the decisions made could possibly affect how it is to minister in particular community, whether it will grow and be healthy or become another statistic.

Of course, in each of our lives there are some things over which we have no control.  Things like our relatives

Where we live in our early lives

Even what we wear

And what we are made to eat

For a while we are pretty much at the mercy of what others see as beneficial for us.

Later as we grow, the decisions we make have greater consequences than whether we eat green peas and oatmeal.  These are what I call critical moments or turning points.  Even those which we do not think as important may impact our health and happiness.

 I would like for us to look at the life of Joseph who ultimately would hold the future of the nation in his hands. 

Let us start with some of the things that were decided for him.

  1. His family.  Father, Jacob; Mother, Rachel, one brother and nine half-brothers and one half-sister
  2. His father’s relationship with him and his brothers. (Gen. 37: 3)
  3. The hatred and jealousy his brothers had towards him because of the bad report he gave his father concerning them. (Gen. 37:2

      4.   The fact he was his father’s favorite. (Gen. 37:3)

  •  His dreams (Gen. 37:5-10)
  • Action taken by his brothers against Joseph.

  a.    Threw him in a well.

  b.    Planned to him

  c.    Sold him to Ishmaelites (Gen 37:26-28

  • Became a slave in Potiphar’s household. (Gen. 39: 1-6)
  • Thrown into prison wrongly charged by Potiphar’s wife. (Gen 39:20)

With the decision to sell Joseph, his life would be altered in way of which he would have never dreamed could happen to him.  No longer would he be in the protective environment under the watchful loving care of Jacob.  He was thrusted into the strange and new world of Egyptian culture.  It would be a place totally unlike anything he had ever experienced.

Before we look at the rest of the story it is critical for us to understand that it is not always the situation in which we find ourselves that is the measure of the maturity of a person but how we react to what is happening to us.  Joseph from the very beginning had two options. He could have become bitter and uncooperative.  He chose the better path of working as to the Lord and not to man. (Eph 4) This turned out to his benefit because the Lord blessed him in every place in which he found himself.

During his sojourn in Potiphar’s household there came the critical moment when he would make a decision that would change everything for him.  We read about it in Gen. 39: 7-12.  These verses show the real test of Joseph’s faith and character.  It would have been so easy to have started a relationship with Potiphar’s wife which in the short term may have been beneficial to his success.  Sooner or later Potiphar probably would have discovered their little secret and Joseph would have been executed.  By staying true to God

in the face of such a great temptation he may have landed him in jail for a while, but God was still working out His purpose for the Israelites through Joseph.  As it is said about Moses in the book of Hebrews “by faith Moses when he had grown up, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter, choosing rather to endure ill treatment with the people of God than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin, considering the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt.” (Hebrews 11:24-26) That statement could have also been attributed to Joseph.

It seems such an injustice for a person of Joseph’s high moral character to be put into prison.  As strange as it may appear, this too was all in God’s plan for him and God’s chosen people.  We need to take note here that the jail where Joseph was incarcerated was where Pharaoh’s prisoners were detained. (Gen 39:19-20)

His decision to stay true to God resulted in Joseph being put in charge of all the others in the part of the jail where he stayed.  Here was the one jailed being given the keys to the vault.  Eventually in his position he came into contact with Pharaoh’s cupbearer and baker.  (Gen. 40:1-4)

 Joseph combines the best of the choleric and melancholy types of personalities.  On the choleric side he displays the drive and passion to face the difficulties and the changing environments in which he found himself.  His decisions were based for the most part on his relationship and trust in God.  Even though he was a take-charge type of person he learned the art of being gentle and caring for those with whom he came in contact.  The other part of his personality showed up in his ability to analyze situations with great clarity. 

His life seems to be divided into four different periods depending on the events surrounding him.  We first heard about him as an immature 17-year-old who bragged to his brothers about dreams he had.  In these dreams his brothers and other family members would eventually bow down before him. (Gen. 37:5,9) Of course this did not set well with them.  This led, along with other family situations for them to first begin hating him, then wanting to kill him and then actually selling him to some Midianites on the way to Egypt. (Gen. 37)

     We next find him in Egypt in the home of Potiphar where he begins to show his potential.  The Scriptures tell us that, “The Lord was with Joseph, so he became a successful man.” (Gen. 39:2) It goes on to say, “Joseph found favor in his sight and became his personal servant, and Potiphar made him overseer over his house, and all that he owned he put in his charge.” (Gen. 39:4)

The next episode finds Joseph in prison.  He was put there, not for anything that he did, but that he remained true to his commitment to God.  When Potiphar’s wife tried to seduce him several times, he continually refused saying, “How could I do this great evil and sin against God.” (Gen. 39:9) Potiphar’s wife eventually accused him of sexual abuse.  This landed him in jail.  Even there, God was with him, therefore he found favor in the eyes of the jailer.  The chief jailer put him in charge of all of the prisoners that led to his encounter with the cupbearer to Pharaoh, which led him to the next important step in his life.  It is there we see Joseph come to full maturity. 

Joseph spent two years in jail before being called by Pharaoh to interpret two dreams. It turns out that only Joseph I was able to tell the Pharaoh the meaning of those dreams.  He spelled out to him a clear and concise the message from God of what Egypt would be facing for the next fourteen years.  Based on this information Joseph laid out a strategy for the Pharaoh, which allowed for Egypt to persevere through the tough time in their history.  There is a telling statement by Pharaoh to show what God had done in Joseph’s life during the 13 refining years he had spent in Egypt.  “He said, “Can we find a man like this, in whom is a divine spirit?” (Gen. 41:38) Pharaoh then said, “See I have set you over all the land of Egypt.”  (Gen. 41:41)

Joseph was put into the position, not only to save Egypt but, to bring about the salvation of Israel.  For seven years he administered the strategy that he had shared with the Pharaoh.  When the famine came there was plenty food in Egypt because of the job Joseph had done.  The land of Canaan where Jacob was living was going to be affected by the famine that occurred in Egypt.

The second trip by the brothers revealed the true heart of Joseph. With a perfect opportunity for revenge he showed great mercy in forgiving what his brothers had done to him. Of all the defining moments his declaration to the twelve men before him may have been his greatest. He said to them concerning their treatment of him. In verse 5 of chapter 45 he said, “Now do not be grieved or angry with yourselves, because you sold me here, for God sent me here before you to preserve life.” In verses 7 and 8 he said, “God sent me here before you to preserve for you a remnant in the earth, and to keep you alive by a great deliverance. Now, therefore, it was not you who sent me here, but God.”  Following the two trips that Joseph’s brothers made to Egypt.  Joseph was successful in bringing Jacob and his family to Egypt for their survival, where Jacob lived out the rest of his life. After his father’s death Joseph was presented with another opportunity recompence his brothers. They had great fear that he might do just that and came to him with a plea for forgiveness. Once again Joseph showed his character by sharing with them his view of what life had handed him. He stated to them that he had no desire to punish them. He understood that what had happened was according to a plan by God that was bigger and more far reaching than any of them could comprehend. He made a statement and also asked them a question to which the answer should have been obvious by then.   He said, “Do not be afraid, for am I in God’s place”?  He, with that question relinquished any right to judge them or take revenge. With regard to reason he had been brought into Egypt he did say, “As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good in order to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive. (Gen. 50:19-20)

Defining Moments Introduction

Filed under: Defining Moments — admin @ 4:10 PM

Defining Moments

Recently my wife and I attended a movie titled “Overcomer” produced by the Kendrick Brothers. I will not take the time to go into a lot of the story but there was a short conversation that took place between a blind and dying man and the coach of a local Christian school.  The coach mistakenly entered a hospital room where the man was.  He began to grumble about the fact he had been asked to coach a cross-country team consisting of one young girl. In the ensuing exchange the sick man asked, “When I ask you who you are what is the first thing that comes to mind?” His answer was what one usually says about family connections and then something about being a Christian.

 Related to what is being discussed here I believe a second question that could be asked is, “What are the circumstances in your life’s journey that cause you to relegate your relationship with Christ to third, fourth or even lower place in priority.”

The patient in this moment made a statement that help the coach redefine his view of his walk with Jesus. He said, “Your identity will be tied to whatever you give your heart to.” The intertwining chain of events of his life will ultimately shape every person’s view of God. The last quote from the dying man was, “When you find your identity in the One who created you it will change your perspective.”  My hope as you and I look at the defining moments to follow it will change our view of the special relationship we have with Christ.

As I have considered many times the direction my own life, I have often asked the question, “What if”. What if I had made other choices or taken a different path in life, what would have been the end results? For most of us that kind of decision come too late or the urgency of the present get in the way of giving careful thought to the future or the consequences of the decisions we make. Quite often emotions play a part in the road we follow. Sometimes what we do is based on the old idea that “the grass is greener than where we find ourselves. Job, educational opportunities, friendships and a very important one the person we marry changes our outlook on the future. 

So why is this idea of defining moments of such interest to me? Even though I did not realize it at the time there was a time that I believe was a true turning point in my life. At the age of nine I accepted Christ as my Savior and was baptized. Although I have attended Sunday School and Worship pretty faithfully over the years, I now see that I was on cruise control doing just enough to be able say I was a Christian.  In my late twenties I actually began teaching a group of eleven-year old boys. In spite of my incompetence many are still faithful to God to this day. An event in nineteen seventy-three brought a major defining moment and turning point in my life.  At that time a number of adults took the youth and some young adults on a weekend retreat. Sometime during those two days I came to the realization that I was shortchanging the young people and myself because I truly did not know the very word of God that I was supposed to be passing on to them.  The time away from the normal activities of life the Lord led me to a decision to finally begin spending time in His Word, as I should have been doing all along.  That was my defining moment.  Here I am forty-six years later still committed to doing everything I can to follow what Ezra wrote. “Ezra set his heart to study the law (the Word of God) of the Lord and to practice it, and to teach His statutes (Scripture) and ordinances in Israel” (Chesterfield County). Ezra 7:10 (Parenthesis mine) From then until today this has been my passion, drive etc.

So, what is meant by defining moments. Because I believe that the Bible is the Word of God, it did not take me long to decide as I have done in other studies to look to His what He provided for us for answers.  I found in the stories of the people written about in Scripture a clear picture of the effect that choices made had on not only that person’s life, but in a greater sense the history of mankind. As I began to look at this subject I decided to base what I wrote on the idea that in every person’s life there is that one moment or moment when an act is committed or a decision is made that often sets the course of a person’s life from that point on. After I began to study, I came to the conclusion, from looking into the lives of the people found in the Bible, that life is more like a journey with many such moments. The incidents or happenings might be symbolized as forks in the road. Each time one approaches the fork it will produce either a positive or negative influence thus moving one into a life of good or evil. In the final analysis what man does is either in obedience to God or rebellion against Him. Man, in a way sets his own destiny with the way he responds to his defining moments.

This idea might be compared to the methods used in some of the witnessing tools developed by different ministries. The strategy uses a number of questions that can be answered with either a yes or no. Depending on the response from the person to with whom the gospel is being shared the conversation comes to a close with a no answer or the presenter is able to proceed on to the next step if a person responds positively.  Hopefully, the person witnessing is able to lead the other person into becoming a follower of Christ.

Before we get into the Bible characters, it has been interesting to me how those who have impacted history reached their place of influence. What was the event or events in their lives that put them on the path they took? One of those individuals is Charles Spurgeon the great English preacher who lived in the 1800’s.  In his biography W.Y. Fullerton wrote of the journey that led him to Christ.  Even though he had wrestled with his decision for some time it took an odd set of circumstances that brought about his conversion.  According to the author during a snowstorm in January 1850 the young Spurgeon was unable to get to the church he normally attended. He wound up at a Methodist Church where a layman was preaching because the minister was not able to make it. The message that day struck a chord in the heart of the young man, when the speaker pointed at him stating, he needed to look to Jesus for salvation.  There are a number of others who have a fascinating history such as Martin Luther, William Wilberforce, who spent forty years fighting against slavery, and John Newton, a slave trader turned to Christ in the midst of a terrible storm at sea.  He later became a minister and mentor to William Wilberforce. He is probably, best known today as the writer of “Amazing Grace”.

With that introduction we will now turn to what the people of the Bible have to teach us.  From the very beginning of God’s story there is plenty of evidence in the history of mankind to learn about each man’s defining moments and the consequences that came as a result of them.

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