It seems the first one snet was not received.  So here is e-mail number 2 for 
this sermon.


Intro
Long before he was Abraham, he was called “Abram.”  Yet even before he had his 
name-change, God still chose to bless him.  When the Lord told Abram to leave 
his homeland, this is the promise He gave him:
I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you.  I will make your 
name great, and you will be a blessing.  I will bless those who bless you, and 
I will curse those who curse you; and in you, all the peoples of the earth will 
be blessed (Gen. 12:2-3).

Through God’s hand of blessing, Abram “had become wealthy in livestock, silver, 
and gold” (Gen. 13:2).  He became so wealthy, his flocks so large, that he and 
his nephew, Lot, needed to live apart to have enough fields to feed their 
flocks (Gen. 13:7).

The Lord also made Abram into a mighty warrior, fierce in battle.  The Old 
Testament tells us of his fighting prowess after four enemies had abducted Lot.
[But] when Abram heard that his nephew had been taken prisoner, he mobilized 
318 of his trained men... During the night, Abram and his servants divided his 
forces, attacked his enemies, and chased them... He recovered all the goods and 
rescued Lot, his nephew, with his possessions, the women, and the other 
captives (Gen. 14:14-16).

Main Body
Yet, despite all of his blessings, success, and comforts, Abram still suffered 
deep anxieties.  He was afraid.  Now we don’t exactly know what his fears were. 
 But today’s Old Testament reading clearly tells us that Abram was afraid.  He 
must have suffered some deep-seated fear, because God’s first words to him in 
today’s reading were, “Do not be afraid” (Gen. 15:1).

This fear that Abram felt--whatever it may have been--was spoken through his 
wish for a son.  He said, “Lord, what can you give me since I remain 
childless?” (Gen. 15:2)  It is almost as if nothing else mattered to Abram if 
he didn’t have a son!  The yearning for a son was festering in his bones!

A son would’ve brought honor to Abram--but it had to be more than paternal 
pride!  For Abram, a son would be a comfort against his fears of an unknown 
future.  Abram also wouldn’t have to worry that someone outside his family 
would inherit his possessions, in his case, “Eliezer from Damascus” (Gen. 15:2).

Maybe Abram also realized that his formidable military strength was withering 
before his eyes.  As many of us know, as you age, your legs tire, your arms 
grow weary, your endurance wanes, and your reflexes slow.  But if he had a son, 
he could face his old age without fear.  He would know that someone would care 
for him and his wife, providing food and shelter, comfort and warmth, and 
protecting them both from their enemies.

Maybe Abram’s fear was tethered to an enemy he could not overcome.  Did he fear 
the last enemy that you and I must also face?  For who can escape death when it 
comes to take us?  But a son would carry on Abram’s legacy.  A son would be the 
hallmark of Abram’s memory on the earth.

But whatever Abram’s fears were, God spoke His word of comfort and peace: “Do 
not be afraid, Abram, for I am your shield, your great reward” (Gen. 15:1).  It 
was then that Abram voiced his gut-twisting concerns to God.  But pushed also 
by his fears, Abram’s doubts now rise to be heard: “O Almighty Lord, what can 
You give me since I am childless and the heir of my estate is Eliezer of 
Damascus?” (Gen. 15:2).

For Abram doubted God.  And doubt is uncertainty, a shaky faith teetering on 
the edge of unbelief.  Long before today’s Old Testament reading, God had 
already promised Abram a son.  God had already promised to make this Abram the 
father of a great nation (Gen. 12:2).  Abram already had God’s promise of a 
great future.  And yet today, we hear his doubts trample on his faith.

That’s why Abram needed continual assurance.  God needed to remind Abram, time 
and again, of His promises.  The Word of God that Abram already had heard--and 
already knew--is the same Word of God that Abram needed to hear over and again.

And who are we compared with Abram?  Are we not also teetering, shaking on the 
edge of unbelief?  Does God not also need to tell us over and again of His 
promises for us?  As Abram lived, so also do we live--by faith in a promise not 
yet fully seen!  Like Abram, we are called to live in “the confident assurance 
of what we hope for and the certainty that what we cannot see exists” (Hebrews 
11:1).

Like Abram, God has called both you and me out of our old, pagan land of sin 
and death.  Like Abram, God has called us into a new land, a promised land, a 
land of Eden, a land laden with the fruit of the Gospel, the forgiveness of 
sins, and the hope of eternal life.

As the Apostle Peter said, “Once you were not a people, but now you are the 
people of God” (1 Peter 2:10).  Like Abram, struggles also box us in on every 
side; yet, like Abram, God has not abandoned us.  “We are hard-pressed on every 
side, but not crushed; frustrated, but not driven to despair; persecuted, but 
not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed” (2 Corinthians 4:8-9).

Yet, even among the many blessings that God has poured out on you, what fears 
still haunt you within?  Do those same fears haunt you like Abram?  Do secrets 
known only to you and God terrorize your conscience?

What is your fear?  Is it the risk of losing your possessions?  Is it the 
possibility of being left penniless and destitute?  Is it the fear of illness 
or weakness or age?  Is it the fear of death?

Dearest saint of God, you are also like Abram.  Like Abram, God has called you 
to walk by faith and not by sight.  God spoke His Word to Abram--and despite 
that Word of promise--Abram still feared, still worried, and still doubted.  
God has also spoken His Word to you--and despite that Word of promise, you 
still fear, still worry, and still doubt.  Like Abram, unbelief is also a 
constant temptation that tramples on your faith.

Yet, against such weaknesses of faith, God is patient, just as He was with 
Abram.  Abram had already heard the Word and promise of God.  He knew that an 
entire nation would come from him.  He knew that, though him, all the peoples 
of the earth would be blessed (Gen. 12:3).  Yet, when Abram needed constant 
reassurance, God gave it!  God said, “Do not be afraid, Abram, for I am your 
shield, your great reward” (Gen. 15:1).

In a similar way, God speaks His Word to you.  Against your fears, your 
temptations, and your unbelief, God also gives to you the same comforting Word 
of reassurance He gave Abram: Do not be afraid, dear Christian, for I am your 
shield, your great reward.

The strongest appeal from Abram’s heart was his longing for a son.  It was as 
if Abram’s hopes and dreams were all bound up in that one, enduring hope.  His 
fears refused to rest if he didn’t have a son.  Abram wanted a son!  He yearned 
for one who would come and calm his fears and fulfill his hopes.

And God answered Abram’s prayers.  A son, Isaac, was born to him in his old 
age.  But Isaac, his son, was only the beginning of his blessing.  For God had 
promised that, through Abram, all the peoples of the earth would be blessed 
(Gen. 12:3).

Through Abram’s son, Isaac, God sent a greater Son.  That Son would not only 
meet Abram’s earthly needs, but through His own suffering and death, He would 
also provide for Abram’s eternal needs.  It was Abram’s son--Jesus, true God 
born of Abram’s bloodline through Mary--through whom God put all of Abram’s 
fears to rest.

Just as the saints of God share in Abram’s fleshly fears and doubts, they also 
share in that mighty man’s boundless yearning for a son.  Because we are also 
fallen creatures of sin, we also need the One who can calm our fears.  We also 
cry out for the One in whom we can dare place our hope.  We also look to the 
One in whom we can trust our eternal well-being.  In a way, all God’s saints 
are Abram and all God’s saints yearn for a Son.

Our heavenly Father has seen your need and your longing.  God has looked with 
compassion on you, you whom sin has also caused to doubt Him.  And God is 
faithful.  He has given you what you need--He has given you a Son!

We see this in what the angel, Gabriel, said to Mary: “You will become pregnant 
and give birth to a son, and you are to name Him Jesus.  He will be great and 
will be called the Son of the Most High” (Luke 1:31-32).  Yes, “when the time 
had fully come, God sent His Son, born of a woman, born under the Law, to 
redeem those under the Law, that we might receive the adoption as sons” 
(Galatians 4:4-5).

In this Son, God’s crucified-and-resurrected Son, God speaks His peace to calm 
your fears.  He speaks His Word to forgive your sinfulness.  This is because 
God has kept His promise to you and has given you His promised Son.

In our Old Testament reading, we finally hear of Abram’s trust in God’s 
promises.  God spoke, and Abram heard.  “Abram believed the Lord, and it was 
credited to him as righteousness” (Gen. 15:6).

Conclusion
That is what God does: He credits righteousness.  That means God credits you as 
being righteous.  That means He proclaims and so makes you righteous because of 
His Son, Jesus.

This means that nothing now exists for you to fear.  For, like Abram, God has 
given you the Son, just as He promised.  And that changes everything.  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO

Where we are to receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the 
Augsburg Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of 
Christ Jesus, His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh 
and blood given and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, 
soul, and spirit.

___________________________________________________________________
 'CAT 41 Sermons & Devotions' consists of works that are, unless
 otherwise noted, the copyrighted property of the various authors;
 posting of such gives members of this list implied consent for
 redistribution _with_attribution_ unless otherwise specified by
 the author (as long as no charge is made for the work and it is
 not made part of a compilation), as well as for quoting or use
 in a congregational setting _with_or_without_attribution_.

 Note: This list's default reply is to the *poster*, NOT the list.
 Do *not* reply to the list with your comments, but to the poster.

Subscribe?              Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Unsubscribe?            Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Archive?                <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/>

For more information on this or other lists offered by Confess And Teach
For Unity, you can contact the CAT 41 list administrator at:

    Rev. Fr. Eric J. Stefanski <MoM [at] lists (dot) cat41 <dot> org>

Reply via email to