Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 24)

Summary:

Genesis 24 describes Abraham, now old, instructing his eldest servant to swear an oath not to take a wife for his son Isaac from the Canaanites but from his relatives in his homeland. 

The servant travels to Nahor in Aram-naharaim with camels and goods. 

At a well, he prays for God’s guidance, asking for a sign: a young woman who offers water to him and his camels. 

Rebekah, granddaughter of Abraham’s brother Nahor, fulfills this exactly. 

The servant gives her gifts, learns her lineage, and is hosted by her family, including brother Laban. 

He recounts the story, secures their consent for the marriage, and despite their delay request, Rebekah agrees to go immediately. 

She returns with the servant, meets Isaac in the field, and they marry, bringing comfort to Isaac after Sarah’s death.


Pointers to Jesus:

Genesis 24 richly foreshadows Jesus as the bridegroom of His church. Abraham, as the covenant patriarch, typifies God the Father, who sovereignly orchestrates salvation for His chosen people (Ephesians 1:4-5). 

The unnamed servant (often seen as Eliezer) shadows the Holy Spirit, sent by the Father to seek and secure a bride for the Son (John 15:26; 16:13-14), testifying to the Father’s promises and guiding through providence.

This chapter advances the Abrahamic covenant (Genesis 12:1-3), pointing to Christ as Isaac’s seed (Galatians 3:16), through whom all nations are blessed in sovereign salvation.


Reflection:

Genesis 24 reminds Christians of God’s providential sovereignty in our lives, urging trust in His guidance amid uncertainty, much like the servant’s prayerful journey. 

This fosters assurance in election and the Spirit’s work, encouraging believers to respond willingly to God’s call while resting in His initiative.

 It relates to daily Christian living by inspiring faithfulness in our “missions”—whether evangelism or personal decisions—knowing Christ, our bridegroom, secures our union with Him, bringing ultimate comfort and purpose in trials.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1d99S7Bwki3ZV85eYts0TY2l9slCzghkz

Monday, September 29, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 23)

Summary:

Genesis 23 describes the death of Sarah, Abraham’s wife, at 127 years old in Kiriath-arba (Hebron) in Canaan. Abraham, a sojourner among the Hittites, mourns her and seeks a burial site. 

He negotiates with the Hittites to buy the cave of Machpelah from Ephron for 400 shekels of silver, a fair market price, with the transaction publicly witnessed to secure legal ownership. 

Abraham buries Sarah in the cave, establishing a foothold in the promised land.


Pointer to Jesus:

Abraham’s purchase of the cave of Machpelah (vv. 16-20) serves as a type of Christ’s redemptive work. Abraham’s insistence on paying the full price for the burial site, rather than accepting it as a gift, foreshadows the costly atonement of Jesus, who paid the ultimate price through His blood to secure an eternal inheritance for His people (1 Peter 1:18-19; Ephesians 1:7). 

The cave, a place of death yet secured in faith, points to Christ’s tomb, which becomes the site of resurrection victory, fulfilling the Abrahamic covenant’s promise of blessing through the Seed (Galatians 3:16).


Reflection:

This example encourages Christians to trust in the costly, completed work of Christ, which guarantees our eternal inheritance despite death and loss.

 In daily life, it calls us to live as pilgrims, like Abraham, holding fast to God’s promises with hope in the resurrection. This fosters resilience and faith, knowing our salvation rests on Christ’s sufficient payment, not our works, inspiring us to worship and persevere in a world marked by mortality.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1WMh73Wcj2qQ-YAdA0-lOc-43X-GCJ43n

Friday, September 26, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 22)

Summary:

In Genesis 22, God tests Abraham by commanding him to sacrifice his son Isaac on Mount Moriah. 

Abraham obeys, taking Isaac, wood, and fire to the designated place. 

When Isaac asks about the lamb for the sacrifice, Abraham responds, “God will provide.” 

As Abraham prepares to sacrifice Isaac, God intervenes, providing a ram as a substitute. 

God commends Abraham’s faith and obedience, reaffirming His promise to bless Abraham’s descendants and all nations through his offspring.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 22 is rich with types and shadows pointing to Jesus Christ, emphasizing God’s sovereignty and redemptive plan. 

Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice Isaac, his only beloved son, prefigures God the Father offering Jesus, His only Son, for humanity’s redemption. 

Isaac, carrying the wood for his own sacrifice, foreshadows Jesus carrying the cross. 

The ram provided as a substitute for Isaac typifies Christ as the substitutionary atonement, taking the place of sinners to satisfy God’s justice. 

Mount Moriah, traditionally linked to Jerusalem, connects to the location of Christ’s crucifixion. 

God’s provision of the ram underscores His sovereign grace, paralleling the gospel truth that salvation is entirely God’s work, not human effort.


Reflection:

Genesis 22, through its redemptive connection to Christ, calls Christians to radical trust and obedience, as Abraham demonstrated. 

Just as Abraham trusted God’s provision and promise, believers are called to rely on Christ’s finished work for salvation, not their own merits. 

The story challenges Christians to surrender their most cherished “Isaacs”—idols, ambitions, or fears—to God’s will, trusting His sovereign plan. 

It also comforts believers, reminding them that God has provided the ultimate sacrifice in Jesus, securing their redemption. This fosters a life of faith, marked by worship, dependence on grace, and confidence in God’s promises, even in trials.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1YoSofbT2INmR9ycqtWJvsO-NSj9K9qLr

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 21)

Summary:

Genesis 21 narrates the fulfillment of God’s promise to Abraham and Sarah with the birth of Isaac, the child of the covenant. 

Sarah conceives and bears Isaac at the advanced age God had foretold. 

Abraham circumcises Isaac, and Sarah rejoices in God’s provision. 

During a feast celebrating Isaac’s weaning, Sarah sees Ishmael, Abraham’s son by Hagar, mocking, and demands that Hagar and Ishmael be sent away. 

God instructs Abraham to comply, assuring him that Ishmael will also become a nation. Hagar and Ishmael are cast out but, in their distress in the wilderness, God provides water and reaffirms His promise to make Ishmael a great nation. 

The chapter concludes with Abraham making a covenant with Abimelech at Beersheba, securing peace and a place to dwell.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 21 richly foreshadows Christ. 

Isaac, the promised son born by divine intervention to barren Sarah, is a type of Christ, the ultimate Seed of Abraham (Galatians 3:16), born miraculously through the Virgin Mary (Luke 1:35). 

Isaac’s birth fulfills God’s covenant promise, pointing to Christ as the fulfillment of all God’s promises (2 Corinthians 1:20). 

The casting out of Ishmael, the son of the slave woman, contrasts with Isaac, the son of the free woman, typifying the distinction between salvation by works (law) and salvation by grace through faith in Christ (Galatians 4:21–31). 

God’s provision of water for Hagar and Ishmael in the wilderness prefigures Christ as the living water who sustains those in spiritual desolation (John 4:14). 

Abraham’s intercession and obedience, even in sending away his son, mirror Christ’s submission to the Father’s will and His role as the mediator of the covenant (Hebrews 5:8–9). 

The covenant at Beersheba, securing peace, foreshadows the ultimate peace Christ brings between God and humanity through His atoning sacrifice (Ephesians 2:14).


Reflection:

Genesis 21 encourages Christians to trust in God’s sovereign promises, as seen in Isaac’s birth, reminding us that salvation in Christ is wholly by grace, not human effort. 

The expulsion of Ishmael challenges believers to reject reliance on works and cling to Christ alone, embracing the freedom of the gospel (Galatians 5:1). God’s mercy to Hagar and Ishmael calls us to rest in Christ’s provision during trials, confident that He sustains us. Abraham’s obedience, even in painful sacrifice, inspires Christians to submit to God’s will, trusting that Christ’s perfect obedience secures our place in God’s covenant family. 

This story urges us to live as heirs of grace, sharing the hope of Christ with others in a world of spiritual wilderness.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1mBYv0rliVTCleooHplclxXL-2cIEwOx1

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 20)

Summary:

Genesis 20 describes Abraham’s sojourn in Gerar, where he deceives King Abimelech by claiming Sarah, his wife, is his sister, fearing for his life. 

Abimelech takes Sarah into his household, but God intervenes in a dream, warning Abimelech of Sarah’s true status and threatening judgment unless she is returned. Abimelech, unaware of the deception, pleads his innocence and promptly restores Sarah to Abraham, giving him gifts of livestock, servants, and silver. 

Abraham prays for Abimelech, and God lifts the affliction on Abimelech’s household, which had been barren due to the incident.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 20 foreshadows Jesus through typological elements. 

Abraham’s failure reflects human depravity, as even the covenant patriarch succumbs to fear and deceit, yet God’s grace preserves the covenant promise through Sarah, the mother of the promised seed (Genesis 17:16). 

This points to Christ, the ultimate Seed (Galatians 3:16), whose coming is safeguarded by divine providence despite human weakness.

Abimelech, a Gentile king, serves as a type of those outside the covenant who receive mercy through divine intervention, prefiguring Christ’s redemptive work extending to all nations (Isaiah 42:6). 

God’s warning and protection of Abimelech mirror Christ’s role as the mediator who reveals God’s will and averts judgment by His intercession (1 Timothy 2:5; Hebrews 7:25). 

Abraham’s intercessory prayer for Abimelech’s household typifies Christ’s high priestly role, interceding for sinners to restore them to God (Romans 8:34). 

The barrenness of Abimelech’s household, lifted through prayer, foreshadows Christ’s power to bring spiritual life to those dead in sin (Ephesians 2:1–5), emphasizing sovereign grace in redemption.


Reflection:

Genesis 20 reminds Christians of their own frailty, as even Abraham faltered, yet God’s faithfulness upholds His promises. 

It calls believers to trust in God’s providence rather than resorting to self-reliant schemes.

Abimelech’s encounter with God’s mercy encourages us to extend grace to others, knowing Christ’s intercession covers our failures. 

The story urges Christians to live with integrity in a fallen world, confident that Christ, our mediator, secures our redemption and empowers us to intercede for others, reflecting His love and mercy in our daily walk.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1657k6XLZ5bwCVwbz63cxTGEsPNpbxdkC

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 19)

Summary:

Genesis 19 recounts the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah due to their wickedness. 

Two angels arrive in Sodom and are hosted by Lot, Abraham’s nephew. 

The men of the city surround Lot’s house, demanding to sexually assault the visitors. 

Lot offers his daughters instead, but the angels intervene by blinding the mob and urging Lot to flee with his family, as God is about to destroy the cities. 

Lot hesitates but escapes with his wife and two daughters to Zoar. 

As fire and brimstone rain down, Lot’s wife looks back and turns into a pillar of salt. 

Later, fearing isolation, Lot’s daughters intoxicate him and commit incest, resulting in the births of Moab and Ben-Ammi, ancestors of the Moabites and Ammonites.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 19 foreshadows Christ through typological elements that highlight divine judgment and unmerited salvation. 

Sodom represents total human depravity and the inevitable wrath of God against sin, prefiguring the final judgment and hell (cf. 2 Peter 2:6–9; Jude 7). 

Lot, declared righteous by faith (2 Peter 2:7–8) despite his compromises, is a type of the elect sinner rescued not by his own merit but by God’s electing grace—dragged out by angels as an act of sovereign mercy, echoing how Christ sovereignly delivers His chosen people from condemnation (Romans 8:30; Ephesians 2:8–9).

The angels function as shadows of Christ as the divine mediator and deliverer, sent by God to execute judgment while providing escape, much like Jesus as the “Angel of the Lord” in other OT appearances and ultimately as the one who bears God’s wrath to save His people (Isaiah 53:5–6). 

Abraham’s prior intercession for Lot (Genesis 18) typifies Christ’s high priestly role, pleading for the elect before the Father (Hebrews 7:25). 

The destruction by fire points to the substitutionary atonement, where Christ endures the “brimstone” of God’s fury on the cross so that believers might flee to safety (1 Thessalonians 1:10). 

Lot’s flawed escape underscores irresistible grace: God preserves His covenant people despite their weakness, fulfilling promises to Abraham and ultimately to Christ as the seed (Galatians 3:16).


Reflection:

This narrative calls Christians to live as sojourners in a fallen world, like Lot amid Sodom’s corruption, yet compelled by grace to flee sin and idolatry without compromise (2 Corinthians 6:17). It warns against lingering attachments—symbolized by Lot’s wife—urging us to press forward in faith, fixing our eyes on Christ rather than worldly allure (Hebrews 12:1–2). 

It reassures us of God’s sovereign protection amid judgment, fostering humility in our depravity and gratitude for Christ’s redemptive work, which empowers holy living as we await ultimate deliverance.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1cBjhrGXyZ7ITtAH7ZpFnYumXG9pI6aYB

Monday, September 22, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 18)

Summary:

In Genesis 18, the Lord appears to Abraham as three men near the oaks of Mamre. 

Abraham welcomes them with generous hospitality, preparing a meal. 

The Lord reaffirms the promise that Sarah will bear a son within a year, prompting Sarah to laugh in disbelief due to her old age. 

The Lord questions her laughter, affirming His power with, “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” 

The Lord then reveals to Abraham His plan to investigate Sodom and Gomorrah’s sinfulness. 

Abraham intercedes boldly, pleading for mercy if as few as ten righteous people are found, and the Lord agrees to spare the cities for the sake of the righteous.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 18 foreshadows Christ through typological elements that highlight God’s sovereign grace and redemptive plan. 

The theophany of the Lord as three men hints at the Trinity, with Christ as the visible manifestation of God, prefiguring His incarnation (John 1:14). 

Abraham’s hospitality reflects the welcoming posture of faith, pointing to Christ as the ultimate host who invites sinners to the banquet of salvation (Luke 14:16-24). 

Sarah’s laughter and the promise of a miraculous son through her barrenness mirror the virgin birth of Jesus, the true “seed” who fulfills God’s covenant to bless all nations (Gal. 3:16). 

The Lord’s rhetorical question, “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” underscores divine omnipotence, fulfilled in Christ’s resurrection, which overcomes sin and death (Rom. 4:25). 

Abraham’s intercession for Sodom typifies Christ’s mediatorial role as our High Priest, interceding for sinners before God’s judgment (Heb. 7:25; 1 Tim. 2:5). The sparing of the righteous foreshadows salvation through Christ, who delivers believers from the wrath to come (1 Thess. 1:10).


Reflection:

Genesis 18 calls Christians to a life of faith, hospitality, and intercession, grounded in God’s covenantal promises. 

Abraham’s bold intercession reflects our call to pray earnestly for others, trusting in Christ’s perfect mediation. 

His hospitality challenges us to welcome others generously, reflecting Christ’s love for the undeserving. 

Sarah’s doubt, met with God’s faithfulness, reassures us that God’s promises hold firm despite our weaknesses, encouraging believers to rest in Christ’s finished work while actively living out faith in service and prayer, confident that nothing is too hard for the Lord.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1_ZoWhDXYDcWDxV84c3_egDhpRgNiRJJi

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Revelation 20)

Summary:

Revelation 20 depicts the binding of Satan for a symbolic “thousand years,” during which the souls of martyred saints reign with Christ in a spiritual sense, emphasizing God’s sovereign protection of His church. 

This millennium represents the current gospel age, inaugurated by Christ’s resurrection and ascension, where Satan is restrained from fully deceiving the nations, allowing the spread of the gospel worldwide. 

At the end of this period, Satan is briefly released, leading to a final rebellion of the nations (Gog and Magog), which God swiftly crushes with fire from heaven. 

The devil is then cast into the lake of fire eternally. 

The chapter culminates in the great white throne judgment, where all humanity is judged according to their works, with the unrighteous joining death and Hades in the lake of fire, while the righteous inherit eternal life through Christ’s redemptive work. 

This underscores God’s absolute sovereignty over history, evil, and salvation, with no literal future earthly kingdom but a present spiritual reign leading directly to the final consummation and new creation.


Pointing to Jesus:

Revelation 20 centers on Jesus Christ as the victorious King who accomplishes God’s eternal decree of salvation. 

The binding of Satan echoes Christ’s triumph over the powers of darkness through His atoning death and resurrection (cf. Colossians 2:15; Hebrews 2:14), where He disarms the devil and limits his influence, fulfilling the protoevangelium of Genesis 3:15. This restraint enables the elect—drawn by irresistible grace—to hear and respond to the gospel, highlighting total depravity overcome by Christ’s substitutionary work. The saints’ reign with Christ symbolizes the believer’s union with Him (Ephesians 2:6), where the justified, through faith alone, participate in His royal priesthood and victory over sin and death, all by God’s unconditional election and perseverance of the saints. The final judgment reveals Jesus as the righteous Judge (John 5:22-23), whose book of life contains only those redeemed by His blood, not by works, underscoring sola gratia and solus Christus. Ultimately, the defeat of evil and the casting out of death point to Christ’s comprehensive redemption, securing eternal life for His people and glorifying God in the new heavens and earth.


How Dispensational Theology Has It Wrong

Dispensationalism, particularly its premillennial variant, errs by imposing a hyper-literal hermeneutic on Revelation’s apocalyptic symbolism, treating the “thousand years” as a future chronological earthly kingdom after Christ’s second coming, often involving a rebuilt temple, animal sacrifices, and a distinct role for national Israel separate from the church. This divides God’s redemptive plan into rigid dispensations, undermining the unity of Scripture and the Reformed emphasis on covenant theology, where the church is the fulfillment of Israel (Romans 9-11; Galatians 3:29). It diminishes Christ’s finished work on the cross by implying future sacrifices for sin (contradicting Hebrews 10:1-18) and introduces a “parenthesis” for the church age, as if God’s plan for Israel was interrupted, which questions divine sovereignty. Furthermore, it fosters speculation on end-times timelines (e.g., pretribulation rapture), distracting from the gospel’s present power and the amillennial focus on Christ’s ongoing spiritual reign. Biblically, this approach ignores the symbolic nature of numbers in Revelation (e.g., 1,000 as completeness) and the New Testament’s portrayal of the kingdom as already/not yet (Luke 17:21; Colossians 1:13), leading to a fragmented eschatology that Reformed theology rejects in favor of a Christ-centered, unified hope.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1-sx_bYsFpAM4a3Kvdu403913iH2OXM-G

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 17)

Summary:

In Genesis 17, God appears to Abram at age 99 and reaffirms His covenant, renaming him Abraham (“father of many nations”) and promising to multiply his descendants exceedingly, making them kings and establishing an everlasting covenant with them. 

God commands circumcision as the sign of this covenant for Abraham and all males in his household, to be performed on the eighth day for infants. 

God also renames Sarai to Sarah (“princess”) and promises she will bear a son, Isaac, through whom the covenant will continue. 

Abraham laughs in disbelief at the idea of having a child at their advanced ages but asks God to bless Ishmael; God affirms Ishmael’s future prosperity but specifies the covenant line through Isaac. 

Abraham obeys by circumcising himself, Ishmael, and his entire household that day.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 17 foreshadows Christ through typological elements that reveal the unfolding of God’s redemptive plan. 

The Abrahamic covenant is unilateral—initiated and sustained by God’s promise alone, not human merit—mirroring the New Covenant in Christ, where salvation is by grace through faith (Eph. 2:8-9). 

Abraham’s name change signifies a new identity bestowed by God, typifying the believer’s regeneration and adoption in Christ (2 Cor. 5:17). 

The promise of a miraculous son to barren Sarah points to the virgin birth of Jesus, the ultimate “seed” of Abraham (Gal. 3:16), through whom all nations are blessed. 

Circumcision, as the covenant sign, symbolizes the cutting away of sinful flesh and the need for heart transformation (Deut. 30:6), shadowing Christ’s own circumcision (Luke 2:21) and His sacrificial death on the cross, where He was “cut off” for sin (Isa. 53:8; Col. 2:11-12). 

This act prefigures baptism in the New Testament as the sign of inward renewal by the Spirit, not mere external ritual. 

Ishmael’s blessing outside the covenant line illustrates election by God’s sovereign choice (Rom. 9:6-13), while Isaac as the child of promise types Christ, the elect Son who fulfills God’s redemptive purposes.


Reflection:

This chapter invites Christians to embrace a life of covenantal faithfulness rooted in God’s promises, not our performance. Just as Abraham’s obedience in circumcision flowed from faith in God’s word (Rom. 4:11), believers today are called to live out their new identity in Christ through Spirit-empowered holiness, circumcising the heart from worldly attachments (Rom. 2:29).

 This underscores assurance in God’s unchanging grace amid doubts, like Abraham’s laughter, reminding us that our inheritance in Christ—eternal life and blessing to the nations—fuels perseverance, mission, and joy in everyday obedience.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1PNGVCjPNuxLbGKssM2nTKD4MmxhZ3PIF

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 16)

Summary:

In Genesis 16, Sarai, Abram’s wife, remains childless despite God’s promise of offspring. 

She suggests that Abram sleep with her Egyptian servant, Hagar, to produce an heir, following a common cultural practice. 

Abram agrees, and Hagar conceives. Pregnant, Hagar begins to despise Sarai, who responds by treating her harshly, causing Hagar to flee into the wilderness. 

There, the angel of the Lord finds Hagar by a spring and instructs her to return and submit to Sarai. 

The angel promises that Hagar’s descendants will be numerous and that she will bear a son named Ishmael, meaning “God hears,” who will be a wild donkey of a man, living in conflict with others. 

Hagar acknowledges God as “the God who sees me” and names the place Beer-lahai-roi. 

She returns and gives birth to Ishmael when Abram is 86 years old.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 16 reveals human attempts to fulfill God’s promises apart from His sovereign plan, contrasted with God’s gracious intervention, pointing to Christ through types and shadows. 

Hagar’s plight and God’s response prefigure the gospel’s reach to the marginalized. 

The angel of the Lord, often seen as a theophany of the pre-incarnate Christ appears as the divine mediator who sees and hears Hagar’s distress, foreshadowing Jesus as the one who seeks and saves the lost (Luke 19:10). 

Hagar’s naming of God as “El Roi” (the God who sees) points to Christ’s omniscience and compassion, fulfilling God’s covenant to care for all nations, including those outside the chosen line, through Abraham’s seed (Galatians 3:8, 16). Sarai and Abram’s attempt to secure the promise through human effort (Hagar) contrasts with God’s sovereign election of Isaac as the covenant heir, typifying salvation by grace alone through Christ, not works (Romans 9:6–8). 

Ishmael, though not the child of promise, receives God’s care, reflecting the broader scope of Christ’s redemptive work that extends mercy to all peoples while preserving the elect for salvation (John 10:16).


Reflection:

Genesis 16 challenges Christians to trust God’s timing and methods rather than resorting to self-reliant schemes, as Sarai and Abram did, reminding us that salvation and sanctification rest on God’s sovereign grace, not human effort. 

Hagar’s encounter with the God who sees encourages believers to find comfort in Christ’s presence amid suffering or marginalization, knowing He hears and sees their struggles. 

This calls Christians to live faithfully in submission to God’s will, extend compassion to the outcast, and proclaim the gospel to all, trusting that Christ’s redemptive work fulfills God’s promises to make a people for Himself from every nation (Revelation 5:9). 

The narrative urges perseverance in faith, resting in the assurance that God’s covenant purposes, accomplished through Jesus, will prevail despite human failings.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1xzP7gw7JJzdvnvt-kZRRCs4hynmY0eyM

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 15)

Summary:

In Genesis 15, God speaks to Abram in a vision, reassuring him with the promise of protection and a great reward. 

Abram expresses concern about his childlessness, noting that his servant Eliezer of Damascus is his heir. 

God counters by promising that Abram’s own offspring will inherit, likening his descendants to the countless stars in the sky. 

Abram believes God, and his faith is credited as righteousness. 

God further promises the land of Canaan to Abram’s descendants. 

To confirm this covenant, God instructs Abram to prepare a sacrifice of animals, which are cut in two. 

As Abram falls into a deep sleep, God reveals that his descendants will be enslaved for 400 years but will be delivered and possess the land. 

God alone passes between the animal pieces in the form of a smoking firepot and flaming torch, unilaterally sealing the covenant.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 15 is rich with types and shadows pointing to Jesus, emphasizing God’s sovereign grace and covenantal faithfulness. 

The covenant ceremony, where God alone passes through the animal pieces, prefigures the unilateral nature of the new covenant in Christ, where God Himself, through Jesus’ atoning death, secures salvation for the elect without human contribution (Ephesians 2:8–9). 

This underscores unconditional election and irresistible grace, as God initiates and fulfills His promises. 

Abram’s faith, credited as righteousness, foreshadows justification by faith alone, fulfilled in Christ, the true seed of Abraham (Galatians 3:16), through whom all nations are blessed (Genesis 12:3). 

The promise of numerous descendants points to the spiritual offspring of Christ—the church—gathered from all nations (Romans 4:16–17). 

The firepot and torch symbolize God’s presence, hinting at Christ as the light of the world and the divine Word who accomplishes redemption, bearing the covenant’s penalty on behalf of sinners (Hebrews 9:12). 

The prophecy of enslavement and deliverance foreshadows Christ’s work as the greater Moses, liberating His people from the slavery of sin through His exodus-like sacrifice (Luke 9:31).


Reflection:

Genesis 15 calls Christians to trust in God’s promises, even when fulfillment seems distant, as Abram did, resting in the assurance of justification by faith in Christ’s finished work. 

It reminds us that salvation is God’s unilateral act of grace, encouraging humility and dependence on Him rather than our own efforts. 

In daily life, this fosters perseverance through trials, confidence in God’s covenant faithfulness, and a call to live as heirs of the promise, sharing the gospel to extend Christ’s kingdom to all nations. 

The imagery of God’s presence inspires worship and reliance on the Holy Spirit, who seals believers as God’s own until the final inheritance is fully realized (Ephesians 1:13–14).https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1IurMot_1aRMlUGB9nSylo9hj2m3u5UJw

Monday, September 15, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 14)

Summary:

In Genesis 14, a coalition of four kings led by Chedorlaomer defeats five rebellious kings from the region of Sodom and Gomorrah. 

During the battle, Abram’s nephew Lot, who lives in Sodom, is captured along with his possessions. Abram, upon hearing this, assembles 318 trained men from his household and pursues the victors, launching a surprise night attack to defeat them and rescue Lot, recovering all the people and goods. 

On his return, Abram encounters Melchizedek, the king of Salem and priest of God Most High, who blesses him and offers bread and wine. 

Abram gives Melchizedek a tenth of everything as a tithe. 

The king of Sodom then offers Abram the recovered goods in exchange for the people, but Abram refuses, swearing by God that he will take nothing to avoid giving the king credit for his wealth.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 14 foreshadows Christ in several ways. 

Abram’s victorious rescue of Lot from overwhelming enemies typifies Christ’s triumphant deliverance of His elect from the bondage of sin and Satan, achieved not by human strength but through divine empowerment—reflecting unconditional election and irresistible grace, where God initiates and accomplishes salvation apart from human merit. 

More prominently, Melchizedek serves as a Christophany or type of Jesus: as the eternal priest-king without recorded genealogy (Hebrews 7:3), he prefigures Christ’s superior, unending priesthood in the order of Melchizedek (Psalm 110:4; Hebrews 5–7), which supersedes the Levitical system and secures eternal redemption through His once-for-all sacrifice. 

Abram’s tithe to Melchizedek underscores Christ’s lordship over all, while the bread and wine hint at the Lord’s Supper, symbolizing the new covenant sealed by Christ’s blood. 

This narrative reveals God’s predestined plan to bless the nations through Abraham’s seed (Genesis 12:3), ultimately fulfilled in Jesus, the true seed (Galatians 3:16), who crushes the serpent’s head and establishes God’s kingdom.


Reflection:

This chapter encourages Christians to live by faith in God’s sovereign provision, much like Abram’s refusal of worldly spoils to credit God alone for blessings—reminding us to resist self-reliance or compromise with sin, trusting instead in Christ’s finished work for our inheritance. 

In daily life, it calls us to bold action in rescuing the spiritually captive through gospel proclamation, while honoring Christ as our eternal Priest-King through worship, tithing, and communion, fostering perseverance amid trials as we await His ultimate victory.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1WAb29qI178kGE7TrAYToz9HRKdMJKXs2

Friday, September 12, 2025

Pointing to Jesus (Genesis 13)

Summary:

In Genesis 13, Abram returns from Egypt with great wealth, accompanied by his nephew Lot. 

Their combined herds and possessions become too large for the land to support, leading to strife between their herdsmen. 

To resolve this, Abram generously allows Lot to choose his portion of the land first. 

Lot selects the fertile plain of the Jordan, which appears lush like the Garden of Eden but is near the wicked cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. 

Abram settles in Canaan, where God reaffirms His promise: Abram’s descendants will be as numerous as the dust of the earth, and the land will be given to them forever. 

Abram builds an altar to worship the Lord at Hebron.


Pointing to Jesus:

Genesis 13 typologically foreshadows Christ in several ways. Abram, as the elect patriarch, embodies faith in God’s promises amid worldly temptations—his selfless deference to Lot mirrors Christ’s humility and self-sacrifice (Philippians 2:5-8), prioritizing divine inheritance over immediate gain. 

Lot’s choice of the verdant but sinful Jordan plain represents humanity’s inclination toward self-reliance and worldly allure, leading to bondage (as seen later in Sodom), while Abram’s separation unto God’s chosen land highlights election by grace alone, not merit. 

The divine promise of land and innumerable offspring points forward to Christ as the true Seed of Abraham (Galatians 3:16), through whom the covenant blessings are fulfilled: the “land” becomes the eternal kingdom (Hebrews 11:8-10), and the descendants are the elect from all nations, justified by faith (Romans 4:13-17). 

God’s initiative in reaffirming the promise underscores sola gratia—salvation as God’s unilateral act, culminating in Christ’s redemptive work on the cross, where He secures the ultimate inheritance for His people.


Reflection:

This narrative challenges Christians to emulate Abram’s faith by choosing separation from worldly enticements, trusting in God’s sovereign promises rather than visible prosperity—like Lot’s ill-fated decision. 

It reminds us that our election in Christ calls us to live as pilgrims in this world (Hebrews 11:13-16), prioritizing spiritual inheritance through grace-fueled obedience. 

Practically, this means discerning God’s will in daily choices, such as career or relationships, resting in His provision, and building “altars” of worship amid uncertainty, assured that Christ has already won our eternal home.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1O3Reybgv3jG0BuSd5m70fe4KmdytzjVi

Pointing to Jesus (Exodus 18)

Summary: In Exodus 18, Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law and a priest of Midian, hears of God’s deliverance of Israel from Egypt and visi...