Genesis 26
Frustration and fear are regular features of a world
that is under the Lord's sentence of futility. Since the fall of
Adam, God's most favored servants have had to navigate their way
through many trials. Even the Lord Jesus Christ warned His disciples,
“In this world you will have tribulation.”
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were greatly blessed by God,
but they did face troubles. They lived in a hostile environment among
nomadic tribes where envy might mean murder, and where everyday
dangers were serious. As Abraham once had fears for his safety on
account of his wife Sarah, Isaac now faced the warlord-kings of his
day who might want Rebekah for their great harems.
Yet the promise of God is greater than the power of the
greatest kings among men. God said to Isaac, “I will be with you.”
The Lord reiterated to Isaac all the promises that He had spoken to
Abraham. So Isaac followed the instruction of the Lord and stayed in
the land of Canaan, yet he was afraid. As his father and his mother
before him, Isaac and Rebekah pretended to be brother and sister
rather than admit to being husband and wife.
Eventually the Abimelech of that time and place noted
the close behavior of Isaac and Rebekah, and the two were found out.
But rather than bringing upon them some harm, this awareness of the
truth was regarded with surprising respect by the powerful man, and
he announced to all, “Whoever touches this man or his wife shall
surely be put to death.”
Isaac was blessed by God. The Lord protected him and his
wife through serious situations of danger. He prospered them in
places where they were strangers.
We are told that Isaac sowed in that land and reaped a
hundredfold in just one year. It was the Lord's determination to be
true to His promise. Isaac would be blessed. This would not happen
because the man was congenial or clever. The Lord blessed him. So
Isaac became a very wealthy man.
With wealth can come significant troubles. The
forerunners of the Philistines, who were already living in the land
at that time, envied Isaac. They made trouble for him by trying to
limit his supply of water, filling with earth all the wells that the
servants of Abraham dug in earlier years. Isaac attempted to live at
peace among hostile people groups. He moved to land that must have
seemed less desirable to his enemies. When they wanted him to leave,
he eventually left. He attempted to dig again the wells from his
father's days, but those who hated his success continued to plague
him. Through all of these challenging years, Isaac was trying to be a
man of peace, yielding to others, and suffering their abuse, until he
found a spot where they would leave him and his people alone. He
received that place with thanksgiving and expressions of faith,
saying, “The Lord has made room for us, and we shall be fruitful in
the land.”
God was with him, appearing to him again and reassuring
him of the certainty of his covenant blessings. He spoke to Isaac of
fear. God knows what we feel like when powerful people are
antagonistic and chase us into situations where we are left alone
only because others see our condition as undesirable. The Lord can
prosper His people very well in such situations. Therefore, He says
to Isaac, “I am the God of Abraham your father. Fear not, for I am
with you and will bless you and multiply your offspring for my
servant Abraham's sake.” Isaac responds with worship. Do your
enemies trouble you? Have you been pushed someplace that was not your
first choice? The Lord God is your friend. Fear not.
In this land of exile, despised by the people in
authority, Isaac received a visit from Abimelech. Why wouldn't they
just leave him in peace? This time the ruler had come to acknowledge
the blessing of God in Isaac's life, and to make a covenant of peace.
Now fear had fallen on Isaac's enemies, since it had become obvious
to them that the Lord was the Helper of this son of Abraham.
This covenant between Isaac and Abimelech was sealed
with a feast and with the exchange of public promises. The Lord
continued to bless Isaac with water and prosperity. But Isaac's son
Esau, whom Isaac especially loved, became entangled with the people
of the land by marrying two of the local women. This disturbed Isaac
and Rebekah.
The Lord is able to bless His servant even in this world
that is under His judgment. Though God's enemies drive His chosen one
into the most despised corner of creation, God will surely bless the
one He has promised to bless.
There has never been a less desirable place to be than
the cross of Christ. Those who were envious of Jesus of Nazareth and
of the obvious blessing of God upon Him, conspired together to bring
Jesus to a place of death. Though Christ came to Calvary through the
hands of wicked men, it was also according to the plan of the
Almighty Himself that our Savior occupied the worst space of all
time, a Roman cross where the Lamb of God would take the sins of His
people upon Himself. Yet God has made that place of shame into a
glorious blessing. Out of defeat, the victory of resurrection has
come to us. We can follow Jesus into lowliness and disgrace in our
own lives with faith that even there, the Lord will surely bless His
people.
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