Hospitality; Fellowship Meals; Omniscience and
Omnipotence. Genesis 18:1-15
Chapter eighteen is another test of the doctrine in
Abraham’s soul. James chapter two says that it is on the basis of these tests
of faith that we apply the Word of God to the circumstances surrounding these
tests and that produces endurance. Endurance in turn produces maturity. So this
is the basic mechanism that God uses to move us along the path of our spiritual
life. The same was true for Abraham. Each test related to some aspect of the
promise that God had given him in the Abrahamic covenant. Now, one again, we
are going to have a confirmation of the seed promise, but in this chapter it is
the most specific of all.
The chapter begins with an
appearance of Yahweh to Abraham who
then prepares a meal that they share. Following them meal the Lord announces
the fulfillment of the promise, that it will be within the next, and Sarah is
listening through the tent flap, over hears the promise and laughs to herself,
thinking that this is really an impossibility. The Lord rebukes here for that
and encourages her at the same time. This is the framework for the first
fifteen verses.
In this section we really see two
tests. It begins in 18:1 and this entire section extends down through the end
of chapter nineteen. Chapter 18:1-15 focuses on this initial phase of the visit
where we have the fellowship meal between Abraham and the Lord, the reiteration
of the promise of the coming seed, and then there is an intercession. Abraham
is going to intercede for Lord actually, not Sodom. That comes in the second
part of chapter eighteen, and then chapter nineteen focuses on God’s judgment
of Sodom and Gomorrah and the five cities of the plain. The test for Abraham’s
spiritual life is in two parts. The first part occurs when these strangers show
up, verses 1-15. It focuses on grace orientation. It is Abraham orienting to
the grace of God and how this has impacted his spiritual life in relation to
the promise. Then beginning in verse 16 we see another test, and that test also
focuses on his grace orientation but in that context it is related to the third
provision of the Abrahamic covenant, “Those who treat you lightly I will curse,
and those who bless you I will bless.” So Abraham is told to be a blessing to
those around him and that is what is taking place in verses 16-33. So the first
test focuses on grace orientation as it is exhibited in hospitality, and the
second test focuses on grace orientation as it is exhibited toward Lot who has
rejected Abraham and gone his own way, and the people who live in the five
cities of the plain, Sodom and Gomorrah and the other cities.
So what orients us to the test in
terms of Abraham’s spiritual life in these two chapters is grace orientation.
What is grace orientation? Grace orientation means that we align our thoughts
and actions to God’s grace. God’s grace is a fundamental principle for living
the Christian life. We have to understand that from the start of our salvation,
that grace means that God does all the work and we simply accept and receive
it. In grace orientation we learn humility; that we can’t rely on our own
talents, our own abilities, our own strengths at all in order to gain God’s
approval. It is fully and totally a matter of God’s grace. Ten when it comes to
the Christian life it is still a matter of God’s grace; it never depends on who
and what we are. Blessing in the Christian life is not dependent upon who we
are, it is dependent upon the fact that we possess the perfect righteousness of
Jesus Christ.
Genesis 18:1, “Now the LORD
appeared to him by the oaks [Terebinth trees] of Mamre, while he was sitting at
the tent door in the heat of the day.” The Terebinth tree isn’t actually an oak
tree but is something like it. Remember, Mamre was an Amorite who lived in
Hebron. What does this tell us about Abraham? He is home, this is his
headquarters, he is oriented to God’s grace, and he is resting. We might
speculate that he is contemplating the promise of God that has just been
confirmed in chapter seventeen and thinking about how God was going to bring
this about. “The LORD appeared to him.” The verb is the niphal [passive] of
ra’a, the standard verb to see or to
look, but in the passive it means to be seen or to be revealed, or to appear.
It indicates a sudden appearance here because Abraham had not seen the three
men (v. 2) coming. He just suddenly looks up and there they are.
Genesis 18:2, “When he lifted up his
eyes and looked, behold, three men were standing opposite him; and when he saw
{them,} he ran from the tent door to meet them and bowed himself to the earth.”
So there was clearly something about their appearance that indicated that they
were people of prestige, people of significance and importance, and he treats
them with respect. This shows his orientation to grace, he is very hospitable
here. It is clear from the conversation that goes on that one of them is
identified as Yahweh. Here Yahweh is a reference to the
pre-incarnate Lord Jesus Christ because John tells us in John chapter one that
no man has seen the Father at any time. But who are the other two? In chapter
19 we will see that the other two that are with Him are angels, but they appear
here as men. So this leads us to make a few observations here related to
angelology.
a)
We have to
recognize that angels are created as non-material beings. They are not
physically material as we are, they don’t have to follow the same laws of
biology, the same laws of physics.
b)
From several
passages it appears that angels have bodies that are composed of light or
something like light. For example, in Hebrews 1:7 they appear as flames of
fire.
c)
Angels would
have the ability to transform themselves into material creatures that possess
all of the characteristics of material bodies. For all purpose, as far as
Abraham can tell, they are material creatures. They eat they drink, they rest,
they sleep. He is going to wash their feet. Later on we see that when they are
trapped inside Lot’s home and the Sodomite perverts outside are trying to pull
them out into the street their hands are outside the door and they have to pull
them back in. These are physical terms. So these immaterial creatures of light
are able to transform themselves to have some kind of material bodies.
d)
From this we
must conclude that angels are able to take on all biological functions of the
material human body. This gives us an indication of what went on in Genesis
chapter three when the sons of God (always a reference to angels in the Old
Testament) looked on the daughters of men and took them as wives. This is
further indicated in Jude 6 & 7. When we do the proper exegesis of these
verses it indicates that the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah is imitating the immoral
sexual sins of the angels of a previous time. “And the angels which kept not
their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath reserved in
everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day. Even as
Sodom and Gomorrah, and the cities about them in like manner, giving themselves
over to fornication, and going after strange flesh, are set forth for an
example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire.”
Genesis 18:3, Abraham exhibits his
grace orientation to these visitors, “and said, “My Lord [Adonay], if now I have found favor [grace] in Your sight, please do
not pass Your servant by.” In other words, stay and let’s sit down and have a
meal together.
Genesis 18:4, “Please let a little
water be brought and wash your feet, and rest yourselves under the tree; and I
will bring a piece of bread, that you may refresh yourselves; after that you
may go on, since you have visited your servant.” And they said, ‘So do, as you
have said.’” What is the purpose for this meal? We have to recognize that there
is an important background to this. Eating together is a picture of fellowship
that extends throughout the Scripture from the Old Testament to the New
Testament. Eating is also a recognition that there has been a covenant
arrangement made and we are celebrating this covenant, this contract between
the two parties, that there is now peace. We recognize that this eating of this
meal occurs after the reconfirmation of the covenant in Genesis chapter
seventeen. We see a similar event in Genesis 26:28-30 where there has been a
covenant sealed with Abimelech the leader of the Philistines, and he and Isaac
sit down and have a meal together. It is a picture that there is now peace
between the two parties involved in the covenant. That is the main idea.
Think about that as we go through
Scripture. Israel ate a meal at the foot of Mount Sinai after initially hearing
the words of the law from Moses—Exodus 24:11. It signified that there was
peace between them and the Lord. In the Levitical offerings one of the
offerings described in Leviticus chapter three and then expanded in Leviticus
chapter eleven verse 21 is a peace offering. This is when the individual would
bring meal to the tabernacle. It was a peace offering and they would eat this
on the site of the tabernacle. This would signify that there was now a peace
the worshipper and the Lord. It was a symbol of fellowship, intimacy between
the Lord and an individual. Another example is in Judges chapter six where the
angel of the Lord appears to Gideon and is calling Gideon to a specific role to
function as a judge and to lead the Israelites in victory over the Midianites.
At the conclusion of that Gideon brought a meal offering to the angel of the
Lord, prepared the meal, laid it out on the altar, and it is consumed by fire.
At that point, the Lord said, “Peace,” and Gideon names the altar “The Lord is
Peace,” v. 14. In the New Testament the Lord Jesus Christ picks up the same
analogy and said that salvation was symbolized by eating His flesh and drinking
His blood. That is not literal, what He is talking about is appropriating
Himself or receiving or taking Himself in to your person. It is a picture of
salvation. Eating and drinking is a picture of receiving the Lord, accepting
Him as savior. This is what is going on symbolically in the Lord’s Table. The
Lord’s Table is the idea of having a communal meal of fellowship with the Lord,
a symbolic meal representing the fact that there is now peace between us and
God because of what Jesus Christ did for us on the cross. We see that eating is
a picture of Christian fellowship in Revelation chapter three, verse 20, which
is not a salvation verse but a verse addressed to believers in the carnal
church of Laodicea.
In Genesis 18 Abraham is exhibiting
hospitality. Hospitality is a manifestation of grace orientation and impersonal
love for others. It is a sign of personal generosity for others; not just to
those we know but to those we don’t know, to strangers. 1 Peter 4:9. Notice Abraham is functioning like a
servant. This is part of grace orientation.
Then in vv. 9-15 we get at the heart
of the visit. Genesis 18:9, “Then they said to him, Where is Sarah your
wife? And he said, There, in the tent.” Genesis 18:10, “And he said, I will
certainly return unto thee according to the time of life; and, lo, Sarah thy
wife shall have a son.”
Genesis 18:12, “Therefore Sarah
laughed within herself, saying, After I am waxed old shall I have pleasure, my
lord being old also?” The word “laugh” is the Hebrew word which is the root for
the name for Isaac. So for the rest of their lives whenever they called for
name Isaac they would be reminded that Sarah had a little skepticism that God
could bring about this particular miracle.
Genesis 18:14, God says, “Is any
thing too hard for the LORD?” The word translated “too hard” is the Hebrew word
which means to be marvelous or wonderful. It is a word that is only applied to
the Lord in the Old Testament, and it is applied in Isaiah 9:16, “He will be
called Wonderful Counselor.” It indicates that God is able to do the
impossible, that no matter how difficult things may be in our life, no matter
how overwhelming circumstances may be, whatever the negatives might be God is
able to bring about the impossible. Matthew 19:26, “With men this is
impossible; but with God all things are possible.” This is the omnipotence of
the Lord. Luke 1:37, “For with God nothing shall be impossible.” Omnipotence
means that God can do anything that He wills to accomplish.
So what we have learned in this
chapter so far is the importance of grace orientation, that when we are
oriented in our thinking to grace it exhibits itself in kindness to others, in
good manners, courtesy, generosity and hospitality. Abraham’s grace orientation
is revealed in his hospitality toward strangers. Even though he suspected it
was God it was more than that, he goes beyond that. The meal itself signifies
the fact that there is this covenant between Abraham and the Lord. He is at
peace with what God is doing in his life, and he is in fellowship with
Him.