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The Gospel Project® for Adults
Leader Guide ESV, Unit 2, Session 3
© 2018 LifeWay Christian Resources
Permission granted to reproduce and distribute within the license agreement with purchaser.
Edited by Rev. Lex DeLong, M.A.
God Provides for His Promise
Summary and Goal
God gave Abraham and Sarah Isaac, the son of promise, and then, as we saw in the last session, in a figurative sense, He took him away and gave him back.
Isaac was certainly the son of promise, but he was not the fulfillment of the promise—that would be Jesus, and His birth was many generations away.
In this session, we will see how God provided a wife for Isaac so that the covenant promises could continue.
We will see that God directed the path of Abraham’s servant to find a wife for his master’s son from among their people.
He also gave Isaac more than just a wife to continue the family line but a woman who provided him with the love and comfort he needed.
Session Outline
1. God’s covenant family will continue through Isaac (Gen.
24:1-9).
2. God directs the paths of His people for His purposes (Gen.
24:12-19,23-27).
3. God provides the way to advance His covenant promises (Gen.
24:63-67).
Session in a Sentence
God works providentially to bring others into His family and fulfill His promises.
Christ Connection
God provided Rebekah as a wife for Isaac according to His covenant promise to bless the world through Abraham’s family.
In the same way, God provides the church as a bride for His Son to bless the world by sharing about God’s plan of salvation through Jesus.
Missional Application
Because we are one people of God, the bride of Christ, we work together to invite others to become part of God’s family through faith in Jesus.
Group Time
Introduction
Explain the progression of maps over the years:
· Paper maps.
In planning a trip, you would pull out a paper map, unfold it, and find where you wanted to go and the best route to get there.
Getting lost required pulling over and studying the map once again.
· Digital maps.
With the advent of the Internet, you could find a location on an online map, indicate your starting point, and receive turn-by-turn directions, which you then printed and took with you.
· GPS devices.
These dashboard devices offered turn-by-turn directions and self-corrected if a turn were missed, but they could not account for traffic and construction.
· Map apps.
Apps today on smart phones factor in real-life traffic conditions and offer alternate routes.
They aren’t perfect, but they are highly accurate.
DDG (p.
84).
The changes in travel planning over the past three decades highlight how we are wired to want, and seemingly need, clear guidance.
There is something comforting about having clear, step-by-step, accurate directions as we travel.
We don’t have to worry about getting lost or stuck in traffic, at least most of the time.
We can travel with confidence.
Don’t you wish the rest of life were like this? Don’t you wish we had clear directions for the important decisions we have to make?
We want it; we feel like we need it; but we wonder why clear guidance so often seems elusive.
What are some areas of life that you wish you had clear guidance?
(where to go to college; career direction; whom to marry; how to discipline children; where to live; which medical treatment to follow; how to plan for retirement; with whom to share the gospel)
God directed the path of Abraham’s servant to find a kind and loving wife for his master’s son from among their people so that the covenant promises could continue.
Clear guidance in life comes through trusting the covenant-keeping God.
Point 1: God’s covenant continued through Isaac and obedience (Gen.
24:1-9).
Read Genesis 24:1-9 (DDG p. 85).
1 Now Abraham was old, well advanced in years.
And the Lord had blessed Abraham in all things.
2 And Abraham said to his servant, the oldest of his household, who had charge of all that he had, “Put your hand under my thigh, 3 that I may make you swear by the Lord, the God of heaven and God of the earth, that you will not take a wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanites, among whom I dwell, 4 but will go to my country and to my kindred, and take a wife for my son Isaac.” 5 The servant said to him, “Perhaps the woman may not be willing to follow me to this land.
Must I then take your son back to the land from which you came?” 6 Abraham said to him, “See to it that you do not take my son back there.
7 The Lord, the God of heaven, who took me from my father’s house and from the land of my kindred, and who spoke to me and swore to me, ‘To your offspring I will give this land,’ he will send his angel before you, and you shall take a wife for my son from there.
8 But if the woman is not willing to follow you, then you will be free from this oath of mine; only you must not take my son back there.”
9 So the servant put his hand under the thigh of Abraham his master and swore to him concerning this matter.
Abraham decided it was time for Isaac to marry.
So he sent his servant to his homeland, to his own people, to find him a wife.
Abraham’s concern here was to protect the worship of God in his family.
Abraham did not want his son persuaded to worship the pagan gods of the Canaanites.
He did not want his son to marry a Canaanite woman.
This was not a matter of interracial marriage but of preserving the faith.
Abraham’s instruction had ethical and theological convictions behind it.
As someone who was called out of idol worship and introduced to the living God (Gen.
11:27–12:1), Abraham understood the danger of his son marrying a woman who did not follow the one true God (Deut.
7:3-4).
So this command to his servant was the loving act of a faithful father, not a sinful act of a bigoted man.
It’s important that we do not read this account as an apologetic or supposed proof that God is against interracial marriage.
God has never been against interracial marriage.
As sure as marriage is a picture of Christ and His church, interracial marriage is a beautiful picture of Christ’s multiracial bride.
It’s a testament to Christ having torn down the dividing wall of hostility between God and humanity and within humanity (Eph.
2:11-22).
Interracial marriages and multiethnic churches present the beauty of reconciliation through the gospel of Jesus, a powerful message the unbelieving world desperately needs to hear about and experience.
DDG (p.
85).
Why was Abraham so emphatic that Isaac not return to his family’s land?
This restriction was born out of ethical and theological convictions.
God had promised Abraham that his descendants would not only be numerous but that they would possess the land where he was living.
Canaan was to be Isaac’s home, and the home of all those who came after him.
Abraham did not want Isaac to go back in any way but follow God’s plan forward.
And Abraham’s faith in God led to certainty of success (Gen.
24:7).
Abraham’s dedication to obeying his faithful, covenant-keeping God provided him with guidance for the next step on his journey.
Abraham had learned to trust God and follow Him in faith—even when the steps he was taking didn’t make sense or appear to be moving toward the promise’s fulfillment.
Isaac needed to learn to trust God as well.
For Isaac to return to the land of Abraham’s family would be to move backward, away from God’s plan, not forward.
Isaac was not to take one step forward, finding a wife, while taking another step backward, leaving the land.
Abraham trusted that God would provide a wife for Isaac—in the land—to continue all of His covenant promises.
He even trusted that God would send an angel before his servant to prepare the way for his success (v. 7).
What are ways that God gives us guidance in life?
God provides daily guidance in life through His clear, purposeful, and loving commands for us to obey.
Chambers quote: “If I obey Jesus Christ in the seemingly random circumstances of life, they become pinholes through which I see THE FACE OF GOD.”
Abraham, Abraham’s servant, and Isaac all seemed to demonstrate a willingness to obey God’s clear commands, whether they were big commands or little ones.
The more we are willing to follow even God’s little commands, the more clear God’s guidance becomes.
Our clarity of God’s guidance in life is in direct proportion to how fully we strive to obey Him.
Point 2: God directs the paths of His people for His purposes through His Gracious Commands (Gen.
24:12-19,23-27).
Abraham’s servant swore an oath that he would complete his assignment as he had been instructed, so he took ten camels loaded with goods and traveled to the town of Abraham’s brother, Nahor.
He arrived in the evening, when women went to draw water, and he waited at a well outside of town.
But that was not all he did.
Read Genesis 24:12-19,23-27 (DDG p. 86).
12 And he said, “O Lord, God of my master Abraham, please grant me success today and show steadfast love to my master Abraham.
13 Behold, I am standing by the spring of water, and the daughters of the men of the city are coming out to draw water.
14 Let the young woman to whom I shall say, ‘Please let down your jar that I may drink,’ and who shall say, ‘Drink, and I will water your camels’—let her be the one whom you have appointed for your servant Isaac.
By this I shall know that you have shown steadfast love to my master.”
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