Week 31, Day 4: Sodom & Gomorrah
Today’s Reading: Genesis 19:1-38
Some thoughts from the reading…
There are several things to comment on in chapter 19. I will try to limit myself to two things.
First, I encouraged you yesterday to pay attention to what sin the two angels found who were sent into Sodom to investigate the condition of the city. Lot took the men into his home and at night fall the men, young and old, come to the house seeking to have relations with the visitors. They wanted to have sexual relations with these men, thus engaging in the sin of homosexuality. The sinfulness of the city is widespread because we are told that both young and old came and men from every quarter of the city came to do this to the visitors. Also, Lot told them to not act wickedly. Homosexual relationships were recognized as acting wickedly.
Later we see the two men tell Lot that they have been sent to destroy the city “because their outcry has become so great before the Lord”. Here is another reference to their sinful actions being very great and calling God’s attention to this city to pass judgment against it. I want to emphasize that when the two men came to the city they had come to “see if they have done entirely according to its outcry,” (Gen 18:21). They could observe in just one evening the sinfulness of the city as being “exceedingly grave” (18:20). But I want to point out that homosexuality was just a mark or tell tale sign of how bad things were. Yesterday I referenced Ezek 16:46-50 because there we are told that the guilt of Sodom was she was arrogant, had abundant food and careless ease and did not help the poor and needy. We know that Lot chose to come to Sodom because Abraham let him pick which part of the land he wanted to dwell in. Lot chose to go to Sodom because the land was well watered and like the garden of the Lord (Gen 13:10). Here was a land that was prosperous and flourishing materially. But that abundance led to their arrogance, careless ease and no desire to help the poor. Their sin grew from there. I believe that Sodom suffered from the same thing we see happen today. When a nation becomes so prosperous and rich, they begin to turn away from the things that are right and just. Paul speaks about homosexuality as being the byproduct of other problems. In Romans 1:22-27 he says that the Romans did not honor God and exchanged the truth of God for a lie and worshipped and served the creature. BECAUSE of this God gave them over to the lusts of their heart, that their bodies would be dishonored among themselves and gave them over to degrading passions. Because they rejected God and His ways they went into such lewd, immoral and unnatural actions as homosexuality. So homosexuality marked Sodom’s wickedness as being exceedingly grave. It showed just how bad things were.
The other thing that I want to point to is the question of “why did Lot not leave before?” According to 2 Peter 2:8 Lot’s soul was tormented each day by the lawless deeds he saw around him. In this account we have Lot basically begging the visitors not to stay in the city square. Was this perhaps because he already knew what tremendous dangers would befall them if they did? Lot already knew what kind of deeds the people of Sodom engaged in and appears to try to help protect these men from such evils. But my question is why did Lot not leave before now? If his soul was so troubled by what he saw each day, why not go? Consider that it might be for the same reason that brought him here to begin with, the abundance and wealth that the land offered for increasing his herds. There was a tremendous increase that could be brought by staying in a land that is like the garden of the Lord. I think it is very likely that Lot was caught up in the prosperity of the land and what he was able to gain by staying there. Even when told to depart right away, why did he linger? Could it be because he would be leaving behind all that he had gained and the wealth he had acquired? We are not told specifically by the text but I think that these might be some lessons that we can learn from today.
What are we willing to put up with to “get a little more”? What kind of job will we do to be able to be paid big dollars? Lot had a family he was raising and still was not willing to move away. He was sitting in the city gates, there was no distance that he kept. Are we so caught up in gaining more materially that we put ourselves and our family in the path of wicked people? It cost Lot everything! All he had, his wife and it appears that his daughters morals were corrupted likewise. It is not ever worth having more materially if we lose everything spiritually. Let us continue to be moved by the wickedness around us but let us also use our hatred of evil practices to help us take the actions we ought to take, even when it costs us physically.
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Week 31, Day 3: The Lord visits Abraham
Today’s Reading: Genesis 18:1-33
Some thoughts from the reading…
Abraham is visited by three men. We are not told anything about what they looked like or whether it was Abraham’s custom to greet all passerbies in the manner he did with these. It is interesting to consider how Abraham knew he was speaking with the Lord.
The Lord tells Abraham that when He returns this time next year Sarah will have a child. Sarah was “advanced in age” and “past childbearing”. But the Lord would now give Abraham the promised child and has told him the time is at hand. All these years of waiting are coming to an end.
I want to focus most of this post by looking at the discourse regarding Sodom and Gomorrah. After the three visited Abraham they turn and went toward Sodom. They tell Abraham that the sin of these cities “is exceedingly grave”. They are going to see if the people have done entirely according to “its outcry, which has come to Me.” This sounds similar to when God told Cain that the voice of Abel’s blood cries out to Him from the ground, Gen 4:10. The sin of Sodom and Gomorrah was grave and it cried out to God. It is interesting to consider this concept of how the Lord knows what has occurred.
Today there are some who try to say that the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah was that they were not hospitable. They say this to avoid admitting that the sin of Sodom involved homosexuality. Homosexuality was not their only sin but it reflected their depraved mind and actions, Ezek 16:46-50, Jude 1:7. No matter what some may claim was the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah, it is obvious to see what these men found when they went into Sodom. They were going to “see if they have done entirely according to its outcry”. They were going to investigate and see what the city was like. What did they find? Look for yourself when we read tomorrow from chapter 19. What actions did they find? It is not hard to see what sin the people of Sodom exhibited very boldly and openly. Yes, homosexuality was not their only sin but it refllected the way these cities had degenerated and crept into ungodliness and sinfulness.
I also find the asking of Abraham for mercy very interesting. Abraham pleaded with the Lord for Him not to destroy the righteous with the wicked. He then begins to respectfully entreat the Lord to see how few righteous were needed in order for the city to be spared. I want to emphasize how respectful Abraham was during this dialogue. Abraham always showed piety in the way he acted toward the Lord. He had washed their feet when they first turned aside to his tent, he gave them a generous meal (a tender, choice calf), walked with them to send them off, and now speaks in a respectful way to ask regarding the city of Sodom.
The main reason I find this dialogue intriguing is when you think about how corrupt the world is today and specifically how corrupt the USA has become in its morals. Abortion, fornication, adultery, homosexuality, divorce, murder, etc are rampant. We live in a perverse generation who are bold and unashamed in committing their sin. How many righteous must be present to keep this nation from destruction? God raises up nations and brings them down, Jer 18:5-10. How long will God be patient with this nation? I have often wondered this question. When you consider that only 10 righteous people in the city of Sodom would have spared the city from destruction it really drives home the thought that the righteous are the salt of the earth. It is impressive how little salt it takes to make a difference in a meal. Though we may be few, we can make a BIG difference when we are godly people. Let us be the salt of the earth and try to make as much difference as we can in the lives of those around us. Also, remember that God does not ever forget you. Even if you are surrounded by such wickedness, God will not forget nor abandon you. He will remember your righteous deeds and faithful service to Him.
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