THE
SCARLET THREAD THROUGH THE BIBLE, NEW YEAR’S EVE
Dr. W.A.
Criswell
Part 1
12-31-61 7:30 p.m.
This
sermon tonight is not like a message that is prepared in which the minister,
within twenty or twenty-five minutes, will have presented his appeal and come
to the climax of the sermon delivered. It is not that kind of a message. The
sermon is as if a man stood on the top of a great height and looked over the
whole creation of God. As Moses stood on the top of Mount Pisgah and saw from
afar the Promised Land, so this message tonight. We are standing as it were on
a great and lofty eminence. And we are looking over the entire story of human
history from its beginning in the eternity of the eternities, in the unknown distant
ages of the ageless past, and as it reaches forward to the great incomparable
consummation of the ages of the ages that are yet to come.
Now
we begin. Some time, before time was created, God—the Spirit, God, the
Almighty Jehovah God—created His infinite heavenly hosts. He created them
in angelic orders. Some of them are called angels; some of them are
called seraphim; some of them are called cherubim; some of them are called
archangels. But in the celestial, spiritual, heavenly world, God created a
great and heavenly host. And in that host of God’s created angelic beings, living
in the heaven of heavens where God lives, there was the great covering cherub,
the ruling archangel that God named Lucifer, or the "Son of the
Morning." That was the first great creation of Almighty God in the
timeless ages before time was.
The
second thing that God Jehovah did was this: He created the physical
universe. And when I hear ministers and preachers try so to spiritualize
religion as to take the material and the physical out of it, they're getting
more religious than God. God likes materiality. He created
it. God likes corporeality. He created it. God likes these
planets and these rocks and seas and stars, and He likes people, and He likes
eating. He created it. He likes living. He created
it.
The
second great creation of God was this material universe, and the Book opens in
Genesis 1:1: "In the beginning," in the beginning of God's
material creative ability, producing this world that we see, "in the
beginning, God created the heavens and the earth." When that was,
nobody could know. Mind could not extend itself to enter into it.
In
the beginning of the beginning, God flung these great universes out into space,
placed them under His great almighty laws, and everything that God did was
beautiful and perfect, filled with light and glory and gladness. His
creation in the celestial world was beautiful and perfect. And His
creation of the material world was beautiful and perfect.
Every
orb was set in its place according to the celestial ableness of Almighty God,
everything beautiful. Then sometime in that beginning, in the ages of the
ages past, sometime before time was, there came into the heart of the great
covering cherub in the celestial world, there came into the heart of the
"Son of the Morning" what we call sin.
I
read it, first from the prophet Ezekiel. God describes him:
Thou
sealest up the sum, full of wisdom, and perfect in beauty.
Thou hast
been in Eden the garden of God; every precious stone was thy covering, the
sardius, the topaz, the diamond, the beryl, the onyx, the jasper, the sapphire,
the emerald, the carbuncle, and gold: the workmanship prepared in thee was
perfect and beautiful.
Thou art
the anointed cherub that covereth; and I [says the Lord God] have set thee
so: thou wast upon the holy mountain of God, and thou hast walked up and
down in the midst of the stones of fire.
Thou wast
perfect in thy ways from the day that thou wast created, till iniquity, till
sin was found in thee ... Therefore, I will cast thee out as profane ... Thine
heart was lifted up because of thy beauty, thou hast corrupted thy wisdom by
the reason of thy brightness: I will cast thee down ... Thou hast defiled
thy sanctuaries by the multitude of thine iniquities. Therefore, will I
bring forth a fire from the midst of thee, and it shall devour thee, and I will
bring thee to ashes.
[Ezekiel
28:12-18]
And
the second passage describing Lucifer, the Son of the Morning, is in Isaiah
14:12: "How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the
morning! How art thou cast down to the ground ... For thou hast said in
thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars
of God: I will sit upon the mount of the congregation ... I will ascend
above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the Most High God"—taking
God's place. "Yet thou shalt be brought down to
hell."
Somewhere
in the infinite, timeless ages of the past, sin was born in this covering
cherub, this archangel of the Lord God Almighty, under whose care God had
placed the heavenly hosts. And when Lucifer fell and when sin was found
in him, one third of the angels of heaven fell also. And in the fall of
Lucifer, God's created, corporeal world fell apart.
Sin
always destroys. Sin plows under. Sin wrecks. Sin
grinds. Sin destroys. And somewhere in the timeless ages of the
past, after God had created the heavenly hosts and after God had created the
heaven and the earth, sin was found in Lucifer. He was cast out.
One third of the angels were cast out with him, and in that sin and in that
transgression, God's great universe fell to pieces—the planets, the sun, the
stars wracked with fire, with mists, with water, destroyed by the searing blast
of winds. God's beautiful world fell into emptiness, into a void, into
formless mass, into ugliness and darkness.
And
then God did a miraculous and a marvelous thing. In six days—in six days,
a day with a morning and an evening, a day of 24 hours—in six days, God
recreated this planet and this universe, our sun and its planets, and this
planet earth.
In
six days, God recreated it, bringing it out of its formless, empty void; out of
its darkness and its mist and the watery grave; and God, in six days, recreated
this universe. On the first day, God said, "Let the light penetrate
it." And God's heavenly and celestial light poured into this
formless void, when the earth was "without form and void, when darkness
was upon the face of the deep, and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the
waters."
"Preacher,
how do you know all those things?" From the Bible. It says
here in the Book: "And the earth became tohu wa bohu, translated
here, "void and formless, empty and uninhabitable." I turn over
here to the prophet Isaiah, chapter 45, verse 18, and the great prophet
saith: "For thus saith the Lord that bara—created out of
nothing—the heavens and the earth; God himself that formed the earth and made
it; he hath established it, he created it not tohu or bohu."
God
never made this universe formless, and void, and empty, and dark, and
destroyed. God made it beautiful and perfect. His material,
corporeal creation, His physical universe was as perfect as his celestial
universe was in glory. But sin destroyed it and plunged God's universe
into chaos and into formless darkness.
And
Isaiah the prophet says God did not create it that way. Satan did
that. Sin did that. Iniquity did that. Transgression did
that. And now, God is recreating His universe. And on the first
day, He pierces it with the glory of His light. God said by fiat,
"Let there be light."
Some
people come along and say, "Well, that's an eon of five hundred thousand billion
years." Listen. That's by fiat. God said, "Let
there be light," and the first day, God's light penetrated the dark mass
of this lost and chaotic and watery, buried world. Then on that second
day, He created the firmament. He raised the waters above from the waters
beneath.
And
then on the third day, He created on the third day—a day like your day—on the
third day, He created the seas, put the waters together and the dry land
appeared. And then on the fourth day, God made the marvel of the sunset.
Why a sunset? That's the most extraneous, useless piece of work that I
know of. God loves things that are beautiful and colorful.
And
on the fourth day, God cleared out the darkness and cleared out the mist and
took away the clouds, and God made the beautiful sunset and the sunrise on the
fourth day, and the moon appeared to shine by night. They'd been created
in the beginning. That wasn't when God created the sun and the moon and
the stars. This is the recreation of God, when God kicked away the chaotic
darkness into which this earth was plunged. And He made the phenomena
that you call sunset, sunrise, and the moon that shines and glows, the queen of
heaven by night.
Then
on the fifth day, He created animal life. All of the things that we see
living in this earth, He did it in a day—in a day, not in a million thousand
trillion years, but by fiat; God created them by His spoken word. And on
the sixth day, He created the man and his wife. Let us, Elohim,
plural, let us make man in our image after our likeness, and let him rule over
the seas and the dry land and the earth and all of the things God has placed in
this universe; let him rule over them.
Every
once in a while, I'll meet somebody who looks with great theological askance
upon a trip to the moon. Why, man, that's part of God's universe He's
given into the hands of the man to have dominion over. If anybody is
smart enough—and we're getting to be—to find our way to the moon, and if
they'll promise me a safe return, I'm ready to go on the first ship. I'd
like the experience. I'd like it.
All
of God's creation—the fowls of the air, and we can out-fly them; the fish of
the sea, and we can out-swim them; and everything that God has made, did He
create this man to have dominion over it, and to rule over it, and to be God's
son as the high regent under the Almighty, ruling over God's dominion.
Then
in the Garden of Eden where He placed the man—and the Garden of Eden is located
in the southern part of the Mesopotamian Valley. I know that because, in
the naming of the four rivers that poured through that beautiful garden, one of
them is named the Euphrates, and the other is named Hiddekel or the Tigris
River. Those two rivers flowed through the beautiful Garden of Eden, and
there God began anew and again with His recreated world.
Now,
the serpent—the serpent, the serpent, you know him after he was cursed,
crawling on his belly, licking up the dust of the ground. But the serpent
was the most beautiful, the most beautifully adorned, the most gifted of all of
the things that God had made in this world except the man. And the
serpent lent himself, whatever he looked like and whatever abilities he had,
the serpent lent himself to Satan.
Satan
is spirit. And a spirit has not body or corporeality. Spirits get
into people. "Ah," you say, "that's medieval, old fogy,
theological baggage, preacher." Listen, I see evil spirits enter into the
hearts of people—the spirit of lying, the spirit of deception, the spirit of
violence, murder, meanness, iniquities, all kinds of things enter into the
hearts of people.
And
Satan chose this most beautiful and gifted of all of God's creation outside of
the man and his wife. And in that serpent, he did a phenomenal and
amazing thing. He began to speak in language to the beautiful woman—perfect,
glorious, fashioned by the hand of God out of these sides. You have it
translated "ribs." The only place that word is translated
"rib" in the entire Hebrew Old Testament is right there.
Everywhere else it's the "side," the "side" of the
ark.
You
wouldn't say "the 'rib' of the ark"; the "side of the ark,"
"the side of the tabernacle." Out of Adam's side God took
Eve. And He looked upon her and said, "This is bone of my bone, and
this is flesh of my flesh," and he loved her and took her unto his
heart.
And
Satan saw it. And Satan began to speak to that beautiful woman. Now
you have the great conflict of the ages. What is it? Well, it must
be the conflict, the struggle unto death between the freedom of our democracy
and the tyranny of ideological totalitarianism. Before that, it was the
wars that swirled around Germany. Before that, it was the awful campaigns
that wracked Europe under Napoleon, under the Caesars.
And
before that, it was the awful wars of the Mesopotamian and Nile Valleys.
Through the ages—ah!—the great conflict is in the heart of Satan and the mind
and love of God. For you see, in glory, Lucifer looked upon the
pre-existent Lord God Christ. And Satan said in his heart, "I would
be first. I would reign. I would rule."
And
he hated Jehovah Jesus Lord Christ in heaven and decided to supplant Him and to
destroy Him. You see, heaven loves the Lord Jesus. It's hard to say
these things because He was only Jesus in His incarnation, but in the beginning
of the beginning, before time, before the ages, there was the uncreated God and
the uncreated Christ.
And
when God said, "Let us make man," that is God the Father, God the
Son, God the Holy Spirit, the personality of God into which a man cannot
enter. Our minds cannot understand it. We cannot fathom it.
But in heaven, in that spiritual world, was the Lord Christ, and Satan envied
Him and hated Him and lifted up his heart against Him to supplant Him.
And
it is against the Lord Christ that Satan, in all of his subtlety and his wiles,
wages war day and night, for Satan chooses to take God's world away from
Him. And Satan has avowed to rule over God's world in place of Him.
And when God made the universe, Satan said, "I was the
second."
And
when God recreated this universe, Satan said, "I will seize it," and
when Satan saw the man and the woman in the Garden of Eden in the perfection
and beauty of the Almighty, Satan said, "I will destroy them."
"For they are made to rule," says God, "over My universe under
Christ." "And I am going to seize the power for myself,"
says Satan, "and I am going to destroy the man. I am going to reign
and to rule over this creation."
And
in the beginning sometime, all of this known to the sovereign God, in the
beginning, the Lord Jesus came forward and volunteered to be the redemption and
the forgiveness and the sin bearer and the Savior of Adam's fallen race.
And when Jesus met the tempter in the wilderness of Judea, that was just one
tiny segment of the conflict between those two—between Lucifer, Son of the
Morning, and the Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord God—that was just a small segment,
a small link, in that awesome conflict between Jesus and Satan.
It
started up there before the worlds were. It started there before time was—the
hatred of Lucifer for Jesus, and the love and compassion of the Lord God Christ
for His creation and for His people. So in the garden, in the beginning,
the serpent is used by Satan to speak to the woman whom God had
made.
And
how does he do it? He doesn't have anything new. Every approach is
old. We know what he's going to say before he begins. There's not
any new attack on God by Lucifer. We know exactly what he's going to
say. First, he's going to put a question mark after the Word of
God. "Yea, did God say that? Did God tell you there's a
hell? Did God say to you there's a judgment? Did God say to you if
you sin you'll die? Did God say that?"
Question
mark, and then a lie. And the first lie: "You won't die.
You won't die. You won't die." And then he presented to Eve
the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil. And the woman ate, enticed
and deceived by the serpent. And she took the fruit to Adam, and Adam was
not deceived. Adam knew in the moment that he ate he would die.
Satan deceived the woman, but he didn't deceive Adam.
And
when Adam saw Eve partaking of the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil,
Adam made a choice. He so loved her and he so found his soul bound with
her that Adam chose to die by her side rather than live without
her.
I
cannot help but speak words of infinite admiration for the first federal head
of our human race. He chose to die with Eve whom he loved rather than
live without her. God could have made another Eve. He could have
made half a dozen Eves. It was Adam who chose to die by the side of that
beautiful and glorious created woman that the Lord placed in his arms and in
his heart.
And
when God came in the cool of the day, He couldn't find them. And He
raised His voice, "Adam, Adam, Adam, where art thou? Adam,
Adam?" And out of the covering of the trees in the garden, Adam
raised his voice, "I heard you coming and I was afraid." God
said, "Afraid? Who made thee afraid? Who taught you that word
'fear'? Afraid?" Afraid.
"Yes,"
said Adam, "I was afraid, for I'm naked. And my wife is
naked." And the Lord said, "Who taught thee thou wast
naked?" And then the story is recounted to the Lord Almighty, and
when they sat in the presence of God, they had made themselves fig leaves to
cover their shame and their nakedness. And when the Lord looked upon
them, He said, "But it won't do, not what human hands can weave, it won't
do."
And
somewhere in the Garden of Eden, the Lord took an innocent animal, and before
the eyes of Eve and of Adam, God slew that innocent animal, and the ground
drank up its blood, "The Scarlet Thread through the Bible," and with
the life sacrifice of an innocent animal, God took coats of skin and covered
over the shame and the nakedness of the man and his wife; the first sacrifice
offered by the hand of Almighty God.
And
I've often thought when Adam saw the gasping, spent life of that innocent
creature and saw the crimson stain the soil of the ground, that was his first
experience to know what it meant to die. Sin and death. And so the
story of atonement and sacrifice begins to unfold through the Word of God,
until finally in glory you will see the great throngs of the saints who've
washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb—"The
Scarlet Thread through the Bible".
As
you know, this is the first time that I have ever attempted anything like
this. I have no experience. I have no precedent. I have
nothing I've ever done to go by. Now, we're going to have to
change. I'm going to have to stop preaching, and we're going to have to
start going through this Bible. So, just as rapidly as we can, now, we're going
to follow through the unfolding of this purpose of God in the Holy
Scriptures.
In
the Garden of Eden, as the Lord covered over the nakedness of the man and the
woman, He turned to the devil, He turned to Satan, He turned to Lucifer, and He
said something to Lucifer. He said, "In this woman, whom you have
deceived and through whom you have destroyed the federal head of the human
race, in this woman I will create out of her, I will create that one who will
crush your head, out of the woman." Now the old rabbis for centuries
pored over that word of Jehovah God to Satan. "The seed of the
woman," and as all of us know, seed is masculine. Seed belongs to
the man. A woman doesn't have seed. It belongs to the man.
And
the old rabbis pored over that word and that promise of God, "The seed of
the woman shall crush your head." Finally, as the Scriptures will
unfold, we'll know what that means, what that refers to. That is a part
of that age-long conflict and struggle between the hatred of Lucifer and the
love of God in Christ Jesus.
But
now we begin in atonement, in blood, in sacrifice: "The seed of that woman
whom you deceived shall crush your head." So, driven out of the
Garden of Eden, the Lord placed on each side of the gate cherubim and an
altar. Wherever in the Bible you find cherubim, they are always symbols
of the grace and love and mercy and forgiveness of the Lord God.
And
He placed the cherubim there and the altar there for the man to come to in
repentance, in faith, to draw nigh to God. And He guarded the Tree of
Life, lest the man eat of it and die. It was a merciful thing for God to
do; for had our parents eaten of the Tree of Life and been confirmed in this
body of death, it would have been the most tragic of all of the imaginable
things that could have overwhelmed the human family.
I
don't want to live forever in this body of death, my eyes gone, my hearing
gone, my back stooped, my frame disintegrating, and yet confirmed in this body
of death, and never be able to die. God put away and guarded out of sight
the Tree of Life, lest the man eat thereof and live forever. "Flesh
and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither does corruption inherit
incorruption." God has made it possible for us to exchange
this old house of clay with its infirmity and its senility—God has made it
possible for us to exchange it for "a house not made with hands, eternal
in the heavens." And that's why He put away and guarded the Tree of
Life. Someday, of course, as you'll see, through the Book, we'll find it
in glory in the paradise of heaven.
So,
the Lord drove out the man and his wife, and she bore two sons. One was
named Cain, and the other was named Abel. Cain brought to that altar
first fruit of the fields. Like a displayer at a county fair, he was so
proud of himself: "And look what I have done." And he
laid it at the feet of God in his pride.
Abel,
by faith, feeling himself unworthy and undone—Abel brought a lamb, the first
slain of his flock, poured out its blood and offered it upon the altar.
And God respected Abel for the faith in his heart and received the
sacrifice. But God respected not Cain because of the pride in his heart—like
Lucifer, lifted up, thought well of himself.
And
when Cain saw he was rejected, he lifted up his hand, and there was the first
mound in the earth, and underneath it lay a boy. And Adam and Eve knew
what it meant to die in the loss of that boy, Abel. And their tears
watered the soil above his grave.
And
in the goodness of God, the Lord gave her another son, Seth. And Seth was
a man of God; and Cain, driven out from the presence of the Lord, was a
blasphemer. And then you have the progeny of those two: the line of Cain
and the line of Seth, the children of God. And as long as the children of
God were separate, God blessed the earth, and the world, and the
families.
Then,
in the sixth chapter of Genesis a tragic thing came to pass. The sons of
God, the children of Seth, looked out into that world and they liked the
glamour of the nightlife. And they liked the drunken orgies of the
world. And they turned aside from their separateness and their dedication
and their holiness, and they began to marry into the families of the sons of
Cain. And God looked upon them, and His children had forsaken His altars
and forsaken their devotion and had forgotten their consecration, and the whole
earth was filled with violence and evil and iniquity.
Whenever
a girl comes to me and says, "I'm going to marry a worthless drunkard, but
I'm going to reform him. You don't understand, Pastor. I'm going to
make a Christian out of him," don't you ever think that when God's people
intermarry with the vile and the iniquitous of the world you're going to lift
them up to God. They're going to pull you down to hell. That's
exactly what happened in the earth.
The
children of God began to marry in the line of Cain, and the earth was filled
with violence and blood and murder and blasphemy. And God said,
"It's enough, it's enough." And He looked over the whole
created family of the Lord God, the children of old man Adam, and there was
only one righteous man in this earth, just one. And that man's name
was Noah.
And
God said to Noah, "It's enough, it's enough. One hundred twenty
years from now, I'm going to destroy this world by flood. You make for
yourself an ark and bring your family in." And then out of His
compassion for the world that He made, the Lord God told him to bring seven
into the ark of the species that was clean and two of a kind into the ark of
the species that was unclean.
So
he built that great ark, made and fashioned after the finest nautical symmetry
known today. And then God shut him up. When the rain began to fall
and the floods began to rise, and those people beat on the door of that ark,
why didn't Noah open the door to let them in? Because God shut that
door.
There's
a day of grace beyond which a man can't trifle with God. Known to Him,
there's a time, there's a line. When a man goes beyond it, he'll never be
saved, never. No. In the New Testament, we call that the
unpardonable sin. God shut the door. And that race and that
generation were destroyed.
And
then after God opened the door and Noah came out, you have the beginning of all
the nations of the earth described here in the tenth and the eleventh chapters
of the Book of Genesis. All the nations of the earth are divided into
three parts; the sons of Noah were Shem, Ham, and Japheth.
The
sons of Japheth are what you would call the Aryans, the Indo- Europeans, that
great family to the north and to the west, of whom we here tonight are a part.
God shall enlarge the tent of Japheth. Japheth is the great, multiplied
wing of Noah's family, Japheth.
The
second: Ham. Ham is the father of the Canaanites, of the Egyptians, of
the Africans, of the Philistines, and all of those people who live in Africa.
And the Canaanites and the Philistines who were the enemies of the people of
God, they are the children of Ham. And God said they should be a servant
people.
The
third great wing of the Noaic family is Shem. And Shem is the father of
Shemites: the Elamites, the Chaldeans, the Assyrians, the Syrians, the Hebrew
family—all of those people, the Arabians, the Arabs—all of those people who
lived in that great, vast section of country from Ur of Chaldea through the
fertile crescent down to the River of Egypt. That was the home of the
Shemites, the Semites.
Anti-semitism
is a vicious prejudice of people against those that God exalted in the
revelation of His love and grace. And those families were all one, and
they all sought to be together, just like families do. But God had said
to inhabit the whole earth and to have dominion over the whole creation, so
when all of those families came together in chapter 11 to build a great central
monument that would hold them together. And if they ever had another
flood—which God said they wouldn't have—they were going to have a tower that
would reach up to heaven in which they could escape from it.
When
God looked down and saw the pride again in the human heart, He confused their
speech—Babel, Babylon. And being unable to understand each other, those
that could speak this language went over in that direction, and those that
could speak this language, automatically gathered in that direction. And
those who could speak this language automatically went in this direction.
And
they divided up according to the speech, according to the family tongue,
according to the mother language, and then they separated from Babel over the
face of the earth, and the nations grew up from those three great sections of
the family of Noah. Now, that is God's introduction to His Bible.
The
first eleven chapters of the Book of Genesis concern the whole family of the
human race. Now, beginning at chapter 12 in the Book of Genesis,
beginning at chapter 12, we come to see one family that God has chosen through
whom He will keep that promise. "I will give thee a seed that shall
crush Satan's head."
In
the twelfth chapter of Genesis, God says to Abram, who lived in Ur of Chaldea,
down there at the bottom of the Mesopotamian Valley where those Tigris and
Euphrates rivers flow into the Persian Gulf, God said to Abram, "Get thee
out from thy father's house, thy father's people."
He
lived in an idolatrous city, and his father was an idolater. His father's
name was Terah. They say he manufactured idols and sold them. God
said, "Get out, and I'll make of thee a great nation, and I'll bless them
that bless thee and curse them that curse thee. And in thy seed shall all
the families and nations of the earth be blessed."
So,
out of the family of Shem, God chooses Abraham from Ur of Chaldea. And he
didn't leave his father's house and his father's family at first. From Ur
of Chaldea, he went up to the northern part of the Mesopotamian Valley in a
place called Haran. Abram, Nahor his brother, Terah his father, and Lot,
his brother's son, they all moved up to Haran.
In
the Bible, you'll also find that to be Padan-aram—Haran, Padan-aram.
There Abraham got a wife for Isaac—Rebekah—and there Jacob fled, and for 20
years was a servant of Laban, and married Leah and Rachel up there in the
northern part of the Mesopotamian Valley in Haran.
But
after Terah died, the father of Abraham died—after Terah died, then Abraham
took his wife, Sarah, and took his nephew, Lot, and left Nahor his brother
there. And Abram moved down into the Promised Land.
He
came to Shechem and then to Bethel and then to Hebron, then down to Egypt for
awhile because of famine, and then back to Hebron. And there at Hebron,
he and Lot divided, and Lot went down into the cities of the plains and pitched
his tent toward Sodom and became the mayor of Sodom. And the angel of the
Lord came and said to Abraham, "If the sin and iniquity of that awful city
is as it has come up unto me, we shall destroy it."
And
when the angels had left, Abraham stood yet before the Lord, knowing that Lot—righteous
Lot, vexing his soul with the filthy living of the Sodomites—knowing that Lot
was in that city. He prayed to God, "If fifty righteous can be
found, would you spare it for the sake of fifty, if forty, if thirty, if
twenty, if ten?" Had he asked for Lot, I think God would have
granted his request, but he asked for ten.
The
angels couldn't find ten, and there as Abram looked on from Hebron, the fire
fell upon Sodom and Gomorrah after Lot, his wife, and two daughters were
snatched away. Jesus says a picture of His coming is as it was in the
days of Lot. First God's people must be taken out before the fire and the
brimstone can fall. And at Hebron, Abraham looked and saw the destruction
of the cities of the plain.
Then
Abraham moved to Beersheba. Then follows the story of Isaac, which is
enmeshed with Abraham, and the story of Jacob; Isaac's life enmeshed first with
Abraham and then with Jacob.
Now,
the story of Jacob. In Beersheba, where Isaac is living, Rebekah loved
Jacob and Isaac loved Esau. Jacob is very shrewd, and Esau is a fine
specimen of an animal. You'd have liked Esau. He'd have been the
captain of the football team. He was a hunter, he was a fisherman, he was
out with the dogs—yup, whoo, whoo, whoo! He liked that. That's
Esau.
You'd
have liked him. All the way through, Esau is splendid. But he was
carnal; he was of this world. He liked the things of the flesh. And
Isaac liked that because he ate of his venison. So, upon a day when Esau
is returning from a hunt perishing to death for hunger, he sells his birthright
to Jacob for a mess of pottage—for some soup.
And
then, with Rebekah, Jacob cheats Esau out of his birthright—out of the
blessing, having already purchased from him his birthright. And Esau
said, "I will kill you." And Jacob fled away to Padan-aram, up
there where Nahor lived in Haran at the north of the Mesopotamian Valley.
So, Jacob flees away, and he stops at Bethel, and there God confirms to him the
promise of the seed and of the land of the Savior who was to come.
And
from Bethel and his vision of angels, he goes to Padan-aram to Haran. Up
there in the grandson's house of Nahor, whose name is Laban, the brother of
Rebekah, and he works for Laban seven years for Rachel. And then of all
things, when he woke up the next morning and looked over there at the woman
whom he'd been married to that night, she wasn't Rachel at all.
I've
always thought that that was one of the stupidest things that a man ever did in
my life, that he couldn't tell in the nighttime whether it was Rachel or
not. He should have known her better than that. So, he worked seven
more years. Having Leah, he worked seven more years for Rachel.
Then he worked six more years for Laban, and at the end of twenty years came
back when God said, "Go back to Palestine."
So,
Jacob comes back on the east side of the Jordan, then crosses over to
Shechem. And living there in Shechem, Simeon and Levi do a cruel and
awful thing in destroying the men of Shechem. And then, finally, Jacob
comes to Bethel and renews his vow to God, and from Bethel down to
Hebron. And while he's on the way to Hebron, Rachel dies at
Bethlehem.
And
down at Hebron, this boy, Joseph, is sent to Dothan, which is about ten miles
north of Samaria, in order to find the flock and the brothers who are keeping
them. And when Joseph appeared they said, "There’s that boy that our
father dotes on, and spoils with that coat of many colors." They
propose to slay him. Finally, Reuben persuades them to just spare his
life, and they sell him to the Ishmaelites, who take him down into Egypt.
And in Egypt, Joseph becomes the prime minister under Pharaoh.
There
is a famine in the land of Canaan, and the story of the brothers going down
into Egypt. And they come back for their father, and it is in Egypt in
the time of famine, they are given Goshen. As you look at Egypt, it had a
triangular delta where the different rivers pour out into the Mediterranean
Sea. On the right side of the delta, between the right side of the delta
and the desert is a little country that is named Goshen—very fertile. And
there Pharaoh and Joseph settled Israel and his family.
Then
we come to the death of Joseph—that his bones be carried back into the Promised
Land when God visits them. There arises a Pharaoh who doesn't know
Joseph, and he sees those Israelites prospering, and God is blessing
them. And they are afraid of them, so Pharaoh uses them to make bricks
without straw, to build cities in slavery.
And
as they groaned under that heavy oppression, God bowed down His ears to hear,
and there arises a man who was Pharaoh's son, an heir apparent to the throne,
whom she took out of the waters when the cruel Pharaoh decreed that all the
male children should die, learned in all of the arts and sciences of the
Egyptians, whose heart was with his people, taught by his mother Jehovah God
and the choice of Israel.
Having
fled away from Pharaoh on the back side of the desert at Sinai, he is tending
sheep. And while he's tending sheep on the back side of the desert at the
foot of Mount Sinai at the bottom of the Sinaitic Peninsula, there God speaks
to him out of a burning bush. And God says, "I've heard the cry of
my people." "Ah, said Moses, anybody but I, anybody but I,"
but the Lord says, "No, it is you. My people through whom this
promise is to be made and kept inviolate, My people."
Moses
goes down, and after the ten plagues on a night of nights, isn't it amazing how
these things are done without any meaning whatsoever except as God gives them
meaning? Why, on that night of nights, why should they take a lamb and
slay it? Pour out its blood, sprinkle it with hyssop—which is a common,
ordinary mistletoe type of a thing, a parasite of a thing, a common plant that
grew on the walls and everywhere in that country—take a hyssop, dip it in the
blood and sprinkle it on the door posts and on the lintel in the sign of the
cross, on the door posts on either side. On the lintel here at the top,
in the form of a cross, sprinkle the blood.
And
when the death angel passes over that night, "When I see the blood, I'll
spare your house and your home." And in all the other homes and
families, there's death, and the wailing and lamentation of all of Egypt,
except to those who are under the blood, under the blood, "The Scarlet
Thread through the Bible."