Who is your God? Several times, God identified Himself as “the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.” Not the God of the sun, moon and stars, the God of mercy, grace, and forgiveness, or the only true God. He was all of those things, but the identity of the nation of Israel was wrapped up in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. This revealed two things about our God. First, He was a God who initiated personal relationships with individual people and secondly, He was a God who chose to accomplish His purposes through families and generations.
When God appeared to Abraham and invited him on a life-altering journey, His purposes were bigger than blessing Abraham and bigger than blessing a nation of his descendants. God’s plan was to bless the world. “I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse, and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.” (Genesis 12:2-3)
God may use small things, but He doesn’t make small plans. Over and over in scripture, those plans were accomplished through families. It began with a couple in a garden, was restarted with the family of Noah, and continued through the family of Abraham. Even in the New Testament we see two sets of brothers in the inner circle of Jesus’ followers and numerous Christ-following families that were used in mighty ways in the early church. God works through families.
As we examine the lives of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, a pattern emerges in God’s ways with families.
- God initiates and renews the relationship with each succeeding generation. However, it is the responsibility of the individual to respond to that invitation and develop an authentic, God-seeking, self-denying relationship with Him.
- God communicates with His people. Families used by God heard from God and responded to what He said with obedience and faithfulness, even in the difficult times.
- Each generation communicates its experiences with God to the next generation. How do we know about Abraham and Isaac’s relationship with God – their successes and their failures? We know because they talked about it with their children who, in turn, passed down their own God stories to their descendants.
- Families used by God are involved in God’s redemptive work. In Genesis 18, Abraham interceded on behalf of the entire city of Sodom, not just for his nephew Lot. God’s families join with Him in blessing the nations.
Who is your God? For our family, He is the God revealed in scripture, but also the God of Gerald, Henry, and Thomas — three generations of men with whom God initiated a relationship in the past that is producing fruit in present generations. Perhaps your name would be the first on such a list. If so, understand that when God intersects your life, His plan is bigger than you. His plan is to work through your relationships and bless the world. Your choices in this generation will influence what is produced in future generations. Keep the big picture in mind. God is on mission to redeem and restore a broken world and He does it one individual, one family at a time.
It’s such Blessed and very effective in transform the world.