This verse by verse Bible study on Genesis is an inductive verse by verse study with extensive reflections, verse by verse commentary, cross-references, and applications. They are the personal study of notes of a very good doctor friend of mine. His native tongue is Mandarin, but his English is amazing as you will see below. It is refreshing to take a look at this important book of Genesis through the eyes of a believer from another culture. Without further adieu: The Scribblings According to David.
Genesis 17 Inductive Bible Study
An Unlikely Man of Faith (VI)
Outline
XVII 1-8. The Nature of the Covenant – Everlasting Nationhood
XVII 9-14. The Sign of the Covenant – Male Circumcision
XVII 15-21. The Means of the Covenant – Supernatural Conception
XVII 22-27. The Response to the Covenant – Immediate Obedience
Textual Summary
Thirteen years after the birth of Ishmael, God appeared to Abram again, confirmed His promises to the patriarch and gave him the sign of the Covenant, which was male circumcision. Abraham obeyed God by promptly carrying out the command.
Interpretative Challenges
What’s so special about the name of God El Shaddai?
El Shaddai is translated in many English versions as God Almighty, or the Almighty God, in which El is the common Semitic word for God, and Shaddai is thought to highlight the power of God (which in the immediate context is to enable Sarah in her 90s to bear Abraham a son). According to the NIV Study Bible, Shaddai occurs 31 times in the book of Job and 17 times in the rest of the Bible.
The Faithlife Study Bible, however, arguing lexically, suggests that there is little evidence to justify the common translation ofEl Shaddai as God Almighty. The following passage is a direct quote from the study note of the Faithlife Study Bible:
Shaddai is similar to Hebrew term shad, meaning “breast” (Eze. 23:3; 21; 34; Song 4:5; 7:4), but “God of breast” is not a reasonable translation. The Akkadian words shadu (“mountain”) and shadda’u – along with the abundant testimony in the OT associating God with mountains (e.g. Sinai) – suggests that the word means “God of the mountain” or “God of the mountainous wilderness”.
It seems like the English Bible translators took a step to interpret Shaddai by comparing God’s power and strength to mountain. Anyway, the phrase God Almighty has thus made its way into the vocabulary of both the sacred and the secular.
Tab -1. Names of God in the OT (from the Faithlife Study Bible)
Why did God reveal His Covenant to Abraham in such progressive manner?
Abram was 75 years old when he first received God’s promise, and was called to leave Ur for the land of Canaan (Gen. 12:1-4). The promise was officially ratified some years later (Gen. 15:1-21). Yet at the age of 86, in a fateful twist of unbelief, Abram begot Ishmael thru the Egyptian slave-maid Hagar (Gen. 16:16). Then, when 13 more years had eclipsed and Abram became 99 years old, God finally spelled out the specifics of that promise. From the perspective of man, God waited quite a long time in unfolding His will and fulfilling His promise. One may very well ask why?
Some commentators do believe that the last 13 years of “silence” was “probably on account of his hasty and blamable marriage with Hagar”. I tend to disagree that the extended waiting was a divine punishment for his presumptuous sins. For one thing, it is merely a speculation without any Scriptural basis. In addition, such “karmic” thinking of causatively linking specific sufferings with specific sins is foolish and dangerous, as we see from the biblical example of Job’s three friends. Borrowing the phrase by Philip Yancey in his book Where Is God When It Hurts, instead of looking backward and ask “why”, we should perhaps look forward and ask “to what end”? We may never know all the nuances behind God’s progressive revelation to Abraham, but we definitely can understand the maturing work He must have wrought in the life and faith of the patriarch. As for us today, God will neither speak to us directly as He did to Abraham, nor once-and-for-all show us the full plan He has for us. Nonetheless, through His providential circumstances, and as we become progressively perfected in Christ-likeness, we will gradually comprehend what He has done, is doing, and perhaps will do in our lives. We do not need to know what the future holds; we only need to know who holds the future.
For each of these three occasions where God made known to Abraham His promise (Gen. XII, XV, and XVII), Abraham believed God. Despite all his failures, let us give credit to him for being such an unlikely man of faith who walked by faith, not by sight.
What exactly is the nature of the Abrahamic Covenant?
This question has been dwelt with in my study of the 15th chapter. Please allow me to quote my own notes and with some minor modifications made:
… the Abrahamic Covenant is a covenant of nationhood. It has two components with regard to Abram: one is his physical offspring (Gen. 15:1-6; 17:2, 4-7); the other is the physical land for his offspring (Gen. 15:18-21; 17:8). Abram could not be “made into a great nation” (Gen. 12:2) unless these two conditions are met.
According to the Nelson’s Complete Book of Bible Maps and Charts, the Abrahamic Covenant was foundational to other covenants:
The promise of land in the Palestinian Covenant (Deut. 30:1-30)
The promise of kingly descendants in the Davidic Covenant (2 Sam. 7:12-16)
The promise of blessing in the Old and New Covenants (Ex. 19:3-6; Jer. 31:31-40)
Why did God change Abram’s name into Abraham (v.5)?
This is the first time in the Bible where God changed someone’s name. For oriental people, names carry significant meanings as well as anticipations by the one who gives the name (e.g. Israel being changed from Jacob; Peter being changed from Simon).
The name Abram (avram) in Hebrew means “exalted father” or “the father is exalted”, which perhaps was a reference to Abraham’s father Terah. The name Abraham (avraham) means “father of nations” or “father of a multitude”, which encapsulates the significance of God’s Covenant. His old name is retrospective, speaking of his aristocratic progenitor; his new name is prospective, speaking of his theocratic progeny.
What does it mean when God spoke to Abraham in His promise, “kings will come forth from you” (vv.6, 16)?
This phrase was not mentioned in earlier Covenant statements in Gen. XII and Gen. XV. It will later appear again in Gen. 35:11. Some commentators believe it not as perpetual royalty for his offspring, but as human beings’ exercising dominion (as “kings”) over the earth. Yet most commentators unanimously see this as an anticipation of the reestablishment of Creation mandate, which will one day culminate in the Messianic Kingdom (cf. the Davidic Covenant in 2 Sam. VII). In other words, not only many kings, but, more importantly, the King of kings shall come from the line of Abraham (Gal. 3:16).
How can God’s Covenant be unilateral if there are responsibilities for the recipients attached to it?
Before God made a three-fold reaffirmation of His Covenant, He commanded Abraham to “walk before me, and be blameless” (v.1). In other words, as the ESV Study Bible puts it, a conditional dimension is now explicit for Abraham, indicating this covenant concerns only those who has an ongoing personal relationship with God (“walk before [Him]”, cf. Deut. 4:29, Prov. 8:16) and lovingly obeyed Him in every matter (“be blameless”, cf. Matt. 5:48, 1 Pet. 1:15-16). The responsibility of the recipients, then, is an active response to God in faith and faithfulness, without which the blessings associated with the Covenant will not befall.
As we can see, the great mystery, namely the doctrine of 200% (of God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility) once again lies behind the scene. But that is beyond the scope of our present study. Coming back to the question: how can God’s Covenant be unilateral yet conditional at the same time? The answer to that hinges on a proper understanding of God and of us. Hence, the index question can be rephrased and broken down into the following two questions with regards to our understanding of God and of ourselves:
(1) Is God obligated to make Covenant with men?
(2) How can men be a part of this Covenant?
Is God obligated to make Covenant with man? The answer is no. In a sense, there is no ultimate cause (particularly in us) that “compels” God to make a covenant of blessings to man (or else this “cause” would be greater than God). He is the sovereign ruler of the universe, accountable to none but Himself, and has the independent freedom to do whatever He wills, whenever He wills, wherever He wills, and however He wills. As the psalmist says, “… our God is in the heavens; He does whatever He pleases” (Ps. 115:3). Men do not deserve to be involved in the Covenant. If anything, men deserve wrath. Therefore, for God to stoop down and to make Covenant with His creatures, this is a free act of divine mercy. In this sense, the Covenant is unilateral on God’s part, for it is He who takes the initiative to make it and keep it.
How can men be a part of this Covenant? The answer, as mentioned above, is faith and faithfulness. We are to see ourselves as the undeserving beneficiaries, thrilled to know that we are to receive an inheritance from our Father. And the only thing we need to do is, figuratively speaking, believe in Him that He will grant us that inheritance, and to live like His son. As it is written in Heb. 11:6, “without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is and that He is a rewarder of those who seek Him.” The only necessary condition is that we believe it; of course, on God’s terms, not our own. Hence, the Covenant is conditional on our part, for we are to take that leap of faith and exercise that act of faith in order to receive it and enjoy it.
The above is a discussion merely of the Abrahamic Covenant. Such an understanding is applicable (and crucial!) in viewing both the unilateralside and the conditional side of the glorious works of redemption in the New Covenant: God had freely decreed to saved sinners, and used the death of Christ as the necessary means to achieve salvation; sinners are, upon hearing the Gospel, to repent and put their faith in Christ, receiving Him as the Savior of their souls and Lord of their lives.
Does the New Testament replace the Old Testament such that the Abrahamic Covenant became nullified?
After the era of the United Kingdom, Israel never saw this promise realized in its fullest sense. Subsequently, some may ask, does the New Testament become an “extension” of the Old Testament in a way that God’s Promises to the Israelites in the OT have been nullified? In fact, this is a sophisticated topic of theology, namely, how do we see Israel today?
There are basically two schools of thoughts. One is called “Supersessionism” (also called, “fulfillment theology”, “replacement theology”), which means that the NT has superseded (or fulfilled) the OT, and thus the Christian church now replaces the children of Israel. Supersessionism believes that the biblical promises of God made to the children of Israel (specifically the land promises to Israel, the Messianic Kingdom and the universal reign of Christ on earth) had been nullified by the New Testament.
The other school of thoughts, in contrast, sees that God’s promises to Israel are yet to be fulfilled in the future. This framework of interpretation is called “Dispensationalism”, which means that men are related to God under different Biblical covenants in a series of “dispensations” (or “times”, “periods” of history). Through this lens of understanding, the fulfillment of God’s promises in terms of the Promised Land to Israel, the Messianic Kingdom and the universal reign of Christ is to be anticipated in the End Times when He returns (but before that, the world is going to get worse and worse). In a nutshell, Dispensationalism believes that not only God has not casted away Israel and replaced them by the Church, but one day what He had promised to the children of Israel shall surely come to pass.
Therefore, as you can see, how we see Israel today closely relates to how we see the future of human history (and to the understanding of the Millennium, giving rise to Amillenialism and Premillenialism, respectively). These two schools of thoughts are a part of the advanced theories of Eschatology, which is beyond the scope of this study. For me, I am comfortably n the Dispensationalist’s camp. I believe when God made a promise, He would keep it. There is no reason to believe that when God told Abraham that He will establish His covenant with him and his offspring throughout generations for an everlasting covenant (v.7,13,19) and that all the land of Canaan shall be for an everlasting possession (v.8), He didn’t mean it or wasn’t able to deliver. Also there’s a difference between Israel and the Church in the divine timetable in redemptive history. A convincing case can be made for Dispensationalism, of course, but is, again, beyond the scope of this study.
One more footnote. From a historical standpoint, the epidemic animosity of Jews (“anti-Semitism”) across Europe, which culminated in the dreadful horror of the Holocaust, I think, perhaps had its theological root in Supersessionism. It was largely because Christians then believed that Jews had been casted away by God and replaced by the Church that they started to treat them with contempt, malice and antipathy. With hatred, they would see Jews as the culprit of crucifying Jesus. Such is a distorted view of the Covenant People of God, resulting from a misunderstanding of the God of the Covenant. Dispensationalists, on the other hands, would act in favor of Israel. The restoration of the state of Israel in 1948, for example, is a good illustration of this. Many Christians who supported Israel financially and politically then, were influenced by a dispensationalist understanding of Israel, God’s Promise and the future, knowing that the Church is not a definitive “replacement” of Israel, that the Jews are still the Covenant people of God, and that God’s promise to them are still waiting to be fulfilled.
What’s so special about male circumcision (esp. on the 8th day after birth)? And how does it relate to us today?
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