Abraham and Sarah have just had a wonderful
conversation with three visitors. They shared God’s promise about a son, even
though they were both well past childbearing age. It was a terrific promise,
one full of hope. A hope that extends from them to Jesus, then to you, me, and
everyone.
But that is not where the story ends. As
the visitors turn to leave, they share troubling news concerning two cities on
the verge of destruction. This news puts Abraham’s nephew, Lot, in jeopardy.
And it is in this story we find a message for us today.
Genesis 18:20-33(CEB):
20 Then
the LORD said, “The cries of injustice from Sodom and Gomorrah are countless,
and their sin is very serious! 21 I will go down now to examine the cries of
injustice that have reached me. Have they really done all this? If not, I want
to know.”
22 The men
turned away and walked toward Sodom, but Abraham remained standing in front of
the LORD. 23 Abraham approached and said, “Will you really sweep away the
innocent with the guilty? 24 What if there are fifty innocent people in the
city? Will you really sweep it away and not save the place for the sake of the
fifty innocent people in it? 25 It’s not like you to do this, killing the
innocent with the guilty as if there were no difference. It's not like you!
Will the judge of all the earth not act justly?”
26 The
LORD said, “If I find fifty innocent people in the city of Sodom, I will save
it because of them.”
27 Abraham
responded, “Since I’ve already decided to speak with my Lord, even though I’m
just soil and ash, 28 what if there are five fewer innocent people than fifty?
Will you destroy the whole city over just five?”
The LORD
said, “For the sake of forty-five there, I won’t destroy it.”
29 Once
again Abraham spoke, “What if forty are there?”
The LORD
said, “For the sake of forty, I will do nothing.”
30 He
said, “Don’t be angry with me my Lord, but let me speak. What if thirty are
there?”
The LORD
said, “I won’t do it if I find thirty there.”
31 Abraham
said, “Since I’ve already decided to speak with my Lord, what if twenty are
there?”
The LORD
said, “I won’t do it, for the sake of twenty.”
32 Abraham
said, “Don’t be angry with me, my Lord, but let me speak just once more. What
if there are ten?”
And the
LORD said, “I will not destroy it because of those ten.”
33 When
the LORD finished speaking with Abraham, he left; but Abraham stayed there in
that place.
This is the word of God
For the people of God
Thanks be to God
The conversation has taken a dramatic and
dark turn. And keep in mind, all these events are not far removed from the
events of the Flood, when God destroyed the earth due to humanity’s wickedness
and violence. Our sinfulness unchecked will always lead to pain, suffering, and
injustice. They are all opposites of God’s design for us.
In verse 20, God said to Abraham, “The
cries of injustice from Sodom and Gomorrah are countless, and their sin is very
serious!” The sin in these two cities involved the oppression of others,
implied by “cries of injustice.” God has heard the cries of those injured by
the wickedness of these two cities.
God continued in verse 21, “I will go down
now to examine the cries of injustice that have reached me. Have they really
done all this? If not, I want to know.” Our God is all-knowing, so He knows and
sees what is happening in these two cities. These social atrocities being
committed have not escaped His sight. He is just. The language used by God is
to help Abraham understand He is not basing His sovereign decision on hearsay
from anyone else but Himself as a witness.
Verses 23 through 32 share an incredible
dialogue between Abraham and God. The main highlight of this negotiation is in
verse 23 when Abraham says, “Will you sweep away the innocent with the guilty?”
Abraham knows God through his faith, and what he knows about God cannot be
reconciled with the judgment mentioned to him. God is good and just, but to
Abraham that does not mesh with the God he knows.
Throughout Abraham’s conversation with God,
he is humble. In verse 27 Abraham said, “I’m just soil and ash.” Some
translations use “dust” instead of “soil.” Abraham is acknowledging he is dirt
with God’s breath in his lungs, with no right to be making such demands. But
Abraham also recognizes God as a Father who allows His children to ask such
things.
The negotiations end in verses 31 and 32,
with God agreeing to spare Sodom and Gomorrah if ten people can be found.
Abraham is dirt and Sovereign God agrees to spare the cities based on Abraham’s
boldness to request. Hebrews 11 has Abraham listed in the Hall of Fame of Faith
amongst other important people of faith, but Abraham is an incredibly flawed
person. But God agrees to this deal with Abraham based on faith.
If we were to continue reading, Sodom and
Gomorrah are destroyed with fire from the sky. It would appear that God did not
find ten righteous people there, but Lot and his family were spared. The sin of
humanity reached a point that the most just thing our holy God could do was
annihilate it.
On that cheerful note, what does this have
to teach us? God sees the oppression of sin today as He did in the cities of
Sodom and Gomorrah. What is keeping God from destroying it? Those who are
righteous. They are living in the world, witnessing to it, holding it
accountable, interceding on its behalf, and demonstrating to it the Kingdom of
God. Those people are you and me.
In Matthew 24:21-22, Jesus said, “There
will be great suffering such as the world has never again see. If that time
weren’t shortened, nobody would be rescued. But for the sake of the ones whom
God chose, that time will be cut short.” Jesus, who is fully human and fully
God, is telling us there will be a time when humanity’s sinfulness is so great
that the suffering will be unbearable. This is when Jesus will return to rescue
those who have faith in Him. But at the same time, Jesus will bring the world
to judgment. It will be a time when the wickedness and violence of human hearts
are so intense, that God will not be able to bring it about for good. Like
Sodom and Gomorrah, and also like the time before the Flood. Only this time it
is impossibly worse.
What this teaches us is a terrible truth,
despite our best efforts of holy living and attempts to influence the culture
of the world, the human nature saturated in sin will not be cleansed. This
world is not salvageable. Despite all the goodness in the world and at work in
and through believers, the evilness will not be pursued.
With so many mass shootings, genocides, sex
trafficking, and so many more human atrocities going on now, what is God
waiting on? The suffering is intense right now, why is God lingering? If the
culture war is unwinnable based on end-time prophecy, why would God not win it
now?
This is the good news our passage in
Genesis teaches us. Abraham succeeded in his negotiations with God because
there was the possibility of ten righteous people being found. God’s delay is
telling us there is hope. Not a hope of winning a culture war or succeeding in
outlawing sin, but in rescuing individuals from remaining victims of it.
That is our mission! Our mission is to
rescue individuals who might be incredibly flawed, but their hearts are open to
the message of Jesus. There might be ten, twenty, thirty, forty, fifty, or
millions more! We are to have faith in Jesus like Abraham had faith in God to
believe they are out there in our community.
We find them through prayer. We find them
through living holy lives that intersect with those living in brokenness and
hopelessness. Our holy lives are grounded firmly in Jesus and holding to His
kingdom values, while simultaneously reaching out in love to anyone and
everyone that we can.
As we reflect on Abraham's boldness to intercede for
Sodom, let us consider our own role in the world today. Just as Abraham stood
in the gap, pleading for mercy, we too are called to stand as
intercessors—praying for our community, our neighbors, and our families. The
story of Sodom and Gomorrah reminds us that God is just, yet His mercy is
great, and He listens to the prayers of the faithful.
Even in the midst of a world filled with injustice
and sin, God has placed us here as lights, to live holy lives that bear witness
to His kingdom. Our mission is not to win culture wars but to reach
individuals, to rescue those who are lost, and to lead them to the hope that is
found in Jesus Christ.
So, as we go from this place, let us commit to being
those who pray fervently, live righteously, and love deeply. Let us trust that,
even in the darkest times, God is still at work through His people. And let us
never lose sight of the hope that there are still those out there who need to
hear the good news, who need to experience the love and grace of Jesus.
Today, I invite you to be that person of faith, to stand in the gap for others, and to commit to the mission of reaching those who are lost. The world may seem beyond saving, but God’s grace is sufficient, and through Him, lives can be transformed. Will you be that intercessor? Will you be the one who stands in the gap? The altar is open for you to come and commit to this mission today.
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