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- (Genesis) 33 Abraham Visited By His Friend; Or The Intimacies Of The Divine Fellowship
(Genesis) 33 - Abraham Visited by His Friend; or the Intimacies of the Divine Fellowship
S. Lewis Johnson

S. Lewis Johnson Jr. (1915–2004). Born on September 13, 1915, in Birmingham, Alabama, S. Lewis Johnson Jr. was a Presbyterian preacher, theologian, and Bible teacher known for his expository preaching. Raised in a Christian home, he earned a BA from the College of Charleston and worked in insurance before sensing a call to ministry. He graduated from Dallas Theological Seminary (ThM, 1946; ThD, 1949) and briefly studied at the University of Edinburgh. Ordained in the Presbyterian Church, he pastored churches in Mobile, Alabama, and Dallas, Texas, notably at Believers Chapel, where he served from 1959 to 1977. A professor at Dallas Theological Seminary and later Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, he emphasized dispensationalism and Reformed theology. Johnson recorded over 3,000 sermons, freely available online, covering books like Romans and Hebrews, and authored The Old Testament in the New. Married to Mary Scovel in 1940, he had two children and died on January 28, 2004, in Dallas. He said, “The Bible is God’s inspired Word, and its authority is final in all matters of faith and practice.”
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the speaker begins by emphasizing the importance of prayer and petitioning to God. He then turns to the story of Genesis chapter 18, focusing on the visit of a heavenly company to Abraham. The speaker highlights the significance of this incident in the history of Abraham and the development of divine revelation. He also mentions a personal anecdote about a man named Mr. Hyde who had a powerful encounter with God during prayer. The sermon concludes with a prayer for confession, forgiveness, and salvation, and a plea for God's grace to live a pleasing life.
Sermon Transcription
Will you turn with me to Genesis chapter 18 and will you listen as I read this 18th chapter. Genesis chapter 18 verse 1 through verse 33. Now you'll remember that in chapter 17 the Lord appeared to Abram, confirmed the covenant, and gave him the sign of the covenant, the rite of circumcision, and also announced that it would be Sarah who would be the mother of the promised seed. So now still speaking about Abram or Abraham we read in chapter 18 verse 1, now the Lord appeared to him by the oaks of Mamre while he was sitting at the tent door, at the tent door in the heat of the day. And when he lifted up his eyes and looked, behold, three men were standing opposite him. And when he saw them, he ran from the tent door to meet them and bowed himself to the earth and said, My Lord, if now I have found favor in your sight, please do not pass your servant by. Please let a little water be brought and wash your feet and rest yourselves under the tree and I will bring a piece of bread that you may refresh yourselves. After that you may go on since you have visited your servant. And they said, So do as you have said. The word translated sense in verse 5 may not be accurately translated by sense and I don't want to get into the details of it, but it appears that he recognizes this at least as a providential visit. Whether, however, he recognized the beings as being supernatural beings, that of course is something that it is really probably impossible for us to be certain about. Verse 6. So Abraham hurried into the tent to Sarah and said, Quickly prepare three measures of fine flour, knead it, and make bread cakes. Abraham also ran to the herd and took a tender and choice calf and gave it to the servant. Some of the commentators, in fact some of the Jewish commentators, Rashi, for example, has said that the word na'er which is used here for servant, that word also means youth in Hebrew, is probably a reference to Ishmael and was one of the means by which Abraham trained him. Gave it to the servant or to the youth and he hurried to prepare it. And he took curds and milk and the calf which he had prepared and placed it before them. And he was standing by them under the tree as they ate. Then they said to him, Where is Sarah your wife? And he said, Behold, in the tent. And he said, I will surely return to you at this time next year, and behold Sarah your wife shall have a son. And Sarah was listening at the tent door which was behind him. Now Abraham and Sarah were old, advanced in age. Sarah was past childbearing. And Sarah left to herself, saying, After I have become old, shall I have pleasure, my Lord, being old also? And the Lord said to Abraham, Now notice it's the Lord now and not simply the man, but the Lord. So this is a theophany, an appearance of God. And the Lord said to Abraham, Why did Sarah laugh, saying, Shall I indeed bear a child when I am so old? Is anything too difficult for the Lord? At the appointed time I will return to you at this time next year, and Sarah shall have a son. Sarah denied it, however, saying, I did not laugh, for she was afraid. And he said, No, but you did laugh. Then the men rose up from there and looked down toward Sodom, and Abraham was walking with them to send them off. And the Lord said, Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do? Since Abraham will surely become a great and mighty nation, and in him all the nations of the earth will be blessed. For I have chosen him. Now if you have a Bible with a marginal note, you will notice that the word translated chosen is really the word that normally is translated in most of its occurrences, no. So literally it is, For I have known him. But now this is a correct rendering, because the force of this know is the knowledge of intimate choice. And we'll talk about that in a moment when we get to this in the exposition. But notice, For I have known him. Now of course God knows everybody, but there is a special sense in which he knows when he chooses. So for I have chosen him in order that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing righteousness and justice, in order that the Lord may bring upon Abraham what he has spoken about him. And the Lord said, The outcry of Sodom and Gomorrah is indeed great, and their sin is exceedingly grave. I will go down now and see if they have done entirely according to its outcry which has come to me, and if not, I will know. Now this is anthropocentric language, that is, language according to human doings. Because of course he didn't have to go down to see what was happening there to know what was happening there. But the desire of this is to show that when the Lord acts, he acts in justice. And so he goes down to take a good look, and the impression you get is that he's very careful before he determines to do what he is going to do. Then the men turned away from there and went toward Sodom while Abraham was still standing before the Lord. The Masoretes, who are responsible for the vocalization of the Hebrew text, have noted at this point that they found the text reading not, and Abraham was standing before the Lord, but, and the Lord was standing before Abraham, but that seemed to be a rather improper thing for them. And so to correct that untidy looking clause, the Lord standing before Abraham, they transferred it, transferred the subjects and objects, and so we read while Abraham was still standing before the Lord, which seems more proper. And Abraham came near and said, Will thou indeed sweep away the righteous with the wicked? Suppose there are fifty righteous within the city. Will thou indeed sweep it away and not spare the place for the sake of the fifty righteous who are in it? Far be it from thee to do such a thing, to slay the righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous and the wicked are treated alike. Far be it from thee. Shall not the judge of all the earth deal justly? So the Lord said, If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then I will spare the whole place on their account. And Abraham answered and said, Now behold, I have ventured to speak to the Lord, although I am but dust and ashes. That's an interesting expression, because you see, he is expressing the humanity of a person. We are dust in the beginning, we are ashes in the end. And so we are not very much before the Lord. Although I am but dust and ashes. Suppose the fifty righteous are lacking five. Will thou destroy the whole city because of five? And he said, I will not destroy it if I find forty-five there. And he spoke to him yet again and said, Suppose forty are found there. And he said, I will not do it on account of the forty. Then he said, O may the Lord not be angry, and I shall speak. Suppose thirty are found there. And he said, I will not do it if I find thirty there. And he said, Now behold, I have ventured to speak to the Lord. Suppose twenty are found there. This sounds like haggling, doesn't it? But it really is not. As one of the commentators says, it's exploring. Exploring God's attitude toward the situation. So suppose thirty are found there. And he said, I will not do it if I find thirty there. And he said, Now behold, I have ventured to speak to the Lord. Suppose twenty are found there. And he said, I will not destroy it on account of the twenty. Then he said, O may the Lord not be angry, and I will, shall speak only this once. That was his mistake, I guess. Suppose ten are found there. And he said, I will not destroy it on account of the ten. And I just wonder what might have happened if he had said, Suppose two. Or one. Or lot was there. And lot, of course, was upon his heart, no doubt. But we read that the interview ended. And you'll notice the Lord ended it, too. As soon as he had finished speaking to Abraham, the Lord departed and Abraham returned to his place. May God bless this reading of his word. Let's... Our subject for this morning in the exposition of the book of Genesis is Abraham visited by his friend, or the intimacies of divine fellowship. We have just had one marvelous theophany in the seventeenth chapter, and now in the eighteenth chapter that is followed by another. But it is of a slightly different kind, for in chapter seventeen the Lord appeared evidently in glorious form, but here in human form. What we are seeing is really a measure of the fulfillment of John chapter one in verse eighteen, even in Old Testament times. In the prologue to the gospel, John wrote, you will remember, No man hath seen God at any time, the only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he has declared him. Now we are certain, of course, that the primary reference of that is to the incarnation of the Lord Jesus, but in the light of these appearances of the angel of Jehovah and the identification of the angel with the Lord Jesus, it's clear that there was a declaration of the eternal God in the Old Testament through these theophanies. Micah may be referring to that when he writes his famous Christmas prophecy, Thou Bethlehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall he come forth to me, who shall be ruler in Israel, whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting. The root translated, out of thee shall he come forth, is the same as the root of goings forth, whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting, and it has been the opinion of a number of Bible students that Micah alludes to the fact that while there is one great coming forth when our Lord was born in the manger in Bethlehem, nevertheless there were anticipations of it in the Old Testament times. It is an event, of course, of wide appeal, and we are therefore not surprised that we find it in the Word of God, for the visits of sovereigns to citizens' homes is of quite a bit of interest, even in 1979, when little sovereigns visit homes even in the United States of America. This one, of course, is one of the most surprising because the God of heaven is the guest of the patriarch Abraham. The Lord Jesus was delighted to visit homes incognito. He told Zacchaeus, Zacchaeus, come down from the tree. I've got to lodge in your house today. And then, of course, he lodged with the disciples on the Emmaus Road after the journey from Jerusalem to Emmaus. So here is one of the events in which the eternal God sits at the table with human beings, and in this case, Abram and his family. I think as we look over Genesis chapter 18, probably the part of it that stands out most of all in our minds is the latter part, that great antecessary prayer which Abraham prays in behalf of Sodom. This is surely one of the great biblical passages on prayer. We like to think of theology as the queen of the sciences. That's what it's been called down through the years. Well, if that is true, then prayer is the queen of the experiences. It certainly is a royal experience. John Calvin regarded prayer as the true proof of the fact that one was a genuine Christian. He has some words concerning prayer as a proof of faith. He says, the principal exercise which the children of God have is to pray, for in this way they give a true proof of their faith. When a person has been converted, one of the first things that he does, in fact the very first thing that he does, for when the work of regeneration takes place in his heart and he turns to the Lord and receives the Lord Jesus as his own Savior, that is an act of petition as a general rule. So the first act of the new life is to turn to the Lord in faith and in prayer. I think one of the most interesting things in the book of Acts to me is the way in which the apostle Paul was identified for Ananas by the angel. Ananas got the message that he was to contact Paul. He was not too happy over that because Paul was a noted persecutor of the faithful, but he was to be identified by the fact that, as the book of Acts says, behold he prayeth. So that's the sign of a true Christian, one who prays. It's one of the evidences that there is genuine life, prayer. Now prayer persistently, of course, is the force of this passage, but prayer is one of those experiences of the Christian. It's like breathing, which mark him out as being alive. A prayerful life is the powerful life, someone has said, and the prayerless life is always a powerless life. Mary, Queen of Scots, said, I fear John Knox's prayers more than an army of 10,000 men. One of our modern liberal men has said, our generation with pride shattered and body bruised longs for sanctuary, for fruitfulness, for an abiding home. Prayer is the true mesa. Why jibe at prayer as an escape? The jibe foolishly assumes that we are self-sufficient. In a world where microbes are stronger than men, where sorrow waits, death stalks with violence, and an aroused conscience is a cave of furies, to pretend that we need no refuge is only a pretense. So those who make fun of prayer are really the ones that are to be pitted. Stonewall Jackson. Have you heard of Stonewall Jackson? Well, General Jackson said this, I have so fixed the habit of prayer in my mind that I never raise a glass of water to my lips without asking God's blessing. Never seal a letter without putting a word of prayer under the seal. Never take a letter from the post without a brief sending of my thoughts heavenward. Never change my classes in the lecture room without a minute's petition for the cadets who go out and for those who come in. And, of course, one of the great things about prayer is that God hears our petitions and answers them on both odd and even days. Now let's turn to Genesis chapter 18, and I want you to notice the visit of this heavenly company first. We'll spend a little time on the first eight verses. We could treat this incident in several different ways. We could look at it simply as an historical incident, because it has some importance for the history of the development of the divine revelation. It holds a place in the history of the life of Abraham. It is further, it is a further step on the way to the accomplishment of the promised seed, the birth of Isaac. Or we could treat it morally. That is the characteristic of modern theology and of popular preaching in our liberal Protestant churches. The tendency is to take Old Testament passages and treat them as simply passages that have moral application. Now that is a valid way to treat the passages of Holy Scripture, because we do have the lessons of patience, the lessons of reverence, the lessons of humility, the lessons of truthfulness, the lessons of faith, and other lessons, even the lesson of what a wife should call her husband, as we see in a moment or two. So that's a valid approach, but of course it misses often the major point that we want to be sure to talk about in the study of the Word of God, and that is the spiritual or theological significance of the passages. And then as we look at this passage in that way, we will see that it is a passage that points on to the Messiah by virtue of the theophany, even intimating such doctrines as the Incarnation, the Atonement, the prophetic priestly ministries of our Lord Jesus Christ. Well we'll try to combine some of these things as we go through the passage. It was siesta time, it was noon time, and Abraham was resting under a tree near the opening of his tent. And no doubt he was thinking about those promises that had been given him, and specifically perhaps about the promise that has now been elaborated to include Sarah as the mother of the seed, just in the last chapter that was given. And suddenly he looks up and there are three men standing before him. The text does not say he saw them coming down the road and watched them. It does not say a thing about how they arrived there, and that in itself is rather striking. Suddenly they were there. And we must also point out that while it says that they were there, and that there were three men there, we are not to think of this as a reference to the Trinity. For we learn in chapter 19 and verse 1, and we'll take this up in our next study next week, the Lord willing, that two of these men were angels, but they are in angelic form. Remember in the New Testament there is exhortation given that we should exercise hospitality before some have entertained angels unawares. Well, this is the occasion of that New Testament comment. So the New Testament use of the Old Testament gives us an idea of the meaning of this passage also. So he looks up and he sees the three standing there, and in true Eastern fashion he feels it absolutely necessary to give them the greatest of hospitality. And he does it in such a way that one wonders if there may not have been some feeling at least that these men were sort of special. For notice what we read in verse 2, he looked and he saw them, two different Hebrew words there, the second one meaning more he saw and understood something about them, but he ran from the tent door to meet them. Verse 6, Abraham hurried into the tent and he told Sarah, quickly prepare three measures of fine flour. And then in verse 7, Abraham ran to the herd. He's a man a hundred years of age now, and you see this old man running around with his garments flowing in the sun around noon. It's something special, and he hurried to prepare it. So there is a great deal of hurried activity suggested. Now in spite of all of this, however, we do not have any evidence that Abraham realized at this point that these men were more than human beings. So we'll just attribute it to the Bedouin hospitality. One of the ancient men who has written about Bedouin hospitality described Arabs as dining at their tent doors in order to invite passersby. So the result is that Abraham prepares a, he calls it just a little piece of bread, but as you can see, it's a very sumptuous repast that he provides for the three men. That is, Sarah provides for them. And then they agree that they will partake of the piece of bread, that modest description. Well, let's look now at the challenge to Sarah's faith that proceeds out of the incident. In verse 9 through verse 15, someone has said God never leaves us in his debt. That is, he always gives us more. So then he is always giving more and more. And of course, that is what happens here. And the opening of the ninth chapter signals something that is going to be new for Sarah at least. Then they said to him, where is Sarah your wife? Now that's, that must have aroused Abraham's suspicions because how did they know he had a wife? And how did they know her name? Well, he doesn't say anything about the effect that question had upon him, but it must have been at least a surprise to him. Where is Sarah your wife? And he said, behold, in the tent. And then the Lord said, I will surely return to you at this time next year. And behold, Sarah, your wife, shall have a son. And Sarah was listening at the tent door which was behind him. Now Abraham and Sarah were old, advanced in age. Sarah was past child bearing. A great deal of stress is laid upon this. Abram's 100, Sarah's 90. She is past the time of child bearing. She had already had her change of life. But even then, she had been barren during the age in which it might have been thought that she would be able to bear children. So this is emphasized in order to stress that Isaac is a child of promise, a supernatural child. Well, we can all sympathize with Sarah. We read in Sarah left within herself. After I become old, shall I have pleasure, my Lord, being old also? Now there is something I think rather interesting about this because I have no doubt in my mind that when Abraham in the preceding chapter in that experience of that theophany heard that Sarah was to be the mother of the seed the long promised seed, the first thing that he must have said when he came back to the tent was, Sarah, you're to be the mother of the seed, not Hagar. And evidently the time lapse between the first theophany and this theophany has not been enough for this great man of faith to convince his wife of the truth of that promise. She's still doubtful. Now any man who has not been able to convince his wife of something can surely empathize with Abraham. In fact, it may well be that he was sitting out at siesta time thinking of how he could possibly bring Sarah to the place of faith. Now when I used to preach the word of God in the presence of my wife, I frequently got a similar kind of response. And in fact, occasionally she would tell others that. I think she liked to do that. She liked to say that, well, he may be convinced of it, but he hasn't convinced me yet. She always said that with a rather superior kind of attitude too, I thought. So I empathize with Abraham. He's tried to bring home this message of Sarah as the mother of the seed, but Sarah has not been responsive. Now she laughs. I think that's mingled doubt and delight. In fact, she refers to the relationship in a purely sensual way. We read here, shall I have pleasure? Incidentally, that is an acknowledgement of the fact that the life of sex between two people is properly a pleasurable thing. The Old Testament is not puritanical as the modern age thinks wrongly, incidentally, of the Puritans. But she said, shall I have pleasure? Now you can see that while she is correct, so far as that is concerned, nevertheless the depth of her penetration at this point is very shallow and superficial. She does not, it appears to me, have any great interest in the covenant. It is purely the sensual side of the thing that impresses her. And so she says, shall I have pleasure, my Lord being old also? It's not a rejoicing in the fact that she is to be the mother of the promised covenantal seed. So Sarah is a person who evidently has at this point a rather shallow understanding of spiritual things. But yet, men notice this. Notice what she calls Abraham. Shall I have pleasure, my Lord being old also? Now wives, that's what you ought to call your husband. My Lord. Now I know what you're going to think. You'll say, well, that's what Sarah did. But what I do is something else. And furthermore, we're living in New Testament times. And in New Testament times, we are living in the age of equality. The idea of calling my husband Lord, well, that's absurd. It is absurd. I wonder if you'd have been happy around the apostles. Because the apostle Peter read this passage. And I'm going to read it for you. You needn't look it up. But it's in the third chapter, first Peter, in which we read the fifth verse. For in this way in former times the holy women also, who hoped in God, used to adorn themselves being submissive to their own husbands. Thus Sarah obeyed Abraham, calling him Lord. And you have become her children if you do what is right without being frightened by any fear. I must confess, I was never able to obtain my wife's address of me as Lord. But it is an ideal for which we look, men. It is, however, a true illustration of the proper relationship that exists between a man and wife. Submission on the one hand, reverential submission, and on the other hand, the kind of love that Christ had for the church. So my Lord being old, and the Lord replies, he said to Abraham, why did Sarah laugh? Now Sarah laughed within herself, the text says. He didn't hear any audible laughing. And so when we read, why did Sarah laugh, saying, shall I indeed bear a child when I am so old? He not only heard the laugh, that inward laugh, in Sarah's heart, but he even knew the tenor and the purpose of that laugh. In other words, it was not only an audible laugh to the Lord, but he also knew the intelligence that was lying back of it, the things that she was thinking. Now that must have meant something to Sarah. And I wonder if it challenged her at this point to have a faith that was much deeper than the superficial faith that she possessed at the moment. One thing we can say, that this superficiality of Sarah elicited from the Lord, one of the great sayings of the Word of God. For we read in the fourteenth verse, is anything too difficult for the Lord? Now let me stop and just point out one thing that I think is rather interesting. The word translated difficult is the translation of a Hebrew root which means wonderful, wonder, wonderful. It is the same root that is used for the name of the in Isaiah chapter nine and verse six. His name shall be called wonderful. So what he said was, is anything too wonderful? That is, is there anything that provokes too much wonder for the Lord? All of his actions are wonder-provoking, and there is nothing that is too wonder-provoking for him. He can do anything. So this is really one of the great sayings of the Word of God, and does not have any answer at all in the Bible, except possibly the answer that Jeremiah gave when he, reasoning about this, in the book of Jeremiah, answered by saying, or made the positive statement, there is nothing too difficult for the Lord. So the idea that God is able to produce a seed out of a woman who is past the age of childbearing and an old man 100 years, that is not beyond him. The wonders that he performs encompasses something so contrary to nature as that, for he controls nature. Now, we read that Sarah, she must have pulled the flap back at this point, and she denied that she had left. She denied that that was in her mind. And we read that she said, I did not laugh, for she was afraid. And he said, no, but you did laugh. Now, I think that's rather interesting too, because the first impulse of guilt with us is often deception. That's the very first thing that we try to do, deceive those with whom we are dealing. In the Garden of Eden, when God came down into the garden in the cool of the day and asked, where art thou, Adam? And then a little conversation ensued, and the Lord asked why they had done what they had done. He quickly turned and laid the blame at the feet of the woman. And the woman laid the blame at the feet or at the body of the serpent. So the tendency of all of us when we are caught in our sin is to try to deceive. That's characteristic of human nature. So she said, I did not, but he said, you did. Well, there follows then the passage in which we have the intercession of Abraham for Sodom. The Lord said that he would not destroy the land because the iniquity of the Amorites was not yet full. He would not yet give it to Israel, but it is clear that the cities of the fair Pentapolis, or the five cities around the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, their iniquity was full. Sodom and Gomorrah had seen the power of the Lord in Abraham's victory over those kings, and so they had little excuse for not believing in Jehovah. And so we go on to read now the circumstances of this great intercessory prayer. The Lord said, shall I? Well, the men rose up from there and looked down towards Sodom and Abraham was walking with them to send them off. And the Lord then spoke and he said, shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do? Abraham had been promoted to a very distinguished position and in the light of this distinguished position of relationship to the Lord, it was proper in the mind of God for the purposes of God to be revealed to him. The psalmist, remember, said the secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will show them his covenant. Those who are the friends of our Lord Jesus Christ are those who do his will, the believers who do his will, but it is to the friends of our Lord that he reveals himself. Now that is a very important and of course a very privileged place, to be a friend of our Lord Jesus Christ and therefore the recipient of the revelation or illumination that comes from one who is the friend of God. So Abram is a friend of God and God says, shall I hide from Abraham that which I am about to do? Since Abraham is going to become a great nation, all the nations are going to be blessed in him, for I have chosen him, for I have known him. I'd like to stop for just a moment and say a word about that because you may have a version which says, for I have known him, but the New American Standard Bible is undoubtedly correct in rendering this, for I have chosen him. If it had been rendered, for I have known him, it still would mean the same thing because it is clear that the knowledge of which he's speaking is not the knowledge simply of the existence of someone, for he knows the existence of all. It's a special sense in which this knowledge is in the heart and mind of God. For I have known him. Now in the Old Testament, this word yathai is a word that more than once means the knowledge of intimate relationship based upon a choice. Let me give you a text. Amos chapter 3 verse 2. The Lord's speaking to the children of Israel. You only have I known of all the nations on the earth. Now God knows all nations, but he says you only have I known. So it is in a special sense that he speaks and of course the context makes it plain that he's speaking of his choice of Israel. It is only Israel whom he has chosen of all the nations of the earth. In other words, it is a word that refers to his distinguishing grace in his election. He has chosen them alone. Now when we say in the Bible that we believe in the doctrine of election, we do not really tell anybody much at all. We only tell them that we read the Bible. And so we must ask a second question. If you believe in election, what kind of election do you believe in? What do you mean by your election? Because there are many ways in which we may understand election, but two primary ones. There are those who seeking to escape the idea that God sovereignly elects have said that God looks down through the years and out of his foreknowledge determines to choose those who will believe in him. In other words, he sees down through the ages of time those who will believe, such as I, and he selects them. And they say yes, I believe in the doctrine of election, and their election is the conditional doctrine of election according to foreseen faith. That's very popular. That's the general idea of election in evangelical churches and most of the evangelical churches in this area of Dallas. That exists. People say yes, we believe in the doctrine of election, but if you ask them what do you mean, out will come conditional election. The Bible teaches, however, election as unconditional. That is an election based upon the sovereign mercy of God, his sovereign good pleasure. He elects some, passes by others, because he elects according to his good pleasure. That is unconditional election. Now that is what the Bible teaches. It is clear the other doctrine is a very bad doctrine, because it's a doctrine based on an inferior view of God. Let me show you how. It in effect says that God does not know something until he looks down through the years to determine it. In other words, he looked down through the years and he saw that Lewis Johnson would believe, and having come to the knowledge of that, he said, goody, I will choose him. I will love him. Well, now we have then a God who has gained in knowledge, and if he has gained in knowledge, then it is clear he was not omniscient. And if he was not omniscient, then he is not the God of Scripture. He is a more limited kind of God. Thus, the idea that you have concerning election affects your idea of God. People think this is only a theological point. It's not only a relationship to the Lord, because it affects the way in which you look at God. You will have an entirely different view of God if you believe in sovereign electing grace from the view that you have of God when you think of him as a God who does his work conditionally. So it is important. He says, for I have chosen him. In the New Testament when we read whom he foreknew, he predestinated. How then are we to understand foreknowledge there? Notice it does not say he foreknew what we would do, but he foreknew us. Well, it is clear then that that foreknowledge is the foreknowledge of intimate choice. It means to enter into the relationship so intimate that what emerges is an election based upon his good pleasure. To know someone in the physical sense in Scripture is to enter into the closest of physical relationships. Adam knew Eve his wife. The intimacy of personal relationship. So in the Bible when we read of foreknowledge, we do not mean that God looked down through the years and saw who would believe and then acted accordingly, but he foreknew an individual, that is he entered into a relationship of election, selecting them because of his sovereign good pleasure. And so we are elect as a result of that. And we should be grateful that the love of God has been set upon us in that way. I have chosen him. So friendship, the friendship between Abraham and the Lord is the product of sovereign electing grace. Now I want you to notice another thing. It says, I have chosen him in order that he may command his children and his household after him. You thought perhaps, not thinking, you thought that God elected people simply to stir up the minds of his enemies and make them mad at him. You thought that perhaps he elected us in this way in order that we might simply sit down and do nothing about it. Oh no. He elected Abraham. He chose him in order that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord. This is a very revealing word on parental responsibility. And it suggests to us an important point about the purpose of God's divine electing choice or divine electing grace. So he was chosen in order to train up his children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. This past week I received a very concerned call from someone in the congregation at Believers Chapel, and I was very grateful for it. And in this call, I was told that the elders did not understand the condition of many of the young people in Believers Chapel, which of course I would grant. That's entirely possible. It's not something that we like. And what I'm going to say is not in any way to be understood as an attempt to avoid some responsibility. But I do want to say this, that if, as I was told, there is a great deal of alcoholism, drug addiction, or traffic in drugs, some sexual immorality among young people, in some ways attached to Believers Chapel. Now of course if the elders know about specific cases, they will do their best to deal scripturally with those things. And we do acknowledge that we have made many errors and mistakes, and no doubt have sinned greatly in our own responsibilities to the congregation. But I want to suggest to you that the ultimate responsibility rests with the father of the children. Now you can see that he says, I have chosen him that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord. The reason that we do have these problems in our congregation is because our fathers, we as fathers, have not assumed our responsibility. It is not our wife's responsibility to train up our children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, primarily. Of course we want godly women to train up children. But it is the father's responsibility. It is his responsibility to be the Bible teacher of his children. As Mr. Prowse often says, it's a great statement, it's almost inspired. He said the best Bible teacher that anyone will ever have is his own father. How true that is. And the responsibility lies right there. And so I want to exhort you men who may have neglected your responsibilities. There is hope. As you turn to the Lord and begin to assume responsibility and begin to study the word of God and assume the headship of the house, your wife may even call you Lord one of these days, if you do your part. So Abram is chosen with a view to a very practical kind of relationship. He's to train up Isaac. And let me assure you that on the human level, had he not done his job, the work of God would have suffered. Isaac comes along and it's Abraham who trains Isaac into becoming the meditative kind of man that he did. And it's Isaac who trained Jacob and so on down the way until finally the promised seed did come. The content of the prayer I can only allude to. It's a very interesting thing. I'm sure that you know about all that I would want to say about it. It's the most remarkable example of intercessory prayer in the Bible. Some have said, prompted no doubt by an anxiety for lot and also a concern for the name of the Lord because he knew that some, if God destroyed these cities, would say the God of Abraham is a very harsh God. He is not a just God because he punishes by this extraordinary kind of judgment and it doesn't seem to make any difference whether there are righteous people there or not. He just punishes. So he has a sense of regard for the honor of the name of God. The appeal is not to covenant grace, as you can see, but to judicial equity. So he doesn't haggle with God. He's exploring the nature of God and trying to put together the mercy of God and the justice of God. He prays six times. It's interesting it's That's the number of man. He ceased asking before God stopped giving. I cannot help but contrast this with Elijah's prayer in first Kings chapter 18. After the great victory on Mount Carmel, he had already announced it was going to rain soon. He went up on the mountain. He told Ahab to eat and get ready because there was a big shower coming. He got down on his knees. Elijah put his head between his knees and he told his servant, go out and take a look. He was on the top of the mountain. The servant went out, came back, and he said he didn't see a thing. Elijah said, go again. He went and looked a second time. He came back. There's nothing there. He said, go again. And he came back and he said, go again. And he came back again and he said, go again. For until seven times the text of Scripture says, seven, that's the number of perfection. That's the number that signifies a persistent, a prayer of importunity that received its answer. And finally the servant came back and said, there's a little cloud out there about the size of a man's hand. Elijah said, get things, get ready and let's go. It's going to have, it's going to be a downpour. And that, of course, is what happened. Now, we do not read that Abram prayed that seventh time. I wonder what would have happened if he had prayed the seventh time. Of course, but he did not. We leave it at this. His prayers were answered to some extent because Lot and some of his family were saved. P. T. Forsythe was one of the great theologians of the earlier part of the 20th century. He once said, it's the will of God that we should bend his will to ours through prayer. That, of course, is not true. We do not bend God's will to our will through prayer. As a matter of fact, speaking from the divine standpoint, prayer does not change things. Prayer only changes things from the human standpoint. God is not changed by our persuasiveness in prayer. We do not move him to change his mind. And so when we use the expression prayer changes things, that's a very, very misleading expression. It's best that we not use it at all, in my opinion, because you see, answers are not wrenched from a reluctant God by importunity. As a matter of fact, promises and divine purposes antedate the praying by the sovereign will of God. Prayer, however, is the means by which we lay hold of blessings already promised to us and already determined to be ours. That's why we pray in confidence and with assurance that we're going to be blessed by God, because it is by means of prayer that we receive the promises that have been given to us. We don't change his mind. We simply receive what he's already promised and determined that shall be ours through the experience of prayer by which we enter into relationship to the Lord. Well, our time is up. I must stop. It's remarkable the influence that one man or a minority has on the Lord from the human standpoint. And it's also remarkable how much the ungodly owe to the presence of saints in the world. But this passage, most of all, is a great incentive to persistent prayer. Persistent prayer is proper when we have received a delay in answer, or that is when God has not answered our prayer, either by a yes or a no. They are the seed of our discipline and they deepen the channel of our natures and enable us to grow in the relationship that we have to the Lord. I'm afraid many of us don't know anything more about prayer than the evening prayer of that sleepy little girl who prayed, now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep. And when he hollers, let him go, eenie meenie miney moe. Praying hard was one of the great prayer warriors, American missionary of the earlier part of the twentieth century. Wilbur Chapman, one of the best known of the evangelists, had a contact with him in Britain. He was in a meeting and someone said, praying hard is going to be praying. And he said there was a tremendous transformation in the meeting, so far as he could tell, and a number of people responded. And he said afterwards to Mr. Hard that he would like to have Mr. Hard pray for him. And so, shortly after the meeting, Mr. Hard came by his room and turned the, walked in, locked the door, dropped down on his knees by the side of Mr. Chapman, and he said for five minutes he didn't say a word. He said, I could hear my own heart thumping, and I could hear his heart beating, and I felt hot tears running down my face. I knew I was with God, he said. And then finally Mr. Hard spoke and all he said was, oh God. And then he said he was silent for five more minutes. And then it seemed as if they all real, or they both realized that they were in the presence of the Lord, and he began to pray with petitions that were petitions such as he had never heard before. Mr. Chapman said he rose from his knees realizing for the first time what real prayer was like. The best prayers often have more groans than words. And I would think that we Christians have tremendous need for that kind of prayer. May God give us the experience of persistent, important prayer for the glory of God. If you're here this morning and you have never believed in Jesus Christ, you don't even have the right to come and receive from him until you have come through the Lord Jesus to receive the forgiveness of sins. May God so bring you to the conviction of your sin and the conviction that Christ has died for sin that you receive as a free gift the forgiveness of sins and offer the first prayer, the movement of the soul out to God in thanksgiving from regeneration for the forgiveness of sins through Jesus Christ. May today, may this morning be the time that you take that step by the grace of God. So if you're here this morning, come to Christ. Put your trust in him. Turn from your sin and iniquity. Come to repentance and faith and know the forgiveness of sins and the wonderful privilege of approaching the Lord God through Jesus Christ. Let's stand for the benediction. Father, we are so grateful to thee for these wonderful stories which have such important spiritual truth for us. We thank thee that we're able to study the words that the apostles studied and learn some of the lessons that the apostles were taught. Enable us, O God, to respond truly. The sins that have plagued us, O God, bring us to confession and forgiveness and purification and then enable us by thy grace to please thee in our lives. For those here who are lost, O God, work mightily in them to bring them to him whom to know as life eternal. We pray through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(Genesis) 33 - Abraham Visited by His Friend; or the Intimacies of the Divine Fellowship
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S. Lewis Johnson Jr. (1915–2004). Born on September 13, 1915, in Birmingham, Alabama, S. Lewis Johnson Jr. was a Presbyterian preacher, theologian, and Bible teacher known for his expository preaching. Raised in a Christian home, he earned a BA from the College of Charleston and worked in insurance before sensing a call to ministry. He graduated from Dallas Theological Seminary (ThM, 1946; ThD, 1949) and briefly studied at the University of Edinburgh. Ordained in the Presbyterian Church, he pastored churches in Mobile, Alabama, and Dallas, Texas, notably at Believers Chapel, where he served from 1959 to 1977. A professor at Dallas Theological Seminary and later Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, he emphasized dispensationalism and Reformed theology. Johnson recorded over 3,000 sermons, freely available online, covering books like Romans and Hebrews, and authored The Old Testament in the New. Married to Mary Scovel in 1940, he had two children and died on January 28, 2004, in Dallas. He said, “The Bible is God’s inspired Word, and its authority is final in all matters of faith and practice.”