The Chosen People
Romans 9:1-5
Genesis 12
1 Please Pass the Patriarchs
Last week I presented a message called The Right Place at the Right Time. I was using the life story of Jacob in the bible to illustrate how some of us try to put ourselves in what we think is the right place at the right time rather than leave the planning of our lives to God.
We learned that even with all Jacobs scheming and planning God had set aside a right place and a right time to confront Jacob about his life. Jacob had mistakenly thought that he needed to orchestrate his life to fit a certain set of circumstances in order to receive a birthright and a blessing from God. But God met Jacob at a place and at a time that Jacob had not planned. Jacob wrestled with God all night and finally was released at daybreak and was given a new name Israel.
Some of you really enjoyed those facts from Jacobs life so I thought I should use the opportunity to do a series of messages on The Chosen People.
In the coming weeks we will discover how they came to be chosen and just what that involved. We will also look at the origins of the Jewish faith and its leaders so that we can better understand how we are linked to them through Gods covenant as the Chosen People.
These are more teaching messages than preaching messages but they still have lessons that we can all apply to our lives. I am going to try to keep things fresh and interesting as together we retrace our Jewish roots in the Old Testament. Today we say Please Pass the Patriarchs like you would say please pass the salt or the pepper at the table. You will see that the lives of the Patriarchs provide real spice to life.
Last week I was approached by a coworker who is a Christian. He knows I am a preacher so he started a conversation about the Chosen People. He mentioned that old movie The Fiddler on the Roof by Norman Jewison
In that story a peasant farmer living is Eastern Europe at the turn of the 19th century is faced with many problems. His name is Tevye. He has five daughters not sons but five daughters and he is trying to work a dairy farm. He is a Jew and the country he is living in does not like the Jews.
He is dirt poor and life is a constant struggle. His horse constantly goes lame and he has to pull his milk wagon himself to make his deliveries. His wife of 25 years always had hoped for the finer things in life but that was not her destiny. All he wants is good husbands for his five daughters.
Tevye talks to God all the time. He saves his truly intimate conversations with God for the barn. One day while in the barn he looks up and asks God a series of questions. He says.... God I know you made many poor people but would it be such a sin if I had a small fortune? I know we are called the chosen people but once in a while could you choose someone else.
There is a lot of honesty in what this fictional character is saying. For millennia the Jews have suffered oppression, slavery, genocide and many, many more hardships to numerous to list. Yet the Bible records them as being the chosen people.
They and the world sometimes wonder just what they have been chosen for. Were they chosen to be an example of suffering while hanging tenaciously to their faith? Were they chosen as an example of how not to be religious? Were they chosen to be ridiculed for their faith? It does make one wonder.
So who got chosen? Well back to the Bible we see the story unfold in the book of Genesis. God chose Moses to be a prophet and God chose Abram to be the father of Isaac who would be the father of Jacob who would one day be known as Israel.
Many people assume that the Moses is a patriarch of the Jewish faith since he is the one who gave us the Ten Commandments. That is an honest conclusion but it is not the case. Moses is referred to as The Prophet of God or the Deliverer. He delivered the people from slavery and delivered Gods word or law to the people.
The Jewish Virtual Library records Moses as a prophet and not a patriarch of the faith.
In Genesis 12 we read the calling of Abram and the making of the Abrahamic Covenant. The calling is really the act of God choosing a person to follow Him. That person is Abraham.
The covenant is the promise God makes to all mankind through Abraham. God is choosing for himself a people through which He will be recognized as the true Living God redeeming mankind to himself. This will end the separation of man and God that was a result of sin in the Garden of Eden. God puts together a contract for peace if you will between Himself and mankind.
So what is a patriarch? The dictionary says:
Wikipedia
Originally a patriarch was a man who exercised autocratic authority as a pater familias over an extended family. The system of such rule of families by senior males is called patriarchy. This is a Greek word, a composition (pater) meaning father and (archon) meaning leader,chief,ruler,king, etc.
Abraham,Isaac and Jacob are referred to as the three patriarchs of the people of Israel and the period in which they lived is called the Patriarchal Age. It originally acquired its religious meaning in the Septuagint version of the Bible.[1]
Well now we know who the Patriarchs are and next week we will look at Abram or Abraham and follow his life to learn about the promise God made to make him into a great nation as many as the stars of the sky.
All this would happen even though Abram was very old and his wife Sari was past childbearing years. But remember with man these things are impossible but with God all things are possible.
In the meantime ask yourself if God has spoken to you? Has God been talking to you about His plans for your future and have you been talking to God like Tevye or Abram?
Take some time in the coming week to just talk to God like you would a close friend. Have a conversation with Him and open your heart. You will find He is a good listener and He also answers what is on your heart.
Our Heavenly Father has called you to be his child to be part of His family. You are children of the King you are princes and princesses of His royal court. Let us honor our Father and King by being ready and willing to answer His call.
Close with.
The Lords Prayer