Search

Sermons

Subject 18 : GENESIS

[Chapter 12-2] The Faith of the Altar of The Burnt Offering (Genesis 12:1-9)

The Faith of the Altar of The Burnt Offering
(Genesis 12:1-9)
“Now the LORD had said to Abram:
‘Get out of your country,
From your family
And from your father’s house,
To a land that I will show you.
I will make you a great nation;
I will bless you And make your name great;
And you shall be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you,
And I will curse him who curses you;
And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.’
So Abram departed as the LORD had spoken to him, and Lot went with him. And Abram was seventy-five years old when he departed from Haran. Then Abram took Sarai his wife and Lot his brother’s son, and all their possessions that they had gathered, and the people whom they had acquired in Haran, and they departed to go to the land of Canaan. So they came to the land of Canaan. Abram passed through the land to the place of Shechem, as far as the terebinth tree of Moreh. And the Canaanites were then in the land. Then the LORD appeared to Abram and said, ‘To your descendants I will give this land.’ And there he built an altar to the LORD, who had appeared to him. And he moved from there to the mountain east of Bethel, and he pitched his tent with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east; there he built an altar to the LORD and called on the name of the LORD. So Abram journeyed, going on still toward the South.”
 
 
The Old Testament progresses from the period of Adam, to the period of Noah, to the period of Shem, and the period of Abraham comes after the period of Shem. Chapter twelve of the Book of Genesis describes the period of Abraham. God had thus appointed the leaders for His people and showed His will through its leaders. And when a leader was about to die, God appointed another leader for them and led them by faith as his predecessor had done.
After Terah, Abraham’s father, had died, God said to Abraham,
“Get out of your country,
From your family
And from your father’s house” (Genesis 12:1), and Abraham followed the Word of God and went towards the land of Canaan. Abraham was seventy-five years old when he left his family and his country.
 
 

Abraham Built an Altar of Burnt Offering to Jehovah God

 
It is written, “Then Abram took Sarai his wife and Lot his brother’s son, and all their possessions that they had gathered, and the people whom they had acquired in Haran, and they departed to go to the land of Canaan. So they came to the land of Canaan.” The Scriptures record like that. And it is also written, “Abram passed through the land to the place of Shechem, as far as the terebinth tree of Moreh. And the Canaanites were then in the land. Then the LORD appeared to Abram and said, ‘To your descendants I will give this land.’”
God appeared to Abraham and his family when they entered the land of Canaan, and as a result Abraham built an altar of burnt offering there for Jehovah God, who appeared to him and where he offered up worship service to Him. Why did he build an altar there? And what kind of altar was this? This was the same type of altar of burnt offering that Adam and Eve, Abraham’s ancestors, had built and offered burned offering up to God. And this altar of burnt offering was also the same type of altar Abel used when he slaughtered sheep and goats and offered these up to God; also it was the same type of altar Noah built after coming out of the ark after the Great Deluge. Abraham built this altar as the sign of inheriting faith, to usher in the period of Abraham.
And it tells us that Abraham built the altar to Jehovah God. His ancestors also built this type of altar while they were still alive. What do you think is the reason for this? It was used to give thanks and offer up worship to God, who saved them who could not but die and receive judgment like this. They were offering up this worship to God, returning glory to God, commemorating the name of God, and remembering this God who had been their Savior. It appeared to be a sacrifice, but today it is like the worship service we offer up to God.
Abraham built an altar of burnt offering to God like this whenever God appeared to him. We also need a sacrificial offering in order to offer up the sacrifice of burnt offering to God. Abraham, by doing this, was making the confession of faith to Jehovah God for being God of his ancestors and for himself, while passing his sins over onto the sacrificial offering, then afterwards slaughtering the sacrificial animal and cutting it into pieces and burning it on the altar.
 
 

All the Ancestors of Faith Built This Altar of Burnt Offering

 
Every ancestor of faith had built this altar and offered up burnt offering to God. At that time, they did not have a specific law of offering up sacrifices because God had as yet not given them the sacrificial system of the tabernacle. However, the sacrifice of burnt offering was already completed during the time of Adam and Eve. In order to give the remission of sins to Adam and Eve, who disobeyed the command of God to not eat the fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, God clothed them with leather clothes which was made from an animal, and Adam and Eve offered up a burnt offering with the animal that was sacrificed at that time. Adam and Eve told their children as they were growing up of this account, and Abel heard this and understood fully that he had to offer up this burnt offering in order to offer up a sacrifice to God.
He did not come to know this by chance. Rather, he learned it from his parents. But on the other hand, Cain who had also heard of this sacrifice many times did not understand the meaning of it and brought an offering of the fruit of the ground to God in accordance with his own thoughts, but God did not receive it.
Adam had an invisible fellowship with God through this burnt offering. They had a private conversation about why he had to offer up this sacrifice as a burnt offering and why he needed to bring a sacrificial animal before God, and also how much God loved Adam. Thus, the burnt offering that began with Adam and Eve continued down to their children and to all the descendants of faith. Who taught the burnt offering to Noah? The first thing Noah did after coming out of the Ark was to build an altar of burnt offering; this was because his ancestors had taught him. Noah built the altar of burnt offering as soon as he came out of the ark, and it shows us clearly that he was initiated into the secret of the burnt offering by his ancestors. And so we see the very first thing he did when he came out of the ark was to offer up this burnt offering, meaning that it was the first thing that he wanted to do, and the thing he could not do even if he wanted to do whilst he was still in the ark.
Did the ancestors of faith lay their hands on the sacrificial animal when they offered up the burnt offering, or not? We need to think about this matter together. Of course the Scriptures do not mention specifically if they had laid their hands on the sacrificial animals or not. Since it just states that they built the altar of burnt offering, one can argue that that there is no mention of the laying on of hands. But on the other hand, one can also argue that it does not state that they did not lay hands on the sacrificial animal. But one thing is clear that this burnt offering system was passed down to the descendants of faith in God. The laying on of hands that began with Adam and Eve was passed down to Abel, Seth, Enoch, Noah, and Shem and to Abraham.
What do you think was the state of the heart of the person building an altar of burnt offering and offering up a sacrifice? He laid his hands on an unblemished animal that did not know sin and professed, “You have to die in my place. God said that He would save me by you taking my sins and dying in my place. I must offer up the sacrifice of faith in order to give the evidence of my real faith to God. Thus, you have to die for me since there is no other way,” and he built the altar of the burnt offering, cut the animal into pieces, and burnt it on the altar.
How was his heart while looking at the animal that was being burned up like this? His heart must have been heavy, thinking, “Animal, you are dying in my place. I would have died like this if not for you, but you are carrying my sins.” How was his heart towards God? He probably thought in his heart, “I should have received judgment from God and been thrown into the fire and die like this animal, but in order to save me, God gave this sacrificial offering and saved me. The moment he offered up this burnt offering, he believed that God had already saved him. They attained the faith that they were able to receive the remission of their sins through the sacrificial offering because it was handed down from their ancestors.
When Abraham entered the land of Canaan, God said, “To your descendants I will give this land,” and Abraham heard this and built the altar of burnt offering on that place. That Abraham built the altar of burnt offering means that his father, grandfather, and all his ancestors had built the same altar of burnt offering to God. Abraham saw the burnt offering that the generations before him had offered up to God and understood that he also had to offer up the same burnt offering whenever he offered up a sacrifice to God.
There is a custom of religious service in Confucianism, but it is different from the burnt offering. This was the custom that developed from the thinking that one’s descendants would honor their parents if they offered up a sacrifice to their ancestors honorably. Thus, a person who grows up watching his family offering religious services to their deceased ancestors would also be willing to offer these very same religious services as he has seen and experienced. Because he has seen these things in his family, he follows this with the exact understanding of the tradition, reason and the purpose of doing it.
Likewise, because Abraham also witnessed such things while he was growing up, he built an altar of burnt offering when God appeared to him. Abraham built an altar and offered a sacrifice to God by faith with thanksgiving in his heart that said, “Thank You Lord. I believe in you as God, the God of my ancestors, the God who saved me, and the God who blotted out all my sins and saved me from all my sins!”
We can see in the Scriptures that his descendants who had not received the remission of their sins and did not follow the Word of God, worshipped idols instead of building the altar of the burnt offering. But the descendants of faith remembered the name of God and built the altar of the burnt offering to Him. They did this to give thanks to Him for the God-given remission of sins. Even in this age and time, glory and thanks are returned back to God by the people who have been truly born again by believing that Jesus took all our sins upon Himself through His baptism, died on the Cross, was resurrected from death and ascended to Heaven. This is the true spiritual worship that only the born-again righteous can offer up to God.
 
 

The Burnt Offering Still Exists in the Worship Service We Offer Up to God

 
Do we or do we not offer up the sacrifice of the altar of the burnt offering whenever we have a worship service? We do. Jesus Christ came to this world, took all our sins upon Himself by His baptism, died on the Cross to pay the wages of those sins, and saved us by being resurrected from the dead. This is the implication of the burnt offering of the Old Testament. The ancestors of faith building the altar of the burnt offering long ago, and us building the altar of the burnt offering by believing in the sacrifice of Jesus now are the same spiritually. People of faith in the Old Testament received the remission of their sins by believing that the Messiah would come and save them; and so they offered up sacrifices by building the altar of burnt offering. The faith of these people was the same as our faith now spiritually. It is because they offered up burnt offerings believing that Jehovah God would send the Savior to this world in the future and that He would pass all the sins of humanity onto this Savior through the baptism and save all humanity like this. They received salvation by believing in the things that would manifest in the future, and we receive salvation by faith of believing in all the work Jesus has done.
As was prophesized in the Old Testament, Jesus came to this world, received all the sins of this world through the baptism John the Baptist gave to Him, and paid the wages for all those sins by dying on the Cross. And Jesus was resurrected from the dead in three days and ascended to the Kingdom of Heaven. Everyone who believes in this fact and gives thanks and praise to God is like a person who offers up a sacrifice to God through the sacrificial Lamb, Jesus Christ. The Words in the New Testament tells us, “God is Spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth” (John 4:24). Believing in all the work Jesus has done and accepting the gospel of the water and the Spirit is in fact offering up a spiritual worship to God in spirit and truth.
I want you to remember that Abraham built the altar of the burnt offering for Jehovah God. This is the sacrifice Abraham offered up to God to commemorate Jehovah God after entering the land of Canaan. After he had entered the land of Canaan according to the promise of God, he called on the name of Jehovah God, praised and worshipped Him. And God approved him as the ancestor of faith. We must remember this and think again of the meaning of the gospel of the water and the Spirit that Jesus fulfilled for us.
If the sacrifice of slaughtering an animal and cutting it into pieces and offering it up as a burnt offering was the way of worshipping God in the Old Testament era; likewise living in the gospel of the water and the Spirit is our spiritual worship we offer up to God today. I want you to offer up this worship to God in spirit and truth.
 
This sermon is also available in ebook format. Click on the book cover below.
Sermons on Genesis (VII) - THOSE WHO POSSESS ABRAHAM`S FAITH