Around 4,000 years ago, give or take, a family of nomads . . .
Around 4,000
years ago, give or take, a family of nomads packed up all of their belongings
and left Ur of the Chaldees (which, today, would be in southeastern Iraq) and
traveled to a place near Haran, Turkey, on the banks of the Balikh River. The leader of this family was a man named
Terah, the father of Abram (later renamed Abraham). After Terah dies, Abram receives a divine
command to pack up all of his belongings once again, and move the family even further
west. “Leave your country, your people,
and your father’s household and go to the land I will show you,” says the Lord.
Now, keep in
mind that this move represents far more than just a change of scenery for Abram. In leaving Haran for Canaan, he is basically
saying good-bye to everything he knows and loves—his family and friends, his
customs and culture, all of the regularities and rhythms of his life. Moreover, he is not undertaking this journey as
a young man—filled with vim, vigor, and the thrill of adventure—but as someone
who has just turned seventy-five. He has
no idea where he is going, or what to expect when he eventually arrives.
In other
words, he is moving from what he knows to what he does not know, from what he
has to what he does not have, from the comfortable and familiar to the strange
and unpredictable. And let’s face, most
of us would much rather travel in the opposite direction—from unknown to known,
from chaos to order, from the strange to the familiar. But, unfortunately, that’s not the way faith
works.
When God
invites us to embark upon a journey of faith, we’re not given step-by-step
directions. No GPS is provided. We’re not told, in advance, where the road
will take us, or what we’re likely to see along the way. We’re not told if the road ahead will be smooth
or arduous, straight or winding, unimpaired or filled with detours. When you get right down to it, we’re not told
a blessed thing!
Actually,
that’s not quite true, is it? Abram is
told one thing about this journey of faith.
When God says, “Leave your country, your people, and your father’s
household and go to the land I will show you,” that implies that the Lord
intends to accompany Abram on this journey.
After all, if it’s a land that God will show him, then the Lord will be
there to point it out to him.
And perhaps
that’s the most important thing to remember about our journeys of faith. Sure, we’re not given maps, or itineraries,
or GPS guidance. Sure, we’re not told
exactly where we are going, or what we’re likely to encounter along the way. But we are promised that we won’t have to
encounter those things all by ourselves.
“Leave
everything you know and love, and come to a land that I will show you,” God
tells Abram. And Abram does just
that—trusting that, if God plans on showing him this land, then God also plans
on getting him there, safe and sound!
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