BibleProject

Commands for Life Given to Noah and Abraham

56 min
Apr 6, 2026about 2 months ago
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Summary

This BibleProject episode explores how God's commands function as invitations to life, tracing the theme through three biblical figures: Adam and Eve (who failed to obey), Noah (who succeeded), and Abraham (who partially obeyed with mixed results). The hosts establish that God's commands—culminating in the Ten Commandments given at Mount Sinai—are designed to guide humans toward flourishing and preservation of life, not as arbitrary rules but as wisdom for right relationship with God and neighbor.

Insights
  • God's commands paradoxically often feel like surrender or death on the surface but lead to life when trusted—a pattern established through Noah's ark (coffin-like box) and Abraham's willingness to sacrifice Isaac
  • Obedience to God's commands is framed as listening to God's voice and keeping covenant partnership, not as authoritarian rule-following or achieving perfection
  • Abraham's partial obedience (bringing Lot despite being told to leave relatives) demonstrates that human response to commands exists on a spectrum, with consequences for incomplete obedience
  • The Ten Commandments are reframed as 'ten words' of life instruction rather than legalistic rules, building on foundational themes established in Genesis narratives
  • God's commands serve a dual purpose: preserving individual life while simultaneously enabling humans to function as mediators of blessing to others (kingdom of priests concept)
Trends
Narrative theology approach gaining prominence in biblical education—using story arc rather than systematic doctrine to teach theological conceptsReframing ancient religious law as wisdom literature and life guidance rather than oppressive regulationEmphasis on covenant partnership model over hierarchical command-obedience in understanding divine-human relationshipsIntegration of ancient Near Eastern context (Egyptian loan words, Babylonian tower narrative) into biblical interpretation for modern audiencesFocus on paradoxical theology—how apparent loss or death becomes pathway to life—as central to understanding biblical ethics
Topics
Biblical Commands and ObedienceCovenant Partnership TheologyGenesis Narrative AnalysisNoah's Ark and Flood NarrativeAbraham's Faith and Partial ObedienceTen Commandments Context and PurposeListening to God's VoiceLife Preservation as Divine Command ThemeRighteousness and Blamelessness in ScriptureKingdom of Priests ConceptAncient Near Eastern Religious ContextSacrifice and Surrender TheologyMount Sinai CovenantHebrew Word Studies (mitzvah, tevah, halech, tamim)Narrative Theology Methodology
People
Tim
Co-host discussing biblical commands and covenant theology throughout the episode
John
Co-host engaging in dialogue about Noah, Abraham, and Ten Commandments interpretation
Quotes
"God's commands are guiding His creatures who have less wisdom towards life. But the goal of the command is to teach you the way to life so that you begin to really own and appreciate that for yourself."
TimEarly discussion
"When human beings trust and obey the command, what they find is that what looked like death becomes this passageway to the gift of life. Not just life for themselves, but then life for all these other people."
TimMid-episode synthesis
"The Ten Commandments are God's invitation to preserve life. Your image is of God, so when you do what I say, you will both increase our own partnership and intimacy, and it will be what's good for you and good for all the people around you."
TimConclusion section
"Abraham's story is really giving us an in-depth portrait now. He does the command, so it does lead to the preservation of his life and a lot of blessing. But also, he doesn't do it completely. And that leads to also a bunch of heartache."
TimAbraham discussion
"Listening to God's voice is equivalent to keeping the covenant, which is about a formalized partnership. God's inviting these people to be partners."
TimMount Sinai section
Full Transcript
The commands of God are meant for life. Last week we looked at the first command of God in the Bible called a mitzvah. And it's in the Garden of Eden story, when God invites humans into the abundant life of the garden. And he tells them, eat up, enjoy. But he also teaches them how to discern good from bad. And to do that, they need to learn to listen to his voice. Today we'll look at the second time the word command is used in the Bible. It's in the story of Noah and his instructions to build an ark. And this command is also about finding and preserving life. Make a box, cram it full of life, go into the box, stay there, and you will stay alive. So the ark is presented as a little Eden refuge. So in the first command, Adam and Eve fail. In the second command, Noah succeeds. And this leads us to the third person to get the command of God, Abraham. And Abraham's response is well, complicated. Sometimes he does the command, and sometimes he sort of does them. So Abraham's story is really giving us an in-depth portrait now. He does the command, so it does lead to the preservation of his life and a lot of blessing. But also, he doesn't do it completely. And that leads to also a bunch of heartache now. So it's like a third variation on a human relating to God's commands. All of this leads up to God giving Abraham a seemingly impossible command. Surrender back to God the life of his son. And when Abraham obeys this command, it doesn't lead to death. It leads to more life. When human beings trust and obey the command, what they find is that what looked like death becomes this passageway to the gift of life. Not just life for themselves, but then life for all these other people. All of these stories are inviting us into a posture of trust, to listen to God's voice, and to expect that the commands of God are for life. On Abraham's best day, when he trusts God and when he actually acts on that trust, by surrendering his own family's future, what he finds is that keeping the command leads to life. Now we're looking at the theme of the commands of God because this all leads us to the Ten Commands, where God gives Israel at Mount Sinai ten words of how to be mediators of life in the world, if they can listen to his voice and keep his commands. The Ten Commandments are God's invitation to preserve life. Your image is of God, so when you do what I say, you will both increase our own partnership and intimacy, and it will be what's good for you and good for all the people around you. That's today on the podcast. Dix are joining us. Here we go. Hello, Tim. Hi, John. Hi. We are in this series on the Ten Commandments. We are. But to set the Ten Command, the famous Ten, in the context of the biblical storyline, I brought us back to the beginning to God's first command, like the actual word command is used in the Garden of Eden story. The one command. The one that was also. You had one job. Eat. Eat. Yeah, actually the one command had three parts, had two basic elements to the command, which yeah, one was eat from all the trees. First of all, just enjoy. Enjoy the trees. And then the second is about the one tree. The tree of knowing good and bad. Don't eat of that one. Yeah, that's right. That's the command. The day you eat of it, you'll die. So God's command is about instructing you on the way to life. Eat from all the trees. Do what will lead to life. And then the flip of that is there is one thing that will not only not lead to life, it will lead to the end of your life. And so don't do that thing. There's one do, there's one don't. But both of them are about protecting, preserving. And finding life. And finding life. Yes. And that really, we could just, that's it. God's commands are guiding His creatures who have less wisdom towards life. But the goal of the command is to teach you the way to life so that you begin to really own and appreciate that for yourself. Not just because God said it, but because you realize it's true, true for you. So there it is. So the humans don't follow that command. They're foolish. They make a foolish move. They're ignorant. They are culpable, like they're accountable for violating the command, but they are deceived. They're led to believe something that's not true about God's command and about God's character. It leads them away from life towards death. So what we're going to see then is the humans are exiled then from Eden and to make a long story short, although it's only about a page and a half. Of text. So to make a short story shorter, I guess, humans just go about unleashing a tidal wave of multi-generational violence and bloodshed throughout the land. This is the sordid tale of Genesis 4, 5 and 6 where the words kill and dying and blood just start leaping off the page. Whereas in Eden's story, it was about trees and life and sprouting and waters. Rivers. Yeah, exactly. So what happens is the famous story that takes a turn in Genesis 6 is God sees that humanity is indeed being fruitful and multiplying, but what they are multiplying on the land is violence. And so God sees one guy, however, a guy named Rest, Noach. And what we're told is that Noach is a righteous one. This is Genesis 6, verse 9, that he is blameless, tamim. He is a person of whole character among his generation. And not only that, he walks about with Elohim. So he's doing the thing that Adam and Eve were meant to do. After Adam and Eve foolishly violate God's command, God comes for the walkabout. It's the Hebrew word, halech, in the garden for the daily walkabout in the wind of the day. And they're freaked out and they hot. But Noach, dude, he walks with Elohim. Are we supposed to then think of him as one who hasn't taken wisdom on his own terms? Yeah, that's a great question. I mean, he does do something pretty dumb right after the flood. Yeah. The garden consumes of its fruit, gets drunken, then naked. And his son takes advantage of that first. That's later. That's later. Right now, we're just told, this guy's rat. This guy is righteous, blameless. He walks with Elohim. He's like a new Adam. Now, when you call someone blameless, one way to think about that is that they're perfect. They've never made any mistakes. Is that the idea here? Yeah. I mean, we don't know. The narrator clearly wants us to see him as the single, righteous, blameless one in that whole generation. And his righteousness counts not just for himself, but for others, like his family and all the animals. So, it sounds like you kind of need to think of him that way. Yeah. And then God says, I'm going to make a covenant with you. And then Noah gets off the boat and he surrenders the life of this animal. And God accepts that surrender as an act of covering for all creation. So Noah becomes an image of the righteous intercessor. And he's a part of the series of characters that lead up to the model of the suffering servant in the book of Isaiah, this like righteous human, almost divine figure whose intercession leads to God declaring the many righteous on behalf of the acts of the one. So we're setting up, it's more like the righteous intercessor model. If God has one person to work with, he'll do it. So Job and Ecclesiastes will come along later and be like, you know, nobody really can be totally righteous. But that's not on the table in the story. We're trying to set up a pattern, I think. And as we're going to see, God gives him a command and he does it. In fact, here it is. So Genesis 6 verse 11, the land was ruined before Elohim, poor God. The land was filled with violence and Elohim saw the land and look, it was ruined. All flesh had ruined its way on the land. So Elohim said to Noah, here we go. God's first words to Noah, the end of all flesh has come up before me. We've talked about this important line in the past. Yeah, I don't remember. If you read some modern English translations, what they'll translate this is God saying, I have decided to bring an end to all flesh. Oh, right. That is not what it says. It says, the end of all flesh has come up before me because the land is filled with violence. So humans are destroying themselves and the end of all humans is becoming very evident to me that they're going to destroy themselves. So what God says is, look, I am going to ruin them with the land. That's what God says. So humans have set something in motion and God's going to accelerate it. Sounds exactly like what will happen later in the next repetition of this theme with Pharaoh and the plagues of Egypt. Pharaoh kick starts a campaign of violence against the Israelites and then God accelerates that and brings it to its end in decreating Egypt. So the flood, something similar here. Anyhow, so that's just God saying, hey, no, here's the situation. Things are bad. I'm going to fast forward on this and we're going to just get this done. That's right. So Genesis 6 verse 14 is God's second command. It's not called a command yet, but it is God's second command to a human in the biblical story. The command to the human Eden was the first one. Now here's the second one. If this isn't called a command, but we're calling it a command. It is called command. Just you got to wait for it. You got to wait for it. This is the second thing called a command. Yep. Okay. Verse 14, make for yourself a tevah in Hebrew, a box. Actually, this is a whole rabble. Tevah, it translated arc, famously Noah's arc. It's a loan word from ancient Egyptian language, meaning box, but most often it's most typically used for a coffin. Oh. A coffin. Interesting. Which is so fascinating. Yeah. Make for yourself a coffin. The purpose of this box is to, as we're going to see, preserve life. But by going through the death. But in a way by floating through the waters that bring death. Wow. Yeah. Fascinating word choice. Anyway, make for yourself an arc. That's the command. And then there's things about the dimensions of the arc. Make it with a window and a door. This is how you know it's a rectangle. Yes. And there's all kinds of interesting speculation about the precise shape of the arc. But the point is it's a big rectangle. 300 cubits long, 50 cubits wide, 30 cubits high. It's like a big container. Big rectangle. Which do flow if those fall out in the water, you know, off a ship, a big cargo ship. Yeah. It would. Totally would flow. Anyhow, so make the arc. Yeah. Why? Verse 18, I'm going to make a covenant with you. And you are going to go into that arc. You, your sons, your wife, your sons, wives, and every living thing of all flesh. Two of everything. You will make them go into the arc. Why? To keep them alive with you. And then again, verse 20, everybody go into the arc to keep them alive. And then verse 22, Genesis 6, and Noah did according to everything that Elohim commanded him. Okay. So he did it. And there's the word command. There it is. He did the command. Adam and Eve didn't do the command. And it led them to death. The command is build this little sanctuary. That's like a coffin. Stuff it full of life. Yeah. Yeah. And get in. And get in. Yeah. And it said, it's repeated twice. And this little paragraph from Genesis 6, 18 to 20, it's a little symmetry. And at the key like lines at the beginning and end are to keep alive, to preserve life. To make things still have life or prolong life. So it's a very simple equation. Humans are spreading death on the land. God's going to hand creation over, back over to decreation, accelerate this process. Humans are set in motion. Make a box, cram it full of life and go into the box, stay there. And you will stay alive. God's command is about the preservation of life. So we've got two commands so far. And it's interesting how to think of them together. Because they're both pretty meta in a way. Like the first one, eat of all the trees, go and have life. Except don't go and have life the way that it's going to kill you. Don't do the thing that will kill you. But that doesn't look like it'll kill you. Yeah. So go and participate in life. Ah, but stay away from the thing that's going to kill you. And you're not going to know the difference. So listen to my voice. Let me tell you. Let me tell you what it is. Okay, yes. Yeah. That's command number one. And then because we fail at the command, humanity fails at the command. Everything cycle into violence. So much so that everything's going to fall apart. And so the second command is let me preserve life. We're going to preserve life in the midst of all this chaos. In this big box. And you and your wife, your sons and their wives and the animals are going to go live in this little wooden box. It's a box made of, you're specifically told, of trees. A box of trees. And you're going to go stay alive in there. Yeah. Yeah. It is a very specific command to build a very specific thing. The idea is I want to preserve life. I need you to participate with me in the preservation of life. That's right. Sorry. I left out one thing, which is God also in verse 21, Genesis 6, accounts for all the food that they're going to need. Take for yourself all of this edible food that you're going to eat. And it will be edible food for yourself and for them. It's the same word used for the tree was for eating. So God is providing food just like he did for Adam and Eve. So the ark is presented as a little Eden refuge. Except another difference then is that God provided the Eden refuge in the middle of the wilderness in Genesis 2. Now here, God's partner, his covenant partner is supposed to create the little Eden refuge out of trees. And God will provide the food and He'll lead the animals to them. But this puts a little more, what do you say, of the burden of partnership on Noah. Noah has to obey God's command or else all this stuff will die, including himself. Isn't that interesting? God made the refuge of Eden. Yeah. Okay. So God made the refuge and that's the command. Make this little refuge for the preservation of life. Build a mini Eden. Yeah. So that says they're different, but in the sense that they're similar, it's the second command. It's the word Savva, Genesis 6, verse 22. And then there's another kind of summary of the speech in Genesis 7, verses 1 through 5, where there's another set of instructions. You go into the ark because I'm going to send rain. It's new information. And you are going to keep alive, seed on the face of the land by going into the ark. That's Genesis 7, verse 3. And then 7, 5, Noah did according to all that Yahweh commanded. So there's two speeches from God. Both are called commands and they're both about the preservation of life. So that's what Noah does. He does it. Okay. So God's two speeches, two commands to Noah are about the preservation of life. After that, what God said would happen, happens. The flood comes, which is cosmic decreation, the collapse of the cosmos, the waters that God split apart, all collapse in themselves. There's this like seed floating. Yeah. Yes. There's this little refuge of preservation of life and seed and food and made of trees floating in the death waters. And then... The coffin, the Teva. And then Genesis 1 kicks in again. God sends a spirit, a wind out blowing over the waters. The waters recede. This ark box floats around. It ends up on the top of a mountain. The waters recede. The dry land appears. Plants appear up out of the ground and it's on. And Noah waits three cycles of seven days, famous sending out of the raven and the dove. To know when it's safe to come out. And what he knows it's safe is when the dove returns with a plant in its mouth that sprouts up out of the ground. So it's days one, two, and three. Of Genesis 1? Yeah, of Genesis 1, all kind of re-kicking off. So knowing his family, get off the boat. Noah surrenders the life of a blameless and pure animal. And God states again his commitment to humanity, his partnership with them. And God also promises that no more cosmic decorations. So that's one thing, this whole very important part of the biblical story. But the point is, is God's covenant partner, obeyed the command. Okay, so there's a big feeling of the command, but then a big success at the command. Yeah, that's right. Okay, one and two. That's right. Failure or success. Yeah, so now we have two stories. We have the Adam and Eve story and that led to breaking of the command. It led to death and violence that spread on such a scale that the cosmos collapsed in on itself and God led it. God accelerated it. But then you have this contrast figure of a righteous, devout, blameless covenant keeper and he listens to God's command and he does it and it results in the preservation of life. And then God says to Genesis 9, to this new Adam and Eve, knowing his wife, be fruitful and multiply and fill the land. God blesses them. Same command that was to the humans in Genesis 1. So interesting, you got Adam and Eve are in the land, things are good and they break the command. You got Noah. Oh yeah. He's in a land full of violence, things are bad. He keeps the command. But he keeps the command. And it leads to life. Yeah. That's it. Yep, that's it. So what happens again, however, is that Noah doesn't fully repeat the Adam and Eve failure, but he does plant a garden and he consumes the fruit of the garden and he gets drunk naked. It's all these echoes of Adam and Eve like, oh, oh. Yeah, but it's very obscure. It's obscure and God didn't tell him, don't drink the fruit of your vines, you know, of your grapes, but he does pull pretty stupid move and then it's his son that takes advantage of him, his son Ham. So from there, the story then focuses on Noah's sons and their descendants and one of them, but that son who took advantage of Noah, just glossing over gigantic, complicated parts of the story. But through Noah's son Ham, it leads you to this guy named We Will Rebel, Nimrod, who builds a couple kingdoms, namely Assyria and Babylon. Yeah. And then. They do big bad ones. Totally. And then the people of Babylon build the tower of Babylon, that is the tower of Babylon. Okay. That's the Hebrew word for Babylon. Yeah. Yeah. And God's response to Babylon is like, oh man, if this is what humans do when they all get together and are unified, man, nothing will be impossible for them to accomplish. They're going to destroy everything, including themselves again. This time through the form of not just violence, but like through imperial violence. So last time I fast forwarded it and we just took care of it. This time. Yeah. God confuses the language and scatters Babylon. Okay. Slows it down. Slows it down. Totally. So maybe just as a footnote, we've talked about the story in depth multiple times. Maybe I'll footnote back to our podcast series on the day of the Lord and on the city where we talk about the Babylon story in a lot more depth. But God confuses the languages and the people of Babylon scatter. And out of that scattering, the narrator follows one particular family that lived in the region of Babylon and that ended up migrating west. And lo and behold, who is this? This is the family of Abraham. It's actually his dad that begins a migration out of the region of Babylon and goes west. But then at a certain moment, God appears to Abraham and these are the famous words in Genesis 12 verse one. Yahweh said to Abraham, go out from your land, from your relatives, from the house of your father to the land that'll show you. Now, it doesn't say it's a command. Yeah. It just... But it's clear directions. Yeah, clear directive. Yes. And then we're told. And Abraham went out as Yahweh told him. So Yahweh said, do this. Abraham did. Abraham did as Yahweh said. And this begins an interesting pattern throughout the Abraham story where Abraham is told he's now the vehicle of God's blessing, the blessing God gave Adam and Eve, the blessing that God gave to Noah and his wife. Now Abraham and his wife are the carriers of that Eden blessing to the nations. In you all, the nations will be blessed. I'm going to bless you and make you a great nation. So Abraham goes out. He did what God said. You're like, sweet. He's a guy who'll be like a new Noah. But we are told one little detail here, super interesting. God says, go out from your land and from your relatives in the house of your father, which means like your whole extended family, like kind of separate. And what we're told is Abraham went out just as Yahweh told him and Lot went with him. Lots is nephew. Okay. Lots is nephew. The son of his father's brother. Yeah. And he brings him with them. Now his father's brother died. So Lot is, it seems like he's an adult. Perhaps we don't know his age. So what's interesting is you kind of be like, oh man, that's rad. He's taken his nephew into his house. Like that seems noble. But you know, there is going to be a lot of complications that happen because of him bringing along Lot. So it raises this interesting question of did he obey the command kind of? And the narrator doesn't tell you. But this is a question mark in this kind of half obedience to the command and Lot's presence, you know, with Abraham and Sarah ends up leading to a lot of heartache and conflict and family separation and... You're saying the command of God was go from your land and from your relatives. Yes. So obviously he's bringing his immediate, well he doesn't kid. He brings his wife. He brings his wife. That's right. And it seems like... But his household, right? Like servants or shepherds that work with him or anything? We're told that he has a larger group of people that come with him. So that's his household. It's not just the two of them. But when it says away from your relatives... Yeah, you would think that would include your nephew. Yeah, unless you fully adopted him. But the narrator doesn't say that. So what's interesting is you add Adam and Eve, who were given a command. They didn't do it, led to death. And you add Noah, he was righteous, he did the command and it led to life. Now we have a third person, the God gives a command. And now it's even a new twist where... He sort of does it. He does it mostly but not in this one part. And Lot went with him. Yeah. And there's a lot in that sense. Yeah, totally. Whoa, yeah, good pun. And so now this third twist on... This third portrait of how a human responds to God's commands is he does the command, so it does lead to the preservation of his life and a lot of blessing. But also, he doesn't do it completely. And that leads to also a bunch of heartache now. So it's like a third variation on a human relating to God's commands. So there's multiple times when God will give Abraham more directives. In Genesis 13, after Abraham and Lot separate, because they're separate, they're fighting, God tells Abraham, hey, go for a walkabout throughout the land. Is it the same word? Mm-hmm. Okay. Yeah, yeah. It doesn't say that God goes with him. But you can kind of imagine that. But you can kind of imagine that, yeah. And interestingly, what you're told is... You're not told Abraham went for a walk through the land. What you're told is he pitched his tent and came and settled by the oaks of Mamre, and he built an altar to Yalway. This could be stop one. It could be stop one. It could be he did the walk and then he settled, though it doesn't say that. We're kind of like, what's up with that? There's a story in Genesis 15 where Abram's wondering like, God, are you going to give me that big family that you promised? God says, go look at the skies and count the stars. Which is very difficult to do. Yep. He told, yeah, this. And we're told Abram goes outside and he does it and he trusts in God. And God reckons that trust as a sign of right relationship or righteousness between him and Abram. After Abram and Sarah don't trust God to provide them a child. And so he sleeps with his Egyptian slave, Hagar, and that leads to a whole bunch of division and heartache in the family. God tells Abram, you need to keep my covenant and you need to go get circumcised and every male in your house needs to get circumcised. It's not called a command, but it's a pretty clear instruction. So we're told Abram took his male, his son and every male in his house needs circumcised them all. So we're seeing this pattern. Like Abram does what God says. When he half does what God says, it usually leads to problems, but then other times he just does what God says. And then sometimes he says you'll do what God says and then he does and trusts it. Oh, that's right. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. So Abram's story is really giving us an in-depth portrait now. We had two binaries with Adam and Eve and Noah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Very clear. Break the command, leaves a death. Keep the command, leaves a life. Abram is just more complicated. Yeah. And you get this with Adam and Eve, you get this foolish couple who get deceived. With Noah, you have this blameless person who just seems to like, I get it. He gets it and he does it. Yeah. And then with Abraham, you have someone with this very childlike faith who's like, I get it. I'm going to follow you, but then just bumbles his way through it. Yeah. Yep. Sometimes gets it right, sometimes gets it wrong. And actually the moment when he gets it most right is in Genesis 15 when he just believes in Yahweh. He trusts Yahweh's promise. And Yahweh reckons that to him as righteousness. And that's the same word that was used to describe Noah. Right. So Noah was... That brings me back to my question. What does that mean? Yeah. That he was righteous and blameless. Well, to be righteous means that Noah does right by God and right by neighbor. Yeah. We know by this point in the story. Yeah, but at what point are you doing that well enough that you could be called righteous? Well, just if you do it. Yeah. Just always do right by people. Yeah. Perfect. Yeah. And I guess, you make mistakes. I don't know. Can you? I guess that's my question. You make a lot of mistakes. I think Abraham did. And God said, well... And God takes what Abraham did on his best day. Yeah. Which was trust him. And have that count for like his legacy. Was that the movie he was doing with Noah? So interesting. We don't know. We don't know. The story is not filled out. But with Abraham it is. And that I think is an interesting part of how the biblical story develops. Okay. Abraham's a very human... Two very simple portraits in a way. One more nuanced. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly right. Now, what's interesting is that the times when Abraham only half heartedly does what God commanded, like with Lot leads to a lot of trouble. And then when he and Sarah really don't trust what God said and they pull the Hagar move, then that leads to... Hagar is the different servant that he... That's right. He uses to get pregnant. That's right. So, the son is Abraham's firstborn. Sarah doesn't like Hagar anymore or that son. Yeah. Relational strife just spirals out of control. Yeah. And so they end up abusing, oppressing this Egyptian slave and her son exiling them. And so, God actually keeps Abraham accountable for the times that he didn't obey. And it leads up to the ultimate story of where God asks Abraham for the ultimate obedience, which is, yes, God to sacrifice the life of his son, to surrender the life of the son that God gave to him. He gave him Isaac through Sarah and... It's the son by which his family will become great and then bless the nations. That's right. God said through Isaac, the nations are going to be blessed, but now it seems like God is... Give him back. ...contradicting God by asking for the son back. So this command, and again, it's not called a command yet. Okay. But this command, take your son, Genesis 22, your only son, Isaac, whom you love, go to the land of Moriah, offer him as a burnt offering, or as a going up offering on one of the mountains. Which is what Noah made. Yes, it is. Yes. So, Abraham does this and then the moment that Abraham's about to follow through, like he picks up the knife and the son's on the altar, God says, stop. Send out your hand against the boy. And here's what God says. Genesis 22 for 16, I swear on oath by my own self, declares Yahweh. Because you have done this thing, you haven't withheld your only son, I will certainly bless you and multiply your seed like the stars of heaven, like the sand on the seashore. All the nations on the land will be blessed through your seed because you listened to my voice. Okay, this is the theme of listening to God's voice. This is the theme of the command. Yeah. Yes. What's so interesting is in all three of these examples, God's command feels like a type of death. Yes, it does. And I don't know if this is really important to our conversation, but it's just really jumping out at me. Yeah, that's good. Adam and Eve, it feels like you're withholding something from me. It's a death to my desire. Yeah, to have the knowledge of good and bad on my own time, my own way. It's a small type of death. Yeah, but it's a surrender. A surrender. Yeah. For Noah, it's like, crawl into this coffin. Yeah, crawl into this taeva. Yeah, and I will preserve you. Go through the chaos waters. Yeah. And then for Abraham, ultimately, it's, yeah, give me back your son. And surrender that life. And they're all moments of going, you know what? This command feels like me walking into death. Yeah. But I have to trust that it's not ultimately. There is actually life here. Yes. Yeah. And when human beings trust and obey the command, what they find is that what looked like death becomes this passageway to the gift of life. And actually, in Noah and Abraham's case, not just life for themselves, but then life for all these other people out the other side. Yeah. So that's great. God's command is pointing you towards life, leads to life. But paradoxically, it can feel confusing and look like a loss of life. Yes. It's good. So what's super fascinating is within Abraham's story, the word command is never used. Never used. Yeah. Well, none of those times. None of those times. However, that's on Isaac, the moment Abraham dies and his son Isaac becomes an adult, God appears to Isaac just like he did to Abraham. And what he says is, Hey, this is Genesis 26 verse three. I'm going to be with you. I'm going to bless you. I'm going to give you all these lands to you and your seed. I'm going to establish my oath that I swore to Abraham, your father, I'll give you descendants like the stars of heaven. And you're like, Oh, okay. Now the sun is inheriting the promise of the father. It's all the same language, all the same words. And all the nations on the land are going to be blessed through your seed because, you're like, Whoa, there's a reason. What's the reason? Because Abraham listened to my voice. He's like, Oh, okay. Well, that is what God said. God's talking to the guy whose life was spared on the day that Abraham listened to God's voice. This is Genesis 26 verse five. Abraham listened to my voice and he kept my charge. It's the word, which means keeping the thing that I gave you to keep. He kept it. He kept my commandments plural. It's the word, he kept my statutes. This is the Hebrew word, which means literally what is inscribed like on stone. And he kept my instructions, which is the Hebrew word, plural, So we get this portfolio of words here. Yeah. God didn't ever inscribe anything for Abraham. You didn't inscribe with any tablets. It's fascinating. So God is using language here. All of these are going to be the words that Moses will use to describe the commands of the Torah. And these are the words that David and the poets and the Psalms will use to describe all of God's commands given out Sinai. What I just want to pay attention to in this moment, a whole bunch of things just came together. Abraham listened to my voice. That is equivalent to, and then you get these four words, keeping my charge, my commandments, my statutes and my Torah. And because Abraham did that, I'm going to now bless all the nations of the earth through the seed of this family. So it's actually now, it's like a Noah moment. Abraham kept the commands and not even just the commands, the charge and the statutes and the instructions. And that is he listened to the voice. And when he did that, it led to the preservation of life for himself and his son. And it led to the unleashing of blessing out to the nations. So this third portrait, you had Adam and Eve, knowing his wife, Abraham said, this third portrait really blew off the top. And it's foreshadowing what Israel's call is going to be. Exactly right. Okay. Yes, that's right. So this little line, Genesis 26.5 is crucially important. It's sort of like he's the link between the laws given to Israel, Mount Sinai, 600 plus, and between the one command given to Adam and Eve and the two commands given to Noah. Because those were very simple, like, you know, just basically do one thing, you know? And they don't do it. I mean, don't do it, at least it does. No, it does, it leaves a life. Abrams is a little more complicated. And it's kind of a human drama of family and seed and scarcity and fear and right. But it really humanizes how complicated it actually is to do what God says. But on Abrams' best day, when he trusts God and when he actually acts on that trust, by surrendering his own family's future, what he finds is that keeping the command leads to life. And then this little summary here in Genesis 26.5 says that's listening to the voice. And it's as if Abrams kept all the laws of the Torah just by listening to God's voice and doing what he said. And it led to the preservation of life and blessing for the many. So what God's going to ask Israel to do with the commands of Mount Sinai and why the 10 commands that come first are so important is because they're drawing on this whole set of themes developed in the Genesis scroll. How do we find life? Yeah. And how is God's voice going to bring us to life? And how is it going to help us, especially when what we desire is going to sometimes lead us to things that are going to lead to death and not life? Yeah. So with Adam and Eve, it's a tree that looks good. Well, for Noah, there's a cataclysm coming. And then for Abram, it's go to this land that I'm going to show you. Trust me to provide a family for you and your wife, even though your bodies look like they're done reproducing. So it's all these unlikely things that are hard. We're drawing attention this earlier. It looks like a kind of surrender or death, but that's God's command tends to lead people in that direction and then surprises them with life. And that leads us to the next main movement in the story where the word command is used. And this is way forward in the story of Israel of Mount Sinai. Abraham has his son Isaac. Isaac has a son Jacob. Jacob has 12 sons. But God's commands are not really highlighted to these people. God talks to these people sometimes. He tells them what to do. And sometimes he tells them what to do, but it's a lot like Abraham. It's they kind of do it. They don't. But the word command doesn't use. The word command really comes into prominence once again later on when the 12 sons of Jacob have become a nation and they get grown into the nation of Israel. So let's just take a couple of minutes near the end of this conversation to tee up Mount Sinai and the commands there. Okay. So the family of Abraham ends up enslaved to the brutal pharaoh in Egypt. That's how the book of Exodus begins. And famously God raises up Moses. He confronts Egypt. The 10 plagues and so on. The people of Israel leave Egypt the night of Passover. God preserves their lives through the desert and brings them to the foot of Mount Sinai. This is Exodus chapter 19. And when he brings all the people to Mount Sinai, he's going to invite them all into a special covenant partnership just like God invited Noah. Remember, he said, I'm going to make a covenant with you. And that was in the context of make the ark and do what I say and it will lead to the preservation of life. All right. He invited Abraham to follow his commands, though they weren't ever called commands in the story. We learn later. Except when he talks to Isaac, he calls it a command. That's right. That's right. And he calls it listening to the voice. Abraham listened to the voice, kept my charge and instructions and statutes and commands. And that was listening to the voice. Now all of Israel is invited to become God's covenant partner and he leads the nation of Israel to the foot of Mount Sinai. And here we begin Exodus 19. And here's the first thing that God says to the people of Israel when they reach Mount Sinai. This is God's first speech to the people in Exodus 19 verse four. And he says, to Moses, this is what you will say to the house of Jacob. This is what you, that is Moses, you will tell to the sons of Yisrael. You yourselves have seen what I did to the Egyptians. How I bore you or carried you on eagles wings and I've brought you to myself. So that's a little summary of chapters one through 18 of Exodus. Okay. The rescue from slavery. Yep. Yeah. I confronted Egypt. I carried you like riding on the back of an eagle. Don't you wish you could do that? Mm-hmm. Every time I see an eagle, I think, what if it was big enough? In creation. And I've brought you here to myself. That's interesting. So like God's at this mountain and he's like, brought them. And now, if you will listen, listen to my voice, that's the Hebrew word Shema, listen. Yeah. And it's the same word used that was used of Abraham, what he did do, and then also of what Abonid didn't do, Genesis. If you will listen to my voice and if you will keep my covenant, then you will be my own special possession among the peoples. Because all of the land belongs to me, but you all will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. These are the words that you are to speak to the sons of Israel. So this speech introduces what will frame the whole context of the giving of the 10 commandments and then the hundreds that will follow. Where is Moses when he gets this command from God or gets this set of instructions? The people came to the foot of the mountain and then Moses was called up. So he's up on the mountain hearing these words. He goes up and down the mountain seven times, of course. So he's to tell the people and notice how there's two phrases to describe what Israel is supposed This is set up. If you will do this, then you will be able to do it. Then I will do this, God says. So if you will, and there's two commands given, if you will listen to my voice and if you will keep my covenant. So what that means is going to be developed in the story to follow. But we know that listening to the voice means doing what God says. Even when it looks like it doesn't lead to life. Even when it looks like it might undo myself. Yeah. What God asked me to do might be intuitive to do right by God and neighbor and preserve life. But there might be other times where what God says will preserve my or another person's life. Doesn't look like it will on the surface. And then that is called keeping my covenant, which is about a formalized partnership. Like God's inviting these people to be as partners. And if they do that, then you will be my special possession among the nations. And then he's like, listen, all the land belongs to me. So I could work with a lot of people here. But you are the ones that I've specially chosen to be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. Now this is what's interesting is that, remember Noah was called the righteous one, blameless. Yeah. And they ended up kind of acting like a righteous mediator priest figure. Yeah. Between God and everybody else. Right. So what he did was on behalf of all these others. And then in a way what Abraham was doing was on behalf of many others, because through him all the nations will be blessed. So that same logic is being applied here. Yeah. If you will listen, that is keep my covenant implied, do what I command, then you will become a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. Yeah. So are these in symmetry then listen to my voice, keep my covenant. These are two ways to say the same thing. Yes. Listening to God's voice is equivalent to keeping the covenant, which is about, I mean, the simplest analogy to draw on is the marriage covenant. And in most weddings still today, people say some form of vows to each other. And that's what the terms of the covenant are. Vows and that's what the laws are presented as. Okay. So the 10 commandments are sort of like a bullet list under these two phrases right here. Listening to God's voice, keeping the covenant. Okay. How? Let me give you 10 really concrete examples. Yes. Yeah. The big 10. The big 10. So what I should, when I hear the 10 commandments, we're finally to it. Okay. This is the main point. Yeah. Give me the point. The 10 commandments are God's invitation to preserve life. It's like what God commanded Noah or what God commanded Adam and Eve. How do I know what is the way to both enjoy life, eat from all the trees. Yeah. Eat. And to preserve my life in the face of danger or death or just confusion. Mm-hmm. Do what God says. Listen to God's voice. Keep the commands and the charge and the statutes and the instructions. So the 10 commands, it's not about, hey humans, be perfect because God is perfect. And you just, you're supposed to be that way. Oh, it's not an authoritarian move. Do what I say because I'm God. Okay. Like the whole story is saying, do what's. Find life. Do what will lead to your own life flourishing. And it just so happens that your image is of God. And so when you do what I say, you will both increase our own partnership and intimacy. And it will be what's good for you and good for all the people around you. So it's just this reframe. The story gives so much more depth to what the 10 commands are. And this is why you like calling them the 10 words. The 10 words, yes. Because it's a reframe. Oh, yes. Well, I like recovering what these 10 things are called in the story. Yeah. They're called in the story, the 10 words. The 10 words. Yeah. These are 10 words. This is not like an innovation that you're giving us. No, no. Yeah. It's these are 10 words of God. 10 words of life. That lead to life. Yeah. Yes. And should I expect that some of these are going to feel very intuitive. Eat, eat. Yes. I love these. And some of them you're going to stop and go, ooh, actually this feels like I'm not going to get what I desire. Yeah. And it feels like maybe this will undo me in a way I'm not comfortable with. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yeah. And some on a way that will feel more, yeah, like you said, intuitive than others. In the ancient world, it's not intuitive to only give your allegiance to one local God. Okay. This is command one. It's command one. Have no other gods. Yeah. Like spread it out. Like, yeah. Yeah. What do you say? Hedge your bets? Hedge your bets. Yeah. Diversify your- I can sacrifice to Yahweh and I can make some side bets here. Right. Diversify your portfolio, you know, become friends of many gods. Yeah. Don't put it all on black. Yeah. There you go. So that's one. That would be counterintuitive in ancient context for moderns that's a little less punch to it. Rest, right? To keep the Sabbath. Mm-hmm. Yeah. That's very counterintuitive. Yeah. Maximizing profit is not, apparently not the greatest value. Shouldn't be. Yeah. In maximizing productivity and profit should necessarily be the greatest value, but rather a balance of work and rest. And then I guess the other ones don't desire what belongs to other people. Yeah. I mean, I don't know. It's a deep well. Yeah. Yeah. It depends. You know, don't kill. So much depends on your social location. And, you know, we live in a Western modern Western culture that's been so saturated in, right, the Christian tradition that this general idea of preserving life is one of the highest values baked in, you know, to our culture and our law tradition, but then also a glorification of violence is baked in to the roots of Western culture too. Yeah. And that's at odds with that shall not kill. So I guess it depends what feels intuitive for my own flourishing, maybe depends on where and when you grew up. I think all of these will probably discover. Yeah. There's a lot of very intuitive things that's like, yes, that's what I want. Yep. But then you're going to start to wrestle with it and go, well, actually, I guess I want some other things too. This is coming into conflict with. Yeah. Yeah. And what will I decide to do? Yeah. But the main point is that God's commands are instructions for the preservation and flourishing of life for myself and for those around me. That is the ultimate goal. And that's the foundation. That is what the Ten Commandments are about. And even when they don't look like a clear, simple pathway to the good life, that is what they are in the biblical story. Okay. Pathway to the good life. Yeah. Pathway to the good life. So yeah, what we're going to do now then really is, I think we should dive into the commands. Let's read the Ten. Yeah. We're going to work through the Ten and we're going to look next. First of all, just set the overall literary packaging of the Ten. See how they're bundled together. It's pretty cool. And then we're just going to dive into the first two, which are kind of a bundle. And so we'll actually take a couple conversations to tease apart the first two. But here we go. You ready? Yeah. Let's rock the Ten Commandments. Let's do it. Thanks for listening to this episode of Bible Project Podcast. Next week, we're going to start reading the Ten Commandments, starting with the first command. There will not be for you any other Elohim before me. Any other spiritual being other than Yahweh is not worthy of your ultimate loyalty and allegiance. When humans give our imaginations and desires and allegiances to anything that's not the source of all reality, it will eventually lead us on a path that dehumanizes us and other people. Bible Project is a crowdfunded nonprofit, and we exist to help people experience the Bible as a unified story that leads to Jesus. And everything that we make is free because of the generous support of thousands of people just like you. Thank you so much for being a part of this with us. Hello, my name is Aiden, and I'm from Salem, Oregon. Hello, my name is Lauren. I'm from Scottsdale, Arizona. I first heard about Bible Project from my son, Stephen. I first heard about Bible Project from my Bible class at school. I use Bible Project for learning about God. I use the Bible Project to help others learn to read the Bible and also for my own personal study and enrichment. And my favorite thing about Bible Project is looking at the artwork. My favorite thing about Bible Project is the podcast. We believe the Bible is a unified story that leads to Jesus. Bible Project is a nonprofit funded by people like me. Find free videos, articles, podcasts, classes, and more on the Bible Project app and at BibleProject.com. Hey, everyone. This is Emma. I'm a volunteer at Bible Project. 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