(Genesis 11–25)

1. Summary of Abraham’s Story

  • Abram was called by God to leave his home and go to an unknown land (Genesis 12:1-2).
  • God promised Abram descendants as numerous as the stars (Genesis 15:5-6).
  • Abram and Sarai doubted and took matters into their own hands with Hagar, resulting in Ishmael (Genesis 16).
  • God changed his name to Abraham and reaffirmed His covenant promise (Genesis 17:5-8).
  • Isaac, the son of promise, was born when Abraham was 100 years old (Genesis 21:2).
  • Abraham faced his greatest test when God asked him to sacrifice Isaac, but God provided a ram (Genesis 22:11-14).
  • Abraham died full of faith, trusting God’s promises for future generations (Genesis 25:8).

2. How Abraham Points to Jesus

  • Called to leave everything and trust God’s plan (Genesis 12:1-2; Hebrews 11:8).
  • Believed God and was counted righteous by faith (Genesis 15:6; Romans 4:3).
  • Father of nations through whom Jesus would come (Genesis 17:5; Galatians 3:8).
  • The near-sacrifice of Isaac points to the sacrifice of Christ (Genesis 22:2; John 3:16).
  • God provided a substitute sacrifice—just as Jesus is our substitute (Genesis 22:13-14).

3. What God is Teaching Us Through Abraham’s Life

  • Faith requires stepping out without seeing the whole path (Genesis 12:1; Hebrews 11:1).
  • Delays are part of the journey, not a denial of the promise (Genesis 21:2; Romans 4:20-21).
  • Our mistakes do not cancel God’s covenant (Genesis 16; Psalm 103:14).
  • Real faith trusts God with what we love most (Genesis 22:2; Hebrews 11:19).
  • Obedience today leaves a legacy tomorrow (Galatians 3:29).

4. Reflection Questions

  1. What area of your life is God asking you to step out in faith without having all the details?
  2. How do you stay strong when God’s promises seem delayed?
  3. Where have you tried to “help God out” instead of trusting His timing?
  4. What would be hardest for you to surrender if God asked?
  5. How is your obedience today shaping a legacy of faith for others?
  6. How does knowing Abraham was justified by faith—not by works—change how you see your own relationship with God?

Personal Reflection Challenge:

Identify one place where you are being called to trust God’s timing.
Write out a prayer surrendering your timetable to His perfect plan.