
Episodes
2 days ago
2 days ago
April 25, 2026 - Equipped 2026 - Day 3 - 9:00 AM Session
This episode is a sermon-style teaching that carefully unpacks Genesis chapters 18 and 19, exploring how these two chapters lay foundational truths for the whole Bible: the fulfillment of God’s promise to Abraham and the unfolding of God’s righteous justice.
The speaker walks through Abraham’s encounter with the Lord and two angels—highlighting Abraham’s hospitality, the emphatic promise that Sarah will bear Isaac, Sarah’s skeptical laugh, and the profound question, “Is anything too difficult for the Lord?” The teaching points to a possible Christophany and ties the promise directly to the later fulfillment in Isaac.
Attention then turns to Abraham’s bold intercession on behalf of Sodom, the negotiation from fifty righteous down to ten, and a theological meditation on God’s dual attributes of righteousness (tzaddik) and justice (mishpat). The sermon emphasizes that God does not act rashly but judges with full knowledge and perfect moral clarity.
Genesis 19 is examined in detail: Lot’s compromised witness in Sodom, the violent mob demanding to “know” the visitors, Lot’s tragic offer of his daughters, the angels’ rescue, Lot’s hesitation, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and Lot’s wife becoming a pillar of salt. The aftermath—Lot’s daughters’ grievous scheme and the birth of the Moabites and Ammonites—is presented as consequence and warning about environmental influence.
Key takeaways include the interwoven truths of God’s promise and God’s justice, the social corrosiveness of unchecked sin, and practical warnings about the influence of place and companions (summarized with references to Paul, Jude, Ezekiel, Romans, and Luke). There are no guest speakers; this is a single-teacher exposition aimed at helping listeners apply the moral and spiritual lessons of these chapters to their lives and communities.
Duration 41:29

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