Sermon Tone Analysis

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
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Sadness
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Analytical
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Anger
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liberty bible church          1~/20~/08 P.M.
By Tom Zobrist
“Why do we struggle with the same sins?”
The Cause and Cure of Besetting Sins
Genesis 20:1-18
introduction
Illus. of “Don’t Let Them Get Away” Like a loving parent that would never abandon their child, so it is with besetting sins.
They just won’t leave us alone.
No matter how hard we try, we just can’t seem to shake them.
When we think of these types of sins, most often we think of the big ones… alcohol or drugs, smoking, etc.
But, these aren’t the sins that bog most Christians down.
The majority of believers struggle more with Prov.
6:16-19; Gal.
5:19-21; 2 Tim.
3:1-7.
How can we overcome the little, hidden, besetting sins that enslave us, that we hate, but that it is so hard to over come?
OPEN to passage.
*Prop.
*In this passage, we see a patriarch deal with the same old sin and the ramifications that follow and then see him overcome.
Open in PRAYER.
PREVIEW the passage.
Sodom and Gomorrah have been destroyed.
Abraham and Lot are more distant now than they have ever been and Abraham may not even know if Lot is alive or not.
So, with God’s promise of a son still in the offing, Abraham moves on.
He relocates in the Promised Land and with that relocation comes a recurring problem.
What do you do with a beautiful wife in a culture where pagans commonly build their harems with women whose husbands had been conquered?
What does Abraham do?
The same thing he did in Egypt.
i.
Abraham courts sin vs. 1-7
Illus. of white lies.
Def.-
A harmless lie; a lie not intended to harm, but told in order to avoid distress or embarrassment.
Is there such a thing as a “harmless lie?” Abraham thought so and had repeated this one before.
a. Abraham tells a little white lie    
V 1      1.
Abraham moves to the south about 50 miles from Hebron, about 12 miles south of Gaza.
V 2      2.
Abraham repeats the same sin that he had in Egypt back in chapter 12. Cf. 12:10-13 Abraham’s sinfulness and weak faith lead to that problem and God preserved Sarah’s purity then and He would do it again.
But it does say something about a person when God has to keep delivering them from the same sin over and over again.
Abraham repeats the sin here.
It’s interesting to note that his son Isaac will do the same thing when we get to chapter 26 with another Abimelech.
We’ll see that later.
But, often we do see sins repeated in families.
It is not genetic.
It is spiritual and habitual in nature.
Anyway…
b.
God protects Sarah again
V 3      1.
This would be a nightmare of nightmares.
When God tells you are a dead man, it’s usually over.
But God’s grace and mercy are evident here.
You also see the dreadful ramifications for adultery.
“a man’s wife” is literally, “married to a husband.”
God is serious about this sin that our world has become very flippant with.
Under the law, it was disciplined with death.
Under grace, it can be forgiven.
But, God is very serious about our purity and protecting it.
V 4      2.
Fortunately, God had kept Abimelech from committing this act of sin.
He appeals to God’s righteousness, much as Abraham had done for Sodom.
Already he had suffered.
Cf. v 17-18
V 5      3.
He appealed to God again for his innocence.
He really didn’t know.
So God communicates with him again.
V 6      4.
God kept him from committing this act that would have destroyed him and would have put God’s promise to Abraham in jeopardy.
Had Sarah’s purity been compromised, the promise may have been in jeopardy, since her marriage to Abraham would have been over.
The promise was that Abraham and Sarah produce a Godly seed.
They had to stay married.
We see here how God opens and closes wombs and how much control he has over the actions of men.
Mere mortals cannot thwart the plans and promises of God.
V 7a     5.
This is the first time “prophet” is used in the Bible.
Abraham was a spokesman for God.
He could intervene for Abimelech and he would be saved.
V 7b    6.
If not, he would die and so would all his family and servants.
He needed the prayers of Abraham to be saved from certain death.
This is not for eternal salvation, but to be saved from physical death because of the sin of adultery, which he would surely commit if Sarah is not returned.
*Trans.*
ABRAHAM COURTS SIN and causes others to suffer.
But, God bales him out of the same predicament he was in in Egypt.
But, he doesn’t even know it yet.
Next we see…
 
 ii.
Abraham confronted for sin vs. 8-13
Illus. of Daniel Webster once said, “My greatest thought is my accountability to God.”
No doubt, that was the thought of Abimelech and his household here in verse 8.
 a.
Abimelech confronts Abraham
V 8      1.
He recounts the dreams and the conversation with God.
They had all been experiencing the barrenness of God’s judgment and so no doubt believed these words and were afraid that death would come to them all.
V 9      2.
Abraham is sternly rebuked.
It’s sad that the this pagan had more conviction about the sin than Abraham did.
V 10    3.
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