LWWC - Genesis - Session 7
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In this session from Genesis 11–12, we move from the Tower of Babel to the call of Abram and discover a powerful contrast between human ambition and God-centered faith.
The message opens with the Tower of Babel, where humanity unites to “make a name” for itself. Under Nimrod’s rebellious leadership, people attempt to build a system centered on pride, control, and self-exaltation. God confuses their language—not because He fears competition, but because unified wickedness would accelerate human corruption. Babel becomes a picture of worldly systems driven by pride and independence from God.
In contrast, Genesis shifts to Abram. Where Babel represents making a name for ourselves, Abram represents surrendering our name for God’s purpose. God calls him to leave his country, family, and security—an act of radical obedience. Abram is not perfect, but he is willing. The call is clear: “Come out and be separate.”
The sermon emphasizes that the call of God remains constant even if our assignments change. Our primary calling is not position, platform, or prominence—it is to know God. Tasks may shift across seasons, but the call to pursue Him never changes.
Abram’s journey shows both faith and frailty. After building altars and calling on the Lord, he faces famine and flees to Egypt in fear, even misleading Pharaoh about Sarah. Yet even in Abram’s weakness, God proves Himself faithful. The Lord protects Sarah and rescues Abram from his own missteps. This demonstrates a key truth: God often allows us to face situations that stretch us so He can reveal His faithfulness and grow our faith.
A major theme of the message is that God is not trying to make our names great—He is forming our faith. From Abram to the New Testament church, salvation has always been by faith. Abram looked forward to the coming Messiah; we look back to the finished work of Christ. The foundation has never been performance—it has always been trust.
The session concludes with a stirring reminder: without faith it is impossible to please God. Therefore, God will continually work to grow our faith through tests, obedience, and dependence. We are pilgrims, not settlers; altar-builders, not empire-builders.
Key TakeawayGod calls His people out of pride and self-reliance into a life of faith. Though we may stumble, He proves Himself faithful. Our greatest calling is to know Him—and to let Him build our faith for His glory.