Setting
From the event of the tower of Babel, the plot moves on to the account of the genealogy of Shem and later, the genealogy of Terah. The detailed and specific genealogy acts as a precursor to Abram, the son of Terah and the one who would become a blessing to all nations. The narrative teaches us a lot about Abram’s struggle, faith, reliance and trust toward the calling of the LORD in spite of the impossibles and the unknowns in front of his eyes.
Key Verse
(12:1)
Did You Know...?
- Ur (11:28): Now, known as modern Tell el-Muqaiyer, 10 miles west of the Euphrates river halfway between Baghdad and the Persian Gulf, [ref] deep in southern Mesopotamia. However, there was also another Ur in the northwest region of Mesopotamia near to the land of the Hittites and Syria. [ref]
- Barren (11:30): Childlessness was a threat to the family in the ancient world because it would disrupt the general inheritance pattern. Thus “legal remedies allowed a man whose wife was barren to impregnate a slave girl (Code of Hammurabi, Nuzi texts) or a prostitute (Lipit-Ishtar Code). The children from this relationship could then be acknowledged by the father as his heirs (Code of Hammurabi).” [ref]
- Haran (11:31) is located on the Balikh river, a northern tributary of the Euphrates, 24 miles south-southeast of Urfa (ancient Edessa). [ref]
- From Haran to Canaan (12:4-5): It took a distance of 300 miles for Abram to travel from Haran to Canaan. [ref]
- Shechem (12:6) was a city in Samaria (Gen 33:18) and stood in the narrow valley between Ebal on the north and Gerizim on the south. [ref]
- Terebinth tree (12:6) is a broad, medium-length, Mediterranean tree. The tree is known for the shade it gives during summer. [ref]
- Bethel (12:8) in Hebrew, the word ‘Bethel” is literally translated as “the house of God.” The city is located in Central Palestine, about 10 miles north of Jerusalem. It was originally a Canaanite city of Luz (Gen 28:19). [ref]
- Ai (12:8): The most probable site is the ancient city Haiyan, two miles east from Bethel. [ref]
- The South (12:9): In Hebrew, the word reads “Negeb.” It is a desert area southwest of the Dead Sea. The area is the southernmost district of Judah (Josh 10:40, 11:16). [ref]
Outline
General Analysis
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1a. Compare the genealogy of Shem in Genesis 11:10-32 with the genealogy of Seth in Genesis 5:6-32. See also Gen 23:1, 25:7, 35:28, 47:28 and 50:22.
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1b. What caused such a great reduction in men’s lifespan? See Genesis 6:3.
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1c. What similarities did you find between the genealogy of Shem and the genealogy of Seth?
Segment Analysis
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11:10-26
1. In Genesis 11:10-32, why did the Scriptures focus only on the genealogy of Shem and not the others?
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11:27-32
2. Compare Genesis 11:27-12:9 with Acts 7:2-4. In these passages, how many times did the LORD communicate with Abram?
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3a. How old was Abram when he left Haran?
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3b. Who and what did Abram take when he departed from Haran to Canaan?
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3c. If you were in Abram’s age and with all the people and possessions that you had, what were the challenges and struggles of a long-distance travelling that you would be having? And what compels you to do such a thing?
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4. Compare and contrast the lives of Sarai and Milcah. See also Gen 17:16, 22:20-23.
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12:1-9
5a. The LORD told Abram to get out from where and for what purpose?
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5b. What were the promised blessings of the LORD to Abram?
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6a. Share your experience of the challenges in “getting out from your country, from your family and from your father’s house, to a land you do not even know”?
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6b. How could Abram simply “get out” from his country, from his family and from his father’s house to a land that God would show him? See Heb 11:8 and Rom 4:20-21.
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7a. How did each of Abram’s family members respond to the departure of Abram from Ur of the Chaldeans? Nahor;
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7b. Terah;
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7c. Sarah and Lot;
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7d. In addition to their response to Abram’s departure to Canaan, what other things can you learn about Terah’s, Nahor’s and Abram’s beliefs? See Josh 24:2-3.
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7e. Share your own personal “leap-of-faith” experience.
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8. What was the significance of the LORD’s appearance and promise to Abram in Canaan?
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9a. How many times did Abram build an altar to the LORD in this passage? And where did he build it?
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9b. What can we learn from Abram in building an altar and calling on the name of the LORD?
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10a. Why would Abram continue his journey, going on still toward the South?
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10b. Share “the unknowns” in our life-journeys and how we go through them with God.