“His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness.” 2 Peter 1:3
We just looked at how God appeared to Hagar and she called Him “The One who sees me.” The next passage in Scripture as we continue in our Spirit and Truth Study tells of God appearing to Abram and saying of Himself “I am God Almighty” (NIV translation). “God Almighty” is the NIV translation of the Hebrew El Shaddai. This is the first time in the Bible that God refers to Himself by this name, and it is the primary name that He will use to reveal Himself to the patriarchs: Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
The website Hebrew4Christians gives this interesting insight into this special name for God that revealed the sufficiency of God to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob:
Jacob's blessing [to Joseph] given in Genesis 49:25, however, indicates that Shaddai might be related to the word for breasts (shadaim), indicating sufficiency and nourishment (i.e., "blessings of the breasts and of the womb" (בִּרְכת שָׁדַיִם וָרָחַם)). In this case, the Name might derive from the contraction of sha ("who") and dai ("enough") to indicate God's complete sufficiency to nurture the fledgling nation into fruitfulness. Indeed, God first uses this Name when He refers to multiplying Abraham's offspring (Gen. 17:2).
In Exodus 6:2, God reveals Himself to Moses as “I am the LORD. I appeared to Abraham, to Isaac and to Jacob as “El Shaddai,” and He tells Moses that by His name the LORD “I did not make myself known to them.” The translation of the LORD is Jehovah, meaning "the self-Existent or Eternal."
So we see that the patriarchs had only a glimpse of the full revelation of God--they were being told by God that He was sufficient for them to bring His covenant with them to pass. But God had not yet shared with them that God Himself was all self-sufficient. I believe that God was requiring a level of faith from the patriarchs regarding His character and nature that is unsurpassed today. God had not even told them that God was the Lord. All He had given them was the promise of a nation and of possession of a promised land and told them to trust Him!
Thus, In Hebrews 11:11, “By faith Abraham, even though he was past age—and Sarah herself was barren—was enabled to become a father because he considered him faithful who had made the promise.” The bottom line is that Abraham knew little about God, but He considered God faithful to the promise God had made!
When we think about the Patriarchs, we must consider that they did not have Genesis chapters 1 through 11 to cart around with them and refer to when they had questions about God. They hadn’t yet seen Jesus. The Holy Spirit has not yet been given. They didn’t have the same things we have today to supplement our faith. Those of you who consider your faith shaky—God has blessed you with so much more to boost your faith than He gave to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob! Could you wait around 25 years on a promise given by a God that you knew little more of than that He was faithful?
But that’s exactly the point! God gives us exactly the information we need to know about Him for the purpose at hand. Abraham needed to know that God would be faithful to His promise to give him a son and a nation and promised land. God did not withhold from Abraham, He only gave Him was was necessary for His faith at the time.
Personal Worship:
- What is God asking you to trust Him with today? Search your heart and find what knowledge God has given you for the requirements of your faith in this instance.
- Is God asking you to trust in His faithfulness? Where has God been faithful to you before? Where can learn more about God’s faithfulness?
- Is God asking you to surrender? What has God equipped you with so that surrender is possible in your life?
Remember that what God requires He has already given us through the knowledge of Him: “His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness.” 2 Peter 1:3

2 comments:
I'm so facinated with the covenant of Abraham. My husband and I were talking about it just this morning. I happen to be studying the old testament in my personal study. BTW I love the NIV version.
As I think about how God called Abraham to sacrifice his son, Isaac, I believe it was to teach him about the future sacrifice of God's beloved Son. To teach Abraham about God's love for us to have His precious and perfect Son be sacrificed in our behalf....and to point Him toward Christ.... like Isaac, the love that Christ had for His Father to be willing to lay down His life.
Another similitude can be: we are like Isaac doomed to death and destruction but saved by the "Ram" or "Lamb of God" who takes our place that our life may be spared. Sometimes I think of it like that anyway.
I also believe Abraham had to learn something about Abraham.
Cool Post.
Hi Alicia,
Thanks for your thoughtful post. I visited your blog and enjoyed it. However, I noticed you believe in something called "The Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ" and I'm curious about your Mormom faith. Care to share anything?
Jessica
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