The Promise
God made a promise to Abraham that would change everything — and He never broke it.
One man, one promise
After the fall, things got bad fast. Cain killed Abel. Humanity descended into violence. God flooded the earth and started again with Noah. But the pattern kept repeating — humans kept trying to source life from themselves.
Then God did something different. Instead of fixing the whole world at once, He picked one man and made him a promise.
“I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you… and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.” — Genesis 12:2-3
That man was Abraham. And that promise — “all peoples on earth will be blessed through you” — is the seed of everything that comes next in the Bible.
The test that revealed everything
Years later, God told Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac — the son God had promised would carry on the blessing. It makes zero sense… until you see the pattern.
Abraham took Isaac up the mountain. Isaac asked, “Where’s the lamb?” And Abraham said something prophetic:
“God himself will provide the lamb.” — Genesis 22:8
At the last second, God stopped Abraham and provided a ram caught in a thicket. Isaac lived.
But here’s what most people miss: this wasn’t just a test of Abraham’s faith. It was a preview. God was showing what He would do someday — provide His own Son as the sacrifice.
Faith, not performance
The other wild thing about Abraham? He wasn’t righteous because he was perfect. He lied about his wife. Twice. He tried to make God’s promise happen on his own timeline. He messed up constantly.
But there’s this one verse that changes everything:
“Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness.” — Genesis 15:6
That’s it. He believed. And God counted him as righteous. Not because of what he did, but because of what he trusted God to do.
This is the template for the entire gospel. Righteousness isn’t earned. It’s received — through faith.
Passover: the pattern gets clearer
Fast forward a few hundred years. Abraham’s descendants — the Israelites — are slaves in Egypt. God sends Moses to bring them out. But freedom requires something brutal and beautiful: the Passover.
Each family had to take a lamb, kill it, and put its blood on their doorframe. When the angel of death passed through Egypt, it passed over every house marked with blood.
“When I see the blood, I will pass over you.” — Exodus 12:13
The lamb died instead of the firstborn. The family was spared — not because they were good enough, but because they were covered.
Notice the pattern:
- God provides the sacrifice
- Death happens to a substitute
- The people are included in what the substitute did
Sound familiar? It should. This is the gospel — told a thousand years before Jesus was born.
Salvation before the rulebook
Here’s a detail that matters more than you think: God rescued Israel from Egypt before He gave them the law at Mount Sinai.
Freedom first. Rules second.
God didn’t say, “Follow these commandments and then I’ll save you.” He said, “I saved you. Now here’s how to live as a free people.”
The order is everything. You don’t obey your way into God’s family. You’re rescued first, and then you learn to walk as someone who belongs.
The thread is forming
Can you see it? From creation to Abraham to Passover, the same message keeps appearing:
- Life comes from God, not from you
- God provides the sacrifice
- You’re saved by what the substitute does, not by your performance
- Faith — trust — is how you receive it
The trail keeps going. The prophets are about to say it even louder.