Don’t look back

Slices

Prepare

Is your present more influenced by past regrets than future hope?

Bible passage

Genesis 19:15–29

15 With the coming of dawn, the angels urged Lot, saying, ‘Hurry! Take your wife and your two daughters who are here, or you will be swept away when the city is punished.’

16 When he hesitated, the men grasped his hand and the hands of his wife and of his two daughters and led them safely out of the city, for the Lord was merciful to them. 17 As soon as they had brought them out, one of them said, ‘Flee for your lives! Don’t look back, and don’t stop anywhere in the plain! Flee to the mountains or you will be swept away!’

18 But Lot said to them, ‘No, my lords, please! 19 Your servant has found favour in your eyes, and you have shown great kindness to me in sparing my life. But I can’t flee to the mountains; this disaster will overtake me, and I’ll die. 20 Look, here is a town near enough to run to, and it is small. Let me flee to it – it is very small, isn’t it? Then my life will be spared.’

21 He said to him, ‘Very well, I will grant this request too; I will not overthrow the town you speak of. 22 But flee there quickly, because I cannot do anything until you reach it.’ (That is why the town was called Zoar.)

23 By the time Lot reached Zoar, the sun had risen over the land. 24 Then the Lord rained down burning sulphur on Sodom and Gomorrah – from the Lord out of the heavens. 25 Thus he overthrew those cities and the entire plain, destroying all those living in the cities – and also the vegetation in the land. 26 But Lot’s wife looked back, and she became a pillar of salt.

27 Early the next morning Abraham got up and returned to the place where he had stood before the Lord. 28 He looked down towards Sodom and Gomorrah, towards all the land of the plain, and he saw dense smoke rising from the land, like smoke from a furnace.

29 So when God destroyed the cities of the plain, he remembered Abraham, and he brought Lot out of the catastrophe that overthrew the cities where Lot had lived.

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Gone. The life they had built, the home they had made, the contacts they had fostered – all that Lot and his family had worked for was gone. It seems a small thing that Lot’s wife should look over her shoulder as everything disappeared (v 26), but, as we have seen throughout this series, the life of faith is lived facing forwards. God’s call to Abraham was to a future that had not yet materialised. In the New Testament, this theme is continued: ‘For here we do not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to come’ (Hebrews 13:14).

It is difficult to remain in this forward- facing attitude when all we hope for seems to continually slip over the horizon. For Christians, the life of faith is possible because we have received the foretaste, or down payment, guaranteeing the fulfilment of our hope. ‘And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us’ (Romans 5:5),

This series ends on a cliff-hanger. Behind is a scene of apocalyptic destruction. Ahead is God’s promised future – a land, a family, a role in history – that can be accessed only through step-by-step trust in God’s call. Lot does escape from Sodom, but he is unable to sustain the life of faith and his story ends shamefully (19:30–38). Abraham will journey on. 

Author
Steve Silvester

Respond

Pray: ‘To the past: Thanks. To the future: Yes’ (Dag Hammarskjöld).

Bible in a year

Read the Bible in a year: Job 18,19; Luke 19

Pray for Scripture Union

Ask God to give wisdom to Leonie, Joel and the team at King’s Church Durham as they consider how to take the young people they are working with on the next stage of their faith journey. (This week's prayers relate to this story.)