Note: Devotional based on last Sunday's sermon on Genesis 22:1-19.
Christians have long seen the binding of Isaac in Genesis 22 as a type (a shadow, a prefiguring, an anticipation) of the cross of Christ.
Consider these parallels:
Isaac
is the son of Abraham (see the
title given eight times in Genesis 22:2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13). Christ too
is “the son of Abraham” (Matthew 1:1), but also “the Son of God” (Mark
1:1).
Isaac
is a beloved son of Abraham (22:2:
the son “whom thou lovest”). Christ is the beloved Son of God the Father. Cf.
at his baptism and transfiguration, “This is my beloved Son in whom I am well
pleased” (Matthew 3:17; 17:5). See also Ephesians 4:6 where Paul said, “he hath
made us accepted in the beloved.”
Isaac
is the only son (three times in 22:2,
12, 16). Christ is the only begotten Son (cf. John 1:14, 18; 3:16).
Isaac
is the servant of his father (22:6
“and laid it upon Isaac his son”). Christ is the Servant of God the Father
(Mark 10:45: He came “not to be ministered unto, but to minister.”).
Isaac
cried out, “My father” (Genesis 22:7). Christ cried out at Gethsemane, “Abba, Father” (Mark 14:36).
Isaac
carried the wood to Mount Moriah (22:6-7).
Christ carried his cross to Mount Calvary (Matthew 27:32: “him they compelled to bear his
cross.”).
Isaac
was told, God will provide himself a lamb (22:8). Christ is the Lamb of God (see John 1:29, 36; and Revelation
13:8: “the Lamb that was slain from the foundation of the earth.”).
Isaac
was bound for the sacrifice (22:9:
“and bound Isaac his son”). Christ was bound and handed over to Pilate (Matthew
27:2, “And when they had bound him”
God
provided a substitute for Isaac (22:13:
there was “a ram caught in the thicket by his horns… who was offered “in the stead
of his son.”). Christ served as a substitute for elect sinners (Romans
5:8). Christ is both the Lamb and the Ram.
Isaac’s
ram was caught in a thicket by his horns
(22:13). The sacred head of Christ was encircled by a crown of twisted thorns
pressed upon his brow (Matthew 27:29).
Perhaps the apostle Paul had Genesis
22 in mind when he said
of God the Father’s offering up of Christ, “He that spared not his own Son, but
delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all
things?” (Romans 8:32).
Here
is one writer’s summary of this analogy:
The
Lord Jesus “enters his day of suffering as
the new Isaac, the true son of Abraham in the fullest sense, the one who would offer
himself wholly up to death, according to the divine foreordained plan, and
bring the blessing of forgiveness and eternal life to all who put their faith
in him” (Nicholas P. Lunn, The Gospels Through Old Testament Eyes, 183).
Christ
is indeed the New and Better Isaac.
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