I Will Bless You

Open Your Bible

Genesis 12:1-7, Galatians 3:15-29, Romans 4:13-25, Hebrews 11:8-16

As the story of the Bible opens, we encounter human failure at every turn. Adam and Eve invite sin and death into our world. Cain kills Abel, even after God warns him about the evil lurking in his heart. And there’s nearly everyone else—“every inclination of the human mind was nothing but evil all the time” (Genesis 6:5). Who could blame God if He had decided enough was enough? But in Genesis 12, God does something tremendously gracious: He chooses to befriend an elderly man from Mesopotamia and bless him beyond all imagination.

The promises God made to Abram, later renamed Abraham, seem too big for reality: descendants enough to replace the stars in the sky, with kings among their number; a name known far and wide; and a piece of real estate approximately the size of New Hampshire. These promises seem so removed from our everyday lives that we tend to leave them in the past, there among the tents and flocks of Abraham and Sarah. But the New Testament tells us that these promises are actually ours in Christ.

We are counted among the stars in the sky Abraham saw, heirs of the blessings bestowed upon the patriarch in response to his faith (Galatians 3:29). Abraham is our father by the way of the promise, just as he was Isaac’s (Romans 4:17). We are even “kings,” since we have been given a royal priesthood (Genesis 17:6; 1 Peter 2:9). And the land? That may be the best part. In Christ, that promise has been transformed, stretched out, and enlarged. It now encompasses the whole earth (Romans 4:13), including the city of New Jerusalem where we will one day live with God, just as Adam and Eve did so many years ago in Eden (Hebrews 11:16; Revelation 21:2–3). In God’s promises to Abraham, Christ has transformed our failures into blessings, not because we deserve it, but because He is just that good.

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158 thoughts on "I Will Bless You"

  1. Nicole Green says:

    Wow! Yes, we are counted among the stars…God’s mercy is indescribable. He is just so good!

  2. Alisa Shoults says:

    I’m am a blessing and counted amongst the stars- God knows me and gives me promises to believe in

  3. Lindsey Osterhaven says:

    From my She Reads Truth Bible:

    “No matter how much or how little we believe in God’s promises, they are still true.

    When we project our own human weakness and unbelief onto God’s promises to us, we miss out on experiencing His peace-the peace that allows us to follow Him into unknown territory.” ❤️

    1. Christie M says:

      Thank you so much for sharing this. It is exactly what I needed to read in this moment.

  4. Jennifer Wolford says:

    Jesus! Let me be more like Abraham. Not wavering in unbelief. Not letting my faith weaken when things don’t look they should in my eyes. Let me see Your Promises through Your Eyes.

  5. Anna Brazer says:

    I love knowing I’m counted among the stars. He transforms my failures to blessings even though I don’t deserve it. That’s how much He loves me!

  6. Leisa Larson says:

    What an inheritance we have. To be on this side of the promise is so amazing! I can’t even imagine how awesome it will be once we get to Christ’s return and all is restored. Wow. Super thankful this morning to belong to God.

  7. Julianna Hendrix says:

    Anyone read through a version that

  8. Nana says:

    “….. they agreed that they were foreigners and nomads here on earth” heb 11:13
    One major attitude of our father of faith, Abraham and so many others is here in this verse.. We can never see this earth and all its treasures as all there is in our lives. I think it’s important to always remember that we are just passing through. So even when we don’t visibly see the promises we do not loose hope.