🕊️ Devotionals
Abraham: The Father of Faith, Whose Journey Began by Leaving Home
✍️ BiblePro Editorial Team · 🗓 2026-07-09
Among the many figures in the Bible, Abraham is known as the "father of faith." God chose him not because he was flawless, but because time and again, when the road ahead was hidden from view, he chose to trust the God who had called him. His life was a journey of listening, waiting, and obeying, and a testimony to the faithfulness of a covenant-keeping God. Today, whether you are just beginning to seek faith or have followed the Lord for many years, Abraham's story quietly invites you: Will you trust the God who speaks?
God's Call: Leaving Behind All That Was Familiar
The story begins with a command. God called a man named Abram, living in Ur, to lay down all his security and everything he knew, and to set out for a place he did not yet know.
「Now the LORD had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will shew thee: And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing.Genesis 12:1-2 (KJV)」
God did not hand him a map first, only a promise and a direction. So Abram departed, as the LORD had spoken to him—and that single step became the beginning of faith. True faith often means stepping out before we can see the answer.
The Covenant and the Promise of Descendants
God made a covenant with Abram, promising that his offspring would be as countless as the stars in the sky and the sand on the seashore. Yet at the time he was already advanced in years and had no children, and the reality before his eyes stood in stark contrast to the promise.
Even so, Abram did not fix his eyes on his own weakness but looked instead to the God who had promised. Faith does not deny reality; it places reality into the hands of a greater God. God's covenant rested not on human ability but on His own faithfulness.
The Long Wait: The Birth of Isaac
From receiving the promise to the birth of Isaac, Abraham waited many years. Along the way he faltered and took some wrong turns, but God's promise never failed. When he was a hundred years old and Sarah was long past the age of childbearing, God gave them Isaac—a name that means "laughter."
This long season of waiting reminds us: God's promises unfold in His own timing. Delay is not forgetfulness, and silence is not abandonment. Waiting itself is a school of faith.
Faith Counted as Righteousness
Scripture sums up the heart of Abraham's relationship with God in a single sentence—one that would later become the foundation of the Bible's great truth of "justification by faith."
「And he believed in the LORD; and he counted it to him for righteousness.Genesis 15:6 (KJV)」
Abraham was regarded as righteous by God not because of his merit or performance, but because he simply believed. This is the gospel foreshadowed: we are accepted by God through faith, not through works.
The Test on Mount Moriah
The deepest test on the road of faith came when God commanded Abraham to offer his beloved and only son, Isaac, as a burnt offering. This was the very child in whom the promise had been fulfilled—and now he was to be given up. Early in the morning Abraham rose, took Isaac, and set out for Mount Moriah, walking step by step toward an obedience that seemed to contradict everything.
At the very moment he raised the knife, the angel of the Lord stopped him and provided a ram in Isaac's place. Abraham believed that the God who promises would also provide. The faith declared on that mountain—"the LORD will provide"—points far ahead to the salvation God would one day provide for all people.
The Father of Many Nations
God renewed His promise to him and renewed his name as well, changing "Abram" to "Abraham," meaning "father of many nations."
「Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy name shall be Abraham; for a father of many nations have I made thee.Genesis 17:5 (KJV)」
Today, all who come to God through faith are called children of Abraham. The obedience of one man became the channel of blessing for all nations. When God calls a single person, it is often for the blessing of many.
The Lessons Abraham Leaves Us
Abraham was no perfect man; he knew fear and he stumbled, yet the one lesson he spent his whole life learning was this: trust the God who speaks. When the road ahead is unclear, when the promise is long in coming, or even when we are called to give up what we treasure most, his footsteps remind us—the God who calls us is faithful and true.
May you, too, open the Bible for yourself and read Genesis chapters twelve through twenty-two, coming to know the journey of this father of faith. In the BiblePro App you can use the "chapter-by-chapter multi-version comparison" to study the original text alongside different translations, or use "AI Search" to ask the questions on your heart; and may you also find a local church where you can walk this road of faith together with brothers and sisters.
God's Call: Leaving Behind All That Was Familiar
The story begins with a command. God called a man named Abram, living in Ur, to lay down all his security and everything he knew, and to set out for a place he did not yet know.
「Now the LORD had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will shew thee: And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing.Genesis 12:1-2 (KJV)」
God did not hand him a map first, only a promise and a direction. So Abram departed, as the LORD had spoken to him—and that single step became the beginning of faith. True faith often means stepping out before we can see the answer.
The Covenant and the Promise of Descendants
God made a covenant with Abram, promising that his offspring would be as countless as the stars in the sky and the sand on the seashore. Yet at the time he was already advanced in years and had no children, and the reality before his eyes stood in stark contrast to the promise.
Even so, Abram did not fix his eyes on his own weakness but looked instead to the God who had promised. Faith does not deny reality; it places reality into the hands of a greater God. God's covenant rested not on human ability but on His own faithfulness.
The Long Wait: The Birth of Isaac
From receiving the promise to the birth of Isaac, Abraham waited many years. Along the way he faltered and took some wrong turns, but God's promise never failed. When he was a hundred years old and Sarah was long past the age of childbearing, God gave them Isaac—a name that means "laughter."
This long season of waiting reminds us: God's promises unfold in His own timing. Delay is not forgetfulness, and silence is not abandonment. Waiting itself is a school of faith.
Faith Counted as Righteousness
Scripture sums up the heart of Abraham's relationship with God in a single sentence—one that would later become the foundation of the Bible's great truth of "justification by faith."
「And he believed in the LORD; and he counted it to him for righteousness.Genesis 15:6 (KJV)」
Abraham was regarded as righteous by God not because of his merit or performance, but because he simply believed. This is the gospel foreshadowed: we are accepted by God through faith, not through works.
The Test on Mount Moriah
The deepest test on the road of faith came when God commanded Abraham to offer his beloved and only son, Isaac, as a burnt offering. This was the very child in whom the promise had been fulfilled—and now he was to be given up. Early in the morning Abraham rose, took Isaac, and set out for Mount Moriah, walking step by step toward an obedience that seemed to contradict everything.
At the very moment he raised the knife, the angel of the Lord stopped him and provided a ram in Isaac's place. Abraham believed that the God who promises would also provide. The faith declared on that mountain—"the LORD will provide"—points far ahead to the salvation God would one day provide for all people.
The Father of Many Nations
God renewed His promise to him and renewed his name as well, changing "Abram" to "Abraham," meaning "father of many nations."
「Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy name shall be Abraham; for a father of many nations have I made thee.Genesis 17:5 (KJV)」
Today, all who come to God through faith are called children of Abraham. The obedience of one man became the channel of blessing for all nations. When God calls a single person, it is often for the blessing of many.
The Lessons Abraham Leaves Us
Abraham was no perfect man; he knew fear and he stumbled, yet the one lesson he spent his whole life learning was this: trust the God who speaks. When the road ahead is unclear, when the promise is long in coming, or even when we are called to give up what we treasure most, his footsteps remind us—the God who calls us is faithful and true.
May you, too, open the Bible for yourself and read Genesis chapters twelve through twenty-two, coming to know the journey of this father of faith. In the BiblePro App you can use the "chapter-by-chapter multi-version comparison" to study the original text alongside different translations, or use "AI Search" to ask the questions on your heart; and may you also find a local church where you can walk this road of faith together with brothers and sisters.
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