Obedience in the Old Testament
Text:
Leviticus 26:3–14
Introduction
Obedience has
always been central to God’s relationship with His people. As Bobby
reminded us in the previous lesson on atonement, the blood of Christ
only benefits those who are obedient. From Genesis to Revelation,
God calls His people to listen, believe, and obey. Today we will
look at obedience in the Old Testament, where God made clear both
the blessings for obedience and the consequences of disobedience.
The Necessity of Obedience
Throughout
scripture, obedience is not optional. In our world today, even
within groups calling themselves the church, there is a growing
resistance to the necessity of obedience. People want salvation, but
not accountability. They want heaven, but not sacrifice. Yet
scripture says plainly, “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’
shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My
Father in heaven” (Matthew 7:21). Obedience is the dividing line.
Blessings for Obedience
Leviticus
26:3–13 shows God’s promises: fruitful harvests, peace in the land,
victory over enemies, and His presence dwelling among them.
Obedience was tied to covenant blessings. When Israel obeyed, they
prospered. God walked with them and made them His people.
Curses for Disobedience
But starting in
Leviticus 26:14, the opposite is given: terror, disease, defeat,
famine, and ultimately captivity. Israel’s history confirms
this—because they disobeyed, they suffered Babylonian captivity. God
warned them repeatedly, but disobedience brought judgment.
Deuteronomy 28 echoes these warnings with even stronger language.
The principle is clear: disobedience always brings consequences.
Examples of Disobedience
Nadab and
Abihu (Leviticus 10:1–3): Offered
unauthorized fire before the Lord. God consumed them with fire. A
small act, but disobedience cost them their lives.
Uzzah (2 Samuel 6:6–7):
With good intentions, he steadied the Ark of the Covenant when it
was carried improperly on a cart. He touched it and died. Good
motives do not cancel disobedience.
Achan (Joshua 7):
Took forbidden spoils from Jericho, hid them in his tent, and
brought destruction on his family.
The young prophet (1 Kings
13): Commanded not to eat or return the same way, but
listened to a lying old prophet. A lion killed him. God’s command
was clear—he disobeyed.
Moses (Numbers 20:7–12):
Told to speak to the rock, but struck it twice. He was denied entry
to the promised land. Even a great leader was not exempt from
consequences.
The Principle Taught
In each case,
disobedience—large or small—brought judgment. God was teaching His
people then, and us today, that He is holy. He expects His word to
be followed, not altered, excused, or explained away. To claim
belief without obedience is false; true faith always acts. Belief
and obedience are inseparably connected.
Obedience in
the Old Testament Sermon Outline:
Introduction
I. The
Necessity of Obedience
II.
Blessings for Obedience (Leviticus 26:3–13)
-
Rain,
harvest, safety, victory
-
God’s
presence among His people
III. Curses
for Disobedience (Leviticus 26:14–39; Deuteronomy 28)
-
Terror,
famine, captivity
-
Israel’s
history proves it
IV.
Examples of Disobedience
-
Nadab &
Abihu: strange fire (Leviticus 10:1–3)
-
Uzzah:
touching the ark (2 Samuel 6:6–7)
-
Achan: theft
from Jericho (Joshua 7)
-
The young
prophet: disobeying God’s word (1 Kings 13)
-
Moses:
striking the rock (Numbers 20)
V. The
Principle Taught
-
Even “small”
disobedience matters
-
God does not
change (Malachi 3:6)
-
Belief and
obedience are inseparable
Conclusion
From Adam and Eve to Moses, the Old Testament testifies that
obedience is essential. God blesses obedience, but punishes
disobedience. Faith without obedience is not faith at all.
Call to Action
Obedience to God
is not optional. The same God who demanded obedience in the Old
Testament demands it today. Let us examine ourselves. Are we doing
His will, or excusing ourselves with opinions and traditions? If our
hearts are right, our actions will follow. Let us be faithful and
obey the Lord in every command, great or small, so that His promises
of blessing and salvation are ours.
Key Takeaways
-
Obedience is
required for atonement to benefit us (Matthew 7:21)
-
God promised
blessings for obedience and curses for disobedience (Leviticus
26)
-
Examples
like Nadab, Uzzah, Achan, the young prophet, and Moses show the
seriousness of disobedience
-
God does not
change—He still requires obedience (Malachi 3:6)
-
True faith
is always expressed through obedience (Numbers 20; Hebrews 11)
Scripture Reference List
-
Leviticus
26:3–39 – Blessings and curses of obedience/disobedience
-
Deuteronomy
28 – Parallel curses for disobedience
-
Matthew 7:21
– Only those who do the will of the Father enter the kingdom
-
Leviticus
10:1–3 – Nadab and Abihu consumed for strange fire
-
2 Samuel
6:6–7 – Uzzah struck dead for touching the Ark
-
Joshua
7:20–26 – Achan’s sin and punishment
-
1 Kings
13:11–24 – The young prophet killed by a lion
-
Numbers
20:7–12 – Moses struck the rock and was denied the promised land
-
Malachi 3:6
– The Lord does not change
-
Hebrews 11:7
– Noah condemned the world through obedience
Prepared by
David Hersey |