Abraham and Sodom
The Chosen PeopleOctober 30, 2025x
19
00:17:0215.66 MB

Abraham and Sodom

🎙️ Aaron Salvato🎙️ Aaron SalvatoVoice Actor | Writer | Theology Consultant
Zak Shellabarger Zak Shellabarger Showrunner | Head Writer

# 19 - Abraham Prays For Sodom - In this episode of The Chosen People Abraham boldly intercedes with God on behalf of Sodom, challenging our understanding of justice and mercy. Through this powerful dialogue, we explore the profound impact of prayer and the compassionate heart of God.

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Episode 19 of The Chosen People is inspired by the Book of Genesis.

Today's opening prayer is inspired by Romans 9:22, “What if God, willing to show his wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much longsuffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction?”

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00:00:00 Speaker 1: What if God, willing to show his wrath and to make his power known, endured with much long suffering, the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction Romans nine twenty two. Dear Lord, we thank you for your patience. We thank you for your mercy. You endure with us even in our weakness. You show kindness. Though we fail often. Your love is beyond measure. Your forbearance humbles our hearts. We confess our need for you. We confess the ways we stray from your will. Forgive us, Lord, when we resist your ways. Forgive us when pride rules our hearts. Turn us back to you. Transform us from within. Shape our lives to reflect your love. Help us surrender every part of ourselves. Give us wisdom to see your purpose and faith to trust in times of trial. Remind us of your patients. Teach us to extend that patience to others. Let us be vessels of grace. Let us be bearers of mercy. May our actions reveal your love. May our words reflect your truth. Use us to bring hope to a hurting world. Keep us close to you always. Amen, Thank you for praying with me today. You're listening to the chosen people. Remain here for a dramatic story inspired by the Bible. Be sure to follow this podcast so you can stay encouraged each week. 00:01:46 Speaker 2: Previously on the Chosen People. 00:01:50 Speaker 3: So close to Sodom? 00:01:52 Speaker 4: Are you sure? I think? 00:01:55 Speaker 2: I think the proximity of the city would prove useful to me. 00:02:00 Speaker 3: Eh, useful. Be careful near those cities. I fear the influence of their culture is more dangerous than their spears. 00:02:09 Speaker 2: Through the haze, Abraham saw them, three figures, distant but distinct, moving along the outskirts of his encampment. Abraham leaped to his feet, electrified by a sense of impending significance. These were no ordinary travelers. 00:02:30 Speaker 3: My lords, Please, if it pleases you, I would invite you to rest here before you continue on your journey. 00:02:39 Speaker 2: As they ate and drank, a connection began to form in Abraham's mind. He could always sense when the presence of his God was near, and sometimes it would prompt thoughts or ideas that were not his own. 00:02:53 Speaker 4: Let me ask you, this is anything impossible for God Almighty? Is anything too hard or too marvelous for him to achieve? 00:03:10 Speaker 2: After hours of talking and eating together, Abraham's three mysterious guests decided to take their leave. Abraham extended an offer for them to stay the rest of the evening, as well as a place to sleep, but they were determined to continue their journey. 00:03:28 Speaker 3: If you are sure you must continue, at least, let me walk with your ways and send you off. 00:03:34 Speaker 4: You may do that, Abraham. 00:03:36 Speaker 2: The men walked together to the edge of Abraham's encamping. As they cleared the tents, the vast expanse of land unfurled before them, a tapestry of earth and sky. The day was clear, and from their vantage point they could see the Salt sea glistening in the east. The city of Sodom lay in the distance, a shadow on the horizon where Abraham's nephew Lot resided. Abraham noticed the men's gaze fixed on Sodom, their eyes narrowing with a weighty contemplation. Suddenly, their leader turned to the other two and spoke, his voice carrying the gravity of a celestial decree. 00:04:18 Speaker 4: Tell me what you think should I hide what I am about to do from Abraham. 00:04:24 Speaker 2: Abraham blinked, startled by the directness of the query. What could this possibly mean? The other two men exchanged glances, their brows furrowing as they considered the leader's words, yet they waited for him to continue. 00:04:39 Speaker 4: Abraham is to become a great and powerful nation, and all the nations of the earth will be blessed through him. He has been chosen so that he will command his children and his house after him to keep the way of God Almighty. Their legacy will be one of honoring their God by doing what is right and just, and that legacy will fulfill to Abraham what he has been promised. 00:05:08 Speaker 2: Abraham was struck in you by the depth of this stranger's knowledge, knowledge of his destiny, his covenant, his God. Her sense of divine familiarity washed over him, a whisper of recognition in the recesses of his mind. It was as if his God was here, speaking. 00:05:29 Speaker 5: My Lord, tell Abraham what you want him to know. Yes, my Lord, you must do as you see fit. Abraham, listen to me. 00:05:40 Speaker 3: Yes, eh he ha ah ha a. I am here. 00:05:46 Speaker 4: The outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is immense. The victims of this terrible wickedness plead for justice. The sin of both Sodom and Gomorrah is extremely serious. I am to go down to see for myself if what they have done justifies the cry that has come up to me. If not, I will find out. 00:06:11 Speaker 2: Abraham did not know what to make of these words. He stood dumbfounded. The guest he had welcomed into his home appeared to be his God, The God Almighty had broken bread with him, drank his wine, and listened to all of his stories for hours. Abraham was amazed. But then there was the matter of what he had spoken about the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. The other two men nodded gravely at God Almighty's words. 00:06:43 Speaker 5: Yes, my Lord, your judgment will be carried out according to your will. 00:06:47 Speaker 4: My Lord, would you have us continue on our way? Yes, go ahead of me and scout out the city. See what you make of it in its inhabitants. I sensed that my chosen one, Abraham, has more to say. 00:07:03 Speaker 2: The two others bowed their heads in reverence to their God. They then turned to Abraham and acknowledged him as well, before departing in the direction of Sodom. 00:07:14 Speaker 4: Abraham, tell me what's on your mind. 00:07:17 Speaker 2: Abraham swallowed and considered all that was racing through his mind. He wasn't sure where to even begin. He had seen his God's power in Egypt, how he had brought plagues upon the household of the pharaoh, but nowhere else he had seen how his God had guided his hand in battle and brought them victory against King Cadelaeuma and his allies, even when it defied all odds. Countless men had fallen at his hands, and their deaths were warranted. They had been locked in battle, and Abraham committed to rescuing his nephew Lot. But the destruction of a city, a city filled with thousands of people, including innocence and civilians, was another matter entirely, My. 00:08:02 Speaker 3: God, will you really sweep away the righteous with the wicked? What if there are fifty righteous people in the city, will you really sweep it all away instead of sparing the place for the sake of fifty righteous people who are in it. I could not possibly imagine you doing such thing, killing the righteous along with the wicked, treating the righteous and the wicked alike. You couldn't possibly do that, right, I just don't understand. I know that it is your place to bring justice, and you are the judge of the whole earth, But how could this be just? 00:08:43 Speaker 2: Abraham was a descendant of Shem, ancient tales told by the fire emerged from the caverns of his mind. Would God judge the innocent? Was anybody truly innocent? Abraham paused, realizing again how little he knew of this God before him. It made him uneasy. Abraham, I hear your concern. Your compassion makes you a worthy leader to your people. I will make you this promise. If I find fifty righteous people in the city of Sodom, I will spare the whole place for their sake. Relief coursed through Abraham's body as he sighed his God would spare the righteous. That was fair. He could live with that. But Abraham then began to consider his nephew Lot and his household. Surely they would be among the righteous, he hoped. He had certainly done his best to impart all he knew and encourage Lot to walk the righteous path. Yes, he felt confident that would be enough to save Lot in his household, But what of their friends and neighbors. He knew his nephew had built a life in Sodom, gaining back the wealth and stability he had before the raid of King Cadelaoma. He wondered if Lot had shared the ways of their God with them. Abraham hoped the number of the righteous in Sodom, influenced by Lot himself, would be larger than fifty, but he feared that it might not be. 00:10:10 Speaker 3: Since I have ventured to speak and even suggest anything at allt you, oh my God. And even though I am dust and ashes, suppose the fifty righteous black five, will you destroy the whole city for lack of five? 00:10:28 Speaker 4: I will not destroy it if I find forty five. 00:10:31 Speaker 3: Suppose forty are found there. 00:10:34 Speaker 4: I will not do it on account of forty. 00:10:37 Speaker 2: But then the stories of Sodom's depravity surfaced in Abraham's mind, Stories of depraved sexual abuse and demoral acts, unsavory deeds like thievery and extortion, lying, cheating, and killing without conscience. Men and women alike hobbled out of Sodom, forever scarred by the cruelty of its residence. None were safe more sacred within the wars, women, children, the elderly. Every one was vulnerable to the cruel and debased culture of Sodom. Just thinking about the stories made Abraham's palms sweat with unease. Surely the judgment of his God was needed against those partaking in such savagery and brutality. But yet he had gone to battle and fought to win back his nephew Lot and the others who were held captive along with him. Surely they deserved to be spared. Many of them were women and young children, and still many more were slaves. They did not have the same autonomy as a man of a great household or high standing might have. If they had been led astray by the society around them, how could they be held responsible. He couldn't imagine abandoning these innocence to whatever terrible fate awaited the wicked in Sodom. Perhaps some of them would have found a way to a righteous path. He would have to hope that it was so. Even if the number of righteous was fewer than he hoped, would they be spared on account of the few? 00:12:05 Speaker 3: My God, please please do not be angry. But I will speak further. Suppose only thirty are found there. 00:12:17 Speaker 4: I will not do it if I find thirty there. 00:12:20 Speaker 2: Abraham then considered the people he had lived among and even fought alongside to win back the stolen from Sodom, the Amirits, his friend's memory, Anna, and Eshko. They had grown distant. 00:12:34 Speaker 4: It was true. 00:12:35 Speaker 2: The longer Abraham walked with his God, the less he could tolerate some of their differences. They were men who neither understood nor embraced the God Most High. They had dined with a mysterious high priest and seen the God Most High delivered them from certain death time and time again in battle, Yet they still had not come to believe. Abraham knew in his heart of hearts that they probably never would. But they had once been his allies. They had honored allegiances and been guests in one another's homes. Could Abraham stand by and watch them meet a fate like the one that awaited the people of Sodom? Abraham was not so sure. Compassion again surged in his heart when he thought of his lost friends. He also considered how many more were lost in a city like Sodom. With a heavy heart, he wondered how many sinned without truly understanding the damage it would do or what it would cost. 00:13:35 Speaker 3: I do I have already spoken my concerns would please my God? Suppose only twenty are found there, I will. 00:13:45 Speaker 4: Not destroy it on account of twenty. 00:13:48 Speaker 2: Abraham had traveled the length and breadth of Canaan for several years before finally settling in Hebron. In his wanderings, he met hostiles, of course, but mostly they were men and women who simply did not know his God. They did not know what was right and blindly deceived themselves into wickedness. Even before Canaan, the peoples of Haron and Or were similarly ensnared in their own sin and following false gods. Tears sprang to Abraham's eyes as he imagined a lonely future for himself and his family. Were they to be alone in pursuing righteousness while the world writhed in its deception and devious deeds in a place like Sodom, should even association with sinners be enough to condemn? Maybe even more were lost there than he knew, But for those who would stand strong, would such a minority of righteous people be enough to spare themselves from the judgment of the masses? 00:14:51 Speaker 3: My God, please do not be angry, but I will speak one final time. Suppose only ten are found there. 00:15:02 Speaker 4: I will not destroy it on account of den After Abraham's God departed to see about Sodom, Abraham walked for a long. 00:15:12 Speaker 2: Time on his own, processing what was to come. He knew his God was right in his authority and right in his judgment. But when he thought of those who were oppressed and abused by the wickedness of Sodom, for this was the need for justice, Abram had to acknowledge that his heart was still broken. It was complicated these feelings. Loving justice and having compassion was no easy task. He longed for a world in which everyone knew and understood what it was to walk the path of the righteous. He longed for a world in which everyone knew and understood his God. Abraham did not regret or question his decision to answer the call of his card. It was not always straightforward, but it was far better than anything else he had known. Abraham walked and walked until the early morning hours, and wondered when judgment for Sodom would come. This Prey dot com production is only made possible by our dedicated team of creative talents. Steve Katina, Max Bard, Zach Shellabarger and Ben Gammon are the executive producers of The Chosen People, narrated by Paul Coltofianu. Characters are voiced by Jonathan Cotten, Aaron Salvado, Sarah Seltz, Mike Reagan, Stephen Ringwald, Sylvia Zaradoc, Thomas Copeland Junior, Rosanna Pilcher, and Mitch Leshinsky. Music by Andrew Morgan Smith, written by Aaron Salvato, bre Rosalie and Chris Baig. 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