Genesis Part 42, “Two Kings, Two Kingdoms” (Genesis 14:17–24), we see that the greatest tests of faith often come after things go well—when we must decide who gets the credit, who we trust, and what kingdom we’re really building our lives on. Abram stands at a crossroads between reward and blessing, choosing worship before wealth and honoring God as the true source of everything. His response challenges us to reflect: when life is going well, where does our confidence quietly shift—and is worship still our first instinct?
As the king of Sodom offers what seems reasonable, Abram refuses to compromise, showing us that prosperity can test our faith even more than hardship. The question becomes personal: where are we tempted to secure ourselves in ways that blur our allegiance, and are we building on what we can see or on what God has promised? The gospel anchors this passage in Christ, our true Priest-King, who refused the kingdoms of this world and secured an unshakable kingdom through His cross—so that our future is not fragile, but forever secure.