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  1. Dec 23, 2015 · smoke like that of an oven mixed with fire like that of a torch that passed through these pieces. There was dark smoke mixed with a large flame passing through the pieces of the animals. This would make Abraham's vision consistent, theme-wise, with the Children of Israel's vision of God at Mt. Sinai in Deuteronomy 4:11:

    • Context of The Smoking Oven and Flaming Torch
    • Dream of The Smoking Oven and Flaming Torch
    • Views of The Smoking Oven and Flaming Torch
    • Correct View of The Smoking Oven and Flaming Torch

    Genesis 15 describes two visions. The high point of the first vision (v. 1-11) occurs when Abram was declared righteous because he believed in God (Genesis 15:6). Romans 4:13-24 uses Abram as an illustration that salvation is by faith. We are not saved by doing good deeds. Because Abram believed God, the land promised in the Abrahamic Covenant (Gen...

    Beginning with Genesis 15:12, Abram entered into a deep sleep as the sun was setting. The time of the night would have been somewhere between 5:00 pm and 8:00 pm in Israel. The Hebrew word for “deep sleep” is tardema. Genesis 2:21 tells us that Adam fell into tardema. It is commonly used for divine revelations (Job 4:13; 33:15; Isaiah 29:10). Abram...

    The question we are interested in is “What does the smoking oven and flaming torch in Genesis 15:17-21 represent?” A wide variety of opinions exist as to the symbolic meaning of the smoking firepot and the flaming torch. Two views have been given already in the quotes above. Here are seven more viewpoints. Several of them are almost identical. Alle...

    Before the recommended view is given, notice that verse 17 tells us the smoking oven and a flaming torch “passed between these pieces,” that is, the animal pieces. Typically, covenants were ratified by a sacrificial offering (Exodus 24:1-8). But this covenant was ratified when two or more people passed between the animal pieces. It is described in ...

  2. Genesis 15:17. Behold a smoking furnace — This signified the affliction of his seed in Egypt: they were there in the furnace of affliction, and labouring in the very fire. They were there in the smoke, their eyes darkened that they could not see to the end of their troubles.

  3. One is a smoking fire pot, something that served as an oven in Abram's day. The other is a flaming torch. In the narrative itself, we're not told what these two items represent.

  4. Feb 11, 2016 · In my opinion, the smoking fire-pot was symbolic or prophetic of the forthcoming captivity of Abraham's descendants in Egypt. (Deuteronomy 4:20 refers to the exodus as Israel's deliverance from the iron-smelting furnace of Egypt.)

  5. Aug 11, 2006 · In a theophany — a visible revelation of the divine — God appears as a smoking fire pot and a flaming torch (v. 17), a form similar to the pillar of fire He will use to guide the Israelites toward Canaan centuries later (Ex. 13:21–22).

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  7. When the sun had set and darkness had fallen, a smoking firepot with a blazing torch appeared and passed between the pieces. After the sun went down and darkness fell, Abram saw a smoking firepot and a flaming torch pass between the halves of the carcasses.

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