From Epic Failures to Epic Redemption
No Story or Person is Too Broken for God's Redemption.
No Story or Person is Too Broken for God's Redemption.
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
Genesis 19 tells two interrelated stories about Lot and his daughters, both of which are quite scandalous. In the first, Lot, Abraham’s nephew, welcomes two angels who have come to Sodom in human form. He protects them from a violent mob but shockingly offers his daughters to appease them. Later, his daughters get him drunk and commit incest with him, giving birth to two nations that would become future enemies of the children of Israel. However, something astounding awaits us at the end of Lot’s story. We only have to have eyes to see and patience to hear it out.
Lot and the Mob
The story of Lot and his daughters begins with Lot sitting at Sodom’s gate, a place of community leadership, indicating his comfort and status among the city’s people. However, the wicked inhabitants of Sodom later remind him that he is an immigrant and does not truly belong. When two angels arrive, Lot rises, bows, and insists they stay at his house (Genesis 19:1–2). They reluctantly agree.
His insistence reflects the ancient Near Eastern value of hospitality in general and the later Jewish value in particular, where hosting guests was a sacred duty, outweighing personal comfort and pleasure. Lot’s persistence—urging the angels despite their refusal (Gen. 19:3)—shows his commitment to this code.
Lot had been living in, and deeply integrated into, the society of Sodom for about two decades when God judged the city. This length of time makes his status as a city elder (sitting at the city gate in Genesis 19:1) perfectly plausible and adds to the tragedy of his story—he was a righteous man whose long exposure to a wicked culture had compromised his moral judgment. We read:
“And if he rescued Lot, a righteous man, who was distressed by the depraved conduct of the lawless (for that righteous man, living among them day after day, was tormented in his righteous soul by the lawless deeds he saw and heard).” (2 Peter 2:7).
Trouble arises when the men of Sodom surround Lot’s house, demanding to have homosexual sex with Lot’s guests. We read:
“Before they lay down, the men of the city—the men of Sodom—surrounded the house, both young and old, all the people from every quarter; and they called to Lot and said to him, “Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us that we may have relations with them.” (Gen. 19:4-5)
The Hebrew verb ידע (yada, “to know”) implies sexual intent, a violation of hospitality and community bonds. Lot pleads, “Please, my brothers, do not act wickedly” (Gen. 19:7), using the Hebrew אחי (achai, “my brothers”) to appeal to shared values, which the mob rejects. Then, shockingly, at least for the modern reader, Lot offers his two virgin daughters, saying,
“Do to them whatever you like; only do not do anything to these men, because they have come under the shelter of my roof” (Gen. 19:8).
The Hebrew phrase צל קרתי (tzail k’ra’ti, “shadow of my roof”) underscores the sacred protection of guests, but Lot’s offer reveals a disturbing fact: he values strangers’s sexual safety over that of his daughters.
The Hebrew phrase בָנוֹת, אֲשֶׁר לֹא-יָדְעוּ אִישׁ (banot asher lo yad’u ish, “daughters, that did not know a man”) emphasizes their purity, making Lot’s offer jarring. It suggests he sees them as property to trade for guest safety. Lot’s action, though courageous and bold in one way, was sadly culturally driven in another. The angels intervene, blinding the mob. This saves Lot and his daughters but undoubtedly leaves their relationship trauma unaddressed.
Lot and His Daughters
Fire and brimstone destroy Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen. 19:24-25). After fleeing to Zoar, a fearful Lot moves to a mountain cave (Gen. 19:30). His daughters, likely feeling betrayed by their father, falsely claim, “There are no men around to come into us, as is common on earth” (Gen. 19:31). They get Lot drunk and sleep with him, first the elder, then the younger (Gen. 19:32-35). The Hebrew phrase לא ידע (lo yada, “he did not know”) is used to elegantly connect the two stories involving Lot and his two daughters in this chapter. The word ידע (yada, “to know”) can mean both cognitive and sexual knowledge, echoing Lot’s prior failure to protect his daughters (Gen. 19:4-5). The daughters, once vulnerable to Lot’s willingness to sacrifice them, now use him as a devalued object in their survival plan, reflecting a twisted symmetry of moral compromise.
Both daughters bear sons, Moab and Ben-ammi, ancestors of the Moabites and Ammonites (Gen. 19:36–38). Their flawed reasoning echoes Lot’s earlier choice to put social duty ahead of family, creating a cycle of betrayal that started with Sodom’s trauma.
Even though Lot made serious mistakes in Genesis 19, 2 Peter 2:7-8 calls him “righteous Lot,” whose soul was tormented by the lawless actions of Sodom, setting him apart from his immoral neighbors. His imperfect hospitality toward the angels reflects godly virtue, and his rescue, bolstered by Abraham’s intercession, underscores God’s grace for those compromised yet oriented toward righteousness.
Epic Redemption
In comparison to Lot, Jesus embodies a self-sacrificial love that protects the vulnerable while not sacrificing others. Instead, Jesus sacrifices Himself to save others. Lot offered his daughters to the mob; Christ offered Himself to the cross. Lot’s story reveals a cycle of trauma and sin; Christ’s story initiates a cycle of redemption and healing, offering not judgment but restorative grace to those whom sin has broken.
But when God’s story unfolds further, something extraordinary becomes clear. The shameful incest in Genesis 19 gives rise to the Moabites, a nation that produces Ruth, a woman of extraordinary faith and virtue (Book of Ruth). Her gift blesses Israel and the world, as she becomes King David’s great-grandmother and an ancestor of Jesus Christ. Her story reveals a profound truth: God’s grace transforms even the darkest moments, proving no situation or person is beyond redemption.
Conclusion
Let the tragedy of Lot serve as our urgent warning and the triumph of Christ as our eternal call. We must vigilantly guard our hearts against the slow, compromising decay of the world, for even wholesome intentions can become twisted when filtered through a corrupted conscience. Don’t just guard the gate of power; escape the city of sin before it’s too late. Do not sacrifice the vulnerable on the altar of principle, but lay down your life in the service of Christ.
But always remember that even in the darkest chapters of your story, the thread of God’s redemption shines most brilliantly. This is the ultimate truth: our God specializes in rewriting stories of brokenness into stories of epics of grace and redemption. In Christ, the cycle of sin is shattered. We are offered not only forgiveness for our past but also a part in His glorious future. No person, no past, and no situation is beyond the reach of His redemptive grace.
Not even yours.
Comments (78)
I want to ThankYou for theses blogs I enjoy reading them very much I sorry I can’t give an offering now as I’m bearly can get by without asking for help for my self
Thank You
May the Lord graciously provide for all that you need, dear Curtis! Thank you so much for your encouragement! I would be very much appriciate your prayers!
This is a blog that truly deserves to be shared with the world. May God continue to bless you with wisdom and understanding. Thank you.
Thank you, Michael! Spred it around!
Well done
Well said :-)
This is so rich amd full of info.
Its really deep.
Another interesting story that almost echoes it is in Judges 19, where a man and his concubine are travelling and she is also "sacrificed" in a way. Its quite brutal and difficult to understand. I only think I understand the symbolism in it. But its likely western perspective not hebrew.
Will deal with it some day
My question, Lot offer his daughters to the mobs to protect the stranger was this in rhe mind of lot the way he was cultured from his uncle Abraham, to treat messengers with respect. And too in light of his daughter couldn't he trust in God to protect both the message and his daughter from the mobs, or because he was in the land of Sodom he was afraid to publicly with bravery demonstrated his faith in his one true God. So he cowardly made his decision to offer up her daughters without considering the consequences. And we see the redemption plan of God came in a better offer to Lot.
Best I understood you, Paulette, I think we agree.
Dr. Eli,
Shalom! Thank you for this lesson! It comes at a most unusual time in my life. It speaks to me very clearly and the last paragraph brings new light to "even the darkest of chapter of your story".
Thank you!
Edward
We have shared experience, my brother. Stay strong and look up.
Great study! I was always looking for some explantion of Lot's disgraceful devaluing of his daughters, but, I might have to just accept the depravity in human nature! The best part of the worst decline in human nature, is that God's wonderful GRACE is greater! I have found those people who have truly repented from a sinful lifestyle, seem to be more humble and more inclined to help others get out of their troubles!
Yes, Robyn. Thank you for your comment.
Your words never fail to bless me. What a brilliant, God-centered mind you have!!
I hope you are right, Valerie! From your lips to God's ears. (Yedish proverb).
Hmmmm - what about Cain?
Sorry - I enojy your work and publications so much, I suppose I thought the event between Cain and Abel fit with God's mercy and grace shown to Lot, Noah, Abraham, and many others who had so many opporunities to learn from the lessons of life and still obtain His tolerance for our mortal errors. Jacob's experience with Tamar and where that led also to a great lineage through repentance ... I just thought Cain was not "taken", but left to learn from his killing his brother Avel. :-)
I see. Thank you for your comment, Kent.
Kent, hi. Please, explain your question?
Do you know the story that it was Lot's wife who told the local people about the two visiting strangers under the pretence that she wanted to borrow salt? It is said this explains her eventual transformation.
This apocryphal Jewish folktale, found in midrashic texts like Genesis Rabbah (c. 400 CE), reinterprets Genesis 19. Lot's wife, unnamed in the Bible, supposedly greets two angelic strangers (disguised as men) at Sodom's gate. Curious, she asks to "borrow salt," a pretext to alert nosy neighbors about the visitors—violating Sodom's hospitality laws and the angels' secrecy. As punishment, she turns into a pillar of salt during the city's destruction, symbolizing betrayal and excessive curiosity. The tale explains her biblical fate beyond mere disobedience (looking back).
Charming midrashic etiology, it humanizes a biblical villainess, linking her doom to everyday gossip. Yet, it's speculative fiction—no biblical basis—and patriarchal: women as tattletales. Reinforces stereotypes, ignoring Sodom's sins (injustice, per Ezekiel 16). Fun, but historically unreliable.