Context: After God commands Abraham to offer Isaac on Mount Moriah and then provides a ram caught in a thicket as a substitute, Abraham names the place "The LORD will provide" (YHWH-Jireh). This is the first compound divine name in Scripture, arising not from theological speculation but from a lived encounter with God's saving character. The naming occurs at the climactic moment of the Aqedah (the binding of Isaac), the most dramatic test of faith in the patriarchal narratives, on the very mountain where Solomon would later build the temple (2 Chronicles 3:1).
Hebrew/Greek Key Terms:
OT-to-OT Development: The naming of YHWH-Jireh establishes a pattern that reverberates through Israel's history. The verb רָאָה carries a dual meaning of "seeing" and "providing" — God "sees" the need and "provides" the answer. This linguistic connection reappears in 1 Samuel 16:1 where God tells Samuel "I have provided [literally 'seen'] for myself a king," linking divine provision to divine election. The geographical connection to 2 Chronicles 3:1 is theologically charged: "Solomon began to build the house of the LORD in Jerusalem on Mount Moriah, where the LORD had appeared to David his father." The mountain of provision becomes the mountain of presence. The compound-name pattern inaugurated here continues with YHWH-Nissi (Exodus 17:15), YHWH-Shalom (Judges 6:24), and YHWH-Rohi (Psalm 23:1), each revealing God's character through redemptive acts.
Connections:
Christological Connection: Genesis 22:14 inaugurates the trajectory of God revealing His character through His name by establishing the foundational pattern: God provides a substitute on the mountain where He will later dwell. The Christological significance operates through multiple Greidanus methods simultaneously.
First, by Longitudinal Theme: YHWH-Jireh is the first in a series of compound divine names that progressively reveal God's multifaceted character. Each name arises from a specific redemptive act — provision (Genesis 22:14), military deliverance (Exodus 17:15), peace-granting (Judges 6:24), shepherding (Psalm 23:1). This cumulative self-disclosure reaches its climax in Christ, who embodies every facet these names individually reveal. He is the Provider who gives His own life (John 10:11), the Banner around whom God's people rally (John 12:32), the Peace who reconciles enemies to God (Ephesians 2:14), the Good Shepherd who lays down His life for the sheep (John 10:11). What required multiple names and multiple historical occasions to reveal in the OT is concentrated in a single Person.
Second, by Promise-Fulfillment: Abraham's prophetic statement, "On the mount of the LORD it shall be provided," contains a forward-looking orientation that extends beyond the immediate provision of the ram. The passive construction ("it shall be provided") and the future-oriented phrasing indicate that the provision on Moriah was not exhausted in that moment. Paul draws the explicit connection: "He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?" (Romans 8:32). The verbal echo of Genesis 22 is unmistakable — God "did not spare" parallels Abraham who "did not withhold" (Genesis 22:12, 16). What Abraham was willing to do but was prevented from completing, God Himself accomplished on that same mountain range when Christ died outside Jerusalem.
The escalation is categorical: Abraham offered his son in obedience but received him back; God offered His Son in love and received Him back through resurrection. The ram was an animal substitute for a human; Christ is the divine-human substitute for all humanity. The name YHWH-Jireh, revealed through a single act of provision on one mountain, finds its ultimate expression in the God who provides "the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world" (John 1:29). The already/not-yet dimension is present: God has already provided the ultimate sacrifice (Hebrews 10:12), yet believers still await the consummation when His provision reaches its fullness in the new creation (Revelation 21:4).
ANTI-DEFAULT CHECK: The primary method here is Longitudinal Theme (compound divine names revealing character) combined with Promise-Fulfillment (Abraham's forward-looking statement fulfilled in Christ). Typology is secondary — while the ram-as-substitute pattern is genuinely typological, the Foundation Text's focus within TT 105 is on the name revealing God's character, not on the substitutionary atonement mechanics (which belong to other trajectory tables). The name YHWH-Jireh contributes to the canon-wide theme of God making Himself known through His acts of redemption.
Connection Method(s): Longitudinal Theme (primary) — the first compound divine name inaugurates a canon-wide motif of God revealing His character through redemptive names. Promise-Fulfillment — Abraham's declaration "on the mount of the LORD it shall be provided" points forward to God's ultimate provision in Christ on that same mountain. Typology (secondary, Forward-Looking) — the substitutionary provision prefigures God providing the Lamb, but the typological significance here serves the larger theme of divine self-revelation through named acts.
Trajectory Table: 105 - Name of God (Revelation of Divine Character)