GENESIS 11, 12
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ONE LANGUAGE…Now
while they understood one another, they would be the more capable of helping
one another, and the less inclined to separate.
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And they found a
plain in the land of Shinar - A spacious plain, able to contain them all.
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The country being a
plain, yielded neither stone nor mortar, yet that did not discourage them; they made brick to use instead of stone, and
slime, or pitch, instead of mortar.
1.
To
make them a name: they would do
something to be talked of by posterity. But they could not gain this point;
for we do not find in any history the name of so much as one of these Babel -
builders.
2.
They did it to prevent their dispersion;
in disobedience to the command, Genesis
9:1 , to replenish the
earth. God orders them to scatter. We will live and die together., engage in
this big undertaking…
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And the Lord came
down to see the city - an expression from our view; He knew it clearly already! The tower speaks to: Their weakness and frailty, it was a
foolish thing for the children of men to defy heaven.
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If they continue as one,
much of the earth will be left uninhabited, and this undertaking will swallow
up the little remnant of God's children, therefore the Trinity decreed they
must not be one. As one, nothing will be restrained from them - this is a
reason why they must be crossed, in their design.
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Let US go down and confound
their language - God speaks to Himself,
the Son and Holy Ghost. Accordingly
three things were done:
Their language was
confounded. God, Who when He made man taught him to speak, now made those
builders to forget their former language; and to speak a new one, which yet
was the same to those of the same tribe or family, but not to others: those
of one colony could converse together, but not with those of another. The world continues today to strive for
one language. Pentecost
contributed greatly to the gathering together of the children of God, which
were scattered abroad, and the uniting of them in Christ, that with one mind and mouth they might glorify God, Romans
15:6
1.
Their
building was stopped since they saw the hand of the Lord gone out against
them.
2.
The
builders were scattered abroad from there upon the face of the whole earth -
They departed in companies after their families and after their tongues, Genesis
10:5 ,20,31, to the
several countries and places allotted to them in the division that had been
made, which they knew before, but would not go to take possession of, 'till
now they were forced to it.
1.
The
very thing which they feared came upon them; that dispersion which they
thought to evade.
2. That it was God's work; the Lord scattered
them; God's hand is to be acknowledged
in all scattering providences; if the family be scattered, relations
scattered, churches scattered, it is the Lord's doing.
3.
That
they left behind them a perpetual memorandum of their reproach in the name
given to the place; it was called Babel, confusion.
4.
The
children of men were now finally scattered, and never will come all together
again 'till the great day. when the Son of Man shall sit upon the throne of
his glory, and all nations shall be gathered before him, Matthew
25:31 ,32.
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1.
That
nothing is left upon record concerning those of this line, but their names and
ages; the Holy Ghost seems to hasten thro' the list to the story of Abraham
in v. 27.
2.
That
there was an observable gradual decrease in the years of their lives. Shem
reached to 600 years, which yet fell short of the age of the patriarchs
before the flood; the three next came short of 500, the three next did not
reach to 300, and after them we read not of any that attained to 200 but
Terah; and not many ages after this, Moses reckoned 70 or 80 to be the utmost
men ordinarily arrive at. When the earth began to be replenished, men’s lives
began to shorten so that the decrease is to be imputed to the wise disposal
of providence, rather than to any decay of nature.
3.
That
Eber, from whom the Hebrews were denominated, was the longest lived of any
that were born after the flood; which perhaps was the reward of his strict
adherence to the ways of God.
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Here begins the
story of Abram. His country: Ur of the Chaldee's –
An idolatrous
country, where even the children of Eber themselves degenerated.
His relations,
mentioned for his sake, and because of their interest in the following story.
His father was
Terah, of whom it is said, Joshua
24:2 , that he served
other gods on the other side the flood; so early did idolatry gain footing in
the world. Probably was Terah’s youngest son. We have,
1.
Some
account of his brethren
i.
Nahor,
out of whole family both Isaac and Jacob had their wives.
ii.
Haran,
the father of Lot, of whom it is here said, Genesis
11:28 , that he died
before his father Terah. He died in Ur
of the Chaldees, before that happy remove of the family out of that
idolatrous country.
iii.
His
wife was Sarai. Abram himself said
that she was the daughter of his father, but not the daughter of his mother, Genesis
20:12 . She was ten years
younger than Abram.
His
departure out of Ur of the Chaldees, with his father Terah, and his nephew
Lot, and the rest of his family, in obedience to the call of God. In Haran or
Charran, a place about the mid - way between Ur and Canaan, where they dwelt
'till Terah's head was laid; probably because the old man was unable, through
the infirmities of age, to proceed in his journey.
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Chapter
12 begins a new division in the book of Genesis. The first eleven chapters have
often been called ‘primeval history.’ The last chapters are known as
‘patriarchal history.’ While the effect of man’s sin has become increasingly
widespread, the fulfillment of the promise of God in Genesis 3:15 has
become more selective. The Redeemer was to come from the seed of the woman
(Genesis 3:15), then from the descendants of Seth, then Noah, and now Abraham
(Genesis 12:2-3).
Theologically,
Genesis chapter 12 is one of the key Old Testament passages, for it contains
what has been called the Abrahamic Covenant. This covenant is the thread which
ties the rest of the Old Testament together. It is critical to a correct
understanding of Bible prophecy.
In
Genesis chapter 12 we come not only to a new division and an important theological
covenant, but most of all to a great and godly man—Abraham. Nearly one-fourth
of the book of Genesis is devoted to this man’s life. Over 40 Old Testament
references are made to Abraham. It is of interest to note that Islam holds
Abram second in importance to Mohammed, with the Koran referring to Abraham 188
times.128
The
New Testament in no way diminishes the significance of the life and character
of Abraham. There are nearly 75 references to him in the New Testament. Paul
chose Abraham as the finest example of a man who is justified before God by
faith apart from works (Romans 4). James referred to Abraham as a man who
demonstrated his faith to men by his works (James 2:21-23). The writer to the
Hebrews pointed to Abraham as an illustration of a man who walked by faith,
devoting more space to him than any other individual in chapter eleven (Hebrews
11:8-19). In Galatians chapter 3 Paul wrote that Christians are the ‘sons of
Abraham’ by faith, and therefore, rightful heirs to the blessings promised him
(Galatians 3:7,9).
As
we turn our attention to Genesis chapter 12 let us do so with an eye to Abraham
as an example of the walk of faith. In particular, I want to underscore the
process which God employed to strengthen Abram’s faith and make him the godly
man he became. Most of the errors so popular in Christian circles concerning
the nature of the life of faith can be corrected by a study of the life of Abraham.
The
Circumstances
Surrounding the Call of Abram
(Joshua
24:2-3; Acts 7:2-5)
Moses
did not give us all the background needed to properly grasp the significance of
the call of Abram, but it has been recorded for us in the Bible. Stephen
clarifies the time that Abram was first called of God. It was not in Haran, as
a casual reading of Genesis 12 might incline us to believe, but in
Ur. As Stephen stood before his unbelieving Jewish brethren, he recounted the
history of God’s chosen people, beginning with the call of Abraham:
And
he said, ‘Hear me, brethren and fathers! The God of glory appeared to our
father Abraham when he was in Mesopotamia, before he lived in Haran and said to
him, “Depart from your country and your relatives, and come into the land that
I will show you”’ (Acts 7:2-3).
While
not all Bible students agree on the location of Ur,129 most agree that it is the Ur of
southern Mesopotamia, on what used to be the coast of the Persian Gulf. The
site of the great city was first discovered in 1854, and has since that time
been excavated, revealing much about life in the times of Abram.130 While the actual period that Abram
lived in Ur may be a matter of discussion, we can say with certainty that Ur
was justified in its boast of being a highly developed civilization. There are
ample evidences of elaborate wealth, skilled craftsmanship, and advanced
technology and science.131 All of this tells us something of
the city which Abram was commanded to leave. In the words of Vos,
Regardless
of when Abraham left Ur, he turned his back on a great metropolis, setting out
by faith for a land about which he knew little or nothing and which could
probably offer him little from a standpoint of material benefits.132
If
the city which Abram was told to leave was great, the home he left behind seems
to have been less than godly. I would have assumed that Terah was a God-fearing
man, who brought up his son, Abram, to believe in only one God, unlike the
people of his day, but this was not so. Joshua gives us helpful insight into
the character of Terah in his farewell speech at the end of his life:
And
Joshua said to all the people, ‘Thus says the Lord, the God of Israel, “From
ancient times your fathers lived beyond the River, namely, Terah, the father of
Abraham and the father of Nahor, and they served other gods”’ (Joshua 24:2).
So
far as we can tell, then, Terah was an idolater, like those of his days. No wonder
God commanded Abram to leave his father’s house (Genesis 12:1)!
Abram’s
age was not a factor in favor of leaving Ur for some unknown land either. Moses
tells us that Abram was 75 when he entered the land of Canaan. Think of it.
Abram would have been on social security for over ten years. The ‘mid-life
crisis’ would have been past history for him. Rather than thinking of a new
land and a new life, most of us would have been thinking in terms of a rocking
chair and a rest home.
We
are not inclined to be impressed with Abram’s age because of the length of
men’s lives in olden times, but Genesis chapter 11 informs us that man’s
longevity was much greater in times past, than in Abram’s day. Abram died at
the ripe old age of 175 (25:7-8), a much shorter time than Shem (11:10-11) or
Arpachshad (11:12-13). One purpose of the genealogy of chapter 11 is that it
informs us that men were living shorter lives, and having children younger.
Abram was, in our vernacular, ‘no spring chicken’ when he left Haran for Canaan.
All
of this should remind us of the objections and obstacles which must have been
in the mind of Abram when the call of God came. He left Haran, not because it
was the easiest thing to do, but because God intended for him to do it. Having
said this, I do not wish to glorify Abram’s faith either, for as we shall see,
it was initially very weak. The obstacles were largely overcome by the
initiative of God in the early stages of the life of Abram. This remains to be
proven.
The
Command of God
The
call of Abram is recorded for us in Genesis 12:1: “Now the Lord said to
Abram, ‘Go forth from your country, and from your relatives and from your
father’s house, to the land which I will show you.’”
A
better rendering of the first sentence of this call is found in the King James
Version and in the New International Version, both of which read, “The Lord had
said to Abram, … ”
The
difference is important. Without it we are inclined to think that the call of
Abram came at Haran, rather than at Ur. But we know from Stephen’s words that
the call came to Abram at Ur (Acts 7:2). The pluperfect tense (had said) is
both grammatically legitimate and exegetically necessary. It tells us that
verses 27-32 of chapter 11 are parenthetical,133 and not strictly in chronological
order.
The
command of God to Abram was in conjunction with an appearance of God.134 While Moses mentioned only an
appearance of God after Abram was in the land (12:7), Stephen informs us that
God appeared to Abram while in Ur (Acts 7:2). In the light of all the
objections which might be raised by Abram, such an appearance should not be
unusual. God also appeared to Moses at the time of his call (Exodus 3:2, etc.).
In
one sense, the command of God to Abram was very specific. Abram was told in
detail what he must leave behind. He must leave his country, his relatives, and
his father’s house. God was going to make a new nation, not merely revise an
existing one. Little of the culture, religion, or philosophy of the people of
Ur was to be a part of what God planned to do with His people, Israel.
On
the other hand, God’s command was deliberately vague. While what was to be left
behind was crystal clear, what lay ahead was distressingly devoid of detail: “…
to the land which I will show you.”
Abram
did not even know where he would settle. As the writer to the Hebrews put it,
“… he went out, not knowing where he was going” (Hebrews 11:8).
The
faith to which we are called is not faith in a plan, but faith in a person.
Much more important than where he was, God was concerned
with who he was, and in Whom he trusted. God
is not nearly so concerned with geography as He is with godliness.
The
relationship between the command of God to Abram in verse 1 and the incident at
Babel in chapter 11 should not be overlooked. At Babel men chose to disregard
the command of God to disperse and populate the earth. They strove to find
security and renown by banding together and building a great city (11:3-4).
They sought blessing in the product of their own labors, rather than in the
promise of God.
The
command of God to Abram is, in effect, a reversal of what man attempted at
Babel. Abram was secure and comfortable in Ur, a great city. God called him to
leave that city and to exchange his townhouse for a tent. God promised Abram a
great name (what the people of Babel sought, 11:4) as a result of leaving Ur,
leaving the security of his relatives, and trusting only in God. How unlike
man’s ways are from God’s.
The
Covenant with Abram
(12:2-3)
Technically,
the covenant with Abram is not found in chapter 12, but in chapters 15 (verse
18) and 17 (verses 2,4,7,9,10,11,13,14,19,21) where the word covenant appears.
It is there that the specific details of the covenant are spelled out. Here in
chapter 12 the general features of the covenant are introduced.
Three
major promises are contained in verses 2 and 3: a land; a seed; and a blessing.
The land, as we have already said, is implied in verse 1. At the time of the
call, Abram did not know where this land was. At Shechem, God promised to give
‘this land’ to Abram (12:7). It was not until chapter 15 that a full
description of the land was given:
On
that day the Lord made a covenant with Abram, saying, ‘To your descendants I
have given this land, from the river of Egypt as far as the great river, the
river Euphrates: … ’ (Genesis 15:18).
This
land never belonged to Abram in his lifetime, even as God had said (15:13-16).
When Sarah died, he had to buy a portion of the land for a burial site
(23:3ff.). Those who first read the book of Genesis were about to take
possession of the land which was promised Abram. What a thrill that must have
been for the people of Moses’ day to read this promise and realize that the
time for possession had come.
The
second promise of the Abrahamic Covenant was that of a great nation coming from
Abram. We have already mentioned the significance of Psalm 127 in
relation to the efforts of man at Babel. Real blessing does not come from toil
and agonizing hours of labor, but from the fruit of intimacy, namely children.
Abraham’s blessing was largely to be seen in his descendants. Here was the
basis for the ‘great name’ that God would give to Abram.
This
promise demanded faith on the part of Abram, for it was obvious that he was
already aged, and that Sarai, his wife, was incapable of having children
(11:30). It would be many years before Abram would fully grasp that this heir
that God had promised would come from the union of he and Sarai.
The
final promise was that of blessing—blessing for him, and blessing through him.
Much of Abram’s blessing was to come in the form of his offspring, but there
was also the blessing that would come in the form of the Messiah, who would
bring salvation to God’s people. To this hope our Lord, the Messiah, spoke,
“Your father Abraham rejoiced to see My day; and he saw it, and was glad” (John
8:56).
Beyond
this, Abram was destined to become a blessing to men of every nation. Blessing
would come through Abraham in several ways. Those who recognized the hand of
God in Abram and his descendants would be blessed by contact with them.
Pharaoh, for example, was blessed by exalting Joseph. Men of all nations would
be blessed by the Scriptures which, to a great extent, came through the
instrumentality of the Jewish people. Ultimately, the whole world was blessed
by the coming of the Messiah, who came to save men of every nation, not just
the Jews:
Therefore,
be sure that it is those who are of faith that are sons of Abraham. And the
Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached
the gospel beforehand to Abraham, saying, ‘All the nations shall be blessed in
you.’ So then those who are of faith are blessed with Abraham, the believer
(Galatians 3:7-9)
The
Compliance of Abram
(11:31-32, 12:4-9)
I am
greatly distressed by the glamorizing of heroes, especially by Christians. The
giants of the faith seem to be sterling characters with no evident flaws, with
machine-like discipline, and unfaltering faith. I do not find such people in
the Bible. The heroes of the Bible are men with ‘like passions’ (James 5:17)
and feet of clay. That is my kind of hero. I can identify with men and women
like this. And, most important, I can find hope for a person like myself.
Little wonder that men like Peter and not Paul, are our heroes, for we can see
ourselves in them.
Abram
was a man like you and me. Moses’ account of his initial steps of faith makes
it evident that much was to be desired, and to be developed in him. God called
him in Ur, but Abram did not leave his father’s house or his relatives. Now
Abram did leave Ur and go to Haran, but it appears to me that this was only
because his pagan father decided to leave Ur. There may well have been
political or economic factors which made such a move expedient, apart from any
spiritual considerations.
Much
of Abram’s first moves were neither purposeful nor pious, but rather were a
more passive response to external forces. God providentially led Terah to pull
up roots at Ur and to move toward Canaan (11:31). For some reason, Terah and
his family stopped short of Canaan, and remained in Haran. Since Abram was
unwilling or unable to leave his father’s house, God took Abram’s father in
death (11:32). Now Abram obeyed God by faith and entered into the land of
Canaan, but only after considerable preparatory steps had been taken by God.
I am
saying that Abram obeyed God in faith, but it was a very little faith, and a
very late faith. But does such a claim contradict the words of Scripture? Is
this inconsistent with the words of the writer to the Hebrews?
By
faith Abraham, when he was called, obeyed by going out to a place which he was
to receive for an inheritance; and he went out, not knowing where he was going
(Hebrews 11:8).
At
least two things must be said in response to this question. First, the emphasis
of Hebrews 11 is on faith. The writer wished to stress here the positive
aspects of the Christian’s walk, not his failures. Therefore, the failures are
not mentioned. Secondly, consistent with this approach, the author does not
stress the timing of Abram’s obedience. He simply wrote, “… Abraham, when he
was called, obeyed by going out.” Let us remember that Abram did go to Canaan,
just as Moses went to Egypt, but not without considerable pressure from God.
We
should not find this discouraging, but consistent with our own reluctance to
put our future on the line in active, aggressive, unquestioning faith. Abraham
was a man of great faith—after years of testing by God. But at the point of
Abram’s call, he was a man whose faith was meager; real, but meager. And if we
are honest with ourselves, that is just about where most of us are. In our best
moments, our faith is vibrant and vital, but in the moments of testing, it is
weak and wanting.
Once
in the land of Canaan, the route taken by Abram is noteworthy. It should first
of all be said that it was the route we would have expected him to have taken
if he were going in that direction. A look at a map of the ancient world of
patriarchal times would indicate that Abram traveled the well-trodden roads of
his day.135 This route was that commonly
traveled by those who engaged in the commerce of those days.
This
I believe to be a significant observation, for many Christians seem to feel
that God’s way is the way of the bizarre and the unusual. They do not expect
God to lead them in a normal, predictable fashion. The lesson we may need to
learn is this: very often the way God would have us go is the most sensible way
that we would have chosen anyhow. It is only when God wishes us to depart from
the expected that we should look for guidance that is spectacular or unusual.
Cassuto
has suggested that the places mentioned (Shechem, Bethel, the Negev) are
significant. He believes that the land is thus divided into three regions: one
extending from the northern border to Shechem, the second from Shechem as far
as Bethel, and the third from Bethel to the southern boundary.136
Jacob,
after his return from Paddan-aram, came first to Shechem (33:18). Later he was
instructed to go up to Bethel (35:1; cf. verse 6). At both Shechem and Bethel
he built altars, like Abram, his grandfather (33:20; 35:7).
When
Israel went into the land of Canaan, to possess it under Joshua, these same key
cities were captured:
So
Joshua sent them away, and they went to the place of ambush and remained
between Bethel and Ai, on the west side of Ai; … (Joshua 8:9).
Then
Joshua built an altar to the Lord, the God of Israel, in Mount Ebal (Joshua
8:30).
Cassuto
concludes that Abram’s journey unknowingly outlined the territory which would
belong to Israel, and that the places he stopped symbolically forecast the
future conquest of the land.137 In an additional comment, Cassuto
adds the fact that these places were also religious centers of Canaanite
worship.138 In effect, Abram’s actions of
building altars and proclaiming the name of the Lord prophesied the coming time
when true religious worship would overcome the pagan religion of the
Canaanites. While the exact meaning of the expression, ‘called upon the name of
the Lord’ may not be known, worship is surely described. It is difficult to
believe that Abram’s public act of worship was not noted and viewed with
particular interest by the Canaanites. Personally I believe that there is some
kind of missionary function being carried out by Abram. As such, it would have
been an act flowing from faith.
Conclusion:
Characteristics
of the Life of Faith
From
these events in the early stages of Abram’s growth in grace several principles
are found which depict the walk of faith in every age, and certainly in our
own.
(1)
Abram’s faith was commenced at the initiative of God. The
sovereignty of God in salvation is beautifully illustrated in the call of
Abram. Abram came from a pagan home. To our knowledge, he had no particular
spiritual qualities which drew God to him. God, in His electing grace, chose
Abram to follow Him, while he was going his own way. Abram, like Paul, and true
believers of every age, would acknowledge that it was God Who sought him out
and saved him, on the basis of divine grace.
(2)
Abram’s spiritual life continued through the sovereign work of God. God
is not only sovereign in salvation, but sovereign in the process of
sanctification. Had Abram’s spiritual life depended solely upon his
faithfulness, the story of Abram would have ended very quickly. Having called
Abram, it was God Who providentially brought Abram to the point of leaving home
and homeland and entering Canaan. Thank God our spiritual lives are ultimately
dependent upon His faithfulness and not ours.
(3)
The Christian’s walk is a pilgrimage. Abraham
lived as a pilgrim, looking for the city of God:
“By
faith he lived as an alien in the land of promise, as in a foreign land,
dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, fellow-heirs of the some promise; for
he was looking for the city which has foundations, whose architect and builder
is God” (Hebrews 11:9-10).
Our
permanent home is not to be found in this world, but in the one that is to
come, in the presence of our Lord (cf. John 14:1-3). That is the message
of the New Testament (cf. Ephesians 2:19, I Peter 1:17, 2:11).
The
tent is thus the symbol of the pilgrim. He does not invest heavily in that
which will not last. He dare not become too attached to that which he cannot
take with him. In this life we cannot expect to fully possess what lies in the
future, but only to survey it. The Christian life is not knowing exactly what
the future holds, but knowing Him Who holds the future.
(4)
The Christian walk is rooted in the reliability of the Word of God. When
you stop to think about it, Abram had no concrete, tangible proof that a life
of blessing lay ahead, outside of Ur, away from his family. All he had to rely
upon was God, Who had revealed Himself to him.
In
the final analysis, that is all anyone can have. There are, of course,
evidences for the reasonableness of faith, but at the bottom line we simply
must believe what God has said to us in His Word. If His ‘Word is not true and
reliable, then we, of all men, are most miserable.’
But
isn’t that enough? What more should we require than God’s Word? The other day I
heard a preacher put it very pointedly. He quoted the shopworn saying, ‘God
said it. I believe it. That settles it.’ The preacher said it could be said
even shorter. ‘God said it, and that settles it, whether you believe it or
not.’ I like that. The Word of God is sufficient for man’s faith.
God
has said that all men are sinners, deserving of, and destined to eternal
punishment. God sent His Son, Jesus Christ, the One Abram looked for in the
future, to die on the cross to suffer the penalty for man’s sin. He alone
offers man the righteousness necessary for eternal life. God said it. Do you
believe it?
(5)
The Christian walk is simply doing what God has told us to do and believing
that He is leading us as we do so. God
told Abram to leave without knowing where the path of obedience would lead, but
believing that God was leading as he went. Do not expect that God will indicate
each turn in the road with a clearly marked sign. Do what God tells you to do
in the most sensible way you know how. Faith is not developed by living life by
some kind of map, but by using God’s Word as a compass, pointing us in the
right direction, but challenging us to walk by faith and not by sight.
As
Abram went from place to place, the will of God must have seemed like a riddle.
But as we look back upon it, we can see that God was leading all the way. No
stop along the path was irrelevant or without purpose. Such will be the case as
we can look back upon our lives from the vantage point of time.
(6)
The Christian walk is a process of growth in grace. We
often read of Abraham, the man of faith, supposing that he was always that kind
of man. I would hope that our study of the initial period of his life indicates
otherwise. How long have you been a Christian, my friend? One year? Five years?
Twenty years? Do you realize that it was probably years from the time Abram was
called in Ur until he ended up in Canaan. Do you know that after Abram entered
the land of Canaan it was another 25 years until he had his son, Isaac? Can you
fathom the fact that after leaving Haran for Canaan, God worked in Abram’s life
for one hundred years? Christian faith grows. It grows through time and through
testing. Such was true in Abram’s 1ife.139 Such is the case with every
believer.
May
God enable us to grow in grace as we walk the path which He has ordained, and
as we continue to study the growth of the faith of Abram over many years.
CHAPTER 12…
Abram and his seed are
almost the only subject of this history.
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The call by which
Abram was removed out of the land of his nativity into the land of promise,
which was designed both to try his faith and obedience, also set him apart
for God. Our understanding of the circumstances of this call may be somewhat
helped from Stephen's speech, Acts
7:2 , where we are
told,
1.
That
the God of glory appeared to him to
give him this call, appeared in such displays of his glory as left Abram no
room to doubt. God spoke to him after in divers manners: but this first time,
when the correspondence was to be settled, He appeared to him as the God of
glory, and spoke to him.
2.
That
this call was given him in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Charran, and in
obedience to this call, he came out of the land of the Chaldeans, and dwelt
in Charran or Haran about five years, and from then, when his father was
dead, by a fresh command, he removed him into the land of Canaan. God let him
know this was not the place he was intended for...Get thee out of thy country
- Now,
1.
By
this precept he was tried whether he loved God better than he loved his
native soil, and dearest friends, and whether he could willingly leave all to
go along with God. His country had become idolatrous, his kindred and his
father's house were a constant temptation to him, and he could not continue
with them without danger of being infected by them; therefore get thee out,
(Heb.) “get thee gone with all speed, escape for thy life, look not behind
thee.”
2.
By
this precept he was tried whether he could trust God farther than he saw him,
for he must leave his own country to go to a land that God would show him; He
did not explain the what, the kind, but Abram must follow God with an
implicit faith, and take God's word for it in the general!
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Here is added an
encouraging promise:
1.
I
will make of thee a great nation - When God took him from his own people, he
promised to make him the head of another people. This promise was.
1.
A
great relief to Abram's burden, for he had no child.
2.
A
great trial to Abram's faith, for his wife had been long barren, so that if
he believed, it must be against hope, and his faith must be based purely upon
God’s power which can raise up children unto Abraham, even out of stones.
2.
I
will bless thee – Blessing of fruitfulness or in general, I will bless thee
with all manner of blessings.
3.
I
will make thy name great - By deserting his country he lost his name there:
care not for that, (saith God) but trust me, and I will make thee a greater
name than ever thou couldst have had there.
4.
Thou
shalt be a blessing - That is, Abram’s life shall be a blessing to the places
wherever he sojourns.
5.
I
will bless them that bless you, and curse him that curseth thee.
6.
In
thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed - This was the promise
that crowned all the rest, for it points at the Messiah.
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So Abram departed -
He was not disobedient to the heavenly vision. His obedience was speedy and without delay,
submissive and without dispute.
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They took with them
the souls that they had gotten - That is, the proselytes they had made, and
persuaded to worship the true God, and to go with them to Canaan.
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He found the country
possessed by Canaanites, who were likely to be bad neighbors; he could not
have ground to pitch his tent without their permission.
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