ABRAHAM, THE TRADITIONAL FATHER OF
HIS RACE. Gen 12:1-8; 13:1-13; 16; 18,
19; 21:7; 22:1-19.
Jehovah said to Abraham, Go forth
from thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy
father’s house, to the land that I will show
thee, that I may make of thee a great nation; and I
will surely bless thee, and make thy name great, so
that thou shalt be a blessing, I will also bless them
that bless thee, and him that curseth thee will I
curse, so that all the families of the earth shall
ask for themselves a blessing like thine own.
So Abraham went forth, as Jehovah had commanded him. Gen
12:1-4. (Hist. Bible.)
By faith Abraham when he was called,
obeyed to go out into a place which he was to receive
for an inheritance; and he went out not knowing whither
he went. By faith he became a sojourner in the
land of promise as in a land not his own, dwelling
in tents, with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him
of the same promise; for he looked for the city which
hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God. Heb
11:8-10.
He that findeth his life shall lose
it; and he that loseth his life for my sake shall
find it Matt 10:39.
I. THE PROPHETIC STORIES ABOUT ABRAHAM
Many Biblical scholars claim that
the data point to variant versions of the different
stories about Abraham. Thus, for example, there
are two accounts of his deceptions regarding Sarah,
one in 12:9-13:1, and the other in 20:1-17. The
oldest version of the story they believe is found
in 26:1-14 and is told not of Abraham but of Isaac,
whose character it fits far more consistently.
Similarly there are three accounts of the covenant
with Abimelech (Gen 21:22-31, 21:25-34, and 26:15-33).
The two accounts of the expulsion of Hagar and the
birth of Ishmael, in Genesis 16:1-16 and 21:1-20 differ
rather widely in details. In one account Hagar
is expelled and Ishmael is born after the birth of
Isaac, and in the other before that event. Do
these variant versions indicate that they were drawn
from different groups of narratives? The differences
in detail are in general closely parallel to those
which the New Testament student finds in the different
accounts of the same events or teachings in the life
of Jesus. They suggest to many that the author
of the book of Genesis was eager to preserve each
and every story regarding Abraham. Instead, however,
of preserving intact the different groups of stories,
as in the case of the Gospels, they have been combined
with great skill. Sometimes, as in the case of
the expulsion of Hagar, the two versions are introduced
at different points in the life of the patriarch.
More commonly the two or more versions are closely
interwoven, giving a composite narrative that closely
resembles Tatian’s Diatessaron which was one
continuous narrative of the life and teachings of
Jesus, based on quotations from each of the four Gospels.
Fortunately, if this theory is right, the group
of stories most fully quoted and therefore best preserved
is the early Judean prophetic narratives. When
these are separated from the later parallels they
give a marvelously complete and consistent portrait
of Abraham.
II. THE MEANING OF THE EARLY PROPHETIC STORIES ABOUT ABRAHAM
Read the prophetic stories regarding
Abraham (Hist. Bible I). Are these stories to be regarded
simply as chapters from the biography of the early
ancestor of the Hebrews or, like the story of the
Garden of Eden, do they have a deeper, a more universal
moral and religious significance? Back of the
story of Abraham’s call and settlement in Canaan
clearly lies the historic fact that the ancestors
of the Hebrews as nomads migrated from the land of
Aram to seek for themselves and their descendants
a permanent home in the land of Canaan. Abraham,
whose name in Hebrew means, “Exalted Father,”
or as it was later interpreted, “Father of a
Multitude,” naturally represents this historic
movement, but the story of his call and settlement
in Canaan has a larger meaning and value. It
simply and vividly illustrates the eternal truths
that (1) God guides those who will be guided. (2)
He reveals himself alone to those who seek a revelation.
(3) His revelations come along the path of duty and
are confined to no place or land. (4) For those who
will be led by him God has in store a noble destiny.
(5) Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be
called the children of God. (6) Blessed are the meek
for they shall inherit the earth. Thus this
marvelous story presents certain of the noblest fruits
of Israel’s spiritual experiences. Incidentally
it also deals with the relationship between the Hebrews
and their neighbors, the Moabites, across the
Jordan and the Dead Sea, for Lot in these earlier
stories stands as the traditional ancestor of the
Moabites and Ammonites. It is evident that,
like the opening narratives of Genesis, this story
aimed to explain existing conditions, as well as to
illustrate the deeper truths of life.
Similarly the story of the expulsion
of Hagar, it is thought, aims primarily to explain
the origin of Israel’s foes, the nomadic Ishmaelites,
who lived south of Canaan. In the inscriptions
of the Assyrian king Sennacherib, Hargaranu is the
name of an Aramean tribe. A tribe bearing a
similar name is also mentioned in the south Arabian
inscriptions. The Hagar of the story is a typical
daughter of the desert. When she became the mother
of a child, the highest honor that could come to a
Semitic woman, she could not resist the temptation
to taunt Sarah. In keeping with early Semitic
customs Sarah had full authority to demand the expulsion
of Hagar, for in the eye of the law the slave wife
was her property. The tradition of the revelation
to Hagar also represented the popular explanation
of the sanctity of the famous desert shrine Beer-lahal-roi.
Like most of the prophetic stories, this narrative
teaches deeper moral lessons. Chief among these
is the broad truth that the sphere of God’s
care and blessing was by no means limited to Israel.
To the outcast and needy he ever comes with his message
of counsel and promise. Was Abraham right or
wrong in yielding to Sarah’s wish? Was
Sarah right or wrong in her attitude toward Hagar?
Was Hagar’s triumphal attitude toward Sarah
natural? Was it right?
In the story of the destruction of
Sodom Lot appears as the central figure. His
choice of the fertile plain of the Jordan had brought
him into close contact with its inhabitants, the Canaanites.
Abandoning his nomadic life, he had become a citizen,
of the corrupt city of Sodom. When at last Jehovah
had determined to destroy the city because of its
wickedness, Abraham persistently interceded that it
be spared. Its wickedness proved, however, too
great for pardon. Lot, who, true to his nomad
training, hospitably received the divine messengers,
was finally persuaded to flee from the city and thus
escaped the overwhelming destruction that felt upon
it. What was the possible origin of this story?
(Hist. Bible I, 87.) What are the important
religious teachings of this story? Were great
calamities in the past usually the result of wickedness?
Are they to-day? Do people so interpret the
destruction of San Francisco and Messina? The
great epidemic of cholera in Hamburg in 1892 was clearly
the result of a gross neglect of sanitary precautions
in regard to the water supply. At that date
the cholera germ had not been clearly identified and
there was some doubt regarding the means by which the
disease was spread. Was sanitary neglect then
as much of a sin as it would be now? May we
properly say that the pestilence was a calamity visited
on that city as a punishment for its sin of neglect?
Why did the prophets preserve the
story of the sacrifices of Isaac? Compare the
parallel teaching in Micah 6:6-8.
With what shall I come before Jehovah,
Bow myself before the God on high?
Shall I come before him with burnt-offerings,
With calves a year old?
Will Jehovah be pleased with thousands
of rams,
With myriads of streams of oil?
Shall I give him my first-born for my
guilt,
The fruit of my body for the sin of my
soul?
Which is the most important teaching
of the story: the importance of an unquestioning
faith and obedience, or the needlessness of human
sacrifice? Does God ever command any person to
do anything that the person thinks wrong?
III. THE PROPHETIC PORTRAIT OF ABRAHAM
In the so-called later priestly stories
regarding Abraham (see especially Gen 17) he is portrayed
as a devoted servant of the law, chiefly intent upon
observing the simple ceremonial institutions revealed
to him in that primitive age. With him the later
priests associated the origin of the distinctive rite
of circumcision. In Genesis 14 Abraham is pictured
as a valiant warrior who espoused the cause of the
weak and won a great victory over the united armies
of the Eastern kings. Like a knight of olden
times, he restored the captured spoil to the city that
had been robbed and gave a liberal portion, to the
priest king Melchizedek, who appears to have been
regarded in later Jewish tradition as the forerunner
of the Jerusalem priesthood. In the still later
Jewish traditions, of which many have been preserved,
he is pictured sometimes as an invincible warrior,
before whom even the great city of Damascus fell,
sometimes as an ardent foe of idolatry, the incarnation
of the spirit of later Judaism, or else he is thought
of as having been borne to heaven on a fiery chariot,
where he receives to his bosom the faithful of his
race. Thus each succeeding generation or group
of writers made Abraham, as the traditional father
of their race, the embodiment of their highest ideals.
The Abraham of the early prophetic
narratives, however, is a remarkably consistent character.
He exemplifies that which is noblest in Israel’s
early ideals. How is Abraham’s faith illustrated
in the prophetic stories considered in the preceding
paragraph? His unselfishness and generosity?
His courtly hospitality? Was his politeness
to strangers simply due to his training and the traditions
of the desert or was it the expression of his natural
impulses? Was Abraham’s devoted interest
in the future of his descendants a noble quality?
How are his devotion and obedience to God illustrated?
In the light of this study describe the Abraham of
the prophetic narratives. Is it a perfect character
that is thus portrayed? Is it the product of
a primitive state of society or of a high civilization?
IV. THE TENDENCY TO IDEALIZE NATIONAL HEROES
Is Shakespeare right in his statement
that “The evil that men do lives after them;
the good is oft interred with their bones”?
Why do men as a rule idealize the dead? Does
the primitive tendency to ancestor worship in part
explain this? Is the tendency to idealize the
men of the past beneficial in its effect upon the race?
What would be the effect if all the iniquity of the
past were remembered? The tendency to idealize
national heroes is by no means confined to the Hebrews.
Greek, Roman and English history abounds in illustrations.
Cite some of the more striking. Why are they
often thought of as descendants of the gods?
Compare the popular conception of the first president
of the United States and his character as portrayed
in Ford’s “The Real George Washington.”
The portraits of national heroes, even though they
are idealized, exert a powerful and wholesome influence
upon the nations who honor their memory. The
noblest ideals in each succeeding generation are often
thus concretely embodied in the character of some national
hero. Compare the great heroes of Greek mythology
with the early heroes of the Old Testament.
Do these differences correspond to the distinctive
characteristics of the Greeks and the Hebrews?
Are these differences due to the peculiar genius
of each race or in part to the influence exerted by
the ideals thus concretely presented upon each succeeding
generation? Is it probable that in the character
of Abraham the traditional father of the Hebrew race
was idealized? Is it possible that teachers of
Israel, consciously or unconsciously, fostered this
tendency that they might in this concrete and effective
way impress their great teachings upon their race?
If so, does it decrease or enhance the value and authority
of these stories?
V. THE REASONS FOB MIGRATION
In the early history of most countries
there comes a pressure of population upon the productive
powers of the land. As numbers increase in the
hunting stage game becomes scarce and more hunting
grounds are needed. Tribes migrate from season
to season, as did the American Indians, and eventually
some members of the tribe are likely to go forth to
seek new homes. Later in the pastoral stage
of society, as the wealth of flocks and herds increases,
more pasturage is needed and similar results follow.
Even after agriculture is well established and commerce
is well begun, as in Ancient Greece, colonies have
a like origin. In the England of the nineteenth
century Malthus and his followers taught the tendency
of population to outgrow the means of subsistence a
tendency overcome only by restraints on the growth
of population, or by new inventions that enable new
sources of supply to be secured or that render the
old ones more efficient. Emigration and pioneering
are thus a normal outgrowth of a progressive growing
people in any stage of civilization. What does
the statement about Abraham’s wealth in cattle
and silver and gold show regarding the country from
which he came and the probable cause of God’s
direction for his removal?
Immigrants and pioneers are usually
the self-reliant and courageous, who dare to endure
hardships and incur risks to secure for their country
and posterity the benefits of new lands and broader
opportunity. The trials of new and untried experiences
and often of dire peril strengthen the character already
strong, so that the pioneers in all lands and ages
have been heroes whose exploits recounted in song
and story have stirred the hearts and molded the faith
of their descendants through many generations.
In the light of later history what was the profound
religious significance to his race and to the world,
of the migration represented by Abraham? The
Biblical narrative does not state the exact way in
which Jehovah spoke to Abraham. Is it possible
and probable that God spoke to men in that early day
as he speaks to them now, through their experiences
and inner consciousness? In what sense was Abraham
a pioneer?
Was it for Abraham’s material
interest to migrate to Canaan?
VI. THE PERMANENT VALUE AND INFLUENCE OF THE ABRAHAM NARRATIVES
Scholars will probably never absolutely
agree regarding many problems connected with Abraham.
Some have gone so far as to question whether he was
an historical character or not. Is the question
of fundamental importance? Other writers declare
it probable that a tribal sheik by the name of Abraham
led one of the many nomad tribes that somewhere about
the middle of the second millenium B.C. moved
westward into the territory of Palestine. It
is probable that popular tradition has preserved certain
facts regarding his life and character. It is
equally clear that the different groups of Israel’s
teachers have each interpreted his character and work
in keeping with their distinctive ideals. Each
individual narrative has an independent unity and the
connection between the different accounts is far from
close. Some of them aim to explain the derivation
of popular names, as for example, Abraham, Isaac,
and Ishmael, the sanctity of certain sacred places,
as for example, Beersheba, the origin of important
institutions, as for example, circumcision and the
substitution of animal for human sacrifice, and the
explanation of striking physical phenomena, as for
example the desolate shores of the Dead Sea.
Some of these accounts, like the table
of nations in Genesis 10, preserve the memory of the
relationship between Israel and its neighbors.
They preserve also the characteristic popular record
of the early migrations which brought these peoples
to Palestine, where they crystalized into the different
nations that figure in the drama of Israel’s
history. The permanent and universal value of
these stories lies, however, in the great moral principles
which they vividly and effectively illustrate.
The prophetic portrait of Abraham was an inspiring
example to hold up before a race. The characteristics
of Abraham can be traced in the ideals and character
of the Israelites. They were unquestionably an
important force in developing the prophet nation.
He was, therefore, pre-eminently a spiritual pioneer.
How far do these stories, and especially the accounts
of the covenant between Jehovah and Abraham, embody
the national and spiritual aspirations of the race?
Are the Abraham stories of practical inspiration to
the present generation? What qualities in his
character are essential to the all-around man of any
age? How far would the Abraham of the prophetic
stories succeed, were he living in America to-day?
Would he be appreciated by a majority of our citizens?
Are spiritual pioneers of the type of Abraham absolutely
needed in every nation and generation if the human
race is to progress?
Questions for Further Consideration.
Are God’s purposes often contrary
to man’s desires? Ever to man’s
best interests?
What qualities must every true pioneer possess?
What is the ultimate basis of all true politeness?
Who are some of the great pioneers
of early American history? What were their chief
contributions to their nation?
Is your own conscientious conception
of your duty to be considered as God’s command
to you? Does he give any other command?
Does a high stage of civilization
ennoble character or tend to degrade it?
Subjects for Further Study.
(1) Abraham in Late Jewish Tradition.
Hastings, Dict. Bib. I,
Ginsberg, The Legends of the Jews, I.
(2) The Geological History of the
Dead Sea Valley. Hastings, Dict. Bib.
I; Encyc. Bib. I; Kent,
Bib. Geog. and Hist; Smith, Hist.
Geography.
(3) The Original Meaning of Sacrifice.
St. O. T., IV; Hastings, Dict.
Bib. IV; Encyc. Bib.
IV; Smith, Relig. of the Semites; Gordon, Early Traditions of GenesIs
(4) A Comparison of the Motives that
Inspired the Migrations of the Ancestors of the Hebrews
and our Pilgrim Fathers. Cheyney, European
Background of American History; Andrews, Colonial
Self-Government.