LV. SUCH a man did appear on
the stage of the world. It was the patriarch
Abraham. The rarest qualities of mind and heart
concurred admirably to render him fit for the high
mission. By the superiority of his intelligence,
he arrived at the rejection of the captivating, but
absurd, idolatrous opinions of his contemporaries,
and at the recognition of a unique supreme Cause of
all things, omnipotent, all-wise and holy, that governs
all with impartial justice and infinite mercy.
The nobility of his sentiments led him to labour and
exert himself in the diffusion of these holy notions
wherever he found himself; and he was most sedulous
in drawing the attention of men to that which most
concerned their spiritual life. An unparalleled
cordiality towards not only his own friends, but all
who approached him; a self-abnegation, carried to
the point of refusing the best deserved remuneration;
a humility ready to waive any right of his own in order
to support that of others; a hospitality full, generous,
unasked; a continual exercise of charity and justice,
which had become in him a second nature; in fine,
a submission of all himself and his dearest to the
will of God, such was the character of that
celebrated luminary of antiquity, of that man truly
divine, of that exemplar of sublime virtue.
LVI. Although so many pre-eminent
merits indisputably assigned to him the distinction
we have pointed out, yet the Divine wisdom decided
to subject his constancy to various trials, with the
view of making manifest to the world the excellence
of that virtuous character, and the justice which
dictated the choice. In the continual antagonism
between the material and spiritual interests involved
in the events of his agitated life, he had opportunities
to display the noblest firmness in causing the latter
to prevail. Involuntary peregrinations, conflicts
with foreign potentates, domestic discords, dangers,
hazards, hopes deferred, and promises well nigh forgotten,
became to him so many occasions for the exercise of
the highest virtues: and last, the holy resignation
with which he prepared to immolate his beloved son,
thinking thereby to respond to a Divine bidding, raised
his glory to an unapproachable summit. If the
other deeds of his edifying piety caused him to be
appointed a herald of the true religion, this last
heroic act brought down upon him the greatest blessing,
in the shape of a promise, that even to his remotest
posterity would be extended the mission of jealously
preserving the revealed truths, and effectually cooperating
in their propagation, so that through that posterity
would be blessed all the families of the earth.
LVII. Abraham’s vocation
marks a luminous and highly interesting epoch in the
history of humanity. It was the commencement of
the execution of that plan of education of mankind,
which, conceived since the beginning in the Increate
Mind, came by means extraordinary, yet consistent with
the natural course of earthly events, to diffuse itself
gradually and to acquire a progressive force among
the various ramifications of the human family.
In that vocation we perceive the first threads of a
wonderful tissue of events, as well in the physical
as in the moral world, which went on preparing a slow
but always progressive development of the human intelligence,
and will go on to produce ultimately the full final
accomplishment of the same primitive plan, so grandly
conceived. In fact, in the very act of electing
this patriarch, God revealed the ultimate object of
the election by saying, that He chose him, in order
that he might transmit to his latest posterity the
obligation which was to become characteristic
of it of exercising and promoting CHARITY
and JUSTICE, the two chief columns on which rests
the edifice of human perfectibility, two conditions
indispensable to the fulfilment of the Divine idea,
and therefore called ways of the Eternal.
LVIII. Abraham and his race having
been called upon to perpetuate the idea of the relation
existing between God and man, it was obviously necessary
that such a relation should be fixed and established
in a more precise mode in the individuals of that
race than it was in any others; in other words, it
was necessary to show clearly that the idea, which
was to be promoted among others, was firmly seated,
under permanent and concrete forms, in those who were
called upon to propagate it. This permanency
of the relation exhibited itself, then, to Abraham
and his posterity under the form of a covenant
between God and that family, whereby the contracting
parties, as it were, promised and undertook to maintain
certain conditions, upon which depended the subsistence
of that relation. The mutual conditions established
were, in substance, nothing else than the universal
relations subsisting between God and every rational
being, but expressed, with respect to Abraham’s,
family, in more special and characteristic terms,
viz., under a form in which God promised Abraham
that He would be particularly his God, his Protector,
Guardian, and Benefactor; and the Abrahamites, on their
part, bound themselves to recognise Him alone
as the Deity, to whom adoration and loyal obedience
were due. Thus the covenant, which had been formerly
established in general terms with Noah, as the representative
of all mankind, was afterwards confirmed in more specific
terms to the Abrahamites, as those who were appointed
to keep and to promote among mankind the fulfilment
of the conditions of the said relation.
Considering the Abrahamitic covenant
in this point of view, all objections of unreasonable
exclusiveness and unjust predilection, which have
been sometimes urged, must disappear. The God
of Abraham is the God of the universe; and the descendants
of Abraham propose to themselves nothing more than
the attainment of that same happiness to which every
mortal can aspire.
LIX. In order that the idea of
the contracted covenant might remain firmly impressed
on all Abraham’s progeny, it was necessary to
institute some external mark, which should continually
recall it to the mind; for an idea being but an abstraction,
it could not be very long retained in men’s
minds, without some symbol or visible sign capable
of keeping its remembrance alive. It was also
necessary that the adhesion of that progeny to the
covenant should not begin to take effect in individuals
in the adult age only, and as a result of one’s
own spontaneous réflexions, as had been the case
with the first stock of that family, but that it should
present itself as an accomplished fact, and, therefore,
irrevocable and obligatory; so that every future offspring
should bear from his birth an external indelible mark,
characterising him as a follower of that principle,
and qualifying him to enter into the pale of that
association. By such means the preservation of
the covenant was insured, and a beginning was made
in the system of those external, symbolical, and commemorative
acts, which were to be thereafter prescribed to all
that race, when sufficiently increased to form an
entire people distinct from others. This external
mark, instituted before the birth of the elect progeny
of the patriarch, is the circumcision.
LX. Before Abraham’s descendants
attained that degree of maturity which would fit them
to receive a revealed legislation, they had to pass
through various stages of progressive material increment
and intellectual development, and also to undergo
several sad vicissitudes produced by the inevitable
relations of contact with other nations. Throughout
all this period, which we may call preparatory, the
Divine Wisdom was pleased to take that race by the
hand, guiding its first steps, and watching in an
extraordinary manner over its destinies, so as gradually
to prepare it for the high mission for which it was
designed. We, therefore, perceive, during that
epoch, a continual intervention of the Divinity in
regulating the particular concerns of the patriarchs
and their successors, and an incessant care to draw
their attention to the future destiny of their grandchildren,
and to their duty of preparing worthily for it.
Such a care manifested itself, particularly, in various
providential measures, the objects of which evidently
were to remove from them everything that might exercise
over them a sinister influence; to enlighten them
on the importance of their election, and to make them
acquainted beforehand with the severe trials in store
for them for several centuries, before they could
deservedly reap the intended benefits.
LXI. To this category of providential
measures belongs the state of isolation and of precarious
subsistence, in which, by the Divine will, the first
fathers had to live, in respect to their neighbours,
in that same land which was yet promised to them as
a perpetual inheritance; whereby they were brought
to learn from the beginning that the great work, which
their children were called upon to accomplish, was
not absolutely dependent on the possession of a land
under their own sovereignty, but rather on the religious
doctrines to which they were to remain faithfully
attached. To it belongs, also, the severance or
removal of the elder branch of the first two families,
which was too much inclined to material interests,
to teach thereby that physical superiority is not
at all requisite to the preservation of a covenant
based entirely on spirituality. And, lastly, to
the same category of measures belongs the decreed
long servitude of the Abrahamites in a strange land,
in which, not only the door to social enjoyments would
be shut against them, but a barbarous tyranny would
also deprive them of the free exercise of acts which
are an imprescriptible right of all mortals.
Through the instrumentality of such an oppression,
the profound counsels of the Eternal Wisdom designed
so to regulate the first education of that growing
people, that, refined in the crucible of adversity,
it should early learn to renounce the subjection of
the senses, and turn its heart and soul to God, from
whom alone it could hope salvation. It was only
by depriving that people of all human support, and
of all extraneous influences on its culture, that it
could acquire a character, firm, independent, tenacious
in the principles adopted, adverse to foreign notions,
faithful to its vocation, and that its mind could
be deeply impressed with the sentiment of a constant
adoration of the Supreme Being, as its only Deliverer,
Legislator, Father, and Sovereign.