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Chapter 13
The Test of Faith
[This chapter is based on Genesis 16; 17:18-20; 21:1-14; 22:1-19.]
ABRAHAM had accepted without question the promise of a son, but he did
not wait for God to fulfill His word in His own time and way. A delay
was permitted, to test his faith in the power of God; but he failed to
endure the trial. Thinking it impossible that a child should be given
her in her old age, Sarah suggested, as a plan by which the divine
purpose might be fulfilled, that one of her handmaidens should be taken
by Abraham as a secondary wife. Polygamy had become so widespread that
it had ceased to be regarded as a sin, but it was no less a violation of
the law of God, and was fatal to the sacredness and peace of the family
relation. Abraham's marriage with Hagar resulted in evil, not only to
his own household, but to future generations.
Flattered with the honor of her new position as Abraham's wife, and
hoping to be the mother of the great nation to descend from him, Hagar
became proud and boastful, and treated her mistress with contempt.
Mutual jealousies disturbed the peace of the once happy home. Forced to
listen to the complaints of both, Abraham vainly endeavored to restore
harmony. Though it was at Sarah's earnest entreaty that he had married
Hagar, she now reproached him as the one at fault. She desired to banish
her rival; but Abraham refused to permit this; for Hagar was to be the
mother of this child, as he fondly hoped, the son of promise. She was
Sarah's servant, however, and he still left her to the control of her
mistress. Hagar's haughty spirit would not brook the harshness which her
insolence had provoked. "When Sarai dealt hardly with her, she fled from
her face."
She made her way to the desert, and as she rested beside a fountain,
lonely and friendless, an angel of the Lord, in human form, appeared to
her. Addressing her as "Hagar, Sarai's maid," to remind her of her
position and her duty, he bade her, "Return to thy mistress, and submit
thyself under her hands." Yet with the reproof there were mingled words
of comfort. "The Lord hath heard thy affliction." "I will multiply thy
seed exceedingly, that it shall not be numbered for multitude." And as a
perpetual reminder of His mercy, she was bidden to call her child
Ishmael, "God shall hear."
When Abraham was nearly one hundred years old, the promise of a son was
repeated to him, with the assurance that the future heir should be the
child of Sarah. But Abraham did not yet understand the promise. His mind
at once turned to Ishmael, clinging to the belief that through him God's
gracious purposes were to be accomplished. In his affection for his son
he exclaimed, "O that Ishmael might live before Thee!" Again the promise
was given, in words that could not be mistaken: "Sarah thy wife shall
bear thee a son indeed; and thou shalt call his name Isaac: and I will
establish My covenant with him." Yet God was not unmindful of the
father's prayer. "As for Ishmael," He said, "I have heard thee: Behold,
I have blessed him, . . . and I will make him a great nation."
The birth of Isaac, bringing, after a lifelong waiting, the fulfillment
of their dearest hopes, filled the tents of Abraham and Sarah with
gladness. But to Hagar this event was the overthrow of her fondly
cherished ambitions. Ishmael, now a youth, had been regarded by all in
the encampment as the heir of Abraham's wealth and the interior of the
blessings promised to his descendants. Now he was suddenly set aside;
and in their disappointment, mother and son hated the child of Sarah.
The general rejoicing increased their jealousy, until Ishmael dared
openly to mock the heir of God's promise. Sarah saw in Ishmael's
turbulent disposition a perpetual source of discord, and she appealed to
Abraham, urging that Hagar and Ishmael be sent away from the encampment.
The patriarch was thrown into great distress. How could he banish
Ishmael his son, still dearly beloved? In his perplexity he pleaded for
divine guidance. The Lord, through a holy angel, directed him to grant
Sarah's desire; his love for Ishmael or Hagar ought not to stand in the
way, for only thus could he restore harmony and happiness to his family.
And the angel gave him the consoling promise that though separated from
his father's home, Ishmael should not be forsaken by God; his life
should be preserved, and he should become the father of a great nation.
Abraham obeyed the angel's word, but it was not without keen suffering.
The father's heart was heavy with unspoken grief as he sent away Hagar
and his son.
The instruction given to Abraham touching the sacredness of the marriage
relation was to be a lesson for all ages. It declares that the rights
and happiness of this relation are to be carefully guarded, even at a
great sacrifice. Sarah was the only true wife of Abraham. Her rights as
a wife and mother no other person was entitled to share. She reverenced
her husband, and in this she is presented in the New Testament as a
worthy example. But she was unwilling that Abraham's affections should
be given to another, and the Lord did not reprove her for requiring the
banishment of her rival. Both Abraham and Sarah distrusted the power of
God, and it was this error that led to the marriage with Hagar.
God had called Abraham to be the father of the faithful, and his life
was to stand as an example of faith to succeeding generations. But his
faith had not been perfect. He had shown distrust of God in concealing
the fact that Sarah was his wife, and again in his marriage with Hagar.
That he might reach the highest standard, God subjected him to another
test, the closest which man was ever called to endure. In a vision of
the night he was directed to repair to the land of Moriah, and there
offer up his son as a burnt offering upon a mountain that should be
shown him.
At the time of receiving this command, Abraham had reached the age of a
hundred and twenty years. He was regarded as an old man, even in his
generation. In his earlier years he had been strong to endure hardship
and to brave danger, but now the ardor of his youth had passed away. One
in the vigor of manhood may with courage meet difficulties and
afflictions that would cause his heart to fail later in life, when his
feet are faltering toward the grave. But God had reserved His last, most
trying test for Abraham until the burden of years was heavy upon him,
and he longed for rest from anxiety and toil.
The patriarch was dwelling at Beersheba, surrounded by prosperity and
honor. He was very rich, and was honored as a mighty prince by the
rulers of the land. Thousands of sheep and cattle covered the plains
that spread out beyond his encampment. On every side were the tents of
his retainers, the home of hundreds of faithful servants. The son of
promise had grown up to manhood by his side. Heaven seemed to have
crowned with its blessing a life of sacrifice in patient endurance of
hope deferred.
In the obedience of faith, Abraham had forsaken his native country--had
turned away from the graves of his fathers and the home of his kindred.
He had wandered as a stranger in the land of his inheritance. He had
waited long for the birth of the promised heir. At the command of God he
had sent away his son Ishmael. And now, when the child so long desired
was entering upon manhood, and the patriarch seemed able to discern the
fruition of his hopes, a trial greater than all others was before him.
The command was expressed in words that must have wrung with anguish
that father's heart: "Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou
lovest, . . . and offer him there for a burnt offering." Isaac was the
light of his home, the solace of his old age, above all else the
inheritor of the promised blessing. The loss of such a son by accident
or disease would have been heart rending to the fond father; it would
have bowed down his whitened head with grief; but he was commanded to
shed the blood of that son with his own hand. It seemed to him a fearful
impossibility.
Satan was at hand to suggest that he must be deceived, for the divine
law commands, "Thou shalt not kill," and God would not require what He
had once forbidden. Going outside his tent, Abraham looked up to the
calm brightness of the unclouded heavens, and recalled the promise made
nearly fifty years before, that his seed should be innumerable as the
stars. If this promise was to be fulfilled through Isaac, how could he
be put to death? Abraham was tempted to believe that he might be under a
delusion. In his doubt and anguish he bowed upon the earth, and prayed,
as he had never prayed before, for some confirmation of the command if
he must perform this terrible duty. He remembered the angels sent to
reveal to him God's purpose to destroy Sodom, and who bore to him the
promise of this same son Isaac, and he went to the place where he had
several times met the heavenly messengers, hoping to meet them again,
and receive some further direction; but none came to his relief.
Darkness seemed to shut him in; but the command of God was sounding in
his ears, "Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest."
That command must be obeyed, and he dared not delay. Day was
approaching, and he must be on his journey.
Returning to his tent, he went to the place where Isaac lay sleeping the
deep, untroubled sleep of youth and innocence. For a moment the father
looked upon the dear face of his son, then turned tremblingly away. He
went to the side of Sarah, who was also sleeping. Should he awaken her,
that she might once more embrace her child? Should he tell her of God's
requirement? He longed to unburden his heart to her, and share with her
this terrible responsibility; but he was restrained by the fear that she
might hinder him. Isaac was her joy and pride; her life was bound up in
him, and the mother's love might refuse the sacrifice.
Abraham at last summoned his son, telling him of the command to offer
sacrifice upon a distant mountain. Isaac had often gone with his father
to worship at some one of the various altars that marked his wanderings,
and this summons excited no surprise. The preparations for the journey
were quickly completed. The wood was made ready and put upon the ass,
and with two menservants they set forth.
Side by side the father and the son journeyed in silence. The patriarch,
pondering his heavy secret, had no heart for words. His thoughts were of
the proud, fond mother, and the day when he should return to her alone.
Well he knew that the knife would pierce her heart when it took the life
of her son.
That day--the longest that Abraham had ever experienced-- dragged slowly
to its close. While his son and the young men were sleeping, he spent
the night in prayer, still hoping that some heavenly messenger might
come to say that the trial was enough, that the youth might return
unharmed to his mother. But no relief came to his tortured soul. Another
long day, another night of humiliation and prayer, while ever the
command that was to leave him childless was ringing in his ears. Satan
was near to whisper doubts and unbelief, but Abraham resisted his
suggestions. As they were about to begin the journey of the third day,
the patriarch, looking northward, saw the promised sign, a cloud of
glory hovering over Mount Moriah, and he knew that the voice which had
spoken to him was from heaven.
Even now he did not murmur against God, but strengthened his soul by
dwelling upon the evidences of the Lord's goodness and faithfulness.
This son had been unexpectedly given; and had not He who bestowed the
precious gift a right to recall His own? Then faith repeated the
promise, "In Isaac shall they seed be called"--a seed numberless as the
grains of sand upon the shore. Isaac was the child of a miracle, and
could not the power that gave him life restore it? Looking beyond that
which was seen, Abraham grasped the divine word, "accounting that God
was able to raise him up, even from the dead." Hebrews 11:19.
Yet none but God could understand how great was the father's sacrifice
in yielding up his son to death; Abraham desired that none but God
should witness the parting scene. He bade his servants remain behind,
saying, "I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and come again to
you." The wood was laid upon Isaac, the one to be offered, the father
took the knife and the fire, and together they ascended toward the
mountain summit, the young man silently wondering whence, so far from
folds and flocks, the offering was to come. At last he spoke, "My
father," "behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a
burnt offering?" Oh, what a test was this! How the endearing words, "my
father," pierced Abraham's heart! Not yet--he could not tell him now .
"My son," he said, "God will provide Himself a lamb for a burnt
offering."
At the appointed place they built the altar and laid the wood upon it.
Then, with trembling voice, Abraham unfolded to his son the divine
message. It was with terror and amazement that Isaac learned his fate,
but he offered no resistance. He could have escaped his doom, had he
chosen to do so; the grief-stricken old man, exhausted with the struggle
of those three terrible days, could not have opposed the will of the
vigorous youth. But Isaac had been trained from childhood to ready,
trusting obedience, and as the purpose of God was opened before him, he
yielded a willing submission. He was a sharer in Abraham's faith, and he
felt that he was honored in being called to give his life as an offering
to God. He tenderly seeks to lighten the father's grief, and encourages
his nerveless hands to bind the cords that confine him to the altar.
And now the last words of love are spoken, the last tears are shed, the
last embrace is given. The father lifts the knife to slay his son, when
suddenly his arm is stayed. An angel of God calls to the patriarch out
of heaven, "Abraham, Abraham!" He quickly answers, "Here am I," And
again the voice is heard, "Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither do
thou any thing unto him: for now I know that thou fearest God, seeing
thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, from Me."
Then Abraham saw "a ram caught in a thicket," and quickly bringing the
new victim, he offered it "in the stead of his son." In his joy and
gratitude Abraham gave a new name to the sacred spot--"Jehovah-jireh,"
"the Lord will provide."
On Mount Moriah, God again renewed His covenant, confirming with a
solemn oath the blessing to Abraham and to his seed through all coming
generations: "By myself have I sworn, saith Jehovah, for because thou
hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son,
that in blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply
thy seed as the stars of the heaven, and as the sand which is upon the
seashore; and thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies; and in thy
seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed; because thou hast
obeyed My voice."
Abraham's great act of faith stands like a pillar of light, illuminating
the pathway of God's servants in all succeeding ages. Abraham did not
seek to excuse himself from doing the will of God. During that three
days' journey he had sufficient time to reason, and to doubt God, if he
was disposed to doubt. He might have reasoned that the slaying of his
son would cause him to be looked upon as a murderer, a second Cain; that
it would cause his teaching to be rejected and despised; and thus
destroy his power to do good to his fellow men. He might have pleaded
that age should excuse him from obedience. But the patriarch did not
take refuge in any of these excuses. Abraham was human; his passions and
attachments were like ours; but he did not stop to question how the
promise could be fulfilled if Isaac should be slain. He did not stay to
reason with his aching heart. He knew that God is just and righteous in
all His requirements, and he obeyed the command to the very letter.
"Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: an
he was called the friend of God." James 2:23. And Paul says, "They which
are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham." Galatians 3:7. But
Abraham's faith was made manifest by his works. "Was not Abraham our
father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the
altar? Seest thou how faith wrought with his works, and by works was
faith made perfect.?" James 2:21, 22. There are many who fail to
understand the relation of faith and works. They say, "Only believe in
Christ, and you are safe. You have nothing to do with keeping the law."
But genuine faith will be manifest in obedience. Said Christ to the
unbelieving Jews, "If ye were Abraham's children, ye would do the works
of Abraham." John 8:39. And concerning the father of the faithful the
Lord declares, "Abraham obeyed My voice, and kept My charge, My
commandments, My statutes, and My laws." Genesis 26:5. Says the apostle
James, "Faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone." James 2:17.
And John, who dwells so fully upon love, tells us, "This is the love of
God, that we keep His commandments." 1 John 5:3.
Through type and promise God "preached before the gospel unto Abraham."
Galatians 3:8. And the patriarch's faith was fixed upon the Redeemer to
come. Said Christ to the Jews. "Your father Abraham rejoiced that he
should see My day; and he saw it, and was glad." John 8:56, R.V.,
margin. The ram offered in the place of Isaac represented the Son of
God, who was to be sacrificed in our stead. When man was doomed to death
by transgression of the law of God, the Father, looking upon His Son,
said to the sinner, "Live: I have found a ransom."
It was to impress Abraham's mind with the reality of the gospel, as well
as to test his faith, that God commanded him to slay his son. The agony
which he endured during the dark days of that fearful trial was
permitted that he might understand from his own experience something of
the greatness of the sacrifice made by the infinite God for man's
redemption. No other test could have caused Abraham such torture of soul
as did the offering of his son. God gave His Son to a death of agony and
shame. The angels who witnessed the humiliation and soul anguish of the
Son of God were not permitted to interpose, as in the case of Isaac.
There was no voice to cry, "It is enough." To save the fallen race, the
King of glory yielded up His life. What stronger proof can be given of
the infinite compassion and love of God? "He that spared not His own
Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also
freely give us all things?" Romans 8:32.
The sacrifice required of Abraham was not alone for his own good, nor
solely for the benefit of succeeding generations; but it was also for
the instruction of the sinless intelligences of heaven and of other
worlds. The field of the controversy between Christ and Satan--the field
on which the plan of redemption is wrought out--is the lesson book of
the universe. Because Abraham had shown a lack of faith in God's
promises, Satan had accused him before the angels and before God of
having failed to comply with the conditions of the covenant, and as
unworthy of its blessings. God desired to prove the loyalty of His
servant before all heaven, to demonstrate that nothing less than perfect
obedience can be accepted, and to open more fully before them the plan
of salvation.
Heavenly beings were witnesses of the scene as the faith of Abraham and
the submission of Isaac were tested. The trial was far more severe than
that which had been brought upon Adam. Compliance with the prohibition
laid upon our first parents involved no suffering, but the command to
Abraham demanded the most agonizing sacrifice. All heaven beheld with
wonder and admiration Abraham's unfaltering obedience. All heaven
applauded his fidelity. Satan's accusations were shown to be false. God
declared to His servant, "Now I know that thou fearest God
[notwithstanding Satan's charges], seeing thou hast not withheld thy
son, thine only son from Me." God's covenant, confirmed to Abraham by an
oath before the intelligences of other worlds, testified that obedience
will be rewarded.
It had been difficult even for the angels to grasp the mystery of
redemption--to comprehend that the Commander of heaven, the Son of God,
must die for guilty man. When the command was given to Abraham to offer
up his son, the interest of all heavenly beings was enlisted. With
intense earnestness they watched each step in the fulfillment of this
command. When to Isaac's question, "Where is the lamb for a burnt
offering?" Abraham made answer, "God will provide Himself a lamb;" and
when the father's hand was stayed as he was about to slay his son, and
the ram which God had provided was offered in the place of Isaac-- then
light was shed upon the mystery of redemption, and even the angels
understood more clearly the wonderful provision that God had made for
man's salvation. 1 Peter 1:12.
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