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Chapter 14
Destruction of Sodom
[This chapter is based on Genesis 19.]
FAIREST among the cities of the Jordan Valley was Sodom, set in a plain
which was "as the garden of the Lord" in its fertility and beauty. Here
the luxuriant vegetation of the tropics flourished. Here was the home of
the palm tree, the olive, and the vine; and flowers shed their fragrance
throughout the year. Rich harvests clothed the fields, and flocks and
herds covered the encircling hills. Art and commerce contributed to
enrich the proud city of the plain. The treasures of the East adorned
her palaces, and the caravans of the desert brought their stores of
precious things to supply her marts of trade. With little thought or
labor, every want of life could be supplied, and the whole year seemed
one round of festivity.
The profusion reigning everywhere gave birth to luxury and pride.
Idleness and riches make the heart hard that has never been oppressed by
want or burdened by sorrow. The love of pleasure was fostered by wealth
and leisure, and the people gave themselves up to sensual indulgence.
"Behold," says the prophet, "this was the iniquity of thy sister Sodom,
pride, fullness of bread, and abundance of idleness was in her and in
her daughters, neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and
needy. And they were haughty, and committed abomination before Me:
therefore I took them away as I saw good." Ezekiel 16:49, 50. There is
nothing more desired among men than riches and leisure, and yet these
gave birth to the sins that brought destruction upon the cities of the
plain. Their useless, idle life made them a prey to Satan's temptations,
and they defaced the image of God, and became satanic rather than
divine. Idleness is the greatest curse that can fall upon man, for vice
and crime follow in its train. It enfeebles the mind, perverts the
understanding, and debases the soul. Satan lies in ambush, ready to
destroy those who are unguarded, whose leisure gives him opportunity to
insinuate himself under some attractive disguise. He is never more
successful than when he comes to men in their idle hours.
In Sodom there was mirth and revelry, feasting and drunkenness. The
vilest and most brutal passions were unrestrained. The people openly
defied God and His law and delighted in deeds of violence. Though they
had before them the example of the antediluvian world, and knew how the
wrath of God had been manifested in their destruction, yet they followed
the same course of wickedness.
At the time of Lot's removal to Sodom, corruption had not become
universal, and God in His mercy permitted rays of light to shine amid
the moral darkness. When Abraham rescued the captives from the Elamites,
the attention of the people was called to the true faith. Abraham was
not a stranger to the people of Sodom, and his worship of the unseen God
had been a matter of ridicule among them; but his victory over greatly
superior forces, and his magnanimous disposition of the prisoners and
spoil, excited wonder and admiration. While his skill and valor were
extolled, none could avoid the conviction that a divine power had made
him conqueror. And his noble and unselfish spirit, so foreign to the
self-seeking inhabitants of Sodom, was another evidence of the
superiority of the religion which he had honored by his courage and
fidelity.
Melchizedek, in bestowing the benediction upon Abraham, had acknowledged
Jehovah as the source of his strength and the author of the victory:
"Blessed be Abram of the most high God, possessor of heaven and earth:
and blessed be the most high God, which hath delivered thine enemies
into thy hand." Genesis 14:19, 20. God was speaking to that people by
His providence, but the last ray of light was rejected as all before had
been.
And now the last night of Sodom was approaching. Already the clouds of
vengeance cast their shadows over the devoted city. But men perceived it
not. While angels drew near on their mission of destruction, men were
dreaming of prosperity and pleasure. The last days was like every other
that had come and gone. Evening fell upon a scene of loveliness and
security. A landscape of unrivaled beauty was bathed in the rays of the
declining sun. The coolness of eventide had called forth the inhabitants
of the city, and the pleasure-seeking throngs were passing to and fro,
intent upon the enjoyment of the hour.
In the twilight two strangers drew near to the city gate. They were
apparently travelers coming in to tarry for the night. None could
discern in those humble wayfarers the mighty heralds of divine judgment,
and little dreamed the gay, careless multitude that in their treatment
of these heavenly messengers that very night they would reach the climax
of the guilt which doomed their proud city. But there was one man who
manifested kindly attention toward the strangers and invited them to his
home. Lot did not know their true character, but politeness and
hospitality were habitual with him; they were a part of his religion--
lessons that he had learned from the example of Abraham. Had he not
cultivated a spirit of courtesy, he might have been left to perish with
the rest of Sodom. Many a household, in closing its doors against a
stranger, has shut out God's messenger, who would have brought blessing
and hope and peace.
Every act of life, however small, has its bearing for good or for evil.
Faithfulness or neglect in what are apparently the smallest duties may
open the door for life's richest blessings or its greatest calamities.
It is little things that test the character. It is the unpretending acts
of daily self-denial, performed with a cheerful, willing heart, that God
smiles upon. We are not to live for self, but for others. And it is only
by self-forgetfulness, by cherishing a loving, helpful spirit, that we
can make our life a blessing. The little attentions, the small, simple
courtesies, go far to make up the sum of life's happiness, and the
neglect of these constitutes no small share of human wretchedness.
Seeing the abuse to which strangers were exposed in Sodom, Lot made it
one of his duties to guard them at their entrance, by offering them
entertainment at his own house. He was sitting at the gate as the
travelers approached, and upon observing them, he rose from his place to
meet them, and bowing courteously, said, "Behold now, my lords, turn in,
I pray you, into your servant's house, and tarry all night." They seemed
to decline his hospitality, saying, "Nay; but we will abide in the
street." Their object in this answer was twofold--to test the sincerity
of Lot and also to appear ignorant of the character of the men of Sodom,
as if they supposed it safe to remain in the street at night. Their
answer made Lot the more determined not to leave them to the mercy of
the rabble. He pressed his invitation until they yielded, and
accompanied him to his house.
He had hoped to conceal his intention from the idlers at the gate by
bringing the strangers to his home by a circuitous route; but their
hesitation and delay, and his persistent urging, caused them to be
observed, and before they had retired for the night, a lawless crowd
gathered about the house. It was an immense company, youth and aged men
alike inflamed by the vilest passions. The strangers had been making
inquiry in regard to the character of the city, and Lot had warned them
not to venture out of his door that night, when the hooting and jeers of
the mob were heard, demanding that the men be brought out to them.
Knowing that if provoked to violence they could easily break into his
house, Lot went out to try the effect of persuasion upon them. "I pray
you, brethren," he said, "do not so wickedly," using the term "brethren"
in the sense of neighbors, and hoping to conciliate them and make them
ashamed of their vile purposes. But his words were like oil upon the
flames. Their rage became like the roaring of a tempest. They mocked Lot
as making himself a judge over them, and threatened to deal worse with
him than they had purposed toward his guests. They rushed upon him, and
would have torn him in pieces had he not been rescued by the angels of
God. The heavenly messengers "put forth their hand, and pulled Lot into
the house to them, and shut to the door." The events that followed,
revealed the character of the guests he had entertained. "They smote the
men that were at the door of the house with blindness, both small and
great: so that they wearied themselves to find the door." Had they not
been visited with double blindness, being given up to hardness of heart,
the stroke of God upon them would have caused them to fear, and to
desist from their evil work. That last night was marked by no greater
sins than many others before it; but mercy, so long slighted, had at
last ceased its pleading. The inhabitants of Sodom had passed the limits
of divine forbearance--"the hidden boundary between God's patience and
His wrath." The fires of His vengeance were about to be kindled in the
vale of Siddim.
The angels revealed to Lot the object of their mission: "We will destroy
this place, because the cry of them is waxen great before the face of
the Lord; and the Lord hath sent us to destroy it." The strangers whom
Lot had endeavored to protect, now promised to protect him, and to save
also all the members of his family who would flee with him from the
wicked city. The mob had wearied themselves out and departed, and Lot
went out to warn his children. He repeated the words of the angels, "Up,
get you out of this place; for the Lord will destroy this city." But he
seemed to them as one that mocked. They laughed at what they called his
superstitious fears. His daughters were influenced by their husbands.
They were well enough off where they were. They could see no evidence of
danger. Everything was just as it had been. They had great possessions,
and they could not believe it possible that beautiful Sodom would be
destroyed.
Lot returned sorrowfully to his home and told the story of his failure.
Then the angels bade him arise and take his wife and the two daughters
who were yet in his house and leave the city. But Lot delayed. Though
daily distressed at beholding deeds of violence, he had no true
conception of the debasing and abominable iniquity practiced in that
vile city. He did not realize the terrible necessity for God's judgments
to put a check on sin. Some of his children clung to Sodom, and his wife
refused to depart without them. The thought of leaving those whom he
held dearest on earth seemed more than he could bear. It was hard to
forsake his luxurious home and all the wealth acquired by the labors of
his whole life, to go forth a destitute wanderer. Stupefied with sorrow,
he lingered, loath to depart. But for the angels of God, they would all
have perished in the ruin of Sodom. The heavenly messengers took him and
his wife and daughters by the hand and led them out of the city.
Here the angels left them, and turned back to Sodom to accomplish their
work of destruction. Another--He with whom Abraham had pleaded--drew
near to Lot. In all the cities of the plain, even ten righteous persons
had not been found; but in answer to the patriarch's prayer, the one man
who feared God was snatched from destruction. The command was given with
startling vehemence: "Escape for thy life; look not behind thee, neither
stay thou in all the plain; escape to the mountain, lest thou be
consumed." Hesitancy or delay now would be fatal. To cast one lingering
look upon the devoted city, to tarry for one moment from regret to leave
so beautiful a home, would have cost their life. The storm of divine
judgment was only waiting that these poor fugitives might make their
escape.
But Lot, confused and terrified, pleaded that he could not do as he was
required lest some evil should overtake him and he should die. Living in
that wicked city, in the midst of unbelief, his faith had grown dim. The
Prince of heaven was by his side, yet he pleaded for his own life as
though God, who had manifested such care and love for him, would not
still preserve him. He should have trusted himself wholly to the divine
Messenger, giving his will and his life into the Lord's hands without a
doubt or a question. But like so many others, he endeavored to plan for
himself: "Behold now, this city is near to flee unto, and it is a little
one: O, let me escape thither, (is it not a little one?) and my soul
shall live." The city here mentioned was Bela, afterward called Zoar. It
was but a few miles from Sodom, and, like it, was corrupt and doomed to
destruction. But Lot asked that it might be spared, urging that this was
but a small request; and his desire was granted. The Lord assured him,
"I have accepted thee concerning this thing also, that I will not
overthrow this city, for the which thou hast spoken." Oh, how great the
mercy of God toward His erring creatures!
Again the solemn command was given to hasten, for the fiery storm would
be delayed but little longer. But one of the fugitives ventured to cast
a look backward to the doomed city, and she became a monument of God's
judgment. If Lot himself had manifested no hesitancy to obey the angels'
warning, but had earnestly fled toward the mountains, without one word
of pleading or remonstrance, his wife also would have made her escape.
The influence of his example would have saved her from the sin that
sealed her doom. But his hesitancy and delay caused her to lightly
regard the divine warning. While her body was upon the plain, her heart
clung to Sodom, and she perished with it. She rebelled against God
because His judgments involved her possessions and her children in the
ruin. Although so greatly favored in being called out from the wicked
city, she felt that she was severely dealt with, because the wealth that
it had taken years to accumulate must be left to destruction. Instead of
thankfully accepting deliverance, she presumptuously looked back to
desire the life of those who had rejected the divine warning. Her sin
showed her to be unworthy of life, for the preservation of which she
felt so little gratitude.
We should beware of treating lightly God's gracious provisions for our
salvation. There are Christians who say, "I do not care to be saved
unless my companion and children are saved with me." They feel that
heaven would not be heaven to them without the presence of those who are
so dear. But have those who cherish this feeling a right conception of
their own relation to God, in view of His great goodness and mercy
toward them? Have they forgotten that they are bound by the strongest
ties of love and honor and loyalty to the service of their Creator and
Redeemer? The invitations of mercy are addressed to all; and because our
friends reject the Saviour's pleading love, shall we also turn away? The
redemption of the soul is precious. Christ has paid an infinite price
for our salvation, and no one who appreciates the value of this great
sacrifice or the worth of the soul will despise God's offered mercy
because others choose to do so. The very fact that others are ignoring
His just claims should arouse us to greater diligence, that we may honor
God ourselves, and lead all whom we can influence, to accept His love.
"The sun was risen upon the earth when Lot entered into Zoar." The
bright rays of the morning seemed to speak only prosperity and peace to
the cities of the plain. The stir of active life began in the streets;
men were going their various ways, intent on the business or the
pleasures of the day. The sons-in law of Lot were making merry at the
fears and warnings of the weak-minded old man. Suddenly and unexpectedly
as would be a thunder peal from an unclouded sky, the tempest broke. The
Lord rained brimstone and fire out of heaven upon the cities and the
fruitful plain; its palaces and temples, costly dwellings, gardens and
vineyards, and the gay, pleasure-seeking throngs that only the night
before had insulted the messengers of heaven--all were consumed. The
smoke of the conflagration went up like the smoke of a great furnace.
And the fair vale of Siddim became a desolation, a place never to be
built up or inhabited--a witness to all generations of the certainty of
God's judgments upon transgression.
The flames that consumed the cities of the plain shed their warning
light down even to our time. We are taught the fearful and solemn lesson
that while God's mercy bears long with the transgressor, there is a
limit beyond which men may not go on in sin. When that limit is reached,
then the offers of mercy are withdrawn, and the ministration of judgment
begins.
The Redeemer of the world declares that there are greater sins than that
for which Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed. Those who hear the gospel
invitation calling sinners to repentance, and heed it not, are more
guilty before God than were the dwellers in the vale of Siddim. And
still greater sin is theirs who profess to know God and to keep His
commandments, yet who deny Christ in their character and their daily
life. In the light of the Saviour's warning, the fate of Sodom is a
solemn admonition, not merely to those who are guilty of outbreaking
sin, but to all who are trifling with Heaven-sent light and privileges.
Said the True Witness to the church at Ephesus: "I have somewhat against
thee, because thou hast left thy first love. Remember therefore from
whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I
will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his
place, except thou repent." Revelation 2:4,5. The Saviour watches for a
response to His offers of love and forgiveness, with a more tender
compassion than that which moves the heart of an earthly parent to
forgive a wayward, suffering son. He cries after the wanderer, "Return
unto Me, and I will return unto you." Malachi 3:7. But if the erring one
persistently refuses to heed the voice that calls him with pitying,
tender love, he will at last be left in darkness. The heart that has
long slighted God's mercy, becomes hardened in sin, and is no longer
susceptible to the influence of the grace of God. Fearful will be the
doom of that soul of whom the pleading Saviour shall finally declare, he
"is joined to idols: let him alone." Hosea 4:17. It will be more
tolerable in the day of judgment for the cities of the plain than for
those who have known the love of Christ, and yet have turned away to
choose the pleasures of a world of sin.
You who are slighting the offers of mercy, think of the long array of
figures accumulating against you in the books of heaven; for there is a
record kept of the impieties of nations, of families, of individuals.
God may bear long while the account goes on, and calls to repentance and
offers of pardon may be given; yet a time will come when the account
will be full; when the soul's decision has been made; when by his own
choice man's destiny has been fixed. Then the signal will be given for
judgment to be executed.
There is cause for alarm in the condition of the religious world today.
God's mercy has been trifled with. The multitudes make void the law of
Jehovah, "teaching for doctrines the commandments of men." Matthew 15:9.
Infidelity prevails in many of the churches in our land; not infidelity
in its broadest sense--an open denial of the Bible--but an infidelity
that is robed in the garb of Christianity, while it is undermining faith
in the Bible as a revelation from God. Fervent devotion and vital piety
have given place to hollow formalism. As the result, apostasy and
sensualism prevail. Christ declared, "As it was in the days of Lot, . .
. even thus shall it be in the day when the Son of man is revealed."
Luke 17:28,30. The daily record of passing events testifies to the
fulfillment of His words. The world is fast becoming ripe for
destruction. Soon the judgments of God are to be poured out, and sin and
sinners are to be consumed.
Said our Saviour: "Take heed to yourselves, lest at any time your hearts
be overcharged with surfeiting, and drunkenness, and cares of this life,
and so that day come upon you unawares. For as a snare shall it come on
all them that dwell on the face of the whole earth"--upon all whose
interests are centered in this world. "Watch ye therefore, and pray
always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that
shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man." Luke 21:34-36.
Before the destruction of Sodom, God sent a message to Lot, "Escape for
thy life; look not behind thee, neither stay thou in all the plain;
escape to the mountain, lest thou be consumed." The same voice of
warning was heard by the disciples of Christ before the destruction of
Jerusalem: "When ye shall see Jerusalem compassed with armies, then know
that the desolation thereof is nigh. Then let them which are in Judea
flee to the mountains." Luke 21:20,21. They must not tarry to secure
anything from their possessions, but must make the most of the
opportunity to escape.
There was a coming out, a decided separation from the wicked, an escape
for life. So it was in the days of Noah; so with Lot; so with the
disciples prior to the destruction of Jerusalem; and so it will be in
the last days. Again the voice of God is heard in a message of warning,
bidding His people separate themselves from the prevailing iniquity.
The state of corruption and apostasy that in the last days would exist
in the religious world, was presented to the prophet John in the vision
of Babylon, "that great city, which reigneth over the kings of the
earth." Revelation 17:18. Before its destruction the call is to be given
from heaven, "Come out of her, My people, that ye be not partakers of
her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues." Revelation 18:4. As
in the days of Noah and Lot, there must be a marked separation from sin
and sinners. There can be no compromise between God and the world, no
turning back to secure earthly treasures. "Ye cannot serve God and
mammon." Matthew 6:24.
Like the dwellers in the vale of Siddim, the people are dreaming of
prosperity and peace. "Escape for thy life," is the warning from the
angels of God; but other voices are heard saying, "Be not excited; there
is no cause for alarm." The multitudes cry, "Peace and safety," while
Heaven declares that swift destruction is about to come upon the
transgressor. On the night prior to their destruction, the cities of the
plain rioted in pleasure and derided the fears and warnings of the
messenger of God; but those scoffers perished in the flames; that very
night the door of mercy was forever closed to the wicked, careless
inhabitants of Sodom. God will not always be mocked; He will not long be
trifled with. "Behold, the day of the Lord cometh, cruel both with wrath
and fierce anger, to lay the land desolate: and He shall destroy the
sinners thereof out of it." Isaiah 13:9. The great mass of the world
will reject God's mercy, and will be overwhelmed in swift and
irretrievable ruin. But those who heed the warning shall dwell "in the
secret place of the Most High," and "abide under the shadow of the
Almighty." His truth shall be their shield and buckler. For them is the
promise, "With long life will I satisfy him, and show him My salvation."
Psalm 91:1, 4,16.
Lot dwelt but a short time in Zoar. Iniquity prevailed there as in
Sodom, and he feared to remain, lest the city should be destroyed. Not
long after, Zoar was consumed, as God had purposed. Lot made his way to
the mountains, and abode in a cave, stripped of all for which he had
dared to subject his family to the influences of a wicked city. But the
curse of Sodom followed him even here. The sinful conduct of his
daughters was the result of the evil associations of that vile place.
Its moral corruption had become so interwoven with their character that
they could not distinguish between good and evil. Lot's only posterity,
the Moabites and Ammonites, were vile, idolatrous tribes, rebels against
God and bitter enemies of His people.
In how wide contrast to the life of Abraham was that of Lot! Once they
had been companions, worshiping at one altar, dwelling side by side in
their pilgrim tents; but how widely separated now! Lot had chosen Sodom
for its pleasure and profit. Leaving Abraham's altar and its daily
sacrifice to the living God, he had permitted his children to mingle
with a corrupt and idolatrous people; yet he had retained in his heart
the fear of God, for he is declared in the Scriptures to have been a
"just" man; his righteous soul was vexed with the vile conversation that
greeted his ears daily and the violence and crime he was powerless to
prevent. He was saved at last as "a brand plucked out of the fire"
(Zechariah 3:2), yet stripped of his possessions, bereaved of his wife
and children, dwelling in caves, like the wild beasts, covered with
infamy in his old age; and he gave to the world, not a race of righteous
men, but two idolatrous nations, at enmity with God and warring upon His
people, until, their cup of iniquity being full, they were appointed to
destruction. How terrible were the results that followed one unwise
step!
Says the wise man, "Labor not to be rich: cease from thine own wisdom."
"He that is greedy of gain troubleth his own house; but he that hateth
gifts shall live." Proverbs 23:4; 15:27. And the apostle Paul declares,
"They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many
foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and
perdition." 1 Timothy 6:9.
When Lot entered Sodom he fully intended to keep himself free from
iniquity and to command his household after him. But he signally failed.
The corrupting influences about him had an effect upon his own faith,
and his children's connection with the inhabitants of Sodom bound up his
interest in a measure with theirs. The result is before us.
Many are still making a similar mistake. In selecting a home they look
more to the temporal advantages they may gain than to the moral and
social influences that will surround themselves and their families. They
choose a beautiful and fertile country, or remove to some flourishing
city, in the hope of securing greater prosperity; but their children are
surrounded by temptation, and too often they form associations that are
unfavorable to the development of piety and the formation of a right
character. The atmosphere of lax morality, of unbelief, of indifference
to religious things, has a tendency to counteract the influence of the
parents. Examples of rebellion against parental and divine authority are
ever before the youth; many form attachments for infidels and
unbelievers, and cast in their lot with the enemies of God.
In choosing a home, God would have us consider, first of all, the moral
and religious influences that will surround us and our families. We may
be placed in trying positions, for many cannot have their surroundings
what they would; and whenever duty calls us, God will enable us to stand
uncorrupted, if we watch and pray, trusting in the grace of Christ. But
we should not needlessly expose ourselves to influences that are
unfavorable to the formation of Christian character. When we voluntarily
place ourselves in an atmosphere of worldliness and unbelief, we
displease God and drive holy angels from our homes.
Those who secure for their children worldly wealth and honor at the
expense of their eternal interests, will find in the end that these
advantages are a terrible loss. Like Lot, many see their children
ruined, and barely save their own souls. Their lifework is lost; their
life is a sad failure. Had they exercised true wisdom, their children
might have had less of worldly prosperity, but they would have made sure
of a title to the immortal inheritance.
The heritage that God has promised to His people is not in this world.
Abraham had no possession in the earth, "no, not so much as to set his
foot on." Acts 7:5. He possessed great substance, and he used it to the
glory of God and the good of his fellow men; but he did not look upon
this world as his home. The Lord had called him to leave his idolatrous
countrymen, with the promise of the land of Canaan as an everlasting
possession; yet neither he nor his son nor his son's son received it.
When Abraham desired a burial place for his dead, he had to buy it of
the Canaanites. His sole possession in the Land of Promise was that
rock-hewn tomb in the cave of Machpelah.
But the word of God had not failed; neither did it meet its final
accomplishment in the occupation of Canaan by the Jewish people. "To
Abraham and his seed were the promises made." Galatians 3:16. Abraham
himself was to share the inheritance. The fulfillment of God's promise
may seem to be long delayed-- for "one day is with the Lord as a
thousand years, and a thousand years as one day" (2 Peter 3:8); it may
appear to tarry; but at the appointed time "it will surely come, it will
not tarry." Habakkuk 2:3. The gift to Abraham and his seed included not
merely the land of Canaan, but the whole earth. So says the apostle,
"The promise, that he should be the heir of the world, was not to
Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through the righteousness
of faith." Romans 4:13. And the Bible plainly teaches that the promises
made to Abraham are to be fulfilled through Christ. All that are
Christ's are "Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise"--heirs
to "an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not
away"--the earth freed from the curse of sin. Galatians 3:29; 1 Peter
1:4. For "the kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom
under the whole heaven, shall be given to the people of the saints of
the Most High;" and "the meek shall inherit the earth; and shall delight
themselves in the abundance of peace." Daniel 7:27; Psalm 37:11.
God gave to Abraham a view of this immortal inheritance, and with this
hope he was content. "By faith he sojourned in the Land of Promise, as
in a strange country, dwelling in tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob, the
heirs with him of the same promise: for he looked for a city which hath
foundations, whose builder and maker is God." Hebrews 11:9, 10.
Of the posterity of Abraham it is written, "These all died in faith, not
having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were
persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were
strangers and pilgrims on the earth." Verse 13. We must dwell as
pilgrims and strangers here if we would gain "a better country, that is,
an heavenly." Verse 16. Those who are children of Abraham will be
seeking the city which he looked for, "whose builder and maker is God."
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