READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
BIOGRAPHYCAL UNIVERSAL LIBRARY |
ABRAHAM: HIS LIFE AND TIMES.By
REV. WILLIAM J. DEANE
The materials for the facts of the life of Abraham are
found in Holy Scripture, in the Book of Genesis, and in some of the later
writings. I have taken it for granted that these statements are authentic, and
have not thought it necessary to follow Ewald and his school in distinguishing
the various authors of them, assigning this to the Book of origins, and that to the First narrator, and that to the Second, and so on. Nor have I esteemed
the details thus given as accretions that have grown up round a great central
figure in the lapse of centuries, the outcome of hero-worship, the result of a natural
desire to accumulate on a great forefather anything that would tend to elevate
his personal character or exalt the favour with which
he was regarded by God. The narrative appears to me to be, consistent, derived
doubtless from different sources, but worked up by the compiler into a fairly
complete biography, which, taken in conjunction with hints afforded by the
later Scriptures, leaves on the mind a finished picture of the Father of
the Faithful. Accessory to the Scripture account are the history of
Josephus and some treatises of Philo, which contain additional facts more or
less mythical, derived from certain histories or Jewish tradition. Eusebius in
his "Praeparatio Evangelica", adds some
circumstances, and a. few of the Fathers afford a little further information, Ephraem
Syrus is said to have composed a work on Abraham's sojourn in Egypt, which
however, if existing in MS., has not been published. A plentiful crop of
legends has, as was natural, risen around the true story of this celebrated
man. Many of these will be found in The Book of Jubilees, which
under the name of Kyfale has been discovered in an Abyssinian
dress, and translated in Ewald's Jahrbucher,
II. and III. The most copious collection, however, gathered from the Talmud and
other sources, has been made by Beer in his Leben Abraham’s nach Auffassung der jüdischen Sage. The Koran
has contributed largely to this legendary lore. Other Mussulman traditions are
found in Weil's work, The Bible, the Koran, and the Talmud. Immense
assistance to the understanding of the various phases of the Patriarch's life
has been derived from the interpretations of the cuneiform inscriptions of the
East and the hieroglyphs of Egypt, embodied in the works of Schrader, G. Smith,
Rawlinson, Sayce, Brugsch, and others. Topography is
cleared by the travels of Robinson, Thomson, Stanley, Tristram, Loftus, Porter,
Malan, etc., and the publications of the Palestine Exploration Fund. The
commentaries of Kalisch; Delitzsch, and especially Dillmann, afford most
valuable information. Of monographs on this subject very few exist. The best
and most recent is that by Dr. Oswald Dykes, Abraham, the Friend of God.
The Rev. R. Allen's work, Abraham ; His Life and Times, as by a
Contemporary, is a romance founded on reliable materials, but extending
only to the arrival at Haran. The Rev. H. Blunt published some Lectures
on Abraham in 1831, and the Hon. L. J. Barrington a book entitled “From Ur
to Machpelah”; but these are rather homiletic and edificatory than scientific.
It is almost unnecessary to add that the Dictionaries of the Bible, such as
those of Herzog, Winer, Smith, Kitto, and McClintock and Strong, contain
epitomes of most necessary information, with references to other works which
bear on the subject.
Whether Abraham was acquainted or not with the art of
writing (and there is no certain evidence on either side), there is certainly
no reason why he should not have known it. His contemporaries at Ur inscribed
their names on the bricks of which they built their temples ; there is writing
in Egypt of earlier date than his time; his great-grandson, Judah, possessed a
signet ring, which, doubtless, as in the case of those discovered in Chaldean
tombs, was engraved with a device and inscription. It is not, then, altogether
beyond the bounds of possibility that he transmitted the events of his life by
written documents to his descendants. But even without such memorials, oral
tradition may easily have handed down the wonderful incidents of his career to
a more literary age, and thence to Moses. Isaac was seventy-five years old when
his father died; Jacob had lived for the first fifteen years of his life in
daily intercourse with his grandfather, who must have often recounted to the
gentle boy the leading events that had befallen him; and this narrative must
have been continually repeated by Isaac, whose death anticipated that of his
son only by some five and twenty years. Thus, when Jacob arrived in Egypt, he
carried with him the stories which he had received from his grandfather and
father, and during the seventeen years of his life in that country he could impart
the family traditions to his sons and grandsons, who would have found no
difficulty in committing them to writing in a land where literature flourished,
and of whose chief seat of learning, On, Joseph himself was a denizen. Granted that
Moses was the chief composer of the Pentateuch, there is no difficulty in
believing that the history which he relates was transmitted to him in an authentic
form, and that he had good warrant for his wonderful story.
ABRAHAM:HIS LIFE AND TIMES.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER 1. Abram’s Birthplace
Ur; Chaldea: its aspect; Former fertility; Religion of
its inhabitants ; Population ; Civilization—Abram bom—His
family— Selection of a centre of true
religion—Legends of Abram's early life—Truth underlying such myths.
CHAPTER 2. First Call
Causes of the migration—The call; its nature ; Ahram’s obedience—Journey from Ur to Haran—Erech—Calneh—Babylon— Sepharvaim—Ivah—Hena—The river
Habor—Haran ; its neighbourhood—Arrival of Nahor
—Death of Terah.
CHAPTER 3. Second Call
The second call with its promise — Departure from
Haran ; necessity of this movement—Route to Canaan—Tadmor ; Kuryetein ; Damascus—Arrival in Canaan—Encampment at Morph— Shechem described.
CHAPTER IV. The Promised Land
Canaan; the name; Language then spoken—Its
inhabitants; Aborigines; Canaanites proper; Amorites; Hittites; Perizzites; Philistines — Their religion — Fertility and natural features of the country;
its capabilities — Characteristics of the Canaanitish tribes — The Fellaheen — Abram’s life — New promise — Selection of Canaan as the cradle
of true religion — Bethel.
CHAPTER 5. Egypt
Famine in Canaan — Abram in Egypt — Condition of that
country — The Hyksos; their civilization — Abram’s policy — Sarai taken to
Pharaoh’s house ; rescued by God’s intervention.
CHAPTER 6. Separation
Return to Canaan — Lot separates from Abram — The Cities
of the Plain — Renewal of promise at Bethel — Residence at Hebron — Description of
the locality — Hittite allies.
CHAPTER 7. Chedorlaomer
Invasion from Shinar — Kings engaged — Chedorlaomer ;
his expedition against the West — Battle in the vale of
Siddim — Defeat of the Sodomites and capture of Lot — His rescue by Abram — Dan — The
King of Sodom — Melchizedek ; Abram's dealings with him ; his office and typical
character.
CHAPTER 8. The Covenant
A vision bringing comfort — Promise of a son and
numerous posterity — Abram’s faith counted for righteousness — Jehovah's covenant
with him — Nature of,such covenant — Mode of
ratification — Prophecy of the future — Chronology of the period of four hundred
years — Dispossession and destruction of the Canaanites — Boundaries of the
Promised Land — Tribes to be dispossessed.
CHAPTER 9. Hagar—Circumcision
Sarai’s impatience — She gives to Abram Hagar as
secondary wife — Concnbinage — Hagar a type — Her
flight — She is met by the angel of the Lord — Promise of a son — Character of the
Ishmaelites — Ishmael born — Renewal of the
covenant — Abram’s name changed — Extension of the promise — Circumcision ; its
nature and signification — The numbers “seven” and “eight’’ — Sarai’s name
changed — Promise of a son from her.
CHAPTER 10. Sodom
Three heavenly visitors — Renewed promise of a son to
Sarah — Abraham intercedes for Sodom — Ramet-el-Khalil — Destruction
of the Cities of the Plain — Testimonies, of ancient writers — Physical agents of
the catastrophe — Site of the five cities —Treatment of the angels in Sodom — Lot
saved — Lot’s wife — Catastrophe widely reported — Subsequent history of Lot —
Moabites and Ammonites - Lot called “righteous.”
CHAPTER 11. Gerar and Beersheba
Removal to Gerar — Philistines — Abraham's
evasion — Sarah taken by Abimelech ; saved by God’s interposition — Abimelech’s
conduct — His rebuke — Beersheba — Treaty between Abimelech and Abraham — Origin of the
name Beersheba — Isaac born ; signification of his name — Ishmael’s conduct —
He and his mother cast out — Reason of this expulsion — Peril in the wilderness ;
relieved by the angel of God — Ishmael’s subsequent history — Tribes sprung from
him.
CHAPTER 12. Temptation
The great trial — Abraham commanded to sacrifice his
son — The command examined — Objections answered — Meaning of the trial — Human
sacrifice — Explanation by Bishop Horsley and others — Rationalistic views — Jewish
legends — Abraham obeys — Moriah — The sacrifice — The knife
arrested — Substitution — Typical import — Reward — The future of the
promise — Jehovah-Jireb.
CHAPTER 13. Machpelah
Sarah dies; her character — Burial-places — Abraham buys
Machpelah — The contract — Money — Mosque of Hebron and
Abraham’s burial-place described — Life beyond the grave and resurrection of the
body.
CHAPTER 14. Isaac’s Marriage
Choice of wife for Isaac — The steward’s mission — His
promise and oath ; arrival at Haran ; simple faith — The sign — Rebekah — Laban — Consent
obtained — Rebekah accompanies the steward — Bethuel — Meeting of Isaac and Rebekah — Marriage — Esau
and Jacob born — Contrast of the twins.
CHAPTER 15. Closing Years—Death
Marriage with Keturah ; difficulties in connection
therewith — Tribes sprung from this union — Abraham dies — His burial — The friend of
God — General view of his character.
CHAPTER I.
ABRAM’S BIRTHPLACE.
Chaldaea : its aspect; Former fertility ; Religion of
its Inhabitant Population; Civilization — Abram born — His family — Selection of a centre of true religion — Legends of Abram's early life — Truth
underlying such myths.
Some five thousand years ago, when civilization first visited the alluvial plain of Babylon, and the Babylonian monarchy came into existence, the Persian Gulf extended inward far beyond its present limits, and sites now more than a hundred miles distant from the sea were then close to the coast, and enjoyed all the advantages and participated in all the dangers of such proximity. The alluvium brought down by the two great rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates, encroaches on the gulf with marvellous rapidity. The present rate of increase is estimated at one mile every seventy years, and it is upon grounds satisfactory to geologists considered that the average growth during the historic period has been as much as a mile in every thirty years. We must take this fact into account in estimating the extent of the country called Chaldea and the position of many of its towns. Among the cities which were thus placed was that which is called in the Bible “Ur of the Chaldees,” now known as Mugheir, situated on the right bank of the Euphrates, some six miles distant from the stream, and nearly opposite the point where the river Shat-el-Hie, which comes from the Tigris, joins the Euphrates. The name Ur, or Uru, is the Semitic form of the Accadian eri, meaning “city,” and was probably given to this place as being the most important in the locality or as the first settled dwelling of its once roving inhabitants. It was, in fact, “the capital of one of the oldest of the pre-Semitic dynasties, though it had probably passed into the hands of the Semitic Casdim” (Chaldees) before this time. Of course, this adjunct, Casdim, does not appertain to the original name, but is an explanation added by the Hebrew narrator. The modern name of this place means “the bitumined,” and is appropriate owing to the quantity of bitumen which is found in the neighbourhood. If it was not actually on the coast, it was placed so low down the Euphrates as to be practically a maritime town and to serve as the port of Babylonia. The native inscriptions constantly speak of the ships of Ur and of the brisk commerce carried on by its inhabitants. It was a city of great importance, and BC 2000 was the capital of a powerful monarch called Urukh, or Lig-Bagas (for the reading is uncertain), who founded the great temple dedicated to the moon-god, Hurki, the remains of which are still to be seen. This monarch was an independent sovereign, and exercised a sway over a tract of country extending as far north as Niffer, the ancient Calneh. The magnificence of his buildings and the extent of his constructive operations prove him to have possessed large resources and high conceptions. A mistaken tradition, followed by many commentators ancient and modern, identified Ur with the Greek Edessa, the modern Orfa, which seems to have had the name Orrha at one time. This city, situated in Upper Mesopotamia, which became famous in Christian times as the capital of that king Abgarus who is supposed to have written a letter to Christ, still retains some traditions of Abraham in the names of its mosque and lake. But all the most probable notices that have come down to us place Ur in Chaldea proper, the alluvial country on the Persian Gulf; and there can be no reasonable doubt that Mugheir which, as the inscriptions witness, bore the exact name of Ur, or Hur, was the birthplace of Abram. Even the tradition quoted by Eusebius from Eupolemus, a pre-Christian Greek historian, that Ur, or
Uria as he called it, is the Babylonian city Camarina, or Chaldaeopolis,
points to the same view; for, as Professor Rawlinson remarks, these names make
it a city of the moon-god, which, as we have seen, was the case with Ur. The
remains of the town consist of a series of low mounds disposed in an oval
shape, measuring about two miles in extent, and dominated by that on which the
temple was erected, which is very conspicuous, rising some seventy feet above
the plain. This temple is built of large bricks, raised on a basement of great
size, and facing the cardinal points. Originally this basement rose in receding
stages, on the highest of which was placed the shrine containing the image of
the god. It was surrounded by date groves of luxuriant growth ; and from its
huge size and towering height, the building was conspicuous from all parts of
the city, and compelled every inhabitant and wayfarer to recognize the worship
of Hurki, the great moongod.
There is a peculiarity in the building which confirms the fact gathered from
the inscriptions, that it was the work of two different monarchs, the earliest
of whom is supposed to have reigned about B.C. 2200. In the lower stage the
bricks are cemented with bitumen, in the upper with lime mortar. The cylinders
recording the name of the founder were found, as usually in Chaldean buildings,
deposited at the corners.
Among the edifices raised by the builder of this
temple was a palace called the house of Rubu-tsiru,
“the supreme prince,” the ruins of which are still to be traced. What this
monarch left uncompleted his son Dungi finished; and this son extended his
father’s kingdom northward, so that he has left traces of his handiwork in the
rebuilding of the temple of Erech, and in a temple
which he erected at Babylon. It was probably in his time that Abram was born.
The present appearance of Chaldaea is singularly
monotonous and uninteresting. Being strictly an alluvial region, owing its
existence to the rivers Tigris and Euphrates, it is a level plain, unrelieved
by mountain or hill. But its amazing fertility is unquestioned, and with a
teeming population and under a system of high cultivation, it must have
presented a striking contrast to its present barren and dispeopled condition. The dreary stretches of sandy waste were once well watered and
cultivated, and were mines of wealth to the industrious peasant. Herodotus, who
himself visited the country, thus describes its fecundity: “The land is but
little watered by rain, but the root of the corn is nourished by other means.
It is fed by the river, not by its overflow, as in Egypt, but by artificial
irrigation. No part of the known world is so fruitful in grain. No attempt,
indeed, is made to grow the fig, the vine, or the olive; but in grain it is so
fruitful as to yield commonly two hundred-fold, and in the best seasons even
three hundred-fold. Wheat and barley often carry a blade of four fingers in
breadth. As for millet and sesame I shall not say, though within my own
knowledge, to what a surprising height they grow ; for I am not ignorant that
what I have already said concerning the produce of Babylonia must seem
incredible to those who have never visited the country. The whole plain is
covered with palm trees, most of them bearing fruit, and from them they make
bread, wine, and honey.” Modern travellers recognize
the productive powers of the soil while deploring the neglect and idleness
which have led to its present miserable condition. The two great natural
products are the wheat plant and the date palm. The former, it is said, grew so
rankly that it was mown twice, and then fed off by cattle, in order to check
its luxuriance and induce it to run to ear. The beautiful date palm gives a
charm to the monotonous landscape, which in that country can scarcely be overestimated.
Its utility is proverbial, and it was applied to more purposes than Herodotus
mentions. Besides furnishing the inhabitants with bread from its fruit and
pith, wine and honey from its sap, it supplied firing, ropes, vinegar, and a
famous mash for fattening cattle. Fruits, such as pomegranates, apples,
grapes, and tamarisks, were abundant; but the country produced great forest
trees ; and the cypress, acacia, and palm could alone be encountered in many
days’ journey. To supply this lack of timber the Chaldeans had recourse to the
enormous reeds which are almost peculiar to this region, and of which to this
day the Arabs make both houses and boats. Reeds were also used in constructing
some of the great Chaldean buildings. They were placed in the form of matting
as a foundation for successive layers of bricks, and by projecting beyond the external
surface served for a time to protect the earthen mass from disintegration. The
country produced no stone for building ; if any was used, it had to be imported
or conveyed from a long distance down the rivers. But excellent clay was
everywhere found, and sun-dried bricks cemented with bitumen formed the usual
material from which the edifices were constructed.
The religion of the Chaldeans was markedly
polytheistic, and seems to have been developed from the worship of the
celestial bodies. But it was not as mere powers of nature that these were
adored, but as real persons with a history and character, many of whom bear a
striking resemblance to the personages of classical mythology. The principal
deity is II (the Hebrew ET) or Ra; then follows a triad, Ana, Bil, or Belus,
and Hea or Hoa, who correspond partly in attributes to the classical Pluto,
Jupiter, and Neptune, and have each their wife. Another triad succeeds;
accompanied by female powers or wives, viz., Vul or
Iva, Shamas, San, or Sansi (the Sun), and Sin or Hurki (the Moon). The predominating influence of Ur caused the worship of the
moon-god (whose name means the Protector of the land) to extend far and wide,
and to eclipse the fame of Shamas (the Sun) in most towns of Babylonia. Next in
order comes a group of five minor deities, representatives of the five planets
respectively, Nin or Ninip (Saturn), Bel-Merodach (Jupiter), Nergal (Mars),
Ishtar or Nana (Venus), and Nebo (Mercury). These principal gods are followed
by numerous divinities of the second and third order, which at present it is
impossible to describe or classify. The older commentaries, both Jewish and
patristic, attributed to the Chaldeans the worship of fire, and some legends
connected with Abraham are based on this assumption. But there is no trace of
this practice in the monumental records; and the writers who allude to it in
connection with Ur seem to confound the Magian tenets prevalent in Media and
Persia with those held by other Eastern nations. Of the degraded nature of the
Chaldean religion there can be no doubt. However poetically the popular faith
was treated by men of polish and learning, and although the received mythology
was moulded into graceful forms vying with the best
creations of Greek and Roman story, yet the mass of men never rose to these
higher conceptions. Believing that their own destinies and the forces of nature
were controlled by capricious deities without moral sense, they resorted to
propitiatory sacrifices and prayers where they ought to have used prudence and
ordinary means, and neglected many sciences and arts which otherwise they would
have studied and practised. Thus instead of seeking
to cure disease or to alleviate pain by the use of medicines or surgical
appliances, they resorted to charms and spells. A great portion of Babylonian
literature now extant is composed of formulae for warding off disease and
sorcery, for bewitching people, or for exorcising evil influences. There are
also many treatises on omens and divination. From all this we gather that the
popular religion was of a base and sensual type, one that tended to degrade,
rather than to elevate, its adherents.
The population of Chaldaea was of a mixed origin, but
chiefly of Cushite descent, as the Bible witnesses. Modern investigators have
supposed that Babylonia was first peopled by Turanian tribes (allied to the
Turks and Tartars of the present day), who invented the cuneiform system of
writing, and that they were conquered and dispossessed by the Semites. Whether
this be true or not, it is certain, says Professor Sayce, that these early
settlers s poke, as those tribes did, an agglutinative language, that is, a
language in which grammatical relations are formed not by inflections, but by
the attachment of independent words, as e.g. of pronouns to verbs to from the
conjugation, and of prepositions to substantives to form declension. This was allied
to the dialects spoken in Elam, and it is probable that the Accadian language,
as it is called, was the medium of communication between the various peoples of
a very wide district on the rivers Tigris and Euphrates. At Ur, one of the
primitive capitals, as the great port of the country, was to be found a
collection of many nationalities. The ships of Ur traded with Ethiopia and the
lands bordering on the Red Sea, which term included both the Persian Gulf and
the Indian Ocean; and the people were thus brought into contact with foreign
nations, and many settlers from distant countries doubtless took up their abode
in the city. One Semitic family we know settled there, the family from which
sprung Abraham, the Father of the Faithful, the friend of God, whose story we
have to tell. The remote ancestor of this family was Eber, who descended
through Arphaxad from Shem. Arphaxad, as the name of a country, represents a
region in the north of Assyria, on the borders of Armenia; from this region
the Hebrews, or posterity of Eber, migrated southward. The usual cause of such
like emigrations is doubtless that restless love of change and desire for new
fields of enterprise which are implanted in man for wise purposes. We do not
know the particular impulse which led these Shemites,
whose predilections were for a pastoral life, thus to become inhabitants of a
busy, bustling, unquiet city. If they brought with them their simple habits,
they must have felt utterly alien in the midst of the commerce, the arts, and
civilization, of this seaport The profligate idol worship which here met their
observation, even if they too soon learned to acquiesce in it, must at first
have seemed an outrage on their own pure religious tradition. Under the open
heaven, in the free air of the plain, they could have worshipped the Lord as
their forefather Noah had worshipped; here the atmosphere was noxious with
idolatrous associations, and everything around tended to degrade their higher
conceptions and to facilitate the descent to false religion.
The inhabitants of Chaldea, however, were not confined
to cities. There was an agricultural as well as an urban class ; and there was,
besides these, also a nomadic population who dwelt in tents, and roamed the
country with their flocks and herds. It is very likely that Terah’s clan was of
the latter class, and that the name “Ur” included the neighbouring district. The Chaldeans were a peaceable nation, and never, as far as we know,
aspired to foreign conquest and the foundation of one great empire till the
days of Nebuchadnezzar. Being not distracted by schemes of ambition, they
turned their attention to the arts of peace, and arrived at a high pitch of
civilization even in very early times. Their achievements in building and
sculpture witness for themselves after four thousand years. The lucidity of the
atmosphere, where the stars rather blaze than shine, led to the study of the
heavenly bodies; and astronomy, with its kindred science of astrology,
received the greatest care at the hands of the learned class. Mathematics, law,
government, were duly studied and reduced to system; weaving, metal-working,
gem-engraving, were practised with remarkable skill.
Writing was well known, and libraries were collected, the books being tablets
of clay on which letters were impressed. One has always been accustomed to
picture the patriarch Abraham dressed in garments like the sheikhs of the
desert, and from engravings on seals which have been found among the debris of
ruined buildings, we see that at this time long flowing robes, richly
embroidered, were used by the chiefs of the country.
Such was Chaldea. In this highly civilized but
idolatrous land, amid this remarkable people, and with such surroundings, Abram
was born, some two thousand or more years before the Christian era. He appears
to have been the youngest of three brothers, the sons of Terah, who is reckoned
the tenth in descent from Noah, as Noah is accounted the tenth in descent from
Adam. That Abram in the genealogy is named before his brothers, Nahor and
Haran, may be explained by the fact that he was the heir of God’s promises, and
the personage whose history was of such vast importance that the rights of
primogeniture were overborne by this consideration. The eldest of the three was
probably Haran, as Nahor married his daughter Milcah, and Abram (as it is
supposed) his other daughter Iscah or Sarai, who was ten years younger than her
husband. Another argument for the same fact may be found in the marriage of
Abraham’s son Isaac to Rebecca, the granddaughter of Nahor by the youngest of
his eight sons. Unless we suppose that Abraham was greatly the junior of Haran,
such a marriage would suggest a very remarkable disparity of years, which we
know did not exist. But taking Nahor as the eldest son, born when Terah was
seventy years old, and remembering that Terah died at the age of two hundred
and five when Abram was seventy-five, we find that his father was one hundred
and thirty years of age when Abram was born.
The name he bore has been recognized in the form Abu-ramu, “the exalted father,” in some of the early Babylonian contracttablets; just as Sarah is the Assyrian Sarrat, “queen,” and Milcah is “princess” in the same
language.
Terah seems to have been an idolater; Joshua speaks of
him and his family as worshipping other gods; and we find his descendant Laban
possessed of “images” or teraphim, and calling them his gods, the honouring of which, whether they were used for purposes of
divination and magic, or regarded as guarantees of domestic prosperity, showed
an amount of ignorance and superstition, incompatible with sincere worship of
the true God.
That the knowledge of the true God had become greatly
obscured even in Noah’s time is certain from the incident of the building of
Babel; deterioration once begun is not easily arrested; rather, its tendency is
to develope itself in grosser and deadlier forms.
Even the descendants of Shem, who had longest retained the pure spirit of
religion, had gone astray; every century that passed bore witness to the decay
of piety and of the knowledge of God. Some new intervention was required. To
avert this growing degeneracy God designed to choose out a family which should
keep alive true religion, be the receptacle of Divine communication, and
finally give to a fallen world the seed of the woman
to be its Redeemer. The family thus selected was that of Terah, and the
individual member who was ordained to receive the revelation was Abram. From
this centre celestial light was to radiate. As far as
we know, from the time of “Noah the Divine voice had not been heard; the
heavens had not sent forth a visitant to earth; the pure faith had been left
to the support of tradition. There was a pause in the outward communication;
there was no open vision. And men had already swerved aside; they had learned
to worship and serve the creature instead of the Creator; they had indeed sunk
into creature worship; they had refused that apprehension of God which the
light of conscience and the physical universe might have taught; and losing
sight of the unity and spirituality of the Divine Being, they became the slaves
of their own lusts, fell into unnameable sensualities, and imagined deities of like character with their own degraded
instincts.” The lesson of the Flood had lost its power, and a new revelation
was needed, if the knowledge of God was not to be wholly obliterated. The
method by which God works is that which is always found most efficacious, which
is true in nature as in grace—namely, from within outwards, from a nucleus to
its surroundings. The patriarchal principle which obtained so largely in
primitive times afforded great facilities for the separation of one family for
this purpose. The distinctions of race and clan and tribe were clearly marked
out and maintained, and it was no hard task to observe them and keep them
unviolated. Looking forward to this future selection Noah had said, “Blessed be
the Lord God of Shem”. From this individual among his sons the knowledge of
Jehovah should spread to Ham and Japheth, and unto the utmost parts of the
earth. It was in view of this choice of a people to be the bearers of salvation
that Moses sang;
When the Most High gave to the nations their
inheritance.
When He separated the children of men,
He set the bounds of the peoples
According to the number of the children of Israel.
Not that God left Himself without witness in the rest
of the world. Natural religion, the law of conscience, moral government, were
not lost; there was still light, if men chose to see it and guide their way by
it. We learn in the case of Melchizedek and Balaam that true religion
overpassed the limits of the single family, and found a home in most unlikely
spots. The Canaanites were of Hamitic descent, yet among them traces of the
old monotheistic faith declared themselves. But God thought fit to place the
germ of the plant, which should grow into a great tree overshadowing all
nations, in one narrow plot, that there it might be carefully tended and
watered and cultivated, sheltered from harm, exposed to ripening influences,
and in the end bring forth much fruit. Jewish bigotry indeed narrowed the
blessing to Abram’s natural descendants, but to the patriarch himself the
promise was not so limited; to him in progressive revelation it was unfolded
that all the world should share in the favour and
reap the benefits of God’s merciful condescension.
Many legends touching Abram’s early life are found in
the writings of Jew and Moslem, and possibly have some historical basis on
which they were erected. The “Book of Jubilees” tells how that from his early
years he was filled with loathing for the vices of those among whom he lived.
When only fourteen, he separated himself from his father, refusing to worship
his idols, and praying to the great Creator to save him from being led astray
by the evil practices of his countrymen. At his command, and reverencing his
sanctity; the ravens refrained from devouring the seed that was sown in the
fields; more than this, he improved upon the practice of scattering seed
broadcast over the ground, and invented a kind of drill, which was attached to
the plough, and covered up the seeds as they were deposited in the soil. As he
grew older, he remonstrated with his father upon the worship of idols, and
showed the folly and wickedness of this practice. Terah assented to his words,
but dared not openly avow his sentiments for fear of his relations, who would
slay without scruple all who presumed to oppose the prevailing religion. Other
legends “tell how a wonderful star heralded his birth; and how Nimrod, the king
of Babylon, fearing that one so favoured might
hereafter rise to a dangerous eminence, required his father to surrender him to
death. Terah substituted a slave’s child for his own son, and thus Abram
escaped. He was hidden for some years in a cave; on emerging from this, and for
the first time beholding the heavens, he began to ask who had made all this
wonderful scene. When the sun arose, he fancied that bright orb must be the
Creator, and prayed to it all day long ; but when it set he thought it could
not have made all the world and yet itself be subject to extinction. The moon
rose, and the stars shone out. “Surely,” he cried, “the moon is the Lord of the
Universe, and the stars are his ministers.” But the moon sank, the stars faded,
and the sun again appeared on the horizon. Then he said: “These celestial
bodies could not have created the world; they all obey an invisible Ruler, to
whom they owe their existence ; and Him only henceforward will I supplicate, to
Him alone will I bow.” Abram’s growth from infancy to boyhood was so rapid that
his mother, who had been some short time separated, did not recognize him when
she met him again, and could scarcely believe in his identity when he assured
her that he was her son. “How is it possible,” she asked, “ that thou hast so
grown in this little while?” “Ah, mother,” answered Abram, “learn from this
that there is an Almighty, everlasting God, who seeth all things and is Himself unseen, who is in heaven, and whose majesty filleth all the earth.” “What! cries the mother; “Is there any God save
Nimrod?” “Certainly,” he says, “the God of heaven and earth, who is also the
God of Nimrod. Go thou to Nimrod and tell him this.” His mother carried this
conversation to Terah, and Terah acquainted the king with this and other
wonderful matters concerning his son. Nimrod was uneasy at this report, and
sent a body of his warriors to arrest the youth. Abram prayed to the God of
heaven, and Gabriel shrouded him suddenly in a clond,
and so terrified the warriors that they fled to Babylon, a journey of forty
days, leaving their errand undone. They were followed by Abram riding on the
angel’s shoulders. Arrived at the city gates, the youth exclaimed with a loud
voice: “The Eternal is the only true God; there is none like Him. He is the
God of heaven, God of all gods, God of Nimrod himself. Bear record, all ye
inhabitants of Babylon; I, Abram, worship Him, and Him alone.” Informed of
these circumstances Nimrod is sorely perplexed what to do ; but at length he
ordains a festival of seven days in which all his people are to come and
worship him. Abram comes boldly before the king, lays hold of his throne and
tosses it about, denouncing, in stern language, Nimrod’s idolatry and
infidelity. As he speaks, a wonderful thing happens : the idol temples in the
city suddenly fall to the ground with a crash; Nimrod is seized with a
death-like trance; all his courtiers are panic-stricken. On recovering his
senses, the king asks: “Was it thy voice which I heard, or the voice of thy
God?” Abram answers: “It was the voice only of one of the meanest of God’s
creatures.” “In sooth,” says Nimrod, “thy God is great and mighty, and indeed
King of kings.” And he dismisses Terah and his son in safety.
All these legends agree in making Abram to have early
arrived at a purer notion concerning God than his contemporaries. Some say that
he obtained this knowledge from Shem, who survived to his day ; but most
stories tell how the more he thought on these things, the more convinced was he
of the truth of monotheism, and the more resolved to spread this belief among
mankind.
According to another Jewish legend Terah was an
idolater, and going one day on a journey he appointed Abram to sell his idols
in his stead. As often as a purchaser came, Abram asked his age, and when he
replied, “I am fifty or sixty years old,” he said, “Woe to the man of sixty who
would worship the work of a day.” And the would-be purchasers went away
ashamed. Other Mahommedan myths tell how, staying at home on one occasion, when
his fellow townsmen had gone on a pilgrimage to some shrine, he destroyed
seventy-two idols which were set up in a temple, obtaining from this adventure
his honourable title of Khulil Allah, “Friend of God.” Accused before Nimrod of this offence, he was condemned
to be burnt alive. Previously the following conversation is reported to have
taken place: Let us worship the fire,”
said the king. “Rather,” replied Abram, “the water that quenches the fire.”
“Well, the water.” “Rather the cloud that carries the water.” “Well, the
cloud.” “Rather the wind that scatters the cloud.” “Well, the wind.” “Rather
man, for he endures the wind.” “Thou art a babbler,” cried Nimrod. “I worship
the fire, and will cast thee into it. May the God whom thou adorest deliver thee thence.” He was accordingly thrown into the burning pile. All the
inhabitants of heaven and the creatures of earth were eager to save him ; but
God sent Gabriel to cool the flame, which miraculously lost all its heat; and
though Abram remained seven days in the furnace he was unharmed, and sat amid
the flames as in a blooming garden.
Is there not a great truth lurking beneath these
fantastic legends? All that will live godly must suffer persecution, ft is the
law of God’s kingdom. The disciple is not above his master. “If they have
persecuted Me,” said Christ to His followers, “they will also persecute you.”
The sacred narrative, indeed, gives no hint of any such trials; but we know
from the necessities of the case that it must have been so; nor would the
character of the patriarch have shown such patience, courage, steadfastness,
without a training of danger and difficulty. What is meant by Isaiah’s
expression: “The Lord who redeemed Abraham?”. Does it not point to a rescue
from perils, such perils as met him at the hands of idolaters whom his pure
life, if not his actual teaching, rebuked? We read of no such hazards undergone
after his migration. He encounters no religious opposition in Haran, or Canaan,
or Egypt. In those stages of his career he is a mature believer, who
unhesitatingly enunciates his sentiments, and whose utterances are received
with respect and submission. Assuredly, he had had to do battle for the faith
before he arrived at this calm maintenance of his religious convictions, and
this power of impressing others. In his early home he must have had many such
conflicts as legendary history relates—conflicts with the secular power, as
represented by Nimrod; conflicts with popular superstition, as represented by
the priests ; and, what was harder to bear, conflicts with his own family, who
did not share his faith, and who derided his enthusiasm—when his foes were
those of his own household. Such trials he endured with the constancy of a
Christian saint.
“Not wondering, though in grief, to find
The martyr’s foe still keep her mind ;
But fixed to hold Love’s banner fast,
And by submission win at last."
CHAPTER II.
FIRST CALL.
Causes of the migration—The call; its nature; Abram’s obediencejourney from Ur to Haran—Erech—Calneh—Babylon—Sepharvaim—
Ivah—Hena—The river Habor—Haran; its neighbourhood—Arrival
of Nabor—Death of Terah.
The history of Abram’s call is not fully given in
Genesis. There is much more in the matter which we should like to know, much
that, if told, would enable us better to estimate his religious character in
this stage of his life, and to understand what advance he had made in the
knowledge of God. But one part of Scripture supplements another; details that
are wanting here are supplied there; hints are cursorily given which complete
the sketch otherwise imperfect. Of the hand that led him, and the voice that
first called him, St. Stephen speaks ; of the blind obedience that followed
that Divine direction the Epistle to the Hebrews tells us, when it teaches that
he “went out, not knowing whither he went.” Had we the record of Genesis alone,
we should not know what was the impulse which led to this migration. For we
read merely : “And Terah took Abram his son, and Lot the son of Haran, his
son’s son, and Sarai his daughter-in-law, his son Abram’s wife; and they went
forth with them from Ur of the Chaldees, to go into the land of Canaan; and
they came unto Haran, and dwelt there.” This might have been merely the
movement of a nomadic tribe, restless in confinement, and not altogether weaned
from ancestral habits, seeking new pastures and a new sphere of activity. Or it
might have been the unwilling departure of a conquered horde, whom some
superior power had driven from their home. Either of these suppositions the
passage in Genesis would allow us to adopt. An explanation of the movement much
nearer to the truth is given in the Book of Judith, from the mouth of Achior
the Ammonite. “This people,” said he to Holofernes, “are descended of the
Chaldeans, and they sojourned heretofore in Mesopotamia, because they would not
follow the gods of their fathers which were in the land of Chaldea. For they
left the way of their ancestors, and worshipped the God of heaven, the God whom
they knew: so they cast them out from the face of their gods, and they fled
into Mesopotamia, and sojourned there many days”; or, as the Latin version puts
it, “thus abandoning the ceremonies of their fathers, which consisted in the
worship of many gods, they worshipped one god of heaven, who commanded them to
depart thence and to dwell in Charran.” Doubtless this account is based on the
facts of the case. The Chaldean religion was not altogether tolerant. The
monarch gave the word to his subjects. Public opinion was thoroughly Erastian,
and elected to believe what the ruling power proposed to its aceptance. “I make a decree,” said Darius in after years, “
that in every dominion of my kingdom men tremble and fear before the God of
Daniel.” So an attack on the prevalent faith was not likely to be allowed to
pass without notice, and a preacher of monotheism would have found himself
opposed both actively and passively, by open persecution as well as by tacit
reproof and official discountenance. The legends mentioned above invariably
show Abram as a devout believer in one God, and suffering persecution for his
faith.
But the true signification of the change of residence
is given by St. Stephen in his speech before the Sanhedrin, where he states
that Abram had had a direct revelation from God before the Lord appeared unto
him in Charran. “The God of glory,” he says, “appeared unto our father Abraham,
when he was in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Charran, and said unto him, Get
thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and come into the land which I
shall show thee.” The tradition of monotheism, handed down from Noah and his
sons, had doubtless never been lost, though overlaid with accretions and combined
with many superstitions; and to such a mind as Abram’s it must have had a vast
attraction which discredited all the allurements of idolatrous worship.
Never till now has any mention been made of a distinct
appearance of the Lord to man, and what the expression imports has occasioned
some perplexity. When God spoke to Adam in Eden, or to Noah, the mode of the
Divine manifestation is not expressly stated. That the appearance in the
present case was not a direct vision of Jehovah in a bodily form is certain,
for “no man hath seen God at any time.” That it was not a subjective impression
on the seer’s mind without any objective reality, the wording of the passage
seems to necessitate; but it may be questioned whether this appearance was that
of a created angel or of the Son of God, anticipating, as it were, the
Incarnation. There are many passages in both Testaments which imply that such
manifestations were made by created angels, acting as messengers of, or
personating, the Lord; but the majority of the Fathers always held that, on the
most solemn occasions, it was the Logos who appeared to the men of old,
assuming an angelic form or imparting His immediate presence to the revealer of
His will. This is He whom Malachi calls “the Angel of the Covenant,” whom the
LXX. in Isaiah ix. 6 term “the Angel of mighty counsel,” and who, while
designated “the Angel of God,” is often identified with God Himself. We may
reverently conclude that it was the second Person of the Holy Trinity, the Only
Begotten Son, who appeared to the patriarch at Ur, and called him to leave his
country and to fare forth on an unknown journey.
This first call was accompanied by no promise; it
demanded simple obedience. This was Abram’s training; by little and little God
was leading him to his great sacrifice; as he answered one call, another and a
greater was ready for him. Every step forward was an advance towards the final
and consummating summons. The old story tells how, in gazing on the starry
heavens, he learned to adore the Creator, and felt the nothingness of the
idolatry and creature worship which satisfied his family and countrymen. “When
night overshadowed him,” says the Koran,” “he saw a star, and said, ‘This is my
Lord.’ But when it set, he said, ‘I like not those that set.’ And when he saw
the moon rising, he said, ‘This is my Lord.’ But when the moon set, he
answered, ‘Verily, if my Lord direct me not the right way, I shall be as one of
those that err.’ And when he saw the sun rising, he said, ‘This is my Lord, his
is greater than the star or moon? But when the sun went down, he said, ‘O my
people, I am clear of these things. I turn my face to Him who hath made the
heaven and the earth?” Thus was he educating himself for greater things. He was
called to make a great sacrifice, and he obeyed. He might have argued that the
summons was too indefinite ; it assigned no limit to the migration. He was a
childless man, and had no sons to send forth to other territories ; his present
substance was sufficient for his wants. The enmity of his countrymen might be
overcome by some slight compromise or reticence concerning his opinions. Why
should he leave ease and comfort, and go forth into unknown dangers and cares?
Was it really the voice divine that claimed this sacrifice at his hands? But
no such considerations influenced his actions. We do not indeed know anything
of his character and feelings before this time ; but there must have been a
certain fitness in the recipient of this revelation; his antecedents must have
prepared him for the demand; such claim on his obedience was net altogether
strange and unexpected. And he was equal to the occasion. Like all noble minds,
he rose higher with the emergency. When the call came it found him ready to
hearken and obey. He had habituated himself to listen to the Divine voice in
his heart; and he was thus well prepared for further measures of grace.
This new revelation of God to Abram led to immediate
results. It could not lie barren in his soul; it involved action, zeal,
sacrifice. The old legend tells how, like Gideon, he burned to the ground the
idol temple of his native place (which may well be true), and how Haran
perished in the flames as he tried to rescue the images of the gods whom he
still served. This latter statement is so far confirmed by the sacred record,
in that it says that Haran “died before his father in the land of his nativity,
in Ur of the Chaldees.” Josephus adds that it was grief for this death of his
son that impelled Terah to leave his native place. St. Jerome recounts a
tradition of the Hebrews, which has been mentioned above, to the effect that
for this outrage on the national religion Abram was cast into the fire, which
he refused to adore, and was miraculously preserved. This story is founded on
the rendering of Ur as “fire,” in Gen. xi. 28, thus—instead of “in Ur of the
Chaldees,” “in the fire of the Chaldees. This version is found in the Latin
Vulgate—Neh. IX. 7.
Following the Divine impulse Abram left Ur and
proceeded some three hundred miles northwards to Haran, accompanied by his
father and his family and dependents. How Terah was induced to quit his old
home we are not told. It may be that the son’s faith had enlightened the
father’s mind, and made him loathe the superstitions that once held him
captive, so that he was eager to free himself from the sight and chain of
degrading associations; or it may be that Terah’s act, in contradistinction to
that of Abram, sprang from merely human motives, but, God so ordering it,
coincided with the Divine summons, and made a way for its accomplishment.
Whither this call was to lead finally seems not to have been disclosed at
first. It is true that Terah is said to have left Ur “to go into the land of
Canaan;” but this is probably mentioned from the writer’s own knowledge and in
anticipation of the more definite statement in the next chapter. At this time
the destination of the movement was left uncertain. Abram was to depart unto a
land which God would in due course show him. As in God’s providence we are led
gradually on our course, and are bidden not too carefully to forecast the
future, so Abram’s part now was to leave his old home, and to trust to other
revelation to teach him what to do hereafter. This was the inward or spiritual
side of the movement. The outward view would represent it as the migration of a
clan with all its slaves and property. Thus Terah, the head, takes with him his
son Abram with his wife Sarai, and his grandson Lot with his wife, and all his
household effects, and advances slowly up the stream seeking new pastures, or a
spot sufficiently clear of inhabitants where he might settle. Such a position
he found at Haran, and arresting his further march, made for himself a second
home, and remained here during the rest of his life.
Of the route taken by Terah and his family from Ur to
Haran we have no account. The shorter way would lead them, keeping to the right
bank of the Euphrates, through a district full of marshes and closely abutting
on the Desert, till they left the river in the far north, somewhere near the
spot where it is joined by the Ualikh. The other road
would take them up the eastern bank, through a populous and well-watered
region, and past many celebrated cities, even in those early days of
magnificent proportions, and strongly fortified. Larsa o’ Ellasar, a town now
identified with the ruins of Senkereh, lay out of
their course; but Erech or Warka,
“the city” (Uruk) par excellence, with its huge temple of Anu, would stand in
their path some forty miles from Ur. “Standing upon the summit of the principal
edifice, called the Buwariyya, in the centre of the ruins,” says Mr. Loftus, “the beholder is
struck with astonishment at the enormous accumulation of mounds and ancient
relics at his feet. An irregular circle, nearly six miles in circumference, is
defined by the traces of an earthen rampart, in some places forty feet high. An
extensive platform of undulating mounds, brown and scorched by the burning sun,
and cut up by innumerable channels and ravines, extends, in a general direction
north and south, almost up to the wall, and occupies the greatest part of the
enclosed area. As at Niffar, a' wide channel divides
the platform into two unequal parts, which vary in height from twenty to fifty
feet; upon it are situated the principal edifices of Warka.
On the western edge of the northern portion rise, in solemn grandeur, masses of
bricks which have accumulated around the lower stories of two rectangular
buildings and their various offices, supposed to be temples, or perhaps royal
tombs. Detached from the principal mass of platform are several
irregularly-shaped low mounds between it and the walls, some of which are
thickly strewn with lumps of black scoria, as though buildings on their summit
had been destroyed by fire. At the extreme north of the platform, close to the
wall, a conical mound rears its head from the surrounding waste of ruins—the
barrow probably of some ancient Scyth. Warka, in the days of her greatness, was not, however,
confined within the limits of her walls; her suburbs may be traced by ruined
buildings, mounds, and pottery, fully three miles beyond the ramparts into the
eastern desert ... The external walls of sun-dried brick assume the form of an
irregular circle, five-and-a-half miles in circumference, with slightly
perceptible angles towards the cardinal points."
The name of King Urukh is
found impressed upon the bricks of the buttresses which supported the great
central edifice, the tower, 200 feet square, called Buwariyya.
Through a country whose soil was a tenacious clay,
crossed by many canals and aqueducts, fifty miles’ journey would bring them to
the neighbourhood of Calneh, the Cul-unu of the Inscriptions, and the modern Niffar.
At one time the capital of this part of Chaldea, the town had now sunk into
comparative insignificance, its place being taken by Ur, and the worship of the
god Bel being superseded by that of the Moon, who is called the eldest son of
Bel. A modern traveller writes thus of the place: “The
present aspect of Niffar is that of a lofty platform
of earth and rubbish, divided into two nearly equal parts by a deep channel,
apparently the bed of a river, about 120 feet wide. Nearly in the centre of the eastern portion of this platform are the
remains of a brick tower of early construction, the débris of which constitutes a conical mound rising seventy feet above the plain. This
is a conspicuous object in the distance, and exhibits, where the brickwork is
exposed, oblong perforations similar to those seen at Birs-Nimrud,
and other edifices of the Babylonian age. At the distance of a few hundred
yards, on the east of the ruins, may be distinctly traced a low continuous
mound, the remains, probably, of the external wall of the ancient city.” Thence
sixty miles more conducted them to Babylon, a city which is identified by an
uninterrupted tradition with the extensive mounds and ruins on the Euphrates
above Hillah, 150 miles from their old home. This city had not attained the
eminence which it reached in after years, and was probably at that time
inferior to Ur in extent and population. But the great temple was already in
existence, and the wonderful building at Borsippa, which moderns call Birs-Nimrud, on the western side of the river, though
already in ruins, showed its huge proportions and massive architecture, as
they passed it at some fifteen miles’ distance. Sepharvaim, afterwards named Sippara, and now Mosaib, would
next be reached, about twenty miles from Babylon. Here, the legend tells, Xisuthrus buried the records of the antediluvian world,
which were recovered by his posterity. The plural form of the city’s name is
explained by its division into two portions by the river on which it stands.
Leaving now the rich alluvial plains of Shinar, the
pilgrims would reach a wide region of upland country, dependent for water on
the rains of heaven, and consequently often suffering from drought, lvah or Ava, the modern Hit, with its copious, springs of bitumen,
and Hena, the modern An at, whose ruins show it to have been a large city, some
hundred miles further, would successively be passed. Next they would enter upon
a high plateau, far above the Euphrates, which, no longer calm and sluggish as
in Lower Chaldaea, where it falls only three inches in the mile, now rushed
along with strong current, battling with the many islands which impeded its
course; then they would descend to the lower plain, crossed by valleys, which
were rich in pasture wherever they felt the effects of the refreshing river,
but otherwise stony, barren, and treeless. Before proceeding northwards they
had to cross the river Habor—the Chaboras of Ptolemy,
and the modern Khabur, which joins the Euphrates where in later times stood the
town Circesium. To find a ford across this stream
they would have to ascend its left bank for some days’ march, leaving the
familiar Euphrates, and entering on a verdant and beautiful region, bounded by
a range of gentle hills. The travellers might then
follow the western branch of the Habor, which led in the direction of Haran,
where the increasing infirmities of Terah caused them to end their wanderings.
Haran, a city whose name has remained attached to the
spot up to this day, lay upon the river Balikh (the Balikhi of the Inscriptions, and the Bilichus of the Classics), an affluent of the Euphrates, in Upper Mesopotamia. The word
Haran is probably the Accadian Kharran, “a road,” and
would point to the town being situated on the great high-road from east to
west. The Greek form Charran is identical. Standing where it did, and with many
roads radiating from it to the great fords of the Tigris and Euphrates, it
formed an important commercial station, and is naturally mentioned in Ezekiel,
as one of the places which supplied the marts of Tyre. It was dedicated to the
same deity as the one honoured at Ur, the Moon-god,
whose symbol was a conical stone with a star above it. All this district from
very early times had belonged to the rulers of Babylonia, of whose kingdom
Haran was the frontier town, commanding the high-road that led to Syria and
Palestine. It was a region shut in by mountains and rivers, and offering a
great variety of soil and climate depending upon elevation and water supply.
Haran itself lay in the centre of a rich, alluvial
plain of marvellous fertility. One who visited the
country a few years ago writes thus: “At every step from Oorfa on the way to Haran, the hills on the right and on the left of the plain recede
farther and farther until you find yourself fairly launched on the
desert-ocean—a boundless plain, strewed at times with patches of the brightest
flowers, at other times with rich and green pastures, covered with flocks of
sheep and of goats feeding together, here and there a few camels, and the son
or daughter of their owner tending them. One can quite understand how the sons
of this open country, the Bedaweens, love it, and
cannot leave it; no other soil would suit them. The air is so fresh, the
horizon is so far, and man feels so free, that it seems made for those whose
life is to roam at pleasure, and who own allegiance to none but to themselves.The village of Haran itself consists of a few conical houses, in shape
like beehives, built of stones laid in courses one over the other, without
either mud or mortar. These houses let in the light at the top, and are
clustered together at the foot of the ruined castle, built on the mound that
makes Haran a landmark plainly visible from the whole plain around. The
principal inhabitants of the place are the Bedaween tribes, which haunt the neighbourhood in search of
pasture. One of these tribes, the Anazeez, had spread
their tents of black goat’s-hair at the foot of the mound, between that and
Rebekah’s well; and I pitched my tent among them. That same day I walked at
even to the well I had passed in the afternoon, coming from Oorfa ; the well of this, the city of Nahor, ‘at the time of the evening, the time
that women go out to draw water.’ There was a group of them, filling no longer
their pitchers—since the steps down which Rebekah went to fetch the water are
now blocked up—but filling their water-skins by drawing water at the well’s
mouth. Everything around that well bears signs of age and of the wear of time ;
for, as it is the only well of drinkable water there, it is much resorted to.”
Some time after that Abram and his father had taken up their abode
in Haran, the brother who had been left behind at (If removed to their new
settlement. The cause of his migration and the date of his arrival are not
given in the sacred record; but it is altogether in accordance with the habits
of these Eastern tribes, and, indeed, with all roving nations who are not fixed
to one spot by physical peculiarities or the possession of great cities, that
an advance of one portion of the people should be followed by another section.
The report of the discovery of an advantageous locality, with plenteous
pasturage and undisturbed occupancy, quickly awoke the desire of change. Nahor
and his wife Milcah followed the steps of Terah, and arrived at Haran, bringing
with them the superstitions of their old home, and only half weaned from the
idolatry which Abram had spurned at so great a sacrifice. Here they met with
much worldly prosperity ; their substance greatly increased ; numerous sons
were born to them. They became a powerful clan, from which wives were sought in
after years for the heirs of the chosen race. Thus the reunited family
remained for a time at Haran. The connecting link seems to have been their
father Terah. As long as he lived Abram had duties to perform which he could
not relinquish; but when Terah’s long life of two hundred and five years came
to a close, this reason no longer operated, and the two branches of the clan
again divided—the one remaining where it had settled, the other accomplishing
its destiny by seeking a new home. Was it because the God of Nahor was not the
same divinity as the God of Abram, that the latter separated himself from his
brother’s family? Secular history, looking at the matter from an external
point, would call this simply a second migration, produced by the causes that
occasioned the former movement. Holy Scripture, describing the world as God’s
world, gives the hidden actuation of events, and shows behind the apparent fact
the finger of an overruling Providence.
CHAPTER III. SECOND CALL.
The second call with its promise—Departure from Haran;
Necessity of this movement—Route to Canaan; Tadmor; Kuryetein;
Damascus—Arrival in Canaan—Encampment at Moreh—Shechem described.
It was after his father’s death that a second and more
definite call came to Abram with a magnificent promise attached to it. And this
was the Divine intimation: “Get thee out
of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father’s house, unto the
land that I will show thee; and I will make of thee a great nation, and I will
bless thee, and make thy name great; and be thou a blessing; and I will bless
them that bless thee, and him that curseth thee will
I curse : and in thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed.” Here was
a threefold blessing promised—partly temporal, partly spiritual. He was to be
brought unto a land where he should make his home; he was to become a great
nation; and in and through him all the families of the earth should be
blessed. The full meaning of this announcement time alone could develope. How much of it Abram understood we cannot tell;
but he must from it have learned a new lesson concerning God. He now saw in the
Lord, not merely the great Creator, but also a moral Governor; he recognized
His ruling Providence; he knew that it was God’s will that he should settle in
the land to which he was directed, that in this new home he and his posterity
should receive some extraordinary blessings, and that from his seed should
spring some wonderful good to all mankind. This solemn promise filled his soul,
directed all his conduct, made him cling with such affection to the land of
Canaan with which the blessing was inseparably connected. He was now of mature
age, seventy-five years old. Fifteen years had passed since the Lord had
appeared to him in Ur, and he had obediently set out on his pilgrimage. He had
had time for meditation on this call, and for fortifying his resolve to follow
the guiding hand. In giving himself up to God he had done so unreservedly. Of
the old superstitions in which he was brought up not a trace remained. Some of
his family long retained a regard for heathenish practices, as Laban had his
teraphim; but Abram once and for all abandoned everything inconsistent with
his faith in God; he received his new creed wholly and implicitly, and
acknowledged the duties which it imposed upon him. A living faith involves
action; its result is practice. So Abram recognized the moral obligation
arising from a more perfect revelation, and “went out, not knowing whither he
went.” More than this, he left his kindred and his father’s house. Lot indeed
accompanied him in his new venture, but Nahor with all his dependents and
family stayed behind in or near Haran, in a locality called “Nahor’s city”, in
whose neighbourhood for many years afterwards, as
Assyrian inscriptions witness, names of a Canaanitish and Hebraic type were commonly found. From all these ties he tore himself
asunder. He was comparatively a solitary man when he set forth on his journey
to the promised land, with only his wife and nephew out of his own immediate
relations. But he took with him all the substance that he and Lot had gathered,
and the souls that they had gotten in Haran; flocks, herds, slaves, dependents,
all accompanied the pilgrim on his way. It was rather the migration of a tribe,
than the removal of a family from one place to another. As purposing never to
return, he left nothing behind; he fared forth into the wilderness as a
wanderer who for ever had forsaken his old home, and would see it no more. An imposing
spectacle must this caravan have presented. It has been computed by Kitto, from
calculations grounded on the stock acquired by Jacob in Padan-aram, that Abram and Lot’s possessions in cattle must have
been at least equal to those of Job, and we are told that “his substance was
seven thousand sheep, and three thousand camels, and five hundred yoke of oxen,
and five hundred she asses, and a very great household”. Some few years later,
after Lot had left him, Abram could at shortest notice put himself at the head
of three hundred and more well-trained slaves, which would imply more than
twice as many incapable of bearing arms; so that we may reckon his whole
company to have numbered not less than a thousand souls. The tents for such a
multitude must have been at least one hundred, made probably of black
goat’s-hair, such as the Bedouin tribes use at the present day. Thus we have a
picture of the migration of the patriarch, which affords us a vivid notion of
his wealth and power. And this large household had doubtless learned true
religion from their master. That “he had gotten souls in Haran” is explained
both by Jewish and Christian commentators to signify that he had converted them
to the worship of Jehovah and taught them his own faith. It was a wrench
doubtless thus to cut himself loose from old ties. A man with ambitious
motives, a warrior fired by the lust of conquest, a chieftain with a family to
provide for and a home to win, might have felt a call to emigrate from this
peaceful spot; but Abram was none of these. Looking at the matter in a worldly
point of view, he had nothing to gain and much to lose by this pilgrimage. But
obedience implies selfsacrifice. The journey was
difficult and dangerous, the future was utterly unknown, the coming benefit was
intangible; what then? God commanded and must be obeyed. This break up of
family ties was necessary; it was part of the heavenly plan thus to isolate the
holy race. Abram saw this necessity of being free from old associations, of
tearing himself away from the evil influences of superstition, and he committed
himself to the guiding hand in utter and unquestioning faith. The further he
went from home and kindred, the closer he came to God; the less dependence he
could place on others, the more he clung to the everlasting arm which upheld
him. All was leading him to perfection; every trial was but smoothing the way
for the final “temptation.” A new starting-point was here taken for the
promotion of the true religion. To have hung back at this juncture would have
been fatal to the plan, as it would have been contrary to Abram’s previous
conduct. It was a kind of renunciation of the world which he had to make. Here
was a foreshadowing of the stern lesson which the gospel teaches: “If any man
come to Me, and hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and
brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be My disciple.
Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all that he
hath, he cannot be My disciple”.
A momentous time was this when into the desolate
wilderness the pilgrims from Haran took their way. Empires that changed the
aspect of the world were as yet unknown; centuries must pass before Greece and
Rome shall make their voices heard, or their arms felt, amid the concourse of
nations. In the childless man seeking an unknown land we see the great teacher
of the stupendous truth, destined to conquer all false systems and to form the
basis of all true religion, that God is one. A mighty victory this, dwarfing
into nothingness the achievements of an Alexander, a Caesar, a Napoleon. Here
was the laying of the foundation stone of that building which was to rise
four-square in the New Jerusalem; here was the final separation of that new
stock from which was to spring the Messiah, the bloodless victor, the unstained
conqueror of the fallen world. Solitary in his communications with heaven,
solitary in his hopes and motives, meeting with scant sympathy from his nearest
friends, Abram, firm in purpose, relying on unseen aid, made his venture. Lot
could ill sound the depths of his uncle’s heart; even Sarai’s faith was but
weak. Tears and wailing and regret accompanied the hero on his first stage;
many a backward glance was sent across the river, many an answering look was
returned from the relations left behind ; but he endured as seeing Him who is
invisible. He had no misgiving ; the path was marked out, the issue lay with
God.
Terah’s purpose had been originally to migrate to
Canaan, and Abram now pursues the long-interrupted journey, turning his face
steadfastly to the south-west country.
Of the route which he took to Canaan we are not
informed. The record simply states: “They went forth to go into the land of
Canaan; and into the land of Canaan they came.” Tradition has endeavoured to fill up this slender account by details of
doubtful authenticity. Thus Josephus, following a native writer, Nicolaus,
states that, after leaving Haran, Abram came with his forces to Damascus, and
reigned there as king, but was eventually compelled by a rising of the people
to depart into Canaan.
His name, however, he adds, is still famous in that
city, and a village is shown called to this day “Abram’s Dwelling,” situated
about a mile and a half from the northern gate. Justin, too, seems to refer to
the same tradition, though he has crowded as many errors as possible into his
paragraph. Thus he writes: “The Jews took their origin from Damascus, the most
illustrious city of Syria, which received its name from its king Damascus.
After him reigned Azelus, then Azores, Abraham and lsrahel.” In Azelus possibly may
be traced the Syrian Hazael, a common name of the later kings; and in Adores
Ewald sees Eliezer, Ador or Ader being a dialectic variation for Ezer.
Of this story there is no confirmation in Scripture
but what may be derived from the incidental mention of the steward of Abram’s
house being Eliezer of Damascus. But it is not in itself improbable that the
patriarch chose this way to enter the land of promise. With his flocks and
herds and numerous dependents a journey of such a length was an arduous enterprize, and could only be successfully accomplished by
taking such a direction as would afford necessary supplies of food and water.
The nearest way across the waterless Syrian desert would have offered
insurmountable difficulties to such a cavalcade; but from the ford at Thapsacus a great caravan route led to Damascus, traversed
continually by merchants, and not unused by armies, and doubtless supplied more
or less abundantly with the necessities of life. This road avoided the dangers
of the desert by skirting its northern border, dropping down upon the oasis of
Damascus from the north, and falling into one of the great tracks from thence
to Egypt. These southward roads avoided the centre of
Palestine which was occupied by mountains, and was by no means easy to
traverse, and either kept on the eastern boundary of the country, crossing the
desert on the south, or they took the coast line which was comparatively level.
The difficulties of the more direct caravan route from the eastern countries
were in after years greatly diminished by the founding of the city of Tadmor in
the wilderness, which under its name of Palmyra has never been forgotten. The
oasis in which this ancient city stands has doubtless always been a green spot
and a refreshing halting-place in the arid Syrian desert; but there are many
miles of parched country to pass both before it is reached and after it is
left, and. the northern track was, if longer, easier for such a tribal migration.
For instance, the nearest water to Palmyra on the Damascus road is at Kuryetein, some forty miles distant, the intervening
country being a dreary, bleak plain, without pasture, spring, or shelter. The
copious fountains at this place make it a little Paradise in the midst of
desolation, and it is supposed on good grounds to be that Hazar-enan, “village of fountains”, mentioned by Ezekiel as
situated on the borders of the territories of Damascus and Hamath towards the
east. The region west of Kuryetein is thus described
by Mr. Porter: “We are now in the desert. The ground is covered with small
fragments of flint and scathed-looking limestone,
through which a sickly grass tuft, or a half-withered weed, here and there
springs up. Not a tree, not a green shrub appears within the range of vision,
and animal life is equally rare, for, except chance throws in our way a troop
of gazelles or a Bedawy ghuzu (marauding party), we sweep along for hours together without seeing a living
creature. A gravelly soil, an undulating plain, and naked mountain sides are
ever around us, with an unclouded sky above and a fiery sun pouring down
showers of burning rays upon the parched landscape from morning till night.”
The sojourn of Abram in Damascus could not have been
of long continuance, and left but a short time for the events foisted in by
legendary invention. He seems to have arrived in Egypt within a year after he
quitted Haran. For he was seventy-five then, and eighty-six when Ishmael was
born; and we are told that he had been ten years in Canaan when he took to wife
Hagar, whom he had brought with him from Egypt, and whom Sarai had had for ten
years as her maid.
From Damascus to Canaan it is most probable that Abram
took the southern track which led on the east side of lakes Merom and Gennesareth, crossing the Jordan at or near the Bridge Jisr el-Mejamia, some eight or nine miles south of the
latter lake, thence to the locality afterwards known as Bethshean or Scythopolis, whence passing the ridge of Gilboa,
it continued to Samaria and the south country. This is now the great caravan
road between the south and Damascus, and owing to the physical features of the
region the route could not have varied much from the earliest times.
“And Abram passed through the land unto the place of
Sichem,” or Shechem. Here the Hebrew, he who had come from the other side of
the great river, the river Euphrates, made his first station in the land of
promise, at the oak or terebinth of Moreb. Who or what was “Moreh” we know not.
It may be the name of a chieftain who was, or had been, famous in those parts;
it may mean, as the Septuagint Version has it, “ofty,”
or as the Latin Vulgate renders, “illustrious”; or it may be etymologically
connected with a verb meaning “to see,” and so may refer to the vision there
vouchsafed to Abram. Be this as it may, in this oak-grove he pitched his tent,
and rested for awhile from his wanderings. The
particular tree which shaded the great father of the race was long venerated,
and survived unto Jacob’s time; for we are told, that “under the oak that was
by Shechem,” he buried the teraphim which his family had brought with them from
Padan-aram. The situation of Shechem is one of
remarkable beauty. It lies in a sheltered valley, protected by Gerizim on the
south and Ebal on the north. The feet of these mountains, where they rise from
the town, are not more than 500 yards apart. The bottom of the valley is about
1,800 feet above the level of the sea, and the top of Gerizim 800 feet higher
still. Those who have been to Heidelberg will assent to Von Richter’s remark,
that the scenery, as viewed from the foot of the hills, is not unlike the
beautiful German town. The site of the present city, which we believe to have
been that also of the Hebrew city, is placed exactly on the water summit; and
streams issuing from the numerous springs there flow down the opposite slopes
of the valley, spreading verdure and fertility in every direction. The somewhat
sterile aspect of the adjacent mountains becomes itself a foil, as it were, to
set off the effect of the verdant fields and orchards which fill up the valley.
“ here is nothing finer in all Palestine,” says Dr. Clarke, “than a view of
Nablus [Shechem] from the heights around it. As the traveller descends towards it from the hills, it appears luxuriantly embosomed in the
most delightful and fragrant bowers, half concealed by rich gardens and by
stately trees collected into groves, all around the bold and beautiful valley
in which it stands.” “The whole valley,” says Dr. Robinson, “was filled with
gardens of vegetables, and orchards of all kinds of fruit, watered by
fountains which burst forth in various parts and flow westward in refreshing
streams.” “There is no wilderness here,” says Van de Velde (i.
386); “there are no wild thickets, yet there is always verdure, always shade,
not of the oak, the terebinth, and the caroub-tree,
but of the olive grove, so soft in colour, so
picturesque in form, that, for its sake, we can willingly dispense with all
other wood.”
CHAPTER IV. THE PROMISED LAND.
Canaan; the name; Language then spoken—Its inhabitants;
Aborigines; Canaanites proper; Amorites; Hittites; Perizzites;
Philistines—Their religion—Fertility and natural features of the country; its
capabilities—Characteristics of the Canaanitish tribes—The Fellaheen—Abram's life—New promise—Selection of Canaan as the cradle
of true religion —Bethel.
The country was not untenanted at the time of Abram’s
arrival. “The Canaanite was then in the land”. The descendants of Canaan, the son
of Ham, under various tribal appellations, were seated in the lowlands of
Palestine, on the seashore, and in the valley of the Jordan. The name of Canaan
was applied originally to that strip of territory called Phoenicia by the
Greeks and Romans, between Lebanon and the sea; but as the tribe there settled
and its kindred clans spread abroad, the whole land came to be called Canaan,
and its inhabitants, without regard to origin and affinity, were termed
generally Canaanites. The language which they spoke was closely related to, if
not substantially identical with, Hebrew; in Isaiah xix. 18, the Hebrew-Phoenician
tongue is called “the language of Canaan.’’ In all the intercourse of the
Hebrews with the old inhabitants there is no sign of the necessity of an
interpreter; all communications pass directly with no mediator. The proper
names of Canaanitish persons and places are, to all
intents, Hebrew, and capable of being explained by Hebrew etymology. Of course,
it is possible that the Israelites translated the native names into their own
language, giving Hebrew equivalents for them, just as they altered Assyrian and
Egyptian words into Hebrew forms; but there is no doubt that the remains of
the Phoenician language which have been preserved have the closest analogy to
the Hebrew ; and that the Phoenician tongue was the Canaanitish is well established.
With the aboriginal inhabitants of Canaan we do not
find that Abram came in contact. Traces of Troglodytes have been discovered,
not only in Edom, where the dwelling-places of the Horites are well known, but
also at Beit-Jibrin, on the borders of the Shephelah,
and in the Lebanon, where their flint instruments are mingled with the bones of
the reindeer and wild ox. We often hear mention of a gigantic aboriginal tribe,
the Rephaim, who dwelt chiefly in Bashan, and whose capital was Ashteroth-Karnaim,
named from the two-horned goddess whom they worshipped. These people are found
also in the west, settled among the Philistines, and have left their name in a
fertile valley near Jerusalem, which has been the scene of some stirring events
in Jewish history. Offshoots of this gigantic clan are named, Anakim, Emim, and Zuzim. There is
no reason to suppose that, though individuals of enormous stature occasionally
appeared, the race generally exceeded the average height of tall, well-grown
men. The Hebrews, recalling the legends of early times and investing these
dwellers in the hoary past with monstrous attributes, applied the term Rephaim
to the dead, perhaps with some idea that Sheol was
the residence of these fallen giants. Another ancient people, the Avim, dwelt
on the sea coast to the south. It was with the conquerors of the aboriginal
inhabitants that Abram was concerned. At Sichem he found the Canaanites in
possession. This people descended, as we have said, from Canaan, the son of
Ham, and differing in many particulars from nations of Semitic origin, seem to
have invaded Palestine from the south-east, gradually spreading to the
north-west, and establishing themselves in Sidon and other strong places on the
coast, as well as on the western side of the Jordan valley up to the Sea of
Galilee. Another nation with whom the patriarch had dealings were the Amorites.
Their name implies that they dwelt in the mountainous district. Originally
their home was beyond the mountains at the foot of the Dead Sea, and south of
the subsequent territory of Judah; but in patriarchal times they occupied the
central and southeastern region of Palestine, and contained among them some
relics of the aboriginal population. They are described as a warlike and fierce
race; and Abram’s alliance with them enabled him to carry out successfully his
attack on the Elamite ravagers. In contrast with these warriors stand forth the
peaceful Hittites, or “ons of Heth,” an offshoot of
that great nation, the discovery of whose importance is one of the triumphs of
modem investigation. Their city, Hebron, is most closely connected with Abram’s
life; it contains his sepulchre. The sacred
historian, in mentioning that Hebron was built seven years before Zoan, or
Tanis, in Egypt, countenances the idea that the Hittites formed part of the
Hyksos forces which invaded that country some time earlier than this, and that
a division of them remained behind in Southern Canaan and settled there. If
this is so, it accounts for Abram finding friends when he went down into Egypt
because of the famine in Canaan.
With the clan dwelling at Mamre the patriarch had the
most amicable relations. He pastures his flocks in their midst; he turns to
them when he wants to effect the purchase of Machpelah. They were a cultured
and highly-civilized people. A city of theirs in the south of Judah was known
as Kirjath-sepher, i.e., Book Town, a title which
implies the possession of a library; and many inscriptions in peculiar writing
have been discovered belonging to them. Their dress, as we learn from the
monuments, even in their southern home recalled their Cappadocian origin. They
are always depicted as wearing boots with turned-up toes, such as are still
worn by mountaineers in Asia Minor. In figure they are short and thick-set, of
a yellowish complexion, with black hair, but without beards. Such in
appearance, doubtless, were Abram’s friends, the children of Heth, at
Kirjath-Arba. The Perizzites, dwellers in villages, pagani,
were probably only Hittites under a different appellation, and in a different
locality. The Philistines are mentioned as dwelling at Gerar, in the
south-west. Whether they had already given the name Philistia to the sea coast
of Canaan and the maritime tract towards Egypt, is difficult to determine. It
seems certain that they had settled in Crete (where the name of the river
Jordan appears), and they may have peopled that island at the same time as they
appeared in Canaan. This would account for their connection with Caphtor, if,
as is supposed by Ewald, the name Caphtor designated the whole or part of
Crete. A remarkable relic of this people existed in Malta some forty years ago,
though it has since been greatly mutilated. This monument is called Hdjar Cham, “stones of worship,” and consists of a temple
of the rudest workmanship, in the walls of which were found figures of female
deities, probably Asthoreth. In front of these
statues were stone altars, and in another enclosure was an altar carved with
the palm-tree, the Phoenician symbol, together with the high-priest’s seat, on
the back of which were graven two serpents and an egg. This temple is supposed
to have been erected by some of the inhabitants of Palestine, who fled before
the conquering arm of Joshua. But the Philistines were evidently in patriarchal
times possessed of little power, and lived a quiet pastoral life, displaying
none of that restless activity and warlike skill which made them such
formidable enemies in the age of Saul and David. This later change in national
character is accounted for possibly by the infusion of a fresh element, owing
to another immigration of these “strangers,” as the Septuagint calls them.
The religion of these tribes was the worship of
nature, gradually degenerating into immorality and cruelty. The Hittites
borrowed many of their deities from Babylonia, so that among them Abram found
traces of that religion which he had abominated in his old home. Their chief
goddess was lstar or Ashtoreth, whose worship they
carried with them wherever they went, and introduced especially among their
Syrian neighbours. The other tribes worshipped also Baal under various
names—El, Moloch, Adoni. As in all such systems that have broken away from
revealed religion, the people learned to consecrate their own lusts and
passions, and to impress a Divine element on the indulgence of them. To
propitiate offended powers of nature they practised human sacrific; and from the notion that the more
costly the offering the more favourably would the offerer be regarded, they scrupled not to slay their own
offspring on the altar of their gods. Of primitive idolatry vestiges are still
to be found in stone circles, obelisks, and dolmens, though the zeal of Jewish
kings destroyed most of them in Judaea. At the same time, in some quarters, a
purer religion was cultivated. Melchizedek was a priest of the Most High God (Elion); and whether this term Elion was applied, as Eusebius says, to the Phoenician
deity or not, it is plain that Abram acknowledged the king of Salem as a
worshipper of the same God as himself. Abimelech appeals to God (Elohim), as
recognized both by himself and Abraham; and though in the plural form of this
word many have seen an intimation of polytheism, yet, joined as it is with a
verb in the singular number, it was doubtless used not only to adumbrate a
monotheistic creed, but likewise to prepare men’s minds for the full
development of the doctrine of the Holy Trinity. But without pursuing this
subject further, we may see that in Canaan at this time, side by side with
idolatry and polytheism, there was a tradition of true religion, and that Abram
was recognized as a worshipper of one God, and was not persecuted or despised
on this account. In his intercourse with the inhabitants of the land he may
have been eager to grasp at any intimation of purer doctrine and to turn it to
a holy purpose; as when he uses the local term El-Olam, the eternal God, and
identifies it with Jehovah; but no intimation is ever given that he was hereby
exaggerating the belief of his hearers or attributing to them a faith which
they did not profess. The example of such a man, in the midst of corruption of
religion and abominable vice, must have had some influence for good, and led to
the inference that the God whose worshipper was of so high a character was not
as the gods of the heathen.
The fertility of Palestine was always remarkable. It
was no zain boast when Moses described it as “a good land, a land of brooks of
water, of fountains and depths that spring out of valleys and hills; a land of
wheat, and barley, and vines, and fig-trees, and pomegranates; a land of
oil-olive and honey.” Though little cultivated in patriarchal times, its
capabilities were great; its wadys and pools were
always there; its natural products were the same then as now. The climate
indeed is variable, but would not be unhealthy if drainage were more attended
to. The danger arises from the cold winds concurring with the hot autumnal sun,
and from malaria, especially in the low country. Hence towns were always built
either on hills or on the sea coast. The rainfall averages in the year about
twenty-five inches, which with ordinary care would obviate all fear of drought.
Probably in early times, when trees were more abundant, the supply of rain was
greater; and the numerous cisterns in all parts of the country show that it
was found necessary to store it where no springs or streams occurred. The
Negeb, or south-land, is pastoral, but owing to the subsoil being a porous
chalk is much subject to drought. The Shephelah, or
low ground, is the richest part of the country, abounding in corn, olives, and
at all times celebrated for its sycamores and terebinths. The Hebron hills are
the home of the vine. Many of the forests which once existed have disappeared.
Dense thickets of lentisk and dwarf-oak, with some
scattered pines, are common on the western slopes. The box, the fig, and the
acacia are indigenous, but very partially distributed. The present aspect of
this part of the country represents to a great extent its state in these early
times, the change being “one of degree and not of kind.” The Jordan valley is
now a wilderness, with a deadly climate and tropical heat. But the soil is
rich, and, where it was irrigated artificially, produced immense crops. The
plain at the foot of the hills, watered by natural mountain streams, was always
extremely fertile. Josephus called it “a region divine and the immediate neighbourhood of Jericho meets with the most glowing
description at the hands of old writers. In Philistia, especially round Gaza,
the soil is so rich and even now unexhausted, that good crops are raised with
very little cultivation. But in these plains along the coast the sand steals on
year by year, and covers the fertile ground. In primitive times there was a
much wider stretch of verdant land before the dunes had encroached. From Jaffa
to Carmel was all forest. The very name Sharon, as the plain was called, signifies
“oaks but a few trees scattered thinly over the open country are all that now
remain of that ingens sylva which is mentioned by
Strabo. In Lower Galilee the plain of Esdraelon is extremely rich, watered by
numerous springs, and producing olives, palms, and every kind of grain and
vegetable. The natives call it Merj Ibn Amir, “the
meadow, the son of cultivation,” a title which, however inappropriate in
Abram’s day, shows at any rate the natural capabilities of the district. The
hills round Nazareth are chalky and bare, but the low ranges to the west are
covered with oak woods, and where these sink into the plain a fine open country
is exposed, more fertile even than Esdraelon. The dense forests which once
surrounded the Sea of Galilee have disappeared ; but the fertility of the land,
which was afterwards apportioned to the tribe of Naphtali, is well attested
both by Josephus and the Talmud. The latter, speaking of Bethshan in this neighbourhood, says that, if Paradise is to be found on
earth, its gate is here; and that its soil was so prolific that one peck of
sown corn produced seventy quarters. In the Carmel region there is evidence
that in the day of Israel’s prosperity a great proportion was under cultivation; the remains of terraces and watch towers prove that what is now thicket and
rank undergrowth was formerly a scene of vineyards and gardens. The once
“fruitful field” has returned to its primitive condition, and its tangled
brakes and wild vegetation represent the picture which would have met the
patriarch’s eye had his steps wandered in this direction. Upper Galilee,
through part of which Abram passed, if not on his way to Canaan, yet certainly
on his expedition against Chedorlaomer, is the healthiest and most picturesque
quarter of the whole country. Round Banias there are remnants of vast primeval
forests, and the vine has always flourished in the district, though its wines
were not considered by the Talmudists to be so good as those produced by the
grapes of Hebron. The tract of land along the coast, called Phoenicia, is
composed of sand and low hills of soft limestone. Here the palm finds a genial
soil, and the olive, lemon, and banana grow luxuriantly. From these notices,
which the accurate survey of modern travellers enables us to collect, we may gather a fairly correct sketch of the aspect of
that good land which was to be the nursery of true religion and the home of
God’s people. That Abram is represented as confining his wanderings to the
comparatively unfertile districts of the south, and neglecting the rich and
fruitful region of North Palestine, is an argument for the authenticity of the
narrative. A mythical or romantic history of the patriarch would have placed
him in situations more favourable to his mode of life; and we can account for the present record only by concluding that it is based
on the true facts preserved by memory or tradition.
There was one peculiarity in Palestine: it was able to
support a far larger number of inhabitants than its small size would lead one
to expect. The area of Western Palestine is only 7,000 square miles, or about
the same as that of Wales; but this is so diversified by hill and valley, so well-watered
and fertile under cultivation, that a dense population found food in abundance.
When the census was taken in the plains of Moab, the people belonging to the
nine and a half tribes who were to inhabit Western Palestine were estimated at
about two millions. This would give 285 to the square mile, which is a far less
proportion than is found in many countries now-a-days ; Belgium having 330,
North Holland 455, and South Holland 467 inhabitants to the square mile. In the
best of times every available spot was inhabited ; every hillside was a garden,
or orchard, or vineyard. Cities and villages were seen in all directions;
mountain, plain, valley, were covered with dwellings. The number of ruins at
this day astonishes and bewilders the traveller. All
this presupposes a large population and unwearied labour.
Such a country under other circumstances would soon fall back into barrenness
and desolation. And this is its state at the present time. Such was its
condition when Abram settled there. Few towns existed; if we except the cities
of the Jordan circle, we read of no more than some half-dozen in all the rest of
the land ; and the population must have been even more sparse than it is now.
From seven to ten tribes are enumerated as dwelling in Palestine or its
confines ; but most of these were of small size, held together by no common
policy, governed by no supreme chieftain, and sufficiently separated from one
another to prevent feuds or disputes about territory. Abram found no difficulty
in pasturing his flocks and herds where he pleased; his household made him
respected as a powerful sheikh and the natural head of a confederacy of native
chiefs, when a common danger gathered them together.
Of the physical and moral peculiarities of these
tribes, of their habits and characteristics, though at so distant a period, we
may learn something from the study of their successors, if not descendants, the
Fellaheen of Palestine. These are not Arabs, like the Bedouins who roam the
desert, or the Belladeen who live in towns; they
differ from the Arabs in dress, feature, habits, and speech ; and though they
have been affected by Jewish, Greek, Christian, and Mussulman influences, yet
they are by many regarded as the representatives of the old inhabitants whom
the Israelites on their invasion found settled in the country, and who, in
their earlier days, were thinly scattered aver the districts where Abram
pitched his tent. The Jews did not wholly extirpate them; they lived side by
side with them; and in time these aborigines more or less adopted their
conquerors’ religion, and were mingled with, though never confounded with, the
invaders. So at this present time, while adopting the Mahommedan faith, they
have retained many of their ancient superstitions. There are traces among them
of their old polytheism; their love for “high places,” and their fetishism for
certain trees, sanctuaries on hills, and venerated groves, are as marked as
ever they were when prophets raised their voice against them, and pious
monarchs used their best efforts to put them down. The remarkable way in which
they have preserved the names of places shows a continuity of tradition passing
through kindred hands. They offer propitiatory sacrifices with quite a
Phoenician ritual; they have superstitions about the moon wholly distinct from
the ordinary Arab myths; they use amulets and other articles made after
Phoenician methods; their fetes, their language, their ways, their tales, take
one back to prehistoric times, and have about them a haze of antiquity,
compared with which the Mussulman conquest seems a modern event. We must
suppose that these Fellaheen have much degenerated since the time of Abram;
for travellers who have studied them say that they
are the very worst type of humanity in the East. They are destitute of all
moral sense; “Lying is the salt of a man,” is one of their proverbs. They are
always taking the name of God on their lips in attestation of the truth of
their words, and at the same time perjure themselves without the slightest
scruple. Robbery and theft and murder are habitual with them, provided they can
commit these crimes without detection or punishment. The women are degraded
into mere child-bearing animals or beasts of burden. The children have no moral
training whatever, and grow up in perfect ignorance of right and wrong. They
are not, indeed, wanting in intelligence in their early years, but after the
age of puberty they never improve; and marrying as, in our view, mere children,
their evil habits and crass ignorance become stereotyped in their nature and
are never eradicated. The Fellaheen are hospitable after their fashion, always
offering a meal to the passing traveller; but their
means are small arid their resources vile. They live in miserable huts, dark,
dirty, and comfortless, sometimes built of stone, generally of mud, roofed with
rough timber and a coat of earth. The furniture consists of some pots and pans
and a few rush mats. They eat meat only when some animal has been killed to
prevent its dying a natural death, or at the great annual feast ; the usual
food is barley or millet bread, wild mallows, sour milk, butter, cheese, and
eggs. They have one virtue, if it is a virtue ; they love their native land.
This does not mean that they have any patriotic feeling, or care anything for
their rulers, or the general welfare of the country. Their love is for the soil
on which they dwell; they cling with the utmost tenacity to the hills or plains
where their forefathers lived and died. With no notion of combining together
for any general movement, utterly careless of one another, if not openly
hostile, they never quit their native village unless carried off by
conscription or such-like cause, and then their only aim is to return as
quickly as possible to their squalid home.
If such were the peasants in Palestine when Abram
first appeared there, it is certain from our record that the dwellers in towns
were more civilized and better acquainted with the arts of life. They
understood trafficking, transacted business, had a medium of exchange, and
administered justice in the place of public resort, the gate of the city. It
was in the neighbourhood of these more settled
habitations that Abram made his temporary abode. His manage offered a pleasing
contrast to that of the natives. Simple and unluxurious,
he spread his tent in some favoured spot, having a
separate one for his wife and her women. Food was plentiful. There were
unleavened cakes baked amid the cinders, clotted cream or butter, flesh of kid
or calf. The slaves, either home-born or purchased, were well treated, and
formed an organized community over which the chief presided with, absolute
authority tempered with kindness and liberality. To this day the “law of
Abraham,” as it is called, an unwritten code handed down from primitive times,
is preferred by the Fellaheen to that of the Koran, and is administered by the
sheikh and the elders of each tribe. The women of the patriarch’s tent were not
the degraded creatures of the peasantry around him. Though they are found
drawing water at the public well, and preparing food for honoured guests, this was only in agreement with the primitive simplicity of their
habits, and showed no marked inferiority or debasement. The mutual love of
Abram and Sarai, of Isaac and Rebecca, of Jacob and Rachel, and the respect
with which each treated the other, are beautiful pictures upon which we ponder
with pleasure, and which present a very high idea of the place which women held
in these households.
And now that his feet trod the soil of Canaan, Abram
received a new revelation, and the object of his pilgrimage was at length
announced to him. Obedience came first, then knowledge. Again the Lord appeared
unto him, and made the definite promise to this childless man : “Unto thy seed
will I give this land”. And he believed the word. The accomplishment was beyond
human control, would have seemed incredible to the carnal mind ; but he
staggered not in unbelief; here, as everywhere, faith was triumphant over
sight; and to mark his trust and to show his devotion, he built an altar unto
Jehovah. This was his practice wherever he paused in his wanderings. No house
for himself he reared, no permanent habitation where he might gather round him
the comforts of a settled home, but he prepared a place for Divine worship. As
Noah, emerging from the Ark, offered his eucharistic sacrifice on the renovated
earth, so here the father of the faithful proclaimed his faith and consecrated
the land by raising his lowly altar to the Lord who had appeared to him. Here
was his witness to the true religion which he embraced with his whole heart;
here was his protest against the polytheism and idolatry which surrounded him.
More tolerant, or more indifferent than his own countrymen, the Canaanites
offered no opposition to this act of worship ; they saw not that it was a
preparation for a mighty future, a taking possession of the land in the name of
the Lord.
The special means ordained by God for preserving the
knowledge of Himself in a world which had lost its primeval faith was not
merely the selection of one family to maintain the great truth, but also the
appropriation of one territory to be the nursery of true religion and the
habitation of the true believers. The position of Canaan made it most suitable
for this great purpose. It was isolated; it was nowhere in immediate contact
with the great idolatrous nations, yet not so remote as to be secluded from
sight or knowledge. It lay in the midst of mighty empires whose struggles for
pre-eminence raged around, but yet did not necessarily affect its existence.
The routes of merchants and of warriors both by land and water passed its
borders; caravans and armies, journeying from the Euphrates to the Nile,
skirted its confines ; but no great highway led through its centre.
Natural barriers, difficulties of position, held it apart from contact with the
stranger, left it at liberty to establish relations with foreign countries or
to maintain its isolation and thorough independence. It touched, as it were,
the three divisions of the world. Europe, Asia, Africa met therein. “I have set
her in the midst of the nations, and countries are round about her”. It was a centre from which at the appointed time might radiate the
light which should illuminate the heathen darkness. Its national independence
was not difficult to defend. The country itself fought for its inhabitants ;
the thirsty wilderness on the south, the hill barrier on the north, the harbourless sea on the west, and the marvellous ravine, the Arabah, together with the great Syrian desert, on the east,
rendered it almost impregnable under circumstances of ordinary prudence and
watchfulness. Here might true religion flourish unchecked by adverse influences;
hence might emanate a spiritual force which should reach to the “sons of the
stranger” far beyond the narrow limits of Israel. This house of God should be a
house of prayer for all nations. And if this high ideal was never realized, if
the people were drawn away to follow the evil customs of the remnant of the
nations which were left in their land, if internal dissensions often exposed
them to foreign invaders and left them helpless in times of emergency, these
are only instances of the weakness and sinfulness of man which mar the merciful
intention of God and bring to nought the Divine purpose. Neither in the case of
nations nor of individuals does God do violence to man’s free will. It is
always possible to resist grace.
From his encampment at Sichem, Abram removed by easy
stages to the neighbourhood of Bethel, then called
Luz. The Canaanites may have regarded with suspicion this stranger from a far
country, and made his position in the open valley insecure; or the necessity of
finding fresh pasturage for his numerous flocks and herds may have obliged him
to change his quarters to the mountainous district between Bethel and Ai, towns
about two miles apart. The site of Bethel, now Beitin,
has never been lost. The village stands some ten miles north of Jerusalem on
the great watershed which divides the country, and from it a steep incline
leads down to Jericho eight miles distant. There are some perennial springs in
the neighbourhood welling from the chalky rocks and
keeping the herbage green amid the stony soil. The site of the altar which
Abram built here has been placed by the late survey at the ruins of Burj Beitin on a little plateau, stony but fertile, east of the
village. In after times how many a solemn thought must have clustered round
these altars thus witnessing to God in different localities. Memories of
ancestral achievements not committed to writing were preserved by these visible
tokens. The tales of tradition were certified and represented in these external
objects. Children yet unborn would recognize {hem as the work of their great
forefather; they would see that the land was dedicated to the worship of
Jehovah, and that it was destined to be their possession. They would realize
the unseen; they would acknowledge the hand Divine that had guided him who
erected these shrines, and they would trust their own future to its leading.
Desolate and miserable as is now the appearance of Bethel, it has always been
held in the highest honour as a sacred spot. The very
scanty coveting of soil on the rocks deprives it of verdure ; and though there
is an abundant supply of water in the valley collected into an immense
reservoir which seems to be of great antiquity, yet it could never have been a
good pasturage. “All the neighbourhood,” says a late traveller, “is of grey, bare stone, or white chalk. The
miserable fields are fenced in with stone walls, the hovels are rudely built of
stone; the hill to the east is of hard rock, with only a few scattered
fig-gardens; the ancient sepulchres are cut in a low
cliff, and a great reservoir south of the village is excavated in rock. The
place seems as it were turned to stone, and we can well imagine that the lonely
patriarch [Jacob] found nothing softer than a stone for the pillow under his
head, when on the bare hillside he slept and dreamed of angels.” In that most
ancient religious sanctuary Abram pitched his tent; he watered his cattle at
the springs in the reservoir, his maidens filled their pitchers at the same.
From the heights above in after years the summit of Solomon’s temple could be
discerned ; and this spot, badly eminent for the base worship of the calf, was
in sight of the mountain of Moriah, where the shrine of the true God of heaven
and earth offered its silent protest against the novel idolatry of Jeroboam.
The Bethel had then become Bethaven—the “House of
God” had turned into a “House of Vanity.” Whether Luz in Abram’s days was a
royal city is not ascertained. It is mentioned in Joshua as the seat of a Canaanitish king, but of its history before it came into
the possession of the Israelites we know but little
CHAPTER V. EGYPT.
Famine in Canaan—Ahram in
Egypt—Condition of that country—The Hyksos; their civilization—Abram’s
policy—Sarai taken to Pharaoh’s house ; rescued by God’s intervention.
A quiet pastoral life Abram continued to lead, staying
in one spot as long as food and water lasted, and when these failed removing to
some more favoured locality, but “going on still
toward the south,” that southern tract of Palestine, which is called in the
Hebrew Negeb. And everywhere as he went, he offered his sacrifice, and “called
upon the name of the Lord.” He bade his own household to the worship of
Jehovah, and, doubtless, as far as was possible, acted as a missionary to the
benighted heathen around, preaching true’ religion and showing the faith that
animated all his actions.
But now a new trial beset him. “God’s athlete,” as St.
Ambrose says, “is exercised and hardened by adversity.” The land which was
promised to him, to which he clung as his future heritage, to which he had been
so marvellously guided, could support him no longer.
A mighty famine arose. He must leave his present position or starve for lack of
water and grass. A country such as Canaan, only partially cultivated, with no artificial
irrigation, and greatly dependent on the annual rainfall for the very existence
of its pasture, often suffered from drought. Similar great famines are recorded
as happening in the days of Elijah and Elisha such are the visitations
mentioned by the prophet Amos: “I have given you cleanness of teeth in all your
cities, and want of bread in all your places ; and also I have withholden the
rain from you, when there were yet three months to the harvest.” In such
emergencies the Palestinians naturally turned to Egypt, as we find them doing
in the days of Joseph. In that country, though rain was not infrequent on. the
northern coasts, the river was the great fertilizer, and by its regular rise
rendered the vast level plain through which it flowed a very paradise of
fecundity. Thus, independent of local rainfall, Egypt was revelling in plenty when other districts were suffering from famine ; and grass, and
vegetables, and food of all kinds were to be had in abundance at all seasons of
the year. Thither Abram betook himself “to sojourn” for a time. Nothing is said
of his having asked counsel from heaven before taking this important step; and
succeeding events lead rather to the inference that he trusted to his own
judgment in this matter, and consequently fell into error.
To determine the exact date of Abram’s arrival in
Egypt, and who was the Pharaoh whom he found upon the throne, is impossible.
Josephus calls him in one place Nechaoh, and in
another Pharaothes; other Jewish authorities name him Rikaion or Rakaion, adding
that he came from Sinear, and obtained the royal
dignity by force and fraud. Malala gives him the name of Naracho,
of which Rikaion seems to be a corruption, and which
is probably the same as the Nechaoh of Josephus. That
the Egypt even of that early date was a country of vast importance, and of
venerable antiquity, is certain from the monuments which have survived; but the
obscurity of its early annals has not yet been cleared up, nor is the
chronology of its several dynasties accurately fixed. But it was probably
between the sixth and eleventh dynasties, and during the dominion of the Hyksos
or Shepherds, that Abram appeared in the land. The word Hyksos is the Egyptian hik shasu, “prince of the Shasu,” or Bedouins. They were of Semitic origin; and
issuing from Canaan and Arabia, they conquered the native princes, and
established a strong government at Zoan or Tanis, which maintained its position
for a period estimated variously at 160 or 500 years, and was with difficulty
overthrown by Aahmes or Amosis, the founder of the eighteenth dynasty, after
the time of Joseph. Though Abram found here a people of kindred blood, and
speaking a language like his own, their manners and customs were far removed
from the pristine simplicity of tent life, or the habits of uncultured nomads.
They had become thoroughly Egyptian in dress and mode of life: they called
their ruler no longer shalat, the old Semitic title,
but Pharaoh, like the people whom they had dispossessed ; they had adopted the
luxury and vices of their neighbours. They erected temples, and engraved
sculptures, and set up their own images, quite in the manner of the vanquished
natives. But they not only learned useful arts and sciences from the subject
races; they also taught them some profitable knowledge. They introduced the
practice of dating events from the first regnal year of their first king Set or Saites ; they were the authors of a more realistic
execution in sculpture; they established a system of military and civil
organization; and they effected changes in the language and literature of the
country which issued in increased production of records. We may judge of the
character of their rulers from the hints given in Scripture concerning the
Pharaoh of Joseph’s days, who has been identified with Apepi,
the last of these monarchs. He “is no rude and savage nomad, but a mild,
civilized and somewhat luxurious king,” who has a grand court, lives in state,
rewards his favourites, is beneficent to his
subjects, and conciliating and mild to strangers. But the Egyptians, though
they had a code of morality which was remarkably pure, and in many points
anticipative of Christianity, were in practice most licentious, and paid no
regard to the commonest precepts of purity. Sensuality was a chief business in
life; drunkenness and gluttony were virtues; luxury and pleasure were the
objects of universal pursuit. The king indulged in a plurality of wives, and
beautiful maidens were eagerly sought after to be taken into his harem. The
zeal displayed by the nobles and officers of the Egyptian court in bringing to
the king’s notice beautiful women is well attested, and an illustration of it
is preserved in the papyrus of Orbiney referred to by
Ebers in his work “Egypten und die Bucher Moses.” Tn
this narrative the sight of a lock of hair accidently discovered leads to the
inference that the original owner must be “ a daughter of God,” and worthy of
being the favourite of Pharaoh, and she is
accordingly sought for and taken to the king.
Such being the character of the Egyptians, it was
natural that Abram should feel some apprehension at bringing his wife into this
country. His fear concerned not only the security of his wife’s honour, but his own personal safety. He thought that the
Egyptians, if they knew of the real relationship between Sarai and himself,
might very possibly take his life in order to get possession of so fair a
woman. He therefore persuaded her on this and on another occasion, as we shall
see further on, to say that she was his sister.. A parallel transaction occurs
in the life of Isaac; and critics have inferred from the similarity of the
three events that they are simply variations of one story. But there is no
improbability in the three separate accounts. Like circumstances might
naturally produce like effects. Such a story, by no means redounding to Abram’s
credit, would hardly have been invented and repeated. The candour and authenticity of the sacred history are noteworthy as showing that the
writer’s object was truth, not hero-worship, or the ideal biography of a
perfect character. Such blemishes in the conduct of a saintly personage make us
feel akin to him, draw us nearer, show him to be a man of like passions with
us, not too far removed from our sphere, but able to afford us warning as well
as example. That the patriarch should act as he did was at least natural. The
fact that Sarai must have been more than sixty years old when she was “commended
before Pharaoh” does not detract from the veracity of the story. Many instances
of women retaining their beauty to a very advanced age are recorded. Sarai had
not been weakened by the pains of child-bearing, or worn by the cares of
children. Her comeliness may well have lasted till this time, as she lived to
the age of one hundred and twenty-seven years, and at ninety was able to be the
mother of Isaac. We cannot lay much stress on the supposition that her fair
complexion offered a favourable contrast to the dusky
beauties of Egypt, as the Italians of the present time set great store by the
blue eyes and rosy cheeks of the women of the north, and as Virgil makes his
hero Eneas a model of beauty with face as fair as ivory or Parian marble,
framed in a setting of yellow hair.
But the monuments show that the Egyptians would have
found no especial novelty in such colouring, and that
they were accustomed to complexions which would not be regarded as swarthy.
That Sarai was a woman of unusual beauty is obvious; Abram’s fear, therefore,
in approaching the profligate court of Egypt was well founded, and the care for
his own safety shown by making Sarai call herself his sister was a matter of
worldly prudence, to which a man, whose conscience was but imperfectly
enlightened with regard to many moral duties, would very probably resort. The
plea that in calling her his sister he was stating the truth, though not the
whole truth, does not much mend the question of morality regarded from the
Christian’s standpoint. In saying this he implied that she was not his wife;
for though the marriage of a brother and a sister was not unknown in Egypt (as
the mythology of the country witnesses);” yet one man in such a case would have
been supposed to make this assertion except to signify that there was no nearer
tie between them. He was guilty of prevarication and deceit; he lost his
perfect trust in God’s guardianship and
he endangered his wife’s chastity and honour in
selfish care for his own safety. St. Augustine, indeed, sees herein a proof of
Abram’s faith, in that he entrusted his wife to God’s care, feeling that he
himself was powerless to protect her. Others have supposed that God Himself
inspired this proceeding, in order to give fresh proof of His care for the
chosen family, and how He brings good out of evil. We, who recognize the
obligation to truthfulness under which we lie, cannot resort to such
considerations in order to justify what in Christian eyes must be deemed lying
or equivocation. But it seems probable that Abram had no intention of sinning,
no thought that in telling only half the truth he was virtually guilty of
falsehood. It was an idea that had long been present with him; he had made the
plan with Sarai when he first entered a strange country. He tells Abimelech, on
the second occasion when he resorted to the same subterfuge: “It came to pass,
when God caused me to wander from my father’s house, that I said unto her, This
is the kindness which thou shalt show unto me; at every place whither we shall
come, say of me, He is my brother.” He lived in an atmosphere of lies; to this
day, the Arab regards falsehood as a proper way of gaining his end; and it may
be that, knowing the length and tediousness of the ceremonies which preceded a
marriage in Egypt, Abram, by this pretence, sought
only to gain time, and hoped in the interval, by his own wisdom, to find means
of saving his wife. In considering the artifice as his plan for securing his
own life, we must take into account the feeling about death entertained in
patriarchal times. Though these early believers doubtless had a certain confidence
in the life beyond the grave, which was expressed in their formulary, “being
gathered to their fathers,” yet they did not rest in that hope as we Christians
have learned to do; they looked more to temporal blessings, regarded a long
life as the greatest of boons, and considered a premature death as a punishment
or an evil, rather than as the gate of everlasting happiness. A mistake is
commonly made in the case of Old Testament worthies. We do not put ourselves in
their position, but are inclined to try their conduct by the Christian
standard. The education of the soul is gradual. Though God’s law is perfect and
uniform, it is not revealed all at once, its excellency and completeness are
only unfolded by degrees. No man is altogether what he ought to be. Even
religious people, under the full light of the gospel, fail in some particulars
of conduct. And shall we be offended that one, who in general lived devoutly in
the fear of God, and showed such remarkable faith, now and then fell into
error, and, leaning on his own understanding, stooped to subterfuge and
equivocation ? In calling this man “the friend of God,” the sacred writers do
not make the Lord countenance sin. The appellation is warranted by the favour with which God distinguished him, and by that life
and character which, in an age uninformed as to many moral duties, and
possessed of no written code of law, rose far superior to all surrounding
influences, and gave witness to a very real piety and a most self-sacrificing
faith, which raised him far above all contemporaries, and has left a high
example to all time.
What Abram feared came to pass. It is quite in
accordance with what we know of Egyptian customs, that news of the arrival of
an illustrious stranger should be at once carried to the king. There were
officers stationed at the frontiers whose duty it was to notify all such
events, and we still possess some of the reports made under similar
circumstances. So the princes received intelligence of the coming of this great
sheikh with his beautiful sister, and “the woman was taken into Pharaoh’s
house,” with a view to honourable marriage in due
course of time. Large presents were made to her so-called brother, by way of
securing his good-will in the transaction, and, according to the customs of the
country, purchasing the bride. Though certain carping critics have asserted
that some of the animals mentioned among the presents were not then known in
Egypt, further research has proved the accuracy of the Biblical record. The
account names sheep, oxen, asses, and camels; and though the last-named animals
are not found represented on the early monuments, it is impossible that they
could have been unknown, as they have always been used in the peninsula of
Sinai, of which the Egyptians of those days were masters.1 Sheep, oxen, and
asses were frequently pictured. The absence of the horse is more remarkable ;
but, besides that it would have been of little use to the patriarch, this creature
is not indigenous in Egypt, and was probably a later introduction. Together
with these animals Abram received a number of slaves ; and the king thought
that he had done all that was necessary to secure Sarai for his harem; so he
took her for his wife. But God interfered to protect her in this dilemma. The
destined mother of the chosen race must be secured from this wrong. A
mysterious sickness fell upon the house of Pharaoh, and impeded the proposed
marriage. The king, according to Josephus, inquired of the priests for what
cause this plague was sent, and was informed by them that it was inflicted
because he was intending to take a married woman for his wife. Alarmed at this
report, he called for Sarai, and obtained from her the truth of her
relationship to Abram. It argues much for his mildness and civilized feeling
that he did not more deeply resent the deception which had nearly betrayed him
into the commission of a grievous crime. His rebuke is calm and dignified : “Why
didst thou not tell me that she was thy wife ? Why saidst thou, She is my sister? So that I took her to be my wife: now therefore behold
thy wife, take her, and go thy way.” And he withdraws none of the presents
which, under his misapprehension, he had given unto Abram; but, now that the
famine in Canaan is relieved, sends him on his way, with a special charge to
his servants to protect him and speed his journey. Thus the Psalmist’s song is
justified:
“And they went about from nation to nation.
From one kingdom to another people.
He suffered no man to do them wrong: Yea,
He reproved kings for their sakes ; Saying,
Touch not Mine anointed,
And do My prophets no harm."
How long a sojourn in Egypt was made by Abram is not
recorded. It was probably only of a few months’ duration. We are told only that
he had become “very rich in cattle, and in silver, and in gold”. According to
Josephus, he had gone thither not merely to share the plenty of the land, but
likewise to examine the religion, and to converse with the priests on the
opinions concerning God which they held; and if, as he supposed most likely, he
found these unreasonable, to endeavour to teach a
more excellent way. His investigation proving that the native sentiments were
vain and unfounded, he used every opportunity for demonstrating the superiority
of his own belief, and by the lucidity of his statements and the persuasiveness
of his oratory gained the reputation of a learned philosopher, and was
venerated as a prodigy of wisdom and sanctity. The Jewish historian adds, what
is plainly apocryphal, that he taught the Egyptians the knowledge of the stars
and arithmetic, which he had himself learned in Chaldaea. If, as is possible,
he helped the shepherd king in maintaining his position against his rival in
the upper country, this may account partly for the distinguished treatment with
which he met. He was likewise too powerful a sheikh to be slighted or injured
with impunity. So we may see that now, as ever, Egypt was a scene of trial and
temptation to the chosen seed. Worldliness, covetousness, trust in the arm of
flesh, or leaning to one’s own understanding—these were the dangers which beset
the saint, and out of which God mercifully delivered him.
CHAPTER VI. SEPARATION.
Retun to Canaan—Lot separates from Abram—The Cities of the
Plane— Renewal of promise at Bethel—Residence at Hebron—Description of the
locality—Hittite allies.
The famine which had driven Abram into Egypt having
passed away, he returned to the southern part of Canaan, whence he had set out,
and by easy stages reached his old encampment at Bethel. Here preserved from
danger in a foreign land, and greatly enriched in worldly wealth, he offered
his thanksgiving unto the Lord, and thought for a time to have had rest. But it
was not so to be. What Christ said to His followers, what is a true word to all
God’s servants—“In the world ye shall have tribulation this was indeed the
experience of the patriarch. We Christians know the blessedness of affliction;
Abram was learning the lesson. The occasion was this very prosperity which God
had bestowed upon him. The large increase of substance in the case of Abram and
his nephew necessitated a wider area of pasturage than had formerly been
required. And they had not the country to themselves; it was occupied by the
Canaanites and Perizzites, the former dwelling in the walled towns, the latter
inhabiting the woods and mountains and rustic villages. So “the land was not
able to bear them.” First the herdsmen of the two masters dispute; one will not
give way to the other; each uphold their own lord’s right to the best grazing
district; each are decided against making any concession for the sake of peace.
And then the principals are drawn into the quarrel, and a life-long alienation might have been the
consequence of this petty difference. A common interest, common trials and
dangers, had united Abram and Lot together; and now their mutual prosperity
threatened to cause serious estrangement. But Abram was equal to the occasion.
His religion was practical; it ruled his conduct; it entered into every detail
of life; it made him unselfish and complaisant. Wealth had not altered his
character; his heart was as large, his sympathies were as uncontracted, as
ever. He anticipated that beautiful phase of the Christian disposition which
Christ inculcated: “I say unto you, That ye resist not evil; but whosoever
shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if any man
will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloke also. And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile,
go with him twain.” He had learned the spirit which animated St. Paul when he
enjoined the Corinthians not to be too eager to maintain their rights. “There
is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to law one with another. Why do ye
not rather take wrong? Why do ye not rather suffer yourselves to be
defrauded?”. So with touching disinterestedness and self-denial he allays the
rising quarrel. He says to Lot: “Let there be no strife, I pray thee, between
me and thee, and between my herdmen and thy herdmen; for we are brethren.” And then, though he was the
elder, and in all respects the superior, from love of peace and in deference to
his nephew’s inclinations, he waives his own rights. With a noble generosity he
exclaims: “Is not the whole land before thee? Separate thyself, I pray thee,
from me : if thou wilt take the left hand, then I will go to the right; or if thou
depart to the right hand, then I will go to the left.” And Lot, who had not the
single-hearted faith of Abram, was already growing tired of the nomadic life;
he cared not to be a stranger and a pilgrim upon earth, to dwell in tents,
waiting for the time of the promise to be fulfilled. He longed for a settled
home at once; and when Abram bade him choose his own way, and make his abode
wherever he liked, he saw the accomplishment of his desires at hand, and
proceeded immediately to carry them out. From the encampment on the east of
Bethel, he looked down on a wide reach of country. On three sides, indeed, the
view was not inviting to a shepherd’s eye. The verdant valleys were mostly out
of sight, and what met the gaze were bare hills, and summit after summit unclothed
with trees, and sinking into the blue distance. On the north were the mountains
which divide what was afterwards known as Samaria from Judaea; westward and
southward rose the bleak hills of Judaea and Benjamin, from which the eye,
missing the lower ground on Which Jebus stood, passed onwards to the range on
the slope of which lay Hebron. But eastward a far different prospect opened.
Down a gorge could be seen the circle of the Jordan, the tropical luxuriance of
that “region round about Jordan”, set in its amphitheatre of mountains, with the plain of Jericho almost at the beholder’s feet, and
brightly green with the verdure fostered by the plentiful streams of the
district, watered as “the garden of the Lord,” and recalling to the pilgrims’ minds
the fertility of that valley of the Nile from which they had lately returned.
Where the five Cities of the Plain were situated, whether at the north or south
extremity of the Dead Sea, has not been absolutely determined. From the spot
where Abram and his nephew stood, the southern end could not be seen, as it is
shut out by intervening hills; nor could that district have supported a settled
population; but the “plain of Jordan” was visible; and that term could not be
applied to the south extremity of the sea, as the Jordan never flowed there in
historic times, and there is very little available ground in that direction.
But these Considerations do not occur on the present occasion, as nothing is
said of Pentapolis itself being seen, but only of the circle of the Jordan
being visible. So Lot looked down on this rich country, and chose it for his
new dwelling-place. Little seems he to have cared for the wickedness of its
inhabitants, or the possible effects of such association-upon his family and household.
The civilization of these cities, however corrupt, had a charm for him ; he
wanted a settled home, and would have it, though it drew him into contamination
and peril. He is led by sight, not by faith ; he looks to worldly advantage,
not to the leading of God’s providence. He refuses to see that the Lord had all
along been carefully separating the chosen family from corrupting influences,
and setting them apart from wicked nations and dangerous associations ; and he
puts himself in the midst of temptation, choosing what seemed most advantageous
and pleasant, shunning the hard and rugged road of selfdenial and humility. Doubtless at first he had intended to retain as much as he could
of his nomadic life ; he had taken his tent with him and pitched it near Sodom.
But he did not long keep to this resolution. The attraction of the city proved
too strong for his weak purpose. By degrees he relinquished the pastoral life;
he, made his home in the wicked town; he became an inhabitant of Sodom, and
sunk his nationality so far as to betroth his daughters to native Sodomites.
The zeal with which he had once followed the example and leading of his uncle
had greatly diminished; he, who formerly had left home and country that he
might worship the true God in, liberty and peace, was now content with a barren
protest against the idolatry and wickedness of his neighbours, and thought he
had done his duty when he refrained himself from imitating their vices and
continued to hold his faith in Jehovah.
Sodom, the chief of these cities, and the other four
owed their foundation to the race of Ham, which ejected the towers of Babylon,
the temples and pyramids of Egypt, and which, proved such bitter enemies to the
Israelites in succeeding times. To what height of refinement and civilization
they had attained cannot be determined, as we have no monuments or remains by
which to test their progress; but we know that they were set in the midst of
plenty, in a land of singular fertility, and on the high road of the traffic
between Egypt and the East. Thus they grew rich and prosperous; they had lost
the restraining influence of a pure monotheism, and had learned to worship
deities who were served by the indulgence of human passions and degrading
lusts. The enervating effects of the tropical climate in which they lived
tended to render the inhabitants an easy prey to vicious and corrupt habits,
Their civilization, such as it was, did not raise them to culture and
refinement, but was displayed in ministering most successfully to sensual
enjoyment. “Behold,” says the Lord by the prophet Ezekiel, “this was the
iniquity of Sodom; pride, fulness of bread, and prosperous ease was in her and
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 when I saw it.” The unnatural crime for which Sodom has become infamous is
a token of the utmost moral degradation, and the people among whom such crime
prevails has sunk to the lowest depths of evil and is ripe for destruction.
God’s hand has written His utter detestation of this vice upon every page of
history; inhabitants thus guilty the land “spues out.” Sodom had its warning
before its final destruction, but did not profit by it, becoming only more
openly sinful, more unblushingly vile.
Sad and lonely felt Abram at the departure of Lot, so
long his companion and friend. He could not but grieve at the careless
selfishness which had led his nephew into the midst of the seductions of the godless
inhabitants of the plain ; he must have felt a solitary man when this last link
which bound him to his family beyond the flood was snapped asunder, when he,
with none to help him or to confirm his acts and words, was left the only
witness for God in all the land. He, whom in default of his own issue he had
regarded as his heir and the inheritor of the great promise, had proved himself
unworthy of the privilege, had recklessly cast it aside for the ease and
comfort of an earthly home. The generous offer had been eagerly seized ; and
without regard to consequences Lot had taken up his abode where the name of
Jehovah was unknown, and in a place whose inhabitants were sinners before the
Lord exceedingly. And now to comfort Abram in this trial, and to show him that
the separation for which he grieved was a providential arrangement, the Lord
made unto him a new revelation, containing a more formal and distinct
reiteration of the promises originally given. Some have thought that a glorious
vision of the land in all its extent was vouchsafed to him, even as Christ in
His temptation was shown “all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them”;
but the record merely says thus: “The Lord said unto Abram, after that Lot was
separated from him, Lift up now thine eyes, and look from the place where thou
art northward, and southward, and eastward, and westward ; for all the land
which thou seest, to thee will I give it, and to thy
seed for ever. And I will make thy seed as the dust
of the earth; so that if a man can number the dust of the earth, then shall thy
seed also be numbered. Arise, walk through the land in the length of it, and in
the breadth of it; for I will give it unto thee.” Thus largely is his
disinterestedness rewarded. He had unselfishly given Lot the choice of the land
; he receives the promise of the whole of it. He need have no fear that he had
parted with him who was to be his heir. His own seed should possess the
country, and should be a multitude which none could number. Not as now, mere
nomad chiefs, should they range the hills and plains; they should be settled
firmly in this territory for ever. Such a promise, of course, was conditional;
its fulfilment depended on the continued faith and obedience of the
recipients." What Abram could not foresee, God foreknew; and this great
promise was only fulfilled in Christ, to whom all power in heaven and earth is
given, who has the uttermost parts of the earth for His possession. “They which
be of faith are blessed with faithful Abraham,” and his blessing “has come on
the Gentiles through Jesus Christ’’ Still as yet Abram possessed not a foot of
land in all the country. It was his inheritance, it was given to his seed, but
they must wait God’s good time before entering into possession.
God had said to Abram: “Arise, walk through the land”;
but this was not a command, but rather an offer, as if He had said, “If thou
wouldst see how fair and wide is this possession which I give to thy posterity,
go forth and examine it for thyself.” And, in fact, Abram never took it for a
command ; for henceforward he changed his former plan of shifting his own abode
whenever the exigencies of food and water necessitated a change of quarters. He
now sends forth his trusty retainers to take his flocks to fresh pasture grounds,
while he himself remains in some fixed locality. From his second station at
Bethel he now removes his tent, and comes and dwells “in the oak-grove of
Mamre, which is in Hebron”. Turning southward along the great watershed,
passing what was afterwards Jerusalem, and Bethlehem, he arrived at a spot near
Hebron or Kirjath-Arba, where stood a famous oak or terebinth-tree, named after
the Amorite chief, Mamre. Tradition has located this encampment at Er Rameh, some three miles north of Hebron, where Constantine
built a large church in commemoration of the patriarch, and where a perennial
spring supplies the neighbourhood with water. The
town of Hebron is beautifully situated on the side of a narrow valley clothed
with luxuriant vineyards, whence, it is supposed, that Joshua’s spies obtained
the huge bunch of grape's which gave the place the name of “the valley of
Eshcol.” There are also groves of olive and other fruit-trees. “The appearance
of these vineyards is quite peculiar and very striking: a veritable wilderness
of hills and rocks, rough garden-walls, bushes, small trees, and an infinite
number of crooked sticks inclined in every possible attitude except the
perpendicular.” But, what is the most important of all points in the position
of an Eastern town, there is a good water supply at Hebron. In the vale below
are two pools never dry. The larger is one hundred and thirty feet square and
twenty-two feet deep, and there are other fountains at no great distance. The
town and district were occupied by a Hittite tribe and by a warlike clan of
Amorites under three brothers—Aner, Mamre, and Eshcol. These at once received
Abram with friendly ardour, and continued to be his
staunch allies and supporters. Indeed, we have reason to suppose that they
found their advantage in his help, and were very thankful to welcome among them
a prince with a powerful following, who, in return for certain concessions,
would aid their feeble community with wise counsel and material support.
Accordingly, in the neighbourhood of this most
ancient city, the patriarch made a more permanent abode than hitherto he had
done. In the broad valley extending for some thirty or forty miles southward,
and remarkable for its fertility, his numerous flocks and herds found ample
pasture. This was his third resting-place in the land that was to be his own.
First Shechem, then Bethel received him; and now Hebron or Mamre is his home,
and will be his resting-place when his pilgrimage is done. It is probable that
he cultivated the land in these more permanent settlements as his son Isaac did
after him. For all such purposes he possessed slaves in abundance; and these
indeed were necessary for the due care of his flocks in a country unenclosed
and exposed to the inroads of predatory tribes and the attacks of wild beasts.
CHAPTER VII. CHEDORLAOMER.
Invasion from Shinar—Kings engaged—Chedorlaomer; his
expedition against the West—Battle in the vale of
Siddim—Defeat of the Sodomites and capture of Lot—His rescue by Abram—Dan—The
King of Sodom—Melchizedek’; Abram’s dealings with him ; his office and typical
character.
A NEW scene opens in the life of Abram. The father of
the faithful appears himself as a powerful chief, and as the head of a
confederacy of Canaanite princes, contesting with the great world-power of
Elam. It is a most interesting and important episode, and, from internal
evidence, seems to have been introduced by Moses into his narrative from some
ancient Canaanitish or Babylonian document. Its
accuracy, which had been questioned by sceptical writers, has been wonderfully confirmed by monumental discoveries, and we can
now trace the personages and events of the history, and give its approximate
date, with all the certainty that can be expected in a time so remote.
Fourteen years before the period at which we have
arrived, while Abram was still in Chaldea, the kings of the East, under
Chedorlaomer, king of Elam, had made an expedition into Syria, and, among other
conquests, had reduced to subjection the inhabitants of the five cities in the
Arabah—Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboim, and Bela or Zoar—called afterwards
Pentapolis. Elam was a country on the east of Babylonia, including what is
known as Susiana, and lying partly in the mountains and partly in the plain. It
was occupied by a Turanian race of character totally distinct from the Babylonians,
with whom they were continually at war. Babylonia was itself split up into
various kingdoms and unable to combine against the invading force; hence, it
often happened that the Elamites obtained the superiority, and, for a time,
exercised supreme power over the whole country. An Assyrian monarch,
Assurbanipal, who is identified with Sardanapalus, records in one of his
inscriptions show that 1635 years before his own time, i.e., about BC
2280, a king of Elam, named Kurdur-nankhundi, had
invaded Babylonia and carried away an image of the goddess Nana who was
worshipped there. For many years subsequent to this event the Elamites retained
their supremacy, and Chedorlaomer was probably a descendant of Kurdur-nankhundi, and was sovereign of the Babylonian kings
who are mentioned with him in Gen. XIV. 1. These kings are evidently named from
accurate accounts in national annals. First comes Amraphel, king of Shinar, or
Southern Babylonia, whom the Septuagint calls Amarphal,
and whose name, though not actually identified in any inscription, contains,
according to Professor Sayce, the same element as that of a monumental king
called Amar-Aku. Priority is given to him as representative of the great
kingdom founded by Nimrod, from whom some writers make him fourth in succession.
Next, we have Arioch, king of Ellasar, whom the Vulgate calls “Rex Ponti.”
Ellasar is Larsa, a town on the eastern bank of the Euphrates, a little to the
south-east of Erech or Warka,
and now marked by the mounds of Senkereh. Arioch
ruled over that portion of Southern Chaldaea not comprised in the kingdom of
Amraphel. The name Arioch occurs as that of a Babylonian in Dan. II. 14. It is,
with some reason, supposed to be identified with the Accadian Eri-Aku, “servant
of the Moon-god,” who, in an inscription found at Mugheir,
and now in the British Museum, calls himself the son of Kudur-Mabuk,
“King of Elam,” and “Father of the West,” i.e. Syria. Kudur and Eri are equivalent terms, meaning “servant”; the
former being an Elamite word, the latter an Accadian. Kudur appears as a
component part of many Elamite names, and the Biblical Chedorlaomer, or,
according to the Septuagint, Chodollogomor, is really Kudur-Lagamar, “the servant of Lagamar,” an Elamite
deity, just as Kudur-Mabuk means “the servant of” the
goddess “Mabuk.” It is not unlikely that Chedorlaomer
and Kudur-Mabuk were brothers, and that Arioch was
appointed by the former as vassal-king of Sumer, or Southern Babylonia. The
fourth monarch mentioned is, according to our version, “Tidal, King of
Nations,” whom Symmachus terms “King of the Scythians”; and others, chief of
certain nomad tribes ; and others, again, Prince of “Galilee of the nations.”
But the Hebrew word rendered “nations,” Goyyim, is,
as Sir H. Rawlinson supposes, doubtless a misreading for Gotim,
that is Gutium, which is a tract of country north of Babylonia, stretching to
the mountains of Kurdistan, and containing within its boundaries what was
afterwards the kingdom of Assyria. The inhabitants of this region are often
mentioned in the Assyrian Inscriptions as Guti or Kuti. Tidal, in the
Septuagint written Thargal or Thalga,
is explained by the Accadian targal, “great judge,”
or turgal, “mighty youth.” To relegate this episode
to the realms of myth or parable, as is done by certain German critics, is to
deny historical facts, and to refuse assent to conclusions quite satisfactory
to unprejudiced minds. There is nothing unprecedented in this irruption from
the East. This was not the first time that Accadian invaders had turned their
arms towards the setting sun. Long before this time Sargon I and his son
Naram-Sin had made expeditions into Syria; they had met with considerable
opposition, but had succeeded in penetrating to the Mediterranean Sea, and have
left carved tablets on the coast. They even crossed over into the island of
Cyprus. Kudur-Mabug is called “the father of the west
country,” by which expression is meant that he claimed supremacy over Canaan.
It is true that neither Babylonians nor Assyrians affix the name of Canaan to
this country; it is with them “the western” or “hinder country”; but we know
that this term included Tyre, Sidon, and Samaria, Edom and Philistia, and a region
that extended to the Mediterranean. In the course of one of these expeditions,
Chedorlaomer had established his authority in the plain of Jordan, and
maintained it for twelve years. His object, doubtless was to keep open
communications with the rival kingdom of Egypt, the great route to which
country crossed the Arabah towards the neighbourhood of Pentapolis. It was of consequence in the eyes of these Elamite invaders that
the petty kingdoms along this road should own their supremacy. Whether the five
cities were situated at the north or south of the Dead Sea, they lay in the way
of armies marching from Damascus to Egypt, and had it in their power to impede
or to assist the troops that passed their limits. When Lot took up his
residence in the plain, the Sodomites owned the suzerainty of the Elamite
monarch; but at the end of the period mentioned above, the five kings of
Pentapolis, having entered into a mutual alliance, revolted, and refused to pay
the customary tribute. But punishment soon overtook them. Chedorlaomer, with
his three tributary kings, marched against them. Taking the usual route from
the Euphrates to Syria, he and his allies fell first on the Rephaim in Basan,
one of the aboriginal tribes of the country, whose capital, Astaroth {mod. Tell
Asherah), was about four miles from Edrei; thence, turning south, they attacked
the Zuzim who dwelt between the Amon and Jabbok, and the Emim of Kiriathaim, in Moab. The Horites, or cave-dwellers of Petra and Mount Seir,
next felt their arms; then turning northward by Kadesh, they overran the land of
the Amalekites and Amorites, and thus arrived at the Cities of thp Plain, whose punishment they had reserved, to the last.
Then the five kings met the four in the vale of
Siddim, “the salt valley,” as the LXX. call it. It was probably situated at the
end of the Dead Sea, and a late traveller has drawn
attention to the Arabic word sidd, which the
dwellers in the Jordan valley apply to the cliffs or banks of marl which exist
in the neighbourhood. The older explanation makes
Siddim the plural of the Hebrew word sadeh, “a
plain.” Here they made their stand, expecting that the pits of bitumen with
which the plane abounded would prove a protection to them and a snare to the
enemy, whose cavalry and chariots would be seriously, impeded by these
obstacles. But their hopes were miserably frustrated. The luxurious and
enervated dwellers in the valley of Jordan could ill withstand the hardened and skilful warriors of Chaldaea. The wells on which they
relied as a defence proved their destruction when
once their line was broken. All order was lost, and their defeat was certain
and complete. They fell themselves into their own “slime-pits,” which were of
great depth in some places, and the existence of which is attested to this day
by the rise of floating masses of bitumen from the southern angle of the Dead
Sea, under whose waters the vale of Siddim (“which is
the salt sea,”) is, with good reason, thought to be submerged. There exist also
in the same locality morasses, in which animals are often lost. So the kings
fled, and he of Sodom escaped to the neighbouring mountains of Moab where the pursuers could not follow him. But the enemy
plundered the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, took all the goods and all the
provisions that were found there, and, as the Septuagint adds, all the
war-horses, of whose efficacy in chariots of iron the Israelites in after years
had terrible proof. They carried off Lot also, who had ceased to dwell in tents
and had a fixed habitation in the city. He had chosen for himself, and he must
take the consequences ; he had joined with the Sodomites, and had to share the
evils that came upon them. He is taken captive, and would have had to spend the
rest of his life in bondage had not deliverance arisen to him from Abram.
Bearing their plunder with them, the conquerors
marched on their homeward way, taking their course northwards up the valley of
the Jordan. Abram was still sojourning at Mamrewhen news of this raid reached him. Some of the survivors, knowing his interest in
Lot, and recognizing in him the head of a powerful tribe, hurry to him with
their intelligence. He is equal to the occasion. He hesitates not a moment.
Though, as the account (evidently an original document) calls him a “Hebrew,” a
stranger from beyond the river, he is not without friends and allies in this
home of his adoption. Three powerful Amorite chiefs—Mamre, Aner, and
Eshcol—were, as we have seen above, confederate with him. He calls them to his
aid. However unwilling to mix himself with military affairs or to interfere in
such secular matters, here was a case that imperatively claimed his attention.
His own near relative, his “brother” as the record calls him.
His brother is in danger, has been unjustly carried
away captive; it is his duty to attempt his deliverance. He arms his own
trained servants, born in his house, three hundred and eighteen in number; he
draws them forth in haste, as a sword from its sheath, or as arrows from the
quiver, and with his allies sets forth in pursuit. The invaders had already
reached the neighbourhood of Laish, afterwards called
Dan, and in later time the northernmost limit of the territory of Israel, at
one of the sources of the Jordan. Some have doubted whether the place intended
be not Dan-jaan in Northern Peraea, as Laish does not
stand on either of the roads from the vale of Siddim
to Damascus. But Josephus states expressly that the locality was at one of the
spring-heads of the Jordan; and Jerome adds his testimony to the same effect.
The spot is identified both by its natural features and its present name. It is
now called Tell-el-Kadi, the “ hill of the judge,”
Dan and Kadi being synonymous. Below the site of the old town, surrounded by a
densegrove of oleanders, is a rocky basin, some fifty paces in width, in which
a most copious fountain rises, forming a full-grown stream at its very beginning.
This is reckoned the third branch of the river; the main stream at Bainas, that at Dan called Leddan,
and the smallest and most northern termed Hashbany at Hashbeiza, unite at Shekh Yusef about five miles
below Dan, and form the Jordan there nearly fifty feet wide. In this neighbourhood Chedorlaomer and his host were encamped,
thinking themselves secure from pursuit and taking no precautions against a
surprise. To encounter such an enemy in a pitched battle was very far from
being Abram’s design. His object was to rescue his nephew, not to win military
renown. So he used stratagem. “He divided himself against them by night, he and
his servants.” He did not engage the main body of the invaders, but attacked
them at separate points, employing the tactics of Gideon when he divided his
little band of three hundred into three companies and surprised the Midianites,
or the plan of Saul when he gained such great reputation by defeating the
Ammonites. So in the darkness and the confusion caused by his sudden attack
from different quarters, Abram routed the Elamites, recovered the spoil and his
captive nephew, and pursued the flying enemy over the range of Anti-Libanus to a place named Hobah, which Eusebius' identifies
with a village near Damascus inhabited by Ebionites, and at this day pointed
out as the spot where Abram prayed on his return from the pursuit of the
Mesopotamian kings, but which is more probably placed about half-way between
Damascus and Palmyra, on the direct route to the East, where a village of that
name is found. With large booty and the rescued captives Abram returned in
peace to the valley of the Jordan. But so successful an exploit, involving
such a vast benefit to the inhabitants of the country, could not be allowed to
pass unacknowledged. The reputation and the influence of the stranger chieftain
were largely increased by this expedition, and the gratitude of the people was
shown in various ways. First of all the king of Sodom comes forth to meet him,
to congratulate hint on his success, and to receive his portion of spoil from
his hands. The place of meeting is called “the valley of Shaveh, which is the
king’s dale.” This is probably the northern part of the valley of the Kidron,
where the “Tombs of the kings” are now shown, and where the childless Absalom
reared a memorial for himself that his name might not be forgotten. Full of
gratitude for Abram’s, valiant rescue, the king of Sodom wished eagerly to
reward him for his services. “Give me the captives of my people whom thou hast
delivered ; I want no more ; keep thou everything else which thou hast taken
from the enemy.” This indeed was no more than the customary practice which
obtained in Eastern countries. In strict right the whole of the recovered booty
belonged to the captor, and no longer to the original possessors; but this was
not an occasion on which to enforce such a claim, nor was the generous Abram
one to insist upon it. The patriarch firmly refused the offer. He had not made
war for his own aggrandizement ; he was not self-seeking ; liberal and
magnanimous, now as ever free from all taint of covetousness, he vows he will
receive nothing. He was no mercenary soldier to be paid for his martial
exploits. It would have suited ill with his character, as a pure worshipper of
the one God, to lay himself under an obligation to the Sodomites and to accept, favours at hands polluted with sin; so he answers: “I have lift up mine hand unto the Lord God Most High, possessor of heaven and
earth, that I will not take a thread nor a shoelatchet nor aught that is thine, lest thou shouldest say, I have made Abram rich”. All
that he will consent to receive is a certain portion of provisions for his
servants and allies.
In contrast to his coldness and reserve towards the king
of Sodom is his conduct to Melchizedek, king of Salem. Round this personage
tradition has gathered a crop of legends which have no credibility in
themselves and no foundation in history. The words of our record are these: “And Melchizedek king of Salem brought forth bread and wine ; and he was priest
of God Most High. And he blessed him, and said, Blessed be Abram of God Most
High, possessor of heaven and earth, and blessed be God Most High, who hath
delivered thine enemies into thy hand. And he gave him a tenth of all.” Now
there are difficulties in this narrative the solution of which has never been
successfully attained. The presence of Melchizedek, “priest of the Most High
God” (El Elyon), in the midst of the probably heathen population of Salem, is
perplexing. We are scarcely prepared for the sudden .appearance of this Cohen,
offering bread and wine in connection with the firstfruits of the spoil, as Philo observes, blessing Abram, and receiving tithes from the
patriarch. We have long looked upon Abram as the one witness to Monotheism
among an idolatrous people, and to see him holding a position inferior to this
hitherto unknown chieftain is an unexpected difficulty. Who he was, of what
family or nation, is left in utter obscurity. Suddenly be
comes forth in the page of history for one brief moment, and then his
name is heard no more for a thousand years, when it is found in the Book of
Psalms; a thousand years more pass before it occurs in the Epistle to the
Hebrews; so that there is a mystery connected therewith, which gives to it a
preponderating interest and charm. The name itself, Josephus explains as
meaning “just king,” and the writer of the Epistle, as “king of righteousness.”
It is certainly Semitic in character, as Abimelech, Adoni-zedek;
and some suppose it signifies “My king is Zedek,” taking the last word to be a
name of God. But the old interpretation is probably correct. The place of which
he was king is disputed. It has been usual to regard “Salem” as Jebus or
Jerusalem; hut other opinions have been held. Jerome, though he says in one
place that Salem was the former name of Jerusalem, of which city Melchizedek
was king, in another expressly affirms that the Salem mentioned in Genesis was
not Jerusalem, but a place so named near Scythopolis or Bethshan, where in his time the ruins of Melchizedek’s palace were still
shown. This town lay indeed on the ancient road from Damascus to Egypt, but it
is far too much to the north to suit the requirements of our narrative, the
incidents of which must have taken place near Jerusalem.. Another hypothesis
regards the place as that Salim near AJnon where John haptized, and which has beep, identified with a
village, blessed with copious springs, opposite the vale of Nablus. From an account which Eusebius, quotes from Eupolemus,
who states that Abram was hospitably entertained at Argarizin,
some’ have argued that the meeting took place at Mount Gerizim, the word being
really Har-Gerizim. But no importance can he attached
to this isolated and confused mention. It is safest to follow the exposition of
Josephus and the Targums, and to see in Salem the city of Jerusalem, as in Psa. lxxvL 2; “ At Salem is His tabernacle and His
dwelling-place in Zion.” There is a striking propriety in the type of David’s
great son being king of that city where David himself reigned. But if we regard
this point as settled, still as to the person and nationality of Melchizedek
different opinions have been held, and nothing can with ahsolute certainty be determined. Some heretics, we are told,? considered him to have,
been the Holy Ghost; Origen and Didymus deemed him an angel; the Jews, in order
to account for his acknowledged superiority to Abram, identified him with Shem,
the most pious of Noah’s sons, who according to their genealogies lived till
Isaac’s time. Some Christians, both in early and later times, have maintained
that he was the Son of God appearing in human form, which of course would
nullify his typical character on which such stress is laid in the Epistle to
the Hebrews. He could not be a type pf himself; nor would it have heen said that he was made “like unto the Son of God,” if
he had been the Son of God Himself. The writer, too, states expressly that his
genealogy is not counted from the sons of Levi; and he could never have termed
him “ without father and without mother,” if he regarded him as the same person
as Shem; nor would the distinction between the priesthood of Melchizedek and
Levi be so marked as to support the argument founded upon it. There is no
reason to doubt that he was an historic personage. As to his nationality we can
conclude nothing from his Semitic name, as that might be only a translation of
his original appellation. He is dwelling among Hamites, recognized apparently
as the chief of a settled Canaanitish tribe. If he
had been of Semitic descent, he could scarcely have been considered so entirely
disconnected with Levi and the Jewish priesthood; his sacerdotal office would
not have had the isolated character which is attributed to it. Monotheists were
to be found among alien people, such as Job in the land of Uz, and Balaam in Pethor. It is reasonable to conclude that he was of the
same blood as those among whom he dwelt, preserving in himself that revelation
of the true God which was maintained by Noah and his immediate descendants. For
the first time in the Bible we meet here with the term, afterwards in frequent
use, “God Most High”, whose priest Melchizedek is called. That the true God is
meant appears by Abram’s use of the same title coupled with the sacred name of
Jehovah, when he answers the king of Sodom: I have lift up mine hand unto Jehovah, God Most High.” It is quite
possible that Melchizedek did not know the name Jehovah; and that was the
reason why he blessed Abram in the name of God, the Possessor or Creator of
heaven and earth, Him whom he knew only under that attribute. Abram adds to
this title that of the One, only, self-existent Deity. The priesthood of
Melchizedek possessed something of a higher nature than that which appertained
to the headship of a family or tribe, and was recognized as such by Abram
himself. So it is said in Hebrews: “Consider how great this man was, unto whom
Abraham, the patriarch, gave a tenth out of the chief spoils, and he whose
genealogy is not counted from the sons of Levi hath taken tithes of Abraham,
and hath blessed him that hath the promises. But without any dispute the less
is blessed of the better.” And as no man taketh the honour of the priesthood on himself without authority from God
We are intended; to see in Melchizedek a very remarkable type of Christ. His very name and title are full of significance. “King of righteousness,” and “King of Salem,” which is “Peace—could any designations more fitly describe Him who is the Lord our righteousness, and the Prince of peace? Melchizedek was a priest, not of the line of Aaron, not of one particular nation; and he blessed Abram, the father of the faithful, before he was circumcised, in whose seed all families of the earth are blessed. So Christ is the one universal priest of all nations and of all ages, who offered Himself for all, who now intercedes for men, and whose office as Mediator and Intercessor reaches over the whole race of mankind and the whole sweep of time, and who blesses His people with manifold love and power. Melchizedek, king and priest, was superior to Abram, like Christ who is the hlessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, the great High Priest, of whom all other priests are but shadows and figures, faint and fleeting. There is. a representation of ete.rnity about Melchizedek. He stands alone; there is no mention of his ancestry or his. descendants; his birth and death alike are unrecorded; to his priesthood and to his life no beginning and no end are assigned, So Christ, in so far as He is a priest, has no pedigree, and his office has no termination ; in His human nature He had no earthly father; and He is the same yesterday, today, and for ever; He was from the beginning, He is from everlasting, who only hath immortality and liveth for ever and ever. Thus, in his character, in his office, in the manner in which he is introduced into the sacred narrative, Melchizedek offers abundant material for profound thought; and we may well believe that the secrecy as to his antecedents, and the functions which he exercised, were providentially ordered to make him a type of Christ, the priest of all mankind, whose eternal generation and continual office are thus so strikingly adumbrated.
TO BE CONTINUED
ABRAHAM
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