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THE CALL OF ABRAHAM
Gen 11:27-32; Gen 12:1-5
WITH Abraham there opens a new chapter in the history of the
race; a chapter of the profoundest significance. The consequences of
Abraham’s movements and beliefs have been limitless and enduring.
All succeeding time has been influenced by him. And yet there is in
his life a remarkable simplicity, and an entire absence of such
events as impress contemporaries. Among all the forgotten millions
of his own time he stands alone a recognisable and memorable figure.
But around his figure there gathers no throng of armed followers;
with his name, no vast territorial dominion, no new legislation, not
even any work of literature or art is associated. The significance
of his life was not military, nor legislative, nor literary, but
religious. To him must be carried back the belief in one God. We
find him born and brought up among idolaters; and although it is
certain there were others besides himself who here and there upon
earth had dimly arrived at the same belief as he, yet it is
certainly from him the Monotheistic belief has been diffused. Since
his day the world has never been without its explicit advocacy. It
is his belief in the true God, in a God who manifested His existence
and His nature by responding to this belief, it is this belief and
the place he gave it as the regulating principle of all his
movements and thoughts, that have given him his everlasting
influence.
With Abraham there is also introduced the first step in a new method
adopted by God in the training of men. The dispersion of men and the
divergence of their languages are now seen to have been the
necessary preliminary to this new step in the education of the
world-the fencing round of one people till they should learn to know
God and understand and exemplify His government. It is true, God
reveals Himself to all men and governs all; but by selecting one
race with special adaptations, and by giving to it a special
training, God might more securely and more rapidly reveal Himself to
all. Each nation has certain characteristics, a national character
which grows by seclusion from the influences which are forming other
races. There is a certain mental and moral individuality stamped
upon every separate people. Nothing is more certainly retained;
nothing more certainly handed down from generation to generation. It
would therefore be a good practical means of conserving and
deepening the knowledge of God, if it were made the national
interest of a people to preserve it, and if it were closely
identified with the national characteristics. This was the method
adopted by God. He meant to combine allegiance to Himself with
national advantages, and spiritual with national character, and
separation in belief with a distinctly outlined and defensible
territory.
This method, in common with all Divine methods, was in strict
keeping with the natural evolution of history. The migration of
Abraham occurred in the epoch of migrations. But although for
centuries before Abraham new nations had been forming, none of them
had belief in God as its formative principle. Wave upon wave of
warriors, shepherds, colonists have left the prolific plains of
Mesopotamia. Swarm after swarm has left that busy hive, pushing one
another further and further west and east, but all have been urged
by natural impulses, by hunger, commerce, love of adventure and
conquest. By natural likings and dislikings, by policy, and by dint
of force the multitudinous tribes of men were finding their places
in the world, the weaker being driven to the hills, and being
schooled there by hard living till their descendants came down and
conquered their conquerors. All this went on without regard to any
very high motives. As it was with the Goths who invaded Italy for
her wealth, as it is now with those who people America and Africa
because there is land or room enough, so it was then. But at last
God selects one man and says, "I will make of thee a great nation."
The origin of this nation is not facile love of change nor lust of
territory, but belief in God. Without this belief this people had
not been. No other account can be given of its origin. Abraham is
himself already the member of a tribe, well-off and likely to be
well-off; he has no large family to provide for, but he is separated
from his kindred and country, and led out to be himself a new
beginning, and this because, as he himself throughout his life said,
he heard God’s call and responded to it.
The city which claims the distinction of being Abraham’s birthplace,
or at least of giving its name to the district where he was born, is
now represented by a few mounds of ruins rising out of the flat
marshy ground on the western bank of the Euphrates, not far above
the point where it joins its waters to those of the Tigris and
glides on to the Persian gulf. In the time of Abraham, Ur was the
capital city which gave its name to one of the most populous and
fertile regions of the earth. The whole land of Accad, which ran up
from the sea-coast to Upper Mesopotamia (or Shinar), seems to have
been known as Ur-ma, the land of Ur. This land was of no great
extent, being little if at all larger than Scotland, but it was the
richest of Asia. The high civilisation which this land enjoyed even
in the time of Abraham has been disclosed in the abundant and
multifarious Babylonian remains which have recently been brought to
light.
What induced Terah to abandon so prosperous a land can only be
conjectured. It is possible that the idolatrous customs of the
inhabitants may have had something to do with his movements. For
while the ancient Babylonian records reveal a civilisation
surprisingly advanced, and a social order in some respects
admirable, they also make disclosures regarding the worship of the
gods which must shock even those who are familiar with the
immoralities frequently fostered by heathen religions. The city of
Ur was not only the capital, it was the holy city of the Chaldeans.
In its northern quarter rose high above the surrounding buildings
the successive stages of the temple of the moon-god, culminating in
a platform on which the priests could both accurately observe the
motions of the stars and hold their night-watches in honour of their
god. In the courts of this temple might be heard breaking the
silence of midnight one of those magnificent hymns, still preserved,
in which idolatry is seen in its most attractive dress, and in which
the Lord of Ur is invoked in terms not unworthy of the living God.
But in these same temple-courts Abraham may have seen the firstborn
led to the altar, the fruit of the body sacrificed to atone for the
sin of the soul; and here too he must have seen other sights even
more shocking and repulsive. Here he was no doubt taught that
strangely mixed religion which clung for generations to some members
of his family. Certainly he was taught in common with the whole
community to rest on ‘the seventh day; as he was trained to look to
the stars with reverence and to the moon as something more than the
light which was set to rule the night.
Possibly then Terah may have been induced to move northwards by a
desire to shake himself free from customs he disapproved. The
Hebrews themselves seem always to have considered that his migration
had a religious motive. "This people," says one of their old
writings, "is descended from 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. Then
their God commanded them to depart from the place where they
sojourned and to go into the land of Canaan." But if this is a true
account of the origin of the movement northwards, it must have been
Abraham rather than his father who was the moving spirit of it; for
it is certainly Abraham and not Terah who stands as the significant
figure inaugurating the new era.
If doubt rests on the moving cause of the migration from Ur, none
rests on that which prompted Abraham to leave Charran and journey
towards Canaan. He did so in obedience to what he believed to be a
Divine command, and in faith on what he understood to be a Divine
promise. How he became aware that a Divine command thus lay upon him
we do not know. Nothing could persuade him that he was not
commanded. Day by day he heard in his soul what he recognised as a
Divine voice, saying: "Get thee out of thy country and from thy
kindred and from thy father’s house, unto a land that I will show
thee!" This was God’s first revelation of Himself to Abraham. Up to
this time Abraham to all appearance had no knowledge of any God but
the deities worshipped by his fathers in Chaldea. Now, he finds
within himself impulses which he cannot resist and which he is
conscious he ought not to resist. He believes it to be his duty to
adopt a course which may look foolish and which he can justify only
by saying that his conscience bids him. He recognises, apparently
for the first time, that through his conscience there speaks to him
a God Who is supreme. In dependence on this God he gathered his
possessions together and departed.
So far, one may be tempted to say, no very unusual faith was
required. Many a poor girl has followed a weakly brother or a
dissipated father to Australia or the wild west of America; many a
lad has gone to the deadly west coast of Africa with no such
prospects as Abraham. For Abraham had the double prospect which
makes migration desirable. Assure the colonist that he will find
land and have strong sons to till and hold and leave it to, and you
give him all the motive he requires. These were the promises made to
Abraham-a land and a seed. Neither was there at this period much
difficulty in believing that both promises would be fulfilled. The
land he no doubt expected to find in some unoccupied territory. And
as regards the children, he had not yet faced the condition that
only through Sarah was this part of the promise to be fulfilled.
But the peculiarity in Abraham’s abandonment of present certainties
for the sake of a future and unseen good is, that it was prompted
not by family affection or greed or an adventurous disposition, but
by faith in a God Whom no one but himself recognised. It was the
first step in a life-long adherence to an Invisible, Spiritual
Supreme. It was that first step which committed him to life-long
dependence upon and intercourse with One Who had authority to
regulate his movements and power to bless him. From this time forth
all that he sought in life was the fulfilment of God’s promise. He
staked his future upon God’s existence and faithfulness. Had Abraham
abandoned Charran at the command of a widely ruling monarch who
promised him ample compensation, no record would have been made of
so ordinary a transaction. But this was an entirely new thing and
well worth recording, that a man should leave country and kindred
and seek an unknown land under the impression that thus he was
obeying the command of the unseen God. While others worshipped sun,
moon, and stars, and recognised the Divine in their brilliance and
power, in their exaltation above earth and control of earth and its
life, Abraham saw that there was something greater than the order of
nature and more worthy of worship, even the still small voice that
spoke within his own conscience of right and wrong in human conduct,
and that told him how his own life must be ordered. While all around
him were bowing down to the heavenly host and sacrificing to them
the highest things in human nature, he heard a voice falling from
these shining ministers of God’s will, which said to him, "See thou
do it not, for we are thy fellow-servants; worship thou God!" This
was the triumph of the spiritual over the material; the
acknowledgment that in God there is something greater than can be
found in nature; that man finds his true affinity not in the things
that are seen but in the unseen Spirit that is over all. It is this
that gives to the figure of Abraham its simple grandeur and its
permanent significance.
Under the simple statement "The Lord said unto Abram, Get thee out
of thy country," there are probably hidden years of questioning and
meditation. God’s revelation of Himself to Abram in all probability
did not take the determinate form of articulate command without
having passed through many preliminary stages of surmise and doubt
and mental conflict. But once assured that God is calling him,
Abraham responds quickly and resolutely. The revelation has come to
a mind in which it will not be lost. As one of the few theologians
who have paid attention to the method of revelation has said: "A
Divine revelation does not dispense with a certain character and
certain qualities of mind in the person who is the instrument of it.
A man who throws off the chains of authority and association must be
a man of extraordinary independence and strength of mind, although
he does so in obedience to a Divine revelation; because no miracle,
no sign or wonder which accompanies a revelation can by its simple
stroke force human nature from the innate hold of custom and the
adhesion to and fear of established opinion: can enable it to
confront the frowns of men, and take up truth opposed to general
prejudice, except there is in the man himself, who is the recipient
of the revelation, a certain strength of mind and independence which
concurs with the Divine intention."
That Abraham’s faith triumphed over exceptional difficulties and
enabled him to do what no other motive would have been strong enough
to accomplish, there is therefore no call to assert. During his
after-life his faith was severely tried, but the mere abandonment of
his country in the hope of gaining a better was the ordinary motive
of his day. It was the ground of this hope, the belief in God, which
made Abraham’s conduct original and fruitful. That sufficient
inducement was presented to him is only to say that God is
reasonable. There is always sufficient inducement to obey God;
because life is reasonable. No man was ever commanded or required to
do anything which it was not for his advantage to do. Sin is a
mistake. But so weak are we, so liable to be moved by the things
present to us and by the desire for immediate gratification, that it
never ceases to be wonderful and admirable when a sense of duty
enables a man to forego present advantage and to believe that
present loss is the needful preliminary of eternal gain.
Abraham’s faith is chosen by the author of the Epistle to the
Hebrews as an apt illustration of his definition of Faith, that it
is "the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not
seen." One property of faith is that it gives to things future, and
which are as yet only hoped for, all the reality of actual present
existence. Future things may be said to have no existence for those
who do not believe in them. They are not taken into account. Men do
not shape their conduct with any reference to them. But when a man
believes in certain events that are to be, this faith of his lends
to these future things the reality, the "substance" which things
actually existing in the present have. They have the same weight
with him, the same influence upon his conduct.
Without some power to realise the future and to take account of what
is to be as well as of what already is, we could not carry on the
common affairs of life. And success in life very greatly depends on
foresight, or the power to see clearly what is to be and give it due
weight. The man who has no foresight makes his plans, but being
unable to apprehend the future his plans are disconcerted. Indeed it
is one of the most valuable gifts a man can have, to be able to say
with tolerable accuracy what is to happen and what is not; to be
able to sift rumours, common talk, popular impressions,
probabilities, chances, and to be able to feel sure what the future
will really be; to be able to weigh the character and commercial
prospects of the men he deals with, so as to see what must be the
issue of their operations and whom he may trust. Many of our most
serious mistakes in life arise from our inability to imagine the
consequences of our actions and to forefeel how these consequences
will affect us.
Now faith largely supplies the want of this imaginative foresight.
It lends substance to things future. It believes the account given
of the future by a trustworthy authority. In many ordinary matters
all men are dependent on the testimony of others for their knowledge
of the result of certain operations. The astronomer, the
physiologist, the navigator, each has his department within which
his predictions are accepted as authoritative. But for what is
beyond the ken of science no faith in our fellow-men avails. Feeling
that if there is a life beyond the grave, it must have important
bearings on the present, we have yet no data by which to calculate
what will then be, or only data so difficult to use that our
calculations are but guesswork. But faith accepts the testimony of
God as unhesitatingly as that of man and gives reality to the future
He describes and promises. It believes that the life God calls us to
is a better life, and it enters upon it. It believes that there is a
world to come in which all things are new and all things eternal;
and, so believing, it cannot but feel less anxious to cling to this
world’s goods. That which embitters all loss and deepens sorrow is
the feeling that this world is all; but faith makes eternity as real
as time and gives substantial existence to that new and limitless
future in which we shall have time to forget the sorrows and live
past the losses of this present world.
The radical elements of greatness are identical from age to age, and
the primal duties which no good man can evade do not vary as the
world grows older. What we admire in Abraham we feel to be incumbent
on ourselves. Indeed the uniform call of Christ to all His followers
is even in form almost identical with that which stirred Abraham,
and made him the father of the faithful. "Follow Me," says our Lord,
"and every one that forsaketh houses, or brethren, or sisters, or
father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for My name’s
sake, shall receive a hundredfold, and shall inherit everlasting
life." And there is something perennially edifying in the spectacle
of a man who believes that God has a place and a use for him in the
world, and who puts himself at God’s disposal; who enters upon life
refusing to be bound by the circumstances of his upbringing, by the
expectations of his friends, by prevailing customs, by prospect of
gain and advancement among men; and resolved to listen to the
highest voice of all, to discover what God has for him to do upon
earth and where he is likely to find most of God; who virtually and
with deepest sincerity says, Let God choose my destination: I have
good land here, but if God wishes me elsewhere, elsewhere I go: who,
in one word, believes in the call of God to himself, who admits it
into the springs of his conduct, and recognises that for him also
the highest life his conscience can suggest is the only life he can
live, no matter how cumbrous and troublesome and expensive be the
changes involved in entering it. Let the spectacle take hold of your
imagination-the spectacle of a man believing that there is something
more akin to himself and higher than the material life and the great
laws that govern it, and going calmly and hopefully forward into the
unknown, because he knows that God is with him, that in God is our
true life, that man liveth not by bread only, but by every word that
cometh out of the mouth of God.
Even thus then may we bring our faith to a true and reliable test.
All men who have a confident expectation of future good make
sacrifices or run risks to obtain it. Mercantile life proceeds on
the understanding that such ventures are reasonable and will always
be made. Men might if they liked spend their money on present
pleasure, but they rarely do so. They prefer to put it into concerns
or transactions from which they expect to reap large returns. They
have faith, and as a necessary consequence they make ventures. So
did these Hebrews-they ran a great risk, they gave up the sole means
of livelihood they had any experience of and entered what they knew
to be a bare desert, because they believed in the land that lay
beyond and in God’s promise. What then has your faith done? What
have you ventured that you would not have ventured but for God’s
promise. Suppose Christ’s promise failed, in what would you be the
losers? Of course you would lose what you call your hope of
heaven-but what would you find you had lost in this world? When a
merchant’s ships are wrecked or when his investment turns out bad,
he loses not only the gain he hoped for, but the means he risked.
Suppose then Christ were declared bankrupt, unable to fulfil your
expectations, would you really find that you had ventured so much
upon His promise that you are deeply involved in His bankruptcy, and
are much worse off in this world and now than you would otherwise
have been? Or may I not use the words of one of the most cautious
and charitable of men, and say, "I really fear, when we come to
examine, it will be found that there is nothing we resolve, nothing
we do, nothing we do not do, nothing we avoid, nothing we choose,
nothing we give up, nothing we pursue, which we should not resolve,
and do, and not do, and avoid, and choose, and give up, and pursue,
if Christ had not died and heaven were not promised us." If this be
the case-if you would be neither much better nor much worse though
Christianity were a fable-if you have in nothing become poorer in
this world that your reward in heaven may be greater, if you have
made no investments and run no risks, then really the natural
inference is that your faith in the future inheritance is small.
Barnabas sold his Cyprus property because he believed heaven was
his, and his bit of land suddenly became a small consideration;
useful only in so far as he could with the mammon of unrighteousness
make himself a mansion in heaven. Paul gave up his prospects of
advancement in the nation, of which he would of course as certainly
have become the leader and first man as he took that position in the
Church, and plainly tells us that having made so large a venture on
Christ’s word, he would if his word failed be a great loser, of all
men most miserable because he had risked his all in this life on it.
People sometimes take offence at Paul’s plain way of speaking of the
sacrifices he had made, and of Peter’s plain way of saying "we have
left all and followed Thee, what shall we have therefore?" but when
people have made sacrifices they know it and can specify them, and a
faith that makes no sacrifices is no good either in this world’s
affairs or in religion. Self-consciousness may not be a very good
thing: but self-deception is a worse.
Here as elsewhere a clear hope sprang from faith. Recognising God,
Abraham knew that there was for men a great future. He looked
forward to a time when all men should believe as he did, and in him
all families of the earth be blessed. No doubt in these early days,
when all men were on the move and striving to make a name and a
place for themselves, an onward look might be common. But the
far-reaching extent, the certainty, and the definiteness of
Abraham’s view of the future were unexampled. There far back in the
hazy dawn he stood while the morning mists hid the horizon from
every other eye, and he alone discerns what is to be. One clear
voice and one only rings out in unfaltering tones and from amidst
the babel of voices that utter either amazing follies or misdirected
yearnings, gives the one true forecast and direction-the one living
word which has separated itself from and survived all the
prognostications of Chaldean soothsayers and priests of Ur, because
it has never ceased to give life to men. It has created for itself a
channel and you can trace it through the centuries by the living
green of its banks and the life it gives as it goes. For this hope
of Abraham has been fulfilled; the creed and its accompanying
blessing which that day lived in the heart of one man only has
brought blessing to all the families of the earth.
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