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LOT’S SEPARATION FROM ABRAM
Genesis 13
ABRAM left Egypt thinking meanly of himself, highly of God. This
humble frame of mind is disclosed in the route he chooses; he went
straight back "unto the place where his tent had been at the
beginning, unto the altar which he had made there at the first."
With a childlike simplicity he seems to own that his visit to Egypt
had been a mistake. He had gone there supposing that he was thrown
upon his own resources, and that, in order to keep himself and his
dependants alive, he must have recourse to craft and dishonesty. By
retracing his steps and returning to the altar at Bethel, he seems
to acknowledge that he should have remained there through the famine
in dependence on God.
Whoever has attempted a similar practical repentance, visible to his
own household and affecting their place of abode or daily
occupations, will know how to estimate the candour and courage of
Abram. To own that some distinctly marked portion of our life, upon
which we entered with great confidence in our own wisdom and
capacity, has come to nothing and has betrayed us into reprehensible
conduct, is mortifying indeed. To admit that we have erred and to
repair our error by returning to our old way and practice, is what
few of us have the courage to do. If we have entered on some branch
of business or gone into some attractive speculation, or if we have
altered our demeanour towards some friend, and if we are finding
that we are thereby tempted to doubleness, to equivocation, to
injustice, our only hope lies in a candid and straightforward
repentance, in a manly and open return to the state of things that
existed in happier days and which we should never have abandoned.
Sometimes we are aware that a blight began to fall on our spiritual
life from a particular date, and we can easily and distinctly trace
an unhealthy habit of spirit to a well-marked passage in our outward
career; but we shrink from the sacrifice and shame involved in a
thoroughgoing restoration of the old state of things. We are always
so ready to fancy we have done enough, if we get one heartfelt word
of confession uttered; so ready, if we merely turn our faces towards
God, to think our restoration complete. Let us make a point of
getting through mere beginnings of repentance, mere intention to
recover God’s favour and a sound condition of life, and let us
return and return till we bow at God’s very altar again, and know
that His hand is laid upon us in blessing as at the first.
Out of Egypt Abram brought vastly increased wealth. Each time he
encamped, quite a town of black tents quickly rose round the spot
where his fixed spear gave the signal for halting. And along with
him there journeyed his nephew, apparently of almost equal, or at
least considerable wealth; not dependent on Abram, nor even a
partner with him, for "Lot also had flocks and herds and tents." So
rapidly was their substance increasing that no sooner did they
become stationary than they found that the land was not able to
furnish them with sufficient pasture. The Canaanite and the
Perizzite would not allow them unlimited pasture in the
neighbourhood of Bethel; and as the inevitable result of this the
rival shepherds, eager to secure the best pasture for their own
flocks and the best wells for their own cattle and camels, came to
high words and probably to blows about their respective rights.
To both Abram and Lot it must have occurred that this competition
between relatives was unseemly, and that some arrangement must be
come to. And when at last some unusually blunt quarrel took place in
presence of the chiefs, Abram divulges to Lot the scheme which had
suggested itself to him. This state of things, he says, must come to
an end; it is unseemly, unwise, and unrighteous. And as they walk on
out of the circle of tents to discuss the matter without
interruption, they come to a rising ground where the wide prospect
brings them naturally to a pause. Abram looking north and south and
seeing with the trained eye of a large flock-master that there was
abundant pasture for both. turns to Lot with a final proposal: "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."
Thus early did wealth produce quarrelling among relatives. The men
who had shared one another’s fortunes while comparatively poor, no
sooner become wealthy than they have to separate. Abram prevented
quarrel by separation. "Let us," he says, "come to an understanding.
And rather than be separate in heart, let us be separate in
habitation." It is always a sorrowful time in family history when it
comes to this, that those who have had a common purse and have not
been careful to know what exactly is theirs and what belongs to the
other members of the family, have at last to make a division and to
be as precise and documentary as if dealing with strangers. It is
always painful to be compelled to own that law can be more trusted
than love. and that legal forms are a surer barrier against
quarrelling than brotherly kindness. It is a confession we are
sometimes compelled to make, but never without a mixture of regret
and shame.
As yet the character of Lot has not been exhibited, and we can only
calculate from the relation he bears to Abram what his answer to the
proposal will probably be. We know that Abram has been the making of
his nephew, and that the land belongs to Abram; and we should expect
that in common decency Lot would set aside the generous offer of.
his uncle and demand that he only should determine the matter. "It
is not for me to make choice in a land which is wholly yours. My
future does not carry in it the import of yours. It is a small
matter what kind of subsistence I secure or where I find it. Choose
for yourself, and allot to me what is right." We see here what a
safeguard of happiness in life right feeling is. To be in right and
pleasant relations with the persons around us will save us from
error and sin even when conscience and judgment give no certain
decision. The heart which feels gratitude is beyond the need of
being schooled and compelled to do justly. To the man who is
affectionately disposed it is superfluous to insist upon the rights
of other persons. The instinct which tells a man what is due to
others and makes him sensitive to their wrongs will preserve him
from many an ignominious action which would degrade his whole life.
But such instinct was a-wanting in Lot. His character, though in
some respects admirable, had none of the generosity of Abram’s in
it. He had allowed himself on countless previous occasions to take
advantage of Abram’s unselfishness. Generosity is not always
infectious; often it encourages selfishness in child, relative, or
neighbour. And so Lot, instead of rivalling, traded on his uncle’s
magnanimity; and chose him all the plains of Jordan because in his
eye it was the richest part of the land.
This choice of Sodom as a dwelling-place was the great mistake of
Lot’s life. He is the type of that very large class of men who have
but one rule for determining them at the turning points of life. He
was swayed solely by the consideration of worldly advantage. He has
nothing deep, nothing high in him. He recognises no duty to Abram,
no gratitude, no modesty; he has no perception of spiritual
relations, no sense that God should have something to say in the
partition of the land. Lot may be acquitted of a good deal which at
first sight one is prompted to lay to his charge, but he cannot be
acquitted of showing an eagerness to better himself, regardless of
all considerations but the promise of wealth afforded by the
fertility of the Jordan valley. He saw a quick though dangerous road
to wealth. There seemed a certainty of success in his earthly
calling, a risk only of moral disaster. He shut his eyes to the risk
that he might grasp the wealth; and so doing, ruined both himself
and his family.
The situation is one which is ceaselessly repeated. To men in
business or in the cultivation of literature or art, or in one of
the professions, there are presented opportunities of attaining a
better position by cultivating the friendship or identifying oneself
with the practice of men whose society is not in itself desirable.
Society is made up of little circles, each of which has its own
monopoly of some social or commercial or political advantage, and
its own characteristic tone and enjoyments and customs. And if a man
will not join one of these circles and accommodate himself to the
mode of carrying on business and to the style of living it has
identified with itself, he must forego the advantages which entrance
to that circle would secure for him. As clearly as Lot saw that the
well-watered plain stretching away under the sunshine was the right
place to exercise his vocation as a flock-master, so do we see that
associated with such and such persons and recognised as one of them,
we shall be able more effectively than in any other position to use
whatever natural gifts we have, and win the recognition and the
profit these gifts seem to warrant. There is but one drawback. "The
men of Sodom were wicked and sinners before the Lord exceedingly."
There is a tone you do not like; you hesitate to identify yourself
with men who live solely and with cynical frankness only for gain;
whose every sentence betrays the contemptible narrowness of soul to
which worldliness condemns men; who live for money and who glory in
their shame.
The very nature of the world in which we live makes such temptation
universal. And to yield is common and fatal. We persuade ourselves
we need not enter into close relations with the persons we propose
to have business connections with. Lot would have been horrified,
that day he made his choice, had it been told him his daughters
would marry men of Sodom. But the swimmer who ventures into the
outer circle of the whirlpool finds that his own resolve not to go
further presents a very weak resistance to the water’s inevitable
suction. We fancy perhaps that to refuse the companionship of any
class of men is pharisaic; that we have no business to condemn the
attitude towards the Church, or the morality, or the style of living
adopted by any class of men among us. This is the mere cant of
liberalism. We do not condemn persons who suffer from smallpox, but
a smallpox hospital would be about the last place we should choose
for a residence. Or possibly we imagine we shall be able to carry
some better influences into the society we enter. A vain
imagination; the motive for choosing the society has already sapped
our power for good.
Many of the errors of worldly men only reveal their most disastrous
consequences in the second generation. Like some virulent diseases
they have a period of incubation. Lot’s family grew up in a very
different atmosphere from that which had nourished his own youth in
Abram’s tents. An adult and robust Englishman can withstand the
climate of India: but his children who are born in it cannot. And
the position in society which has been gained in middle life by the
carefully and hardily trained child of a God-fearing household may
not very visibly damage his own character, but may yet be absolutely
fatal to the morality of his children. Lot may have persuaded
himself he chose the dangerous prosperity of Sodom mainly for the
sake of his children; but in point of fact he had better have seen
them die of starvation in the most barren and parched desolation.
And the parent who disregards conscience and chooses wealth or
position, fancying that thus he benefits his children, will find to
his life-long sorrow that he has entangled them in unimagined
temptations.
But the man who makes Lot’s choice not only does a great injury to
his children, but cuts himself off from all that is best in life. We
are safe to say that after leaving Abram’s tents Lot never again
enjoyed unconstrainedly happy days. The men born and brought up in
Sodom were possibly happy after their kind and in their fashion; but
Lot was not. His soul was daily vexed. Many a time while hearing the
talk of the men his daughters had married, must Lot have gone out
with a sore heart, and looked to the distant hills that hid the
tents of Abram, and longed for an hour of the company he used to
enjoy. And the society to which you are tempted to join yourself may
not be unhappy, but you can take no surer means of beclouding,
embittering, and ruining your whole life than by joining it. You
cannot forget the thoughts you once had, the friendships you once
delighted in, the hopes that shed brightness through all your life.
You cannot blot out the ideal that once you cherished as the most
animating element of your life. Every day there will be that rising
in your mind which is in the sharpest contrast to the thoughts of
those with whom you are associated. You will despise them for their
shallow, worldly ideas and ways; but you will despise yourself still
more, being conscious that what they are through ignorance and
upbringing, you are in virtue of your own foolish and mean choice.
There is that in you which rebels against the superficial and
external measure by which they judge things, and yet you have
deliberately chosen these as your associates, and can only think
with heart-broken regret of the high thoughts that once visited you
and the hopes you have now no means of fulfilling. Your life is
taken out of your own hands; you find yourself in bondage to the
circumstances you have chosen; and you are learning in bitterness,
disappointment, and shame, that indeed "a man’s life consisteth not
in the abundance of the things which he possesseth." To determine
your life solely by the prospect of worldly success is to risk the
loss of the best things in life. To sacrifice friendship or
conscience to success in your calling is to sacrifice what is best
to what is lowest, and to bind yourself to the highest human
happiness. For happily the essential elements of the highest
happiness are as open to the poor as to the rich, to the
unsuccessful as to the successful-love of wife and children,
congenial and educating friendships, the knowledge of what the best
men have done and the wisest men have said; the pleasure and
impulse, the sentiments and beliefs which result from our knowledge
of the heroic deeds done from year to year among men; the enlivening
influence of examples that tell on all men alike, young and old,
rich and poor; the insight and strength of character that are won in
the hard wrestle with life; the growing consciousness that God is in
human life, that He is ours and that we are His-these things and all
that makes human life of value are universal as air and sunshine,
but must be missed by those who make the world their object.
Though in point of fact Lot cut himself off by his choice from
direct participation in the special inheritance to which Abram was
called by God, it might perhaps be too much to say that his choice
of the valley of Jordan was an explicit renunciation of the special
blessedness of those who find their joy in responding to God’s call
and doing His work in the world. It might also be extravagant to say
that his choice of the richest land was prompted by the feeling that
he was not included in the promise to Abram, and might as well make
the most of his present opportunities. But it is certain that
Abram’s generosity to Lot arose out of his sense that in God he
himself had abundant possession. In Egypt he had learned that in
order to secure all that is worth having a man need never resort to
duplicity, trickery, bold lying. He now learns that in order to
enter on his own God-provided lot, he need shut no other man out of
his. He is taught that to acknowledge amply the rights of other men
is the surest road to the enjoyment of his own rights. He is taught
that there is room in God’s plan for every man to follow his most
generous impulses and the highest views of life that visit him.
It was Abram’s simple belief that God’s promise was meant and was
substantial, that made him indifferent as to what Lot might choose.
His faith was judged in this scene, and was proved to be sound. This
man, whose very calling it was to own this land, could freely allow
Lot to choose the best of it. Why? Because he has learned that it is
not by any plan of his own he is to come into possession; that God
Who promised is to give him the land in His own way, and that his
part is to act uprightly, mercifully, like God. Wherever there is
faith, the same results will appear. He who believes that God is
pledged to provide for him cannot be greedy, anxious, covetous; can
only be liberal, even magnanimous. Any one can thus test his own
faith. If he does not find that what God promises weighs
substantially when put in the scales with gold: if he does not find
that the accomplishment of God’s purpose with him in the world is to
him the most valuable thing, and actually compels him to think
lightly of worldly position and ordinary success; if he does not
find that in point of fact the gains which content a man of the
world shrivel and lose interest, he may feel tolerably certain he
has no faith and is not counting as certain what God has promised.
It is commonly observed that wealth pursues the men who part with it
most freely. Abram had this experience. No sooner had he allowed Lot
to choose his portion than God gave him assurance that the whole
would be his. It is "the meek" who "inherit the earth." Not only
have they, in their very losses and while suffering wrong at the
hands of their fellows, a purer joy than those who wrong them; but
they know themselves heirs of God with the certainty of enjoying all
His possessions that can avail for their advantage. Declining to
devote themselves as living sacrifices to business they hold their
soul at leisure for what brings truest happiness, for friendship,
for knowledge, for charity. Even in this life they may be said to
inherit the earth, for all its richest fruits are theirs-the ground
may belong to other men, but the beauty of the landscape is theirs
without burden-and ever and anon they hear such words as were now
uttered to Abram. They alone are inclined or able to receive renewed
assurances that God is mindful of His promise and will abundantly
bless them. It is they who are in no haste to be rich, and are
content to abide in the retired hill-country where they can freely
assemble round God’s altar; it is they who seek first the kingdom of
God and make sure of that, whatever else they put in hazard, to whom
God’s encouragements come. You wonder at the certainty with which
others speak of hearing God’s voice and that so seldom you have the
joy of knowing that God is directing and encouraging you. Why should
you wonder, if you very well know that your attention is directed
mainly to the world, that your heart trembles and thrills with all
the fluctuations of your earthly hopes, that you wait for news and
listen to every hint that can affect your position in life? Can you
wonder that an ear trained to be so sensitive to the near earthly
sounds, should quite have lost the range of heavenly voices?
Of the assurance here given him Abram was probably much in need when
Lot had withdrawn with his flocks and servants. When the warmth of
feeling cooled and allowed the somewhat unpleasant facts of the case
to press upon his mind; and when he heard his shepherds murmuring
that, after all the strife they had maintained for their master’s
rights, he should have weakly yielded these to Lot; and when he
reflected, as now he inevitably would reflect, how selfish and
ungrateful Lot had shown himself to be, he must have been tempted to
think be had possibly made a mistake in dealing so generously with
such a man. This reflection on himself might naturally grow into a
reflection upon God, Who might have been expected so to order
matters as to give the best country to the best man. All such
reflections are precluded by the renewed grant he now receives of
the whole land.
It is always as difficult to govern our heart wisely after as before
making a sacrifice. It is as difficult to keep the will decided as
to make the original decision; and it is more difficult to think
affectionately of those for whom the sacrifice has been made, when
the change in their condition and our own is actually accomplished.
There is a natural reaction after a generous action which is not
always sufficiently resisted. And when we see that those who refuse
to make any sacrifices are more prosperous and less ruffled in
spirit than ourselves we are tempted to take matters into our own
hand, and, without waiting upon God, to use the world’s quick ways.
At such times we find how difficult it is to hold an advanced
position, and how much unbelief mingles with the sincerest faith,
and what vile dregs of selfishness sully the clearest generosity: we
find our need of God and of those encouragements and assistances He
can impart to the soul. Happy are we if we receive them and are
enabled thereby to be constant in the good we have begun; for all
sacrifice is good begun. And as Abram saw, when the cities of the
plain were destroyed, how kindly God had guided him; so when our
history is complete, we shall have no inclination to grumble at any
passage of our life which we entered by generosity and faith in God,
but shall see how tenderly God has held us back from much that our
soul has been ardently desiring, and which we thought would be the
making of us.
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