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COVENANT WITH ABRAM
Genesis 15
OF the nine Divine manifestations made during Abram’s life this
is the fifth. At Ur, at Kharran, at the oak of Moreh, at the
encampment between Bethel and Ai, and now at Mamre, he received
guidance and encouragement from God. Different terms are used
regarding these manifestations. Sometimes it is said "The Lord
appeared unto him"; here for the first time in the course of God’s
revelation occurs that expression which afterwards became normal,
"The word of the Lord came unto Abram." Throughout the subsequent
history this word of the Lord continues to come, often at long
intervals, but always meeting the occasion and needs of His people
and joining itself on to what had already been declared, until at
last the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, giving thus to all
men assurance of the nearness and profound sympathy of their God. To
repeat this revelation is impossible. A repetition of it would be a
denial of its reality. For a second life on earth is allowed to no
man; and were our Lord to live a second human life it were proof He
was no true man, but an anomalous, unaccountable. uninstructive,
appearance or simulacrum of a man.
But though these revelations of God are finished, though complete
knowledge of God is given in Christ, God comes to the individual
still through the Spirit Whose office it is to take of the things of
Christ and show them to us. And in doing so the law is observed
which we see illustrated here. God comes to a man with further
encouragement and light for a new step when be has conscientiously
used the light he already has. The temper that "seeks for a sign,"
and expects that some astounding providence should be sent to make
us religious is by no means obsolete. Many seem to expect that
before they act on the knowledge they have, they will receive more.
They put off giving themselves to the service of God under some kind
of impression that some striking event or much more distinct
knowledge is required to give them a decided turn to a religious
life. In so doing they invert God’s order. It is when we have
conscientiously followed such light as we have, and faithfully done
all that we know to be right, that God gives us further light. It
was immediately on the back of faithful action that Abram received
new help to his faith.
The time was seasonable for other reasons. Never did Abram feel more
in need of such assurance. He had been successful in his midnight
attack and had scattered the force from beyond Euphrates, but he
knew the temper of these Eastern monarchs well enough to be aware
that there was nothing they hailed with greater pleasure than a
pretext for extending their conquests and adding to their territory.
To Abram it must have appeared certain that the next campaigning
season would see his country invaded and his little encampment swept
away by the Eastern host. Most appropriate, therefore, are the
words: "Fear not, Abram: I am thy shield."
But another train of thoughts occupied Abram’s mind perhaps even
more unceasingly at this time. After busy engagement comes dulness;
after triumph, flatness and sadness. I have pursued kings, got
myself a great name, led captivity captive. Men are speaking of me
in Sodom, and finding that in me they have a useful and important
ally. But what is all this to my purpose? Am I any nearer my
inheritance? I have got all that men might think I needed; they may
be unable to understand why now, of all times, I should seem
heartless; but, O Lord, Thou knowest how empty these things seem to
me, and what wilt Thou give me? Abram could not understand why he
was kept so long waiting. The child given when he was a hundred
years old might equally have been given twenty-five years before,
when he first came to the land of Canaan. All Abram’s servants had
their children, there was no lack of young men born in his
encampment. He could not leave his tent without hearing the shouts
of other men’s children, and having them cling to his garments-but
"to me Thou hast given no seed; and lo! one born in mine house, a
slave, is mine heir."
Thus it often is that while a man is receiving much of what is
generally valued in the world, the one thing he himself most prizes
is beyond his reach. He has his hope irremovably fixed on something
which he feels would complete his life and make him a thoroughly
happy man; there is one thing which, above all else, would be a
right and helpful blessing to him. He speaks of it to God. For years
it has framed a petition for itself when no other desire could make
itself heard. Back and back to this his heart comes, unable to find
rest in anything so long as this is withheld. He cannot help feeling
that it is God who is keeping it from him. He is tempted to say,
"What is the use of all else to me, why give me things Thou knowest
I care little for, and reserve the one thing on which my happiness
depends?" As Abram might have have said: "Why make me a great name
in the land, when there is no one to keep it alive in men’s
memories: why increase my possessions when there is none to inherit
but a stranger?"
Is there then any resulting benefit to character in this so common
experience of delayed expectations? In Abram’s case there certainly
was. It was in these years he was drawn close enough to God to hear
Him say, "I am thy exceeding great reward." He learned in the
multitude of his debating about God’s promise and the delay of its
fulfilment, that God was more than all His gifts. He had started as
a mere hopeful colonist and founder of a family; these twenty-five
years of disappointment made him the friend of God and the Father of
the Faithful. Slowly do we also pass from delight in God’s gifts to
delight in Himself, and often by a similar experience. From what
have you received truest and deepest pleasure in life? Is it not
from your friendships? Not from what your friends have given you or
done for you; rather from what you have done for them; but chiefly
from your affectionate intercourse. You, being persons, must find
your truest joy in persons, in personal love, personal goodness and
wisdom. But friendship has its crown in the friendship of God. The
man who knows God as his friend and is more certain of God’s
goodness and wisdom and steadfastness than he can be of the worth of
the man he has loved and trusted and delighted in from his boyhood,
the man who is always accompanied by a latent sense of God’s
observation and love, is truly living in the peace of God that
passeth understanding. This raises him above the touch of worldly
losses and restores him in all distresses, even to the surprise of
observers; his language is, "There may be many that will say, Who
will show us any good? Lord, lift Thou up the light of Thy
countenance upon us. Thou hast put gladness in my heart more than in
the time that their corn and their wine increased."
But evidently there was still another feeling in Abram’s heart at
this particular point in his career. He could not bear to think he
was to miss that very thing which God had promised him. The keen
yearning for an heir which God’s promise had stirred in him was not
lost sight of in the great saying, "I am thy exceeding great
reward." When he was journeying back to his encampment not a
shoestring richer than he left, and while he heard his men,
disappointed of booty, murmuring that he should be so scrupulous, he
cannot but have felt some soreness that he should be set before his
little world as a man who had the enjoyment neither of this world’s
rewards nor of God. And here must have come the strong temptation
that comes to every man: Might it not be as well to take what he
could get, to enjoy what was put fairly within his reach, instead of
waiting for what seemed so uncertain as God’s gift? It is painful to
be exposed to the observation of others or to our own observation,
as persons who, on the one hand, refuse to seek happiness in the
world’s way, and yet are not finding it in God. You have possibly
with some magnanimity rejected a tempting offer because there were
conditions attached to which conscience could not reconcile itself;
but you find that you are in consequence suffering greater
privations than you expected and that no providential intervention
seems to be made to reward your conscientiousness. Or you suddenly
become aware that though you have for years refused to be mirthful
or influential or successful or comfortable in the world’s way and
on the world’s terms, you are yet getting no substitute for what you
refuse. You will not join the world’s mirth, but then you are morose
and have no joy of any kind. You will not use means you disapprove
of for influencing men, but neither have you the influence of a
strong Christian character. In fact by giving up the world you seem
to have contracted and weakened instead of enlarging and deepening
your life.
In such a condition we can but imitate Abram and cast ourselves more
resolutely on God. If yon find it most weary and painful to deny
yourself in these special ways which have fallen to be your
experience, you can but utter your complaint to God, assured that in
Him you will find consideration. He knows why He has called you, why
He has given you strength to abandon worldly hopes; He appreciates
your adherence to Him and He will renew your faith and hope. If day
by day you are saying, "Lead Thou me on," if you say, "What wilt
Thou give me?" not in complaint but in lively expectation,
encouragement enough will be yours.
The means by which Abram’s faith was renewed were appropriate. He
has been seeing in the tumult and violence and disappointment of.
the world much to suggest the thought that God’s promise could never
work itself out in the face of the rude realities around him. So God
leads him out and points him to the stars, each one called by his
name, and thus reminds the Chaldaean who had so often gazed at and
studied them in their silent steady courses, that his God has
designs of infinite sweep and comprehension; that throughout all
space His worlds obey His will and all harmoniously play their part
in the execution of His vast design; that we and all our affairs are
in a strong hand, but moving in orbits so immense that small
portions of them do not show us their direction and may seem to be
out of course. Abram is led out alone with the mighty God, and to
every saved soul there comes such a crisis when before God’s majesty
we stand awed and humbled, all complaints hushed, and indeed our
personal interests disappear or become so merged in God’s purposes
that we think only of Him; our mistakes and wrong-doing are seen now
not so much as bringing misery upon ourselves as interrupting and
perverting His purposes, and His word comes home to our hearts as
stable and satisfying.
It was in this condition that Abram believed God, and He counted it
to him for righteousness. Probably if we read this without Paul’s
commentary on it in the fourth of Romans, we should suppose it meant
no more than that Abram’s faith, exercised as it was in trying
circumstances, met with God’s cordial approval. The faith or belief
here spoken of was a resolute renewal of the feeling which had
brought him out of Chaldaea. He put himself fairly and finally into
God’s hand to be blessed in God’s way and in God’s time, and this
act of resignation, this resolve that he would not force his own way
in the world but would wait upon God, was looked upon by God as
deserving the name of righteousness, just as much as honesty and
integrity in his conduct with Lot or with his servants. Paul begs us
to notice that an act of faith accepting God’s favour is a very
different thing from a work done for the sake of winning God’s
favour. God’s favour is always a matter of grace, it is favour
conferred on the undeserving; it is never a matter of debt, it is
never favour conferred because it has been won. To put this beyond
doubt he appeals to this righteousness of Abram’s. How, he asks, did
Abram achieve righteousness? Not by observing ordinances and
commandments; for there were none to observe; but by trusting God,
by believing that already without any working or winning of his, God
loved him and designed blessedness for him; in short by referring
his prospect of happiness and usefulness wholly to God and not at
all to himself. This is the essential quality of the godly; and
having this, Abram had that root which produced all actual
righteousness and likeness to God.
It is sufficiently obvious in such a life as Abram’s why faith is
the one thing needful. Faith is required because it is only when a
man believes God’s promise and rests in His love that he can
co-operate with God in severing himself from iniquitous prospects
and in so living for spiritual ends as to enter the life and the
blessedness God calls him to. The boy who does not believe his
father, when he comes to him in the midst of his play and tells him
he has something for him which will please him still better, suffers
the penalty of unbelief by losing what his father would have given
him. All missing of true enjoyment and blessedness results from
unbelief in God’s promise. Men do not walk in God’s ways because
they do not believe in God’s ends. They do not believe that
spiritual ends are as substantial and desirable as those that are
physical.
Abram’s faith is easily recognised, because not only had he not
wrought for the blessing God promised him, but it was impossible for
him even to see how it could be achieved. That which God promised
was apparently quite beyond the reach of human power. It serves then
as an admirable illustration of the essence of faith; and Paul uses
it as such. It is not because faith is the root of all actual
righteousness that Paul describes it as "imputed for righteousness."
It is because faith at once gives a man possession of what no amount
of working could ever achieve. God now offers in Christ
righteousness, that is to say, justification, the forgiveness of
sins and acceptance with God with all the fruits of this acceptance,
the indwelling Divine Spirit and life everlasting. He offers this
freely as he offered to Abram what Abram could never have won for
himself. And all that we are asked to do is to accept it. This is
all we are asked to do in order to our becoming the forgiven and
accepted children of God. After becoming so, there of course remains
an infinite amount of service to be rendered, of work to be done, of
self-discipline to be undergone. But in answer to the awakened
sinner’s enquiry, "What must I do to be saved," Paul replies, "You
are to do nothing; nothing you can do can win God’s favour, because
that favour is already yours; nothing you can do can achieve the
rectification of your present condition, but Christ has achieved it.
Believe that God is with you and that Christ can deliver you and
commit yourself cordially to the life you are called to, hopeful
that what is promised will be fulfilled."
Abram’s faith, cordial as it was, yet was not independent of some
sensible sign to maintain it. The sign given was twofold: the
smoking furnace and a prediction of the sojourn of Abram’s posterity
in Egypt. The symbols were similar to those by which on other
occasions the presence of God was represented. Fire cleansing,
consuming, and unapproachable, seemed to be the natural emblem of
God’s holiness. In the present instance it was especially suitable,
because the manifestation was made after sundown and when no other
could have been seen. The cutting up of the carcases and passing
between the pieces was one of the customary forms of contract. It
was one of the many devices men have fallen upon to make sure of one
another’s word. That God should condescend to adopt these modes of
pledging Himself to men is significant testimony to His love; a love
so resolved on accomplishing the good of men that it resents no
slowness of faith and accommodates itself to unworthy suspicions. It
makes itself as obvious and pledges itself with as strong guarantees
to men as if it were the love of a mortal whose feelings might
change and who had not clearly foreseen all consequences and issues.
The prediction of the long sojourn of Abram’s posterity in Egypt was
not only helpful to those who had to endure the Egyptian bondage,
but also to Abram himself. He no doubt felt the temptation, from
which at no time the Church has been free, to consider himself the
favourite of heaven before whose interests all other interests must
bow. He is here taught that other men’s rights must be respected as
well as his, and that not one hour before absolute justice requires
it, shall the land of the Amorites be given to his posterity. And
that man is considerably past the rudimentary knowledge of God who
understands that every act of God springs from justice and not from
caprice, and that no creature upon earth is sooner or later unjustly
dealt with, by the Supreme Ruler. In the life of Abram it becomes
visible, how, by living with God and watching for every expression
of His will, a man’s knowledge of the Divine nature enlarges; and it
is also interesting to observe that shortly after this he grounds
all his pleading for Sodom on the truth he had learned here: "Shall
not the Judge of all the earth do right?"
The announcement that a long interval must elapse before the promise
was fulfilled must no doubt have been a shock to Abram; and yet it
was sobering and educative. It is a great step we take when we come
clearly to understand that God has a great deal to do with us before
we can fully inherit the promise. For God’s promise, so far from
making everything in the future easy and bright, is that which above
all else discloses how stern a reality life is; how severe and
thorough that discipline must be which makes us capable of achieving
God’s purposes with us. A horror of great darkness may well fall
upon the man who enters into covenant with God, who binds himself to
that Being whom no pain nor sacrifice can turn aside from the
pursuance of aims once approved. When we look forward and consider
the losses, the privations, the self-denials, the delays, the pains,
the keen and real discipline, the lowliness of the life to which
fellowship with God leads men, darkness and gloom and smoke darken
our prospect and discourage us; but the smoke is that which arises
from a purifying fire that purges away all that prevents us from
living spiritually: a darkness very different from that which
settles over the life which amidst much present brightness carries
in it the consciousness that its course is downwards, that the lows
it suffers are deadening, that its sun is steadily nearing its
setting and that everlasting night awaits it.
But over all other feelings this solemn transacting with God must
have produced in Abram a humble ecstasy of confidence. The wonderful
mercy and kindness of God in thus binding Himself to a weak and
sinful man cannot but have given him new thoughts of God and new
thoughts of himself. With fresh elevation of mind and superiority to
ordinary difficulties and temptations would he return to his tent
that night. In how different a perspective would all things stand to
him now that the Infinite God had come so near to him. Things which
yesterday fretted or terrified him seemed now remote: matters which
had occupied his thought he did not now notice or remember. He was
now the Friend of God, taken up into a new world of thoughts and
hopes; hiding in his heart the treasure of God’s covenant, brooding
over the infinite significance and hopefulness of his position as
God’s ally.
For indeed this was a most extraordinary and a most encouraging
event. The Infinite God drew near to Abram and made a contract with
him. God as it were said to him, I wish you to count upon Me, to
make sure of Me: I therefore pledge Myself by these accustomed forms
to be your Friend.
But it was not as an isolated person, nor for his own private
interests alone that Abram was thus dealt with by God. It was as a
medium of universal blessing that he was taken into covenant with
God. The kindness of God which he experienced was merely an
intimation of the kindness all men would experience. The laying
aside of unapproachable dignity and entrance into covenant with a
man was the proclamation of His readiness to be helpful to all and
to bring Himself within reach of all. That you may have a God at
hand He thus brought Himself down to men and human ways, that your
life may not be vain and useless, dark and misguided, and that you
may find that you have a part in a well-ordered universe in which a
holy God cares for all and makes His strength and wisdom available
for all. Do not allow these intimations of His mercy to go for
nothing, but use them as intended for your guidance and
encouragement.
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