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ABRAM IN EGYPT
Gen 12:6-20
ABRAM still journeying southward, and not as yet knowing where
his shifting camp was finally to be pitched, came at last to what
may be called the heart of Palestine, the rich district of Shechem.
Here stood the oak of Moreh, a well; known landmark and favourite
meeting-place. In after years every meadow in this plain was owned
and occupied, every vineyard on the slopes of Ebal fenced off, every
square yard specified in some title-deed. But as yet the country
seems not to have been densely populated. There was room for a
caravan like Abraham’s to move freely through the country; liberty
for a far-stretching encampment such as his to occupy the lovely
vale that lies between Ebal and Gerizim. As he rested here and
enjoyed the abundant pasture, or as he viewed the land from one of
the neighbouring hills, the Lord appeared to him and made him aware
that this was the land designed for him. Here accordingly, under the
spreading oak round whose boughs had often clung the smoke of
idolatrous sacrifice, Abram erects an altar to the living God in
devout acceptance of the gift, taking possession as it were of the
land jointly for God and for himself. Little harm will come of
worldly possessions so taken and so held.
As Abram traversed the land, wondering what were the limits of his
inheritance, it may have seemed far too large for his household.
Soon he experiences a difficulty of quite the opposite kind; he is
unable to find in it sustenance for his followers. Any notion that
God’s friendship would raise him above the touch of such troubles as
were incident to the times, places, and circumstances in which his
life was to be spent, is quickly dispelled. The children of God are
not exempt from any of the common calamities; they are only expected
and aided to be calmer and wiser in their endurance and use of them.
That we suffer the same hardships as all other men is no proof that
we are not eternally associated with God, and ought never to
persuade us our faith has been in vain.
Abram, as he looked at the bare, brown, cracked pastures and at the
dry watercourses filled only with stones, thought of the ever-fresh
plains of Mesopotamia, the lovely gardens of Damascus, the rich
pasturage of the northern borders of Canaan; but he knew enough of
his own heart to make him very careful lest these remembrances
should make him turn back. No doubt he had come to the promised land
expecting it to be the real Utopia, the Paradise which had haunted
his thoughts as he lay among the hills of Ur watching his flocks
under the brilliant midnight sky. No doubt he expected that here all
would be easy and bright, peaceful and luxurious. His first
experience is of famine. He has to look on his herd melting away,
his favourite cattle losing their appearance, his servants murmuring
and obliged to scatter. In his dreams he must have night after night
seen the old country, the green breadth of the land that Euphrates
watered, the heavy-headed corn bending before the warm airs of his
native land; but morning by morning he wakes to the same anxieties,
to the sad reality of parched and burnt-up pastures, shepherds
hanging about with gloomy looks, his own heart distressed and
failing. He was also a stranger here who could not look for the help
an old resident might have counted on. It was probably years since
God had made any sign to him. Was the promised land worth having,
after all? Might he not be better off among his old friends in
Charran? Should he not brave their ridicule and return? He will not
so much as make it possible to return. He will not even for
temporary relief go north towards his old country, but will go to
Egypt, where he cannot stay, and from which he must return to
Canaan.
Here, then, is a man who plainly believes that God’s promise cannot
fail; that God will magnify His promise, and that it above all else
is worth waiting for. He believes that the man who seeks without
flinching, and through all disappointment and bareness, to do God’s
will, shall one day have an abundantly satisfying reward, and that
meanwhile association with God in carrying forward His abiding
purposes with men is more for a man to live upon than the cattle
upon a thousand hills. And thus famine rendered to Abram no small
service if it quickened within him the consciousness that the call
of God was not to ease and prosperity, to landowning and
cattle-breeding, but to be God’s agent on earth for the fulfilment
of remote but magnificent purposes. His life might seem to be down’
among the commonplace vicissitudes, pasture might fail, and his
well-stocked camp melt away, but out of his mind there could not
fade the future God had revealed to him. If it had been his ambition
to give his name to a tribe and be known as a wide-ruling chief,
that ambition is now eclipsed by his desire to be a step towards the
fulfilment of that ‘real end for which the whole world is.' The
belief that God has called him to do His work has lifted him above
concern about personal matters; life has taken a new meaning in his
eyes by its connection with the Eternal.
The extraordinary country to which Abram betook himself, and which
was destined to exercise so profound an influence on his
descendants, had even at this early date attained a high degree of
civilisation. The origin of this civilisation is shrouded in
obscurity, as the source of the great river to which the country
owes its prosperity for many centuries kept the secret of its birth.
As yet scholars are unable to tell us with certainty what Pharaoh
was on the throne when Abram went down into Egypt. The monuments
have preserved the effigies of two distinct types of rulers; the one
simple, kindly, sensible, stately, handsome, fearless, as of men
long accustomed to the throne. These are the faces of the native
Egyptian rulers. The other type of face is heavy and massive, proud
and strong but full of care, with neither the handsome features nor
the look of kindliness and culture which belong to the other. These
are the faces of the famous Shepherd kings who held Egypt in
subjection, probably at the very time when Abram was in the land.
For our purposes it matters little whether Abram’s visit occurred
while the country was under native or under foreign rule, for long
before the Shepherd kings entered Egypt it enjoyed a complete and
stable civilisation. Whatever dynasty Abram found on the throne, he
certainly found among the people a more refined social life than he
had seen in his native city, a much purer religion, and a much more
highly developed moral code, He must have kept himself entirely
aloof from Egyptian society if he failed to discover that they
believed in a judgment after death, and that this judgment proceeded
upon a severe moral code. Before admission into the Egyptian heaven
the deceased must swear that "he has not stolen nor slain any one
intentionally; that he has not allowed his devotions to be seen;
that he has not been guilty of hypocrisy or lying; that he has not
calumniated any one nor fallen into drunkenness or adultery; that he
has not turned away his ear from the words of truth; that he has
been no idle talker; that he has not slighted the king or his
father." To a man in Abram’s state of mind the Egyptian creed and
customs must have conveyed many valuable suggestions.
But virtuous as in many respects the Egyptians were, Abram’s fears
as he approached their country were by no means groundless. The
event proved that whatever Sarah’s age and appearance at this time
were, his fears were something more than the fruit of a husband’s
partiality. Possibly he may have heard the ugly story which has
recently been deciphered from an old papyrus, and which tells how
one of the Pharaohs, acting on the advice of his princes, sent armed
men to fetch a beautiful woman and make away with her husband. But
knowing the risk he ran, why did he go? He contemplated the
possibility of Sarah’s being taken from him; but, if this should
happen, what became of the promised seed? We cannot suppose that,
driven by famine from the promised land, he had lost all hope
regarding the fulfilment of the other part of the promise. Probably
his idea was that some of the great men might take a fancy to Sarah,
and that he would so temporise with them and ask for her such large
gifts as would hold them off for a while until he could provide for
his people and get clear out of the land. It had not occurred to him
that she might be taken to the palace. Whatever his idea of the
probable course of events was, his proposal to guide them by
disguising his true relationship to Sarah was unjustifiable. And his
feelings during these weeks in Egypt must have been far from
enviable as he learned that of all virtues the Egyptians set
greatest store by truth, and that lying was the vice they held in
greatest abhorrence.
Here then was the whole promise and purpose of God in a most
precarious position; the land abandoned, the mother of the promised
seed in a harem through whose guards no force on earth could
penetrate. Abram could do nothing but go helplessly about, thinking
what a fool he had been, and wishing himself well back among the
parched hills of Bethel. Suddenly there is a panic in the royal
household; and Pharaoh is made aware that he was on the brink of
what he himself considered a great sin. Besides effecting its
immediate purpose, this visitation might have taught Pharaoh that a
man cannot safely sin within limits prescribed by himself. He had
not intended such evil as he found himself just saved from
committing. But had he lived with perfect purity, this liability to
fall into transgression, shocking to himself, could not have
existed. Many sins of most painful consequence we commit, not of
deliberate purpose, but because our previous life has been careless
and lacking in moral tone. We are mistaken if we suppose that we can
sin within a certain safe circle and never go beyond it.
By this intervention on God’s part Abram was saved from the
consequences of his own scheme, but he was not saved from the
indignant rebuke of the Egyptian monarch. This rebuke indeed did not
prevent him from a repetition of the same conduct in another
country, conduct which was met with similar indignation: "What have
I offended thee, that thou hast brought on me and on my kingdom this
great sin?" Thou hast done deeds unto me that ought not to be done.
What sawest thou that thou hast done this thing? This rebuke did not
seem to sink deeply into the conscience of Abram’s descendants, for
the Jewish history is full of instances in which leading men do not
shrink from manoeuvre, deceit, and lying. Yet it is impossible to
suppose that Abram’s conception of God was not vastly enlarged by
this incident, and this especially in two particulars.
(1) Abram must have received a new impression regarding God’s truth.
It would seem that as yet he had no very clear idea of God’s
holiness. He had the idea of God which Mohammedans entertain, and
past which they seem unable to get. He conceived of God as the
Supreme Ruler; he had a firm belief in the unity of God and probably
a hatred of idolatry and a profound contempt for idolaters. He
believed that this Supreme God could always and easily accomplish
His will, and that the voice that inwardly guided him was the voice
of God. His own character had not yet been deepened and dignified by
prolonged intercourse with God and by close observation of His
actual ways; and so as yet he knows little of what constitutes the
true glory of God.
For learning that truth is an essential attribute of God he could
not have gone to a better school than Egypt. His own reliance on
God’s promise might have been expected to produce in him a high
esteem for truth and a clear recognition of its essential place in
the Divine character. Apparently it had only partially had this
effect. The heathen, therefore, must teach him. Had not Abram seen
the look of indignation and injury on the face of Pharaoh, he might
have left the land feeling that his scheme had succeeded admirably.
But as he went at the head of his vastly increased household, the
envy of many who saw his long train of camels and cattle, he would
have given up all could he have blotted from his mind’s eye the
reproachful face of Pharaoh and nipped out this entire episode from
his life. He was humbled both by his falseness and his foolishness.
He had told a lie, and told it when truth would have served him
better. For the very precaution he took in passing off Sarai as his
sister was precisely what encouraged Pharaoh to take her, and
produced the whole misadventure. It was the heathen monarch who
taught the father of the faithful his first lesson in God’s
holiness.
What he so painfully learned we must all learn, that God does not
need lying for the attainment of His ends, and that double-dealing
is always short-sighted and the proper precursor of shame.
Frequently men are tempted like Abram to seek a God-protected and
God-prospered life by conduct that is not thoroughly
straightforward. Some of us who statedly ask God to bless our
endeavours, and who have no doubt that God approves the ends we seek
to accomplish, do yet adopt such means of attaining our ends as not
even men with any high sense of honour would countenance. To save
ourselves from trouble, inconvenience, or danger, we are tempted to
evasions and shifts which are not free from guilt. The more one sees
of life, the higher value does he set on truth. Let lying be called
by whatever flattering title men please-let it pass for diplomacy,
smartness, self-defence, policy, or civility-it remains the device
of the coward, the absolute bar to free and healthy intercourse, a
vice which diffuses itself through the whole character and makes
growth impossible. Trade and commerce are always hampered and
retarded, and often overwhelmed in disaster, by the determined and
deliberate doubleness of those who engage in them; charity is
minimised and withheld from its proper objects by the suspiciousness
engendered in us by the almost universal falseness of men; and the
habit of making things seem to others what they are not, reacts upon
the man himself and makes it difficult for him to feel the abiding
effective reality of anything he has to do with or even of his own
soul. If then we are to know the living and true God we must
ourselves be true, transparent, and living in the light as He is the
Light. If we are to reach His ends we must adopt His means and
abjure all crafty contrivances of our own. If we are to be His heirs
and partners in the work of the world, we must first be His
children, and show that we have attained our majority by manifesting
an indubitable resemblance to His own clear truth.
(2) But whether Abram fully learned this lesson or not, there can be
little doubt that at this time he did receive fresh and abiding
impressions of God’s faithfulness and sufficiency. In Abram’s first
response to God’s call he exhibited a remarkable independence and
strength of character. His abandonment of home and kindred, on
account of a religious faith which he alone possessed, was the act
of a man who relied much more on himself than on others, and who had
the courage of his convictions. This qualification for playing a
great part in human affairs he undoubtedly had. But he had also the
defects of his qualities. A weaker man would have shrunk from going
into Egypt and would have preferred to see his flocks dwindle rather
than take so venturesome a step. No such hesitations could trammel
Abram’s movements. He felt himself equal to all occasions. That part
of his character which was reproduced in his grandson Jacob, a
readiness to rise to every emergency that called for management and
diplomacy, an aptitude for dealing with men and using them for his
purposes-this came to the front now! To all the timorous suggestions
of his household he had one reply: Leave it all to me: I will bring
you through. So he entered Egypt confident that, single-handed, he
could cope with their Pharaohs, priests, magicians, guards, judges,
warriors; and find his way through the finely-meshed net that held
and examined every person and action in the land.
He left Egypt in a much more healthy state of mind, practically
convinced of his own inability to work his way to the happiness God
had promised him, and equally convinced of God’s faithfulness and
power to bring him through all the embarrassments and disasters into
which his own folly and sin might bring him. His own confidence and
management had placed God’s promise in a position of extreme hazard;
and without the intervention of God Abram saw that he could neither
recover the mother of the promised seed nor return to the land of
promise. Abram is put to shame even in the eyes of his household
slaves; and with what burning shame must he have stood before Sarai
and Pharaoh. and received back his wife from him whose wickedness he
had feared, but who so far from meaning sin, as Abram suspected, was
indignant that Abram should have made it even possible. He returned
to Canaan humbled and very little disposed to feel confident in his
own powers of managing in emergencies; but quite assured that God
might at all times be relied on. He was convinced that God was not
depending upon him, but he upon God. He saw that God did not trust
to his cleverness and craft, no, nor even to his willingness to do
and endure God’s will, but that He was trusting in Himself, and that
by His faithfulness to His own promise, by His watchfulness and
providence, He would bring Abram through all the entanglements
caused by his own poor ideas of the best way to work out God’s ends
and attain to His blessing. He saw, in a word, that the future of
the world lay not with Abram but with God.
This certainly was a great and needful step in the knowledge of God.
Thus early and thus unmistakably was man taught in how profound and
comprehensive a sense God is his Saviour. Commonly it takes a man a
long time to learn that it is God who is saving him, but one day he
learns it. He learns that it is not his own faith but God’s
faithfulness that saves him. He perceives that he needs God
throughout, from first to last; not only to make him offers, but to
enable him to accept them; not only to incline him to accept them
today, but to maintain within him at all times this same
inclination. He learns that God not only makes him a promise and
leaves him to find his own way to what is promised: but that He is
with him always, disentangling him day by day from the results of
his own folly and securing for him not only possible but actual
blessedness.
Few discoveries are so welcome and gladdening to the soul. Few give
us the same sense of God’s nearness and sovereignty; few make us
feel so deeply the dignity and importance of our own salvation and
career. This is God’s affair; a matter in which are involved not
merely our personal interests, but God’s responsibility and
purposes. God calls us to be His, and He does not send us a-warring
on our own charges, but throughout furnishes us with everything we
need. When we go down to Egypt, when we quite diverge from the path
that leads to the promised land and worldly straits tempt us to turn
our back upon God’s altar and seek relief by our own arrangements
and devices, when we forget for a while how God has identified our
interests with His own and tacitly abjure the vows we have silently
registered before Him, even then He follows us and watches over us
and lays His hand upon us and bids us back. And this only is our
hope. Not in any determination of our own to cleave to Him and to
live in faith on His promise can we trust. If we have this
determination, let us cherish it, for this is God’s present means of
leading us onwards. But should this determination fail, the shame
with which you recognise your want of steadfastness may prove a
stronger bond to hold you to Him than the bold confidence with which
to-day you view the future. The waywardness, the foolishness, the
obstinate depravity that cause you to despair, God will conquer.
With untiring patience, with all-foreseeing love, He stands by you
and will bring you through. His gifts and calling are without
repentance.
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