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THE COVENANT SEALED
Genesis 17
ACCORDING to the dates here given fourteen years had passed since
Abram had received any intimation of God’s will regarding him. Since
the covenant had been made some twenty years before, no direct
communication had been received; and no message of any kind since
Ishmael’s birth. It need not, therefore, surprise us that we are
often allowed to remain for years in a state of suspense, uncertain
about the future, feeling that we need more light and yet unable to
find it. All truth is not discovered in a day, and if that on which
we are to found for eternity take us twenty years or a life’s
experience to settle it in its place, why should we on this account
be overborne with discouragement? They who love the truth and can as
little abstain from seeking it as the artist can abstain from
admiring what is lovely, will assuredly have their reward. To be
expectant yet not impatient, unsatisfied yet not unbelieving, to
hold mind and heart open, assured that light is sown for the upright
and that all that is has lessons for the teachable, this is our
proper attitude.
Think you, ‘mid all this mighty sum
Of things for ever speaking,
That nothing of itself will come,
But we must still be seeking?
We appreciate the significance of a revelation in proportion as we
understand the state of mind to which it is made. Abram’s state of
mind is disclosed in the exclamation: "Oh, that Ishmael might live
before Thee!" He had learned to love the bold, brilliant,
domineering boy. He saw how the men liked to serve him and how proud
they were of the young chief. No doubt his wild intractable ways
often made his father anxious. Sarah was there to point out and
exaggerate all his faults and to prognosticate mischief. But there
he was, in actual flesh and blood, full of life and interest in
everything, daily getting deeper into the affections of Abram, who
allowed and could not but allow his own life to revolve very much
around the dashing, attractive lad. So that the reminder that he was
not the promised heir was not entirely welcome. When he was told
that the heir of promise was to be Sarah’s child, he could not
repress the somewhat peevish exclamation: "Oh, that Ishmael might
serve Thy turn!" Why call me off again from this actual attainment
to the vague, shadowy, nonexistent heir of promise, who surely can
never have the brightness of eye and force of limb and lordly ways
of this Ishmael? Would that what already exists in actual substance
before the eye might satisfy Thee and fulfil Thine intention and
supersede the necessity of further waiting! Must I again loosen my
hold, and part with my chief attainment? Must I cut my moorings and
launch again upon this ocean of faith with a horizon always receding
and that seems absolutely boundless?
We are familiar with this state of mind. We wish God would leave us
alone. We have found a very attractive substitute for what He
promises, and we resent being reminded that our substitute is not,
after all, the veritable, eternal, best possession. It satisfies our
taste, our intellect, our ambition; it sets us on a level with other
men and gives us a place in the world; but now and again we feel a
void it does not fill. We have attained comfortable circumstances,
success in our profession, our life has in it that which attracts
applause and sheds a brilliance over it; and we do not like being
told that this is not all. Our feeling is Oh, that this might do!
that this might be accepted as perfect attainment! it satisfies me
(all but a little bit); might it not satisfy God? Why summon me
again away from domestic happiness, intellectual enjoyment,
agreeable occupations, to what really seems so unattainable as
perfect fellowship with God in the fulfilment of His promise? Why
spend all my life in waiting and seeking for high spiritual things
when I have so much with which I cart be moderately satisfied? For
our complaint often is not that God gives so little but that He
offers too much, more than we care to have; that He never will let
us be content with anything short of what perfectly fulfils His
perfect love and purpose.
This being Abram’s state of mind, he is aroused from it by the
words: "I am the Almighty God; walk before Me and be thou perfect."
I am the Almighty God, able to fulfil your highest hopes and
accomplish for you the brightest ideal that ever My words set before
you. There is no need of paring down the-promise till it square with
human probabilities, no need of relinquishing one hope it has
begotten, no need of adopting some interpretation of it which may
make it seem easier to fulfil, and no need of striving to fulfil it
in any second-rate way. All possibility lies in this: I am the
Almighty God. Walk before Me and be thou perfect, therefore. Do not
train your eye to earthly distances and earthly magnitudes and limit
your hope accordingly, but live in the presence of the Almighty God.
Do not defer the advices of conscience and of your purest
aspirations to some other possible world; do not settle down at the
low level of godless nature and of the men around you; do not give
way to what you yourself know to be weakness and evidence of defeat;
do not let self-indulgence take the place of My commandments,
indolence supplant resolution and the likelihoods of human
calculation obliterate the hopes stirred by the Divine call: Be thou
perfect. Is not this a summons that comes appropriately to every
man? Whatever be our contentment, our attainments, our possessions,
a new light is shed upon our condition when we measure it by God’s
idea and God’s resources. Is my life God’s ideal? Does that which
satisfies me satisfy Him?
The purpose of God’s present appearance to Abram was to renew the
covenant, and this He does in terms so explicit, so pregnant, so
magnificent that Abram must have seen more distinctly than ever that
he was called to play a very special part in God’s providence. That
kings should spring from him, a mere pastoral nomad in an alien
country, could not suggest itself to Abram as a likely thing to
happen. Indeed, though a line of kings or two lines of kings did
spring from him through Isaac, the terms of the prediction seem
scarcely exhausted by that fulfilment. And accordingly Paul without
hesitation or reserve transfers this prediction to a spiritual
region, and is at pains to show that the many nations of whom Abram
was to be the father, were not those who inherited his blood, his
natural appearance, his language and earthly inheritance, but those
who inherited his spiritual qualities and the heritage in God to
which his faith gave him entrance. And he argues that no difference
of race or disadvantages of worldly position can prevent any man
from serving himself heir to Abram, because the seed, to whom as
well as to Abram the promise was made, was Christ, and in Christ
there is neither Jew nor Gentile, bond nor free, but all are one.
In connection then with this covenant in which God promised that He
would be a God to Abram and to his seed, two points of interest to
us emerge. First that Christ is Abram’s heir. In His use of God’s
promise we see its full significance. In His life-long appropriation
of God we see what God meant when He said, "I will be a God to thee
and to thy seed." We find our Lord from the first living as one who
felt His life encompassed by God, embraced and comprehended in that
higher life which God lives through all and in all. His life was all
and whole a life in God. He recognised what it is to have a God, one
Whose will is supreme and unerringly good, Whose love is constant
and eternal, Who is the first and the last, beyond Whom and from
under Whom we can never pass. He moved about in the world in so
perfectly harmonious a correspondence with God, so merging Himself
in God and His purpose and with so unhesitating a reliance upon Him,
that He seemed and was but a manifestation of God, God’s will
embodied, God’s child, God expressing Himself in human nature. He
showed us once for all the blessedness of true dependence, fidelity
and faith. He showed us how that simple promise "I will be a God to
thee," received in faith, lifts the human life into fellowship with
all that is hopeful and inspiring, with all that is purifying, with
all that is real and abiding.
But a second point is, that Jesus was the heir of Abram not merely
because He was his descendant, a Jew with all the advantages of the
Jew, but because, like Abram, He was full of faith. God was the
atmosphere of His life. But He claimed God not because He was
Jewish, but because He was human. Through the Jews God had made
Himself known, but it was to what was human not to what was Jewish
He appealed. And it was as Son of man not as son of Israel or of
Adam that Jesus responded to God and lived with Him as His God. Not
by specially Jewish rites did Jesus approach and rest in God, but by
what is universal and human, by prayer to the Father, by loving
obedience, by faith and submission. And thus we too may be
joint-heirs with Christ and possess God. And if we think of
ourselves as left to struggle with natural defects amidst
irreversible natural laws; if we begin to pray very heartlessly, as
if He who once listened were now asleep or could do nothing; if our
life seems profitless, purposeless, and all unhinged; then let us
look back to this sure promise of God, that He will be our God: our
God, for, if Christ’s God, then ours, for if we be Christ’s then are
we Abram’s seed and heirs according to the promise. How few in any
given day are living on this promise: how few attach reality to
God’s continuous revelation of Himself, the reality in this world’s
transitory history: how few can believe in the nearness and
observance and love of God: how few can strenuously seek to be holy
or understand where abiding happiness is to be found; for all these
things are here. Yet who knocks at this door? Who makes, as Christ
made, his life a unity with God, undismayed, unmurmuring,
unreluctant, neither fearful of God nor disobedient, but diligent,
earnest. jubilant, because God has said, "I will be thy God." Do you
believe these things and can you forbear to use them? Do you believe
that it is open to you, whosoever you are, to have the Eternal and
Supreme God for your God, that He may use all His Divine nature in
your behalf; have you conceived what it is that God means when He
extends to you this offer, and can you decline to accept it, can you
do otherwise than cherish it and seek to find more and more in it
every day you live?
Two seals were at this time affixed to the covenant: the one for
Abram himself, the other for every one who shared with him in his
blessings of the covenant. The first consisted in the change of his
own name to Abraham, "the father of a multitude," and of his wife’s
to Sarah, "princess" or "queen," because she was now announced as
the destined mother of kings. And however Abraham would be annoyed
to see the hardly surpressed smile on the ironical faces of his men
as he boldly commanded them to call him by a name whose verification
seemed so grievously to lag; and however indignant and pained he may
have been to hear the young Ishmael jeering Sarah with her new name,
and lending to it every tone of mockery and using it with insolent
frequency, yet Abraham knew that these names were not given to
deceive; and probably as the name of Abraham has become one of the
best known names on earth, so to himself did it quickly acquire a
preciousness as God’s voice abiding with him, God’s promise renewed
to him through every man that addressed him, until at length the
child of promise lying on his knees took up its first syllable and
called him "Abba."
This seal was special to Abraham and Sarah, the other was public.
All who desired to partake with Abraham in the security, hope, and
happiness of having God as their God, were to submit to
circumcision. This sign was to determine who were included in the
covenant. By this outward mark encouragement and assurance of faith
were to be quickened in the heart of all Abraham’s descendants.
The mark chosen was significant. It was indeed not distinctive in
its outward form; so little so that at this day no fewer than one
hundred and fifty millions of the race make use of the same rite for
one purpose or other. All the descendants of Ishmael of course
continue it, but also all who have their religion, that is, all
Mohammedans; but besides these, some tribes in South America, some
in Australia, some in the South Sea Islands, and a large number of
Kaffir tribes. The ancient Egyptians certainly practised it, and it
has been suggested that Abraham may have become acquainted with the
practice during his sojourn in Egypt. It is however uncertain
whether the practice in Egypt runs back to so early a time. If it
were an established Egyptian usage, then of course Hagar would
demand for her boy at the usual age the rite which she had always
associated with entrance on a new stage of life. But even supposing
this was the case, the rite was none the less available for the new
use to which it was now put. The rainbow existed before the Flood;
bread and wine existed before the night of the Lord’s Supper;
baptisms of various kinds were practised before the days of the
Apostles. And for this very reason, when God desired a natural
emblem of the stability of the seasons He chose a striking feature
of nature on which men were already accustomed to look with pleasure
and hope; when He desired symbols of the body and blood of the
Redeemer He took those articles which already had a meaning as the
most efficacious human nutriment: when He desired to represent to
the eye the renunciation of the old life and the birth to a new life
which we have by union with Christ, He took that rite which was
already known as the badge of discipleship: and when He desired to
impress men by symbol with the impurity of nature and with our
dependence on God for the production of all acceptable life. He
chose that rite which, whether used before or not. did most
strikingly represent this.
With the significance of circumcision to other men who practise it,
we have here nothing to do. It is as the chief sacrament of the old
covenant, by which God meant to aid all succeeding generations of
Hebrews in believing that God was their God. And this particular
mark was given, rather than any other, that they might recognise and
ever remember that human nature was unable to generate its own
Saviour, that in man there is a native impurity which must be laid
aside when he comes into fellowship with the Holy God. And these
circumcised races, although in many respects as unspiritual as
others, have yet in general perceived that God is different from
nature, a Holy Being to Whom we cannot attain by any mere adherence
to nature, but only by the aid He Himself extends to us in ways for
which nature makes no provision. The lesson of circumcision is an
old one and rudely expressed, but it is vital; and no abhorrence of
the circumcised for the uncircumcised too strongly, however
unjustly, emphasises the distinction that actually subsists between.
those who believe in nature and those who believe in God.
The lesson is old, but the circumcision of the heart to which the
outward mark pointed, is ever required. That is the true seal of our
fellowship with God; the earnest of the Spirit which gives promise
of eternal union with the Holy One; the relentings, the shame, the
softening of heart, the adoration and reverence for the holiness of
God, the thirst for Him, the joy in His goodness, these are the
first fruits of the Spirit, which lead on to our calling God Father,
and feeling that to be alone with Him is our happiness. It is this
putting aside of our natural confidence in nature and absorption in
nature, and this turning to God as our confidence and our life,
which constitutes the true circumcision of the heart.
Believing as Abraham was, he could not forbear smiling when God said
that Sarah would be the mother of the promised seed. This
incredulity of Abraham was so significant that it was commemorated
in the name of Isaac, the laugher. This heir was typical of all
God’s best gifts, at first reckoned impossible, at last filling the
heart with gladness. The smile of incredulity became the laughter of
joy when the child was born and Sarah said, "God hath made me to
laugh, so that all that hear will laugh with me." It is they who
expect things so incongruous and so impossible to nature unaided
that they smile even while they believe, who will one day find their
hopes fulfilled and their hearts running over with joyful laughter.
If your heart is fixed only on what you can accomplish for yourself,
no great joy can ever be yours. But frame your actual hopes in
accordance with the promise of God, expect holiness, fulness of joy,
animating partnership with God in the highest matters, the
resurrection of the dead, the life everlasting, and one day you will
say, "God hath made me to laugh." But Abraham prostrating himself to
hide a smile is the symbol of our common attitude. We profess to
believe in a God of unspeakable power and goodness, but even while
we do so we find it impossible to attach a sense of reality to His
promises. They are kindly, well-intentioned words, but are
apparently spoken in neglect of solid, obstinate facts. How hard is
it for us to learn that God is the great reality, and that the
reality of all else may be measured by its relation to Him.
Sarah’s laughter had a different meaning. Indeed Sarah does not
appear to have been by any means a blameless character. Her conduct
towards Hagar showed us that she was a woman capable of generous
impulses but not of the strain of continued magnanimous conduct. She
was capable of yielding her wifely rights on the impulse of the
brilliant scheme that had struck her, but like many other persons
who can begin a magnanimous or generous course of conduct, she could
not follow it up to the end, but failed disgracefully in her conduct
towards her rival. So now again she betrays characteristic weakness.
When the strangers came to Abraham’s tent, and announced that she
was to become a mother, she smiled in superior, self-assured,
woman’s wisdom. When the promise threatened no longer to hover over
her household as a mere sublime and exalting idea which serves its
purpose if it keep them in mind that God has spoken to them, but to
take place now among the actualities of daily occurrence, she hails
this announcement with a laugh of total incredulity. Whatever she
had made of God’s word, she had not thought it was really and
veritably to come to pass; she smiled at the simplicity which could
speak of such an unheard-of thing.
This is true to human nature. It reminds you how you have dealt with
God’s promises, -nay, with God’s commandments-when they offered to
make room for themselves in the everyday life of which you are
masters, every detail of which you have arranged, seeming to know
absolutely the laws and principles on which your particular line of
life must be carried on. Have you never smiled at the simplicity
which could set about making actual, about carrying out in practical
life, in society, in work, in business, those thoughts, feelings,
and purposes, which God’s promises beget? Sarah did not laugh
outright, but smiled behind the Lord; she did not mock Him to His
face, but let the compassionate expression pass over her face with
which we listen to the glowing hopes of the young enthusiast who
does not know the world. Have we not often put aside God’s voice
precisely thus; saying within us, We know what kind of things can be
done by us and others and what need not be attempted; we know what
kind of frailties in social intercourse we must put up with, and not
seek to amend; what kind of practices it is vain to think of
abolishing; we know what use to make of God’s promise and what use
not to make of it; how far to trust it, and how far to give greater
weight to our knowledge of the world and our natural prudence and
sense? Does not our faith, like Sarah’s, vary in proportion as the
promise to be believed is unpractical? If the promise seems wholly
to concern future things, we cordially and devoutly assent; but if
we are asked to believe that God intends within the year to do
so-and-so, if we are asked to believe that the result of God’s
promise will be found taking a substantial place among the results
of our own efforts-then the derisive smile of Sarah forms on our
face.
To look at the crowds of persons professing religion, one would
suppose nothing was commoner than faith. There is nothing rarer.
Devoutness is common, righteousness of life is common; a contempt
for every kind of fraud and underhand practice is common; a
high-minded disregard for this world’s gains and glories is common;
an abhorrence of sensuality and an earnest thirst for perfection are
common-but faith? Will the Son of man when He comes find it on
earth? May not the messengers of God yet say, Who hath believed our
report? Why, the great majority of Christian people have never been
near enough to spiritual things to know whether they are or are not;
they have never narrowly weighed spiritual issues and trembled as
they watched the uncertain balance; they say they believe God and a
future of happiness because they really do not know what they are
talking about-they have not measured the magnitude of these things.
Faith is not a blind and careless assent to matters of indifference,
faith is not a state of mental suspense with a hope that things may
turn out to be as the Bible says. Faith is the firm persuasion that
these things are so. And he who at once knows the magnitude of these
things and believes that they are so, must be filled with a joy that
makes him independent of the world, with an enthusiasm which must
seem to the world like insanity. It is quite a different world in
which the man of faith lives.
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