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ABRAHAM’S INTERCESSION FOR
SODOM
Genesis 18
THE scene with which this chapter opens is one familiar to the
observer of nomad life in the East. During the scorching heat and
glaring light of noon, while the birds seek the densest foliage and
the wild animals lie panting in the thicket and everything is still
and silent as midnight, Abraham sits in his tent door under the
spreading oak of Mamre. Listless, languid, and dreamy as he is, he
is at once aroused into brightest wakefulness by the sudden
apparition of three strangers. Remarkable as their appearance no
doubt must have been, it would seem that Abraham did not recognise
the rank of his visitors; it was, as the writer to the Hebrews says,
"unawares" that he entertained angels. But when he saw them stand as
if inviting invitation to rest, he treated them as hospitality
required him to treat any wayfarers. He sprang to his feet, ran and
bowed himself to the ground, and begged them to rest and eat with
him. With the extraordinary, and as it seems to our colder nature
extravagant courtesy of an Oriental, he rates at the very lowest the
comforts he can supply; it is only a little water he can give to
wash their feet, a morsel of bread to help them on their way, but
they will do him a kindness if they accept these small attentions at
his hands. He gives, however, much more than he offered, seeks out
the fatted calf and serves while his guests sit and eat. The whole
scene is primitive and Oriental, and "presents a perfect picture of
the manner in which a modern Bedawee Sheykh receives travellers
arriving at his encampment"; the hasty baking of bread, the
celebration of a guest’s arrival by the killing of animal food not
on other occasions used even by large flock-masters; the meal spread
in the open air, the black tents of the encampment stretching back
among the oaks of Mamre, every available space filled with sheep,
asses, camels, -the whole is one of those clear pictures which only
the simplicity of primitive life can produce.
Not only, however, as a suitable and pretty introduction which may
ensure our reading the subsequent narrative is it recorded how
hospitably Abraham received these three. Later writers saw in it a
picture of the beauty and reward of hospitality. It is very true,
indeed, that the circumstances of a wandering pastoral life are
peculiarly favourable to the cultivation of this grace. Travellers
being the only bringers of tidings are greeted from a selfish desire
to hear news as well as from better motives. Life in tents, too, of
necessity makes men freer in their manners. They have no door to
lock, no inner rooms to retire to, their life is spent outside, and
their character naturally inclines to frankness and freedom from the
suspicions, fears, and restraints of city life. Especially is
hospitality accounted the indispensable virtue, and a breach of it
as culpable as a breach of the sixth commandment, because to refuse
hospitality is in many regions equivalent to subjecting a wayfarer
to dangers and hardships under which he is almost certain to
succumb.
"This tent is mine," said Yussouf. "but no more
Than it is God’s; come in, and be at peace;
Freely shall thou partake of all my store,
As I of His Who buildeth over these
Our tents His glorious roof of night and day,
And at Whose door none ever yet heard Nay."
Still we are of course bound to import into our life all the
suggestions of kindly conduct which any other style of living gives
us. And the writer to the Hebrews pointedly refers to this scene and
says, "Let us not be forgetful to entertain strangers, for thereby
some have entertained angels unawares." And often in quite a prosaic
and unquestionable manner does it become apparent to a host, that
the guest he has been entertaining has been sent by God, an angel
indeed ministering to his salvation, renewing in him thoughts that
had been dying out, filling his home with brightness and life like
the smile of God’s own face, calling out kindly feelings, provoking
to love and to good works, effectually helping him onwards and
making one more stage of his life endurable and even blessed. And it
is not to be wondered at that our Lord Himself should have
continually inculcated this same grace; for in His whole life and by
His most painful experience were men being tested as to who among
them would take the stranger in. He who became man for a little that
He might for ever consecrate the dwelling of Abraham and leave a
blessing in his household, has now become man for evermore, that we
may learn to walk carefully and reverentially through a life whose
circumstances and conditions, whose little socialities and duties,
and whose great trials and strains He found fit for Himself for
service to the Father. This tabernacle of our human body has by His
presence been transformed from a tent to a temple, and this world
and all its ways that He approved, admired, and walked in, is holy
ground. But as He came to Abraham trusting to his hospitality, not
sending before him a legion of angels to awe the patriarch but
coming in the guise of an ordinary wayfarer; so did He come to His
own and make His entrance among us, claiming only the consideration
which He claims for the least of His people, and granting to whoever
gave Him that the discovery of His Divine nature. Had there been
ordinary hospitality in Bethlehem that night before the taxing, then
a woman in Mary’s condition had been cared for and not
superciliously thrust among the cattle, and our race had been
delivered from the everlasting reproach of refusing its God a cradle
to be born and sleep His first sleep in, as it refused Him a bed to
die in, and left chance to provide Him a grave in which to sleep His
latest sleep. And still He is coming to us all requiring of us this
grace of hospitality, not only in the case of every one who asks of
us a cup of cold water and whom our Lord Himself will personate at
the last day and say, "I was a stranger and ye took Me in"; but also
in regard to those claims upon our heart’s reception which He only
in His own person makes.
But while we are no doubt justified in gathering such lessons from
this scene, it can scarcely have been for the sake of inculcating
hospitality that these angels visited Abraham. And if we ask, Why
did God on this occasion use this exceptional form of manifesting
Himself; why, instead of approaching Abraham in a vision or in word
as had been found sufficient on former occasions, did He now adopt
this method of becoming Abraham’s guest and eating with him?-the
only apparent reason is that He meant this also to be the test
applied to Sodom. There too His angels were to appear as wayfarers,
dependent on the hospitality of the town, and by the people’s
treatment of these unknown visitors their moral state was to be
detected and judged. The peaceful meal under the oaks of Mamre, the
quiet and confidential walk over the hills in the afternoon when
Abraham in the humble simplicity of a godly soul was found to be fit
company for these three-this scene where the Lord and His messengers
receive a becoming welcome and where they leave only blessing behind
them, is set in telling contrast to their reception in Sodom, where
their coming was the signal for the outbursts of a brutality one
blushes to think of, and elicited all the elements of a mere hell
upon earth.
Lot would fain have been as hospitable as Abraham. Deeper in his
nature than any other consideration was the traditional habit of
hospitality. To this he would have sacrificed everything-the rights
of strangers were to him truly inviolable. Lot was a man who could
as little see strangers without inviting them to his house as
Abraham could. He would have treated them handsomely as his uncle;
and what he could do he did. But Lot had by his choice of a dwelling
made it impossible he should afford safe and agreeable lodging to
any visitor. He did his best, and it was not his reception of the
angels that sealed Sodom’s doom, and yet what shame he must have
felt that he had put himself in circumstances in which his chief
virtue could not be practised. So do men tie their own hands and
cripple themselves so that even the good they would take pleasure in
doing is either wholly impossible or turns to evil.
In divulging to Abraham His purpose in visiting Sodom, it is
enounced here that God acted on a principle which seems afterwards
to have become almost proverbial. Surely the Lord will do nothing
but He revealeth His secret unto His servants the prophets. There
are indeed two grounds stated for making known to Abraham this
catastrophe. The reason that we should naturally expect, viz., that
he might go on and warn Lot is not one of them. Why then make any
announcement to Abraham if the catastrophe cannot be averted, and if
Abraham is to turn back to his own encampment? The first reason is:
"Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do? Seeing that
Abraham shall surely become a great and mighty nation, and all the
nations of the earth shall be blessed in him." In other words,
Abraham has been made the depository of a blessing for all nations,
and account must therefore be given to him when any people is
summarily removed beyond the possibility of receiving this blessing.
If a man has got a grant for the emancipation of the slaves in a
certain district, and is informed on landing to put this grant in
force that fifty slaves are to be executed that day, he has
certainly a right to know and he will inevitably desire to know that
this execution is to be, and why it is to be. When an officer goes
to negotiate an exchange of prisoners, if two of the number cannot
be exchanged, but are to be shot, he must be informed of this and
account of the matter must be given him. Abraham often brooding on
God’s promise, living indeed upon it, must have felt a vague
sympathy with all men, and a sympathy not at all vague, but most
powerful and practical, with the men in the Jordan valley whom he
had rescued from Chedorlaomer. If he was to be a blessing to any
nation it must surely be to those who were within an afternoon’s
walk of his encampment and among whom his nephew had taken up his
abode. Suppose he had not been told, but had risen next morning and
seen the dense cloud of smoke overhanging the doomed cities, might
he not with some justice have complained that although God had
spoken to him the previous day, not one word of this great
catastrophe had been breathed to him.
The second reason is expressed in the nineteenth verse; God had
chosen Abraham that he might command his children and his household
after him to keep the way of the Lord, to do justice and judgment
that the Lord might fulfil His promise to Abraham. That is to say,
as it was only by obedience and righteousness that Abraham and his
seed were to continue in God’s favour, it was fair that they should
be encouraged to do so by seeing the fruits of unrighteousness. So
that as the Dead Sea lay throughout their whole history on their
borders reminding them of the wages of sin, they might never fail
rightly to interpret its meaning, and in every great catastrophe
read the lesson "except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish."
They could never attribute to chance this predicted judgment. And in
point of fact frequent and solemn reference was made to this
standing monument of the fruit or sin.
As yet there was no moral law proclaimed by any external authority.
Abraham had to discover what justice and goodness were from the
dictates of his own conscience and from his observation upon men and
things. But he was at all events persuaded that only so long as he
and his sought honestly to live in what they considered to be
righteousness would they enjoy God’s favour. And they read in the
destruction of Sodom a clear intimation that certain forms of
wickedness were detestable to God.
The earnestness with which Abraham intercedes for the cities of the
plain reveals a new side of his character. One could understand a
strong desire on his part that Lot should be rescued, and no doubt
the preservation of Lot formed one of his strongest motives to
intercede, yet Lot is never named, and it is, I think, plain that he
had more than the safety of Lot in view. He prayed that the city
might be spared, not that the righteous might be delivered out of
its ruin. Probably he had a lively interest in the people he had
rescued from captivity, and felt a kind of protectorate over them as
he sometimes looked down on them from the hills near his own tents.
He pleads for them as he had fought for them, with generosity,
boldness, and perseverance; and it was his boldness and
unselfishness in fighting for them that gave him boldness in praying
for them.
There has come into vogue in this country a kind of intercession
which is the exact reverse of this of Abraham-an obtuse, mechanical
intercession about whose efficacy one may cherish a reasonable
suspicion. The Bible and common sense bid us pray with the Spirit
and with the understanding; but at some meetings for prayer you are
asked to pray for people you do not know and have no real interest
in. You are not told even their names, so that if an answer is sent
you could not identify the answer, nor is any clue given you by
which, if God should propose to use you for their help, you could
know where the help was to be applied. For all you know the slip of
paper handed in among a score of others may misrepresent the
circumstances; and even supposing it does not, what likeness to the
effectual fervent prayer of an anxious man has the petition that is
once read in your hearing and at once and for ever blotted from your
mind by a dozen others of the same kind. Not so did Abraham pray; he
prayed for those he knew and had fought for; and I see no warrant
for expecting that our prayers will be heard for persons whose good
we seek in no other way than prayer, in none of those ways which in
all other matters our conduct proves we judge more effectual than
prayer. When Lot was carried captive Abraham did not think it enough
to put a petition for him in his evening prayer. He went and did the
needful thing, so that now when there is nothing else he can do but
pray, he intercedes, as few of us can without self-reproach or
feeling that had we only done our part there might now be no need of
prayer. What confidence can a parent have in praying for a son who
is going to a country where vice abounds, if he has done little or
nothing to infix in his boy’s mind a love of virtue? In some cases
the very persons who pray for others are themselves the obstacles
preventing the answer. Were we to ask ourselves how much we are
prepared to do for those for whom we pray, we should come to a more
adequate estimate of the fervency and sincerity of our prayers.
The element in Abraham’s intercession that jars on the reader is the
trading temper that strives always to get the best possible terms.
Abraham seems to think God can be beaten down and induced to make
smaller and smaller demands. No doubt this style of prayer was
suggested to Abraham by the statement on God’s part that He was
going to Sodom to see if its iniquity was so great as it was
reported; that is, to number, as it were, the righteous men in it.
Abraham seizes upon this and asks if He would not spare it if fifty
were found in it. But Abraham, knowing Sodom as he did, could not
have supposed this number would be found. Finding, then, that God
meets him so far, he goes on step by step getting larger in his
demands, until when he comes to ten he feels that to go farther
would be intolerably presumptuous. Along with this audacious beating
down of God, there is a genuine and profound reverence and humility
which at each renewal of the petition dictate some such expression
as: "I who am but dust and ashes," "Let not my Lord be angry."
It is remarkable too that, throughout, it is for justice Abraham
pleads, and for justice of a limited and imperfect kind. He proceeds
on the assumption that the town will be judged as a town, and either
wholly saved or wholly destroyed. He has no idea of individual
discrimination being made, those only suffering who had sinned. And
yet it is this principle of discrimination on which God ultimately
proceeds, rescuing Lot. Yet is not this intercession the history of
what every one who prays passes through, beginning with the idea
that God is to be won over to more liberal views and a more
munificent intention, and ending with the discovery that God gives
what we should count it shameless audacity to ask? We begin to pray,
"As if ourselves were better certainly
Than what we come to-Maker and High Priest,"
and we leave off praying assured that the whole is to be managed by
a righteousness and love and wisdom, which we cannot plan for, which
any love or desire of ours would only limit the action of, and which
must be left to work out its own purposes in its own marvellous
ways. We begin, feeling that we have to beat down a reluctant God
and that we can guide the mind of God to some better thing than He
intends: when the answer comes we recognise that what we set as the
limit of our expectation God has far overstepped, and that our
prayer has done little more than show our inadequate conception of
God’s mercy.
Not only in this respect but throughout this chapter there is
betrayed an inadequate conception of God. The language is adapted to
the use of men who are as yet unable to conceive of one Infinite,
Eternal Spirit. They think of Him as one who needs to come down and
institute an inquiry into the state of Sodom, if He is to know with
accuracy the moral condition of its inhabitants. We can freely use
the same language, but we put into it a meaning that the words do
not literally bear: Abraham and his contemporaries used and accepted
the words in their literal sense. And yet the man who had ideas of
God in some respects so rudimentary was God’s Friend, received
singular tokens of His favour, found His whole life illuminated with
His presence, and was used as the point of contact between heaven
and earth, so that if you desire the first lessons in the knowledge
of God which will in time grow into full information, it is to the
tent of Abraham you must go. This surely is encouraging; for who is
not conscious of much difficulty in thinking rightly of God? Who
does not feel that precisely here, where the light should be
brightest, clouds and darkness seem to gather? It may indeed be said
that what was excusable in Abraham is inexcusable in us; that we
have that day, that full noon of Christ to which he could only, out
of the dusky dawn, look forward. But after all may not a man with
some justice say: Give me an afternoon with God, such as Abraham
had; give me the opportunity of converse with a God submitting
Himself to question and answer, to those means and instruments of
ascertaining truth which I daily employ in other matters, and I will
ask no more? Christ has given us entrance into the final stage of
our knowledge Of God, teaching us that God is a Spirit and that we
cannot see the Father; that Christ Himself left earth and withdrew
from the bodily eye that we might rely more upon spiritual modes of
apprehension and think of God as a Spirit. But we are not at all
times able to receive this teaching, we are children still and fall
back with longing for the times when God walked and spoke with man.
And this being so, we are encouraged by the experience of Abraham.
We shall not be disowned by God though we do not know Him perfectly.
We can but begin where we are, not pretending that that is clear and
certain to us which in fact is not so, but freely dealing with God
according to the light we have, hoping that we too, like Abraham,
shall see the day of Christ and be glad; shall one day stand in the
full light of ascertained and eternal truth, knowing as we are
known.
In conclusion, we shall find when we read the following chapter, and
especially the prayer of Lot that he might not be driven to the wild
mountain district, but might occupy the little town of Zoar which
was saved for his sake-we shall find that much light is reflected on
this prayer of Abraham. Without trenching on what may be more fitly
spoken of afterwards, it may now be observed that the difference
between Lot and Abraham, as between man and man generally, comes out
nowhere more strikingly than in their prayers. Abraham had never
prayed for himself with a tithe of the persistent earnestness with
which he prays for Sodom-a town which was much indebted to him, but
towards which for more reasons than one a smaller man would have
borne a grudge. Lot, on the other hand, much indebted to Sodom,
identified indeed with it, one of its leading citizens, connected by
marriage with its inhabitants, is in no agony about its destruction,
and has indeed but one prayer to offer, and that is, that when all
his fellow towns-men are destroyed, he may be comfortably provided
for. While the men he has bargained and feasted with, the men he has
made money out of and married his daughters to, are in the agonies
of an appalling catastrophe and so near that the smoke of their
torment sweeps across his retreat, he is so disengaged from regrets
and compassion that he can nicely weigh the comparative comfort and
advantage of city and rural life. One would have thought better of
the man if he had declined the angelic rescue and resolved to stand
by those in death whose society he had so coveted in life. And it is
significant that while the generous, large-hearted, devout pleading
of Abraham is in vain, the miserable, timorous, selfish petition of
Lot is heard and answered. It would seem as if sometimes God were
hopeless of men, and threw to them in contempt the gifts they crave,
giving them the poor stations in this life their ambition is set
upon, because He sees they have made themselves incapable of
enduring hardness, and so quelling their lower nature. An answered
prayer is not always a blessing, sometimes it is a doom: "He sent
them meat to the full: but while their meat was yet in their mouths,
the wrath of God came upon them and slew the fattest of them."
Probably had Lot felt any inclination to pray for his townsmen, he
would have seen that for him to do so would be unseemly. His
circumstances, his long association with the Sodomites, and his
accommodation of himself to their ways had both eaten the soul out
of him and set him on quite a different footing towards God from
that occupied by Abraham. A man cannot on a sudden emergency lift
himself out of the circumstances in which he has been rooted, nor
peel off his character as if it were only skin-deep. Abraham had
been living an unworldly life in which intercourse with God was a
familiar employment. His prayer was but the seasonable flower of his
life, nourished to all its beauty by the habitual nutriment of past
years. Lot in his need could only utter a peevish, pitiful, childish
cry. He had aimed all his life at being comfortable, he could not
now wish anything more than to be comfortable. "Stand out of my
sunshine," was all he could say, when he held by the hand the
plenipotentiary of heaven, and when the roar of the conflict of
moral good and evil was filling his ears-a decent man, a righteous
man, but the world had eaten out his heart till he had nothing to
keep him in sympathy with heaven.
Such is the state to which men in our society, as in Sodom, are
brought by risking their spiritual life to make the most of this
world.
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