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Youngs
Literal Translation
King
James Version
The 1599
Geneva
Study Bible
American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
of the
Christian Church
8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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What We Believe
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Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
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Soli Deo Gloria: For the
Glory of God Alone
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Solo Christo: By Christ's
Work Alone are We Saved
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Sola Gratia: Salvation by
Grace Alone
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Sola Fide: Justification by
Faith Alone
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World Without End Ministry
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Cagayan de Oro
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Cagayan de Oro 9000
Mindanao, Philippines |
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"It is enough for good
people to do nothing, for evil people to succeed."
12 Little Things Every Filipino Can Do To Help Our Country
by Alexander L. Lacson
Keil & Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament
(Genesis 12)
Gen 12:1-3 -
The life of Abraham, from his call to his death,
consists of four stages, the commencement of each of which is marked by a
divine revelation of sufficient importance to constitute a distinct epoch.
The first stage (Gen 12-14) commences with his call and removal to Canaan;
the second (Gen 15-16), with the promise of a lineal heir and the
conclusion of a covenant; the third (Gen 17-21), with the establishment of
the covenant, accompanied by a change in his name, and the appointment of
the covenant sign of circumcision; the fourth (Gen 22-25:11), with the
temptation of Abraham to attest and perfect his life of faith. All the
revelations made to him proceed from Jehovah; and the name
Jehovah is employed throughout the whole life of the father of the
faithful, Elohim being used only where Jehovah, from its
meaning, would be either entirely inapplicable, or at any rate less
appropriate.
(Note: The hypothesis, that the history is compounded
of Jehovistic and Elohistic documents, can only be maintained by those
who misunderstand that distinctive meaning of these two names, and
arbitrarily set aside the Jehovah in
Gen_27:1,
on account of an erroneous determination of the relation in which
שַׁדַּי
אֵל
stands to
יהוה.)
Gen_12:1-3
The Call. - The word of Jehovah, by which Abram
was called, contained a command and a promise. Abram was to leave all -
his country, his kindred (see
Gen_43:7),
and his father's house - and to follow the Lord into the land which He
would show him. Thus he was to trust entirely to the guidance of God, and
to follow wherever He might lead him. But as he went in consequence of
this divine summons into the land of Canaan (Gen_12:5),
we must assume that God gave him at the very first a distinct intimation,
if not of the land itself, at least of the direction he was to take. That
Canaan was to be his destination, was no doubt made known as a matter of
certainty in the revelation which he received after his arrival there (Gen_12:7).
- For thus renouncing and denying all natural ties, the Lord gave him the
inconceivably great promise, “I will make of thee a great nation; and I
will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing.”
The four members of this promise are not to be divided into two parallel
members, in which case the athnach would stand in the wrong place;
but are to be regarded as an ascending climax, expressing four elements of
the salvation promised to Abram, the last of which is still further
expanded in
Gen_12:3.
By placing the athnach under
שְׁמֶךָ
the fourth member is marked as a new and independent feature added to the
other three. The four distinct elements are - 1. increase into a numerous
people; 2. a blessing, that is to say, material and spiritual prosperity;
3. the exaltation of his name, i.e., the elevation of Abram to honour and
glory; 4. his appointment to be the possessor and dispenser of the
blessing. Abram was not only to receive blessing, but to be
a blessing; not only to be blessed by God, but to become a blessing, or
the medium of blessing, to others. The blessing, as the more minute
definition of the expression “be a blessing” in
Gen_12:3
clearly shows, was henceforth to keep pace as it were with Abram himself,
so that (1) the blessing and cursing of men were to depend entirely upon
their attitude towards him, and (2) all the families of the earth were to
be blessed in him.
קִלֵּל,
lit., to treat as light or little, to despise, denotes “blasphemous
cursing on the part of a man;”
אָרַר
“judicial cursing on the part of God.” It appears significant, however,
“that the plural is used in relation to the blessing, and the singular
only in relation to the cursing; grace expects that there will be many to
bless, and that only an individual here and there will render not blessing
for blessing, but curse for curse.” - In
Gen_12:3 b,
Abram, the one, is made a blessing for all. In the word
בְּךָ
the primary meaning of
ב,
in, is not to be given up, though the instrumental sense,
through, is not to be excluded. Abram was not merely to become a
mediator, but the source of blessing for all. The expression “all the
families of the ground” points to the division of the one family into
many (Gen_10:5,
Gen_10:20,
Gen_10:31),
and the word
הָאֲדָמָה
to the curse pronounced upon the ground (Gen_3:17).
The blessing of Abraham was once more to unite the divided families, and
change the curse, pronounced upon the ground on account of sin, into a
blessing for the whole human race. This concluding word comprehends all
nations and times, and condenses, as Baumgarten has said, the whole
fulness of the divine counsel for the salvation of men into the call of
Abram. All further promises, therefore, not only to the patriarchs, but
also to Israel, were merely expansions and closer definitions of the
salvation held out to the whole human race in the first promise. Even the
assurance, which Abram received after his entrance into Canaan (Gen_12:6),
was implicitly contained in this first promise; since a great nation could
not be conceived of, without a country of its own.
This promise was renewed to Abram on several occasions:
first after his separation from Lot ( Gen_13:14-16),
on which occasion, however, the “blessing” was not mentioned, because not
required by the connection, and the two elements only, viz., the numerous
increase of his seed, and the possession of the land of Canaan, were
assured to him and to his seed, and that “for ever;” secondly, in
Gen_18:18
somewhat more casually, as a reason for the confidential manner in which
Jehovah explained to him the secret of His government; and lastly,
at the two principal turning points of his life, where the whole promise
was confirmed with the greatest solemnity, viz., in Gen 17 at the
commencement of the establishment of the covenant made with him, where “I
will make of thee a great nation” was heightened into “I will make nations
of thee, and kings shall come out of thee,” and his being a blessing was
more fully defined as the establishment of a covenant, inasmuch as
Jehovah would be God to him and to his posterity (Gen_11:3.),
and in Gen 22 after the attestation of his faith and obedience, even to
the sacrifice of his only son, where the innumerable increase of his seed
and the blessing to pass from him to all nations were guaranteed by an
oath. The same promise was afterwards renewed to Isaac, with a distinct
allusion to the oath (Gen_26:3-4),
and again to Jacob, both on his flight from Canaan for fear of Esau (Gen_28:13-14),
and on his return thither (Gen_35:11-12).
In the case of these renewals, it is only in
Gen_28:14 that
the last expression, “all the families of the Adamah,” is repeated
verbatim, though with the additional clause “and in thy seed;” in the
other passages “all the nations of the earth” are mentioned, the family
connection being left out of sight, and the national character of the
blessing being brought into especial prominence. In two instances also,
instead of the Niphal
נִרְכוּ
we find the Hithpael
הִתְבָּרֲכוּ.
This change of conjugation by no means proves that the Niphal is to
be taken in its original reflective sense. The Hithpael has no
doubt the meaning “to wish one's self blessed” (Deu_29:19),
with ב
of the person from whom the blessing is sought (Isa_65:16;
Jer_4:2),
or whose blessing is desired (Gen_48:20).
But the Niphal
נִבְרַךְ
has only the passive signification “to be blessed.” And the promise not
only meant that all families of the earth would wish for the blessing
which Abram possessed, but that they would really receive this blessing in
Abram and his seed. By the explanation “wish themselves blessed” the point
of the promise is broken off; and not only is its connection with the
prophecy of Noah respecting Japhet's dwelling in the tents of Shem
overlooked, and the parallel between the blessing on all the families of
the earth, and the curse pronounced upon the earth after the flood,
destroyed, but the actual participation of all the nations of the earth in
this blessing is rendered doubtful, and the application of this promise by
Peter (Act_3:25)
and Paul (Gal_3:8)
to all nations, is left without any firm scriptural basis. At the same
time, we must not attribute a passive signification on that account to the
Hithpael in Gen_22:18
and Gen_24:4.
In these passages prominence is given to the subjective attitude of the
nations towards the blessing of Abraham-in other words, to the fact that
the nations would desire the blessing promised to them in Abraham and his
seed.
Gen 12:4-5 -
Removal to Canaan. - Abram cheerfully followed the call
of the Lord, and “departed as the Lord had spoken to him.” He was then 75
years old. His age is given, because a new period in the history of
mankind commenced with his exodus. After this brief notice there follows a
more circumstantial account, in
Gen_12:5, of the fact that he left Haran with
his wife, with Lot, and with all that they possessed of servants and
cattle, whereas Terah remained in Haran (cf.
Gen_11:31).
עָשׂוּ
אֲשֶׁר
הַנֶּפֶשׁ
are not the souls which they had begotten, but the male and female slaves
that Abram and Lot had acquired.
Gen 12:6 -
On his arrival in Canaan, “Abram passed through the
land to the place of Sichem:” i.e., the place where Sichem, the
present Nablus, afterwards stood, between Ebal and Gerizim, in the heart
of the land. “To the terebinth (or, according to
Deu_11:30, the
terebinths) of Moreh:”
אֵלֹון
אֵיל
(Gen_14:6)
and
אֵילָה are the terebinth,
אַלֹּון
and
אַלָּה the oak; though in many MSS and editions
אַלֹּון
and
אֵלֹון are interchanged in
Jos_19:33 and
Jdg_4:11,
either because the pointing in one of these passages is inaccurate, or
because the word itself was uncertain, as the ever-green oaks and
terebinths resemble one another in the colour of their foliage and their
fissured bark of sombre grey. - The notice that “the Canaanites were
then in the land” does not point to a post-Mosaic date, when the
Canaanites were extinct. For it does not mean that the Canaanites were
then still in the land, but refers to the promise which follows, that God
would give this land to the seed of Abram (Gen_12:7),
and merely states that the land into which Abram had come was not
uninhabited and without a possessor; so that Abram could not regard it at
once as his own and proceed to take possession of it, but could only
wander in it in faith as in a foreign land (Heb_11:9).
Gen 12:7 -
Here in Sichem Jehovah appeared to him, and
assured him of the possession of the land of Canaan for his descendants.
The assurance was made by means of an appearance of Jehovah, as a
sign that this land was henceforth to be the scene of the manifestation of
Jehovah. Abram understood this, “and there builded he an altar
to Jehovah, who appeared to him,” to make the soil which was hallowed
by the appearance of God a place for the worship of the God who appeared
to him.
Gen 12:8-9 -
He did this also in the mountains, to which he probably
removed to secure the necessary pasture for his flocks, after he had
pitched his tent there. “Bethel westwards and Ai eastwards,” i.e.,
in a spot with Ai to the east and Bethel to the west. The name Bethel
occurs here proleptically: at the time referred to, it was still called
Luz ( Gen_28:19);
its present name if Beitin (Robinson's Palestine). At a
distance of about five miles to the east was Ai, ruins of which are still
to be seen, bearing the name of Medinet Gai (Ritter's
Erdkunde). On the words “called upon the name of the Lord,” see
Gen_4:26.
From this point Abram proceeded slowly to the Negeb, i.e., to the
southern district of Canaan towards the Arabian desert (vid.,
Gen_20:1).
Gen 12:10-14 -
Abram in Egypt. - Abram had scarcely passed through the
land promised to his seed, when a famine compelled him to leave it, and
take refuge in Egypt, which abounded in corn; just as the Bedouins in the
neighbourhood are accustomed to do now. Whilst the famine in Canaan was to
teach Abram, that even in the promised land food and clothing come from
the Lord and His blessing, he was to discover in Egypt that earthly craft
is soon put to shame when dealing with the possessor of the power of this
world, and that help and deliverance are to be found with the Lord alone,
who can so smite the mightiest kings, that they cannot touch His chosen or
do them harm ( Psa_105:14-15).
- When trembling for his life in Egypt on account of the beauty of Sarai
his wife, he arranged with her, as he approached that land, that she
should give herself out as his sister, since she really was his
half-sister (Gen_11:29).
He had already made an arrangement with her, that she should do this in
certain possible contingencies, when they first removed to Canaan (Gen_20:13).
The conduct of the Sodomites (Gen 19) was a proof that he had reason for
his anxiety; and it was not without cause even so far as Egypt was
concerned. But his precaution did not spring from faith. He might possibly
hope, that by means of the plan concerted, he should escape the danger of
being put to death on account of his wife, if any one should wish to take
her; but how he expected to save the honour and retain possession of his
wife, we cannot understand, though we must assume, that he thought he
should be able to protect and keep her as his sister more easily, than if
he acknowledged her as his wife. But the very thing he feared and hoped to
avoid actually occurred.
Gen 12:15-20 -
The princes of Pharaoh finding her very beautiful,
extolled her beauty to the king, and she was taken to Pharaoh's house. As
Sarah was then 65 years old (cf.
Gen_17:17 and
Gen_12:4), her
beauty at such an age has been made a difficulty by some. But as she lived
to the age of 127 (Gen_23:1),
she was then middle-aged; and as her vigour and bloom had not been tried
by bearing children, she might easily appear very beautiful in the eyes of
the Egyptians, whose wives, according to both ancient and modern
testimony, were generally ugly, and faded early. Pharaoh (the
Egyptian ouro, king, with the article Pi) is the Hebrew name
for all the Egyptian kings in the Old Testament; their proper names being
only occasionally mentioned, as, for example, Necho in
2Ki_23:29, or
Hophra in Jer_44:30.
For Sarai's sake Pharaoh treated Abram well, presenting him with cattle
and slaves, possessions which constitute the wealth of nomads. These
presents Abram could not refuse, though by accepting them he increased his
sin. God then interfered (Gen_12:17),
and smote Pharaoh and his house with great plagues. What the nature of
these plagues was, cannot be determined; they were certainly of such a
kind, however, that whilst Sarah was preserved by them from dishonour,
Pharaoh saw at once that they were sent as punishment by the Deity on
account of his relation to Sarai; he may also have learned, on inquiry
from Sarai herself, that she was Abram's wife. He gave her back to him,
therefore, with a reproof for his untruthfulness, and told him to depart,
appointing men to conduct him out of the land together with his wife and
all his possessions.
שִׁלֵּהַ,
to dismiss, to give an escort (Gen_18:16;
Gen_31:27),
does not necessarily denote an involuntary dismissal here. For as Pharaoh
had discovered in the plague the wrath of the God of Abraham, he did not
venture to treat him harshly, but rather sought to mitigate the anger of
his God, by the safe-conduct which he granted him on his departure. But
Abram was not justified by this result, as was very apparent from the
fact, that he was mute under Pharaoh's reproofs, and did not venture to
utter a single word in vindication of his conduct, as he did in the
similar circumstances described in
Gen_10:11-12. The saving mercy of God had so
humbled him, that he silently acknowledged his guilt in concealing his
relation to Sarah from the Egyptian king.
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The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew beth,
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