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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
P.O. Box 177
Cagayan de Oro
Central Post Office
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 18)
Genesis 18 -
Visit of Jehovah, With Two Angels, to
Abraham's Tent - Genesis 18
Having been received into the covenant with God through
the rite of circumcision, Abraham was shortly afterwards honoured by being
allowed to receive and entertain the Lord and two angels in his tent. This
fresh manifestation of God had a double purpose, viz., to establish
Sarah's faith in the promise that she should bear a son in her old age ( Gen_18:1-15),
and to announce the judgment on Sodom and Gomorrah (vv. 16-33).
Gen 18:1-5 -
When sitting, about mid-day, in the grove of Mamre, in
front of his tent, Abraham looked up and unexpectedly saw three men
standing at some distance from him ( עָלָיו
above him, looking down upon him as he sat), viz., Jehovah (Gen_18:13)
and two angels (Gen_19:1);
all three in human form. Perceiving at once that one of them was the Lord
(אֲדֹנָי,
i.e., God), he prostrated himself reverentially before them, and entreated
them not to pass him by, but to suffer him to entertain them as his
guests: Let a little water be fetched, and wash your feet, and recline
yourselves (הִשָּׁעֵן(
sevle to recline, leaning upon the arm) under
the tree. - Comfort your hearts: lit., strengthen the
heart, i.e., refresh yourselves by eating and drinking (Jdg_19:5;
1Ki_21:7).
For therefore (sc., to give me an opportunity to entertain you
hospitably) have ye come over to your servant:
כֵּן
עַל
כִּי
does not stand for
כִּי
כֵּן
עַל
(Ges. thes. p. 682), but means because for this purpose (vid.,
Ewald, §353).
Gen 18:6-8 -
When the three men had accepted the hospitable
invitation, Abraham, just like a Bedouin sheikh of the present day,
directed his wife to take three seahs (374 cubic inches each) of fine
meal, and back cakes of it as quickly as possible ( עֻגֹּות
round unleavened cakes baked upon hot stones); he also had a tender calf
killed, and sent for milk and butter, or curdled milk, and thus prepared a
bountiful and savoury meal, of which the guests partook. The eating of
material food on the part of these heavenly beings was not in appearance
only, but was really eating; an act which may be attributed to the
corporeality assumed, and is to be regarded as analogous to the eating on
the part of the risen and glorified Christ (Luk_24:41.),
although the miracle still remains physiologically incomprehensible.
Gen 18:9-15 -
During the meal, at which Abraham stood, and waited
upon them as the host, they asked for Sarah, for whom the visit was
chiefly intended. On being told that she was in the tent, where she could
hear, therefore, all that passed under the tree in front of the tent, the
one whom Abraham addressed as Adonai (my Lord), and who is called
Jehovah in Gen_18:13,
said, I will return to thee (חַיָּה
כָּעֵת)
at this time, when it lives again (חַיָּה,
reviviscens, without the article, Ges. §111, 2b),
i.e., at this time next year; and, behold, Sarah, thy wife, will
(then) have a son. Sarah heard this at the door of the tent; and
it was behind Him (Jehovah), so that she could not be seen by
Him as she stood at the door. But as the fulfilment of this promise seemed
impossible to her, on account of Abraham's extreme age, and the fact that
her own womb had lost the power of conception, she laughed within herself,
thinking that she was not observed. But that she might know that the
promise was made by the omniscient and omnipotent God, He reproved her for
laughing, saying, Is anything too wonderful (i.e., impossible)
for Jehovah? at the time appointed I will return unto thee, etc.; and
when her perplexity led her to deny it, He convicted her of falsehood.
Abraham also had laughed at this promise (Gen_17:17),
and without receiving any reproof. For his laughing was the joyous
outburst of astonishment; Sarah's, on the contrary, the result of doubt
and unbelief, which had to be broken down by reproof, and, as the result
showed, really was broken down, inasmuch as she conceived and bore a son,
whom she could only have conceived in faith (Heb_11:11).
Gen 18:16-19 -
After this conversation with Sarah, the heavenly guests
rose up and turned their faces towards the plain of Sodom ( פְּנֵי
עַל,
as in Gen_19:28;
Num_21:20;
Num_23:28).
Abraham accompanied them some distance on the road; according to
tradition, he went as far as the site of the later Caphar barucha,
from which you can see the Dead Sea through a ravine, - solitudinem ac
terras Sodomae. And Jehovah said, Shall I hide from Abraham
what I propose to do? Abraham is destined to be a great nation and a
blessing to all nations (Gen_12:2-3);
for I have known, i.e., acknowledged him (chosen him in anticipative love,
יָדַע
as in Amo_3:2;
Hos_13:4),
that he may command his whole posterity to keep the way of Jehovah,
to practise justice and righteousness, that all the promises may be
fulfilled in them. God then disclosed to Abraham what he was about to do
to Sodom and Gomorrah, not, as Kurtz supposes, because Abraham had
been constituted the hereditary possessor of the land, and Jehovah,
being mindful of His covenant, would not do anything to it without his
knowledge and assent (a thought quite foreign to the context), but because
Jehovah had chosen him to be the father of the people of God, in
order that, by instructing his descendants in the fear of God, he might
lead them in the paths of righteousness, so that they might become
partakers of the promised salvation, and not be overtaken by judgment. The
destruction of Sodom and the surrounding cities was to be a permanent
memorial of the punitive righteousness of God, and to keep the fate of the
ungodly constantly before the mind of Israel. To this end Jehovah
explained to Abraham the cause of their destruction in the clearest manner
possible, that he might not only be convinced of the justice of the divine
government, but might learn that when the measure of iniquity was full, no
intercession could avert the judgment-a lesson and a warning to his
descendants also.
Gen 18:20 -
The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah, yea it is great; and
their sin, yea it is very grievous. The cry is the appeal for vengeance
or punishment, which ascends to heaven ( Gen_4:10).
The כִּי
serves to give emphasis to the assertion, and is placed in the middle of
the sentence to give the greater prominence to the leading thought (cf.
Ewald, §330).
Gen 18:21-33 -
God was about to go down, and convince Himself whether
they had done entirely according to the cry which had reached Him, or not.
כָלָה
עָשָׂה,
lit., to make completeness, here referring to the extremity of iniquity,
generally to the extremity of punishment (Nah_1:8-9;
Jer_4:27;
Jer_5:10):
כָּלָה
is a noun, as Isa_10:23
shows, not an adverb, as in
Exo_11:1. After this explanation, the men
(according to Gen_19:1,
the two angels) turned from thence to go to Sodom (Gen_18:22);
but Abraham continued standing before Jehovah, who had been talking
with him, and approached Him with earnestness and boldness of faith to
intercede for Sodom. He was urged to this, not by any special interest in
Lot, for in that case he would have prayed for his deliverance; nor by the
circumstance that, as he had just before felt himself called upon to
become the protector, avenger, and deliverer of the land from its foes, so
he now thought himself called upon to act as mediator, and to appeal from
Jehovah's judicial wrath to Jehovah's covenant grace (Kurtz),
for he had not delivered the land from the foe, but merely rescued his
nephew Lot and all the booty that remained after the enemy had withdrawn;
nor did he appeal to the covenant grace of Jehovah, but to His
justice alone; and on the principle that the Judge of all the earth could
not possibly destroy the righteous with the wicked, he founded his
entreaty that God would forgive the city if there were but fifty righteous
in it, or even if there were only ten. He was led to intercede in this
way, not by communis erga quinque populos misericordia (Calvin),
but by the love which springs from the consciousness that one's own
preservation and rescue are due to compassionate grace alone; love, too,
which cannot conceive of the guilt of others as too great for salvation to
be possible. This sympathetic love, springing from the faith which was
counted for righteousness, impelled him to the intercession which
Luther thus describes: sexies petiit, et cum tanto ardore ac
affectu sic urgente, ut prae nimia angustia, qua cupit consultum miseris
civitatibus, videatur quasi stulte loqui. There may be apparent folly
in the words, Wilt Thou also destroy the righteous with the wicked?
but they were only violenta oratio et impetuosa, quasi cogens Deum ad
ignoscendum. For Abraham added, peradventure there be fifty
righteous within the city; wilt Thou also destroy and not forgive (נָשָׁא,
to take away and bear the guilt, i.e., forgive) the place for the fifty
righteous that are therein? and described the slaying of the
righteous with the wicked as irreconcilable with the justice of God. He
knew that he was speaking to the Judge of all the earth, and that before
Him he was but dust and ashes - dust in his origin, and ashes in
the end; and yet he made bold to appeal still further, and even as low as
ten righteous, to pray that for their sake He would spare the city. -
הַפַּעַם
אַךְ
(Gen_18:32)
signifies only this (one) time more, as in
Exo_10:17.
This seemingly commercial kind of entreaty is, as Delitzsch
observes, the essence of true prayer. It is the holy
ἀναίδεια,
of which our Lord speaks in
Luk_11:8, the shamelessness of faith, which
bridges over the infinite distance of the creature from the Creator,
appeals with importunity to the heart of God, and ceases not till its
point is gained. This would indeed be neither permissible nor possible,
had not God, by virtue of the mysterious interlacing of necessity and
freedom in His nature and operations, granted a power to the prayer of
faith, to which He consents to yield; had He not, by virtue of His
absoluteness, which is anything but blind necessity, placed Himself in
such a relation to men, that He not merely works upon them by means of His
grace, but allows them to work upon Him by means of their faith; had He
not interwoven the life of the free creature into His own absolute life,
and accorded to a created personality the right to assert itself in faith,
in distinction from His own. With the promise, that even for the sake of
ten righteous He would not destroy the city, Jehovah went His
way, that is to say, vanished; and Abraham returned to his place, viz.,
to the grove of Mamre. The judgment which fell upon the wicked cities
immediately afterwards, proves that there were not ten righteous
persons in Sodom; by which we understand, not merely ten sinless or
holy men, but ten who through the fear of God and conscientiousness had
kept themselves free from the prevailing sin and iniquity of these cities.
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Bethel Missionary Baptist:
The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew beth,
meaning house,
and el, meaning God. Bethel means "The House of
God."
Church in the Philippines |
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