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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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"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 22)
Gen 22:1-4 -
Offering Up of Isaac. - For many years had Abraham
waited to be fulfilled. At length the Lord had given him the desired heir
of his body by his wife Sarah, and directed him to send away the son of
the maid. And now that this son had grown into a young man, the word of
God came to Abraham to offer up this very son, who had been given to him
as the heir of the promise, for a burnt-offering, upon one of the
mountains which should be shown him. This word did not come from his own
heart, - was not a thought suggested by the sight of the human sacrifices
of the Canaanites, that he would offer a similar sacrifice to his God; nor
did it originate with the tempter to evil. The word came from Ha-Elohim,
the personal, true God, who tried him ( נִסָּה),
i.e., demanded the sacrifice of the only, beloved son, as a proof and
attestation of his faith. The issue shows, that God did not desire the
sacrifice of Isaac by slaying and burning him upon the altar, but his
complete surrender, and a willingness to offer him up to God even by
death.
Nevertheless the divine command was given in such a
form, that Abraham could not understand it in any other way than as
requiring an outward burnt-offering, because there was no other way in
which Abraham could accomplish the complete surrender of Isaac, than by an
actual preparation for really offering the desired sacrifice. This
constituted the trial, which necessarily produced a severe internal
conflict in his mind. Ratio humana simpliciter concluderet aut mentiri
promissionem aut mandatum non esse Dei sed Diaboli; est enim contradictio
manifesta. Si enim debet occidi Isaac, irrita est promissio; sin rata est
promissio, impossibile est hoc esse Dei mandatum (Luther). But
Abraham brought his reason into captivity to the obedience of faith. He
did not question the truth of the word of God, which had been addressed to
him in a mode that was to his mind perfectly infallible (not in a vision
of the night, however, of which there is not a syllable in the text), but
he stood firm in his faith, “accounting that god was able to raise him up,
even from the dead” Heb_11:19).
Without taking counsel with flesh and blood, Abraham started early in the
morning (Gen_22:3,
Gen_22:4),
with his son Isaac and two servants, to obey the divine command; and on
the third day (for the distance from Beersheba to Jerusalem is about 20
1/2 hours; Rob. Pal. iii. App. 66, 67) he saw in the distance the
place mentioned by God, the land of Moriah, i.e., the mountainous country
round about Jerusalem. The name
מֹרִיָּה,
composed of the Hophal partic. of
רָאָה
and the divine name
יה,
an abbreviation of
יְהֹוָה
(lit., “the shown of Jehovah,” equivalent to the manifestation of
Jehovah), is no doubt used proleptically in
Gen_22:2, and
given to the mountain upon which the sacrifice was to be made, with direct
reference to this event and the appearance of Jehovah to Abraham
there. This is confirmed by
Gen_22:14, where the name is connected with the
event, and explained in the fuller expression Jehovah-jireh. On the
ground of this passage the mountain upon which Solomon built the temple is
called
הַמֹּרִיָּה with reference to the appearance of the
angel of the Lord to David on that mountain at the threshing-floor of
Araunah (2Sa_24:16-17),
the old name being revived by this appearance.
Gen 22:5-8 -
When in sight of the distant mountain, Abraham left the
servants behind with the ass, that he might perform the last and hardest
part of the journey alone with Isaac, and, as he said to the servants, “worship
yonder and then return.” The servants were not to see what would take
place there; for they could not understand this “worship,” and the issue
even to him, notwithstanding his saying “we will come again to you,” was
still involved in the deepest obscurity. This last part of the journey is
circumstantially described in
Gen_22:6-8, to show how strong a conflict every
step produced in the paternal heart of the patriarch. They go both
together, he with the fire and the knife in his hand, and his son with the
wood for the sacrifice upon his shoulder. Isaac asks his father, where is
the lamb for the burnt-offering; and the father replies, not “Thou wilt be
it, my son,” but “God (Elohim without the article - God as the
all-pervading supreme power) will provide it;” for he will not and cannot
yet communicate the divine command to his son. Non vult filium macerare
longa cruce et tentatione (Luther).
Gen 22:9-10 -
Having arrived at the appointed place, Abraham built an
altar, arranged the wood upon it, bound his son and laid him upon the wood
of the altar, and then stretched out his hand and took the knife to slay
his son.
Gen 22:11-13 -
In this eventful moment, when Isaac lay bound like a
lamb upon the altar, about to receive the fatal stroke, the angel of the
Lord called down from heaven to Abraham to stop, and do his son no harm.
For the Lord now knew that Abraham was
אֱלֹהִים
יְרֵא
God-fearing, and that his obedience of faith did extend even to the
sacrifice of his own beloved son. The sacrifice was already accomplished
in his heart, and he had fully satisfied the requirements of God. He was
not to slay his son: therefore God prevented the outward fulfilment of the
sacrifice by an immediate interposition, and showed him a ram, which he
saw, probably being led to look round through a rustling behind him, with
its horns fast in a thicket (אַחַר
adv. behind, in the background); and as an offering provided by God
Himself, he sacrificed it instead of his son.
Gen 22:14 -
From this interposition of God, Abraham called the
place Jehovah-jireh, “Jehovah sees,” i.e., according to
Gen_22:8,
provides, providet; so that (אֲשֶׁר,
as in Gen_13:16,
is equivalent to
כֵּן
עַל,
Gen_10:9)
men are still accustomed to say, “On the mountain where Jehovah appears”
(יֵרָאֶה),
from which the name Moriah arose. The rendering “on the mount of
Jehovah it is provided” is not allowable, for the Niphal of the verb
does not mean provideri, but “appear.” Moreover, in this case the
medium of God's seeing or interposition was His appearing.
Gen 22:15-19 -
After Abraham had offered the ram, the angel of the
Lord called to him a second time from heaven, and with a solemn oath
renewed the former promises, as a reward for this proof of his obedience
of faith (cf. Gen_12:2-3).
To confirm their unchangeableness, Jehovah swore by Himself (cf.
Heb_6:13.),
a thing which never occurs again in His intercourse with the patriarchs;
so that subsequently not only do we find repeated references to this oath
(Gen_24:7;
Gen_26:3;
Gen_50:24;
Exo_13:5,
Exo_13:11;
Exo_33:1,
etc.), but, as Luther observes, all that is said in
Psa_89:36;
Psa_132:11;
Psa_110:4
respecting the oath given to David, is founded upon this. Sicut enim
promissio seminis Abrahae derivata est in semen Davidis, ita Scriptura S.
jusjurandum Abrahae datum in personam Davidis transfert. For in the
promise upon which these psalms are based nothing is said about an oath
(cf. 2 Sam 7; 1Ch_17:1).
The declaration on oath is still further confirmed by the addition of
יְהֹוָה
נְאֻם
“edict (Ausspruch) of Jehovah,” which, frequently as
it occurs in the prophets, is met with in the Pentateuch only in
Num_14:28, and
(without Jehovah) in the oracles of Balaam,
Num_24:3,
Num_24:15-16.
As the promise was intensified in form, so was it also in substance. To
express the innumerable multiplication of the seed in the strongest
possible way, a comparison with the sand of the sea-shore is added to the
previous simile of the stars. And this seed is also promised the
possession of the gate of its enemies, i.e., the conquest of the enemy and
the capture of his cities (cf.
Gen_24:60).
This glorious result of the test so victoriously stood
by Abraham, not only sustains the historical character of the event
itself, but shows in the clearest manner that the trial was necessary to
the patriarch's life of faith, and of fundamental importance to his
position in relation to the history of salvation. The question, whether
the true God could demand a human sacrifice, was settled by the fact that
God Himself prevented the completion of the sacrifice; and the difficulty,
that at any rate God contradicted Himself, if He first of all demanded a
sacrifice and then prevented it from being offered, is met by the
significant interchange of the names of God, since God, who commanded
Abraham to offer up Isaac, is called Ha-Elohim, whilst the actual
completion of the sacrifice is prevented by “the angel of Jehovah,”
who is identical with Jehovah Himself. The sacrifice of the heir,
who had been both promised and bestowed, was demanded neither by
Jehovah, the God of salvation or covenant God, who had given Abraham
this only son as the heir of the promise, nor by Elohim, God as
creator, who has the power to give life and take it away, but by He-Elohim,
the true God, whom Abraham had acknowledged and adored as his personal
God, and with whom he had entered into a personal relation. Coming from
the true God whom Abraham served, the demand could have no other object
than to purify and sanctify the feelings of the patriarch's heart towards
his son and towards his God, in accordance with the great purpose of his
call. It was designed to purify his love to the son of his body from all
the dross of carnal self-love and natural selfishness which might still
adhere to it, and so to transform it into love to God, from whom he had
received him, that he should no longer love the beloved son as his flesh
and blood, but simply and solely as a gift of grace, as belonging to his
God-a trust committed to him, which he should be ready at any moment to
give back to God. As he had left his country, kindred, and father's house
at the call of God ( Gen_12:1),
so was he in his walk with God cheerfully to offer up even his only son,
the object of all his longing, the hope of his life, the joy of his old
age. And still more than this, not only did he possess and love in Isaac
the heir of his possessions (Gen_15:2),
but it was upon him that all the promises of God rested: in Isaac should
his seed be called (Gen_21:12).
By the demand that he should sacrifice to God this only son of his wife
Sarah, in whom his seed was to grow into a multitude of nations (Gen_17:4,
Gen_17:6,
Gen_17:16),
the divine promise itself seemed to be cancelled, and the fulfilment not
only of the desires of his heart, but also of the repeated promises of his
God, to be frustrated. And by this demand his faith was to be perfected
into unconditional trust in God, into the firm assurance that God could
even raise him up from the dead. - But this trial was not only one of
significance to Abraham, by perfecting him, through the conquest of flesh
and blood, to be the father of the faithful, the progenitor of the Church
of God; Isaac also was to be prepared and sanctified by it for his
vocation in connection with the history of salvation. In permitting
himself to be bound and laid upon the altar without resistance, he gave up
his natural life to death, to rise to a new life through the grace of God.
On the altar he was sanctified to God, dedicated as the first beginning of
the holy Church of God, and thus “the dedication of the first-born, which
was afterwards enjoined in the law, was perfectly fulfilled in him.” If
therefore the divine command exhibits in the most impressive way the
earnestness of the demand of God upon His people to sacrifice all to Him,
not excepting the dearest of their possessions (cf.
Mat_10:37, and
Luk_14:26);
the issue of the trial teaches that the true God does not demand a literal
human sacrifice from His worshippers, but the spiritual sacrifice of an
unconditional denial of the natural life, even to submission to death
itself. By the sacrifice of a ram as a burnt-offering in the place of his
son, under divine direction, not only was animal sacrifice substituted for
human, and sanctioned as an acceptable symbol of spiritual self-sacrifice,
but the offering of human sacrifices by the heathen was condemned and
rejected as an ungodly
ἐθελοθρησεία.
And this was done by Jehovah, the God of salvation, who prevented
the outward completion of the sacrifice. By this the event acquires
prophetic importance for the Church of the Lord, to which the place of
sacrifice points with peculiar clearness, viz., Mount Moriah, upon which
under the legal economy all the typical sacrifices were offered to
Jehovah; upon which also, in the fulness of time, God the Father gave
up His only-begotten Son as an atoning sacrifice for the sins of the whole
world, that by this one true sacrifice the shadows of the typical
sacrifices might be rendered both real and true. If therefore the
appointment of Moriah as the scene of the sacrifice of Isaac, and the
offering of a ram in his stead, were primarily only typical in relation to
the significance and intent of the Old Testament institution of sacrifice;
this type already pointed to the antitype to appear in the future, when
the eternal love of the heavenly Father would perform what it had demanded
of Abraham; that is to say, when God would not spare His only Son, but
give Him up to the real death, which Isaac suffered only in spirit, that
we also might die with Christ spiritually, and rise with Him to
everlasting life (Rom_8:32;
Rom_6:5,
etc.).
Gen 22:20-24 -
Descendants of Nahor. - With the sacrifice of Isaac the
test of Abraham's faith was now complete, and the purpose of his divine
calling answered: the history of his life, therefore, now hastens to its
termination. But first of all there is introduced quite appropriately an
account of the family of his brother Nahor, which is so far in place
immediately after the story of the sacrifice of Isaac, that it prepares
the way for the history of the marriage of the heir of the promise. The
connection is pointed out in
Gen_22:20, as compared with
Gen_11:29, in
the expression, “she also.” Nahor, like Ishmael and Jacob, had
twelve sons, eight by his wife Milcah and four by his concubine; whereas
Jacob had his by two wives and two maids, and Ishmael apparently all by
one wife. This difference with regard to the mothers proves that the
agreement as to the number twelve rests upon a good historical tradition,
and is no product of a later myth, which traced to Nahor the same number
of tribes as to Ishmael and Jacob. For it is a perfectly groundless
assertion or assumption, that Nahor's twelve sons were the fathers of as
many tribes. There are only a few names, of which it is probable that
their bearers were the founders of tribes of the same name. On Uz,
see Gen_10:23.
Buz is mentioned in
Jer_25:23 along with Dedan and Tema as an
Arabian tribe; and Elihu was a Buzite of the family of Ram (Job_32:2).
Kemuel, the father of Aram, was not the founder of the Aramaeans,
but the forefather of the family of Ram, to which the Buzite Elihu
belonged, - Aram being written for Ram, like Arammim in
2Ki_8:29 for
Rammim in 2Ch_22:5.
Chesed again was not the father of the Chasdim (Chaldeans), for
they were older than Chesed; at the most he was only the founder of one
branch of the Chasdim, possibly those who stole Job's camels (Knobel;
vid., Job_1:17).
Of the remaining names, Bethuel was not the founder of a tribe, but
the father of Laban and Rebekah (Gen_25:20).
The others are never met with again, with the exception of Maachach,
from whom probably the Maachites (Deu_3:14;
Jos_12:5)
in the land of Maacah, a small Arabian kingdom in the time of David (2Sa_10:6,
2Sa_10:8;
1Ch_19:6),
derived their origin and name; though Maachah frequently occurs as the
name of a person (1Ki_2:39;
1Ch_11:43;
1Ch_27:16).
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