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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 26)
Genesis 26 -
Isaac's Joys and Sorrows - Genesis 26
The incidents of Isaac's life which are collected
together in this chapter, from the time of his sojourn in the south
country, resemble in many respects certain events in the life of Abraham;
but the distinctive peculiarities are such as to form a true picture of
the dealings of God, which were in perfect accordance with the character
of the patriarch.
Gen 26:1-5 -
Renewal of the Promise. - A famine “in the land”
(i.e., Canaan, to which he had therefore returned from Hagar's well;
Gen_25:11),
compelled Isaac to leave Canaan, as it had done Abraham before. Abraham
went to Egypt, where his wife was exposed to danger, from which she could
only be rescued by the direct interposition of God. Isaac also intended to
go there, but on the way, viz., in Gerar, he received instruction through
a divine manifestation that he was to remain there. As he was the seed to
whom the land of Canaan was promised, he was directed not to leave it. To
this end Jehovah assured him of the fulfilment of all the promises
made to Abraham on oath, with express reference to His oath (Gen_22:16)
to him and to his posterity, and on account of Abraham's obedience of
faith. The only peculiarity in the words is the plural, “all these
lands.” This plural refers to all the lands or territories of the
different Canaanitish tribes, mentioned in
Gen_15:19-21,
like the different divisions of the kingdom of Israel or Judah in
1Ch_13:2;
2Ch_11:23.
הָאֵל;
an antique form of
הָאֵלֶּה
occurring only in the Pentateuch. The piety of Abraham is described in
words that indicate a perfect obedience to all the commands of God, and
therefore frequently recur among the legal expressions of a later date.
יְהֹוָה
מִשְׁמֶרֶת
שָׁמַר
“to take care of Jehovah's care,” i.e., to observe Jehovah,
His persons, and His will, Mishmereth, reverence, observance, care,
is more closely defined by “commandments, statutes, laws,” to
denote constant obedience to all the revelations and instructions of God.
Gen 26:6-11 -
Protection of Rebekah at Gerar. - As Abraham had
declared his wife to be his sister both in Egypt and at Gerar, so did
Isaac also in the latter place. But the manner in which God protected
Rebekah was very different from that in which Sarah was preserved in both
instances. Before any one had touched Rebekah, the Philistine king
discovered the untruthfulness of Isaac's statement, having seen Isaac
“sporting with Rebekah,” sc., in a manner to show that she was his wife;
whereupon he reproved Isaac for what he had said, and forbade any of his
people to touch Rebekah on pain of death. Whether this was the same
Abimelech as the one mentioned in Gen 20 cannot be decided with certainty.
The name proves nothing, for it was the standing official name of the
kings of Gerar (cf. 1Sa_21:11
and Ps 34), as Pharaoh was of the kings of Egypt. The identity is favoured
by the pious conduct of Abimelech in both instances; and no difficulty is
caused either by the circumstance that 80 years had elapsed between the
two events (for Abraham had only been dead five years, and the age of 150
was no rarity then), or by the fact, that whereas the first Abimelech had
Sarah taken into his harem, the second not only had no intention of doing
this, but was anxious to protect her from his people, inasmuch as it would
be all the easier to conceive of this in the case of the same king, on the
ground of his advanced age.
Gen 26:12-17 -
Isaac's Increasing Wealth. - As Isaac had experienced
the promised protection (“I will be with thee,”
Gen_26:3) in
the safety of his wife, so did he received while in Gerar the promised
blessing. He sowed and received in that year “a hundred measures,”
i.e., a hundred-fold return. This was an unusual blessing, as the yield
even in very fertile regions is not generally greater than from
twenty-five to fifty-fold (Niebuhr and Burckhardt), and it
is only in the Ruhbe, that small and most fruitful plain of Syria,
that wheat yields on an average eighty, and barley a hundred-fold.
Agriculture is still practised by the Bedouins, as well as grazing
(Robinson, Pal. i. 77, and Seetzen); so that Isaac's sowing
was no proof that he had been stimulated by the promise of Jehovah
to take up a settled abode in the promised land.
Gen_26:13-17
Being thus blessed of Jehovah, Isaac became
increasingly ( הָלֹוךְ,
vid., Gen_8:3)
greater (i.e., stronger), until he was very powerful and his wealth very
great; so that the Philistines envied him, and endeavoured to do him
injury by stopping up and filling with rubbish all the wells that had been
dug in his father's time; and even Abimelech requested him to depart,
because he was afraid of his power. Isaac then encamped in the valley of
Gerar, i.e., in the “undulating land of Gerar,” through which the torrent
(Jurf) from Gerar flows from the south-east (Ritter, Erdk.
14, pp. 1084-5).
Gen 26:18-22 -
Reopening and Discovery of Wells. - In this valley
Isaac dug open the old wells which had existed from Abraham's time, and
gave them the old names. His people also dug three new wells. But
Abimelech's people raised a contest about two of these; and for this
reason Isaac called them Esek and Sitnah, strife and
opposition. The third there was no dispute about; and it received in
consequence the name Rehoboth, “breadths,” for Isaac said, “Yea
now ( כִּי־עַתָּה,
as in Gen_29:32,
etc.) Jehovah has provided for us a broad space, that we may be
fruitful (multiply) in the land.” This well was probably not in
the land of Gerar, as Isaac had removed thence, but in the Wady
Ruhaibeh, the name of which is suggestive of Rehoboth, which stands at
the point where the two roads from Gaza and Hebron meet, about 3 hours to
the south of Elusa, 8 1/3 to the south of Beersheba, and where
there are extensive ruins of the city of the same name upon the heights,
also the remains of wells (Robinson, Pal. i. 289ff.; Strauss,
Sinai and Golgotha); where too the name Sitnah seems to have been
retained in the Wady Shutein, with ruins on the northern hills
between Ruhaibeh and Khulasa (Elusa).
Gen 26:23-25 -
Isaac's Journey to Beersheba. - Here, where Abraham had
spent a long time ( Gen_21:33.),
Jehovah appeared to him during the night and renewed the promises
already given; upon which, Isaac built an altar and performed a solemn
service. Here his servants also dug a well near to the tents.
Gen 26:26-33 -
Abimelech's Treaty with Isaac. - The conclusion of this
alliance was substantially only a repetition of renewal of the alliance
entered into with Abraham; but the renewal itself arose so completely out
of the circumstances, that there is no ground whatever for denying that it
occurred, or for the hypothesis that our account is merely another form of
the earlier alliance; to say nothing of the fact, that besides the
agreement in the leading event itself, the attendant circumstances are
altogether peculiar, and correspond to the events which preceded.
Abimelech not only brought his chief captain Phicol (supposed to be
the same as in Gen_21:22,
if Phicol is not also an official name), but his
מֵרֵעַ
“friend,” i.e., his privy councillor, Ahuzzath. Isaac
referred to the hostility they had shown; to which Abimelech replied, that
they (he and his people) did not smite him (נָגַע),
i.e., drive him away by force, but let him depart in peace, and expressed
a wish that there might be an oath between them.
אָלָה
the oath, as an act of self-imprecation, was to form the basis of the
covenant to be made. From this
אָלָה
came also to be used for a covenant sanctioned by an oath (Deu_29:11,
Deu_29:13).
תַּעֲשֶׂה
אִם
“that thou do not:”
אִם
a particle of negation used in an oath (Gen_14:23,
etc.). (On the verb with zere, see Ges. §75, Anm. 17; Ewald,
§224.) - The same day Isaac's servants informed him of the well which they
had dug; and Isaac gave it the name Shebah (שִׁבְעָה,
oath), in commemoration of the treaty made on oath. “Therefore the city
was called Beersheba.” This derivation of the name does not shut the
other (Gen_21:31)
out, but seems to confirm it. As the treaty made on oath between Abimelech
and Isaac was only a renewal of his covenant concluded before with
Abraham, so the name Beersheba was also renewed by the well Shebah.
The reality of the occurrence is supported by the fact that the two wells
are in existence still (vid.,
Gen_21:31).
Gen 26:34-35 -
Esau's Marriage. - To the various troubles which the
Philistines prepared for Isaac, but which, through the blessing of God,
only contributed to the increase of his wealth and importance, a domestic
cross was added, which caused him great and lasting sorrow. Esau married
two wives in the 40th year of his age, the 100th of Isaac's life ( Gen_25:26);
and that not from his own relations in Mesopotamia, but from among the
Canaanites whom God had cast off. On their names, see
Gen_34:2-3.
They became “bitterness of spirit,” the cause of deep trouble, to
his parents, viz., on account of their Canaanitish character, which was so
opposed to the vocation of the patriarchs; whilst Esau by these marriages
furnished another proof, how thoroughly his heart was set upon earthly
things.
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