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V1-3
The call to Abram in Ur which preceded the journey to Haran (11.31-32).
Terah came with Abram as far as Haran; Abram then moved on to Canaan. The call
to Abram is hard, given the culture of the day; we are not surprised that his
family accompany him, so he does not leave them immediately, and they remain for
a period in Haran; perhaps there is family pressure, something which can be
difficult to resist.
Acts 7.2-4 confirms that the call came while Abram was in Ur; Stephen
suggests that Abram only moved from Haran when Terah died. (If Abram was born
when Terah was 70 years old, then he was 135 before he moved from Haran. It is
difficult to be precisely clear over dates here. But that is not the main
issue.)
V1
God has spoken to Abram; a man picked out, chosen by grace. The call was
to forsake country and kindred and family; a real sacrifice. Implicit is the
call to break with idolatry, and to exercise total dependence upon God. At the
time of the call, God did not show Abram where he was to go (Heb 11.8), for he
has to dwell in tents for years (Heb 11.9). Faith obeys even when the outcome
and the destiny are unknown.
V2
A great nation; a further promise, although Sarai is barren (11.30).
Abram believes God, even in the face of the impossible. He has no Bible, no
prior knowledge of God, no testimony from others (it seems inconceivable that he
could have known Noah, although Noah was still alive when Abram was born.)
Here are promises
without condition; see 15.5; Rom 4.18-19. Abram would be blessed by God, and
become a blessing to many.
V3
Men will be tested by their attitude to Abram, the man of faith. And
blessing will spread to all families of the earth, especially through Christ.
V4-5
Lot remains with Abram, and is associated with him for 25 years (see
21.5). He is constantly a burden to him; disagreeing over where to live (chapter
13), getting captured by the Gentile kings (chapter 14), and needing to be
delivered from Sodom (chapter 18). It seems that the Lord intended that Abram
should be separated from Lot. Isaac was not conceived until the final departure
of Lot in 19.36-38. Lot has not been expressly called, he had decided to come
with Abram, and he did not build altars, and did not share Abrams faith. He
is half-hearted, wanting to be near the man of blessing, but not become the
pioneer that Abram clearly is.
V6-9
Abrams altars; Shechem and Bethel; testimony of sacrifice, or
thanksgiving, of communion. Abram is now in the land of Canaan, where God
appears to him for the first time.
The Canaanites live in the land; they are potential threats to Abrams
life, and certainly do not share his love for the true God. Later these places
become centres of government and even idolatry in the kingdom of Israel.
The promise of the land; God will give this very land to Abrams
offspring. This means that he is now in the right place, the place where God had
planned that he should come. Thus the wider promises of v1-3 begin to be
fulfilled in detail.
V10
There is no command to go to Egypt; Abram goes because of the famine;
would the Lord not provide for him?
Egypt is the place of -
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alternative security, food;
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alternative religion, false; and
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alternative power, magic;
it thus pictures the
world. Abram, like Elimelech, goes down to Egypt, leaving the land of
promise because of difficulties. For both there is a sense of backsliding, a
foretaste of the slavery suffered later by the whole nation of Israel. We are
commanded to cling to the Lord through all circumstances.
We note that Abram
built no altar in Egypt. Here is a test, which Abram failed. But God proves His
faithfulness, bringing him back into Canaan later.
V11-13
Abrams compromise leads to a lie. This seems to create more problems
than he intended it to solve.
V14-16
Pharaoh takes Sarai into his own house; she has the ceremonial ablutions
as preparation for marriage; compare Esthers experience. Pharaoh treats Abram
well, and he grows in wealth.
V17
God protects Abram and Sarai, in spite of their mistake in going to
Egypt. Abram also grows in wealth.
V18-20
Pharaohs rebuke, a sign of his conscience. He recognised that the
serious diseases that fell on his household were the result of him taking Sarai
into his palace. Abram maintained a good testimony in Canaan, but not so good in
Egypt.
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