Friday, November 30, 2018


BOOK BY BOOK BIBLE STUDY
larrydalexanderbiblestudies.blogspot.com

BIBLE STUDY LESSON
For the week beginning Sunday December 2, 2018

ISAAC MARRIES REBEKAH
Genesis 24

   Genesis 24 shows how the providence of GOD is worked out in the lives of those who are faithful to him. Here we see chronicled, the special case of a man named Eliezer, a faithful servant of Abraham, and how he successfully answered the call of his superior when he was put to the task.   
    This lengthy passage can actually be simplified if it is broken down into four special and distinct segments, and we’ll entitle this first segment “the calling, “charge”, or “commission” of Eliezer (Vs.1-9), and any of those terms are applicable here. In this section Abraham charges Eliezer, the man in charge of all things concerning his household, with the even more special task, of finding a wife for his son Isaac, shortly after the death of Sarah. The aging patriarch wanted to ensure that Isaac wouldn’t end up marrying one of the local Canaanite women, after he had passed away.
    And so he commissioned Eliezer to go to his own (Abraham’s) homeland, to his brother Nahor’s house, back in Aram-naharaim, in the northern section of Padan Aram (Mesopotamia), located between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, and choose a woman from among his relatives there. Abraham also made Eliezer swear a solemn oath that he would never take Isaac to Padan-aram, but instead, that he brings the young lady back there to Canaan, which was Isaac’s promised inheritance from GOD. And if by chance the woman refuses to come back to Canaan with him, then Eliezer would free from his oath.
    The second section of this chapter (Vs.10-27) reveals “the faith and trust” that Eliezer shows in the “GOD of Abraham” to lead and guide him into a position to make the right choice for his master’s son. After receiving his instructions from Abraham, Eliezer loaded ten camels with gifts that consisted of the best of everything that Abraham owned, and set out on this 450-mile journey.  
    When Eliezer arrived in Padan Aram where Nahor had settled, he rested by a well just outside the village of Aram-naharaim. There he prayed to the GOD of Abraham to help him accomplish his mission. He asked GOD to show him a sign by which he would ask the women who come to the well to draw water, to give him a drink. If the woman answers by saying “Yes, I will give you a drink, and I will water your camels too” (it would take considerable time and water to accommodate ten thirsty camels) let her be the one YOU have appointed to be Isaac’s wife. And the LORD honored his request, and that woman turned out to be a young virgin named Rebekah, the daughter of Bethuel, the son of Nahor, Abraham’s brother.
    In the third segment (Vs.28-60), we see the success of Eliezer’s mission as he and his entourage, are invited into the home of Laban and his father Bethuel, who quickly concluded that Eliezer’s mission was truly a commission from GOD. In those days it was not unusual to see the brother of a woman negotiating along with the living father concerning her marriage, and that is why here we see, both, Laban and Bethuel actively involved. And so they entrusted Rebekah into Eliezer’s hand, and she went willingly with them back to Beersheba.
    And finally, in section four (Vs.61-67) we see the mission of Eliezer winding down to a conclusion, as they wrap up their 900-mile journey to Padan Aram and back. This final segment opens up as we find a, now 40-year old Isaac, who had just returned home himself from Beer-lahairoi in the Negev, strolling through a field meditating, when he looked up and saw Eliezer’s caravan approaching from the east.
    When Rebekah looked and saw Isaac, she quickly dismounted and asked Eliezer who Isaac was. He replied, “He is my master’s son”, and so Rebekah covered her face with her veil. Soon after they met they were married and moved into the tent of his deceased mother Sarah, and Isaac loved her very much, as she was a great comfort to him after the death of his mother whom he had missed very much. Abraham was 140 years old at that time, and he lived another 35 years, and he himself re-married before he died and passed the torch to Isaac at the ripe old age of 175.

A Sunday school lesson by,
Larry D. Alexander





   
   

Friday, November 23, 2018


BOOK BY BOOK BIBLE STUDY
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BIBLE STUDY LESSON
For the week beginning Sunday November 25, 2018

THE BURIAL OF SARAH
Genesis 23

   At the end of chapter 22 we are re-introduced to Nahor, who was Abraham’s brother, and to Milcah, Nahor’s wife. They were still living in Padan-aram, a large plains area in Mesopotamia, 450 miles to the south of Beersheba were Abraham now dwelled. Milcah had now bore Nahor eight sons, and, in addition, Nahor’s concubine, Reumah, had also bore him four other children. Nahor’s youngest son by Milcah was named Bethuel, and he became the father of Rebekah, who would become the future wife of Isaac.
    Sandwiched in between this horizontal genealogy of Nahor at the end of chapter 22, and the marriage account of Isaac and Rebekah in Genesis 24, we find the account of the death and burial of Abraham’s wife, Sarah, who was, at the time of her passing, 127 years. Here the scripture tells us that she died in Kiriath-arba (later called Hebron), a city that is located about 28 miles northeast of Beersheba. There Abraham remained and wept and mourned for Sarah for an unspecified amount of time, before leaving her body and going to the Hittite elders to request a place to bury his beloved wife.
    The Hittite elders responded positively to Abraham’s request telling him that they would be proud to offer him the very best tombs that they have. Abraham humbled himself before them and said, “Since this is how you feel, be so kind, as to ask Ephron son of Zohar to let me have the cave of Machpelah, down at the end of the field. I want to pay the full price, of course, whatever is publically agreed upon, so I may have a permanent burial place for my family” (Vs.5-9 - NLT).
    Ephron, who was sitting there among them, answered Abraham and publically stated before all of the elders, “No sir, please listen to me, I will give you the cave and the field. Here in the presence of my people, I give it to you. Go and bury your dead”.
    However, Abraham, who believed that the land he was standing on, had already been given to him and to all of his descendants as a permanent possession, by GOD, did not want to risk any future confusion, or take-back attempts of the property, by any of the descendants of Ephron later on, after his death.
    By buying the property, Abraham would insure that the land would legally be his to pass down to the next generation of his family and beyond. And so, in essence, Abraham was making an investment in the promises of GOD, on faith, and as it turned out, this would be the only piece of the promised land that Abraham would actually legally own in his lifetime. By insisting on buying the property, Abraham was faithfully exhibiting that his hope was in the CREATOR of the land that was promised to him, and not in the people who legally possessed it at that time.
    And so Abraham paid the publically suggested price of 400 shekels of silver for the field, the cave, and all of the trees that were nearby. And he buried Sarah there in the cave near the future site of Hebron, which also later became known as “the city of David”. In fact, not only was Sarah buried there, but also Abraham (Genesis 25:9, Isaac and Rebekah, and Jacob and Leah (Genesis 49:29-31 and 50:13).

A Sunday school lesson by,
Larry D. Alexander





   

Friday, November 16, 2018


BOOK BY BOOK BIBLE STUDY
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BIBLE STUDY LESSON
For the week beginning Sunday November 18, 2018

ABRAHAM’S OBEDIENCE TESTED
Genesis 22

   Genesis 22 comprises the, now famous account, of Abraham’s “faith and obedience test” that is actually given by GOD to all those who profess to love, worship, and serve HIM, even to those here in this 21st century. However, in Abraham’s test, GOD instructs him to take his son, Isaac, to the land of Moriah (which means “bitterness of the LORD”) some 50 miles away (approximately 3 days journey) from his home in Beersheba.
    Mount Moriah is an elevated area in Jerusalem, then known as Salem, where Abraham once met with Melchizedek (Genesis 14:17-24). It is also the place where King Solomon would later build the first temple of GOD here on earth (2 Chronicles 3:1-2). By sending Abraham to Moriah, and with Abraham knowing the meaning and history of the name, GOD was setting the stage for Abraham’s greatest test of faith.
    Real tests from GOD often defies human logic, because, in order for a test of faith to be effective, it has to be composed of those elements that the flesh will vehemently be opposed to. The test has to present us with a genuine opportunity to choose between obeying the flesh (satan), or clinging to the SPIRIT (GOD). Through those tests, GOD is seeking to prove to us, for our own spiritual confidence, whether or not we are “true believers”, or just “professed Christians”.
    In order to serve GOD properly, we have to prove through our actions and behavior (not just through our mouth), that we love HIM more than our father, mother, sister, brother, children, or property here on earth (Mark 10:29-31), and be willing to give up any and all things (your whole life) for the kingdom, and for CHRIST’s sake, the way JESUS did for us.
    GOD never intended for Abraham to kill his son Isaac, but rather, HE was trying to prove to Abraham himself, if he would truly be willing to do it, if he had to. Our tests are never done for GOD’s sake, because GOD already knows the answer to all things. However, in order for us to serve HIM with complete confidence and faith, we ourselves have to know where we truly stand at all times, and how we will react in pressure situations when things aren’t going well, and we are beset with tribulations and persecutions from the world (satan).
    Several things in this passage confirm Abraham’s faith in GOD, and we’ll investigate some of those right now. First of all, GOD tells Abraham up front that he would be taking Isaac to Moriah to present him as a sacrifice to HIM (v.2). In those days, child sacrifices by pagan cultures, especially to the idol god Mollech, were very popular, and was almost certainly a ritual term that Abraham was familiar with. However, he also knew that it was something that his GOD detested and would never indorse among HIS people.
    Nevertheless, operating on total faith, Abraham got up early the next morning, saddled a donkey, and took Isaac, along with two of his servants and some wood for the sacrificial burnt offering, and set out on the 50-mile journey that had been designated by “the GOD of his faith”. We can assume that GOD requested this be done some 50 miles away so that Abraham would have at least three days to think about it, and have amble time to change his mind, and not go through with it, if he chose to. This was indeed, another part of the test.
    On the third day of the journey, Abraham could see from a distance, the place where GOD had instructed him to go, and so he directed his servants to stay where they were, and he traveled the remaining short distance alone with Isaac, and the supply of wood. He told them that they would go and worship, and would be back shortly.
    This was an astounding statement by Abraham that seemed to confirm his faith that GOD would keep HIS promise to him and would not actually kill the heir to that promise, which was Isaac, or, at worse, GOD would kill him, and then raise him from the dead. However, either way, his “faith reasoning” was that, he would not lose his son in this ordeal.
    Throughout Old Testament Scripture, and, in levitical law, the lamb is not only the animal most preferred for sacrificial offerings, but, over time, it has become the literal symbol of sacrifice. JESUS, WHO is the innocent lamb of GOD, voluntarily offered HIMSELF up as a sacrifice for all mankind. HE, quite literally, took our place “as payment” for our sins against GOD, past, present, and future.
    Here in Genesis 22, verses 6-8, Abraham places the wood for the burnt offering on “Isaac’s shoulder” and he took a lighted torch and a knife in his own hands, and the two of them begin to “walk to their final destination” (this is reminiscent of JESUS’ death walk from the courthouse to Golgotha, bearing HIS OWN cross). It was then that Isaac said to his father, “We have the wood and the fire, but where is the lamb for the sacrifice? Here Abraham responds with another statement of faith, “GOD will provide a lamb my son”.
    When they arrived at the place where GOD had told Abraham to go, he built an altar to the LORD and placed the supply of wood on it. He then tied Isaac up, and laid him on top of the wood and took his knife and raised it up over his head to kill him as a sacrifice to the LORD. At that moment “The ANGEL of the LORD”, which is a theophany of CHRIST in the Old Testament, shouted out to Abraham from Heaven, “Abraham, Abraham!”
    Abraham immediately stopped his downward motion with the knife and said, “I’m listening” (Vs.9-11). The ANGEL then told Abraham to “Lay down the knife. Do not hurt the boy in any way, for “now I know” that you truly fear GOD. You have not withheld even your beloved son from ME”.
    In the Old Testament, prophets were reformers of sort, who, not only delivered GOD’s Word, but also, at one and the same time, challenged the people to actually serve the LORD and obey HIS Word. They were called “men of GOD” or “seers”, and were distinguished by their holy lifestyle before men, under GOD. They were able to faithfully see beyond that which is natural in the eyes of man.
    JESUS wholly fitted the role of the Old Testament prophet. In fact, in the Old Testament, the future CHRIST served in the role of a prophet as “The ANGEL of the LORD” and even “The COMMANDER of the LORD’s Army” in Joshua 5:13-15. As a prophet, HE delivered many messages from GOD the FATHER to men such as Abraham here in Genesis 22:11-17, to Moses in Exodus 3:2-3 (the burning bush), to Joshua, to Baalam in Numbers 22:21-35, and, to the Israelites in general at Bokim  in Judges 2:1-5.
    The Scriptures teaches us that “the pre-incarnate JESUS” and “the incarnate JESUS” was not “all-knowing” (omniscient) as GOD the FATHER is. We see that here in this passage in the ANGEL’s response to Abraham, were HE says “now I know” that you truly fear GOD”, meaning that HE didn’t know how Abraham would respond to his test from GOD the FATHER beforehand. Also, JESUS tells us HIMSELF in Matthew 24:36 that HE was not all-knowing at that stage in HIS humanity, but was not granted omni-power, in Heaven and on earth, until just before HIS ascension back into Heaven, as “the Resurrected JESUS”, and SAVIOR of the world (Matthew 28:18).
    In verses 13-14 we see Abraham looking up and seeing a ram (symbolic of CHRIST) caught in a bush, a “sacrificial substitute” to replace his son, Isaac (mankind), on the altar of GOD. Here the concept of how GOD would later bring salvation to man, through HIS only begotten SON, CHRIST JESUS, is being introduced into the world. And Abraham named the place “The LORD will provide”. This name gave rise to a future popular Jewish proverb that would state “On the mountain of the LORD, it will be provided”.
    Then “The ANGEL of the LORD” spoke again to Abraham saying, “This is what the LORD says: “Because you have obeyed ME and have not withheld even your beloved son, I swear by MY OWN SELF that I will bless you richly, I will multiply your descendants into countless millions, like the stars of the sky and the sands on the seashore, they will conquer their enemies, and through your descendants, all the nations of the earth will be blessed---all because you have obeyed ME”.
    Abraham then traveled back to Beersheba and lived there for a long time. As this chapter ends, we see GOD already making preparations in the life of young Isaac, and we are introduced to his future wife, Rebekah, who had already been born to the youngest son of Abraham’s brother, Nahor, who was now living in the east. Rebekah’s father’s name was Bethuel. Stay tuned.

A Sunday school lesson by,
Larry D. Alexander   
   






   


Friday, November 9, 2018


BOOK BY BOOK BIBLE STUDY
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BIBLE STUDY LESSON
For the week beginning Sunday November 11, 2018

THE BIRTH OF ISAAC
Genesis 21:1-7

  In Genesis 21, verses 1-8, we see GOD’s promise to Abraham and Sarah finally being realized, and it is exactly at the appointed time. The silent laughter of both Abraham (Genesis 17:17) and Sarah (Genesis 18:12), because of their unbelieving spirit, is now turned into loud laughter of joy that can be shared by both, their family, and friends. And it had been made possible because they had both finally, through faith, turned themselves over to GOD, whole-heartedly and completely.
    This account in the lives of this aging couple serves to remind us forever, and to assure each of us individually, that, the seemingly impossible things in life are put here to serve as proof, that all things become possible for us when we serve the Almighty, sovereign GOD, the CREATOR of the universe, in total faith.
    As “human beings” living in this world, we seem to always attempt to solve our problems by taking matters in our own hands. However, after we become Christians, we need to develop a different mindset, calling on the advice found in GOD’s Word, and the power of the HOLY SPIRIT, to lead and guide us out of our own, self-imposed predicaments.
     Unfortunately though, we often continue on in “our worldly mindset” long after we’ve professed to have accepted the wonderful gift of salvation, and vowed to GOD that we are ready to place our lives into HIS protective hands. We seem to have a difficult time resisting the urge to try and move forward without the help of the only wise GOD WHO is physically invisible to us. We have to have faith in someone (GOD) other than what we see physically every day. As human beings, our mind finds abstract things hard to grasp and embrace, because we have to do so with our spirit.
    When we develop an experiential relationship of friendship with GOD, we can then allow HIM to work in our lives through prayer, and by being patient and waiting on HIM to answer at perfectly the right time. Our trust in GOD should buttress our patience, so that, over time, we won’t see GOD as not moving fast enough, and begin to take foolish and prideful measures, thinking that we need to “help GOD out”. The only real way we can help GOD, or ourselves, is by being obedient to HIS Word. When we foolishly attempt to interfere with GOD’s speed, we often end up sinning against HIM, and thereby, we delay HIS promise and blessing that HE has already prepared for us.
    Abraham and Sarah are one of Scripture’s greatest examples of people who delayed their blessings and promise from GOD, by trying to “help GOD out”. First they brought their servant girl, Hagar, into their bedroom to try and produce a child totally outside of the will of GOD’s plan for them. This human act, of course, eventually caused a lot of strife in their family, and, as a result, they ended up waiting seventeen more years for their promised son, Isaac, to be born through their union.

HAGAR AND ISHMAEL SENT AWAY
Genesis 21:8-21

   In Genesis 21, verses 8-21, after the birth of Isaac, we see more strife erupting in the family as Hagar and Abraham’s son, Ishmael, begins to mock and deride he and Sarah’s son, Isaac. Now, an angry Sarah calls on Abraham to oust both Hagar and Ishmael from their home forever. She was not about to let young Ishmael share her husband’s inheritance with her son Isaac, and her wishes were reinforced by GOD, WHO, spoke to Abraham, assuring him that it was only through Isaac, that his covenant blessings would be realized.
    However, GOD also assured Abraham that HE would make a great nation of the seed of Ishmael also, because, after all, he too, was Abraham’s son, and had, in fact, already been blessed and assured through GOD’s promise to Hagar (Genesis 16:9-11). No longer upset, Abraham rose early the next morning and prepared food and water for Hagar and Ishmael, and then, sent them away.
    Hagar and Ishmael wandered aimlessly in the desert of Beersheba until they had exhausted all of their food and water supply. Concerned for their survival, Hagar placed her, now teenaged son, underneath the shelter of a large bush. She then walked about a hundred yards, so as to not be able to see Ishmael suffer and die.
    As Hagar sat crying on the hot desert floor, having already done all that she could do, “the GOD WHO sees us” (Genesis 16:13), sends HIS angel, just as HE had done before, after Hagar had ran away from Abraham and Sarah, while she was still pregnant with Ishmael. Here in this passage we see that, GOD had heard the cries of young Ishmael also, while he laid there under the bush. In response to Hagar’s and Ishmael’s lamentations, GOD had already sent an angel to comfort them both.
   There in the heat of the desert, GOD reassures Hagar of HIS promised blessings upon she and Ishmael, and HE placed a well in front of her, and she filled her containers with water and gave her son Ishmael a drink. And GOD continued on with them as Ishmael grew up in the desert of Paran, which is located in the northeast section of the Sinai Peninsula. He became an expert archer, and Hagar later arranged a marriage for him to a young woman from Egypt, her own homeland.
    The Apostle Paul uses this historical biblical account of the life of Abraham and Sarah in his, now famous, “Letter to the Galatians” (Galatians 4:21-31), where he attempted to teach the Galatians about the conflict between the flesh and the spirit. There he tells how Ishmael was born through the flesh, as a result of Abraham and Sarah’s own human passions and desires. Isaac, on the other hand, was the “humanly impossible birth” brought about by the promise of GOD, and thereby, becoming heir to that promise.
    And so we see one child, Ishmael, ended up representing the bondage of the “Law” given to Moses on Mount Sinai, while the other child, Isaac, came to personify the “freedom of the promise” that would later be ushered in to us by CHRIST JESUS. When JESUS came into the world, “the old way” (the Law, which can only condemn us)) was done away with, and HIS vicarious sacrifice, “the new way” (the ultimate Grace, which can only save us) enabled us, as believers, to become co-heirs to the promise of GOD.
    Those of us who allow ourselves to be adopted into the family of CHRIST, and thereby, into the family of GOD, are set free from the bondage of sin, and, the Law. And just as Ishmael and Isaac were in conflict with each other, so is it with “the flesh” and “the spirit”. The flesh often mocks and derides the spirit, and therefore, as Christians, we are called by GOD to reject the threat of the flesh, just as Abraham and Sarah eventually had to do (send it away), and choose to cling to, and live by the SPIRIT. That way, we will always be able to keep ourselves on GOD’s schedule and timetable, not ours, and we can allow HIM to lead and guide us into all truth.

A TREATY WITH ABIMELECH
Genesis 21:22-34

   In verses 22-34, some time after Hagar and Ishmael had been sent away, Abraham receives a visit from Abimelech and his commanding officer, Phicol. Here in this passage, we see that, Abimelech, knowing by now that Abraham was supported by a powerful GOD, and, that he also was capable of much trickery and deceit, shrewdly decides that it may be in his best interest to bind Abraham to a covenant for his own protection, and for the security of his family, and, their descendants.
    Here Abraham is called on by the Abimelech to swear in his own GOD’s name that he will be as loyal to him as he had been to him and his family, allowing them to dwell in peace in the land that he had given to him. Abraham agreed and accepted the Abimelech’s offer of peace, but then he issued a complaint to the king regarding the taking of a well he had dug when he settled in their land. Apparently some of Abimelech’s servants had taken control of the well from Abraham, without the king’s knowledge.
    At this point Abraham brings out sheep and oxen and offers them to Abimelech as a peace offering. In addition, he brings out seven ewe lambs and set them off by themselves. When the Abimelech inquires as to why he did that, Abraham responds, “They are a gift to you as a public confirmation that I dug this well”.
    In the Hebrew, the word used for “swear” is “saba” and it is mentioned no less than three times in this passage. Also in this passage the Hebrew numerical adjective “seba” occurs three times, and it is the term used for the number “seven”. After agreeing to abide by their covenant with each other, they called the name of that place “Beer-sheba” which means “well of seven” and also “well of oath”. It stresses the significance of their agreement and is indeed the key verse in this passage.
    After sealing their covenant, the Abimelech and his army commander returned home and left Abraham and his clan in peace. Abraham, showing his faith in GOD that HE would allow him to live there for a long time, in peace and security, planted a Tamarisk tree in the midst of this desert land, as if to prophesy through that action that, GOD would supply a constant stream of water to make the tree grow and provide shade to him for years to come. In Hebrew tradition, the term “one is sitting under a shade tree” implies that a person is living in comfort, peace and security with no worries. It is the same term that JESUS used to describe how HE saw Nathaniel when he first spoke to him (John 1:48).
  

A Sunday school lesson by,
Larry D. Alexander







Friday, November 2, 2018


BOOK BY BOOK BIBLE STUDY
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BIBLE STUDY LESSON
For the week beginning Sunday November 4, 2018

ABRAHAM DECEIVES ABIMELECH
Genesis 20

   In Genesis 20, some time after the destruction of the five cities of the plains (Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboiim, and Bela), Abraham moved his family south toward the Negev, and they re-settled in the area between Kadesh and Shur known as Gerar, where a man called “Abimelech” was king. This was the land of a small group of “sea people” from the island of Crete located in the Mediterranean Sea, known as the Philistines.
    Whenever Abraham and Sarah entered into a pagan nation (a place that didn’t fear GOD), for fear of Abraham’s life, they would tell the inhabitants of that land that they were sister and brother, which was a “lie”. In fact, nowhere in Scripture, except in Abraham’s lie, does it state that Terah, Abraham’s father, had any other children except Abraham, Nahor, and Haran (no daughters). In Genesis 11:31 Sarai is called Terah’s daughter-in-law, because of her marriage to his son. She is never referred to as his daughter.
    Here in chapter 20 of Genesis, Abraham and Sarah employ the same deceitful strategy that they used against the Egyptian Pharaoh in Genesis chapter 12, because, at this point, they apparently continued to fear man more than GOD, in their actions and behavior. When we trust GOD like we say we do, GOD expects us to also show it in our actions, behavior, and decision-making.  
    It is very possible that the name “Abimelech” is a “hereditary title”, rather than a personal name, and it means “My father is king”. Here in chapter 20 of Genesis, after Abraham had spread the rumor that he and Sarah were siblings, the Abimelech quickly sent for Abraham’s beautiful wife and placed her in his harem at his palace, and began to make preparations to marry her.
    However, one night GOD visited the Abimelech in a dream and warned him that he was a dead man if he didn’t return Sarah to her husband. Fortunately for him, he had not yet slept with Sarah and thereby he pleaded with GOD not to kill him, because, what he had planned (to marry an already married woman) was not with malicious intent. He, in fact, had been deceived into believing that Sarah was only Abraham’s sister, not his wife (Vs.3-5).
    In verse 6 GOD tells Abimelech that HE knows of his innocence in this matter, and that is why HE kept him from sinning against HIM by sleeping with Sarah. GOD, apparently through divine interference, had kept Abimelech from the sin of adultery. HE then instructed Abimelech to return Sarah to HIS “prophet” (the first use of this word in Scripture), her husband, Abraham, and HE would not kill him (Abimelech) and his family (Vs.6-7).
    Abimelech arose early the next morning and hastily called his servants together and told them about what Abraham and Sarah had done to him. He then called for Abraham and rebuked him for his undeserved trickery and deceit towards him and his household. Abraham responded, confessing his fear, telling the king that:

 “I figured this to be a GODless place. I thought, they will want my wife and will kill me to get her. Besides, she is my sister---we both have the same father, though different mothers--and I married her. When GOD sent me to travel far from my father’s home, I told her, wherever we go, have the kindness to say that you are my sister” (Vs.11-13).

    At that point Abimelech took sheep, oxen, and male and female servants, and gave them as a gift to Abraham, and he also returned Sarah to him. In addition, Abimelech told Abraham to look around his kingdom and choose a place where he might like to live.
    In verse 16 he turns and apologizes to Sarah and states, with a bit of sarcasm, that, “I am giving your “brother” a thousand pieces of silver to compensate for any embarrassment I may have caused you. This will settle any claim against me in this matter”.
    Abraham then prayed to GOD to show mercy on Abimelech and his family, that they would be healed from the “curse of infertility” that GOD had placed upon them so that they could not have children unless Abimelech, first, obeyed HIS command. That is why Abimelech acted swiftly to resolve this situation. GOD had stricken his whole household to ascertain that he would take HIS command seriously.

A Sunday school lesson by,
Larry D. Alexander





                                 
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