3. לֶךְ-לְךָ
Lech L'cha
Genesis Ch 12:1-17:27
To recap: YHVH found and rescued No'ach; then broke up the human-made mosh pit starting in a place called בָּבֶל
(Babel: 'in-futility').
We now get the lineage of the next good man, Av'ram:
Shem -> Arpachshad -> Shalach -> Eyhver -> Peleg -> R'uh -> S'rug -> Nachor -> Therach-> (triplets) Av'ram + Nachor + Haran
At the end of Chapter 11, we learn that Therach takes Av'ram and wife Sarai, and his grandson Lot (from his deceased son Haran), out of Ur of Chaldees in בָּבֶל, to go to (לָלֶכֶת) the land of Canaan. But Therach settles first in Charan (in modern-day Turkey) where he dies at the age of 205.
Chapter 12
(12:1) After Therach's death, YHVH conveys to Av'ram in Charan, לֶךְ-לְךָ, 'Go to yourself,'
'From your-land and-from-your-birthplace and-from-house (of)your-fathers, to the-land which I-will-show-you.'
Av'ram's father, Therach, was somehow driven to leave Babylonia and go to Canaan, the future land of his great-grandson Jacob (Israel). But he only made it as far as Charan. YHVH makes it clear that the full trip was now going to be completed by Therach's son Av'ram.
(1:2-3) God says, 'and-I-will-make-you into-a-great-nation, and-I-will-bless-you and-I-will-make-great your-name, and-you, be a-blessing! And-I-will-bless those-that-bless-you, and-those-that-curse-you I-will-expose-to-light. And-will-be-blessed in-you all families-of the-earth.'
In verse 7 YHVH appears to Av'ram in Shechem (modern-day Nablus in the upper West Bank) in Canaan, and conveys, 'To-your-seed I-will-give this land.' There Av'ram builds an altar, מִזְבֵּחַ,
to God Who appeared to him. Av'ram travels furhter south to a location between Beth-el and Ai (near Beitin in middle West Bank), and builds another altar to God. Here Av'ram calls in the Name of YHVH.
There is a famine in Canaan, so Av'ram and his entourage keep going south into Egypt. There he realizes that the men of the land will see his beautiful wife Sarai, take her, and kill him. But they will let him live if he's seen as her brother (he's her half-brother: Av'ram and Sarai share a father but have separate mothers). Sure enough, when Av'ram comes to Egypt the Egyptians see how beautiful Sarai is and take her to Pharaoh. In exchange they give him lots of sheep, cattle, donkeys, manservants, maidservants, and camels. But because God is with Av'ram, He intervenes and afflicts the Egyptians with great bodily afflictions. Pharaoh somehow figures out that this is happening because Sarai is actually Av'ram's wife. He scolds Av'ram for telling him that Sarai is his sister and tells Av'ram to go. Pharaoh even has his men escort Av'ram and his entourage, including the gifts, out.
Chapter 13
Av'ram, with Sarai and Lot and all their riches, now go up out of Egypt, back to south Canaan where Av'ram's altar to YHVH is. Av'ram again calls in the Name of YHVH.
Av'ram and Lot have so much now that the land can't support them. Their herdsmen clash. Ever the diplomat, Av'ram pleads with Lot not to let there be strife between them, for they are brethren. He tells Lot they need to split up. He lets Lot decide where he'll go. Unfortunately for Lot, his eyes see how green and well-watered the plain of the Jordan is, like the 'Garden of YHVH,' and he heads down to Sodom. Av'ram stays in Canaan. Once Av'ram is split from Lot, YHVH shows Av'ram the land that he and his seed will inherit: north, south, east and west.
YHVH again tells Av'ram לְךָ
'go,' through the land, its length and breadth כִּי לְךָ, אֶתְּנֶנָּה
'for to-you I-give-her.' Av'ram listens to YHVH, arises, moves his tents to dwell by the Oaks of Mamre in Hebron, and builds there an altar to YHVH.
Chapter 14
This chapter tells the story of Av'ram's escapades in Canaan. It gives us an idea of how hostile the people of Canaan were, and by contrast, how decent Av'ram was. (Some of the place names are of people that did not yet exist, such as the land of Dan, son of Jacob, grandson of Av'ram, and Amalek, grandson of Esau, great-great grandson of Av'ram. This is because these accounts in the Torah were written many centuries later by Moses. The references were understood by Moses and his contemporaries.)
The chapter starts by listing four Cannanite kings: Amraphel, Arioch, Chedorlaomer and Tidal. These four kings made war with five other Canaanite kings, including בֶּרַע
(b'rah, 'in-badness') king of Sodom and בִּרְשַׁע
(bi'rashah, 'in-wickedness') king of Gomorrah. The five kings wound up serving Chedorlaomer, one of the four kings, for twelve years. But in the thirteenth year they balked. Then in the fourteenth year, possibly in response to the five kings balking, Chedorlaomer and the other three kings with him went on a smiting rampage. They smote: the Rephaim, the Zuzim, the Emim, the Horites, the country of the Amalekites, and the Amorites. Finally, possibly worrying that they were next, the five kings, of Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboiim, and Bela, aligned for war.
Sadly, B'rah king of Sodom and Bi'rashah king of Gomorrah fell into some asphalt pits. The others ducked into the local mountains. So Chedorlaomer and company took all the property of Sodom and Gomorrah (including humans), plus all their food, plus Lot, who dwelled in Sodom, and all his property. וַיֵּלֵכוּ
va'yeyleychu: 'and they (the attackers) walked away.'
Pathetic.
Av'ram must have been known in Sodom because a Sodomite who escaped ran to Hebron, where Av'ram, הָעִבְרִי
'the-Hebrew,' was dwelling. Once Av'ram heard that his nephew had been taken captive, he mobilized 318 of his men that had been born into his household and pursued Chedorlaomer and Co. up to Dan, in northeastern Canaan. This is a distance of about 120 miles! In Dan Av'ram strategized at night, divided up his servants, and smote the gang of four. He then pursued the remaining men from Dan up to Chobah, near Damascus, another 50 miles away give or take.
He then brought back all the property, as well as Lot and his property, and also the women and the peoples.
After Av'ram cut down Chedorlaomer and the kings with him, the king of Sodom came forth to call on Av'ram.
'Also Melchizedek, מַלְכִּי-צֶדֶק
('King-of Righteousness') king of Shalem ('peace') came forth, with bread and wine; he was kohen (priest) to God-Most-High. He blessed Av'ram and conveyed: "Blessed is Av'ram of God-Most-High, Possessor of heaven and earth. And blessed is God-Most-High Who delivered your-foes in-your-hand." And he gave to him a-tithe from-all.'
And the king of Sodom conveyed to Av'ram, "Give me the souls, and take the property for yourself."
And Av'ram conveyed back to the king of Sodom, "I-raise my-hand to YHVH, God-Most-High, Possessor of heaven and earth. I won't take a thread or a shoe lace or anything that is yours, lest you say "I have made Av'ram rich".'
It's interesting that people even today are tempted to take bribes from shady people in exchange for power and favors. Those that take these bribes take the easy road, but then spiral down into bad company. Those that refuse to take these bribes take a social and financial risk, but then ultimately strengthen their moral souls.
Chapter 15
After Av'ram proves to be solidly non-bribable, the word of YHVH appears to Av'ram in a vision:
'Do not fear Av'ram, I am a shield to you, your reward is very great.'
Av'ram, our spiritual ancestor, then converses with YHVH, God of the Universe, as if He was a fellow, although higher, power. In this sense, YHVH makes us feel as if we were truly made in His image.
Av'ram reminds God that he is childless. YHVH responds that Av'ram's heir will come from inside him, מִמֵּעֶיךָ
mi-mey'eyhcha, literally 'from your maw (insides).' God then takes Av'ram out הַחוּצָה
hachutzah, 'in the midst' of the land and asks him to gaze towards the heavens and count the stars if he is able to count them, so will be his seed. Looking back at this moment from today, three and a half millenia later, YHVH surely kept His promise. Av'ram believed in YHVH, and God in saw that Av'ram was upright.
YHVH then reminds Av'ram that He is the God Who took him from Ur of the Chaldees, to give to him this land as a possession. Again, YHVH is making good His promise.
Av'ram though needs more proof. In verse 8 he conveys, 'Lord YHVH, in-what will-I-know that I-will-inherit?' The next 13 verses are a personal interplay between God and Av'ram involving animal sacrifices, dreams and visions that is meant to convince Av'ram of God's intent and sincerity. We readers are left to figure out Av'ram's response to God.
Chapter 16
We are back in the physical realm, with Av'ram's still childless wife Sarai. Sarai admits to Av'ram that YHVH has restrained her from bearing children. So after dwelling in Canaan for ten years, she tells Av'ram to come to her slave-woman הָגָר הַמִּצְרִית
(ha-gar ha-mitzriyth, 'the-sojourner the-Egyptian'). Perhaps Sarai will be built up through Hagar? Av'ram complies, takes Hagar to be his wife, and she promptly becomes pregnant. Obviously YHVH has not restrained Hagar. Hagar is understandably snooty, Sarai is squashed, and Av'ram is blamed. Sarai throws God's judgment at Av'ram, who basically tells Sarai to do what she wants. Sarai then throws her judgment at Hagar and torments her. Hagar flees like a bowshot, pregnant and probably nauseous.
YHVH's messenger finds Hagar by a fountain of water, in the wilderness of Shur, in the Negev en route to Egypt. YHVH's messenger dialogues with Hagar; Hagar in turn speaks with the messenger freely. She tells him she's fleeing from her mistress, Sarai. The messenger of YHVH tells Hagar to return to her mistress, and be afflicted under her hands. In return, the messenger tells her that YHVH will multiply her greatly, that she is with child, a son, and that she will call his name Ishmael, יִשְׁמָעֵאל
yishma'el, 'God-will-listen.' The messenger goes on to say that Ishmael will be a פֶּרֶא אָדָם
pere adam, a wild-ass human: his hand in all and the hand of all in him; he will dwell before all his brethren.
Hagar calls out the Name of YHVH, the One Who spoke to her: 'You are a God Who sees. Have I seen Him that sees me?'
Hagar returns to Sarai, and gives birth to her son. Av'ram calls him Ishmael.
Chapter 17
When Av'ram is 99 years old, YHVH appears to him as אֵל שַׁדַּי
eyl shaday, God of-plenty. He asks Av'ram to walk before Him and be whole.
YHVH is a personal God, and a God with plenty of good to give us. Every one of us is special and created in His image. Therefore each one of us has the same potential for a personal relationship with God. He gives us the physical universe for our physical bodies. He gives us the non-physical universe for our souls, our life, and our instructions. And if we choose, He gives us a chance to walk before Him and be whole.
In verse 5 God changes Av'ram's name from אַבְרָם ('exalted father') to Avraham אַבְרָהָם('their strong pinion (limb)'), by adding a ה
(Hebrew letter hey).
(17:5-8) Then God says, '...you will be a father of a multitude of nations. I will make you very very fruitful and kings will come forth from you. I will establish My contract between Me and between you, and between your seed after you to their generations as an eternal contract, to be God to you, and to your seed after you. I will give to you and to your seed after you the land of your sojournings, all of the land of Canaan, as an eternal possession. And I will be their God.'
(17:9) What does God ask in return? To behave right, and: '...you will safeguard My contract, you and your seed after you to their generations. This is My contract which you will safeguard, between Me and between you-all and between your seed after you:'
הִמּוֹל לָכֶם, כָּל-זָכָר
zachar kol la-chem himol
(17:10) 'Circumcise to yourselves all male(s).'
Circumcision is the surgical removal of the foreskin. According to historians, it is the world's oldest elective surgical procedure and has been around for over 15,000 years.
Here, beginning with Avraham, circumcision is the physical sign of YHVH's contract between Him and human males (right behavior being the spiritual sign). In fact, it is the one physical sign of the contract between YHVH and the human male:
וּנְמַלְתֶּם, אֵת בְּשַׂר עָרְלַתְכֶם; וְהָיָה לְאוֹת בְּרִית, בֵּינִי וּבֵינֵיכֶם
u-veyneychem beyniy b'riyth l-oth v-hayah ahr'lath'chem b'sar eyth u-n'mal'them
(17:11) 'And you will be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskin, to be a sign of the contract between Me and between you all.'
Avraham obviously isn't the only human at the time to be circumcised. But what he added was a willingness to listen to YHVH, in addition to right behavior. Before Avraham, Chanoch, a descendant of Seth (third son of Adam and Eve), 'walked with God' (behaved right). Then No'ach, a descendant of Chanoch, was 'whole' (spiritually) and 'walked with God' (behaved right). God established His first contract with No'ach. We're all direct descendants of Chanoch and No'ach.
Avraham built on the goodness of these two good men.
Right after Avraham agreed to the contract, God changed שָׂרַי
Sarai (my struggle) to שָׂרָה
Sarah (one who struggles). He blessed her, and promised her a son through her own body. Sarah 'will be a mother of nations, and kings of peoples will be from her.' YHVH then said that His contract will continue with Isaac, Sarah's biological son.
Avraham then proceeds to circumcise himself, at age 99, Ishmael at age 13, and all the males in his household, on that very same day.
שָׁלוֹם
Shalom! (Peace!) and להתראות
L' hithraoth! (see you again!) Mona Balogh