insure the blessing.
In accordance with the usages of those around her, she gave her
handmaid to her husband to be his wife, "that their children might bless
her age." She doubtless felt herself strong enough in love to Abraham
and to Hagar to believe that her affection would embrace their children.
But when the trial came, and all the instincts of the heart, all the
feelings of the wife revolted, she proved that this violation of a
heaven-appointed institution brings only sorrow and strife. Yet there
was no alienation between Sarah and Abraham. The wife of his youth
was ever dearer to him than the mother of his child.
At length, however, the promise was fulfilled. Sarah became a mother.
Many years had passed since she had left the home of her fathers. The
days of man were now much abridged, and she was fast approaching
the ordinary limit of human life; but we may suppose her cheek was
still fair and her brow smooth, and that she still retained much of the
beauty of youth.
With a wondering joy, Sarah gazed upon the child so long desired--the
child in whose seed "all the nations of the earth" were to be "blessed."
And she said, "God hath made me to laugh, so that all who hear shall
laugh;" and while those that heard that Sarah "had borne Abraham a
son in his old age," wondered at an event so strange, Abraham must
have pondered the prophecy which had revealed to him the destiny of
his race,--perhaps foreseeing that Star which was to rise in a still distant
age, and apprehending, however dimly and faintly, something of the
mysterious connection between the birth of the child and the promise
given in the hour of the curse--the blending of the fate of his race with
the eternal plan of mercy and redemption.
There is an instinct in our natures which leads us to rejoice at a birth;
but, could Sarah have foreseen the destiny of her race, tears would have
mingled with her smiles. Wonderful has been the past history of that
people, strange their present condition, while the future may develop
mysteries still more incomprehensible.
In the hour of rejoicing over the new-born babe, past transgression
brought forth its legitimate fruits. Sullenness and strife were brooding
in the bosoms of the Egyptian bond-woman and her son; and the quiet
eye of the mother saw all the danger arising from the jealous hate and
rivalry of the first-born of Abraham.
If the decision was stern, it was needful. "Cast out the bond-woman and
her child, for her son shall not be heir with my son, even with Isaac."
Harsh words,--but it is better to dwell peacefully asunder, than together
in strife and bitterness. The malignant passions which led Ishmael to
mock, might soon be stimulated by the mother to murder,--chafed and
irritated as she was by the constant presence of the child who had
supplanted her own. From the time of the departure of Hagar from the
household of Abraham, peace seems to have rested upon it. Prosperity
attended him. He no longer wandered from place to place. He remained
in Hebron, sojourning with Sarah and her child.
Many years passed,--years of peaceful quiet and happiness seldom
allotted to such an age,--while they trained their child in the nurture of
the true God, and were honoured by the princes around him, who
sought to enter into league with him, for they saw that "God blessed
him in all that he did."
Once again God saw fit to test the faith of Abraham by calling upon
him to offer his son--his only son Isaac, whom he loved--as a sacrifice;
and Abraham obeyed the divine command, and thus doing, uttered that
prophecy which has thrilled so many souls, "God will himself provide a
sacrifice." In this trial, Sarah seems not to have been called to
participate. The mother was spared the agony of feeling that her only
child was to be offered as a sacrifice--that the hope of her life was to
perish.
"Sarah was an hundred and twenty years old, and she died." The dark
shadow of death is, sooner or later, to fall upon each household.
Abraham seems to have been at a distance--perhaps in the charge of
some of his numerous flocks--when he was recalled to Hebron by news
of Sarah's death. And he came to mourn over her. The remembrance of
her maiden beauty and modesty, the grateful recollection of all her
conjugal devotedness, filled his soul. If light and immortality were
brought to light in the gospel, still the divine rays were faintly reflected
in the former dispensation, and the eye of faith even then penetrated the
thick darkness of the grave.
And now, after these long years of promise
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