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Ge 16:1-16

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Gen 16:1-25:18

ABRAM AND THE PROMISED HEIR

Birth of Ishmael

(Gen 16:1-16)

When Abram earlier suggested adopting his slave as his heir, God reassured him that his heir would be a son of his own (see Gen 15:2-4).

But after ten years in Canaan, Sarai was still childless. Weakened in faith, she suggested that Abram obtain his son through their slave-girl Hagar.

This was not God’s way, but it followed an accepted custom among the people of the region. All legal rights over the child belonged to the wife, not to the slave-girl, though the wife had no right to expel the slave-girl.

However, when jealousy arose between Sarai and Hagar, Sarai enforced her rights with such bitterness that Hagar fled (Gen 16:1-6).

Hagar was probably heading for her home country Egypt when she was met by the angel of the Lord.

Through the angel God told Hagar to return and submit to Sarai, adding that the son to be born to her would himself become the father of a great people.

He would be named Ishmael and would grow into a tough, fiercely independent desert-dweller (Gen 16:7-12; cf. Gen 17:20; 21:13).

Hagar was so amazed to think she had seen God and lived, that she addressed God by a special name in acknowledgment of her extraordinary experience (Gen 16:13-16).

Note: In the early books of the Old Testament the angel of God appears almost to be the same as God himself.

This is possibly because the angel is so closely identified with God as his messenger that when he speaks, God speaks.

The temporary physical appearance of the angel is interpreted as the temporary physical appearance of God. (See also Gen 21:17-18; 22:15-17; Exod 3:2-6.)