Authors: Roberta Kells Dorr
Abraham could see that the full import of what was to be done had not occurred to Sarah and he couldn’t tell her. He could see that she was against Isaac’s going as it was.
“There’s no need for our son to go. He can be a part of many sacrifices right here,” she said.
“But that’s what the Elohim told me to do. I am to take Isaac, and so that is what I must do.”
Sarah frowned. “What if some accident should happen? What if our son finds the journey too difficult?”
Abraham could see that she didn’t understand and he was relieved. He must give her some encouragement for the fears she seemed to have, and so he said, “The Elohim has told me to do this and I trust Him.”
“And where is the animal for the sacrifice?” she asked.
Abraham had started to leave, and now he came back and took Sarah in his arms, hoping she wouldn’t see how disturbed her questions made him. “I have only the words, ‘The Lord will provide,’” he said. “And I can only trust the Lord to provide.”
She pulled away and looked at him with fear glinting in her eyes. “There’s something strange about this. What are you doing with Isaac?”
“Don’t worry, Sarah,” he said, “please don’t worry. It’s true the Elohim told me to take my son and sacrifice him but …”
“Sacrifice him! Sacrifice him! How can you even think of such a thing?”
“Sarah, listen to me,” he said. “I don’t know what will happen. I just trust the Elohim. He will do what is best.”
Sarah began to scream and cry. She clung to him so fiercely her nails dug into his flesh, “No, no!” she cried. “Not Isaac! Not my son Isaac!”
Abraham loosened her fingers and tried to reason with her, but it was useless. She backed from him, her face twisted in horror and anguish. She clawed at her hair and ripped her robe. In a frenzy she began scooping up the cold ashes from the night’s fire and pouring them over her head.
Some of the women heard the commotion and came running. Abraham bade them comfort her until he returned. He turned quickly and started up the path to where Isaac and the two young servants were waiting. At the crest of the small incline he looked back and could see women from other tents running toward their tent, but he could see nothing of Sarah. “Oh, my God,” he prayed, “if I am to do this thing, comfort Sarah.”
The journey for Abraham was fraught with anxiety and terrors. He plodded on, putting one foot in front of the other, trying not to think. Isaac seemed not to notice but ran along exclaiming over each new bird or small dark animal. He whistled and sang with the joy of the fresh air, the sunshine, and the adventure with his father.
On the third night, Abraham was awakened by a gentle shaking of his shoulder, a whispering of his name and then the instructions, “You will see Salem tomorrow. The village threshing floor is called Moriah. You will go to the west a ways to the tallest mountain, a mountain with the face of a skull. There you will build an altar and sacrifice Isaac.”
In the morning, when he arose, he remembered the instructions perfectly, but he began to doubt it was anything but his imagination until he came to the mountain with the face of a skull.
“Stay here with the donkey,” he told the servants, “and the lad and I will go yonder and worship and return.”
He placed the wood on Isaac’s back, then fumbled around among the trappings on the donkey’s back, almost hoping the knife would not be there.
A knife was a rare and costly thing. He had paid dearly for it, but now he wished with all his heart it would be lost. His hand touched the cold hardness of the metal, and he drew it out. He held the knife at arm’s length, as though seeing it for the first time. It would have been so easy for the Elohim to send an angel to destroy the knife, and Isaac would be saved. Reluctantly he stuffed the knife into his belt, took the fire pot from one of the servants, and started up the steep incline.
Isaac had become quiet. He no longer dawdled along chasing butterflies and tossing rocks. It was as though he had begun puzzling over the strangeness of their journey. “Where is the lamb for the sacrifice?” he finally asked his father when they stopped for a few minutes to catch their breath.
Abraham hesitated. He could find nothing to say but to repeat the words that continually drummed in his head. “The Lord will provide,” he said with a catch in his voice. He turned and started back up the hill, his steps getting slower and slower until it was obvious that something was wrong.
When they reached the top of the hill, Abraham took a long time looking for the right spot and then a great deal of time collecting stones for the altar. Isaac helped him, and seeing that Abraham was having more and more difficulty, he laid the final stones.
Abraham carefully and methodically placed the wood on the altar, then took from his belt a coil of hempen rope. Slowly he tied Isaac’s hands and feet and then lifted him onto the altar. Isaac said nothing but looked at his father with calm, trusting eyes that so disturbed Abraham, he was almost turned from his purpose.
He could no longer look at his son. The trust he saw was crushing. He looked down and struggled to loosen the knife, then lifted it high and, looking up, hesitated only a moment as he felt the wrench and pain of abandonment. Elohim was not going to save him. His son, and with him all the hope and joy and meaning of life itself, was going to die. It was only a moment, but the pain he felt was akin to a whole lifetime of disappointment.
Then, just as he had lost all hope of rescue, a voice loud and jubilant cried out, “Abraham! Abraham!”
“Here I am,” he whispered while his eyes strained to see where the voice was coming from and his arm trembled.
“Do not lay a hand on the boy. Do not do anything to him. Now I know
that you fear God, because you have not withheld from me your son, your only son.”
Through tears of joy Abraham saw a ram caught by its horns in the thicket. He lowered his arm and released Isaac. “My son,” he said, “you see? The Lord has provided. We will name this place Jehovah-Jireh, the Lord provides.”
Three days later, as Abraham approached the region of his tents, some of his men saw him coming and ran to meet him. When they saw Isaac, they yodeled for joy, grabbed his hands and kissed them, and kissed the hem of his garment as though he were a dignitary. Everyone talked at once. They all tried to tell of Sarah’s suffering, and they asked so many questions, no one waited for answers.
The only information that was repeated was the news that for the first time in the six days Sarah had combed her hair, anointed herself with oil, and changed her clothes and was at the well.
“My son,” Abraham said, “run to the well. We must not let your mother suffer one more moment of wondering how you are.”
Isaac ran to do as his father asked, and the men drew back to let Abraham enter his tent alone. Abraham lifted the flap and entered Sarah’s side of the tent first. He saw at a glance the awful scene of her suffering. There was the torn robe that had been her favorite. He picked it up and noticed how the ashes fell from it. He saw that all the bright-colored throws had been put away. Only Isaac’s belongings were evident, as though she had clung to them in desperation. He picked up the brass bowl that had been filled with ashes and saw the untouched bread the women must have brought. “Oh Sarah,” he said, “how you must have suffered. With what tortured thoughts you were tormented. Three extra days you suffered, not knowing how the lad was saved.”
Jehovah-Jireh, the Lord will provide. The God who provides. How lovely it had seemed on the mountain, but how difficult it would be to explain to Sarah. It had been to him a new revelation of who his God was and how He cared for those who trusted Him.
Since leaving home six days earlier, he had eaten nothing but bread and cheese. Suddenly he became acutely aware of being hungry. Along with this awareness came the distinct recognition of a familiar odor. Quickly he pulled the heavy dividing curtain aside and stepped into his part of the tent. It was
just as he had left it, except on the leather mat in front of his seating area was the old fire pot with a clay stew pot on top.
Curls of smoke drifted up from the pot, and Abraham realized it was indeed his favorite stew. He hurried over and lifted the lid to see the delicious contents. As he did so he saw that beside the pot were sitting two bowls. “It’s Isaac’s bowl set out by mine!” he said, holding them up. Such joy flooded through him. He laughed. “Dear Sarah,” he said, holding the bowls high, “you knew nothing of what happened, but you trusted enough to set out both bowls.”
He heard laughing and singing and rushed to the door of his tent in time to see Sarah coming with Isaac. The whole camp came with them. Everyone was singing and dancing in an explosion of joy. Abraham saw a new Sarah before him, and in a rush of love, he held out his arms to embrace his wife.
Urim waited until a decent time had passed before he came again with cheese and questions. “My lord,” he said, shifting awkwardly from one foot to the other, “what do you make of all this? Are we to sacrifice our children now?”
Abraham was startled by the lesson Urim seemed to be gleaning from the whole experience on Mount Moriah. “No, no, Urim,” he said, “we must sacrifice, for love and worship demand it. If we truly love, we want to give our best. However, the Elohim has made it clear that he does not want the firstborn of our sons. He will accept a substitute in their place.”
The answer didn’t satisfy the clever cheese maker. “Then why,” he asked, “did the Elohim tell you to go and make the sacrifice?”
There was a long silence as Abraham pondered the question he had asked himself over and over again. Nothing was entirely clear. He had no answers that a simple man like Urim could understand. He sighed and started to take the cheese and dismiss Urim. Then seeing the eager, expectant look in Urim’s eyes, he felt obliged to give an answer. “I suppose,” he said, “one way of looking at it is to see that the Elohim was testing this creature that He’d made. How much love and trust was he capable of. If He was going to bless him with descendants and possessions and make him a blessing to the whole earth, He had to know just what the man was made of.”
Urim’s eyes grew large with reverence and wonder. “Did he tell you that?
Did he tell you all people would be blessed because of what you did?”
Abraham picked up the cheese and nodded. “Yes, Urim, He told me that and much more, much, much more.”
He watched the cheese maker go and was aware of another thought that had recurred many times since the trip to Moriah. It wasn’t something Urim would understand, but it was something very profound that he had learned. “Just because you get some word from the Elohim doesn’t mean you should stop listening. One should never stop listening,” he muttered. Listening was everything. If he had not continued to listen, if he had hurried along with the first instructions and hadn’t continued to listen, he would have sacrificed Isaac needlessly.
He wished Sarah could accept and understand all that he had learned and experienced. He had been encouraged by her big step of faith in putting out the bowls, but he suspected that he hadn’t heard the end of her frustration and fear.
S
arah had learned only one lesson from the Moriah experience, and it was that Isaac was not something she owned or possessed. She no longer hovered over Isaac but tried to relax and let Abraham take over the training of this special child. To her amazement they were soon inseparable. A noticeable bond grew between them that had not been there before.