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DID ABRAM LIE?
All Scripture references
are to the New International Version UK edition unless stated otherwise.
Question: Genesis 12: 11-13:
11 As he was about to enter Egypt,
he said to his wife Sarai, ‘I know what a beautiful woman you are. 12
When the Egyptians see you, they will say, “This is his wife.” Then they will
kill me but will let you live. 13 Say you are my sister, so that I will
be treated well for your sake and my life will be spared because of you.’
Did Abram lie when he
passed off his wife as his sister?
Answer:
Yes,
and he enlisted his wife Sarai in the deception. However, to understand his
actions, we should look at this question from at least two standpoints. The first casts him in a somewhat
favourable light; the second less so.
First,
Abram feared for his life when he entered
Egypt with his beautiful Sarai, convinced the Egyptians would kill him to get
her, once they learned she was his wife. That fear prompted him to give the
impression that Sarai was his sister. Though misleading, and intended to be so,
the assertion was not entirely untrue. Abram and Sarai shared the same father,
but different mothers (see later in this article). In those days it was customary
to refer to close relatives such as step-brothers, step-sisters and cousins, as
one’s brothers and sisters. However, Abram let the faulty impression stand and
even accepted livestock from the pharaoh’s officers in exchange for Sarai
(verse 16).
Second,
although Abram did fear for his life, it’s not clear from the Scriptures what he based his fears on.
Perhaps he lacked the assurance of faith that God would protect him from harm,
especially in light of the promises that God already gave him (Genesis
12: 2, 3). Unfortunately, Abram’s
course produced several uncomplimentary results: (1) The Egyptians accused him
of deception; (2) in conveying the impression Sarai was a free woman, he
exposed her to mistreatment – she was taken into Pharaoh’s house for sexual
exploitation; and, (3) he put Pharaoh in danger of sinning against God by his
taking the wife of another man.
Abram’s Experiences an Encouragement
God’s Word records
the sins and faults of His people, as well as their virtues and strengths. Many
of God’s most faithful servants, such as David and Peter, suffered failures,
later proving to be overcomers.
Abram is no
exception. It is interesting to note from the lengthy account in Genesis 20
that later, when Abram (Abraham) and Sarai (Sarah), were living
in Gerar, they made the same mistake, putting the king, Abimelech, in a
false position, with a similar outcome. Here again Abram presents his wife as
his step-sister, since they claimed the same father, but were born of different
mothers.
However, when Abraham
was put under a most crucial test of his faith when God commanded him to
sacrifice his one and only son, Isaac, he did not compromise. God forestalled
the sacrifice at the last minute, though Abraham had been fully prepared to go
through with it.
In a recurring theme,
Isaac fell into the same temporizing trap as his father, in the same place
(Gerar), and with a royal successor of the same name (Abimelech) (Genesis 26:
1-11). Here, too, Isaac claimed that his wife Rebekah was really his sister,
though in truth she was a cousin (Genesis 24: 15, 16; compare 11: 29).
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