My
wife and I mentor engaged couples preparing to get married at our church. Over
the course of four or five meetings with them, we go over their responses to a
survey they previously completed. The very last survey question is “We understand that when we exchange our vows, we are entering
into a life-long covenant.” This usually leads me to ask what the word
“covenant” means to them and a typical response is “a life-long commitment.”
Chapter
15 of Genesis is
what I usually think of when I hear the word “covenant”. Gen 15 is popular with
theologians because it describes God’s covenant with Abram. It has a parallel
with Gen 17 which also describes God’s covenant with Abram. But the promises in Gen
15 are unconditional while those in Gen 17 are conditional on Abram following
God’s commands, like circumcision.
Gen
15 breaks down into two distinct units. The first narrative (vv. 1-6) is a
promise of a biological son and innumerable descendants while the second (vv.
7-21) is a promise of land. One clue to them being distinct narratives is that
they take place at different times. The first takes place at night (Abram looks
up at the stars) while the second begins in the evening and continues into the
night.
First Promise
The
first narrative has been described by some biblical scholars as an oracle of
salvation which takes the form of: 1) a pledge of salvation, 2) objection, 3)
God’s answer and confirming sign, and 4) praise.
The pledge
of salvation occurs in v. 1: “Do not fear, I am your shield; I will make
your reward very great.” The promise to be Abram’s protector could be a reference
to the battle
described in Gen 14
and any fears Abram might have about possible retaliation from the defeated
kings.
Abram
objects to a promise of more wealth because, with Lot no
longer his heir, all
the wealth he has already accumulated will be left to a “slave born in my
house”, a term which hearkens back to its previous use in Gen 14:14. YHWH answers
Abram with the assurance that his heir will be his biological son. For a confirming sign YHWH has Abram
step outside and tells him his descendants will be as countless as the stars.
This
brings us to the conclusion of the oracle in v. 6. The Hebrew is ambiguous:
“And he believed [or trusted] YHWH and he credited it to him as
righteousness [or loyalty, fidelity].” Who credited what to whom?
The
traditional interpretation is because Abram believed in YHWH, YHWH credited
that act of belief to Abram as righteousness. In other words, faith makes one
right with God. This verse later became a key verse for St. Paul (Rom
4:3; Gal
3:6) and, through him, was a
proof text for the Protestant theology of salvation by faith alone (sola fide).
But
if vv. 1-6 are an oracle of salvation, the format calls for praise from Abraham.
Because the Hebrew is ambiguous, there is another possible interpretations of
this line: Abram trusted in YHWH and Abram credited the promise to YHWH’s fidelity.
In other words, Abram trusts YHWH will fulfil the promise because he acknowledges
YHWH’s fidelity. This reading of the Hebrew as praise of YHWH betters fits as a
conclusion to an oracle of salvation.
Abrahamic Covenant, God Walks the Line (2009) by Wayne Forte (wayneforte.com) |
Second Promise and Covenant
The
second narrative is the most interesting part of the chapter for me as it
describes a bizarre (to us) covenant ceremony. YHWH tells Abram (v. 7) that the
land of Canaan will be given to him as a possession and Abram asks for proof.
YHWH tells him (vv. 9-10) to take various animals and cut them in two, placing the
severed parts opposite each other. After night falls, Abram witnesses (v. 17) a smoking
firepot and flaming torch pass between the animal parts.
In
the OT, two parties “cut a covenant” in a ceremony involving the sacrifice of
an animal, witnessed by the deity. Any party not honoring the covenant will
meet the same fate as the sacrificed animal. Jer
34:18-20
describes a covenant ceremony where officials walked in procession between the
severed parts of a sacrificed calf. Because the officials did not honor the
terms of the covenant, YHWH will enforce the terms by handing them over to
their enemies.
The
difference here in Gen 15 is that YHWH (appearing as smoke and flame) is a
participant in the covenant and not just a witness. This is YHWH’s way of telling Abram that he will be true to his promise.
Four Hundred Years or Four Generations?
The appearance
of birds of prey (v. 11) that Abram has to drive off may be an omen that the promise of land will not be
fulfilled without a struggle. If true, this would tie into the prophecy made in vv.
13-16, which many commentators have assumed is a later insertion rather than
being an original part of the second narrative.
In
vv. 13-16 YHWH tells Abram that his descendants will be enslaved and oppressed
for 400 years. He also says the “fourth generation” will return to the promised
land because “the wickedness of the Amorites is not yet complete.”
YHWH is obviously referring to slavery in Egypt and the exodus. But what is meant by the “fourth generation” (v. 16a) will return to Canaan? And how do you reconcile that
with Abram’s descendants being oppressed for 400 years?
The Bible sometimes indicates an Egyptian sojourn much shorter than 400 years. For example, Exod
6:16-20 gives us the genealogy of Moses and
Aaron. Levi, one of Jacob’s sons, descends to Egypt with his son Kohath (generation
#1). Kohath has a son named Amram (#2) who is the father of Moses and Aaron (#3).
Moses dies before reaching the promised land, but his sons (generation #4) live
to enter Canaan.
Other passages like Ex 12:40 state clearly that the Israelites were in Egypt for 430 years. There seems to have been two traditions for
the Egyptian sojourn. In one tradition, there were only four generations in
Egypt; in the other, approximately 400 years. This passage appears to conflate
the two traditions.
The
Wickedness of the Amorites
Who were the Amorites? If you ask a historian,
Amorites refer to the people of Amurru, west of Mesopotamia in modern-day
Syria. But in the biblical texts the terms “Amorites” and “Canaanites” are frequently
used interchangeably to describe the original occupants of the land. Some texts
locate the Amorites in the mountainous areas of Canaan (e.g., Num
13:29; Josh
11:3) and other texts locate them east of the Jordan (e.g., Deut
3:8; Judg
10:8).
What does it mean in v. 16b that “the
wickedness of the Amorites is not yet complete”? The author presupposes his
audience understands that the Amorites/Canannites were driven out upon the
Israelites’ return from their sojourn in Egypt. What was the Israelites’ justification for exterminating the Amorites? Their wickedness. Why did the
Israelites have to wait 400 years in Egypt before taking possession
of the land? Because the Amorites’ wickedness hadn’t yet run its course. YHWH
is granting the Amorites 400 years to rack up all the sins that will then justify their extermination.
The idea that the Israelites will possess the
land not because of their righteousness but because of the wickedness of the
indigenous population reflects deuteronomic theology (compare Deut
9:4-5). This attitude is still with us today in TV preachers who,
after a hurricane in New Orleans or earthquake in San Francisco, blame the loss
of life on the sinfulness of the victims. These same TV preachers also believe
Israel has a right to appropriate Palestinian territories on the West Bank based
on the promise of land God made to Abraham.
Helping interpret current events is another
reason why I believe an understanding of the Bible is crucial, even for people who may
not necessarily be religious.
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