 Chapter 5, Abraham, Part 5 of the Legends of the Jews, Volume 1. The Legends of the Jews, Volume 1, by Rabbi Louis Ginsburg, his sojourn in Egypt. Carelessly had Abraham established himself in Canaan when a devastating famine broke out. One of the ten God-appointed famines for the chastisement of men. The first of them came in the time of Adam, when God cursed the ground for his sake. The second was this one in the time of Abraham. The third compelled Isaac to take up his abode among the Philistines. The ravages of the fourth drove the sons of Jacob into Egypt to buy grain for food. The fifth came in the time of the judges, when Emilech and his family had to seek refuge in the land of Moab. The sixth occurred during the reign of David, and it lasted three years. The seventh happened in the day of Elijah, who had sworn that neither rain nor dew should fall upon the earth. The eighth was the one in the time of Elisha, when an ass's head was sold for four score pieces of silver. The ninth is the famine that comes upon men piecemeal from time to time, and the tenth will scourge men before the advent of Messiah, and this last will be not a famine of bread, nor thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord. The famine in the time of Abraham prevailed only in Canaan, and it had been inflicted upon the land in order to test his faith. He stood the second temptation as he had the first. He murmured not, and he showed no sign of impatience toward God, who had bitten him shortly before to abandon his native land for a land of starvation. The famine compelled him to leave Canaan for a time, and he repaired to Egypt, to become acquainted there with the wisdom of the priests, and, if necessary, give them instruction in the truth. On this journey from Canaan to Egypt Abraham first observed the beauty of Sarah. Chased as he was, he had never before looked at her, but now, when they were waiting through a stream, he saw the reflection of her beauty in the water like the brilliance of the sun. Wherefore he spoke to her thus, the Egyptians are very sensual, and I will put thee in a casket that no harm befall me on account of thee. At the Egyptian boundary the tax collectors asked him about the contents of the casket, and Abraham told them he had barley in it. No, they said, it contains wheat. Very well, replied Abraham, I am prepared to pay the tax on wheat. The officers then hazarded the guess. It contains pepper. Abraham agreed to pay the tax on pepper, and when they charged him with concealing gold in the casket, he did not refuse to pay the tax on gold, and finally on precious stones. Seeing that he demurred to no charge, however high, the tax collectors, made thoroughly suspicious, insisted upon his unfastening the casket and letting them examine the contents. When it was forced open, the whole of Egypt was resplendent with the beauty of Sarah. In comparison with her, all other beauties were like apes compared with men. She excelled Eve herself. The servants of Pharaoh outbid one another in seeking to obtain possession of her, though they were of opinion that so radiant a beauty ought not to remain the property of a private individual. They reported the matter to the king, and Pharaoh sent a powerful armed force to bring Sarah to the palace, and so bewitched was he by her charms that those who had brought him the news of her coming into Egypt were loaded down with bountiful gifts. Amid tears Abraham offered up a prayer. He entreated God in these words. Is this the reward for my confidence in thee? For the sake of thy grace and thy loving kindness let not my hope be put to shame. Sarah also implored God, saying, O God, thou didst bid my Lord Abraham leave his home, the land of his fathers, and journey to Canaan, and thou didst promise him to do good unto him if he fulfilled thy commands. And now we have done as thou didst command us to do. We left our country and our kindred, and we journeyed to a strange land unto a people which we knew not here to for. We came hither to save our people from starvation, and now hath this terrible misfortune befallen. O Lord, help me and save me from the hand of this enemy, for the sake of thy grace show me good. An angel appeared unto Sarah while she was in the presence of the king, to whom he was not visible, and he bade her take courage, saying, Fear not, Sarah, for God hath heard thy prayer. The king questioned Sarah as to the man in the company of whom she had come to Egypt, and Sarah called Abraham her brother. Pharaoh pledged himself to make Abraham great and powerful, to do for him whatever she wished. He sent much gold and silver to Abraham, and diamonds and pearls, sheep and oxen, and men slaves and women slaves, and he assigned a residence to him within the precincts of the royal palace. In the love he bore Sarah he rode out a marriage contract, dating to her all he owned in the way of gold and silver, and men slaves and women slaves, and the province of Goshen besides, the province occupied in latter days by the descendants of Sarah, because it was their property. Most remarkable of all he gave her his own daughter Hagar as slave, for he preferred to see his daughter the servant of Sarah to reigning as mistress in another harem. His free-handed generosity availed not. During the night when he was about to approach Sarah, an angel appeared armed with a stick, and if Pharaoh but touched Sarah's shoe to remove it from her foot, the angel planted a blow upon his hand, and when he grabbed her dress a second blow followed. At each blow he was about to deal, the angel asked Sarah whether he was to let it descend, and if she bade him give Pharaoh a moment to recover himself, he waited and did as she desired. And another great miracle came to pass. Pharaoh and his nobles and his servants, the very walls of his house and his bed were afflicted with leprosy, and he could not indulge his carnal desires. This night in which Pharaoh and his court suffered their well-deserved punishment was the night of the fifteenth of Nisan, the same night wherein God visited the Egyptians in a later time in order to redeem Israel the descendants of Sarah. Led by the plague sent upon him, Pharaoh inquired how he could rid himself thereof. He applied to the priests, from whom he found out the true cause of his affliction, which was corroborated by Sarah. He then sent for Abraham and returned his wife to him, pure and untouched, and excused himself for what had happened, saying that he had had the intention of connecting himself in marriage with him, whom he had thought to be the brother of Sarah. He bestowed rich gifts upon the husband and the wife, and they departed for Canaan after a three-month sojourn in Egypt. Arrived in Canaan they sought the same night shelters at which they had rested before, in order to pay their accounts, and also to teach by their example that it is not proper to seek new quarters unless one is forced to it. Abraham's sojourn in Egypt was of great service to the inhabitants of the country, because he demonstrated to the wise men of the land how empty and vain their views were, and also he taught them astronomy and astrology, unknown in Egypt before his time. The Legend of the Jews Volume 1 by Rabbi Louis Ginsburg, the first Pharaoh. The Egyptian ruler, whose meeting with Abraham had proved so untoward an event, was the first to bear the name Pharaoh. The succeeding kings were named thus after him. The origin of the name is connected with the life and adventures of Rekyan Havnat, a man wise, handsome, and poor, who lived in the land of Shinar. Finding himself unable to support himself in Shinar, he resolved to depart for Egypt, where he expected to display his wisdom before the king Ashwaroosh, the son of Anam. Perhaps he would find grace in the eyes of the king, who would give Rekyan the opportunity of supporting himself and rising to be a great man. When he reached Egypt, he learned that it was the custom of the country for the king to remain in retirement in his palace, removed from the sight of the people. Only on one day of the year he showed himself in public, and received all who had a petition to submit to him. Richer by a disappointment, Rekyan knew not how he was to earn a livelihood in the strange country. He was forced to spend the night in a ruin, hungry as he was. The next day he decided to try to earn something by selling vegetables. By a lucky chance he fell in with some dealers and vegetables, but as he did not know the customs of the country, his new undertaking was not favored with good fortune. Ruffians assaulted him, snatched his wares from him, and made a laughing stock of him. The second night, which he was compelled to spend in the ruin again, a sly plan ripened in his mind. He arose and gathered together a crew of thirty lusty fellows. He took them to the graveyard and bade them in the name of the king, charged two hundred pieces of silver for everybody they buried. Otherwise, internment was to be prevented. In this way he succeeded in amassing great wealth within eight months. Not only did he acquire silver, gold, and precious gems, but also he attached a considerable force, armed and mounted, to his person. On the day on which the king appeared among the people they began to complain of this tax upon the dead. They said, What is this thou art inflicting upon thy servants, permitting none to be buried unless they pay thee silver and gold? Has a thing like this come to pass in the world since the days of Adam, that the dead should not be interred unless money be paid therefore? We know well that it is the privilege of the king to take an annual tax from the living, but thou take his tribute from the dead too, and thou exactest it day by day. O king, we cannot endure this any longer, for the whole of the city is ruined thereby. The king, who had no suspicion of Rekyan's doings, fell into a great rage when the people gave him information about them. He ordered him and his armed force to appear before him. Rekyan did not come empty-handed. He was preceded by a thousand youths and maidens, mounted upon steeds and a raid in state apparel. These were present to the king. When he himself stepped before the king, he delivered gold, silver, and diamonds to him in great abundance, and the magnificent charger. These gifts and the display of splendor did not fail of taking effect upon the king, and when Rekyan, in well-considered words and with a pliant tongue, described the undertaking, he won not only the king to his side, but also the whole court, and the king said to him, no longer shalt thou be called Rekyan, have not, but Pharaoh, pay master, for thou didst collect taxes from the dead. So profound was the impression made by Rekyan that the king, the grandees, and the people, altogether resolved to put the guidance of the realm in the hands of Pharaoh. Under the serenity of Ashwerosh he administered law and justice throughout the year, only on the one day when he showed himself to the people did the king himself give judgment and decide cases. Through the power thus conferred upon him and through cunning practices, Pharaoh succeeded in usurping royal authority, and he collected taxes from all the inhabitants of Egypt. Nevertheless he was beloved of the people, and it was decreed that every ruler of Egypt should thenceforth bear the name Pharaoh. CHAPTER V. CHAPTER VI. On his return from Egypt, Abraham's relations to his own family were disturbed by annoying circumstances. Life developed between the herdsmen of his cattle and the herdmen of Lot's cattle. Abraham furnished his herds with muzzles, but Lot made no such provision. And when the shepherds that pastured Abraham's flocks took Lot's shepherds to task on the count of the omission, the latter replied, It is known of assurity that God said unto Abraham, To thy seed I will give the land. But Abraham is a sterile mule. Never will he have children. On the morrow he will die, and Lot will be his heir. Thus the flocks of Lot are but consuming what belongs to them or their master. But God spoke, Verily I said unto Abraham I would give the land unto his seed, but only after the seven nations shall have been destroyed from out of the land. Today the Canaanites are thereon, and the Parasites. They still have the right of habitation. Now when the strife extended from the servants to the masters, and Abraham vainly called his nephew Lot to account for his unbecoming behavior, Abraham decided he would have to part from his kinsmen, though he should have to compel Lot there too by force. Lot thereupon separated himself not from Abraham alone, but from the God of Abraham also, and he betook himself to a district in which immorality and sin reigned supreme, wherefore punishment overtook him, for his own flesh seduced him later into sin. God was displeased with Abraham for not living in peace and harmony with his own kindred, as he lived with all the world beside. On the other hand God also took it in ill part that Abraham was accepting Lot tacitly as his heir, though he had promised him in clear, unmistakable words, to thy seed I will give the land. After Abraham had separated himself from Lot he received the assurance that Canaan should once more belong to his seed, which God would multiply as the sand which is upon the she-shore. As the sand fills the whole earth, so the offspring of Abraham would be scattered over the whole earth, from end to end, and as the earth is blessed only when it is moistened with water, so his offspring would be blessed through the Torah, which is likened under water, and as the earth endures longer than metal, so his offspring would endure forever. While the heathen would vanish, and as the earth is trodden upon, so his offspring would be trodden upon by the four kingdoms. The departure of Lot had a serious consequence, for the war waged by Abraham against the four kings is intimately connected with it. Lot desired to settle in the well-watered circle of the Jordan, but the only city of the plain that would receive him was Sodom, the king of which admitted the nephew of Abraham out of consideration for the latter. The five impious kings planned first to make war upon Sodom on account of Lot, and then advance upon Abraham. For one of the five, Amrafel, was none other than Nimrod, Abraham's enemy of old. The immediate occasion for the war was this. Chetor Leomer, one of Nimrod's generals, rebelled against him after the builders of the tower were dispersed, and he set himself up as king of Elim. Then he subjugated the hemitic tribes living in the five cities of the plain of the Jordan, and made them tributary. For twelve years they were faithful to their sovereign ruler Chetor Leomer, but then they refused to pay the tribute, and they persisted in their insubordination for thirteen years. Making the most out of Chetor Leomer's embarrassment, Nimrod led a host of seven thousand warriors against his former general. When the battle fought between Elim and Shinar, Nimrod suffered a disastrous defeat. He lost six hundred of his army, and among the slain was the king's son, Mardin. Humiliated and abased, he returned to his country, and he was forced to acknowledge the chersanity of Chetor Leomer, who now proceeded to form an alliance with Ariat king of Elisar, and title the king of several nations, the purpose of which was to crush the cities of the circle of the Jordan. The united forces of these kings, numbering eight hundred thousand, marched upon the five cities, subduing whatever they encountered in their course, and annihilating the descendants of the giants. Fortified places, unwalled cities, and flat open country all fell in their hands. They pushed on through the desert as far as the spring issuing from the rocket Kadesh. The spot appointed by God is the place of pronouncing judgment against Moses and Aaron on account of the waters of strife. Since they turned toward the central portion of Palestine, the country of dates, where they encountered the five godless kings, Berra the villain, the king of Sodom, Bersha the sinner, king of Gomorrah, Shinab the father-hater, king of Adma, Shemmambar the voluptuary, king of Zaboam, and the king of Bella, the city that devours its inhabitants. The five were routed in the fruitful veil of Siddham, the canals of which later formed the Dead Sea. They that remained of the rank and file fled to the mountains, but the kings fell into the slime pits and stuck there. Only the king of Sodom was rescued miraculously for the purpose that he might convert those heathen to faith in God that had not believed in the wonderful deliverance of Abraham from the fiery furnace. The victors despoiled Sodom of all its goods and victuals, and took lot, boasting, we have taken the son of Abraham's brother captive, so betraying the real object of their undertaking, their innermost desire was to strike at Abraham. It was on the first evening of the Passover and Abraham was eating of the unleavened bread when the archangel Michael brought him the report of Lot's captivity. This angel bears another name besides, Pallet, the escaped, because when God threw Samuel and his host from their holy place in heaven, the rebellious leader held on to Michael and tried to drag him along downward, and Michael escaped falling from heaven only through the help of God. When the report of his nephew's evil state reached Abraham, he straightway dismissed all thought of his dissensions with Lot from his mind, and only considered ways and means of deliverance. He convoked his disciples to whom he had taught the true faith, and all who called themselves by the name Abraham. He gave them gold and silver, saying at the same time, Know that we go to war for the purpose of saving human lives. Therefore, do ye not direct your eyes upon money? Here lie gold and silver before you. Furthermore, he admonished them in these words, We are preparing to go to war. Let none join us who hath committed a trespass, and fears that divine punishment will descend upon him. Alarmed by his warning, not one would obey his call to arms. They were fearful on account of their sins. Eliezer alone remained with him, wherefore God spake, and said, All for Sukthi save only Eliezer. Verily I shall invest him with the strength of the three hundred and eighteen men whose aid thou did seek in vain. The battle fought with the mighty hosts of the kings, from which Abraham emerged victorious, happened on the fifteenth of Nisan, the night appointed for miraculous deeds. The arrows and stones hurled at him effected not, but the dust of the ground, the chaff, and the stubble which he threw at the enemy were transformed into death-dealing javelins and swords. Abraham, as tall as seventy men set on end, and requiring as much food and drink as seventy men, marched forward with giant strides, each of his steps measuring four miles, until he overtook the kings and annihilated their troops. After he could not go, for he had reached Dan, where Jeroboam would once raise the golden calves, and on this ominous spot Abraham's strength diminished. His victory was possible only because the celestial powers espoused his side. The planet Jupiter made the night bright for him, and an angel, Leila by name, fought for him. In a true sense it was a victory of God. All the nations acknowledged his more-than-human achievement, and they fashioned a throne for Abraham, and erected it on the field of battle. When they attempted to seat him upon it, amid exclamations of Thou art our king, Thou art our prince, Thou art our God, Abraham warded them off and said, The universe has its king, and it has its God. He declined all honors, and returned his property unto each man. Only the little children he kept by himself. He reared them in the knowledge of God, and later they atoned for the disgrace of their parents. Somewhat arrogantly the king of Sodom set out to meet Abraham. He was proud that a great miracle his rescue from the slime-pit had been performed for him too. He made Abraham the proposition that he keep the dispoiled goods for himself. But Abraham refused them, and said, I have lift up mine hand unto the Lord, God most high, who hath created the world for the sake of the pious, that I will not take a thread nor a shoe latchet nor ought that is thine. I have no right upon any goods taken as spoils, save only that which the young men have eaten and the portion of the men who terried by the stuff, though they went not down to the battle itself. The example of Abraham, in giving a share in the spoils, even unto the men who not concerned directly in the battle, was followed later by David, who heeded not the protest of the wicked men and the base fellows with him, that the watchers who stayed by the stuff were not entitled to a share alike with the warriors that had gone down to the battle. In spite of his great success Abraham nevertheless was concerned about the issue of war. He feared that the prohibition against shedding the blood of man had been transgressed, and he also dreaded the resentment of Shem, whose descendants had perished in the encounter. But God reassured him and said, Be not afraid, thou hast but extirpated the thorns, and as to Shem he will bless thee rather than curse thee. So it was. When Abraham returned from the war, Shem, or as he is sometimes called, Melchizedek, the King of Righteousness, Priest of God Most High and King of Jerusalem, came forward to meet him with bread and wine. And this high priest instructed Abraham in the laws of the priesthood and in the Torah, and to prove his friendship for him he blessed him and called him the partner of God in the possession of the world, seeing that through him the name of God had first been made known among men. But Melchizedek arranged the words of his blessing in an unseemly way. He named Abraham first and then God. As a punishment he was deposed by God from the priestly dignity, and instead it was passed over to Abraham with whose descendants it remained forever. As a reward for the sanctification of the holy name, which Abraham had brought about when he refused to keep odd of the goods taken in battle, his descendants received two commands, the command of the threads in the borders of their garments, and the command of the latchets to be bound upon their hands and to be used as frontlets between their eyes. Thus they commemorate that their ancestor refused to take so much as a thread or a latchet. And because he would not touch a shoe-latchet of the spoils, his descendants cast their shoe upon Edom, the covenant of the pieces. Shortly after the war God revealed himself unto Abraham to soothe his conscience as to the spilling of innocent blood, for it was a scruple that gave him much anguish of spirit. God assured him at the same time that he would cause pious men to arise among his descendants, who like himself would be a shield unto their generation. As a further distinction God gave him leave to ask what he would have, rare grace accorded to none beside except Jacob, Solomon, Ahaz, and the Messiah. Abraham spoke and said, O Lord of the world, if in time to come my descendants should provoke thy wrath, it were better I remained childless. Lot for the sake of whom I journeyed as far as Damascus, where God was my protection, would be well pleased to be my heir. Moreover I have read in the stars, Abraham thou wilt beget no children. Thereupon God raised Abraham above the vault of the skies, and he said, Thou art a prophet, not an astrologer. Now Abraham demanded no sign that he would be blessed with offspring. Without losing another word he believed in the Lord, and he was rewarded for his simple faith by a share in this world and a share in the world to come as well. And besides, the redemption of Israel from the exile will take place as a recompense for his firm trust. But though he believed the promise made to him with a full and abiding faith, he yet desired to know by what merit of theirs his descendants would maintain themselves. Therefore God bade him bring him a sacrifice of three heifers, three she-goats, three rams, a turtle-dove, and a young pigeon, thus indicating to Abraham the various sacrifices that should once be brought in the temple to atone for the sins of Israel and further his welfare. But what will become of my descendants, asked Abraham, after the temple is destroyed? God replied and said, If they read the order of sacrifices as they will be set down in the scriptures, I will account it unto them as though they had offered the sacrifices, and I will forgive all their sins. And God continued and revealed to Abraham the course of Israel's history and the history of the whole world. The heifer of three years indicates the dominion of Babylon. The she-goat of three years stands for the empire of the Greeks. The ram of three years for the Meadow-Persian power. The rule of Ishmael is represented by the ram, and Israel is the innocent dove. Abraham took him these animals and divided them in the midst. Had he not done so, Israel would not have been able to resist the power of the four kingdoms. But the birds he divided not, to indicate that Israel will remain whole. And the birds of prey came down upon the carcasses, and Abraham drove them away. Thus was announced the advent of the Messiah, who will cut the heathen in pieces, but Abraham bade Messiah wait until the time appointed unto him. And as the messianic time was made known unto Abraham, so also the time of the resurrection of the dead. When he laid the halves of the pieces over against each other, the animals became alive again, as the birds flew over them. While he was preparing these sacrifices, a vision of great import was granted to Abraham. The sun sank, and a deep sleep fell upon him, and he beheld a smoking furnace, Gehenna, the furnace that God prepares for the sinner. And he beheld a flaming torch, the revelation on Sinai, where all the people saw flaming torches. And he beheld the sacrifices to be brought by Israel, and in horror of darkness fell upon him, the dominion of the four kingdoms. And God spake to him, Abraham, as long as thy children fulfill the two duties of studying the Torah and performing the service in the temple, the two visitations, Gehenna and alien rule, will be spared them. But if they neglect the two duties, they will have to suffer the two chastisements. Only thou mayest choose whether they shall be punished by means of Gehenna or by means of the dominion of the stranger. All the day long Abraham wavered until God called unto him. How long wilt thou halt between two opinions? Decide for one of the two, and let it be for the dominion of the stranger. Then God made known to him the four hundred years bondage of Israel and Egypt, reckoning from the birth of Isaac, for unto Abraham himself was the promise given that he should go to his fathers in peace, and feel not of the arrogance of the stranger oppressor. At the same time it was made known to Abraham that his father Torah would have a share in the world to come, for he had done penance for his sinful deeds. Furthermore, it was revealed to him that his son Ishmael would turn into the path of righteousness while yet his father was alive, and his grandson Esau would not begin his impious way of life until he himself had passed away. And as he received the promise of their deliverance, together with the announcement of the slavery of his seed, in a land not theirs, so it was made known to him that God would judge the four kingdoms, and destroy them. The Covenant of the Pieces, whereby the fortunes of his descendants were revealed to Abraham, was made at a time when he was still childless. As long as Abraham and Sarah dwelled outside of the Holy Land, they looked upon their childlessness as a punishment for not abiding within it. But when a ten-year sojourn in Palestine found her bear and as before, Sarah perceived that the fault lay with her. Without a trace of jealousy, she was ready to give her slave Hagar to Abraham's wife, first making her a freed woman. For Hagar was Sarah's property, not her husband's. She had received her from Pharaoh the father of Hagar. Taught and bred by Sarah, she walked in the same path of righteousness as her mistress, and thus was a suitable companion for Abraham, and, instructed by the Holy Spirit, he acceded to Sarah's proposal. No sooner had Hagar's union with Abraham been consummated, and she felt she was with child than she began to treat her former mistress contemptuously, though Sarah was particularly tender toward her in the state in which she was. When noble matrons came to see Sarah, she was in the habit of urging them to pay a visit to poor Hagar, too. The dames would comply with her suggestion, but Hagar would use the opportunity to disparage Sarah. My Lady Sarah, she would say, is not inwardly what she appears to be outwardly. She makes the impression of a righteous, pious woman, but she is not, for if she were, how could her childlessness be explained after so many years of marriage, while I became pregnant at once? Sarah scorned to bicker with her slave, yet the rage she felt found vent in these words to Abraham. It is thou who art doing me wrong. Thou hearest the words of Hagar, and thou sayest not to oppose them, and I hoped that thou wouldst take my part. For thy sake did I leave my native land in the house of my father, and I followed thee into a strange land with trust in God. In Egypt I pretended to be thy sister, that no harm might befall thee. When I saw that I should bear no children, I took the Egyptian woman, my slave Hagar, and gave her unto thee for wife, contending myself with the thought that I would rear the children she would bear. Now she treats me disdainfully in thy presence. O, that God might look upon the injustice which hath been done unto me, to judge between thee and me, and have mercy upon us, restore peace to our home, and grant us offspring, that we have no need of children from Hagar, the Egyptian bond woman of the generation of the heathen, that cast thee in the fiery furnace. Abraham, modest and unassuming as he was, was ready to do justice to Sarah, and he conferred full power upon her to dispose of Hagar according to her pleasure. He added but one caution. Having once made her a mistress, we cannot again reduce her to the state of bond woman. Unmindful of this warning, Sarah exacted the services of a slave from Hagar. Not alone this she tormented her, and finally she cast an evil eye upon her, so that the unborn child dropped from her and she ran away. On her flight she was met by several angels, and they bade her return, at the same time making known to her that she would bear a son who should be called Ishmael, one of the six men who have been given a name by God before their birth, the others being Isaac, Moses, Solomon, Josiah, and the Messiah. Thirteen years after the birth of Ishmael the command was issued to Abraham that he put the sign of the covenant upon his body, and upon the bodies of the male members of his household. Abraham was reluctant at first to do the bidding of God, for he feared that the circumcision of his flesh would raise a barrier between himself and the rest of mankind. But God said unto him, Let it suffice thee that I am thy God and thy Lord, as it suffices the world that I am its God and its Lord. Abraham then consulted with his three true friends, Anner, Eschel, and Mamre, regarding the command of the circumcision. The first one spoke and said, Thou art nigh unto a hundred years old, and thou considerest inflicting such pain upon thyself? The advice of the second was also against it. Yet, said Eschel, thou choosest to mark thyself so that thy enemies may recognize thee without fail? Mamre the third was the only one to advise obedience to the command of God. God suckered thee from the fiery furnace, he said. He helped thee in the combat with the kings. He provided for thee during the famine. And thou dost hesitate to execute his behest concerning the circumcision? Accordingly Abraham did as God had commanded. In bright daylight, bidding defiance to all that none might say, had we seen him attempted, we should have prevented him. The circumcision was performed on the tenth day of Tishri, the day of atonement, and upon the spot on which the altar was later to be erected in the temple, for the act of Abraham remains a never-ceasing atonement for Israel. The Legends of the Jews, Volume 1 by Rabbi Louis Ginsburg, The Visit of the Angels On the third day after his circumcision, when Abraham was suffering, dire pain, God spoke to the Angels, saying, Go, too, let us pay a visit to the sick. The Angels refused, and said, What is man that thou art mindful of him? And the Son of man that thou visitest him? And thou desirest to betake thyself to a place of uncleanness, to a place of blood and filth? But God replied unto them, Thus do ye speak, as ye live the savor of this blood is sweeter to me than myrrh and incense, and if ye do not desire to visit Abraham I will go alone. The day whereon God visited him was exceedingly hot, for he had bored a hole in hell, so that its heat might reach as far as the earth, and no way fairer venture abroad on the highways, and Abraham be left undisturbed in his pain. But the absence of strangers caused Abraham great vexation, and he sent his servant Eliezer forth to keep a lookout for travelers. When the servant returned from his fruitless search, Abraham himself, in spite of his illness and the scorching heat, prepared to go forth on the highway and see whether he would not succeed where failure had attended Eliezer, whom he did not wholly trust at any rate, bearing in mind the well-known saying, No truth among slaves. At this moment God appeared to him, surrounded by the Angels. Finally Abraham attempted to rise from his seat, but God checked every demonstration of respect, and when Abraham protested that it was unbecoming to sit in the presence of the Lord, God said, As thou livest, thy descendants at the age of four and five will sit in days to come in the schools and in the synagogues while I reside therein. Meantime Abraham beheld three men. They were the Angels Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael. They had assumed the form of human beings to fulfill his wish for guests to ward whom to exercise hospitality. Each of them had been charged by God with a special mission, besides to be executed on earth. Raphael was to heal the wound of Abraham, Michael was to bring Sarah the glad tidings that she would bear a son, and Gabriel was to deal destruction to Sodom and Gomorrah. Arrived at the tent of Abraham, the three Angels noticed that he was occupied in nursing himself, and they withdrew. Abraham, however, hastened after them through another door of the tent, which had wide open entrances on all sides. He considered the duty of hospitality more important than the duty of receiving the shekinah. Turning to God he said, O Lord, may it please thee not to leave thy servant while he provides for the entertainment of his guest. Then he addressed himself to the stranger walking in the middle between the other two, whom by this token he considered the most distinguished. It was the archangel Michael, and he bade him and his companions to turn aside into his tent. The manner of his guests, who treated one another politely, made a good impression upon Abraham. He was assured that they were men of worth whom he was entertaining. But as they appeared outwardly like Arabs and the people worshiped the dust of their feet, he bade them first wash their feet that they might not defile his tent. He did not depend upon his own judgment in reading the character of his guests. By his tent a tree was planted which spread its branches out over all who believed in God, and afforded them shade. But if idolaters went under the tree, the branches turned upward and cast no shade upon the ground. Whenever Abraham saw this sign he would at once set about the task of converting the worshipers of the false gods. And as the tree made a distinction between the pious and the impious, so also between the clean and the unclean. Its shade was denied them as long as they refrained from taking the prescribed ritual bath in the spring that flowed out from its roots, the waters of which rose at once for those whose uncleanliness was of a venial character and could be removed forthwith, while others had to wait seven days for the water to come up. Finally Abraham bade the three men lean against the trunk of the tree. Thus he would soon learn their worth or their unworthiness. Being of the truly pious, who promised little but performed much, Abraham said only, I will fetch a morsel of bread and comfort ye your heart, seeing that ye chance to pass my tent at dinner time. Then after ye have given thanks to God ye may pass on. But when the meal was served to the guests it was a royal banquet, bringing Solomon's at the time of his most splendid magnificence. Abraham himself ran into the herd to fetch cattle for meat. He slaughtered three calves that he might be able to set a tongue with mustard before each of his guests. In order to accustom Ishmael to God-pleasing deeds he had him dress the calves, and he bade Sarah to bake the bread. But as he knew that women are apt to treat guests niggardly, he was explicit in his request to her. He said, Make ready quickly three measures of meal, ye fine meal. As it happened the bread was not brought to the table, because it had accidentally become unclean, and our father Abraham was accustomed to eat his daily bread only in a clean state. Abraham himself served his guests, and it appeared to him that the three men ate. But this was an illusion. In reality the angels did not eat. Only Abraham, his three friends, Anna, Eschel, and memory, and his son Ishmael partook of the banquet, and the portions set before the angels were devoured by a heavenly fire. Although the angels remained angels even in their human disguise, nevertheless the personality of Abraham was so exalted that in his presence the archangels felt insignificant. After the meal the angels asked after Sarah, though they knew that she was in retirement in her tent, but it was proper for them to pay their respects to the lady of the house and send her the cup of wine over which the blessing had been said. Michael, the greatest of the angels, thereupon announced the birth of Isaac. He drew a line upon the wall saying, when the sun crosses this point Sarah will be with child, and when he crosses the next point she will give birth to a child. This communication which was intended for Sarah and not for Abraham, to whom the promise had been revealed long ago, the angels made at the entrance to her tent, but Ishmael stood between the angel and Sarah, for it would not have been seemly to deliver the message in secret, with none other by. Yet so radiant was the beauty of Sarah that a beam of it struck the angel and made him look up. In the act of turning toward her he heard her laugh within herself. Is it possible that these bowels can yet bring forth a child, these shriveled breasts give suck? And though I should be able to bear, yet is not my Lord Abraham old? When the Lord said unto Abraham, Am I too old to do wonders? And wherefore doth Sarah laugh, saying Shall I of assurity bear a child which am old? The reproach made by God was directed against Abraham as well as against Sarah, for he too had showed himself of little faith when he was told that a son would be born unto him. But God mentioned only Sarah's incredulity, leaving Abraham to become conscious of his defect himself. Full of the peace of their family life God had not repeated Sarah's words accurately to Abraham. Abraham might have taken amiss what his wife had said about his advanced years, and so precious is the peace between husband and wife that even the Holy One, blessed be he, preserved it at the expense of truth. After Abraham had entertained his guests he went with them to bring them on their way, for important as the duty of hospitality is, the duty of speeding the parting guest is even more important. Their way lay in the direction of Sodom, whither two of the angels were going, the one to destroy it, and the second to save lot, while the third, his errand to Abraham fulfilled, returned to heaven. The inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, and the three other cities of the plain were sinful and godless. In their country there was an extensive veil, where they foregathered annually with their wives and their children and all belonging to them, to celebrate a feast lasting several days and consisting of the most revolting orgies. If a stranger merchant passed through their territory he was besieged by them, big and little alike, and robbed of whatever he possessed. Each one appropriated a bagatelle, until the traveler was stripped bare. If the victim ventured to remonstrate with one or another he would show him that he had taken a mere trifle, not worth talking about. And the end was that they hounded him from the city. Once upon a time it happened that a man journeying from Elam arrived in Sodom toward evening. No one could be found to grant him shelter for the night. Finally a sly fox named Hedor invited him cordially to follow him to his house. The Sodomite had been attracted by a rarely magnificent carpet strapped to the stranger's ass by means of a rope. He meant to secure it for himself. The friendly persuasions of Hedor induced the stranger to remain with him two days, though he had expected to stay only overnight. When the time came for him to continue on his journey he asked his host for the carpet and the rope. Hedor said, Thou hast dreamed a dream, and this is the interpretation of thy dream. The rope signifies that thou wilt have a long life, as long as a rope. The very colored carpet indicates that thou wilt own an orchard, wherein thou wilt plant all sorts of fruit trees. The stranger insisted that his carpet was a reality, not a dream fancy, and he continued to demand its return. Not only did Hedor deny having taken anything from his guest, he even insisted upon pay for having interpreted his dream to him. His usual price for such services, he said, was four silver pieces, but in view of the fact that he was his guest, he would, as a favor to him, content himself with three pieces of silver. After much wrangling they put their case before one of the judges of Sodom, Sherrick, by name, and he said to the plaintiff, Hedor is known in this city as a trustworthy interpreter of dreams, and what he tells thee is true. The stranger declared himself not satisfied with the verdict, and continued to urge his side of the case. Then Sherrick drove both the plaintiff and the defendant from the courtroom. Doing this the inhabitants gathered together and chased the stranger from the city, and lamenting the loss of his carpet he had to pursue his way. As Sodom had a judge worthy of itself, so also had the other cities, Sharkar in Gomorrah, Zabnek in Adma, and Manon in Zaboam. Eliezer, the bondman of Abraham, made slight changes in the names of these judges in accordance with the nature of what they did. The first he called Shakara, liar. The second, Shakrura, arch-deceiver. The third, Kazban, falsifier. And the fourth, Basildon, perverter of judgment. At the suggestion of these judges, the cities set up beds on their commons. When a stranger arrived, three men seized him by his head and three by his feet, and they forced him upon one of the beds. If he was too short to fit into it exactly, his six attendants pulled and wrenched his limbs until he filled it out. If he was too long for it, they tried to jam him in with all their combined strength, until the victim was on the verge of death. His outcries were met with the words, Thus will be done to any man that comes into our land. After a while, travelers avoided these cities, but if some poor devil was betrayed occasionally into entering them, they would give him gold and silver, but never any bread, so that he was bound to die of starvation. Once he was dead, the residents of the city came and took back the marked gold and silver which they had given him, and they would quarrel about the distribution of his clothes, for they would bury him naked. Once Eliezer, the bondman of Abraham, went to Sodom at the bidding of Sarah to inquire after the welfare of Lot. He happened to enter the city at the moment when the people were robbing a stranger of his garments. Eliezer espoused the cause of the poor wretch, and the Sodomites turned against him, one threw a stone at his forehead and caused considerable loss of blood. Immediately the assailant, seeing the blood-gush forth, demanded payment for having performed the operation of cupping. Eliezer refused to pay for the infliction of a wound upon him, and he was hailed before the judge, Shakara. The decision went against him, for the law of the land gave the assailant the right to demand payment. Eliezer quickly picked up a stone and threw it at the judge's forehead. When he saw that the blood was flowing profusely, he said to the judge, Pay my debt to the man, and give me the balance. The cause of their cruelty was their exceeding great wealth. Their soil was gold, and in their miserliness, then their greed for more and more gold, they wanted to prevent strangers from enjoying ought of their riches. Accordingly they flooded the highways with streams of water, so that the roads to their city were obliterated, and none could find the way thither. They were as heartless toward beasts as toward men. They begrudged the birds what they ate, and therefore extirpated them. They behaved impiously toward one another, too, not shrinking back for murder to gain possession of more gold. If they observed that a man owned great riches, two of them would conspire against him. They would beguile him to the vicinity of ruins, and while the one kept him on the spot by pleasant converse, the other would undermine the wall near which he stood, until it suddenly crashed down upon him and killed him. Then the two plotters would divide his wealth between them. Another method of enriching themselves with the property of others was in vogue among them. They were adroit thieves. When they made up their minds to commit theft, they would first ask their victim to take care of a sum of money for them, which they smeared with strongly scented oil before handing it over to him. The following night they would break into his house and rob him of his secret treasures, led to the place of concealment by the smell of the oil. Their laws were calculated to do injury to the poor. The richer a man, the more he was favoured before the law. The owner of two oxen was obliged to render one day shepherd service, but if he had but one ox he had to give two days service. A poor orphan, who was thus forced to tend the flocks a longer time than those who were blessed with the large herds, killed all the cattle entrusted to him to take revenge upon his oppressors, and he insisted when the skins were assigned that the owner of two head of cattle should have but one skin, but the owner of one head should receive two skins in correspondence to the method pursued in assigning the work. For the use of the ferry a traveller had to pay four zoos, but if he waited through the water he had to pay eight zoos. The cruelty of the Sodomites went still further. Lot had a daughter, Paltet, so named because she had been born to him shortly after he escaped captivity through the help of Abraham. Paltet lived in Sodom where she had married. Once a beggar came to town and the court issued a proclamation that none should give him anything to eat in order that he might die of starvation. But Paltet had pity on the unfortunate wretch, and every day when she went to the well to draw water she supplied him with a piece of bread which she hid in her water-pitcher. The inhabitants of the two sinful cities, Sodom and Gomorrah, could not understand why the beggar did not perish, and they suspected that someone was giving him food in secret. Three men concealed themselves near the beggar and caught Paltet in the act of giving him something to eat. She had to pay for her humanity with death. She was burnt upon a pyre. The people of Adma were no better than those of Sodom. Once a stranger came to Adma, intending to stay overnight and continue his journey the next morning. The daughter of a rich man met the stranger and gave him water to drink and bread to eat at his request. When the people of Adma heard of this infraction of the law of the land, they seized the girl and arraigned her before the judge who condemned her to death. The people smeared her with honey from top to toe and exposed her where bees would be attracted to her. The insects stung her to death, and the callous people paid no heed to her heart-rending cries. Then it was that God resolved upon the destruction of these sinners. The Legends of the Jews, Volume 1 by Rabbi Lewis Ginsburg. Abraham Pleads for the Sinners. When God saw that there was no righteous man among the inhabitants of the sinful cities, and there would be none among their descendants for the sake of whose merits the rest might be treated with lenient consideration, he resolved to annihilate them one and all. But before judgment was executed, the Lord made known to Abraham what he would do to Sodom, Gomorrah, and the other cities of the plain, for they formed a part of Canaan, the land promised unto Abraham, and therefore did God say, I will not destroy them without the consent of Abraham. Like a compassionate elder, Abraham importuned the grace of God in behalf of the sinners. He spoke to God and said, Thou didst take an oath that no more should all flesh be cut off by the waters of a flood. Is it meat that thou shouldst evade thy oath and destroy cities by fire? Shall the judge of all the earth not do right himself? Verily, if thou desirest to maintain the world, thou must give up the strict line of justice. If thou insistest upon the right alone there can be no world. Whereupon God said to Abraham, Thou take us to light in defending my creatures, and thou wouldst not call them guilty. Therefore I spoke with none but thee during the ten generations since Noah. Abraham ventured to use still stronger words in order to secure the safety of the godless. That be far from thee, he said, to slay the righteous with the wicked. That the dwellers on the earth say not. It is his trade to destroy the generations of men in a cruel manner, for he destroyed the generations of Enosh, then the generation of the flood, and then he sent the confusion of tongues. He sticks ever to his trade. God made reply, I will let all the generations I have destroyed pass before thee, that thou mayest see they have not suffered the extreme punishment they deserved. But if thou thinkest that I did not act justly, then instruct thou me in what I must do, and I will endeavor to act in accordance with thy words. And Abraham had to admit that God had not diminished in ought the justice due to every creature in this world or the other world. Nevertheless he continued to speak, and he said, Wilt thou consume the cities if there be ten righteous men in each? And God said, No, if I find fifty righteous therein I will not destroy the cities. Abraham, I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord. I who would have been turned long since into dust of the ground by Amrafel, and into ashes by Nimrod, had it not been for thy grace. Peradventure shall lack five of the fifty righteous for Zohar, the smallest of the five cities. Wilt thou destroy all the city for lack of five? God, I will not destroy it if I find there forty and five. After there be ten pious men in each of the four cities, then forgive Zohar in thy grace, for its sins are not so great a number as the sins of the others. God granted his petition, yet Abraham continued to plead, and he asked whether God would not be satisfied if there were but thirty righteous, ten in each of the three larger cities, and would pardon the two smaller ones, even though there were no righteous therein, whose merits would intercede for them. This too the Lord granted, and furthermore he promised not to destroy the cities if but twenty righteous were found therein. Yes, God conceded that he would preserve the five cities for the sake of ten righteous therein. More than this Abraham did not ask, for he knew that eight righteous ones, Noah and his wife and his three sons and their wives, had not suffice to avert the doom of the generation of the flood, and furthermore he hoped that Lot, his wife and their four daughters, together with the husbands of their daughters, would make up the number ten. What he did not know was that even the righteous in these sin-laden cities, though better than the rest, were far from good. Abraham did not cease to pray for the deliverance of the sinners, even after the shekinah had removed from him. But his supplications and his intercessions were in vain. For fifty-two years God had warned the godless. He had made mountains to quake and tremble. But they hearkened not unto the voice of admonition. They persisted in their sins, and their well-merited punishment overtook them. God forgives all sins, not only in immortal life. And as all these sinners led a life of debauchery, they were burnt with fire. CHAPTER V. ABERHAM, PART NINE OF LEGENDS OF THE JUSE, VOLUME I. The angels left Abraham at noontime, and they reached Sodom at the approach of evening. As a rule angels proclaimed their errand with the swiftness of lightning, but these were angels of mercy, and they hesitated to execute their work of destruction, ever hoping that the evil would be turned aside from Sodom. With nightfall the fate of Sodom was sealed irrevocably, and the angels arrived there. Bread in the house of Abraham lot had learned from him the beautiful custom of extending hospitality, and when he saw the angels before him in human form, thinking they were wayfarers, he bade them turn aside and tarry all night in his house. But as the entertainment of strangers was forbidden in Sodom on penalty of death, he dared invite them only under cover of darkness of the night, and even then he had to use every manner of precaution, bidding the angels to follow him by devious ways. The angels who had accepted Abraham's hospitality without delay first refused to comply with Lot's request, for it is a rule of good breeding to show reluctance when an ordinary man invites one, up to accept the invitation of a great man at once. Lot, however, was insistent and carried them into his house by main force. At home he had to overcome the opposition of his wife, for she said, if the inhabitants of Sodom hear of this they will slay thee. Lot divided his dwelling in two parts, one for himself and his guests, the other for his wife, so that if Lot happened his wife would be spared. Nevertheless it was she who betrayed him. She went to a neighbor and borrowed some salt, and to the question whether she could not have supplied herself with salt during daylight hours, she replied, we had enough salt until some guests came to us, for them we need more. In this way the presence of strangers was breeded abroad in the city. In the beginning the angels were inclined to harken to the petition of Lot in behalf of the sinners, but when all the people of the city, big and little, crowded around the house of Lot with the purpose of committing a monstrous crime, the angels warded off his prayers, saying, hitherto thou couldst intercede for them, but now no longer. It was not the first time that the inhabitants of Sodom wanted to perpetrate a crime of this sort. They had made a law some time before that all strangers were to be treated in this horrible way. Lot, who was appointed chief judge on the very day of the angels coming, tried to induce the people to desist from their purpose, saying to them, my brethren, the generation of the deluge was extirpated in consequence of such sins as you desire to commit, and you would revert to them? But they replied, back, and though Abraham himself came hither, we should have no consideration for him. Is it possible that thou wouldst set aside a law which thy predecessors administered? Even Lot's moral sense was no better than it should have been. It is the duty of a man to venture his life for the honor of his wife and daughters, but Lot was ready to sacrifice the honor of his daughters, wherefore he was punished severely later on. The angels told Lot who they were, and what the mission that had brought them to Sodom, and they charged him to flee from the city with his wife and his four daughters, two of them married and two betrothed. Lot communicated their bidding to his sons-in-law, and they mocked him, and said, O thou fool, violins, cymbals and flutes resound in the city, and thou sayest Sodom will be destroyed, such scoffing but hastened the execution of the doom of Sodom. The angel Michael laid hold upon the hand of Lot, and his wife and his daughters, while his little finger, the angel Gabriel, touched the rock whereon the sinful cities were built, and overturned them. At the same time the rain that was streaming down upon the two cities was changed into brimstone. When the angels had brought forth Lot and his family and set them without the city, he bade them run for their lives, and not look behind, lest they should behold the shekinah, which had descended to work the destruction of the cities. The wife of Lot could not control herself. Her mother-love made her look behind to see if her married daughters were following. She beheld the shekinah, and she became a pillar of salt. This pillar exists unto this day. The cattle lick it all day long, and in the evening it seems to have disappeared. But when the morning comes it stands there as large as before. The Saviour angel had urged Lot to take refuge with Abraham. But he refused, and said, As long as I dwelt apart from Abraham, God compared my deeds with the deeds of my fellow citizens, and among them I peered as a righteous man. If I should return to Abraham, God will see that his good deeds outweigh mine by far. The angel then granted his plea that Zohar be left undestroyed. This city had been founded a year later than the other four. It was only fifty-one years old, and therefore the measure of its sins was not so full as the measure of the sins of the neighbouring cities. The destruction of the cities of the plain took place at dawn on the sixteenth day of Nisan, for the reason that there were moon and sun worshippers among the inhabitants. God said, If I destroy them by day the moon worshippers will say, Where the moon here she would prove herself our Saviour, and if I destroy them by night the sun worshippers will say, Where the sun here he would prove himself our Saviour, I will therefore let their chastisement overtake them on the sixteenth day of Nisan at an hour at which the moon and the sun are both in the skies. The sinful inhabitants of the cities of the plain not only lost their life in this world, but also their share in the future world. As for the cities themselves, however, they will be restored in the messianic time. The destruction of Sodom happened at the time at which Abraham was performing his morning devotions, and for his sake it was established as the proper hour for the morning prayer unto all times. When he turned his eyes toward Sodom and beheld the rising smoke, he prayed for the deliverance of Lot, and God granted his petition. The fourth time that Lot became deeply indebted to Abraham. Abraham had taken him with him to Palestine, he had made him rich in flocks, herds, and tents, he had rescued him from captivity, and by his prayer he saved him from the destruction of Sodom. The descendants of Lot, the Ammonites and the Moabites, instead of showing gratitude to the Israelites, the posterity of Abraham, committed four acts of hostility against them. They sought to compass the destruction of Israel by means of Balaam's curses. They waged open war against him at the time of Jephthah and also at the time of Jehoshaphat, and finally they manifested their hatred against Israel at the destruction of the temple. Hence it is that God appointed four prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Jefaniah, to proclaim punishment unto the descendants of Lot, and four times their sin is recorded in holy writ. Though Lot owed his deliverance to the petition of Abraham, yet it was at the same time his reward for not having betrayed Abraham in Egypt when he pretended to be the brother of Israel. But a greater reward still awaits him. The Messiah will be a descendant of his, for the Moabites' Ruth is the great-grandmother of David, and the Ammonites Nehem is the mother of Rehoboam, and the Messiah is of the line of these two kings. The legends of the Jews, volume one, by Rabbi Lewis Ginsburg, among the Philistines. The destruction of Sodom induced Abraham to journey to Gerer, accustomed to extend hospitality to travelers and wayfarers, he no longer felt comfortable in a district in which all traffic had ceased by reason of the ruined cities. There was another reason for Abraham's leaving his place. The people spoke too much about the ugly incident with Lot's daughters. Arrived in the land of the Philistines, he again, as a four time in Egypt, came to an understanding with Sarah that she was to call herself his sister. In the report of her beauty reached the king, he ordered her to be brought before him, and he asked her who her companion was, and she told him that Abraham was her brother. Entranced by her beauty, Abimelech the king took Sarah to wife, and heaped marks of honor upon Abraham in accordance with the just claims of her brother of the queen. Toward evening, before retiring, while he was still seated upon his throne, Abimelech fell into asleep, and he slept until the morning, and in the dream he dreamed he saw an angel of the Lord raising his sword to deal him a death blow. Sore frightened he asked the cause, and the angel replied, and said, Thou wilt die on account of the woman thou didst take into thy house this day, for she is the wife of Abraham, the man whom thou didst cite before thee. Return his wife unto him, but if thou restore her not thou shalt surely die, thou and all that are thine. In that night the voice of a great crying was heard in the whole land of the Philistines, for they saw the figure of a man walking about with sword in hand, slaying all that came in his way. At the same time it happened that in men and beasts alike all the apertures of the body closed up, and the land was seized with indescribable excitement. In the morning when the king awoke, in agony and terror, he called all his servants and told his dream in their ears. One of their numbers said, O Lord and King, restore this woman unto the man, for he is her husband. It is but his way in a strange land to pretend that she is his sister. Thus he did with the king of Egypt, too, and God sent heavy afflictions upon Pharaoh when he took the woman unto himself. Consider, O Lord and King, what hath befallen this night in the land. Great pain, wailing, and confusion there was, and we know that it came upon us only because of this woman. There were some among his servants who spake, Be not afraid of dreams. What dreams make known to man is but falsehood. Then God appeared unto Abimelech again, and commanded him to let Sarah go free, otherwise he would be a dead man. Abimelech replied, Is this thy way? Then I weaned, the generation of the flood and the generation of the confusion of tongues were innocent, too. The man himself did say unto me, She is my sister, and she even herself said, He is my brother, and all the people of their households said the same words. And God said unto him, Ye, I know that thou hast not yet committed a trespass, for I withheld thee from sinning. Thou didst not know that Sarah was a man's wife. But is it becoming to question a stranger? No sooner does he set foot upon thy territory about the woman accompanying him, whether she be his wife or his sister? Abraham, who is a prophet, knew beforehand the danger to himself if he revealed the whole truth. But being a prophet he also knows that thou didst not touch his wife, and he shall pray for thee, and thou shalt live. The smoke was still rising from the ruins of Sodom, and Abimelech and his people, seeing it, feared that a like fate might overtake them. The king called Abraham and reproached him for having caused such great misfortunes through his false statements concerning Sarah. Abraham excused his conduct by his apprehension that, the fear of God not being in the place, the inhabitants of the land slay him for his wife. Abraham went on and told the history of his whole life, and he said, When I dwelt in the house of my father, the nations of the world sought to do me harm, but God proved himself my redeemer. When the nations of the world tried to leave me astray to idolatry, God revealed himself to me, and he said, Get the out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house. And when the nations of the world were about to go astray, God sent two prophets, my kinsmen, Shem and Eber, to admonish them. Abimelech gave rich gifts to Abraham, wherein he acted otherwise than Pharaoh in similar circumstances. The Egyptian king gave gifts to Sarah, but Abimelech was God interfering, and desired that Abraham pray for him. To Sarah he gave a costly robe that covered her whole person, hiding her seductive charms from the view of beholders. At the same time it was a reproach to Abraham that he had not fitted Sarah out with the splendor due to his wife. Though Abimelech had done him great injury, Abraham not only granted him the forgiveness he craved, but also he prayed for him to God. Thus he is an exemplar unto all. Then should be pliant as a reed, not hard like the cedar. He should be easily appeased and slow to anger, and as soon as he who has sinned against him asks for pardon, he should forgive him with all his heart. Even if deep and serious injury has been done to him, he should not be vengeful, nor bear his brother a grudge in his heart. Abraham prayed thus for Abimelech, O Lord of the world, thou has created man that he may increase and propagate his kind. Grant that Abimelech in his house may multiply and increase. God fulfilled Abraham's petition in behalf of Abimelech and his people, and it was the first time it happened in the history of mankind that God fulfilled the prayer of one human being for the benefit of another. Abimelech and his subjects were healed of all their diseases, and so efficacious was the prayer offered by Abraham that the wife of Abimelech bear in hitherto for a child. Volume 1 by Rabbi Lewis Ginsberg, The Birth of Isaac When the prayer of Abraham for Abimelech was heard, and the King of the Philistines recovered, the angels raised a loud cry and spoke to God thus. O Lord of the world, all these years hath Sarah been barren as the wife of Abimelech was. Now Abraham prayed to thee, and the wife of Abimelech hath been granted a child. It is just and fair that Sarah should be remembered and granted a child. These words of the angels, spoken on the New Year's Day, when the fortunes of men are determined in heaven for the whole year, bore a result. Barely seven months later, on the first day of Passover, Isaac was born. The birth of Isaac was a happy event, and not in the house of Abraham alone. The whole world rejoiced, for God remembered all barren women at the same time with Sarah. They all bore children. And all the blind were made to see, all the lame were made whole, the dumb were made to speak, and the mad were restored to reason. And a still greater miracle happened. On the day of Isaac's birth the sun shone with such splendor as had not been seen since the fall of man, and as he will shine again only in the future world. To silence those who asked significantly, can one a hundred years old beget a son? God commanded the angel who has charge over the embryos to give them form and shape, that he fashion Isaac precisely according to the model of Abraham, so that all seeing Isaac might exclaim, Abraham begot Isaac. That Abraham and Sarah were blessed with offspring only after they had attained so great an age had an important reason. It was necessary that Abraham should bear the sign of the covenant upon his body before he begot the son who was appointed to be the father of Israel. And as Isaac was the first child born to Abraham after he was marked with the sign, he did not fail to celebrate his circumcision with much pomp and ceremony on the Eighth Day. Shem, Eber, Abimelech, King of the Philistines, and his whole retinue, Fikol, the captain of his boat in it. They all were present, and also Tera, and his son Nahor. In a word, all the great ones round about. On this occasion Abraham could at last put a stop to the talk of the people who said, Look at this old couple. They picked up a foundling on the highway and they pretend he is their own son. And to make their statements incredible, they arrange a feast in his honour. Abraham had invited not only men to the celebration but also the wives of the magnates with their infants. And God permitted a miracle to be done. Sarah had enough milk in her breasts to suckle all the babes there. And they who drew from her breasts had much to thank her for. Those whose mothers had harboured only pious thoughts in their minds when they let them drink the milk that flowed from the breasts of the pious Sarah, they became proselytes when they grew up. And those whose mothers let Sarah nurse them only in order to test her, they grew up to be powerful rulers, losing their dominion only at the revelation on Mount Sinai, because they would not accept the Torah. All proselytes and pious heathen are the descendants of these infants. Among the guests of Abraham were the thirty-one kings and thirty-one viceroys of Palestine who were vanquished by Joshua at the conquest of the holy land. Even Og, king of Bashan, was present. And he had to suffer the teasing of the other guests who rallied him upon having called Abraham a sterile mule who would never have offspring. Og, on his part, pointed at the little boy with contempt and said, Cry to lay my finger upon him he would be crushed. Whereupon God said to him, Thou makest mock of the gift given to Abraham, As thou livest, thou shalt look upon millions and myriads of his descendants. And in the end, thou shalt fall into their hands. The Legends of the Jews, Volume 1 by Rabbi Louis Ginsburg Ishmael Cast Off When Isaac grew up, quarrels broke out between him and Ishmael on account of the rights of the firstborn. Ishmael insisted he should receive a double portion of the inheritance after the death of Abraham, and Isaac should receive only one portion. Ishmael, who had been accustomed from his youth to use the bow and arrow, was in the habit of aiming his missiles in the direction of Isaac, saying at the same time that he was butt-jesting. Sarah, however, insisted that Abraham make over to Isaac all he owned that no disputes might arise after his death. For, she said, Ishmael is not worthy of being heir with my son, nor with a man like Isaac, and certainly not with my son, Isaac. Furthermore, Sarah insisted that Abraham divorce himself from Hagar, the mother of Ishmael, and send away the woman and her son, so that there be not in common between them and her own son, either in this world or in the future world. Of all the trials Abraham had to undergo, none was so hard to bear as this, for it grieved him sorely to separate himself from his son. What appeared to him in the following night, and said to him, Abraham, notice thou not that Sarah was appointed to be thy wife from her mother's womb? She is thy companion, and the wife of thy youth, and I named not Hagar as thy wife, nor Sarah as thy bondwoman. What Sarah spoke unto thee was not but truth, and let it not be grievous in thy sight because of the lad, and because of thy bondwoman. The next morning Abraham rose up early, gave Hagar her bill of divorcement, and sent her away with her son, first binding a rope about her loins that all might see she was a bondwoman. The evil glance cast upon her stepson by Sarah made him sick and feverish, so that Hagar had to carry him, grown up as he was. In his fever he drank often of the water in the bottle given her by Abraham as she left his house, and the water was quickly spent. That she might not look upon the death of her child, Hagar cast Ishmael under the willow shrubs growing on the self-same spot whereupon the angels had once spoken with her, and made known to her that she would bear a son. In the bitterness of her heart she spoke to God, and said, Yesterday thou didst say to me, I will greatly multiply thy seed, that it shall not be numbered for multitude. And today my son dies of thirst. Ishmael himself cried unto God, and his prayer and the merits of Abraham brought them help in their need. Though the angels appeared against Ishmael before God, they said,ult thou cause a well of water to spring up for him whose descendants will let thy children of Israel perish with thirst? But God replied, and said, What is Ishmael at this moment, righteous or wicked? And when the angels called him righteous, God continued, I treat man according to his desserts at each moment. At that moment Ishmael was pious indeed, for he was praying to God in the following words, O Lord of the world, if it be thy will that I shall perish, then let me die in some other way, not by thirst, for the tortures of thirst are great beyond all others. Hagar, instead of praying to God, addressed her supplications to the idols of her youth. The prayer of Ishmael was acceptable before God, and he bade Miriam's well spring up. The well created in the twilight of the sixth day of creation. Even after this miracle, Hagar's faith was no stronger than before. She filled the bottle with water because she feared it might again be spent, and no other would be nigh. Thereupon she journeyed to Egypt with her son, for, Throw the stick into the air as thou wilt, it will always land on its point. Hagar had come from Egypt, and to Egypt she returned to choose a wife for her son. The Legends of the Jews, Volume 1 by Rabbi Lewis Ginsburg The Two Wives of Ishmael The wife of Ishmael bore four sons and a daughter, and afterward Ishmael, his mother, and his wife and children went, and returned to the wilderness. They made themselves tents in the wilderness, in which they dwelt, and they continued to encamp and journey month by month and year by year, and God gave Ishmael flocks and herds and tents, on account of Abraham his father, and the man increased in cattle. And some time after, Abraham said to Sarah, his wife, I will go and see my son Ishmael. I yearn to look upon him, for I have not seen him for a long time. And Abraham rode upon one of his camels to the wilderness to seek his son Ishmael, for he heard that he was dwelling in a tent in the wilderness with all belonging to him. And Abraham went to the wilderness, and he reached the tent of Ishmael about noon, and he asked after him. He found the wife of Ishmael sitting in the tent with her children, and her husband and his mother were not with them. And Abraham asked the wife of Ishmael, saying, Where has Ishmael gone? And she said, He has gone to the field to hunt game. And Abraham was still mounted upon the camel, for he would not alight upon the ground, as he had sworn to his wife Sarah that he would not get off from the camel. And Abraham said to Ishmael's wife, My daughter, give me a little water that I may drink, for I am fatigued and tired from the journey. And Ishmael's wife answered, and said to Abraham, We have neither water nor bread. And she was sitting in the tent, and did not take any notice of Abraham. She did not even ask him who he was. But all the while she was beating her children in the tent, and she was cursing them, and she also cursed her husband Ishmael and spoke evil of him. And Abraham heard the words of Ishmael's wife to her children, and it was an evil thing in his eyes. And Abraham called to the woman to come out to him from the tent, and the woman came out and stood face to face with Abraham, while Abraham was still mounted upon the camel. And Abraham said to Ishmael's wife, When thy husband Ishmael returns home, say these words to him. A very old man from the land of the Philistines came hither to seek thee, and his appearance was thus and so, and thus was his figure. I did not ask him who he was, and seeing thou was not here he spoke unto me and said, When Ishmael thy husband returns tell him. Thus did the man say, When thou comest home, put away this tentpin which thou hast placed here, and place another tentpin in its stead. And Abraham finished his instructions to the woman, and he turned and went off on the camel homeward. And when Ishmael returned to the tent he heard the words of his wife, and he knew that it was his father, and that his wife had not honoured him. And Ishmael understood his father's words that he had spoken to his wife, and he hearkened to the voice of his father, and he divorced his wife, and she went away. And Ishmael afterward went to the land of Canaan, and he took another wife, and he brought her to his tent to the place where he dwelt. And at the end of three years Abraham said, I will go again and see Ishmael my son, for I have not seen him for a long time. And he rode upon his camel, and went to the wilderness, and he reached the tent of Ishmael about noon, and he asked after Ishmael, and his wife came out of the tent, and she said, He is not here, my lord, for he has gone to hunt in the fields and feed the camels. And the woman said to Abraham, Turn in, my lord, into the tent, and eat a morsel of bread, for thy soul must be wearied on account of the journey. And Abraham said to her, I will not stop, for I am in haste to continue my journey, but give me a little water to drink, for I am thirsty. And the woman hastened and ran into the tent, and she brought out water and bread to Abraham, which she placed before him, urging him to eat and drink, and he ate and drank, and his heart was merry, and he blessed his son Ishmael. And he finished his meal, and he blessed the Lord, and he said to Ishmael's wife, When Ishmael comes home, say these words to him, A very old man from the land of the Philistines came hither, and asked after thee, And thou wasst not here, and I brought him out bread and water, and he ate and drank, and his heart was merry. And he spoke these words to me, When Ishmael thy husband comes home, say unto him, The tent pin which thou hast is very good, Do not put it away from the tent. And Abraham finished commanding the woman, and he rode off to his home to the land of the Philistines, and when Ishmael came to his tent, his wife went forth to meet him with joy and a cheerful heart, and she told him the words of the old man. Ishmael knew that it was his father, and that his wife had honoured him, and he praised the Lord. And Ishmael then took his wife and his children and his cattle, and all belonging to him, and he journeyed from there, and he went to his father in the land of the Philistines. And Abraham related to Ishmael all that had happened between him and the first wife that Ishmael had taken, according to what she had done. And Ishmael and his children dwelt with Abraham many days in that land, and Abraham dwelt in the land of Philistines a long time. Chapter 5, Abraham, Part 11 of The Legends of the Jews. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recorded by Laurie Ann Walden. The Legends of the Jews, Volume 1 by Rabbi Louis Ginsburg. The Covenant with Abimelech. After a sojourn of twenty-six years in the land of the Philistines, Abraham departed dense and he settled in the neighbourhood of Hebron. There he was visited by Abimelech with twenty of his grandees, who requested him to make an alliance with the Philistines. As long as Abraham was childless, the heathen did not believe in his piety. But when Isaac was born, they said to him, God is with thee. But again they entertained out of his piety when he cast off Ishmael. They said, were he a righteous man, he would not drive his first born forth from his house. But when they observed the empiestees of Ishmael, they said, God is with thee and all thou doest. But Abraham was the favourite of God, they saw in this, too, that although Sodom was destroyed and all traffic had come to a standstill in that region, yet Abraham's treasure chambers were filled. For these reasons the Philistines sought to form an alliance with him, to remain in force for three generations to come, for it is to the third generation that the love of a father extends. Before Abraham concluded the Covenant with Abimelech, king of the Philistines, he reproved him on account of a well, for correction leads to love, and there is no peace without correction. The herdmen of Abraham and those of Abimelech had left their dispute about the well to decision by ordeal. The well was to belong to the party for whose sheep the waters would rise so that they could drink of them. But the shepherds of Abimelech disregarded the agreement, and they rested the well for their own use. As a witness and a perpetual sign that the well belonged to him, Abraham set aside seven sheep, corresponding to the seven Noachian laws binding upon all men alike. But God said, Thou didst give him seven sheep, as Thou livest the Philistines shall one day slay seven righteous men, Samson, Hoffney, Finnehas, and Saul with his three sons, and they will destroy seven holy places, and they will keep the holy ark in their country as booty of war for a period of seven months, and furthermore only the seventh generation of Thy descendants will be able to rejoice in the possession of the land promised to them. After concluding the alliance with Abimelech, who acknowledged Abraham's right upon the well, Abraham called the place Beersheba, because there they swore both of them unto a covenant of friendship. In Beersheba Abraham dwelt many years, and thence he endeavored to spread the law of God. He planted a large grove there, and he made four gates for it, facing the four sides of the earth, east, west, north, and south, and he planted a vineyard therein. If a traveller came that way, he entered by the gate that faced him, and he sat in the grove, and ate, and drank, until he was satisfied, and then he departed. For the house of Abraham was always open for all passers by, and they came daily to eat and drink there. If one was hungry, and he came to Abraham, he would give him what he needed, so that he might eat and drink and be satisfied. And if one was naked, and he came to Abraham, he would clothe him with the garments of the poor man's choice, and give him silver and gold, and make known to him the Lord, who had created him and set him on earth. After the wayfarers had eaten, they were in the habit of thanking Abraham for his kind entertainment of them. Where too he would reply, What ye give thanks unto me? Father, return thanks to your host, he who alone provides food and drink for all creatures. Then the people would ask, Where is he? And Abraham would answer them and say, He is the ruler of heaven and earth, he woundedth, and he healeth. He formeth the embryo in the womb of the mother, and bringeth it forth into the world. He causeth the plants and the trees to grow. He killeth, and he maketh alive. He bringeth down to sheol, and bringeth up. When the people heard such words, they would ask, How shall we return thanks to God, and manifest our gratitude unto him? And Abraham would instruct them in these words, Say, blessed be the Lord who is blessed, Blessed be he that giveth bread and food unto all flesh. In this manner did Abraham teach those who had enjoyed his hospitality how to praise and thank God. Abraham's house thus became not only a lodging-place for the hungry and thirsty, but also a place of instruction where the knowledge of God and his law were taught. Satan accuses Abraham. In spite of the lavish hospitality practiced in the house of Abraham it happened once that a poor man, or rather an alleged poor man, was turned away empty-handed, and this was the immediate reason for the last of Abraham's temptations, the sacrifice of his favorite son, Isaac. It was the day on which Abraham celebrated the birth of Isaac with a great banquet to which all the magnets of the time were bidden with their wives. Satan, who always appears at a feast in which no poor people participate and keeps aloof from those to which poor guests are invited, turned up at Abraham's banquet in the guise of a beggar asking alms at the door. He had noticed that Abraham had invited no poor man, and he knew that his house was the right place for him. Abraham was occupied with the entertainment of his distinguished guests, and Sarah was endeavouring to convince their wives, the matrons, that Isaac was her child in very truth and not a spurious child. No one concerned himself about the beggar at the door who thereupon accused Abraham before God. Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan came also among them, and the Lord said unto Satan, From whence comest thou? As Satan answered the Lord, and said, From going to and fro on the earth, and from walking up and down in it. And the Lord said unto Satan, What hast thou to say concerning all the children of the earth? And Satan answered the Lord, and said, I have seen all the children of the earth serving thee and remembering thee, when they require ought from thee, and when thou givest them what they require from thee, then they forsake thee, and they remember thee no more. As thou seen Abraham, the son of Tara, who at first had no children, and he served thee and erected altars to thee wherever he came, and he brought offerings upon them, and he proclaimed thy name continually to all the children of the earth. And now his son Isaac is born to him, he has forsaken thee. He made a great feast for all the inhabitants of the land, and the Lord he has forgotten. For amidst all that he is done he brought thee no offering, neither burnt offering nor peace offering, neither one lamb nor goat of all that he had killed in the day that his son was weaned. Even from the time of his son's birth till now, being thirty-seven years, he built no altar before thee, nor brought up any offering to thee, for he saw that thou didst give what he requested before thee, and he therefore forsook thee. And the Lord said to Satan, Hast thou considered my servant Abraham, for there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man before me for a burnt offering, and that feareth God and escheweth evil. As I live, were I to say unto him, bring up Isaac thy son before me, he would not withhold him from me, much less if I told him to bring up a burnt offering before me from his flocks or herds. And Satan answered the Lord and said, Speak now unto Abraham, as thou hast said, and thou wilt see whether he will not transgress and cast aside thy words this day. God wished to try Isaac also. Ishmael once boasted to Isaac, saying, I was thirteen years old when the Lord spoke to my father to circumcise us, and I did not transgress his word which he commanded my father. And Isaac answered Ishmael, saying, What dost thou boast to me about this, about a little bit of thy flesh which thou didst take from thy body concerning which the Lord commanded thee? As the Lord liveth, the God of my father Abraham, if the Lord should say unto my father, Take now thy son, Isaac, and bring him up as an offering before me, I would not refrain, but I would joyfully exceed to it. The Journey to Mariah And the Lord thought to try Abraham and Isaac in this matter, and he said to Abraham, Take now thy son, Abraham, I have two sons, and I do not know which of them thou commandest me to take. God, thine only son, Abraham, the one is the only son of his mother, and the other is the only son of his mother. God, whom thou lovest, Abraham, I love this one and I love that one. God, even Isaac, Abraham, and where shall I go? God, to the land I will show thee, and offer Isaac there for a burnt offering. Abraham, am I fit to perform the sacrifice? Am I a priest? Aught not rather the high priest shim to do it? God, when thou wilt arrive at that place, I will consecrate thee and make thee a priest. And Abraham said within himself, How shall I separate my son Isaac from Sarah his mother? And he came into the tent, and he sat before Sarah his wife, and he spake these words to her. My son Isaac is grown up, and he has not yet studied the service of God. Now tomorrow I will go and bring him to shim and ebber his son, and there he will learn the ways of the Lord, for they will teach him to know the Lord, and to know how to pray unto the Lord that he may answer him, and to know the way of serving the Lord his God. And Sarah said, Thou hast spoken well, go, my Lord, and do unto him as thou hast said, but remove him not far from me, neither let him remain there too long, for my soul is bound within his soul. And Abraham said unto Sarah, My daughter, let us pray to the Lord our God that he may do good with us. And Sarah took her son Isaac, and he abode with her all that night, and she kissed and embraced him, and she laid injunctions upon him till morning. And she said to Abraham, O my Lord, I pray thee, take heed of thy son, and place thine eyes over him, for I have no other son nor daughter but him. Thou neglect him not, if he be hungry give him bread, and if he be thirsty give him water to drink. Do not let him go on foot, neither let him sit in the sun, neither let him go by himself on the road, neither turn him from whatever he may desire, but do unto him as he may say to thee. After spending the whole night in weeping on account of Isaac she got up in the morning and selected a very fine and beautiful garment from those that Abimelech had given to her. And she dressed Isaac therewith, and she put a turban upon his head, and she fastened a precious stone in the top of the turban, and she gave them provisions for the road. And Sarah went out with them, and she accompanied them upon the road to see them off, and they said to her, Return to the tent. And when Sarah heard the words of her son Isaac she wept bitterly, and Abraham wept with her, and their son wept with them, a great weeping, also those of their servants who went with them wept greatly. And Sarah called hold of Isaac, and she held him in her arms, and she embraced him, and continued to weep with him. And Sarah said, Who knoweth if I shall ever see thee again after this day? Abraham departed with Isaac amid great weeping, while Sarah and the servants returned to the tent. He took two of his young men with him, Ishmael and Eleazar, and while they were walking in the road the young men spoke these words to each other. Said Ishmael to Eleazar, Now my father Abraham is going with Isaac to bring him up for a burnt offering to the Lord, and when he returneth he will give unto me all that he possesses to inherit after him, for I am his first born. Eleazar answered, Surely Abraham did cast thee off with thy mother, and swear that thou shouldst not inherit anything of all he possesses, and to whom will he give all that he has, all his precious things, but unto his servant who has been faithful in his house, to me who have served him night and day, and have done all that he desired me? The Holy Spirit answered, Neither this one nor that one will inherit Abraham. And while Abraham and Isaac were proceeding along the road Satan came and appeared to Abraham in the figure of a very aged man, humble and of contrite spirit, and said to him, Art thou silly or foolish that thou goest to do this thing to thine only Son? God gave thee a Son in thy latter days, in thine old age, and wilt thou go and slaughter him who did not commit any violence, and wilt thou cause the soul of thine only Son to perish from the earth? Does thou not know and understand that this thing cannot be from the Lord? For the Lord would not do unto man such evil, to command him, go and slaughter thy Son. Abraham hearing these words knew that it was Satan who endeavored to turn him astray from the way of the Lord, and he rebuked him that he went away. And Satan returned and came to Isaac, and he appeared unto him in the figure of a young man, comely and well-favored, saying unto him, Does thou not know that thy silly old Father bringeth thee to the slaughter this day for naught? Now my Son, do not listen to him, for he is a silly old man, and let not thy precious soul and beautiful figure be lost from the earth. And Isaac told these words to his father, but Abraham said to him, Take heed of him, and do not listen to his words, for he is Satan endeavoring to lead us astray from the commands of our God. And Abraham rebuked Satan again, and Satan went from them, and, seeing he could not prevail over them, he transformed himself into a large brook of water in the road. And when Abraham, Isaac, and the two young men reached that place, they saw a brook large and powerful as the mighty waters, and they entered the brook trying to pass it, but the further they went, the deeper the brook, so that the water reached up to their necks, and they were all terrified on account of the water. But Abraham recognized the place, and he knew that there had been no water there before, and he said to his Son, I know this place on which there was no brook nor water. Now surely it is Satan who doth all this to us to draw us aside this day from the commands of God. And Abraham rebuked Satan, saying unto him, The Lord rebuk thee, though Satan, be gone from us, for we go by the command of God. And Satan was terrified at the voice of Abraham, and he went away from them, and the place became dry land again as it was at first. And Abraham went with Isaac toward the place that God had told him. Satan then appeared unto Sarah, in the figure of an old man, and said unto her, Where did thine husband go? She said, to his work. And where did thy son Isaac go? He inquired further, and she answered. He went with his father to a place of study of the Torah. Satan said, O thou poor old woman, thy teeth will be set on edge on account of thy son, as thou knowest not that Abraham took his son with him on the road to sacrifice him. In this hour Sarah's loins trembled, and all her limbs shook. She was no more of this world. Nevertheless, she aroused herself and said, All that God hath told Abraham, may he do it unto life and unto peace. On the third day of his journey Abraham lifted up his eyes and saw the place at a distance which God had told him. He noticed upon the mountain a pillar of fire reaching from the earth to heaven and a heavy cloud in which the glory of God was seen. Abraham said to Isaac, My son, dost thou see on that mountain which we perceive at a distance that which I see upon it? Thus Isaac answered and said unto his father, I see and lo a pillar of fire and a cloud, and the glory of the Lord is seen upon the cloud. Abraham knew then that Isaac was accepted before the Lord for an offering. He asked Ishmael and Eleazar, Do you also see that which we see upon the mountain? They answered, We see nothing more than like the other mountains. And Abraham knew that they were not accepted before the Lord to go with them. Abraham said to them, Abide ye here with the ass, you are like the ass, as little as it sees so little do you see. I and Isaac, my son, go to Yonder Mount and worship there before the Lord, and this Eve we will return to you. An unconscious prophecy had come to Abraham, for he prophesied that he and Isaac would both return from the mountain. Eleazar and Ishmael remained in that place as Abraham had commanded, while he and Isaac went further. End of chapter 5, part 11.