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Ishmael and His Temple (Understanding each other in the scheme of things)
Maridian Magazine ^ | Jan 2008 | By E. Douglas Clark

Posted on 01/09/2008 5:09:14 AM PST by restornu

Chapter 9, part 2 of The Blessings of Abraham:  Becoming a Zion People
By E. Douglas Clark

A few years hence, [1] to celebrate the weaning of Isaac, Abraham put on what Genesis calls “a great feast” (Gen. 21:8) or “a great banquet” (NJB Gen. 21:8). It was a sumptuous spread, a lavish offering open to all and attended by a great multitude, including, as Jasher reports, “all the great people of the land” who “came to eat and drink and rejoice.” [2]

The event was also a harbinger, says Jewish tradition, of things to come, for “the Holy One ... will make a great feast for the righteous on the day He shows his love for Isaac’s descendants.” [3] It is the same feast that Latter-day Saints look forward to as foretold in latter-day revelation (D&C 27:5–14).

The festivities that day for young Isaac were a summit of joy for the aged Abraham, who now had two sons whom he loved profoundly and, as Jewish sources say, equally. [4] As Abraham interacted with both during the celebration, Jubilees reports that he “rejoiced and blessed God because he had seen his sons and had not died childless. And he remembered the words [God] had spoken to him on the day Lot parted from him. And he rejoiced because the Lord had given him offspring on the earth to possess it, and he blessed and praised the creator of all things.” [5] For Abraham it was, to date, the greatest and most fulfilling day of his life.

Then, suddenly, in the midst of the joyous celebration, one brief communication from Sarah turned Abraham’s intense joy to intense grief. She had seen Ishmael doing something, which the King James translators rendered as “mocking” (Gen. 21:9). The translation is as inaccurate as it is unfortunate, as shown by noted biblical scholar E. A. Speiser, [6] and is corrected by modern translations which read “playing” [7] or “laughing,” [8] a translation required by the Septuagint, which adds here: “with Isaac her son.” [9]

Jubilees describes the scene as follows: “Sarah saw Ishmael playing and dancing, and Abraham rejoicing with great joy.” [10] Her reaction, as reported in Genesis, was to declare to Abraham: “Cast out that slave-woman and her son, for the son of that slave shall not share in the inheritance with my son Isaac” (JPST Gen. 21:10).

Sarah has received endless criticism through the ages for this seemingly harsh and heartless demand. But one Jewish tradition tells a different story: “God looked into Sarah’s heart and saw no hatred for Ishmael there,” but saw that she was motivated solely by “her passion to nurture Isaac to his full potential.” [11] And not merely motivated, but actually inspired, according to Jewish sages. Her words to Abraham arose not out of impulse or anger, but she was “acting under Divine inspiration,” so that, according to the learned Rashi, “Sarah’s voice is the voice of prophecy.” [12]

Sarah well knew of God’s promises to Abraham, repeated over decades, about the covenant race that would bless the world, and knew that her son, Isaac, was appointed to be their progenitor. She had even foreseen the history of her covenant descendants, [13] on whose behalf she now acted. And as the instrument of God, what she was proposing would also be for the benefit and blessing of Ishmael and his descendants, whose destiny had already been prophesied to Hagar.

Even so, Sarah’s words came as a thunderbolt to Abraham, who, as Genesis tells, was “greatly distressed,” [14] or “troubled ... very greatly.” [15] He was “tormented,” says Ephrem the Syrian, for he loved Ishmael just as he loved Isaac. [16]

In fact, Jewish tradition remembers that “of all the trials that Abraham had to undergo” up to that time, “none was so hard to bear as this.” [17] “How could he drive out people who were part of him, who were dear to him, who were dependent on him and helpless without him?” [18]

That troubled night, as Genesis reports, God told Abraham to implement Sarah’s wish (Gen. 21:12–13), but tradition gives a slightly expanded version of the incident: “In that night the Holy One ... said to him: Abraham! Dost thou not know that Sarah was appointed to thee for a wife from her mother’s womb? She is thy companion, and the wife of thy covenant ... All that Sarah has spoken she has uttered truthfully,” [19] for she “also is a prophetess.” [20] Therefore, “let it not be grievous in thine eyes.” [21]

Genesis records that Abraham simply arose the next morning and expelled Hagar and Ishmael into the desert, parsimoniously providing them with only a little bread and a bottle of water [22] — for which Abraham has been severely criticized. But other Jewish sources insist that the highly abbreviated Genesis account fails to communicate the reality that Abraham provisioned them well with necessities for their journey, including gold and silver, and then actually escorted them on their way. [23]

Islamic sources, from the descendants of Ishmael who was being “expelled,” unanimously remember that Abraham did in fact accompany Hagar and Ishmael to the place that God directed and where he would protect and prosper them — the site of the future city of Mecca. [24]

Islamic tradition describes what transpired when the moment came for Abraham to return and Hagar and Ishmael to remain in what was then the wilderness. Seeing that Abraham intended to depart, Hagar asked Abraham if God had commanded him to do this. When he answered in the affirmative, this remarkable woman declared her faith in God and God’s servant Abraham by courageously stating that she knew that God would take care of them. [25]

She was, in the words of a modern Muslim scholar, “willing to do this for God,” while for his part, Abraham “is enough of a believer to say, ‘I will submerge myself and rely on God.’” [26]

It was yet another irony in the life of Abraham, that although he would have instantly given his life for these loved ones, he was now forced to leave them behind in the wilderness in obedience to God, to whom, according to the Qur’an, he prayed fervently for their protection: “Fill the hearts of some among men with love for them.” [27]

It was a prayer of faith borne of personal experience, recalling the time when as a young man himself, he had been imprisoned without food and water, but miraculously provided for. Hence “Abraham is only providing them an experience that he himself has already lived through.” [28] Abraham then expressed his own love for both of his sons: “Praise be to God who has given me Ishmael and Isaac.” [29]

Abraham obediently left, although, as Cyril of Alexandria reports, he “took it very hard.” [30] Hagar obediently remained, but wept. When the provisions ran out, God sent an angel to protect and provide for them (see Gen. 21:15–19). Genesis recounts that “God was with the lad” (Gen. 21:20), and the Genesis Rabbah adds that the blessing of God rested upon him and all his household. [31]

They were prospered, [32] says Jewish tradition, in answer to Abraham’s continuing prayer: “Abraham prayed to the Almighty on his son’s behalf, and Ishmael’s house was filled with every good thing and every blessing.” [33] The Qur’an describes Ishmael as one who was “truthful in promise, and he was a messenger, a prophet. And he enjoined on his people prayer and almsgiving, and was one in whom his Lord was well pleased.” [34] An early Jewish text likewise pays to Ishmael the ultimate compliment of being one of the righteous. [35]

As Ishmael’s descendants remember, Abraham returned to visit Ishmael many times. On one of those occasions, according to the Qur’an, Abraham enlisted Ishmael’s help to build “the Temple,” or Ka’ba, a place “to which people might repair again and again, and a sanctuary.” [36] The pattern for this Temple was shown to Abraham, says Islamic tradition, by an angel, [37] while the site itself was divinely designated to Abraham by a cloud or wind. Abraham and Ishmael worked together [38] as described by the Qur’an:

Thus did we command Abraham and Ishmael: “Purify My Temple for those who will walk around it, and those who will abide near it in meditation, and those who will bow down and prostrate themselves in prayer.” And, lo, Abraham prayed: “O my Sustainer! Make this a land secure and grant its people fruitful sustenance — such of them as believe in God and the Last Day.” ... And when Abraham and Ishmael were raising the foundations of the Temple, they prayed: “O our Sustainer! Accept Thou this from us ... Make us surrender ourselves [or, “make us both submissive” [39] ] unto Thee, and make out of our offspring a community that shall surrender itself [or, be “submissive” [40] ] unto Thee, and ... impart unto them revelation as well as wisdom, and cause them to grow in purity. [41]

The temple at Mecca would share a number of similar motifs with the Jewish Temple at Jerusalem. [42] But it is the temple at Mecca — the holy Ka’ba — which remains to this day the longing of Muslims worldwide, who are expected at least once in their lifetime to make the sacred pilgrimage in which men don sacred robes, women cover their heads, Satan is cast out, and all walk seven times the circuit around the Ka’ba — all following the pattern, according to Islam, of that set by Abraham and Ishmael in order to attain purity and prepare for the very presence of God. [43] The seven circuits recall the seven ages of the temporal earth (D&C 77:7) in the Lord’s “one eternal round” (1 Ne. 10:19).

Islam further tells that God commanded Abraham to summon all mankind to the Ka’ba; and still today when faithful Muslims go there, they do so in response to Abraham’s summons as they arrive at the “famous place of prayer, the Place of Abraham, [which] is situated near the Ka’ba.” [44]

Three different times the pilgrims raise their hands to heaven and say, “Here I am, Lord.” Near the Ka’ba they also see the famous black stone with the footprint, believed to be that of Abraham. In their most sacred of all ceremonies, Muslims literally believe themselves to be following the footsteps of their father Abraham.

The seven circuits echo the architectural pattern of the “cosmic city” of the ancient Near East, often constructed with seven circuits or with seven-tiered temple towers made in the “image of the seven cosmic spheres.” [45] Seven is also, of course, the number of days of creation, as well as the number of millennial periods of the earth’s temporal existence — all of which Abraham had seen in vision. And as to the shape of the circle itself, it is the shape of Facsimile 2, representing what Hugh Nibley called “One Eternal Round.”

Muslim tradition holds that in erecting the Ka’ba Abraham was also laying the foundations of a sacred city. “When Abraham offered the [dedicatory] prayer, there was no town existing near the Ka’ba. There existed only the House of God. So Abraham prayed that in that wildest of wildernesses there might grow up a town, and that that town might become a place of security, affording peace to mankind,” for “he wished [it] to be the abode of the righteous only.” [46]

If Ishmael must grow to manhood far removed from Abraham, Abraham could not be content without first establishing his son and laying the foundation for a Zion community with a temple at its center. Abraham would return frequently, [47] for “he longed for his son Ishmael.” [48]


1.Perhaps two years (Tuchman and Rapoport, Passions of the Matriarchs, 56, citing Rashi); perhaps three (Wenham, Genesis 16–50, 81, calling attention to 2 Maccabees 7:27).

2.Jasher 21:5, in Noah, Book of Yashar, 57.

3.Kasher, Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation, 3:110, citing Pes. 119b.

4.See Levner, Legends of Israel, 87; and Bialik and Ravnitzky, Book of Legends, 40.

5.Jubilees 17:2–3, in Sparks, Apocryphal Old Testament, 60.

6.Speiser, Genesis, 155.

7.As in most modern translations of Genesis 21:9. See Speiser, Genesis, 153; JPST; NRSV; Mitchell, Genesis, 40; Vawter, On Genesis, 247; REB; and Westermann, Genesis 12–36, 336.

8.Genesis 21:9 in Fox, Five Books of Moses, 89; and in Alter, Genesis, 98.

9.Wenham, Genesis 16-50, 77.

10.Jubilees 17:4, in Sparks, Apocryphal Old Testament, 60.

11.Tuchman and Rapoport, Passions of the Matriarchs, 62, recounting a tradition repeated Rabbi Abraham, son of the famous Rambam.

12.Ibid., 62–64.

13.See Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, 1:203; 5:215.

14.Genesis 21:11, in Vawter, On Genesis, 247. And see similar translations in NRSV; JPST; NIV; NASB; NJB; and Speiser, Genesis, 162.

15.Genesis 21:11, in Mitchell, Genesis, 40.

16.Matthews, Armenian Commentary on Genesis, 96.

17.Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, 1:264.

18.Scherman and Zlotowitz, Bereishis: Genesis, 1(a):396.

19.Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer 30, in Friedlander, Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer, 216.

20.Baring-Gould, Legends of the Patriarchs, 182.

21.Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer 30, in Friedlander, Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer, 216.

22.As it is written in Genesis 21:14, and in all of Jewish tradition. See Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, 1:264; and Kasher, Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation, 3:115–19.

23.Kasher, Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation, 3:115, citing several sources including Abrabanel and Sforno.

24.Knappert, Islamic Legends, 1:78. See also Asad, Qur’an, 26 n. 102: “According to very ancient Arabian traditions, it was at the site of what later became Mecca that Abraham, in order to placate Sarah, abandoned his Egyptian bondwoman Hagar and their child Ishmael after he had brought them there from Canaan. This is by no means improbable if one bears in mind that for a camel-riding bedouin (and Abraham was certainly one) a journey of twenty or even thirty days has never been anything out of the ordinary. At first glance, the Biblical statement (Genesis xxi, 14) that it was ‘in the wilderness of Beersheba’ (i.e., in the southernmost tip of Palestine) that Abraham left Hagar and Ishmael would seem to conflict with the Qur’anic account. This seeming contradiction, however, disappears as soon as we remember that to the ancient, town-dwelling Hebrews the term ‘wilderness of Beersheba’ comprised all the desert regions south of Palestine.”

25.Kathir, Stories of the Prophets, 88–89.

26.Azizah Y. Al-Hibri, in Moyers, Genesis, 196, 199.

27.Qur’an 14:37, in A. Y. Ali, Qur’an, 631.

28.Levy, A Faithful Heart, xv.

29.Qur’an 14:39, in Cragg, Qur’an, 117.

30.Cyril of Alexandria, Glaphyra on Genesis 3:10, Oden, Ancient Christian Commentary, 2:99.

31.Genesis Rabbah 53:15, in Freedman, Midrash Rabbah, Genesis, 1:474.

32.Kasher, Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation, 3:119, citing Radak.

33.Kasher, Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation, 3:120, quoting Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer 30.

34.Qur’an 19:54–55, in M. M. Ali, Qur’an, 603.

35.See Mekilta, tractate Pisha, in Lauterbach, Mekilta de Rabbi Ishmael, 1:134–35.

  36.Qur’an 2:125, in Asad, Qur’an, 26.

  37.The angel Gabriel. Knappert, Islamic Legends, 1:81. Joseph Smith explained that the angel Gabriel is Noah. Galbraith and Smith, Scriptural Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 178.

38.See various traditions of the event summarized and discussed in Firestone, Journeys in Holy Lands, 80–93.

  39.Qur’an 2:128, in M. M. Ali, Qur’an, 56.

40.Ibid.

41.Qur’an 2:125–29, in Asad, Qur’an, 26–27, omitting brackets in original.

42.See Rachel Milstein, “The Evolution of a Visual Motif: The Temple and the Ka’ba,” in Arazi, Sadan, and Wasserstein, Compilation and Creation, 23–48, esp. 45–46.

43.See Denny, An Introduction to Islam, 117–23; and Syed Ali Ashraf, “The Inner Meaning of the Islamic Rites: Prayer, Pilgrimage, Fasting, Jihad,” in Nasr, Islamic Spirituality, 119–25.

44.Reuven Firestone, “Abraham,” in McAuliffe, Encyclopaedia of the Qur’an, 1:7.

45.L’Orange, Iconography of Cosmic Kingship, 10.

46.Holy Qur’an 1:179.

47.Asad, Qur’an, 26 n. 102.

48.al-Kisa’i, Tales of the Prophets, 153.

 



TOPICS: Current Events; History; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: ishmael
Glimpsing back into as the what was in history as to how it was and original intend before it got to what is today!

Hope for a mature audience to ponder yesterday and how it lost it way in today world.

Thanking those of you who are students of history and appreciate pondering and always remember who we are among the Lord's families this is on earth!

That we try to step back for a moment from the common every day reaction wonder if we are we really helping or hindering in bring about the Heavenly Fathers will.

1 posted on 01/09/2008 5:09:17 AM PST by restornu
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To: Adam-ondi-Ahman; America always; Antonello; asparagus; BlueMoose; Choose Ye This Day; ...

Listening to the will of Heavenly Father helps us to be builders of bridges in the name of Jesus Christ, amen


2 posted on 01/09/2008 5:11:58 AM PST by restornu (Teach them correct principles and let them govern themselves ~ Joseph Smith)
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To: restornu

Islam denies the cross of Christ. The Koran denies that Jesus was ever crucified, and denies that He is the Only Begotten Son of the Creator of the Universe, much less that all things were created through Jesus.

The Koran is a false book and Islam is a false religion. God did redeem people for Himself from the seed of Ishmael through Jesus, when many of these people became Christians in the centuries after the resurrection. The response of Satan was to use his tool Mohammed to murder and forcibly convert Christians in the areas that are now Syria, Iraq, Egypt, etc etc.


3 posted on 01/09/2008 5:25:18 AM PST by fishtank (Fenced BORDERS, English LANGUAGE, Patriotic CULTURE: A good plan.)
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To: restornu

But as at that time he who was born according to the flesh persecuted him who was born according to the Spirit, so it is now also.” Galatians.

Psalm 83

1. A psalm, a song of Asaph.
2. O God, have no silence, do not be silent and do not be still, O God.
3. For behold, Your enemies stir, and those who hate You raise their heads.
4. Against Your people they plot cunningly, and they take counsel against Your protected ones.
5. They said, “Come, let us destroy them from [being] a nation, and the name of Israel will no longer be remembered.”
6. For they have taken counsel with one accord; against You they form a pact.
7. The tents of Edom and the Ishmaelites, Moab and the Hagrites.
8. Gebal, Ammon, and Amalek, Philistia with the inhabitants of Tyre.
9. Also Assyria joined them; they were the arm of the children of Lot forever.
10. Do to them as [to] Midian; as [to] Sisera, as [to] Jabin in the brook Kishon.
11. They were destroyed in En-Dor; they were [as] dung on the ground.
12. Make them, their nobles, as Oreb and as Zeeb, and as Zebah and as Zalmuna all their princes,
13. Who said, “Let us inherit for ourselves the dwellings of God.”
14. My God, make them like thistles, like stubble before the wind.
15. As a fire that burns in a forest and as a flame that burns mountains.
16. So will You pursue them with Your tempest, and with Your whirlwind You will terrify them.
17. Fill their faces with shame, and they will seek Your countenance, O Lord.
18. Let them be ashamed and terrified forever; let them be disgraced and perish.
19. Let them know that You-Your name alone is the Lord, Most High over all the earth.


4 posted on 01/09/2008 6:07:27 AM PST by AliVeritas (ah, the sheer grace! in darkness and concealment, my house being now all stilled.)
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To: fishtank

Let’s not go over the things we are told about from the media or world, and we things we know in 2008.

This is a fact in every race of people on the fact of the earth there are many who hearts and minds belong to the God of Love but many have been in bondage or given stumbling blocks that were put into their way.

It is now for us to try to ponder and understand to discern what really is from what is always being programed into us!

The world always wants to tell us what is God way we see it in the election the world view (media etc) try to hold us to their view of God standards, which in many cases don’t even come close to the ways of God!


5 posted on 01/09/2008 8:39:17 AM PST by restornu (Teach them correct principles and let them govern themselves ~ Joseph Smith)
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To: restornu

Islam is a system of works & Jesus had a thing or two to say about those who worshipped the law of God instead of God.


6 posted on 01/09/2008 9:09:59 AM PST by GoLightly
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To: restornu

The mythology of the Koran is exceeded only by the prefabrications of the Book of Mormon.


7 posted on 01/10/2008 4:07:42 AM PST by Uncle Chip (TRUTH : Ignore it. Deride it. Allegorize it. Interpret it. But you can't ESCAPE it.)
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