I wrote recently
about the exemplary Sarah and of her unfailing support of Abraham and his
priesthood leadership within their marriage. I have never lived in her skin so
I don’t know what it was like to be a wife of such a ‘visionary man’ but I
trust the scriptural account which shows no evidence of her ever complaining or
questioning her husband.
I want to
highlight here Sarah’s unfailing faith for the God Jehovah by which she became
the mother of nations through her beloved son Isaac.
Sarah
didn’t question any of the revelations Abraham received from God, including the
promise of Isaac. She moved from place to place, wherever he said God wanted
them to go. And she ardently believed that the priesthood heir would come from
her body even though she was past bearing children. The biggest way she proved
this was when she gave Hagar to Abraham to wife.
The
ancient custom dictated that if a married woman could not produce children for
her husband, she was to give him another wife (D&C 132:34). This Sarah did
out of obedience. She gave her young maid, Hagar, to Abraham for a second wife.
It is significant that she chose Hagar.
Egyptians were descendants of Ham and his wife Egyptus who was a
descendant of Cain. Since Hagar was an Egyptian, her offspring could not hold
the priesthood (Abraham 1:21-27), therefore a son that Hagar could bear to
Abraham could never become the heir of the covenant. Sarah knew this and she
held onto the promise that she would be the mother of such a son. When she told
Abraham to take Hagar to wife, she asked him to do so ‘that I may obtain
children by her’, NOT ‘so that we might get the heir of the promise ’ (Genesis
16:2)
When the three holy men visited Abraham prior to the annihilation of
Sodom, they confirmed that Sarah will have a son. Genesis records that Sarah
laughed when she heard it. This was not a laugh of disbelief. It was more a
joyous reaction, just as Abraham reacted when the Lord told him the same thing
(Genesis 17:17; 18:12). Please see JST Genesis 21:5 which replaces ‘laugh’ with
‘rejoice’.
In Sarah’s words: “God has made me to rejoice; and also all that know me
will rejoice with me” (JST Genesis 21:5). “The Hebrew word here translated as “rejoice”
can also be translated as “laugh”, as most translations of Genesis do. “God has
brought me laughter”, Sarah exclaims, and “everyone who hears will laugh with
me.” She then adds: “Who would have said to Abraham that Sarah would suckle
children?” (JPST Genesis 21:6-7). Why did she say “children” instead of “a
child”? Because, according to Jewish interpretation, she was keenly cognizant
that this was the covenant son whom God would multiply into a host of covenant
people….” (E. Douglas Clark, “The Blessings of Abraham”, p 193)
When the holy men referred to Sarah’s laugh with: “Is anything too hard
for the Lord?” (v 14), it was a confirmation of Sarah’s role in providing an
heir that would be in the similitude of God’s own Son….that we might believe if
“an aged woman who was sterile brought Isaac to birth according to God’s
promise, we may also believe that God
has power to bring it about that even a virgin may give birth.” (Oden, “Ancient
Christian Commentary” 2:91). Isaac was
in every way the prototype of Christ.
And here is
the ultimate proof of Sarah’s faith in the God of Israel. When Paul wrote to
the Hebrews, he spoke of prominent men and women who achieved miraculous things
by the power of faith. Amongst those that were so valiant was Sarah, the wife
of Abraham and the mother of Isaac, the heir of the covenant:
“Through
faith also Sarah herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered
of a child when she was past age, because she judged Him faithful who had
promised.” (Hebrews 11:11)
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: Sarah and Isaac by unknown artist)






