It is fair to say that Abraham is famous for the unthinkable sacrifice of his son Isaac for whom he waited for 38 years from the time of the promise. We often forget about another sacrifice that was asked of Abraham.
Yesterday I wrote about Hagar whom Sarah gave to Abraham as a second wife by whom she hoped to have children (Genesis 16:2). This was according to the law (D&C 132:34). And so began the triangle of trial for three people: Abraham, Sarah and Hagar. And herein lies a lesson. Even when we do the right thing, there is no guarantee that things will always work out…..as many people who have ended up divorced will attest.
When Abraham was ninety-nine years old and Ishmael, his son by Hagar, thirteen, the Lord appeared to Abraham and told him Sarah will bear him a son of the covenant. Abraham's first thought was Ishmael for he loved the boy. He fell on his face and asked the Lord to consider him to be the heir (Genesis 17:18). The Lord denied the request but replied, "I have heard thee" (v20). Once again, as with Hagar, he was saying: "I see you....I see the difficulties you have to live with....I will make it up to you". He said He would give Ishmael twelve sons and Ishmael would be part of the promise of endless posterity that He had made to Abraham (v20). This is mercy and this is justice of the God of Israel: 12 sons for Ishmael and 12 sons for Isaac through his son Jacob…..
And so, because we are flawed humans, this triangle of three people did not work out. When the time came for them to part ways, Genesis gives a highly abbreviated account of Hagar’s departure by stating that Abraham simply expelled Hagar and Ishmael into the desert providing them only with a little bread and a bottle of water (Genesis 21:14). Abraham has been severely criticized for this but anyone who has studied his life knows that this could not be true. Abraham was the kind of a man who sought strangers who needed help. He could not have banished the mother and the son who he loved in such a cruel way.
According to Islamic tradition, Abraham provisioned Hagar and Ishmael well and even accompanied them well into the desert of Beersheba (Knappert, “Islamic Legends”, 1:78), trusting God that He will care for them once he departed as per His promise that He will make out of Ishmael a mighty nation and acting upon God’s instruction to implement Sarah’s wish (Genesis 21:12-13). Nevertheless, having to do this would have rent his heart. This was Abraham’s first sacrifice.
Islamic tradition further states that Abraham “would return frequently for he longed for his son Ishmael” (al-Kisa’I, “Tales of the Prophets” 153). Whether the Islamic tradition is true or not, it certainly aligns well with the character of this great patriarch. The fact that Genesis claims that Ishmael and Isaac buried their father together would also be proof that the family relationships were sustained throughout the rest of their lives (Genesis 25:9).
After Sarah died, Abraham married a woman called Keturah and with her he had six more sons (Genesis 25:1-4). Before he died, he gave gifts to these sons and sent them all “unto the east country”, away from his son Isaac to whom he gave all that he had (v 5,6).
I
don’t really understand the custom of the day that the first son inherits
everything but in my limited female way, I can see the importance of preserving
the priesthood line “after the order of the Son of God” for He too was the
firstborn and He too inherited everything. It is through His priesthood that He
bestows His inheritance upon all the nations of this earth and all of humanity.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: Jesus by Joseph Brickey)

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