Genesis: These Are The Generations (XXIV)

Sarah Dies (23:1-20)

Neal Pollard

In our modern world where women typically outlive their husbands, we may find it surprising that Abraham will outlive Sarah by nearly a half century. “The years of the life of Sarah” were 127 (1). She dies in Hebron, in the land their descendants would one day own, and Abraham mourned her loss (2). Afterward, he had practical matters to settle (3). He approaches “the sons of Heth,” descended from Canaan (10:15) and the ancestors of the Hittites. In Scripture, they are typically allies of Israel rather than enemies (2 Sa. 11:3; 2 Ki. 7:6; 2 Chr. 1:17). 

Perhaps it is an overlooked evidence of faith that Abraham wants to buy a burial place in the land promised to but not yet possessed by him (4). Throughout Genesis, we will see more and more of Abraham’s family buried there–Abraham (25:9), Isaac and Rebekah (49:30-31), and Jacob (50:13). After the conquest, Hebron would belong to the inheritance of the nation descended from Abraham.

These proto-Hittites first propose one of their own tombs, but Abraham wants a place of his own that he does not have to share with these generous people (4-6). Not only that, but Abraham names the place, the cave of Machpelah, which he wants to buy from their presumed leader, Ephron (7-9). Ephron wishes to give the cave as a gift to Abraham, but the patriarch wants ownership to be clear for subsequent generations (10-13). Is there a bit of horse-trading humor when, after saying he would give it to Abraham, Ephron says when pressed, “My lord, listen to me; a piece of land worth four hundred shekels of silver, what is that between me and you? So bury your dead” (15). Abraham was listening (16), and paid the full price and was given the deed to the field and the cave along with all the trees in the field (17-20).

By burying his wife there and buying the land, Abraham was making a small downpayment on a place that would someday belong to the nation descending from him. This wife, Sarah, is remembered as really an ideal model for all wives in 1 Peter 3:1-6. She was submissive and obedient to her husband, she did what was right, and she was courageous. The writer of Hebrews likewise exalts her faith to believe that at 90 years old she could become a first-time mother (Heb. 11:11). Her loss was a source of grief and mourning to Abraham. Despite their inevitable foibles and faults, they were a “power couple”! They were driven together by a partnership that embraced the promises of God and “being fully assured that what God had promised, He was also able to perform” (Rom. 4:21). 

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Author: preacherpollard

preacher,Cumberland Trace church of Christ, Bowling Green, Kentucky

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