Genesis 20
20
Sarah Taken into the King’s Harem
1Abraham journeyed from the oaks of Mamre to the southern region of Canaan # 20:1 Or “the land of the Negev.” and settled between Kadesh and Shur, to live as a temporary resident in Gerar. # 20:1 This would have been an arduous journey as Abraham was a very wealthy man with hundreds of servants and many flocks and herds of livestock. Gerar means “lodging place” and was a Philistine city-kingdom south of Gaza. 2Now Abraham had said about his wife Sarah, “She’s my sister.” So Abimelech, # 20:2 Abimelech has two possible meanings: “Melech [Molech] is my father” or “my father is king.” king of Gerar, sent for her and took her into his harem. # 20:2 Sarah was ninety years old. God had supernaturally rejuvenated her and made her attractive to a king. According to Jewish tradition, “her flesh was rejuvenated, her wrinkles smoothed out, and her original beauty was restored” (Bava Metzi’a 87a). The Dead Sea Scrolls likewise comment on Sarah’s miraculous restoration due to her faith in the promise of God with these words: “Fair indeed are her eyes . . . and all the radiance of her face . . . and her hands how perfect. Her legs how beautiful and without blemish her thighs . . . And when the king heard the words of [his three officials], he desired her exceedingly, and he sent [them] at once to bring her to him, and he looked upon her and marveled at all her loveliness . . . and he [God] sought to slay me.” See The Message of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Simon & Schuster, 1957. 3One night, God appeared to Abimelech in a dream # 20:3 We see from this not only that God speaks in dreams to the righteous, but that he will also come to the lost and share his heart with them (see Prov. 21:1). Dreams are powerful avenues into the human spirit. God may speak to you in dreams, if you will listen. and said to him, “You’re as good as dead, for you have taken into your harem a married woman!”
4Now Abimelech had not touched Sarah, so he said to the Lord, “Would you really destroy people who are innocent? # 20:4 Or “Would you really slaughter an innocent nation?” 5Didn’t the man tell me, ‘She is my sister’? And didn’t she agree and say, ‘Yes, he’s my brother’? I’ve done this with clean hands and a clear conscience.”
6Then God answered him in the dream, “Yes, I know you did this with a clear conscience. Furthermore, it was I who kept you from sinning and kept you from touching her. 7Now return the man’s wife, and because he is a prophet, # 20:7 This is the first time the word “prophet” is found in the Bible. The Hebrew word navi’ means “to bubble up,” referring to the stirring of the Holy Spirit that bubbles up through the prophet with divine utterance. Navi’ is the most common word used for “prophet” and can also be translated “to declare” or “one who declares.” However, some etymologists connect it with Akkadian word nabû, “to call.” Assyrian kings had the title of “the one called,” that is, called by the gods. The form navi’ in Hebrew could also signify “one who receives the [divine] call.” he will intercede on your behalf that you may live. But if you don’t give her back—you will certainly die, you and your entire household.” # 20:7 See Ps. 105:15.
8So Abimelech rose early in the morning and gathered all his servants. When he told them about his dream, they were terrified! 9Abimelech summoned Abraham and asked him, “What is this trick you have played on us? I did nothing wrong to you. Why would you bring such great guilt upon me and my kingdom? You have done to me what no one should ever do to another.” 10Then Abimelech asked, “What is your purpose in doing this?”
11Abraham answered, “Because I thought, ‘There’s no one here that fears God. They will kill me to get to my wife.’ # 20:11 Or “over the matter of my wife.” 12Besides, she really is my half sister. She’s my father’s daughter, but not my mother’s, so I married her. 13When God sent me out to wander from my father’s house, I said to her, ‘Here is how you can show your love for me. Everywhere we go, you must say about me, “He’s my brother.” ’ ”
14Then Abimelech gave Abraham’s wife Sarah back to him. In addition, he gave him sheep, cattle, and both male and female servants. 15Abimelech told him, “Look, my land is now before you; feel free to settle wherever you please.” 16Then he turned to Sarah and said, “I am giving your brother a thousand pieces of silver # 20:16 Or “a thousand shekels,” which would amount to about twenty-five pounds of silver. as compensation to settle any claim against me, to exonerate you in the eyes of all who are with you, # 20:16 Or “a covering of eyes.” The Hebrew is uncertain. and to clear your reputation.”
17Then Abraham prayed to God; and God healed Abimelech! He also healed Abimelech’s wife and female servants of their infertility and they began to have babies again. # 20:17 Considering that Abraham’s wife had never given him a child, it was an amazing miracle for Abraham to pray for someone else to give birth! The very first healing in the Bible was through the prayer of a childless man, Abraham. He had no confidence in himself as he prayed this prayer of faith. However, he could pray in total confidence that it had to be God doing the miracle. He prayed for the very thing he had not yet received. When the last two verses of Gen. 20 are read together with the first two verses of Gen. 21, we see that Isaac’s conception occurred as a result of Abraham’s prayer for another person with an identical need. 18For Yahweh had shut all the wombs of the women of Abimelech’s household because he took Sarah, Abraham’s wife.
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Genesis 20: TPT
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Learn More About The Passion TranslationGenesis 20
20
CHAPTER 20
1Abraham went forth from thence into the land of the south, and dwelled betwixt Kadesh and Shur, and was a pilgrim in Gerar;
2and he said of Sarah, his wife, She is my sister. Therefore Abimelech, king of Gerar, sent, and took her.
3Soothly God came to Abimelech by a sweven in the night, and said to him, Lo! thou shalt die, for the woman which thou hast taken, for she hath an husband.
4Forsooth Abimelech [had] touched not her; and he said, Lord, whether thou shalt slay a folk unknowing and just [or rightwise]?
5Whether he said not to me, She is my sister, and she said, He is my brother? In the simpleness of mine heart, and in the cleanness of mine hands, I did this.
6And the Lord said to him, And I know that thou didest by simple heart, and therefore I kept thee, lest thou didest sin against me, and I suffered not that thou touchedest her;
7now therefore yield thou the wife to her husband, for he is a prophet; and he shall pray for thee, and thou shalt live; soothly if thou wilt not yield her, know thou that thou shalt die by death, thou, and all things that be thine.
8And at once Abimelech rose by night, and called all his servants, and spake all these words in the ears of them; and all men dreaded greatly.
9Soothly Abimelech called also Abraham, and said to him, What hast thou done to us? what sinned we against thee, that thou hast brought in on me and on my realm such a great sin? thou hast done to us which things thou oughtest not to do.
10And again Abimelech asked, and said, What thing sawest thou, that thou wouldest do this?
11Abraham answered, I thought within me, and said, In hap the dread of God is not in this place; and they shall slay me for my wife;
12in other manner forsooth and she is my sister verily, the daughter of my father, and not the daughter of my mother; and I wedded her into wife;
13soothly after that God led me out of the house of my father, I said to her, Thou shalt do this mercy with me in each place to which we shall enter; thou shalt say, that I am thy brother.
14Therefore Abimelech took sheep, and oxen, and servants, and handmaids, and gave to Abraham; and he yielded to him Sarah, his wife,
15and said, The land is before you; dwell thou, wherever it pleaseth thee.
16Forsooth Abimelech said to Sarah, Lo! I gave a thousand pieces of silver to thy brother; this shall be to thee into a covering of eyes, to all men that be with thee; and whither ever thou goest, have thou mind that thou art taken.
17Soothly for Abraham prayed, God cured Abimelech, and his wife, and handmaids, and they childed;
18for God had closed each womb of the house of Abimelech, for Sarah, the wife of Abraham.
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Wycliffe’s Bible with Modern Spelling ©2017
Wycliffe’s Apocrypha ©2013, 2015
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Wycliffe’s New Testament ©2001, 2011
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