A time to depart (Gen. 24)
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Gen. 24
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A time to depart (Gen. 24)
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…
There are five short readings, all coming from the book of Genesis.
Genesis chapter 24, commencing at verse 34.
Genesis 24, verse 34.
And he said, I am Abram's servant, and the Lord hath blessed my master greatly,
and he has become great, and he hath given him flocks, and herds, and silver, and gold,
and menservants, and maidservants, and camels, and asses.
And Sarah, my master's wife, bare a son to my master when she was old,
and unto him hath he given all that he had.
And my master made me to swear, saying,
Thou shalt not take a wife to my son of the daughters of the Canaanites,
in whose land I dwell, but thou shalt go unto my father's house,
and to my kindred, and take a wife unto my son.
Now verse 50, the same chapter.
Then Laban and Bethuel answered and said,
The thing proceedeth from the Lord.
We cannot speak unto thee bad or good.
Behold, Rebekah is before thee.
Take her, and go, and let her be thy master's son's wife,
as the Lord hath spoken.
And it came to pass, that when Abram's servant heard their words,
he worshipped the Lord, bowing himself to the earth.
And the servant brought forth jewels of silver, and jewels of gold,
and raiment, and gave them to Rebekah.
He gave also to her brother and to her mother precious things.
And they did eat and drink.
He and the men that were with him, and tarried all night.
And they rose up in the morning and said,
Send me away unto my master.
And her brother and her mother said,
Let the damsel abide with us a few days, at the least ten.
After that she shall go.
And he said unto them,
Hinder me not. Send the Lord a prostrate my way.
Send me away, that I may go to my master.
And they said, We will call the damsel, and inquire at her mouth.
And they called Rebekah, and said unto her,
Would thou go with this man?
And she said, I will go.
Now shall we turn to chapter 31.
The 31st chapter, verse 1.
And he heard the words of Laban's son, saying,
Jacob hath taken away all that was our father's.
And of that which was our father's hath he gotten all his glory.
And Jacob beheld the countenance of Labanon.
And behold, he was not toward him as before.
And the Lord said unto Jacob,
Return unto the land of thy fathers and to thy kindred,
and I will be with thee.
Now down to verse 13.
I am the God of Bethel, where thou anointest a pillar,
and where thou vowest a vow unto me.
Now arise, get thee out of this land,
and return unto the land of thy kindred,
And Rachel and Lear answered and said unto him,
Is there yet any portion or inheritance for us in our father's house?
Are we not counted of him strangers?
For he hath sold us, and hath quite devoured also our money.
For all the riches which God hath taken from our father,
that is ours and our children's.
Now then, whatsoever God hath said unto thee, do.
Then Jacob rose up and set his sons and his wives upon camels,
and he carried away all his cattle and all his goods,
which he had gotten, the cattle of his getting,
which he had gotten in Paradarum,
for to go to Isaac his father in the land of Canaan.
Now to chapter 35.
First verse of chapter 35.
And God said unto Jacob, Arise, go up to Bethel, and dwell there,
and make thee an altar unto God,
that appeared unto thee when thou fleddest from the face of Esau thy brother.
Then Jacob said unto his household and to all that were with him,
Put away the strange gods that are among you,
and be clean, and change your garments,
and let us arise and go up to Bethel,
and I will make thee an altar unto God.
And I will make there an altar unto God,
who answered me in the day of my distress,
and was with me in the way which I went.
And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods which were in their hand,
and all their earrings which were in their ears.
And Jacob hid them under the oak which was by Shechem.
And they journeyed, and the terror of God was upon the cities that were round and about them,
and they did not pursue after the sons of Jacob.
So Jacob come to Luz, which is in the land of Canaan, that is Bethel.
He and all the people that were with him.
And he built there an altar.
And he called the place El Bethel,
because their God appeared unto him when he fled from the face of his brother.
May God bless those portions of his precious word to us.
Now shall we sing again, this time the hymn 380.
380
O draw me, Saviour, after thee.
I would just like to refer you to two or three other short scriptures in the New Testament.
The first is in the 13th chapter of John, verse 1.
Just the one verse, John 13, verse 1.
Now before the feast of the Passover,
when Jesus knew that his hour was come,
that he should depart out of this world unto the Father,
having loved his own which were in the world,
he loved them unto the end.
And in the 17th chapter, beginning from verse 1,
these words spake Jesus and lifted up his eyes to heaven and said,
Father, the hour is come.
Glorify thy son, that thy son also may glorify thee.
As thou hast given him power over all flesh,
that he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him.
And this is life eternal, that they might know thee,
the only true God and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.
I have glorified thee on the earth.
I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do.
Now a verse or two in the second epistle of Timothy,
the last chapter.
I'm sorry to give you so many scriptures,
but I think you'll see in a moment how they link up.
2 Timothy 4, verse 6.
For I am now ready to be offered,
and the time of my departure is at hand.
I have fought a good fight.
I have finished my course.
I have kept the faith.
Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness
which the Lord, the righteous judge,
shall give me at that day,
and not to me only,
but unto all them also that love his appearing.
Some time ago, I don't know quite in what circumstances,
I was reading in this 13th chapter of John,
and the middle sentence in that first verse
stuck in my mind,
and it's been more or less in my mind ever since.
When Jesus knew that his hour was come,
that he should depart out of this world unto the Father.
When we preach the gospel,
we are, I think, usually insistent that the time is short.
Now is the accepted time.
Now is the day of salvation.
And not only do we point to the fact
that it isn't only old people who pass through death,
but even children and babies.
The story is told of a young child
who wanted to know how long they had in this world,
and their parent wisely sent the child to the cemetery
and to note the length of the grave,
see which is the longest and which is the shortest.
Well, it was an object lesson.
And we are, and must be,
if we're going to be faithful to unbelievers,
point out that it may not depend upon age,
they may be called out of the scene at any age.
And then there is that which is the joy of the believer,
the coming of the Lord, which may be at any time.
And I felt that here in this first verse
of the 13th chapter of John,
we have got a reminder from the Lord himself
of the way he looked at things.
And when we come to think of this matter
of departing out of this scene,
I think there are three major questions
that may occur in our minds.
First of all, do we want to go?
And secondly, if we want to go, why do we want to go?
And thirdly, how does this desire,
if it exists in our hearts,
affect us in our pathway today?
When we're traveling,
I dare say most of us have done a bit of traveling in our time,
if it's a good long distance,
we have some things to get ready.
And we wouldn't like to be pushed up
to within, say, an hour of the time of our departure
before we knew we were going.
We have certain things to do, quite rightly too.
And that is true of the believer.
We're not left here just to idle our time away.
We're here for a purpose.
And if that purpose is to be accomplished
for the glory of God,
then we can't just take a holiday and say,
well, a bit later on I'll see to these things,
because that later on never may come to you.
And I thought in taking these scriptures
that we've read in the Old Testament
and one or two more I shall refer to in the New,
we have the circumstances and thoughts
of people who have to make a change of place.
It's a time of departure for them.
And that time of departure
is something which brings out
what is in the mind of the person.
Now if we put that first question
to Rebecca,
do you want to go?
Let's go over the story.
Abraham had one son
to whom he gave all that he had.
And we read in those scriptures
that he had a tremendous lot.
He was, as they reckoned in the East in those days,
a very wealthy man.
Lots of herds and men servants and maid servants.
I think we read of him in one case
when he went out to fight with the kings
and Sodom and others.
There were over 300 men born in his own house.
They had large colonies in those days
and he was a wealthy man of the day.
And he had this one son
who was his love, the son of promise.
He had others.
And he gave them gifts and he sent them away
but Isaac was his son.
God had one beloved son.
His own dear son, Jesus Christ our Lord.
And to him, he's given all that he had.
He is the heir, God's heir.
The one in whom his thoughts and affections are centered,
his beloved son.
And what has he done?
God has sought for his son
a bride in this world.
His beloved son, as we know,
came out and himself
bore all the burden of the day
in bringing the message of God's love,
that was his joy,
but in bearing the rejection of men
and this final rejection at Calvary
that the debt might be paid,
that the bride might be found.
There and there only is found
the basis upon which
poor sinners like ourselves can be gathered together
to be a bride for Christ.
And the spirit of God is here in the world today
calling out those who shall be
associated forevermore
with God's beloved son.
Like the servant of Abraham,
he had to go back to that distant land
where Abraham came from
to call out from his kindred
a wife for the beloved son of the house.
And the servant goes
and faithfully carries out this mission
and he tells in that household
where he has been guided
of this one beloved son
whom Abraham has
and to him he has given all that he has.
And there is Rebecca
listening to all that is said
and the parents too,
they're listening
and they come to the conclusion
that it is the mind of God
that this Rebecca
should be the bride for Isaac.
And they turn to her
and they ask her what she has to say.
Is she willing to go?
It's a long way.
She says, I will go.
There was no hindrance.
In fact, I believe at that time
she looked at the wonderful things
the jewels of silver, jewels of gold
and all those things
and the gifts that he had given
all around the household.
All those things they told
of the wealth and greatness of the person
to whose company she was being called.
And she lost her heart to him
and she didn't want to stay there
in her home any longer.
She wanted to go.
All they said, stay a little while.
The reading says ten days
but the margin I think says a whole year.
Oh no, she says, I don't want to be hindered.
And the servant says, I want to get back.
I want to fulfill my mission.
And there we get the picture
which I believe should represent
the believer in his attitude
answering the question
whether we want to go.
There was no want
in the mind of Rebecca to stay.
Why? Her father might say
you've got everything you want here.
You've got all your home comforts.
We're with you.
We can enjoy life together.
But no, there's a new person
coming to her life
and she says, I want to go.
I don't want to stop here.
I have an object
and that should be
the attraction of our hearts.
Do we know the Lord to that extent
that we've lost our hearts to him?
Do we want to go to meet him
because of what he is to our hearts?
Is it just a theory?
Just something we've read in the scriptures
that he is coming
and well, when the time comes
we should be translated.
Is that all it is?
Or is there something about it
like there is with Rebecca here?
No hindrance is big enough
to hold her back
when the opportunity is there to go.
I believe that is what our hearts should say
as the words of the Spirit we get
in the end of the last book in the Bible.
The Spirit and the Bride say come.
Even so, come Lord Jesus.
We long to see him
because of what he is
and what he has done.
It's the value that we set for the person.
The affection we love him
because he first loved us.
There is a reflection of the love of God
or it should be in our hearts
and there should be no sufficient reason
to keep us here.
No pet themes or little things
we want to just build up
for some reason or other before we go.
No, if the voice comes,
we hear that voice,
there will be no hindrance
because there is no greater joy
than going to see him.
Well now we go on to the other case
of Jacob and his two wives.
And we find a completely different picture.
And I think somewhere between these two
we probably find our place.
Because here we have the other extreme
where a man is so occupied
with the things down here
that he forgets all about
his meeting with God.
If we go back to the beginning of his history
we find in an earlier chapter
that he was a deceiver.
His name means supplanter, Jacob.
And he had deceived his brother
and supplanted him.
And he had stolen the birthright,
stolen the firstborn blessing
and he fled with a bad conscience.
And the night after
he slept in a convenient place.
We mightn't call it very convenient,
he had a stone for a pillow.
And whilst he slept he had a dream.
And in the morning when he got up
what were his thoughts?
Was there any question of wanting
to leave this scene for a heavenly one?
Rather not.
How dreadful is this place.
It's none other than the house of God,
the gate of heaven.
He had a guilty conscience
and he was running away from his brother
and he couldn't run away from God.
God caught him up.
Well, God was very gracious to him
and he spoke comfortingly to him
and he told him that he would bring him
back again to that very place
and give him the blessings
that had been promised to Abraham.
So he journeys on
and he gets into the same country
where Rebecca came from
and there he gets into the household of Laban
and there we find that he starts his scheming again.
And he is engrossed in his business, shall we say.
And it doesn't seem to me
that he thought anything more about God
or the promises of God.
God had promised him all he needed.
He promised him wealth untold.
But he must get down to it himself.
He couldn't trust God.
He only trusted himself, not himself very far.
Everything that he did was to be a bargain
or a covenant or an oath.
Everything had to be confirmed
and he wasn't going to leave anything to chance
and he wasn't going to leave anything to God
if it comes to that.
When God spoke to him at Bethel when he ran away
he says, I'll bring you back to this very place
and I'll do this and that for you.
And his answer was, if you'll do this, if you'll do that,
if you'll do the other and so on
then you shall be my God
and a tenth I'll give back to you.
That was the sort of man that Jacob was.
He was absorbed in his business.
And in the household of Laban
he acted in such a way
that he thought he was very ill-used
because he had his wages changed ten times.
But it was only the way that he operated himself
that caused Laban to change around like that
and there they were trying to cut one another's throats.
One was trying to be a bit smarter than the other all the time.
And he went on in that way so long
that he really got hated in that place.
And where we read, we found that they were talking together
the family of Laban, Laban and his sons and that
and they were beginning to grumble.
They saw that the flocks and herds
were being translated from their father to Jacob
and they didn't like it.
And so he calls his wives out to the field
and they consult together
and they determined to go.
And then God also enters into this business
and he says to him,
now it's time for you to go back
and to go back to Bethel.
And now here I think is where we get the lesson.
Here is a man who has been engrossed in his business
and he has got himself thoroughly disliked by his business.
He has made his tenure there so uncomfortable
that he is glad to get out of it.
Is there sometimes in our hearts a feeling
that we should be glad to get out of this scene?
I don't mean to say that we have been doing
some dodgy business like Jacob
but the question is often in our minds
and we give expression to it.
I think we are all the same.
What a wonderful thing it will be
when we have done with this scene altogether
and we should get away from all the things
that are going on today.
That I believe is quite a right way
of expressing ourselves.
We shall be glad
because all the difficulties of the way then
will be done with
and it will be the fullness of joy to us.
But don't let us ever get into the habit
of looking at the coming of the Lord in that way
that it is just a deliverance
away from the things down here
because I believe the way it should appear to us
is that it is the untold joy
of seeing the one who is to us
more than any other person living or dead
could ever be.
It should be our joy to meet him
and not so much our joy
to run away from the things down here.
And I believe because there are other things to do down here
we may want to get away from untold
and awkward circumstances
but it may be that in those circumstances
we may find that there is something
that we have got to do.
Now perhaps we ought to go a little bit further with Jacob
because there are other things there to learn
and on our pathway through this world
it's a sorry thing
if we have to look back
and we are filled with regrets.
Jacob, when he got on the way
he began to think
and he realized
that God had sent him back
that was the first thing
but he was there
where he was
in the mess that he had made
because he had made another mess before he came out.
He had upset his brother Esau
and he had run away with a bad conscience
and now that he has got to go back
he has got to bear the fruit of what he has done
and he has got to meet this Esau
this brother of his whom he has offended
and so he gets his scheming going again
and God has to meet him in the way
and he has to break him down
and show him that this is the end
you cannot go on forever with this bargaining
and so when he had to meet with his brother Esau
things were completely reversed
and we get what always seems to me
is the picture of the prodigal son
in the Old Testament.
He finds a welcome
instead of just the opposite
but then his troubles weren't finished
because he still had a bad conscience
and he crept on a little further
and he put up his altar
partway
but God has said you have got to go back to Bethel
what was the next thing?
Oh dear, he wasn't quite ready
they had got some idols in the house
they had brought some out from Laban's place
and that had caused a tremendous fuss
when Laban caught up with them
but they had still got these idols
and he thought to himself
well now I can't go into the presence of God in Bethel
with these idols
we shall have to do something about that
and so we read that they dug a hole under a tree
and they buried them
before they went any further.
Well now there is a sorry picture
I don't say it reflects in our own lives
but it gives us the lesson
of the sort of thing to avoid at the other extreme
being in a position
which we have made for ourselves
which is unpleasant
and which we want to get away from
and the reason for our wanting to go
is the unpleasantness of the place
and even so
we would go away with a bad conscience
because of the things that have happened
previously in life.
Well that's a sorry picture
but there was a time to depart
and the time to depart
brought for him
all those forebodings
and the coming back
of the results of the way in which he had lived
but the grace of God met him
and you will find most beautifully
at the end of that experience
God says to him
no you are not going to be called any longer
Jacob the supplanter
but you are going to be called
Israel a prince with God
that's the way that God works
and however
poor may be our witness here
we still shall have
a welcome when we meet the Lord
and we shall be in his presence
for all eternity
but it will be our shame
if we have to look at our lives
like Jacob looked at his
and he had to go back
in that shame faced limping way
that he had to go back
to Bethel
well now there are two instances there
one wanted to go
and the other had to go
put it that way
he couldn't stay any longer
well now
this desire to go
what does it mean?
how does it affect us
in this present life?
well now if we refer next
to those verses in the second of Timothy
we find there
a servant of God
who had come also
to this time to depart
and he said I have finished my course
I have fought, I have kept the faith
it was time for him to depart
I have muddled up in my quoting
but he says it is time for me to go
I am now ready to be offered
and the time of my departure is at hand
and although previously
and I suppose always
he had in the back of his mind
that before his conversion
he was the worst enemy of God
that could be found
he called himself the chief of sinners
but then God wonderfully saved him
and he went as hard at work
in the service of the Lord
as he ever did in the opposite direction
and so now he is able to say
I am now ready to be offered
and the time of my departure is at hand
I have fought a good fight
I have finished my course
I have finished my course
I have kept the faith
well now here is a man
we have a good deal of his history
in the scriptures
who has been an out and out servant for God
and that there was no time or place
where he was not ready to serve his master
and there were no circumstances
that he wouldn't face
for the glory of his Lord
we read in the
if you want to read more of him
in the third of Philippians there
you will find what it meant to him
to do what he had done
in being converted as he was
to believing in the Lord Jesus
he was an outcast with his own people
he suffered the loss of all things
there was nothing left
they took it all away from him
and they would take his life if they could
and so they chased him from place to place
but he says I don't want these things
all those things that were gained to me
I count lost
count them as dung
they are worthless
they are hindrances
but I reach out towards that is before
the prize of the high calling of God
in Christ Jesus
that's what he was after
and he was not going along
like Jacob with his head between his knees
he was going forward
with the joy and anticipation
of seeing the one who loved me
as he says
and gave himself for me
he says the world is crucified to me
and I enter the world
the cross of Christ makes all the difference
and he couldn't look at the world
but through the cross of Christ
and that was what it was that separated him
from the world as it was
and the world that he went out to
was a wonderful gospel of the grace of God
that is why he went out
that Christ had loved him and died for him
and he saw that this gospel that had reached him
was the gospel that was for others also
and so he realized
though he told us and told others
and it's written down by his hand
that the coming of the Lord is nigh
and how to expect it
how it will come
and all that we get it from his own writings
but he was diligent in view of that coming
it was because the Lord was coming
because the time might be short
that was the reason why
he did what he did
with the Lord Jesus it was different
he knew that the hour had come
when he should depart out of the world
unto the Father
he knew
Paul realized
that the time was near
he knew by the things that were taking place
the way he'd been treated
and the way he'd been tried
and witnessed against
and all the rest of it
by the normal course of events of those days
he knew that he hadn't very much longer to live
but right up to the time
that he was put out of this scene
by men
he was able and willing to serve the Lord
and he did it in view of
as he says here
henceforth there is laid up for me
a crown of righteousness
he was looking forward to the future
and the time of his departure
unknown to him
only spurred him on
to work harder and harder
and the object, the joy
of the time of departure was
for me to live is Christ
and to die is gain
to depart is to be with Christ
and to enter into
that fullness of joy
as one who has been a faithful servant
and has trodden the path
to the glory of his Lord
well now the other instance
that I do want to refer to
is the Lord himself
because we do get all manner of pictures
of servants
who do certain things
but in him is the perfect pattern
and so when we read in the 13th of Hebrews
we get an exhortation to run with patience
the race that is set before us
not looking behind us
not looking to see other competitors
to see how well they are getting on
or how much better we are doing
but looking unto Jesus
the author and finisher of faith
the Lord Jesus
in the 17th chapter
the verses we know so well there
at the end of his journey here
he could look up to his father
and say I have finished
the work which thou gavest me to do
he was able to say that
because he knew exactly
what he had to do
and that it was just about the time of his departure
the apostle Paul
he could say
that he had finished
he had done as much as he could do
and he knew within a little
that his end was near
but we don't know that
and we have to go on
as the apostle went
and many others
go on with the work that we've got to do
not lagging and say
well I think I've done enough now
I must sit down
we go on as best we can
to the end of the journey
the Lord Jesus says I have finished the work
which thou gavest me to do
and in that lovely prayer of his
he says the things that he has done
I've given them thy word
I've given them the glory
and various things
all the way down that chapter
he tells of the things that he has done
and then of course
when we go on to the later
the 19th chapter
there you get that other word
his life's work was finished
when he came to the 17th chapter
but there was the greatest of all
to be done yet
and then we get
his word
it is finished
the whole thing is finished
his work of witness
through this world
was finished
and he was able to commend
the disciples to his father
to be kept
and then he went on to the cross
and he laid the foundation
of that which is
the foundation of every blessing
for mankind
and that also was a finished work
he bore witness to it himself
and as we read
in the epistle to the Hebrews
also that it is a work
which once offered
a sacrifice once offered
makes perfect
for ever
so it is a finished work
as far as he was concerned
and it is the end of all working
for all who put their trust
in our Lord Jesus Christ
and his finished work
well then let me
just leave those three questions
with you
do we want to go
or have we some pet theories
and objects down here
that keep us behind
and give us another object
which alas may lead us
away from the Lord
or if we
want to go
why do we want to go
is it the joy of meeting the Lord
or is it to escape
difficulties down here
and if this desire
exists in our hearts
how does it affect us
in our daily pathway
and in our service
for our Lord Jesus Christ …