The Official Journal of the Ensign Trust, London

Search

THE ENSIGN MESSAGE

ISHMAEL AND THE ARABS

By

“He will be a wild man; his hand (will be) against every man and every man’s hand against him; and he shall dwell in the presence of all his brethren.” (Genesis 16:12)

Turning to an Encyclopaedia, we read that ”Arab” is a name loosely applied to all the Arabic speaking peoples of the Near and  Middle East, but restricted by ethnologists to the basic Semitic stock of the Arabian peninsula,  where  many of the nomadic  tribes have preserved  their  identity  after  thousands of years  of internecine war and migration into Iraq, Syria and Africa. It is also used both inside and outside the Islamic world as synonymous  with Bedouin,  the  Nomadic Arab as distinct from the town dweller.

Arabians are of two stocks: those of the uplands of the south-west  corner  of the Arabian peninsular, and the group located in northern and central Arabia “and often alleged to be descendants of Ishmael, son  of Abraham.To this day almost every Arab tribe claims to be  descended from  one  or  other of these two stocks” (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1967).

As rainfall is scanty and precarious, the desert cities can only be near springs, wells or along the coast. The settled population lives by agriculture, chiefly gardens of date palms, or they are go-betweens buying camels, sheep, wool or animal oil from the tribes and exporting to neighbouring countries such as Egypt, Syria or Iraq.

In the south-west  mountainous regions spices are the principal exports, and it is known that wealthy Arab kingdoms there were settled at least a thousand years before Christ.

Sons of Hagar and Keturah

Dr. William Smith, in his Dictionary of the Bible, puts forward evidence to show that Joktanites settled in the south-west of the Arabian peninsular. As Jokshan was a son of Keturah this would make the stock Abrahamic, but not through Ishmael, son of Hagar.Sheba and Dedan, both ancient kingdoms in south-west Arabia, were also the names of the sons of Jokshan.

The Bedouin has to be constantly on the move to find pasture for their livestock and the black goatskin tents are a feature of the life of wandering. Set up against a hillock for protection from wind and sand,  the tents look  tiny against  the  immensity of space and  the undulations of hill and valley seen as far as the eye can reach. Through the centuries  the nomadic Arabs have spent their time raiding, hunting and fighting. They have endured  severe physical hardship and, even until after World War 1, terrorised Central Arabia and surrounding territories.

Hebron, city of Hebrew patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.  The lower part of the construction of the mosque seen in the middle centre dates from the original memorial building constructed  over  the  Cave  of Machpelah in the time of Herod the Great. In the sixth century A.D. Justinian  turned  it Into a church,  which was rebuilt as a mosque in later times.

Descent Through Ishmael

There can be little doubt that the Palestinian Arab is descended from Abraham through Ishmael, as pilgrims to the Holy Land will agree.  They are  proud  of their ancestry and delight to tell visitors that they are decended from Abraham, the friend of God.

The mosque that now stands at Hebron was first built by Herod the Great, before our Lord was  born, as a mausoleum for the bodies of Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebecca, Jacob and Leah. The building is over the cave of Machpelah, the cave which was in the field of Ephron, the Hittite, when Abraham sought for a place to bury his wife Sarah (Gen. 23). The Arabs know this and, in spite of the passage of centuries, and invading armies entering, settling and disappearing  from the land, the knowledge  remains and, what is more important,  the actual place remains to be seen by all.

When Abraham himself died, the record in the Book of Genesis states that Ishmael was present with his half­ brother, Isaac, at the service of burial. “Then Abraham gave up the ghost and died in a good old aged an old man, and  full (of years); and was gathered to his people. And his sons  Isaac and Ishmael buried him  in  the  cave  of Machpelah, in  the   field  of Ephron”(Gen. 25:8-9).

When Isaac came to die, Esau was with Jacob at the burial. Jacob died in Egypt but his body wa:s embalmed and returned  to his own land escorted  by a very great company  of his own  people and Egyptians. Thus the burial-place was known to all surrounding nations.

“A Wild Man”

Certain aspects of  Ishmael’s character were described  to his mother before he was born. It will be remembered that when  Hagar found  that she was pregnant she  scorned her  mistress, Sarai,  for her barrenness. Sarai, in her turn, afflicted her maid until Hagar fled from her presence towards her own country of Egypt. Then, while resting in the wilderness of Shur, by a well of water, the angel of the Lord found her. She was alone and desperately unhappy but the Lord heard her affliction and sent His messenger to strengthen and inform her of what he intended  to do for her child:

“I will multiply thy seed exceedingly, that it shall not be numbered for multitude.

Behold, thou (art) with child, and  shalt  bear  a son,  and  shalt  call  his  name Ishmael (God  shall hear); because the LORD hath heard  thy affliction. And he will be a wild man; his hand (will be) against every man, and every man’s hand  against him; and he shall  dwell  in the  presence of all his  brethren” (Gen. 16:10-12).

In the strength of the Lord’s promise, Hagar returned to her mistress and gave birth to her son. “And Abram called his son’s  name, which Hagar bore, Ishmael” (Gen. 16:15). “A wild man” does not mean in the sense of a wild beast but rather in the way a free animal runs wild. In Ferrar Fenton’s translation it is “a free man” and James Moffatt makes it “a wild-ass of a man,” which is the   literal  translation.  His  very   freedom  and independence have  put  the Arab in the  position  of opposing those with a more settled way of life. Abraham, too, is given information about  his first-born: ‘And as for Ishmael, I have heard thee: behold, I have blessed him,  and  will make him  fruitful, and  will multiply him exceedingly; twelve princes shall he beget, and I will  make him  a great  nation. But  my  covenant will I establish with  Isaac”  (Gen 17:20-21).

At the time of this revelation Ishmael was  thirteen years of age and  Isaac not yet born. It is worth noting that Abraham’s new name was only given him when he was ninety-nine years of age and that with it came  the promise of a son by Sarah. When Ishmael was born of Hagar, the bond-woman, his name was still Abram (High Father).

Ishmael’s Twelve Sons

Undoubtedly there was an urge in Ishmael  to seek the wild, free, desert places. When  he and his mother were sent away from Abraham and Sarah, after the birth of the child of promise, Isaac, he dwelt in the wilderness of Paran, married an Egyptian and begat the twelve sons as predicted.  A daughter ‘s name  is also  given who married her cousin,  Esau. In the wilderness Ishmael became an archer.

The names of his twelve sons are recorded in Genesis 25 and, also, that his people  dwelt from “Havilah unto Shur,” that is, from the wilderness near Egypt right across to the centre of the Arabian peninsular. Three at least of the princes gave their names to a place or district, Kedar, Dumah  and Tema. Kedar, the second son, seems particularly well known and the name of a great tribe of the Arabs (see Wm. Smith’s Bible Dictionary and Scripture maps).The name is used by some as a universal name for the Bedouin Arabs.

Isaiah, the prophet,  refers to “the glory  of Kedar” (Isaiah  21:13-17) and  describes them  as archers  and mighty men. The Psalmist implies that Kedar is one of those  that hates  peace  and is for war and  strife (Psa. 120). Ezekiel includes Arabia and all the princes of Kedar amongst  the merchants of Dedan, Sheba and Raamah (Ezekiel 27:21). Jeremiah, when denouncing Israel for immorality, uses the illustration of an Arabian sitting in the wilderness as though it were a common sight in his day “In the ways hast thou sat  for them (thy lovers), as the Arabian in the wilderness” (3:2).

The Midianites

Perhaps  it would  be  true  to say  that  our  earliest memory of Ishmaelites is in the story of Joseph and his­ brothers when the boy was drawn up from the pit and sold to the caravan  of merchantmen on their way to Egypt. The  Authorised Version  states: “Behold, a company of Ishmaelites came  from Gilead with their camels bearing spicery  and balm and myrrh, going to  carry  (it)  down to  Egypt”  (Gen 37:25). Through Reuben, who wanted  to save his young brother’s life, and Judah, who saw he could make a profit out of the transaction,  the sons of Jacob agreed  to sell Joseph  to the merchants for twenty pieces  of silver. In verse 36 comes the statement: “The  Midianites sold him  into Egypt unto Potiphar, an officer of Pharaoh’s, (and) captain of the guard”

Why Midianites? The name is used as though it is an alternative name for Ishmaelite. But Midian was a son of Keturah (not Hagar, as was Ishmael), which makes the tribe from Abraham,  not, strictly speaking, of Ishmael. The same mixture occurs in the Book of Judges, when Midianites were defeated by Gideon and it is explained that  they  had  golden  earrings  ‘because they  were Ishmaelites” (8:24). It would  seem that,  because Ishmael and Midian were half-brothers,  Midian as the younger  took on the name  of Ishmael  on occasions, perhaps using it as a family name.

The enemy of Israel at that time against Gideon and his three hundred men were “Midianites.Amalekites, and the children of the east, they came up with their cattle and their tents, and they came as grasshoppers for multitude; (for) both they and their camels were without number: and  they  entered into the land  to destroy it” (Judges 6:3-5).

Nomadic Tribes

The description  is of nomadic tribes and makes  it clear that the desert  dwellers  to the east and south of Canaan, who opposed Israel at the time of the Judges, were Abrahamic tribes, descendants of Hagar, Keturah and Esau-Edom. (Abraham had  sent  the  sons  of the concubines away to the east.)

The list of plunder taken in the war of Gideon, together with that taken  by Moses when fighting Midianites two centuries earlier, is remarkable: gold, silver, brass, iron, tin and  lead,  jewels  of gold,  chains and  bracelets,  rings, earrings and  tablets, ornaments and  collars,   purple raiment, chains that were  about  the camels necks. “We have  here a wealthy Arab  nation living  by plunder, delighting in finery, and where forays were impossible, carrying on the traffic southwards into Arabia, the land of gold  – if not  naturally, by  trade – and across to Chaldaea, or into the rich plains of Egypt” (Wm. Smith’s Dictionary of the Bible.)

Neither should the camels be overlooked. In war they must have been a frightening  sight. A camel may plod along slowly when loaded with merchandise but racing camels can  cover the ground at great  speed and, undoubtedly, their  riders  were able  to make surprise attacks,  gather their booty quickly, and be away before the terrified defenders had gathered their wits.

When Reuben, Gad and the half-tribe of Manasseh made war against the Hagarites, Jetur, Nephish  (all of Ishmael) and  Nodab  in  the  days  of Saul, they captured  fifty  thousand camels and  a  hundred thousand men, as  well  as  two hundred and   fifty thousand sheep  and  two thousand asses  (1 Chron. 5:18-22).

Enough  has  been written to show that  desert or Bedawee tribes have much in common, whether living in Old Testament days or the twentieth century AD. There is not, perhaps, the tribal warfare now and travellers tell much of the hospitality and generosity of the desert, and an obvious desire to be friendly. But, still, there  is a love of liberty and a fierce independence, which  will brook no interference with their chosen way of life.

Finally, the Lord said that Ishmael should  “dwell in the presence of all his brethren,” and here it must be remembered that Keturah’s sons were as much his half­ brothers as Isaac. Ishmael did just that and “died in the presence of all his brethren” (Gen. 25:18). Promise of possession of the land which was made to Abraham by covenant, was not passed to Ishmael. His descendants, together with their brethren, have dwelt on the face of the land, and still do, according to the prediction of God.

Courtesy: National Message

End

 

 

|