02 -- MOUNT MORIAH
We now come to the second mountain,
which is the Mount of Sacrifice, and it is Mount
Moriah. This is one of the mountains that the human family will hold
very sacred, for it was on this
mountain that our Father Abraham offered up his son Isaac on the altar
as a burnt sacrifice.
The human family will never
forget the man Abraham, for he was called the father of the
faithful. Well, it was because he was faithful, and he never flinched
one hair's breadth. Bro. H. C.
Morrison says that "God called and Abraham went, and God promised and
Abraham believed, and
God asked and Abraham gave." I thought at the time that I heard my
beloved brother say that, that it
was the greatest thing I had ever heard fall from a man's lips, and I
still believe it.
So Mount Moriah will always
be held in the highest esteem because of its association with
Abraham and Isaac. We all remember that on that mountain God asked a
man to do the hardest
thing that a man was ever asked to do in this world, and that old hero
never even asked God a
simple question, but got the boy and the wood and the knife and started
to the mountain.
We read in Heb. 17:18, 19:
"By faith Abraham when he was tried offered up Isaac and he
that had received the promise offered up his only begotten son of whom
it was said that in Isaac
shall thy seed be called, accounting that God was able to raise him up
even from the dead from
whence also he received him in a figure."
We see that Abraham
just as truly killed Isaac and burnt him as if he had done the thing
itself, and God gave him credit for killing his son, and so put it down
in the sacred Scriptures. So
today it stands out that by faith Abraham offered up Isaac, and all men
take off their hats to
Abraham, and all men take off their hats to Mount Moriah. The very
names of Abraham and Mount
Moriah are sacred to the Bible reader and the student of sacred history.
In this wonderful tragedy
that took place on this mountain we have a beautiful type of God
the Father in the man Abraham, and we have a beautiful type of Christ
in the boy Isaac, and we
have the type of the blessed Holy Ghost in the fire in the hand of
Abraham.
We see that Isaac was the
child of promise. It had been declared by the Lord Himself that
"In Isaac shall all the kindreds of the earth be blessed," and now,
right in the face of that promise,
God tells Abraham to take Isaac, his only begotten son, and offer him
on the altar for a burnt
sacrifice. God had just told Abraham that "My covenant will be between
me and Isaac."
Now Isaac was not just a
common born child; he was the son of a man one hundred years
of age, and he was the child of promise. The angels had eaten supper
with Abraham and Sarah and
promised them this remarkable child. Now according to the word of the
angels and according to
the promise of the Lord God Himself, this child was born, and is now
the joy and comfort of the
old father, for he was a wonderful child. But oh, to the sad surprise
of Abraham, here comes the
voice of God: "Abraham, Abraham!" And he said, "Here I am Lord." And
the Lord said to him,
"Now take Isaac, thine only son, and get thee to the land that I shall
shew thee, and offer up thy son
on the altar for a burnt offering." And then just listen! We read that
Abraham started. Did he start to
leave the country with his boy? Oh no, he started to Mount Moriah to
obey God and offer up his
son for the burnt offering.
In this wonderful tragedy we
see Isaac as a type of the blessed Son of God. Yonder goes
Isaac to Mount Moriah with the wood on his shoulder that he is to be
burnt on. If you will look
down the stream of time a few hundred years you will see the Son of God
going to Mount Calvary
with the cross of wood on his shoulder, on which He is to die. So
without a doubt in my mind,
Isaac is the type of Christ.
Just as Isaac was a child of
promise, so Christ was the child of promise. He had been
promised ever since the fall of man. Now we see God the Father and
Abraham each making an
offering of their son. Isaac was to bless the whole world of mankind,
but the command was to put
him to death.
The fire in the hands of
Abraham was to consume Isaac, and the Holy Ghost in the hand of
the Father is to consume all of the old self that is in us. Just as
truly as Abraham received Isaac
from the dead, we are to die to this old world, and be put to death and
let the fire from heaven fall
on us and consume all the dross and tin, and we are to rise and walk in
newness of life as new
creatures in Christ Jesus. Old things are to pass away, and the Book
says, "Behold all things are
new."
Abraham just simply believed
that God could take the pile of ashes and make his son as
truly as he believed that he was on the earth, and so he did not
hesitate when God told him to offer
up Isaac. Now we can see the force of the statement of Bro. Morrison
when he said that "God
called and Abraham went, and God promised and Abraham believed, and God
asked and Abraham
gave."
The reader will remember
that it was said of Abraham that he was the "friend of God." It
doesn't say that he was friendly with God but it does say that he was
the friend of God. There are
plenty of people that we are friendly with, but we never tell them
anything; but there are others that
we tell all we know, and they are the friends, you see. Again, it is
said that Abraham is the father
of the faithful; again, it is said that Abraham believed God and it was
counted unto him for
righteousness. I have heard men say, "I would vote the Prohibition
ticket, but I am afraid I would
lose my vote." Well, the Bible said that, "Abraham believed God and it
was counted," and if you
will do right God will count you also.
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