06 -- THE FRUITS OF DECEPTION
In the twelfth chapter
of the Book of Genesis we read that Abraham said of Sarah that she
was his sister. In so saying he misrepresented the facts, for she was
his wife, although she was his
half sister. We will notice now the outcome of this case of deception.
For in the twentieth chapter
of the same book he got into another hard place, and said of his wife
the second time, "She is my
sister." You see, he misrepresented things twice, and we see the effect
of the misrepresentation of
the father on the son.
We read in the twenty-sixth
chapter of Genesis that his son, Isaac, got into a hard place,
and he said of his little wife, Rebecca, "She is my sister." There the
mantle of the father had fallen
on the son. But, beloved, "chickens come home to roost," for we read
now, in the twenty-seventh
chapter of Genesis, that when Isaac was old and almost blind, his son
Jacob covered himself with
a goatskin and put on his brother Esau's clothes, and came in before
the old father, Isaac, and,
behold, he said, "I am your very son Esau." There is the sin handed
down from the father to the
son, and to the grandson. How strange that Jacob would cover himself
with a goatskin in order to
deceive his dying father! But God is faithful and will reward each man
according to his deeds.
After Jacob deceived his
father by putting on a goatskin and Esau's clothes, he swindled his
brother, Esau, out of his birthright and his father's parting blessing.
But we then read that Jacob left
home and fled from the face of his brother, Esau. He went into a far
country and hired himself out
to a man whose name was Laban.
Laban was a relative of
Jacob's grandfather Abraham, and now we see Laban comes into
play at this time and takes a hand in deception. Jacob had fallen
desperately in love with Laban's
youngest daughter, Miss Rachel. He was so in love with this beautiful
maiden that he finally
contracted to work for her seven years. When the seven years were up
and the great wedding day
was set, behold, Laban covers Miss Leah with a heavy veil and presents
her to Jacob for his
daughter Rachel.
After the wedding ceremonies were
all over, and Jacob was rejoicing in the fact that his
seven years were up, and now he had his beautiful bride, Miss Rachel,
behold, to his surprise,
when the veil was removed, he found that Laban had deceived him and had
given him Leah. Then
no doubt his mind turned back to the day seven years before when he
himself had put on a goatskin
and deceived his old father, and had gotten Esau's blessing and
birthright.
We see again that the seed of
deception is still bearing fruit in the family of Abraham, for
as Jacob had deceived his father, now Laban had deceived him. But Jacob
was desperately in love
with Rachel, and signed another contract to work seven years longer for
Rachel. Finally he
succeeded and won the girl for whom he had worked fourteen years.
But we also read again in
the thirty-first chapter of Genesis that during this period of time
Laban deceived Jacob, not only in giving him Leah when he should have
had Rachel, but also by
changing his wages ten times. Also we read at this time that little
Rachel came to the front and took
a hand in the deception and stole one of her father's household gods
and covered this god with
household goods, and deceived the old man, and made him believe that
she didn't have it.
But the end is not yet, for
we read again in the thirty-seventh chapter of Genesis that
Jacob's ten oldest sons were in the field, keeping their father's
flocks, and little Joseph and
Benjamin were at home with their father. Jacob sent Joseph out to the
field to see how his ten
brothers were getting along. Joseph's brethren caught the lad Joseph,
stripped him of the beautiful
coat his father had made him, and killed a young goat and dipped
Joseph's coat in the blood. They
brought it to the father and said, "See if you can tell whether or not
this is your son Joseph's coat."
And Jacob said, "Yes, this is my son's coat, and no doubt an evil beast
has torn him to pieces."
But while they were
carrying the coat to their father, little Joseph, whom they had just
sold
to a company of Ishmaelites that were going into Egypt, was at that
time on his way to Egypt. What
a wonderful case of deception! Jacob killed a goat and put on its hide
and deceived his father, and
now his sons kill a goat and roll Joseph's beautiful coat in its blood,
and deceive their father. We
see again that the seed of deception that was sown in the
great-grandfather of these young men is
still bearing fruit.
But the end is not yet, for
many years later we read in the forty-second chapter of Genesis
that these same ten brethren that sold Joseph and dipped his coat in
blood and deceived their father
were now standing in the presence of the governor of Egypt. They didn't
know that it was their
little brother Joseph, for he treated them as spies, and had them put
in prison. While they were in
prison they talked between themselves, and said, "No doubt but this is
our sin that has overtaken
us, for the way we treated our little brother Joseph." Joseph heard
their conversation and it almost
broke his heart. He had to flee from their presence and go out where he
could weep.
How strange this story all
ends! Joseph is a type of Christ; his brothers represent a
perishing world coming to Christ, seeking the bread of life. It also
brings out the two works of
grace. For when they went to Egypt the first time, they saw Joseph as a
great ruler, and they got
their sacks full of corn. When they went to Egypt the second time they
knew Joseph, then, as their
brother, and they got several wagonloads of corn, and honey, and the
good things of the land. So it
is with the young convert. He sees Jesus Christ as the Ruler of the
world, but when he is sanctified
wholly he sees Jesus as his Elder Brother.
* * *
THE DECEITFULNESS OF PRIDE
The reader will
remember that the wise man said, "Pride goeth before destruction, and an
haughty spirit before a fall." We have noticed that when a man gets on
a tailor-made suit of clothes
that is supposed to be all wool, he begins to puff, and strut, and
swagger, and grin, and smile. Any
man could see at a glance that the man is laboring under a delusion. He
thinks that he is wearing
new clothes, and he is too dull to know that he is wearing secondhand
goods. He tells you that his
suit is all wool, and tailor-made, and he doesn't seem to remember that
the old wether wore that
wool all last year, and never thought of taking the "swell head" once.
But the gentleman threw that
old sheep on the scaffold and sheared the wool off his back and made
himself a suit of clothes.
Today he has a bad case of the "swell head" because his clothes are all
wool. Shame on a man that
will take the wool off a sheep's back and put it on his own back, and
take a bad case of the
"swaggers," and seems to forget that his clothes are secondhand.
Again we have noticed
some man with a pair of shopmade shoes on, and as he strutted, and
showed off, and swaggered around, he was showing you his shop-made
shoes. He had forgotten
that he was wearing secondhand goods, that the old Jersey cow had worn
that hide for the last
seven or eight years, and never for a single time showed the spirit of
pride. But this man knocked
her in the head and pulled her hide off and tanned it He made himself a
pair of shoes to cover up
the bunions and corns on his toes, and now because his bare feet are
covered with a cowhide he
has got a bad case of the "swaggers." And as truly as "staggers" will
kill a mule, the "swaggers"
will kill a man. "Blind staggers" are no more fatal to a mule than
"blind swaggers" are to a man.
Again I have noticed ladies
with ostrich plumes in their hats, and they wanted the eyes of
the community to behold their beauty and grandeur and glory. As they
had stood before the mirror
and beheld themselves, they seemed to think they had produced the
feather. But, behold, an old
ostrich wore those feathers all last year and never seemed to become
proud or vain or to think that
he himself was anything out of the ordinary. For an ostrich has got
less sense than anything in the
world, unless it is another creature that is trying to play the ostrich.
At other times we have
seen a woman come into church with a silk dress on, and as she
went down the aisle she wiggled and twisted exactly like a worm. She
seemed to forget that the
silkworm had been dressed in the silk before it ever reached her. But,
strange as it seems to think
of, this woman has the appearance of a worm as she wiggles. No doubt
her object is to show that
she is wearing imported goods, but she forgets that the goods are,
nevertheless, secondhand.
The human family seem to
forget that the sheep wore the wool before the man, the cow
wore the hide before we got it, the ostrich wore the plume before the
woman put it on her head,
and the little worms made the silk before the woman ever wiggled down
the aisle, cutting all the
capers of a little, innocent worm.
When the pastor called
on the silk-gowned lady to pray that morning, in a choked,
smothered voice, she told the Lord that she was a poor weak worm of the
dust A few minutes
earlier she was trying to play the silkworm, all of which reveals the
pride that is hid away in the
heart of an unsanctified soul. Beloved, the wise man was right when he
refers to pride as one of
the great dangers of the human family, for it has often been said that
"pride is not a misfortune, but
a disease."
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