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How Abraham Ended a Quarrel
Genesis 13
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Abraham and Lot separate the land.
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FTER ABRAM RETURNED
from Egypt, he and Lot journeyed to the place where they had first
pitched their tents in Canaan. There Abram had built an altar to
worship God. At the very same place he now sacrificed another offering,
and again talked to God.
Abram was
now a very rich man. Not only did he possess many servants, flocks, and
herds, but he also possessed much silver and gold. And we find that his
nephew Lot owned many servants and sheep and cattle too.
Wherever these men and their servants pitched their tents, the place
looked like a tent-town. And the country all around them would be
dotted with cattle and sheep.
After some time trouble arose between the servants of Abram and Lot.
Some of Abram's servants were caretakers of his cattle and sheep. They
and the servants who cared for Lot's flocks quarreled. Abram's servants
wanted the best pasture-land for Abram's flocks, and Lot's servants
wanted that same land for their master's flocks. And so the trouble
grew. By and by news of the quarrel reached the ears of Abram.
He looked out over the crowded country and saw how hard it must be for
the servants. How could they always find Places near by where tender
grasses grew and where water was plentiful' He saw, too, the villages
of the Canaanites not far away, and he knew there was not room enough
in that part of the country for all to dwell together peaceably.
So Abram called Lot and said, "Let there be no quarrel between us or
between our servants. There is not room enough for both of us to dwell
together with our flocks and herds. But see, the whole land lies before
us. Let us separate. If you choose to go to the west country, then I
shall journey east; but if you desire the east country, then I shall go
west."
From the height upon which
Abram and Lot stood to view the country they could see far to the east
and to the west. Because Abram was the one to whom God had promised all
this land he could have chosen the better part, or he could have sent
Lot and his servants away out of the land altogether. But Abram was not
selfish.
He kindly offered Lot the
first choice. And Lot, forgetting the kindness of his uncle, thought
only of his own interests and chose the east country, through which the
Jordan River flowed.
"I can always
find plenty of grass and water there," he reasoned, "and my flocks and
herds will grow in number until soon I shall become very rich, too."
After Lot departed with his possessions, God spoke again to Abram.
Perhaps God saw that Abram felt lonely. So he comforted him by
reminding him of the promise that the whole of Canaan's land should
belong to him and to his children.
As yet Abram and Sarai had no children, but God said that some day the
children of their grandsons and great-grandsons should be many. And
Abram believed God. God also told Abram to journey through the length
and breadth of Canaan's land to see how large a country it was.
So Abram moved away from the place where he and Lot had lived together
for the last time, and came to a plain called Mamre. Here he pitched
his tents under the oak-trees near the city of Hebron, and then built
another altar to worship God.
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