My Come, Follow Me studies took me to Genesis 24-27, and I continued to learn about God’s covenant with Abraham. Part of the covenant included a promise that “all the families of the earth [shall] be blessed through Abraham and his posterity. (See Abraham 2:11.) God’s promise was a continuing one rather than one that could be fulfilled in one generation.
God made the covenant with Abraham
and renewed it with Isaac. The experiences of Isaac and his wife Rebekah teach
us about being part of the covenant. They set examples of kindness, patience,
and trust in God’s promised blessings. These chapters also teach us the importance
of keeping an eternal perspective and not giving up eternal blessings for
worldly “pottage” (Genesis 25:30).
One of the principles taught in
these chapters is that marriage is essential to God’s plan for the eternal
happiness of His children. Satan works to destroy God’s plan, and he has
influenced people in our day to put a low priority on marriage or even to
consider it to be a burden. Abraham had an eternal perspective, and he
considered the marriage of his son Isaac to be of highest importance.
Genesis 24 tells us that Abraham was
concerned that Isaac would marry a local Canaanite girl who would lead him away
from God. Therefore, Abraham sent his most trusted servant back to the land of
his family to find a suitable wife for Isaac. The servant thought that Isaac
should go with him to the city of Nahor in the land of Mesopotamia, but Abraham
told him no.
The servant took ten camels from Abraham’s
herd and left. He arrived at the city of Nahor in the evening and caused his
camels to kneel down outside the city by a well of water. Then he prayed that
God would help him to find the right damsel. He suggested a test to show him the
girl: He would ask a girl to give him a drink, and the right girl would give
him water to drink as well as draw water for his camels.
Rebekah – daughter of Bethuel, the
son of Milcah and Nahor, Abraham’s brother – came to draw water. She was a
virgin and “very fair to look upon” (Genesis 24:16). She filled her pitcher
with water, and the servant asked for some of her water. She gave him water to
drink and then said, “I will draw water for thy camels also, until they have
done drinking” (Genesis 24:19).
The servant watched as she drew
water for the camels and wondered if the Lord had led him to her. He gave her
some jewelry and asked about her parents. He also asked if her parents had room
enough for him to stay with them. She told him that she was the daughter of
Bethuel and the granddaughter of Milcah and Nahor. She also told him that they
had enough food and room for him, the men with him, and his camels. The servant
offered thanks to God for guiding him to her.
Rebekah ran home to tell her family
about the man. Laban, Rebekah’s brother, ran out to meet the man at the well
and to invite him to the family home. Dinner was prepared, but the servant
refused to eat until he told them why he was there. He explained that he was
Abraham’s servant, and Abraham was rich. He also told them that the Lord had
blessed Abraham and Sarah with a son in their old age and that Abraham had sent
him to their house to find a wife for Isaac in his father’s house. He explained
how he had prayed and asked God to show him the girl, and that Rebekah answered
his prayer.
The servant told Laban and Bethuel
to answer him truthfully and tell him if Rebekah could go with him. They agreed
that God had guided the servant and that he could take Rebekah. Again, the
servants offered gratitude to God. He “brought forth jewels of silver, and
jewels of gold, and raiment, and gave them to Rebekah” (Genesis 24:53). He also
gave gifts to Rebekah’s brother and mother.
After dinner, the servant suggested
that he should leave the next morning, but Rebekah’s brother and mother wanted the
damsel to remain with them for ten days and then go. The servant did not agree,
and they suggested that Rebekah should make the decision. They called Rebekah
and “said unto her, Wilt thou go with this man? And she said, I will go”
(Genesis 24:57-58).
The family sent Rebekah, her nurse,
and her damsels with Abraham’s servant and his men. “And they blessed Rebekah,
and said unto her, Thou art our sister, be thou the mother of thousands of
millions, and let thy seed possess the gate of those which hate them” (Genesis
24:60). The next morning, Rebekah and her damsels left with the servant and
rode on the camels.
Isaac was out in the field when the
entourage arrived. When Rebekah saw him, she asked the servant about him. When
the servant answered, “she took a veil, and covered herself” (Genesis 24:65).
66 And the servant told Isaac all
things that he had done.
67 And Isaac brought her into his
mother Sarah’s tent, and took Rebekah, and she became his wife; and he loved
her: and Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death (Genesis 24:66-67).
The importance of marriage and
family are being taught by prophets and apostles in our day. Elder D. Todd
Christofferson taught the following:
A family built on the marriage
of a man and woman supplies the best setting for God’s plan to thrive—the
setting for the birth of children, who come in purity and innocence from God,
and the environment for the learning and preparation they will need for a
successful mortal life and eternal life in the world to come. A critical mass
of families built on such marriages is vital for societies to survive and
flourish. That is why communities and nations generally have encouraged and
protected marriage and the family as privileged institutions. It has never been
just about the love and happiness of adults.
The social science case for
marriage and for families headed by a married man and woman is compelling. And
so “we warn that the disintegration of the family will bring upon individuals,
communities, and nations the calamities foretold by ancient and modern
prophets.” But our claims for the role of marriage and family rest not on
social science but on the truth that they are God’s creation. It is He who in
the beginning created Adam and Eve in His image, male and female, and joined
them as husband and wife to become “one flesh” and to multiply and replenish
the earth. Each individual carries the divine image, but it is in the
matrimonial union of male and female as one that we attain perhaps the most
complete meaning of our having been made in the image of God—male and female.
Neither we nor any other mortal can alter this divine order of matrimony. It is
not a human invention. Such marriage is indeed “from above, from God” and is as
much a part of the plan of happiness as the Fall and the Atonement (Liahona or
Ensign, May 2015, 50-53).
God ordains
marriage between a man and a woman. He has also provided a way that marriage
and family can last for eternity. Marriage and family are essential for the
eternal happiness of God’s children.
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