(Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)
Long
ago, even long before your great-great-great-great-great-great grandparents
were born, Abraham built a sukkah.
It
was near a tamarisk tree and a well of fresh spring water. It was positioned in
an area of Canaan near the road where the caravans of merchants and traders
traveled back and forth to the large cities to sell their goods at the markets.
Abraham
would sit in the shade of his sukkah and welcome these guests to the land as
they rode by. He would invite them to
come inside his sukkah and have a meal with him. He would tell them the stories
of God.
Abraham
believed there was only One God; the God of Heaven and Earth, Our Creator. Abraham worshiped no other gods such as the
pagans around him did. He wanted
everyone to know about The One True God, so he would welcome everyone and tell
them God’s stories at his table in his sukkah.
Sometimes,
during the days of Awe, before he sat in his sukkah, Abraham would go down by
the sea. He would sit on the shore and
look at the sand and the waves rushing in.
Abraham would find himself in complete awe of the things God had
created. They were indeed
wonderful! Abraham would give thanks to
God as he sat by the sea shore.
One
day while Abraham was sitting near the ocean in awe, God make him a promise. God
told Abraham that his descendants would be as many as the sands of the
sea. Abraham knew that the sands of the
sea were so many that it would be impossible to count them! Abraham thanked God for this promise, even
though as of yet, he did not even have one son with his wife Sarah. Abraham still believed the things that God
promised and he looked forward to the blessings that were to come.
Back
at home near the road that the merchants traveled, Abraham sat in his sukkah
again. On many cool clear nights Abraham
looked up through the covering of his sukkah’s roof to see the stars in the sky
twinkling back at him. They were so
bright and so beautiful that Abraham just had to praise God for creating them!
When
Abraham worshiped God and praised Him as he sat in his sukkah, God made Abraham
another wonderful promise. God told
Abraham that his descendants would be as many as the stars in the sky. Abraham knew he could never count the number
of stars in the sky, and that would be a great miracle! As of yet, Abraham and
Sarah had no children. They were
old! Still; Abraham had faith in God and
he believed God’s promises and he looked forward to the blessings of the
future.
As
the people traveled to and fro on the main trade route of the country, Abraham
would invite these strangers into his sukkah.
Abraham would prepare feasts for his guests. A feast is not just an ordinary meal, but a
feast is a very festive meal with a purpose behind it. Abraham’s purpose was to tell the stories of God
to the people in the land. Abraham and
his wife Sarah were known for their gifts of welcome and hospitality to all the
people of all the lands.
You
would be amazed at the guests that Abraham entertained under the roof of his
sukkah!
Red, yellow, black or white, skin
color did not matter to Father Abraham. If
you were rich or poor or in-between; you were invited to Abraham’s sukkah for a
festive meal. The only requirement was
that you had ears. Ears are for
listening and Abraham liked to tell the stories of God to each of his guests.
One
day The Angel of The Lord (who was really Jesus in another form long before He
came to earth as a man) and two other angels came to visit in the sukkah of
Abraham. They were passing through the land
when Abraham spotted them in the distance.
He ran to them and invited them into his sukkah for a festive meal.
The
three were on a mission from God. Part
of their mission was to deliver a message to Abraham, but Abraham did not know
this. Abraham was so honored to have
someone from The One True God that he worshiped sitting in his sukkah and gathering
around his very table! Abraham had Sarah
to cook an elaborate and very special feast for them. Abraham brought his very best offerings. They shared a festive meal full of some serious
talk but also some laughter.
After
the meal they shared a glass of wine together.
Sarah was waiting inside the tent where she and Abraham lived, tending
to some of the things she would bring out for dessert, and she could hear their
voices carrying on the wind as they spoke inside the sukkah. Sarah heard The Angel of The Lord tell
Abraham that a son would be born to them.
Sarah could not help but laugh out loud because she was very old and
past the age of having children.
So
when Isaac, the son of Sarah and Abraham was born in their old age; it was a
great miracle and Abraham and Sarah remembered the words that were told to
Abraham as their special guests dined with them under the roof of their
sukkah. Sarah remembered her laughing
and so they named him Isaac, which means “laughter.”
Abraham
had faith to believe the things that God promised and he looked forward to the
blessings to come. (The rest of this
story series, (there are eight stories in this series, one for every day of The Feast of Tabernacles) is available, just send an
e-mail to wordcastlepublications@gmail.com. The Keeper of the Castle will
be happy to help you.)