Wednesday, July 20, 2016

SAMPLES FROM CHAPTERS OF MY NOVEL - "THE CUPBEARER'S DREAM"

FROM A CHAPTER CALLED:
 “THE VALLEY GATE”
(Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)

The Valley did not look so forlorn in the light of day.  I brushed the sleep from my eyes and rose to follow Jesus again.  He walked before me as if He had slept on a bed of roses in a mansion of glory.   I marveled at the fact that this could have actually been the case had He chosen, but He was walking this valley again for my sake.  I felt humbled beyond words.

Jesus was smiling a happy smile.  I had to ask Him.  “So what has you so happy after a cold dark night’s sleep in the valley?”  
He laughed.  I loved that sound! 

“I was just mulling over how My Father was reminding you last night in your dreams of how each person working on the wall with you was a blessing .” 

“You can even see into my dreams!”  He smiled again. 

“I guess it was good to take that summary again, after all was said and done.  I can look back and see all the differences in talent, commitment and diversity that God blessed us with in the process we were going through while working on those walls.”

“He has a way of doing that!”

  Somehow thinking of the blessings made the morning’s travel much easier.  We walked in the sunlight and conversed all morning.  Any conversation with Jesus was always amazing.  I had not wanted to walk through this valley, but I was seeing how being forced to spend this time alone with Jesus was a truly fulfilling experience.  No distractions, just me and My Master walking together through the rough roads of the valley.  I was thankful for every word that we were able to share along the way.  I was never bored. 

All of a sudden a huge cloud blocked the sun.  In less than a second buckets and buckets of water were falling down upon us from the sky.  Lightening was flashing in huge striking streaks, and fierce winds were howling through the canyons.  It happened so fast; like the twinkling of an eye.  We had no time to prepare.  I saw the water collecting on top of the rocky earth, pooling up and forming small little floods.  I saw Jesus looking for higher ground to guide us to.

“Nehemiah, we must get to higher ground, these areas flood fast in a rain storm.  We are walking through a big gully.”
“I can’t believe You, of all people, are worried and telling me this.  God will save us.  I’m not moving from this spot.”

“Faith is a good thing Nehemiah, but stubbornness is not.”

Jesus was wading quickly on and upward to a higher plain.  I sat for a rest in the cool of the water and basked in my self-assurance, despite the words He had said to me.  I could survive this, after all, wasn’t I Nehemiah TheGreat Wall Builder?  Let the storm come.  I would not move from this spot until I was ready to go.  I just needed a little rest. 

It was about that time the water came suddenly from around a rock, rushing into me, pounding against me, pulling me along into a current that I could not fight.  I struggled against it with all of my might.  It was too strong for me.  I was grabbed and swept through the ravine.  I was pulled under in a split second, even before I could take a breath.  As I felt my lungs filling with the water of a furious Wadi storm, I realized my mistake much too late.  I silently confessed my sin in my mind before I passed out.  I hoped God heard me by reading my thoughts.  Then the world went dark.

I awoke on dry ground with a fire burning beside me.  It was twilight and Jesus was cooking something that smelled very good over the fire.  I was lying on a soft blanket and my clothes were different and dry. 

“You failed the first test” He said, without looking up from his cooking, “but you did confess it, and I have forgiven you; not to mention that I pulled you out of the flood.”

“Oh Lord, I’m so sorry!  I can’t believe I fell for that old trap of the devil!  I was relying on my own strength instead of listening toYou and following the age old advice of Our Father!”

“Pride is one of the greatest sins we battle Nehemiah The Great Wall Builder!”  I blushed, deeply embarrassed at my own stupidity.

“Most of my servants have had to learn about pride the hard way – through experience instead of knowledge.” 

My aching bones were certainly proof-positive of this statement.  The sorrow of my spirit for not listening to my Lord and trusting my own way was also very painful.  He always knew what was best for me, when would I ever learn this?  I caught myself wondering if He had ever been tempted in some way.  Surely being divine God sent from Heaven, He must have had a self-righteous moment or two?  How had He fought the battle of pride?

“My enemy, Satan, tried to bring that out in me Nehemiah.”

He was reading my thoughts again.  I blushed, feeling like I had accused Him out loud.

“I spent 40 days in the wilderness, much like you are spending in this valley, just Me and My Father, walking and talking.  I was fasting and praying for His guidance.  I too, had to be tested.  It was for my own good.  It was to develop my own strength.  It was hard for Me too, but it was something that had to be done in order for my purpose to be fulfilled.”

“What happened?”

“It started a lot like your testing started.  I was walking through the dry desert grounds, My Father had gone ahead in the distance leaving Me alone.  I was physically tired and emotionally drained.  I was hungry and thirsty.  Of course, Satan was watching.  He is always watching Nehemiah, just waiting on the opportune moment to catch a child of God in a moment of weakness.  That is when He shows himself.  He usually begins by twisting The Word.  That is why you must study and memorize the scroll that contains The Word.  The only way to recognize that the enemy is twisting the word for his own purposes is to know the word yourself.  I used The Word like a sword to fight him when he tried to tempt me.  By quoting the correct words from the Holy Scriptures back to him, I gave him no place to stand.”

“He knew I was hungry and He tempted me to command the stones to become bread.  He knew I had the power to do this.  He had witnessed me doing this many times before, but I was fasting in order to hear from My Father.  He wanted to distract me from this focus.  So he found where he thought I would be the weakest and he focused on that.  I knew to keep my focus, and I gave him back the scriptures that say “Man shall not live on bread alone, but from every word that comes from the mouth of God.”  These scriptures were the whole purpose for Me in that moment; to hear the word of My Father and to know His will for Me next.  By focusing on the scriptures that I believed and had faith in, the enemy did not win that battle.”

“Wow, I’ll bet he left you alone after that happened!”

“Actually, Satan is pretty stubborn.  He returned to me a second time.  This time he wanted me to prove my power as The Son of God.  He quoted the scripture again; don’t ever think that the enemy has not read the scriptures.  He was once the great cherubim before My Father’s throne.  He knows The Word.  He just tries to twist the meaning.  He wanted me to jump from the highest point of the temple and prove that I was The Son of God by letting the angels save Me.  Of course, he really thought he would trick me into jumping to my premature death.  I had no doubt that the angels would save me, but My Father is the one who tests, and I am not the tester.  My role and purpose at this time was to be the servant.  The servant does not test the Master.  I gave Satan back some scripture to chew on:  “Thou shalt not put The Lord Your God to the test.”

“Yes Lord! And the victory must have seemed sweet to You; and Satan must have gone off to hide in shame!”

“Like I said, he is a very stubborn and determined being.  He returned to Me a third time with yet another temptation, which you should find very interesting. “

“Why?  What did he tempt you with the next time?”

“Pride.  He took me up to a high mountain again and he showed me all the kingdoms of the world.  He said I could have them all if I would just bow down and worship him.”

“That liar!”

“Yes, you are right.  He did not own the kingdoms of the world, My Father owned them, and I was already the rightful heir, but just the same, even if he had owned them; I would not have been tempted.  My place was to do my Father’s  will.  All the kingdoms of the world would not have benefited me if I had not obeyed My Father.  I would have simply been following my own self righteous ways instead of His.”

I knew this false pride.  It was very fresh on my mind, and my back and my aching bones.  Had Jesus not stepped in and saved me from my own foolish pride, I would not be here with Him, having this conversation. 

“Lord, I’m so sorry.  I was wrong to trust in my own ways and my own strength.  I will not make that mistake again.”

“I know your true heart wants to do better Nehemiah, and I have forgiven you.”

Once again we shared a wonderful meal, and then we got up to begin another journey.  My heart felt fresh and humble and full of renewed energy and enthusiasm.  Perhaps my troubles were over!

The water that washed through the area and flooded the valley left as quickly as it came.  It was strange how it just seemed to seep down into the rocky ground.  The sun came out and dried the way quickly.  We were once again dragging our tired feet through dusty roads and for the most part, we were the only sojourners on the highway. 

It was surprising to notice the figure of a young woman dressed in purple and red cloth strolling down the road, pushing a cart and singing a song.  She had such an enchanting voice!  The words of her song fell soothingly on my ears even before I saw her comely figure drawing nearer and nearer to where we would pass her on the road.

“Good day to you gentlemen!  Would you like to gaze upon the gems I’m pushing in this wagon to sell in the village?”

Jesus was strangely quiet.  I took that as acceptance and smiled back at the lovely young lady.  “Why yes, what treasures do you have for sell?”

She smiled sweetly up at me, meeting my eyes with a full wide stare, something that I was not accustomed to from the women of my day.  I thought things just must be done differently here in this valley, and I gazed into the cart she was pushing to see what wares she had to sell.

She dramatically pulled back a cloth that covered a cart full of gems.  I gasped at the brilliance of the many fine jewels that lay in a cloth lining around the bottom of the cart.  The sunlight glistened through them, and they sparkled up at me.  They were the most precious, beautiful, delightful gems my eyes had ever seen, even more beautiful than what I had seen in the crown on Queen Esther’s head as she sat on the throne with her son, The King of Persia. 

“Wow – they are dazzlingly beautiful!”

“Yes, they are! Some lucky person will soon become the owner of these precious jewels.  They have to be sold.  My Father has become ill, and my Mother has died.  They belonged to her, but she has no need of them now.  I would dearly love to keep them, but I must sell them to buy food and drink for my family and to obtain a doctor for my father’s illness.  I only need the right person to give me a fair offer.  I will not be stingy.  I am in desperate need of money as we have always been very poor, except for these precious items that we have held on to for far too long.”

The jewels sparkled up at me.  I reached in my pocket absentmindedly counting and jiggling the coins that I had put back for my provisions along the way.  I could offer her a price, and if she took it I could double my money from such a fine investment in the market place where the silversmiths worked making very fine jewelry.  She would be satisfied, and I would be much better off.  I had not needed money so far, but I was sure we could use a little help with lodging when we got to where we were going.  Somehow Jesus had been feeding us from the spoils of the land, but how much longer would we be that lucky?  Sooner or later we would need money and this opportunity was right in front of me, so easy to grasp. 

I knew the diamonds alone would bring double the coins in my pockets, not to mention the emeralds and rubies and sapphires that now gleamed from the open cart.  I took the coins that I had and held them out to her.  “Would these be a fair price my lady?”

“Ah….that is truly more money than I’ve ever had, but do you not have a little more?”

I knew she would be one to bargain, and I brought out the coin I had hidden before I made my offer.

She smiled at me that same way again, most charming and disarming, and she reached out and took every coin I had.  I blinked and she was gone, leaving a cart full of jewels at my feet.  I wondered how she disappeared so swiftly, but my good fortune was now in my own hands. 

I smiled at Jesus who had stood beside me not saying a word.

 “Quite a trade, huh?”

He once again was very silent.

“We need to be moving on.”
  
He headed back for the pathway, and I picked up the handles of the cart and began to push.  It was amazingly heavy, and I had not thought of how this heavy cart full of jewels would slow me down and make my journey harder, but I knew it would be worth all the trouble in the end.  I mustered up my strength and pushed on.  Jesus was making much better time, but He would stop and gaze back at me patiently and wait up when I fell behind.  Even as He walked ahead of me, I tried to speak loudly and make conversation.  I did not want the cart full of treasures to keep us from our talks. 

“Poor girl, I hope she is able to help her father!  She seemed like such a nice person and so lovely to gaze upon too.”

“A person’s beauty is found on the inside, not the outside Nehemiah.  I fear what was left of her heart was not so beautiful as her outward appearance.”

“Really!  I’m surprised.  Surely she had a kind spirit in wanting to give up all of these precious stones, more beautiful than any I’ve ever seen, and I have seen a few, for the sake of her starving family.”

Jesus said no more.  He wasn’t interested in talking about the young lady.  He was focused and intent on crossing the valley.
“Soon we will come to the field of fires.  You will need to trust me completely in order to cross safely.”

“Fires?”

“Yes, you will see.”

I looked at the wooden cart that I was pushing.  I knew the diamonds could survive fire and still be okay, but I wasn’t sure about the other jewels.  I would just have to find a way around these fields of fire.  I was sure I could find another way in order to protect the investment I had made for our future welfare.

Finally we stopped for a rest under a scruffy shade tree.  I uncovered the cart and gazed down at my treasures, picking up the stones in my hands and letting them fall through my fingers, liking the way they glittered in the sun.  I sorted the diamonds out, thinking they would be the most valuable.  I put them into a napkin and wrapped them separately.

Jesus sat quietly by my side, just watching, never saying a word.  I sensed that He was deliberately not talking to me and I wondered why.  I guess He could read my mind and we had reached a state of not having to talk out loud.  I stopped pondering this and turned back to sorting through the jewels in my cart.  It seemed that this treasure was all I could think about now.  I would be glad when we got out of the valley and I could sell them at the market and pocket enough cash to not have to worry about anything on my future journeys.  I covered the top of the cart carefully as we rose and headed back down the road.

 It wasn’t long before we came to a place that looked like an ash heap.  Everything was charred, burnt, melted down into nothing but ashes.  The land was empty and dry.  The air was heavy.  The way was dusty and dirty.  Some places in the ground still seemed to be smoldering from fires. 

“Be careful here,” Jesus said. 

“What is this place?”

“It is the old altar ground where men took their own children, put them up on polls, lit a torch and burned them as an offering to a pagan god.” 

I could almost hear the cries of innocent children rising out of the ashes.  I was suddenly terrified.  My cart seemed like a much greater burden to push through this area, and I didn’t understand when we came to the smoky areas why some of the fires still seemed fresh. 

“You do not want to understand all there is to know about these fires right now, Nehemiah.  Suffice it to say that I have found the children who were offered here, and they are loved and cared for by my Father now.”

I sensed a reverence in His voice that told me to observe in silence, and not to be too hasty in crossing through here.  I also sensed that many of the fires were still hot and would quickly burn or melt anyone or anything that came near them.  I looked sadly at my cart full of jewels.  I carefully picked up the jewels and wrapped them well in the blanket so they would not drop and put them deep into my pockets.  I lifted the cart up on my back and flung it over my shoulders.  It was heavy and very hard to carry.  I was very slow and my back ached as we moved carefully through this area, dodging the fires, going the long way around in many places.  By the time we reached a clearing my back was killing me.  In severe pain I lowered the cart to the ground once more.  I took out the jewels from my pocket and placed them inside the cart again.  The pain in my side and lower back did not go away.  It was going to be something I had to endure for awhile.  I had been through a lot to keep these jewels, much more than I had originally anticipated.

I had to ask Jesus to stop for awhile.  I very much needed to rest.  We sat down under the shade of an old tree and drank some water.  As we were resting, I pulled the cart next to me, unfolded the cover and recounted the jewels.  I knew how many diamonds, sapphires, rubies, emeralds and pearls I had.  I loved looking at them. I always marveled at the way they captured the light. 

Jesus was watching me hold them in my hands and moveing them back and forth to admire the quality, color and shine that I saw. 

“Nehemiah, you know, many things in this life can be very deceptive.”

I stopped watching the glittering jewels dancing in the sunlight and glanced up at Jesus as He made this comment.
“What do you mean, Lord?”

“I think you will see soon enough.  Let’s get started on our journey again.”

We were in the flat of the valley now.  I rolled the cart a little easier, but it still seemed very heavy.  Sometimes I hit bumps and ruts in the dirt and the jewels would bounce around.  I was being very careful not to let them fall out of the cart.  It was a hard job.  It was hard enough just walking on this long, hot dangerous journey.  The jewels I had in my possession now made it even harder.  I trudged on through, following Jesus, who was able to maneuver better and more swiftly than I could.  He was getting harder and harder to keep up with.  I tried hard not to lose Him, as I did not know the way without Him, but He seemed to have no thought for the heavy burden that I was carting along with us.

“Lord, will you please slow down a bit?”  I asked timidly.

“Why?”

“You know why.  My cart is hard to carry through this rough terrain.”
“I did not tell you to purchase that cart, Nehemiah.  It isn’t my problem.  I need to get where we are going, and I can’t slow down for an unnecessary cart.”

I pondered the true, but stinging words.

“But Lord, this cart was a good investment.  When we get to the city, I can sell it and we will not want for food ever again!”

 “Has your food not always been provided for you?  Have you lacked for anything in the past?”

He had a point.  God had provided everything we needed every step of the way.  But I clung to the fact that I had made a good investment and we would live luxuriously when this was over.  I thought to myself – He will see when that happens.  I tugged at the cart and kept on walking, trying to keep up with the fast pace, but the thoughts He was putting in my head frustrated me.  Finally I decided to break the silence.

“Okay – just tell me – what is it about these jewels that bothers You?”

There – I had said it – the elephant was out of the closet and we could have this discussion.  I DID want to follow Him, His way, but I just wasn’t very clear on His feelings right now.

He smiled at me.  It seemed forever before He answered.

“Did you like the way the sunlight glittered on the jewels as you looked at them earlier?”

Why did He do that?  I noticed that He never answered me directly, but always answered me with another question.  Why did He do that?

“Yes, I did like that sunlight glittering on the jewels.  It made them look quite beautiful.”

“My Father is The Light of The World.”

I wasn’t sure where this conversation was going.  What did one thing have to do with the other?  I walked along in silence, grasping for thoughts on how to respond. 

“Sometimes when we are walking through life, only the next step is illuminated.  My Father gives us just the light we need for our next step and just in the moment that we need it.  When the path is not fully lighted, you can only see one step ahead.  We walk in surrender to faith, even though we are unable to see the future, and we can’t completely comprehend the past.  We walk in the path of the light that we have been given.  It is The Father that gives us the light that we have.  We must reject the fear and doubt that threatens to overtake our journey.  We must be content right where we are each moment.  We must allow God to get us where we need to go.  Nehemiah, you must trust that the light He sheds on your path is always sufficient.  Dayenu !  It is enough!”

Wow, I was beginning to understand.  He had used that old Hebrew word that we recite every year at Passover, “dayenu.”  It meant that we should be satisfied with the place that God put us in this life, that we should be thankful in all circumstances, just to know that God is God.  Now I was getting the whole picture.

“Lord, do you mean that I should not have worried about investing in the jewels and selling them later to obtain gain so that we could always eat and have plenty?  Should I have trusted God for all we needed instead of striking out on my own and investing in the jewels?”

“Well part of that is correct.  That part about trusting God is correct.  It is not that investments are not good, Nehemiah.  Sometimes investments are wise.  It is acting on your own, without consulting God before you make the investment that could get you into trouble.  He is the only One you can trust to show you the true light of your very own unique path.” 

“Hmmmm…..”

“Did you fear that we would not have food Nehemiah?  Is that truly what made you buy those jewels?”

I knew the truth.  It wasn’t the fear that we would not have food.  It was my own greed, the desire to make a profit.  I had enough money in my pockets when I bought the jewels to feed us for the rest of the way.  I had not even needed it so far, Jesus has provided all the food all the way.   I wanted my own personal gain.  I had to admit it.  I looked down ashamed, and I saw that He knew.  He knew my shame.  He always did.  I felt really bad too.  I was remembering how I had fed all those homeless Israelites who came to work on the wall, but had no place to stay or eat.  God had provided.  I was remembering how back in the days that I was supervising the rebuilding of the walls and gates how I took nothing for myself, and had even used my own money for helping others who were working.  I hoped God remembered those things too.  I had temporarily forgotten.  Those things made me feel good about myself; but even I, the unselfish one in the past, had now been tempted by greed and want of gain.  It had snuck up on me without any realization of what I was getting into.  Who would have ever thought this would happen to me?  I thought of the enemy of God sleeping in the temple in the bed of the priests.  My heart sank.  I, myself, was as much a sinner.  I can’t tell you how sad this made my soul.  I guess nothing is beyond any man if he is tempted in the right way at the right time, unless he has the good sense to remember The Lord and turn to Him for advice on how to proceed.  I determined to do better in the future.

“Up until you bought those jewels, it seemed that we were content and happy on this little journey, in spite of the dangers and the long way.”

Once again, I knew He was right.  It was after I bought the jewels and had to push the heavy cart that things became a struggle.  It had become much harder after I had made the decision to take matters into my own hands, without consulting Him, or The Father.

I looked at my hands on the cart.  They seemed bound to it now.  I had made this investment and now I was tied to carrying through with it.  I had new responsibilities I had not anticipated or planned for.  I had to go on down the road with this heavy cart, pushing it ahead of me, feeling ever more tired of the struggle.  I had bound myself to all of this trouble.  I was waking up to the fact that I had made my own way instead of letting God show me how to go.  I remembered reading in the scroll about God’s friend David.  He said in one of the Psalms:  “The steps of a good man are ordered by the LORD; and he delights in his way.”  I thought of how delighted I had been before I bought the jewels and how I felt now.  The difference was in following my own way and in not following God’s way.  I wished I could turn back the time, but the deed was done.

I sadly trudged onward.  David had so often spoken of The Good Shepherd.  I had been walking the path with Him, but had not asked Him for help.  He had gently taken His rod and staff in the form of words and conversations and prodded my conscience.  Now, I had seen the light, but I had to decide how to proceed from here.

I bowed my head right there in the road.  I knew from here on out I needed to seek God’s will.  I quietly asked Him to forgive me.  I asked Him to guide me out of this quick-sand that I had fallen into.  I finally put my own understanding aside and trusted in God to show me the way.  I pleaded with God for help in making good choices from now on, and I gave all control over to Him for the remainder of this journey through the valley. 

                I walked along slowly now, pushing the heavy cart, listening, waiting to hear His voice to know what to do next.

I looked up to see a caravan coming our way.  How odd, to meet a whole caravan of people traveling down this lonely road.  The gentleman in the front seemed to be the wealthy owner of all the goods that followed on the backs of the camels behind him.  His men guided the camels with expertise and discernment.  I hoped he might be a man of great means who possibly might want to purchase my jewels.  Perhaps God was already showing me favor!  I smiled at him and waved for him to stop and speak with me.

                “Welcome, stranger, I wish you and your people a safe journey through the land.”

                “Thank you my friend, and may your journey also be blessed.”

                “Sir, I see you may be a man of great wealth, and perhaps you might be in need of some very precious stones, such as these that I have for sale today.”

                The man showed an interest, and I pulled the cloth back that covered the jewels in the cart.  They glistened in the sunlight, and the man got down from his beast and came closer to examine my treasures. 

                “Where did you get these jewels my friend?”

                “I bought them from a woman we met on the road earlier.  She needed money to take to her sick father.”

                “Did she give you a certificate of authenticity?”

                “Well…no..no, she didn’t have one of those, but they are pretty!  See how they glisten in the sun?”

                He reached out to pick up one of the diamonds and turned it upside down.

“Bring me the map” he said to his servant.  The servant quickly placed the map in his hands, and he held it under the diamond.  It was easy to read.  He could see every dot and every word and color on the map.  He looked up at me and shook his head.

                “My friend, these are not of good quality.  They are cut wrong, or else, I would not be able to read through these diamonds.   They will not catch the light as well as one of good quality.  He held the one I had handed to him against the one on his finger.  The brilliance of the shine on his diamond put mine to shame.  It was the real deal.  Mine was not.   My heart sank.  I was astonished and hoped that he did not become angry with me for trying to sell him my poor investment.

                I think he could read the surprise in my face.  I hoped he knew I was an honest man.  He took the diamond again and held it in my direction.  “Do you see the doubling effect?”  I looked closely.  I did see that facets were looking double instead of single as he held them up.    “This means it is only a good quality gemstone – not a diamond.”

                My eyes must have widened. 

                “I am sorry my friend, but you have been sold false merchandise.  I hope you did not pay too much for them.”

                Just all the money I had for the journey.  I did not say that part out loud.  I saw the look of pity he was giving me. 

                “Well, maybe some of the other jewels are okay” he said, hopefully.

                He shuffled through the pile and picked up what looked like a ruby.  I hoped it was real.  He held it up to the light, checking out the color quality, the cut, the size and shape.  He looked at his servant as he made comments.

                “Soft facets….tiny bubbles, see those little scratches?”

The servant nodded.  They both had a knowing look that was exchanged.  He handed it back to me. 

                “Sorry my friend, I don’t think I’ll be interested in these glass imitation rubies that you are carting through the valley.”

                My hopes fell.

                He glanced at the pile of jewels again.  An expression crossed his face, as if he had an idea.

                “I know you might not want to make such a trade, but I do have a young daughter that is much too young to appreciate the value of real jewelry.  I like to have her trinkets made up for her dress up games.  I always use cheap jewels, so if she loses them it is no loss to me.  I could buy them for this purpose.  Would you like to sell them for that reason?  Of course, the price would not be very much.”

I pondered the fact that any money would be better than the NO money I now had inside my pockets.

                “Make me an offer.”

It wasn’t long before the rich merchant went on down the road smiling happy with a gift for his little daughter, and I was left standing with a small amount of pocket change and an empty wooden cart.   At least he could probably teach his daughter a valuable lesson on what is real and what is not, and she might not have to learn this lesson the hard way as I had done. 

“Well, we will make better time now, since your cart will be a bit lighter.”  Jesus offered this comment in hopes of cheering me up.

Suddenly something rose up inside of me and I began to laugh.  I laughed and laughed, and Jesus joined me in the most hilarious laughter we had ever shared. We must have laughed for an hour, until our sides hurt and tears rolled out of our eyes. Every time we stopped we started laughing again.  All at once I felt lighter, so very free, and much, much wiser.

So all was not lost as we trudged through the flat part of the valley and made our way up to the Mountain of God.  How good that mountain looked off in the distance.  We were much closer now, and I could hardly wait to arrive. 

“Nehemiah, we must go through one more gate in this valley before we will begin to climb up to The Mountain of God.”
“Why would we go through another gate in this valley, Lord?  Haven’t we been through enough trials and temptations yet?”

“You have experienced much Nehemiah, but it is at this next gate, The Dung Gate, where you will learn to let go of those burdens and let me remove them from your life forever.”

“Oh.”  I thought of how I had let go of the jewels that were not real, and now I had only an empty cart to show for them.

“The cart needs to go too Nehemiah.  You must move on.  When the time comes you must be able leave it, to let it go, and to forget about it forever.  You have walked a long way pushing a heavy cart with worthless contents.  I can show you where to leave that cart.  Come with me, we must walk through the Dung Gate together.”

He was taking me to a place just outside the city that looked vaguely familiar.  Suddenly I realized we were walking right through The Valley of Hinnom.  I knew what went on here.  It was where the residue from the Temple was burned.  Suddenly I remembered Jesus telling me we would walk through some fires.  So that was what He meant.  We had already walked through some fires, but now they became closer and larger.  

Some of these gates just weren’t any fun.  I had thought when we got to the edge of the valley things might get a little easier.  Nope!  I could tell the Dung Gate was going to be another one of those less than wonderful places.  I knew I must keep following Jesus, no matter where He led me; so I kept walking. 

Now I think I felt humbler than I had ever felt in my whole life.  This valley floor was not the place for pride.  All kinds of shameful thoughts entered my mind here.  My memory was so much keener here and I didn’t like some of the things I was recalling.  The closer we got to the Dung Gate, the more I remembered the awful sins of my past life.  Most of them I had long forgotten.  Most of them I had stuffed away and never spoken to anyone about, not even my Heavenly Father, not even Jesus. But it was obvious that I still remembered them, even after all of this time, even after receiving salvation and being forgiven.  For some reason I had not forgotten them.

GENESIS COMMENTARY

RELEASING THE DOVE
(Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)

            The day finally came when God told Noah to release the dove!
            How interesting that God chose a dove to assist Noah in finding new life!  Immediately as the story unfolds we begin to see that the dove is symbolic of The Holy Spirit.  The dove is mentioned about 50 times in the Bible. It has been a symbol in almost every culture. In ancient Greek mythology Aphrodite kept a dove as a pet. It became the symbol of love.  However, in the Word of God and the Christian culture the dove is symbolic of the precious person of the Holy Spirit.
            In the love story of The Song of Solomon, Solomon speaks of his lover’s eyes and compares them to a dove by saying:  ”Behold, thou art fair, my love; behold, thou art fair; thou hast doves' eyes.”(Song of Solomon 1:15). This beautiful scripture passage comes to mind as we think about Noah, anxious to know how to find his new home, taking a treasured pure white dove which he had probably been very fond of having as a pet during the journey through the flood.  Noah had probably tended to and cared for this particular dove for a long time possibly even before the days they had spent together inside the ark.  Now Noah is about to release this special dove in order to seek out a new life.  Noah must have looked into the beautiful eyes of the dove as he held it upward and let it fly away.
            A dove’s eyes are special in several ways; one being that doves have binocular vision.  This means they can focus on only one thing at a time.  Usually, that one thing is their mate. If you observe a mated pair of doves you will soon discover that what one does the other will do.  They are always together.  They are always watching and imitating each other.  This is why they are often referred to as “love birds.”Dove couples move in sync with one another.  It is beautiful and majestic to watch.  They look like perfect dancing partners flying in sync across the sky. 
            Doves have no peripheral vision, so they cannot be distracted by the things around and outside of their focus.  They hone in on one thing and that thing is all there is.
            Solomon’s lover also declared Solomon’s eyes to be like dove’s eyes.  Song of Solomon 5:12 says:”His eyes are as the eyes of doves by the rivers of waters, washed with milk and fitly set. “Solomon’s eyes, like a doves eyes, stayed focused only on his beloved.  He only had eyes for her.  No one else is even allowed into his line of vision.  All others are completely ignored as if they do not even exist.  He would not allow anything to distract him from his beloved.  He only loves and adores his partner.  She sees this total admiration as she looks into the deepness of his dove eyes.

            Once again, in Song of Solomon 6:9 Solomon’s beloved is compared to a dove. In this passage he says of her:  “My dove, my undefiled is but one.  She is the only one of her mother.  She is the choice one of her that bare her.   ”When this smitten lover looks into the eyes of the lover of his soul it is as if he sees his own spirit gazing back at him.  He always sees her as the favored one.  He always sees her as the only one.  He expects others to see this in her too.  He is not surprised to learn that her mother has blessed her with every blessing of a favorite child.

            So Noah takes the dove out of the ark, knowing each of these wonderful characteristics of the dove.  Noah anticipates the dove’s loyalty, his faithfulness, his desire for purity and cleanliness.  He knows that the dove will not land on dead things as the raven had done, or go near muddy waters.  Doves do not like to get dirty.  They are clean animals. Nor will a dove rest where there is violence, anger, confusion, strife or division.  Doves enjoy and seek rest in peaceful surroundings.

            The Middle Eastern dove is white in color and the white is symbolic of purity, similar to the white garments that we know will be given to the saints in heaven representing their righteousness spoken of in Revelation 4:4. The dove represents the Holy Spirit and the dove represents the righteousness of the believers who follow The Holy Spirit.  They are both in sync.  They move together as they focus on one another.  The scripture above notes that the righteous who follow the Holy Spirit are over-comers.  He that over-cometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment” so similar to the white of Noah’s dove who had the purpose of helping Noah overcome the flood and leading him to new life in a clean new world.

            Doves are the most affectionate of birds.  They show their affection by stroking and cooing.  They love to kiss. The dove is a very gentle creature.  They never retaliate toward their enemies; they simply retreat.  The words of Jesus come to mind when thinking of this fact.  It helps us to begin to consider how Jesus commanded us to pray for our enemies.  The dove is a living illustration of this commandment.  If a dove sitting on its nest is attacked by another bird they will leave the nest and their eggs will never hatch. They do not fight.  They retreat from their enemies.  If the young of a dove are attacked they will not fight back.  They will simply cry out in distress.

            Strange noises frighten doves.  If a dove hears a noise that is not familiar it will become spooked and fly away.  Once again we can remember the words of Jesus saying “My sheep know my voice.”  If a dove has a regular place where it is fed and it hears an unfamiliar noise it will become disturbed and leave but return later.  If you spook it again until the third time the dove will never show up at that place again. A dove will not dwell with unfamiliar voices.

            In Noah’s day God said “My Spirit will not always strive with man.”God does not change.  He is the same today, tomorrow and forever and this fact is still as true today as it ever was.  There is a time of the dove in each of our lives.  We must be alert and attentive to the call of the dove.  When the Spirit of God is calling to you the Spirit of God should never be rejected.  Like a dove it could become rejected too often and chose not to return.  The Holy Spirit is a gentleman.  The Holy Spirit is never rude or intruding, but he is gentle like a dove.  It is best to deal with The Holy Spirit as it hovers over you in the time of your calling.

            Middle Eastern doves hover when they are flying. The tips of the wing feathers of most birds point toward the tail, but when the dove hovers its wing-tip feathers point forward toward the head.  Jesus told us that the Holy Spirit would not speak of its self but that he would speak of Jesus.  This is true because Jesus is the head of the church.  The dove will always point to the head and The Holy Spirit will always point to Christ.

            When the dove hovers, it hovers in the shape of the Hebrew letter kaf.  In the Old Testament times when priest and kings were anointed oil was poured out on and over their heads.  When Aaron was anointed the oil ran down his beard. That would mean that his anointing was from ear to ear, which would make the same shape of that letter kaf in the Hebrew alphabet, like a big C reversed.  This is the same shape of a dove’s wings when it is hovering.  We think of Jesus when we realize this.  When Jesus was baptized in the Jordan River and The Holy Spirit hovered over him in the form of a dove, it hovered in the shape of that Hebrew letter kaf.  This was God announcing to the world “Here is your next high priest.”  
                      There is one type of Middle Eastern dove that has nine main feathers on the right wing and nine main feathers on the left wing.  This corresponds with the nine gifts of the spirit we read about in the book of Corinthians and the nine fruits of the spirit we read about in Galatians.  The same dove has five main tail feathers and this could relate to or be symbolic of a five- fold ministry.
            A dove doesn’t sing songs like other birds do; instead it sings lamentations and releases a type of a wooing sound.  This can be equated to believers groaning in the spirit.
            The body of the dove lacks bile. A bile system represents bitterness and bitterness usually comes from unforgiveness.  Doves are very forgiving.  They do not hold grudges and they do not remember when you have wronged them.
            Doves fly together in flocks. They represent a beautiful picture of the unity of The Body of Christ in motion.  One will not leave the flock and try to strike out on its own.  Doves are team players.  They never steal.  They will not steal food from another bird like a raven will.
            A dove will never feed off of the dead. They are not scavengers like ravens. A dove will only eat good clean grain.
            Doves always return to their homes. They are faithful in every way.  Noah knew the dove would either return to him or return to the place it had formerly known as “home” before the flood.  He released the dove to fly home, but it could not yet find home, so it returned again to Noah and the ark.  The scriptures describe this by saying the dove “found no rest for the sole of her foot.” This is so like the people of God, wondering through life without finding rest, seeking home and not finding it. It was that way for a long, long time, until we were given the gift of a child named Jesus.  He came to give us home and he came to give us rest.
            Often the people of God are said to have “found no rest for the sole of their feet.”This is usually describing times when they have not been allowed to return to their beloved home, Jerusalem.  There is a physical Jerusalem on earth, a heavenly Jerusalem and a Jerusalem of the heart.  Jesus Christ is the way to all three.  He is the way home.
            This is what the dove that could find no rest for her foot discovered.  She could not yet return to her beloved home.  She could not rest among the dead as the raven had done. She returned to Noah, who acts as a type of Jesus for us.  It is said that Noah put out his hand and took her and brought her inside the ark unto himself.  Doesn’t this hold true with all of God’s servants?  When we are weak and weary from the journey without any good tidings or results does God not open His window and stretch out the safety of His loving hands and say “Come inside, I will give you rest?” This is what Noah did for the weary homeless dove and this is what God will always do for us.

THE SUKKAH STORIES - PART ONE

ABRAHAM'S SUKKAH

(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 worshipped 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 six other parts of The Sukkah Stories are available, just send an e-mail to wordcastlepublications@gmail.com.  The Keeper of the Castle will be happy to help you.

SHORT STORY SAMPLES WRITTEN BY SHEILA GAIL LANDGRAF

BENEATH THE TEREBINTH TREE
(A short story written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)

            He was born laughing.  It is said that his parents laughed when they conceived him.  Even his beautiful mother had to ask God's forgiveness about her laughter over him, but he never thought any of the laughter was wrong.  He loved the laughter! He felt the laughter did not happen often enough.

            It was the meaning of his name – laughter; and life for Isaac was sometimes very serious and very hard, so when the laughter came it was always timely.  It was always welcomed.  It was always good to him, and it came to be to him  as refreshing as cool water in the hot desert sun. 

            He constantly longed for more of the laughter.  He sought after it and he was always looking for ways to make it happen again. This was easy enough with his mother; not quite so easy with his father.  He had learned to wait for the proper time to bring it forth, and he knew the proper times to leave it be.  Sarah had taught him the distinction between the two early on.  This was definitely a day to keep silent.  It was not a day for laughter.

            There was no laughter in his father's voice as he told him to gather the wood they would be taking on their journey.  Isaac set about obediently gathering the wood into his bag.  This wood was for the sacrifice and they would be taking with them when they left tomorrow.  Abraham had insisted on cutting all of the wood by himself.  He had slowly and patiently cut it from some of the branches of the terebinth tree he had planted right outside their tent many, many years ago.  This tree had grown large, strong and tall and had spread its branches in such a way that it shaded Abraham as he gazed upon it from the door of his tent.

            Abraham had lived many happy days under the generous shade of this huge old twisted tree.   It had been under the shade of this tree that the three men of God had visited Abraham and Sarah nine months before Isaac's birth.  Abraham had often told Isaac the story.  God had promised Abraham a nation would be his heritage, but Abraham and Sarah had grown old without a child between them.

            On that same day of the visit, when Sarah's laughter came at the announcement of Isaac's birth, the same Three Men of God had been on their way to Sodom to destroy the whole town because every single person living there was wicked.  Angels had reported this to Heaven and the prayers of the nearby town's people had risen up to the ears of The Lord over and over again.   Abraham pleaded with God to spare any godly men from the destruction of Sodom; and Isaac's cousin Lot and his family had been spared, except for Lot's wife; who had turned back to remember the carnal things of that city just one last time.

            When she turned to look back she instantly became a pillar of salt.  Isaac had been shown the place where she was changed.  He hated looking into the eyes of her stony face.  The story had always horrified him, and he shuttered each time he thought of it.  It had happened on the day that God Himself, in the form of three men, stopped in to visit with Abraham under the tree on His way to this mission.  They all sat together and shared a meal under the very branches of the terebinth tree that Abraham was now using for firewood.  Isaac tried not to think of Lot’s wife as his father chopped the wood of his favorite tree.

            Funny how things happened sometimes, Isaac thought this to himself as he gathered the wood.  On their way to put an end to something evil, the three visitors from Heaven had stopped to proclaim something good.  They told Abraham that Isaac would soon be born.  Sarah had heard from inside the tent and that was when she laughed.  Isaac had heard the story over and over again as he grew up.  He didn't mind though.  He always loved hearing it.  He often thought of this story and smiled, even now that he had grown into a man 37 years of age.

            Isaac marveled at his father's actions in cutting the branches of the sacred old tree.  He did not fully understand, but Isaac had learned how to wait for understanding.  Abraham had taught Isaac this virtue long before he grew into a man.  In time Abraham would share his heart with Isaac; he always did. Isaac knew Abraham only did the things God instructed him to do.  So Isaac did not ask why.  If God told Abraham to use the branches of the terebinth tree; Abraham would be obedient.  This Isaac was sure of.  Abraham was always obedient, at all costs, and so was Isaac.  This trait of total obedience to God had been instilled in Isaac's character from the first day of his birth.  Isaac knew he was a promise fulfilled, and he must always stay true to God because of this blessing.  Obedience was his destiny, his purpose, his call of God on his life.

            Abraham had been careful to carry out the covenant promise of circumcision when Isaac was only eight days old.  Everything about Isaac's upbringing had been carefully planned and well thought out by his parents.  So careful even that his mother had insisted he not be allowed to play with his older brother Ishmael when the two were growing up together.  It seemed that Ishmael liked to taunt Isaac, even when he was just a toddler, perhaps their mutual jealousy had started way back then.  This had certainly continued on - and Isaac had seen Ishmael only in short visits with Abraham since that day that Sarah got upset with Ishmael. 

            Ishmael was thirteen and Abraham had given him a bow and arrow.  He was quite good with it and very precise when he shot.  He had begun a game of shooting his arrows to land just inches away from Isaac as he lay in his crib.  This had happened more than once and it horrified Sarah.    She had insisted that Abraham send Hagar and Ishmael away.  It was a long time after that before Isaac was allowed to visit with Abraham when he took supplies to Hagar and Ishmael.  Sarah did not like the fact and Abraham and Isaac did not speak of it to her.
            Isaac remembered one visit with his half-brother about the time that he had grown to into a teenager. Ishmael had taunted him again over the issue of circumcision that made them both a part of the covenant with God and Abraham.   Isaac suspected that this was the very covenant that kept Abraham from severing ties completely with Hagar and Ishmael.  The adults were off tending to some other business and the two boys, Isaac a young teen and Ishmael a young man, were sitting around the fire talking. The usual happened; they began to compare themselves as the future heirs to Abraham's covenant with God. 

            Ishmael had proclaimed he was most loved since he was circumcised when he was thirteen and Isaac was circumcised as a baby.  Ishmael had noted that Isaac could not refuse as he was only a helpless infant, yet he, Ishmael, had made a brave and conscious decision to perform the covenant act and had done it in a time of life that was much more painful; so he reasoned that his sacrifice to God was greater and more deliberate that Isaac's. 

            Isaac had calmly looked at his half-brother and replied if God desired of him to be slaughtered he would not refuse even to offer up his whole life as a sacrifice.  This was a common practice for the pagans in Ishmael's hometown.  Isaac could still remember the sneer on his half-brother's face upon hearing these words.  Isaac knew Ishmael would never make such a statement, because he would not be brave enough to carry through with it.  Isaac's heart and intent were true.  He truly would lay down his life if God should demand such a thing from him.  From time to time the words of that conversation haunted Isaac in his dreams.

            As Isaac gathered up the wood he pondered the interesting traits he knew of the terebinth tree.  The tree was a very strong and sturdy oak.  It had deep, deep roots.  It had remained green through all of the draughts of the land.  That tree had provided shade for many a sojourner. It was a resilient tree.  If one of these trees should die or be cut down, it was known that the stump that was left would sprout up and grow new life again.  This gave Isaac comfort as he listened to the chopping sound of Abraham’s ax.

            The tree was so large that it could be seen from a distance for miles and miles.  It had become a landmark.  It served as a way that Abraham had of telling people how to locate his tents.  He had used this tree as the one to mark this place of his home after so many years of wondering.  The place of the tree was very close to the cave where he had reverently and thoughtfully decided would be the future burial plot for his family.  He was glad the cave was so close to the tree that he had grown to love and admire. 

            It had actually been Sarah's idea, to buy the caves at Machpelah.   She had purchased them herself with some of the money that came from her own dowry, explaining to Abraham that she felt sure she had found the very site where Adam and Eve had been buried by God.  Abraham had patiently listened to his wife when she spoke of this.  Other husbands might have ignored this far-fetched tale from a wife, but Abraham knew that sometimes Sarah just knew things.  It defied all logic, but always proved out in the end.  Over the years he too came to believe this story from the cave was true.

             Just as a double check, Abraham had asked God to confirm this fact to him as well as Sarah.  On the day that the Three Men of God came calling Abraham ran out to kill the fatted calf for their dinner.  The calf had gotten away and ran from him.  Desperately needing the calf for dinner, Abraham chased the calf through the land.  The chase led him right up to the caves where Abraham beheld Adam and Eve's burial sites with his very own eyes.  He instantly knew God had shown it to him too, and after that he knew the cave was a very sacred place.  That calf also provided a very sacred meal.

            When Sarah had first expressed her desire to be buried in this spot beside him one day, he remembered looking at his charming wife and noting that she was the most beautiful woman in all the land.  He had taken in her innocence, her ability to make the world feel right and perfect and her deep wisdom.  The thought of her not being alive was very painful to him.  He had realized long ago that she was blessed with the gift of prophecy and this incident with the cave was yet another proof of it.  He had seen how the glory of God surrounded their tent as she prepared their meals each day.  Her dough never ran out.  She hospitably gave portions of it away to people as blessings as they came to visit at the home of Abraham and enjoyed many meals prepared by Sarah.
            Abraham had seen how the lamps lit during Sarah's prayers lasted from Sabbath to Sabbath, never going out during the week, providing light for their home day after day after day.  How was it that God had blessed him with such a wife?  He always marveled at it, even now, in their old age.  He had completely agreed that he and Sarah were to be laid to rest together in the cave near the terebinth tree that grew close to their tent in the very place where God had finally established them a permanent home together. 

            Isaac did not yet understand how significant the cave was, but he did understand the importance of the tree.  This strong tree stood for everything that God had promised to Abraham. It was an ever present reminder.   The roots were deep and old.  The branches were fruitful and many.  The leaves were full of life.  Abraham had often told Isaac that the tree was sacred.  Yet, just yesterday Abraham had raised his ax to some of the branches of this tree for firewood.  He had chosen it deliberately to provide the fuel for their sacrifice.  He had chosen something of the best from this place of blessings from God and taken something from it to give back to God.  Isaac understood that much of his father's thinking as he carefully filled his bag with the wood and then moved on to help load the donkey.

            Abraham had carried a branch of this tree to the land where Ishmael lived and he had planted it beside the well where Hagar worked.  Ishmael had brought some of the wood from that tree too and he began to mix it with the wood that Isaac was hauling.  "Stop!" Isaac almost panicked as he saw what he was doing, but Abraham came and stood between the two men and allowed the wood to be mixed together.  Isaac was amazed at this, but he said nothing.

            Abraham carefully gathered up the fire-pots and the knife for slaughtering the sacrifice.  Eliazer and Ishmael helped with the food supplies.  They gathered all the necessities they would need to sustain them on the long six day journey.  Hagar had come with Ishmael as he had not wanted her to be alone in his absence.  She had reluctantly submitted to this trip, hating every minute that she would be stuck in the tent with her former mistress, Sarah while the men were away. 

            Isaac wished he and Abraham were going alone.  He did not get along well with his older half-brother, and he knew his mother would not be pleased to be spending his time away from her with this former slave women.  Ishmael had often reminded Isaac that his mother had once been a Princess of Pharaoh before she had volunteered to be his mother's handmaiden.  Isaac wished she had not been so hasty with her decisions.  Former princess or not, she always brought trouble to the camp. 

When Abraham and Sarah sent Hagar and Ishmael away on Ishmael’s thirteenth birthday, a miracle had happened.  They had found a pure well in the dessert and had established their home there next to this well.  Hagar then provided a living for them by selling the pure refreshing spring water to people passing through the desert land.  They had become quite prosperous from this provision.  Hagar had no need for Sarah's pity now.  She no longer was a slave, and she made quite a good living for herself.  Ishmael managed her wealth for her.  She would be at the tents of Sarah only for a quick visit and then she would be heading right back to her well established home again.  She was no longer a tent dweller.  She had a home with walls and a roof.  She did not like revisiting the home of Abraham’s first wife.  She longed to be going with Ishmael and Abraham instead of staying behind while they journeyed off together.

             Both mothers gazed longingly at their sons as they prepared to leave them behind.

            Both boys had grown up constantly seeking Abraham's full undivided attention.  One was always trying to please him above the other, in hunting, in fishing, in building, in growing crops.  Their lives had been one long competition for Abraham's affection.  Now they were both grown men and this situation had not changed.  It never went away.  Perhaps this very competitive spirit had been handed down from their mothers.  Each of these women were also constantly seeking Abraham's undivided attention.  The women did not have room for one another and they despised each other, so much so that Sarah had convinced Abraham to send Hagar and Ishmael away, but Abraham had maintained a long distance relationship with them off and on and had always looked after them in spite of the fact that God had made it clear to him that Isaac was the son of promise.

            This was something that Sarah had learned to bear quietly in her heart.  Sarah was smart enough to understand that anger and jealousy did nothing to make a woman beautiful or cherished.  Hagar seemed incapable of learning this lesson.  When Abraham moved Hagar and Ishmael away, Sarah bore this grief against them all alone and tried not to share it with anyone.  She knew of the times Abraham went to them with supplies and she secretly wondered what went on between them, but she said nothing.  She had her cherished Isaac.  She lavished him with all the love that a mother had for a son, and she ignored that Abraham was not always in her tent.  She accepted that this whole situation was her own fault and she had asked God to forgive her for it long ago.  She knew in her heart of hearts that Abraham cherished her above all women.  She had tried to make her peace with this situation, but if she was not careful it would always rise up against her. 

            Now Sarah knew her son was going away and that woman's son - Ishmael - would be going on the journey too.  This did not please her one bit.  Abraham had tried to prepare Sarah for Ishmael's presence here by explaining the necessity of having good and trusted servants on this journey.   That is what he told Sarah, but Abraham had other thoughts about this too.

            He had already informed Sarah that he was taking Isaac to the school established by Shem (son of Noah) on Mt. Moriah so that Isaac could study Torah and learn all the ways of God from the masters in Shem's school.  It was said that Shem's school carefully guarded the mysteries of God and taught them to only very trusted, blessed men.  As much as she knew this would be a good thing for her son, Sarah had an unexplained apprehension about it.  She realized these teachings were necessary in order to fulfill the calling and purpose of Isaac’s life, but she had not been able to rest well since she had found out this would happen.

            For some reason she sensed a deep sadness in Abraham's voice.  It did not sound like the excitement of a father taking his son to learn from the great masters.  Did he not realize how many years this would take Isaac away from her?  She wondered if her husband was telling her everything.  Abraham had been very silent, very quiet and was going off to pray by himself a lot these days.

            When evening came Sarah could not rest.  She rumbled through the things in her tent and found the lavish, beautiful garments and the turban containing the special stone.  These royal garments had been given to her as a gift from King Abimelech in the time when she was held captive as a guest in his palace.  She had saved them for years for a special gift to her only son.  She took them to Isaac and told him to dress himself in them as he appeared before the masters in the land of Moriah.  Isaac, astonished at their beauty, took them and hugged her expressing his sincere thanks.  This was another case in Sarah's life where something good had come from something wrong.  King Abimelech had not touched her and had honored her marriage to Abraham when he had learned the truth of their relationship.  He had sent her away with Abraham and had given them lavish gifts as they left.

            After she had given him the presents from her greatest treasures, Sarah wept.  Through her many tears she told Isaac how much she did not want him to go away.  Neither of them could sleep that night and they spent the night just talking of memories from Isaac's childhood and expressing their fond memories of all the good times God had granted them with one another as he grew up.  Isaac loved and cherished his Mother very much.  He did not enjoy seeing her grieve, yet he knew he had a destiny from God that must come first.  He tried to comfort her to no avail.  In the wee hours of the morning she seemed to accept his reality.

            She would not deny him the special time he was to spend with God which would truly make him a better man; but why was Abraham making this journey so mysterious?  Why did she catch her beloved husband gazing at her with what seemed to be a tinge of tender sorrow?  He had always been so protective of her heart, and she sensed he was some how wanting to be protective of something.  Yet again; she knew not what.  She dared not ask.  The day had been full of enough painful surprises.

            Questioning why things happened was no longer Sarah’s style.  She had learned to let life happen as it happened.  This had been a hard lesson for her to learn.  It was a lesson that had taken away much of her innocence, passion and joy.  She had learned not to question, though it was not her true nature.  After the horrid mistake she had made with that Egyptian slave named Hagar, she had learned to let God fulfill His own blessings in His own way in His own time.

            Sarah was sad in her soul about this journey, and she was not excited about this parting, even if it was for a noble cause in Isaac's life.  Even if the study of the Torah would help to fulfill his destiny, she would miss him terribly!  She would also miss Abraham as he took Isaac on the journey.  Would he come home only to leave again to take Ishmael and Hagar back?  She hoped Abraham would give that task to Eliazer.

            Sarah  knew so much could happen in six days, so much!  A whole world had been created in six days!  It would take them six days total to make the journey, three days to climb the mountain where Abraham would leave her beloved son to be schooled, and three days for Abraham to return to her, leaving Isaac behind.   Sarah began to petition her great God to look after them both, her beloved husband and her blessed son.  She reminded God, as she often did, of His promises to Isaac and Abraham.  She prayed that God would provide everything that they needed in every minute of this journey.

            She felt the salty tears from the Holy Spirit trickle down her face as she prayed and prayed and she knew God had heard her prayers.  Just that God listened to an old woman like her gave Sarah more hope and courage.  She reminded herself of how God had kept His promise to them even when it had seemed 
impossible.   She smiled sweetly at her husband and her beloved son as they prepared for their long journey.
            "Perhaps I should go with you," she remarked to Abraham as they all had sat around the fire that night.  Because of the dark she had not seen the terror that presented itself in Abraham’s face.  He could not bear to explain all of this to her.  "No, my princess, you must stay behind this time."  Sarah was silent.  As the fire danced before them she leaned on her husband's chest and pondered how she might walk a way behind them without their noticing her presence.  Yes; she was old and frail, but she was also courageous and determined.  Had she not waited 25 years for Isaac to be born?  If an old woman could give birth, surely an old woman could walk to Mt. Moriah!  She had seen God's miracle way back then, and she knew he would protect her now.  After Abraham and Isaac went to sleep she hastened to pack some food and water for herself, then she lay down beside her husband to rest for a few hours.

            She woke to an empty bed and the sun shining down on her face from an open tent flap. The men had risen and left early, even before Sarah stirred.  It distressed her that she had not been able to tell her son goodbye again as he departed.  She walked outside the tent only to see the face of Hagar staring at her from the shade of the tree.  Those eyes were the last thing she wanted to see today.

            Sarah quickly gathered her things.  She would not be too far behind them.  The first time that Hagar turned her back Sarah went trudging down the road.  She knew the general direction toward Moriah.  It took a few hours before she caught up with the men.  They were shocked to see her and amazed that she had followed them so far.  She ran toward Isaac and hugged him close.  "My son!  Who knows when I will see you again?  I could not let you go without saying another goodbye!"

            That is when the tears poured forth.  She wept and Abraham wept and Isaac wept, each of them for their own reasons; each of them in deep pain and agony.  After much weeping Abraham and Isaac convinced Sarah to turn back and wait at home.  She stood in the road watching everything that mattered to her walk away to a place where she could not go.   She had never felt so much pain, as if a knife were cutting into her throat and bleeding all of the life out of her.  She finally could not see them anymore and she turned back toward Hebron.

            As she approached her tent she noticed an old man walking behind her.  He saw that she had seen him.  She wondered who he was and why he seemed to be following her.  She stopped, though much afraid and faced him.  He bowed low to her and proclaimed that he had come from the school in which her son was to be a pupil.  She drew a deep breath of relief and asked what his business was.  "I am a prophet and I have come to declare the truth to you, the WHOLE truth, the part that your husband and your son have not told you, I fear you will be terribly upset when I tell you, but your husband has gone to build an altar and there he will sacrifice your son to God.  You will not be able to reach them in time to stop it.  I am sorry to have to tell you this."

            When Sarah heard these words she screamed the loudest scram ever heard in any land.  It was the wale of a mother with a broken heart. As she felt her heart losing its rhythm and the strength of her life leaving her body she thought she saw a vision of her son cut and bleeding and tied to an altar.  She became very ill and was too weak to walk back to the tent.  She could not bear this horrible news.  Her old body could not take the shock of it.  She could not bear to think that Abraham would do such a thing.  Her scream was heard by Hagar, who despite their past came running to her side to see what was wrong.

            The next words from Hagar gave Sarah the second heart breaking shock.  "They have told you, haven't they?"  Sarah's eyes looked an answer for the rest of the sentence.  "They have told you that Isaac is to be the sacrifice at Moriah!"  Sarah fainted and Hagar almost fainted too.  Hagar became afraid that Sarah would die and she would be blamed for Sarah’s death.  She panicked and ran away.  The old man had also mysteriously disappeared from the road.  Sarah was left there alone and unconscious for hours until some friends of Abraham passed by and recognized her on the side of the road.  They quickly took Sarah to their tents and tried to nurse her back to life.

            The good neighbors watched anxiously as Sarah faded in and out of consciousness, She talked to them about what God was showing her in a dream.  She mentioned how Abraham would only do God's will and that Isaac would only do what God had required of him.  Even in her dreaming state, Sarah confessed that everything God did was always good, even when she did not understand.  The people were astonished at her testimony and admired her courage as she lay there, dying of grief.   They knew they had cared for a true prophetess. 

            Finally, in the provision of the peace and the hope of God, Sarah having lost all reason for living, gave up her spirit and passed into the other world.  The people of the village grieved her death and preserved her body as they waited for Abraham to pass back through the land so they could give him the sad news that the wife he dearly loved had died.

            It was several days before they heard his footsteps on the road.  Men were watching and waiting on Abraham, dreading what they had to say to him.  Abraham was deep in thought as he approached alone.  He was still in awe of what God had done for him and Isaac.  He had painfully walked up to Moriah, Isaac at his side.  Isaac had asked the obvious question; "Father, where is the lamb for the sacrifice?" 
Abraham had answered "My son, God will provide the lamb." 

It was when he had spoken this that Abraham knew that Isaac knew and understood his destiny.  Isaac had moved on willingly and had not resisted one thing that was done to him.  He only asked that his father bind him tightly so that he would not be tempted in a moment of weakness to jump away. 

            As Isaac lay down on the altar, he remembered his words to Ishmael that day.  They played over and over through his mind.  He heard those words as Abraham raised the knife to slay him and perhaps Abraham had been slow because of another sound that he heard.  A long loud blast from a ram’s horn sounded forth.  In the midst of that sound Abraham thought he also heard Sarah screaming, and he hesitated for only a moment; but a moment was just enough time for him to hear the Angel say "Stop!" 

            And the Angel assured Abraham that everything God had required of him had been proven, and he need not sacrifice the boy.  Suddenly Abraham saw a ram caught in the thicket.  He quickly untied Isaac and together they sacrificed the lamb that God had provided.  A day of sadness had instantly become a day of joy. 
            Abraham left Isaac with The Great Masters to learn the secrets of Torah and he hurried home to Sarah.  He was full of thankfulness and excitement.  He could not wait to share this sweet story with his beloved wife.
            As the men stopped Abraham on the road with the tragic news of Sarah’s death, Abraham’s countenance quickly changed.  Only hours ago Abraham had escaped the greatest grief he thought he would ever know, but now he realized that Sarah's death would leave him only half a person.  He was not sure how he would go on living without her.  The men who met him in the road saw him age 20 years in his appearance from the short walk from where they found him to the place where they had laid Sarah.

            Abraham took his beloved wife and buried her in the cave at Macphelah, just as they had discussed when Sarah was living.  He knew God would look after her there and it was a way for him to fulfill one last wish from her. 


            With a broken heart he went to sit alone under what was left of the old terebinth tree.  There he mourned for days.  Finally he lifted his head and rode out toward the desert.  It would be a long time before Isaac returned, and Abraham could not bear to stay in Hebron without him.  

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