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| What is Meant by Abraham’s Marrying Keturah After Sarah’s Death. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 34.—What is Meant by
Abraham’s Marrying Keturah After Sarah’s Death.
What did Abraham mean by marrying
Keturah after Sarah’s death? Far be it from us to suspect him
of incontinence, especially when he had reached such an age and
such sanctity of faith. Or was he still seeking to beget
children, though he held fast, with most approved faith, the
promise of God that his children should be multiplied out of Isaac
as the stars of heaven and the dust of the earth? And yet, if
Hagar and Ishmael, as the apostle teaches us, signified the carnal
people of the old covenant, why may not Keturah and her sons also
signify the carnal people who think they belong to the new
covenant? For both are called both the wives and the concubines
of Abraham; but Sarah is never called a concubine (but only a
wife). For when Hagar is given to Abraham, it is written. “And
Sarai, Abram’s wife, took Hagar the Egyptian, her handmaid, after
Abraham had dwelt ten years in the land of Canaan, and gave her to
her husband Abram to be his wife.”949 And of Keturah, whom he took
after Sarah’s departure, we read, “Then again Abraham took a
wife, whose name was Keturah.”950 Lo! both are called wives, yet
both are found to have been concubines; for the Scripture afterward
says, “And Abraham gave his whole estate unto Isaac his son.
But unto the sons of his concubines Abraham gave gifts, and sent
them away from his son Isaac, (while he yet lived,) eastward, unto
the east country.”951 Therefore the sons of the
concubines, that is, the heretics and the carnal Jews, have some
gifts, but do not attain the promised kingdom; “For they which
are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God:
but the children of the promise are counted for the seed, of whom
it was said, In Isaac shall thy seed be called.”952 For I do
not see why Keturah, who was married after the wife’s death,
should be called a concubine, except on account of this mystery.
But if any one is unwilling to put such meanings on these things,
he need not calumniate Abraham. For what if even this was
provided against the heretics who were to be the opponents of
second marriages, so that it might be shown that it was no sin in
the case of the father of many nations himself, when, after his
wife’s death, he married again? And Abraham died when he was
175 years old, so that he left his son Isaac seventy-five years
old, having begotten him when 100 years old.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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