By David R. Ferguson
Moses
writes in Genesis 14:13, “Then one who had escaped came,
and told Abram the Hebrew, who was living by the oaks of
Mamre the Amorite, brother or Eshcol and of Aner; these
were allies of Abram.” This is a very significant verse
because this is the very first time the word “Hebrew” is
used in Scripture, and it is specifically applied to
Abram. It was to be through Abram that the Promised Seed,
Jesus Christ, would come, the One God said in Whom the
entire world would be blessed.
The
word “Hebrew” comes from “Eber” and it means “the other
side.” I believe there are at least three reasons why
Abram became the first man designated as “the Hebrew.”
First of
all, Abram was a stranger “from the other side.” Born east
of Canaan in Ur of the Chaldees of Mesopotamia, Abram had
come “from the other side” of the Jordan River before
settling in Canaan.
Secondly
and more importantly, Abram stood on “the other side” in
opposition to the entire pagan world. His recognition of
the One True God, Yahweh, and his adamant refusal to
comply with the “modern” ideology of the time, set him at
odds with the rest of humanity and their false worship of
idols created by men.
Finally,
Abram was a descendant of Eber from which the word Hebrew
is derived. Eber was the great-grandson of Noah’s son,
Shem, and Eber is given special recognition as a man of
worth and honor by Moses, who states in Genesis 10:21
[RSV], “To Shem also, the father of all the children of Eber, the
elder brother of Japheth, children were born.” Noah,
waking up from his drunken stupor, realized that Shem had
not dishonored him as had Ham, and Noah said, “Blessed by
the Lord my God be Shem, and let Canaan be his slave”
(Genesis 9:26 [RSV]). Just as Abram and the Messiah were
to come through the line of Shem, so, too, was the world
to be blessed through “the children of Eber.”
Moses
words his commentary in a manner that shows us he fully
expected his original audience to know what was so special
about this man Eber, and why he and his offspring were
mentioned specifically as they were. According to Jewish
tradition handed down since before the time of Moses, Eber
refused to help in the building of the Tower of Babel as
ordered by Nimrod, who had set himself up as world
emperor. Later, he went further in declared himself to be
god, claiming that he had vanquished the God Who had sent
the Flood. Consequently, because of Eber’s righteous
stance against the evil Emperor Nimrod, Eber’s and his
family’s language was not confused when the building of
the Tower was abandoned through the intervention of
Yahweh, and Eber and “the children of Eber” were given the
special blessing of retaining the original language given
to Adam by God at the beginning of time. Therefore, God
further honored Eber by designating his called out man,
Abram, “the Hebrew,” the one from whom the entire world
would be blessed, and also naming the original language of
the Earth after him also, Hebrew.
- David R. Ferguson preaches for the Lakeland Church of Christ in Mattoon, IL. He may be contacted through the congregation's website: http://lakelandchurchofchrist.web.officelive.com/default.aspx
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