Biblical Characters: Abraham the Patriarch – His Weaknesses, Part 2

His Holiness Pope Shenouda III reviews the weaknesses of our father Abraham alongside his virtues, clarifying that the Bible presents the saints as humans like us: preserved by grace yet susceptible to error, and that mentioning the weaknesses aims to teach and warn us, not to diminish their sanctity.
🔹 The weakness of going down to Egypt without consulting God
The first experience illustrating weakness was Abraham’s descent to Egypt during the famine without consulting the Lord, relying on human help (Egypt) instead of trust in God’s protection; he fell into fear of hunger and then danger to his life.
🔹 The tactic of hiding the truth about Sarah
The story of hiding Sarah’s truth and claiming she was his sister was repeated (with Pharaoh and later with Abimelech/Gerar). This was an evasion of danger by human cunning, which led to others (Pharaoh, Abimelech) receiving divine punishments and involved gifts of flocks and possessions.
🔹 The progression of error into habit
The lecture shows how a wrong step can progress into a habit: Abraham’s fear led him to partial falsehood, then to accepting gifts, and repeating the behavior in later places until it became a recurring pattern.
🔹 Abraham’s relation with Lot and the consequences of Lot’s choice
Abraham took Lot with him and could not detach from him; Lot chose a fertile land and settled in Sodom, causing troubles (captivity and destruction). Abraham showed wisdom and nobility by offering Lot the choice of land to avoid quarrel.
🔹 Virtues alongside weaknesses
Despite that, Abraham remained a man of notable virtues: obedience and surrender to God, remarkable hospitality, renunciation of possessions, chivalry and courage in battle, chastity and respect for the priesthood, altar-building and continuous worship, and intercession for others.
🔹 Spiritual and educational lessons
The lecture highlights a pedagogical lesson: human weakness may appear even in the greatest saints, and repentance, humility, and reliance on God are the path to spiritual maturity. It also indicates that some problems arise from human choices that produce consequences if wisdom is not observed.
🔹 Deferred conclusion
The lecture ends by noting that Abraham lived a long life full of events and virtues and that he also had faults, with a promise to continue discussing the issue of Abraham’s childlessness next time.
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