Abraham's Visitors
Daniel W. Hardy, University of Cambridge
Two preparatory papers are
available to me as I write these comments, those by Elliott Wolfson and Francis
Watson. I have found them very helpful
and illuminating indeed, but I shall not attempt to respond to them directly or
in detail. Rather, I wish to ask about
the overall meaning of the passage on which they comment.
The text, I believe, places us
as readers within the events being narrated.
Unlike our normal role as critical observers, the text "observes" us,
like an icon placing us in a reversed perspective where the lines that give the
text its meaning (which in Western art meet in the distant horizon) meet in us,
incorporating us within the field portrayed.
In that way, we are already "marked" by the coming of the Lord and by
the choice of Abraham and Sarah by the Lord.
In that sense, neither the text itself nor we in ourselves are ever
complete (cf.Wolfson). And something very important occurs: both text and we
are renewed ever and again. The Christian counterpart of this is what
occurs in Eucharistic worship. What Wolfson describes of Derrida,
Heidegger, Levinas and the kabbalists - the quest for meaning unfolding
in time - happens in a significantly multidimensional fashion in the
Eucharist: there we are transformed in every aspect of our being.
This is the Christian counterpart of circumcision for the Jews and
Muslims, and no less definite in its transformative import.
More important, the reading of
this particular text places us in the dynamic field of the divine presence as
operative in the world. This is a field
interwoven with ongoing history because it is that which gives this history its
full significance. It promises Abraham
that he "will surely become a great and powerful nation, and all nations on
earth will be blessed through him" (18.18).
Abraham with Sarah embodies
the nation to come, and embodies blessing for all nations. His embodiment of blessing is particularized
in his nation, but thereby extended to all, as inclusive of them.
To place these events within
the histories of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, and to ask the questions
"normal" to them, has been the means by which these traditions have enhanced
their positions, even to the extent of marginalizing or excluding the
others. Such questions as "where is the
Lord?" the tracing of vestigia
trinitatis
in the threeness of the visitors, the primacy of circumcision and the intensity
of the sacrifice involved, etc., are the beginning of the problems that not
only beset the interpretation of this passage but also divide the
traditions. They have their place, of
course, but they are also held within
the dynamic field exemplified in the text.
Unless that is realized, they are potentially very destructive.
What is more primary to the text is not so much
spatial dynamics - "horizontal" and "vertical" dimensions (see
Watson) -
as that it combines the "intensity" of the presence of the Lord with the
"extensity" of the Lord's operation in human history.
This is what accounts for "the
shift from the one to the three in the introduction to this narrative (vv.1-3)
matched by a corresponding shift in Abraham's speech (vv.3-5)" (Watson). On the one hand, the Lord is self-identical
("simple") but complex in historical involvement. On the other hand, the Lord's operation is both participatory in
special involvement with those chosen, and also extensive in the blessing
thereby conferred. No wonder that the
text is polyvalent! Too much is
concentrated here to find a "proper" meaning favoring any of the three
religious traditions. And that makes
the text especially important as the occasion for their mutual engagement!
What seems to lie at the heart of this text is indwelling the
other, how the Lord fully indwells the three visitors without
displacing their identities, and they indwell the Lord without
displacing the identity proper to the Lord. That is the gift and
promise to which Abraham and Sarah assent, and by doing so dwell in the
fullness of the blessing of the Lord. That indwelling becomes their
blessing upon all nations, calling us likewise to dwell in it - and so
indwell each other.
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