« Then the Gangly Men Come Along | Main | The Church is Full of Dymschitz »

February 28, 2013

I Am Not Abraham’s Mistake

Pop theology about Arabs contradicts the gospel.

9/11 was a weird day for me. I was a sophomore in high school at the time, and as soon as I heard that a plane had crashed into the first tower, I distinctly remember thinking to myself, Oh God, I hope it wasn’t Arabs. I’m three-fourths Palestinian and at times have a distinctly Arab cast to me. My last name is Rishmawy. Admittedly it was a selfish thought, but I just didn’t see that going well for me in high school. And I was right.

That afternoon in football practice, upon discovering that I was of Arab descent—a “Palestilian” according to one educated linguist on the team—a teammate of mine took it upon himself to spear me in the back. Twice. For those of you who’ve never played, that sort of thing hurts. Thankfully, my coach caught on quickly and put an end to that. Still, for the next few years I was lovingly called “dune-coon,” “sand-n****r,” “Taliban,” “Osama,” and so on by a good chunk of my teammates and friends. And yes, I do mean lovingly. It was wrong, and I don’t really get it, but for some reason racial slurs were a way of bonding in the locker room. Still, it grated on me at times.

As frustrating and awkward as being an Arab high-schooler in post–9/11 America could be at times, given garden-variety prejudices, fears, and ignorance, none of those slurs frustrated me as much as what some of my well-meaning, evangelical brothers and sisters ignorantly implied: that I and my entire ethnic heritage were an unfortunate mistake—Abraham’s mistake to be exact.

Anatomy of a mistake: Ishmael the Arab

The first time I was struck by that thought, I was working the front counter at a gym in college. At the time, plenty of the regulars knew I was a Christian and a number were Christians themselves, so we’d chat sometimes about faith, life, and the Bible. In one such front-counter chat, the subject of the end times and the Middle East conflict came up and my lovely, kindhearted brother said something to the effect of, “If it weren’t for Abraham’s mistake with Ishmael, this whole business could have been avoided.” I’d like to say that was the only time I’d heard something in that vein, but it wasn’t. In fact, you can hear the same thing implied at churches on Sundays, in Bible studies, and on second-rate Bible and prophecy blogs.

For those of you who don’t get the “Ishmael” reference, he’s mentioning Abraham’s firstborn child by his concubine Hagar. Abraham and Sarah were getting impatient about God’s promised child, the one through whom God would make Abraham a great nation, so they thought they’d help him out by having Abraham father a child through Hagar, Sarah’s Egyptian hand-maid (Gen. 16). This caused family problems that led to Abraham, under some pressure from Sarah, sending Hagar and Ishmael away (Gen. 16–17; 21). It’s another one of those wholesome, “family values” stories that makes Genesis so uplifting.

What does all of this have to do with the Middle East? Well, in his faithfulness, God promises Abraham that, although Ishmael is not to be the child of the promise, that doesn’t mean he won’t bless him. Indeed he does bless him, making him the father of many nations—“12 princes” to be exact (Gen. 17:19–21; 21:18; 25:12–18). In the broader Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions, Ishmael becomes the father of modern-day Arabs with varying significance attached to the claim. For example, it’s common for Muslim Arabs to claim Ishmael as their ancestor and the original heir of the covenant instead of Isaac, making them the heirs to the Holy Land. Indeed, in much of the popular Christian imagination, this is at the root of the conflict in the Middle East—the conflict between the Muslims’ misguided claim on the Holy Land and God’s irrevocable promise of the land to Israel.

According to my well-meaning brother at the gym and those whom he represents, this whole conflict in the Middle East could have been avoided if Abraham had just been patient and not fathered Ishmael—and the Arabs never existed.

Sweet. Thanks guys.

The bigger picture

Of course, this remark needs to be set against the broader picture of general post–9/11 fears about Muslim Arabs, and a prevalent popular-level dispensationalism that contributes, not hate of course, but a sort of theology-laced ambivalence toward Palestinians and Arabs as a people group. This ambivalence has a range to it, starting with total ignorance that Palestinian Christians like myself even exist. (The shock I’ve encountered in churches when someone finds out I’m a Palestinian and a Christian can be pathetically humorous.) Or American EEvangelicals tend to identify more with Israelis than the dwindling Christian population still living in squalor on the West Bank. Or worse, they see them as that group of people cursing God’s chosen Israel.

I know of one particular local Orange County pastor who hosts well-attended “prophecy” conferences that, in the course of raising support for Israel, regularly engages in what amounts to fear-mongering about Palestinian/Muslim terrorists and end-times scenarios (that’s where the pop-dispensationalism comes in). None of this should be taken as bitter, anti-Zionism or a stealth criticism of conservative support for Israel. I’ve grown up decently conservative, so I know some of the complex logic at work. That’s a legitimate policy debate people can have. I’m simply pointing to some of the broader context in which this kind of remark is made—most of which doesn’t contribute toward creating “warm fuzzies” for Palestinians and Arabs.

So what’s wrong with this overall picture and the Ishmael comment in general? Well, leaving aside the various technical reasons for doubting the simple identification of the Arabs with Ishmael (biblical, genealogical, geographical, and historical), and the roots of conflict in the Middle East, the main problem is that this sort of comment betrays a seriously shoddy theology in at least a couple ways.

God’s providence

First, it involves a deficient view of God’s providential ordering of history. As remarkable as it seems, God’s hand is never far from any event in human history. Jesus declares that the number of hairs on a person’s head are numbered (Luke 12:7) and that a sparrow doesn’t fall to the ground without God’s consent. Old Testament wisdom reminds us that while you might be rolling the dice in Vegas, they land where God determines (Prov. 16:33). Your parents might have decided to move into the neighborhood you grew up in as a kid, but Paul told the Athenians you got there because God appointed it as the time and dwelling place for you to live and reach out to find him as the source of your life.

This is not a denial of human responsibility or the contingency of history, but a reminder that in biblical thought, contingency and freedom are realities that are upheld, sustained, and governed by God’s fatherly hand. God was no more caught off-guard by Ishmael’s birth than by Isaac’s. Isaac is the child of the promise, but Ishmael was no accident. Most pro-life Evangelicals would object to thinking of any child as an accident, an unplanned mistake. In God’s ordering of history, no child is to be thought of as an accident—how much less should an entire people group?

God’s purposes

This sort of sentiment also betrays a weak view of God’s intention to bless all peoples through Abraham. God’s original call of Abraham in Genesis culminates in the promise to bless Abraham that through him all the families on the earth might be blessed (Gen. 12:3). God reiterates this promise in various places, especially in his covenant with Abraham and his seed, or offspring (Gen. 15:18). Paul takes up that promise in his argument in Galatians and shows that its ultimate fulfillment came through Christ, the true seed of Abraham, the faithful Israel through whom the blessings of the covenant would come to the whole world (Gal. 3:15–29). God’s intention in the election of Israel has always been the blessing of the nations and the salvation of the world. The Arabs, descended from Ishmael or not, comprise part of that broader crowd of “all the families of the earth” that God intended to bless through Christ. “All” really means “all” here. If, by faith, an Arab or a Palestinian is united to Christ, then in the body of Christ they “are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to promise” (Gal. 3:29) in the truest sense. “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Gal. 3:28). At the wedding supper of the Lamb, when members of every “tribe, tongue, and nation” (Rev. 5:9; 7:9) gather to sing the praise of the King, those redeemed from the Arab peoples, descendants of Ishmael or not, will join in the same song, giving glory to Jesus in ways that draw on their particular ethnic and racial particularity—as Arabs and Palestinians. The bottom-line is that thinking of an entire group of people, one of the families of the earth, primarily as an obstacle to peace, instead of as an object of God’s reconciling love in Christ is a sub-Christian view of God’s purposes for the nations in the drama of redemption.

I know I’ve only just scratched the surface of a complex issue. The tangle of ethnicity, Middle East politics, and eschatology in American evangelicalism won’t be easily solved. What concerns me, and what ought to concern you, is whether we in the Church have the proper zeal to carry the gospel, in word and deed, to all nations and peoples. Do we see all people as Abraham’s potential heirs, as Christ demands? Even Ishmael’s alleged heirs? In generations past, in different parts of the globe, the Church has forgotten, excluded, or considered differing ethnic or cultural groups to be beyond the reach of the gospel. This must not be the case with our Arab and Palestinian neighbors today.

I guess what I’m trying to say is, at the end of the day, as a Palestinian Christian, I am not Abraham’s mistake; I am God’s choice in Christ.

This piece was originally published on Christ and Pop Culture. Used by permission.

Derek Rishmawy is the Director of College and Young Adult ministries at Trinity United Presbyterian Church in Orange County, CA.

He blogs at derekzrishmawy.com.

You can also follow him on Twitter @DZRishmawy and on Facebook.

Comments

Beautifully said!!!!

Thanks for writing this and opening up my eyes as well as others I'm sure.

Great article. Well done.

Ah, the stinging wit of youth, and with it comes some valid points.

I'd like to see some more Mr. Rishmawy on Ur...he does have a way of turning a phrase that emphasizes a thought for the reader to consider.

Very well stated and much needed when tragedy driven emotions seek to trump the full scope of God's Word. There was a much deeper Biblical base given for his point than in many previous articles and addresses a big problem in American form of church - high racial segregation.

"In generations past, in different parts of the globe, the Church has forgotten, excluded, or considered differing ethnic or cultural groups to be beyond the reach of the gospel."

I don't think the church's struggle with bringing the gospel, and building spiritual partnerships with those of Arabic descent is as much racial deprivation based on Abrahams issues, but on the reality that if we go to many or most Arabic countries and defy their non-evangelism laws, we will be short lived. Martyrs are many and unknown at the hands of Arabic people. Yet, as those called to walk by faith, rather than by sight God makes a way to reach all nations including those of Arabic decent. One of our relatives learned Arabic as a teenager. God connected her to a young man raised in her same town who also learned Arabic as a young man. They married, have 5 children and have an amazing ministry bringing the gospel to Arabic people completely outside the routines and policies of normal American missions. Their courage and perseverance is mind and heart boggling. They constantly call us to pray for more laborers for this harvest field.

Thanks, Derek. I get so tired of the thinking that Israel is the end-all-be-all of history. I appreciate the reminder that God is Lord of history, extending salvation to "every tribe, tongue, and nation."

Very good considerations. Although I am one who believes that God operates uniquely through Israel, and will do so even more in the Eschaton, by no means does that exclude other ethnic groups from God's love and promises.

As for "Abraham's mistake," yes, it was a mistake, but yes, it was under God's sovereignty. Any illegitimate child or child whose parents have divorced could easily feel the same way, if they stop to think about it. "But if that mistake hadn't happened, I wouldn't be here."

Yet we also have to remember what Tim has said in his last paragraph, that most of the persecution conducted against Christians and Jews, and the Christian faith today is at the hands of Arabs. That's no excuse for racism, of course, but it does make the whole matter of loving and reaching Arabs more difficult tasks. But we were never called to "easy," were we?

23 In that day there will be a highway from Egypt to Assyria. The Assyrians will go to Egypt and the Egyptians to Assyria. The Egyptians and Assyrians will worship together. 24 In that day Israel will be the third, along with Egypt and Assyria, a blessing[a] on the earth. 25 The Lord Almighty will bless them, saying, “Blessed be Egypt my people, Assyria my handiwork, and Israel my inheritance.”

John, based on sheer numbers in the world population, I would suspect most of the persecution of Christians today is still probably more at the hands of communists than Arab Muslims (consider the size of communist China), and many of the Christians suffering persecution from Arab Muslims are Arab Christians. I wonder if you realize that by far more Arabs in this country are Christians like Derek than Muslims?

Good article!!! I live in the Middle East & have thought long about this idea of Ishmael being the father of the arabs. The author fails to mention that Hagar was Egyptian, not Arab. When Ishmael married, Hagar found an Egyptian wife for him. Palestinians are also not Arab, they are the Philistines, and they were in the Israel area the same time as Abraham, maybe predating his arrival. Where this "father of the Arabs" idea comes from is hard for me to understand.

Thank you Derek for airing this subject with such love. Thank you also Danny for your comments, which I was already thinking when I reaached the bottom of the list. Ishmael was born to Abram, whose name was later changed by God to Abraham. As names are so important in many cultures, we find it difficult to refer to Muslims as an Abrahamic faith.
In Jordan some years ago when this discussion arose, I suggested that the Arab States should be helping the Palestinians in their need. The response was that 'Palestinians are not Arabs'!
In following the command of Jesus to take the gospel to all nations, let us truly love Palestinians even when shuddering at Muslim treatment of non-Muslims.

I appreciate the heart with which this post was written. Every single person should be loved because God loves them. God has sovereignly determined the birth of each person on this planet and Christ died for each one. As a child born out of wedlock makes complications for a single mom, it does not mean that the child is or should be loved any less.
That being said, it is important to acknowledge that real conflict has emerged from Abraham's choice. But perhaps the blame for conflict should be more fixed on Sarah. We have no record of there being any conflict between Abraham and Hagar. If Sarah had been more gracious it is conceivable that the family could have stayed together and we would have less conflict in that part of the world.
So yes, if Abraham had patiently waited for God's plan than there is no doubt things would be different, but they also would have been different if Sarah would not have blamed Hagar for the result she suggested in the first place.

I agree with the author's points however--and I know this is off topic a bit--I recall reading that the Palestinians are descended from the Philistines and the Philistines were not Semitic at all but were a sea-faring people unrelated to Abraham or Ishmael. Therefore they have nothing to do with a mistake or non-mistake of Abraham, anyway.

excellent article!!

Wow. I am so sorry all of this happened to you. However, as metionted before, God makes no mistakes. To say that God could make a mistake would be taking away from His deity. He knew Abraham'sfirst child would be Ishmael. This by no means took HIm for surprise. This story as an underlying tone of God using us inspite of us. God used Ishmael and gave Him a porpuse in life. Your story is a reminder to us all to. As the body of Christ we need one another. The arm can not say its more inmportant than the knee. We need both to function and we hhave proven stories in the Bible that show use God uses everyone. All you have to do it up the scriptures and read countless stories ofGod using people...some weren't Christinas, others were. God knew 9/11 would happen and has being using itever since. Within the first year, our country turned towards God, now we are a country turning away from God and even though we may not see it, God has a plan for it.

Abraham didn't make the "mistake". Mohammed made it all up about Abraham being the father of all Arabs through Abraham's "bad" son and Mohammed lived about 600 years after Jesus lived. He couldn't write so he memorized the stories of the Jews and the Christian prophet when he decided he wanted to be a prophet like the Jewish prophets. The problem was he told the stories wrong and mispronounced words and unfortunately the listening Jews laughed at him. He took off in anger and took the stories of the Jews and the Christian "prophet" and put himself into the stories and called his stories the Koran. He dictated his stories to his "secretary". Abraham was the history of many Jews and Jesus' story was told by his disciples not by Jesus. The problem son of Abraham is not the problem or mistake. Mohammed and his lies and fake stories and saying Arabs are from Ishamel was made up by Mohammed and is the mistake. Through the centuries even the Christians picked up this lie probably for their survival among the Arabs. Mohammed became the "prophet" of the Arabs because he made up this religion to make the Arab tribes stop fighting eachother before they wiped each other out. The tribes around the area of Turkey asked him to do this and he did through his own military. Just because Mohammed says Arabs are from Ishamel doesn't make it so. It's a nice excuse to use to give authority to Mohammed's made up religion to get back at the laughing Jews. Now you know where the hate of the Jews comes from with the Muslims.

I just want to add, if anyone is to blame for this I think that we should shift our eyes to the first two people that sinned in the Garden of Eden. Satan's temptations towards them is what caused them and us the pain and suffering that is in our world today but what has happened has happened and we can't take back the past. What I really liked that I saw was at the end of the article when you said "...as a Palestinian Christian, I am not Abraham’s mistake; I am God’s choice in Christ." You are completely correct. Don't let the world drag you down a path of unrighteousness because of what they say or do to you. We are going to have trials and temptations that come our way as a result of sin and there is nothing that we can do to prohibit them. What we can control is the way that we respond to them and how we present ourselves as vessels used for God's glory.

Post a comment:

Verification (needed to reduce spam):

tags

see more

books we’re reading