11/29/2025

Parashat 3 Portion 13 ‘’Lech lecha’’ Gen 17:1-27 Jer 33:25-34:5 ,12-13

 Psa 119:18/19  Please open our eyes YHVH that we might see hidden and wonderful truths in Your Torah. Father we are strangers and sojourners here on earth, please do not hide the council of your commandments from us.                        

Blessed are those to whom You have shown mercy to walk in Your Torah of truth in loving obedience.

We ask and thank You in Yahshua’s name – Amein.

ויהי אברם

Abraham and the Covenant of Circumcision

Gen 17:1  And it came to be when Aram was ninety-nine years old, that יהוה appeared to Aram and said to him, “I am Ěl Shaddai – walk before Me and be perfect.

 

First time use of ‘’El Shaddai’’ the ‘’breasted One’’ refers to fertility and abundant descendants.

Perfect – ‘’(Tamim) or wholehearted  - we become complete by walking (התהלך) in covenant obedience

 

Gen 17:2  “And I give (אתנה)My covenant between Me and you, and shall greatly increase you.” 

 

 A paragogic ה (final ־ה)   an added ending that enhances tone or emphasis without altering meaning ‘’ אתנה ‘’ ie YHVH was determined to give Abram His covenant promise to increase him exceedingly exceedingly (במאד מאד) CLV

 

ואתנה בריתי ביני ובינך וארבה אותך במאד מאד

 

Only Abraham receives this exact wording:

But the content of the covenant — relationship with YHVH, land, and enormous multiplication — is deliberately repeated to Isaac and Jacob, marking them as full heirs of the same divine promise – see Gen 17:7

 

Gen 17:3  And Aram fell on his face, and Elohim spoke with him, saying, 

Gen 17:4 “As for Me, look, My covenant is with you, and you shall become a father of many nations. 

Gen 17:5 “And no longer is your name called Aram, but your name shall be Araham, because I shall make you a father of many nations. 

 

YHVH expands the meaning of Abraham’s destiny: Not just one people (Israel), But many nations springing from him (Israelites, Edomites, Ishmaelites, various Arab peoples, and spiritually “all nations” in later traditions).

 

Gen 17:6 “And I shall make you exceedingly fruitful, and make nations of you, and sovereigns shall come from you. 

Gen 17:7 “And I shall establish My covenant between Me and you and your seed after you in their generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be Elohim to you and your seed after you. 

Gen 17:8 “And I shall give to you and your seed after you the land of your sojourning’s, all the land of Kena‛an, as an everlasting possession. And I shall be their Elohim.” 

Gal 3:16  But the promises were spoken to Araham, and to his Seed. He does not say, “And to seeds,” as of many, but as of one, “And to your Seed,”b Gen_12:7 who is Messiah. Footnote: bAlso see Gen_17:7, Gen_22:18, Gen_24:7

Gal 3:17  Now this I say, Torah, that came four hundred and thirty years later, does not annul a covenant previously confirmed by Elohim in Messiah, so as to do away with the promise. (neither does the church have the power change or annul the Abrahamic covenant)

 

Messiah is the ultimate Seed through whom the covenant reaches its intended purpose. It was impossible for this covenant to come into force, until the Messiah met the covenant conditions that were required in order that these promises could be made possible. See Gen 15

It’s never been about an institution – Rabbinic or Christian, it’s always been about a covenant – a family.

 

Deu 32:8  “When the Most High gave the nations their inheritance When He separated the sons of Aam, He set the boundaries of the peoples According to the number of the children of Yisra’ěl. (Elohim not Israel)

Deu 32:9  “For the portion of יהוה is His people, Ya‛aqo His allotted inheritance. 

 

Gen 17:9  And Elohim said to Araham, “As for you, guard My covenant, you and your seed after you throughout their generations. 

Gen 17:10  “This is My covenant which you guard between Me and you, and your seed after you: Every male child among you is to be circumcised. 

Gen 17:11  “And you shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin, and it shall become a sign of the covenant between Me and you. 

Gen 17:12  “And a son of eight days is circumcised by you, every male child in your generations, he who is born in your house or bought with silver from any foreigner who is not of your seed. 

Gen 17:13  “He who is born in your house, and he who is bought with your silver, has to be circumcised. So shall My covenant be in your flesh, for an everlasting covenant. 

Gen 17:14  “And an uncircumcised male child, who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, his life shall be cut off from his people – he has broken My covenant.” 

 

Hegg argues that circumcision symbolizes faith and obedience to YHVH's promises, pointing forward to spiritual realities like "circumcision of the heart" (Deut. 10:16; Rom. 2:29). It's not exclusively about marking Abraham's physical descendants but about covenantal adoption that transcends biology.

Genesis 17, functions primarily as a sign of the Abrahamic covenant—a relational and spiritual commitment to God

 

According to Tim Hegg, the apostle Paul used "circumcision" as a shorthand or "code word" for the full process of converting to Judaism (proselytism), particularly in the context of first-century debates over Gentile inclusion in the covenant. This interpretation is central to Hegg's exegesis in works like his commentary on Galatians (Paul’s Epistle to the Galatians) and Fellow Heirs, where he argues that Paul's vehement opposition to circumcision for Gentiles (e.g., Gal. 5:2–6; Acts 15) targeted the rabbinic conversion ritual—not the biblical sign of the Abrahamic covenant itself.

 

Isaac's Birth Promised

Gen 17:15  And Elohim said to Araham, “As for Sarai your wife, do not call her name Sarai, for Sarah is her name. 

Gen 17:16  “And I shall bless her and also give you a son by her. And I shall bless her, and she shall become nations – sovereigns of peoples are to be from her.” 


In Genesis 17:15–16, YHVH changes Sarai’s name to Sarah (שָׂרַי שָׂרָה) immediately before announcing that she herself — not just a surrogate — will bear the covenant heir.

Tim Hegg (and most biblical scholars) see this name change as far more than a minor edit. It carries profound theological and covenantal significance, especially when read in parallel with Abram → Abraham in the same chapter.

Key Points of Significance According to Hegg and the Text Itself

1.      From “My Princess” to “Princess” (Universal)

·         Sarai (שָׂרַי) is usually understood as “my princess” (the -i ending is a possessive: my princess, limited to one man or family).

·         Sarah (שָׂרָה) drops the yod and means “princess” in an absolute, noble sense — a woman of princely status for many peoples. Hegg stresses that this signals the expansion of the covenant: Sarah is now the mother not only of Abraham’s immediate seed but of “kings of peoples” and “nations” (Gen 17:16). The name change marks her as a matriarch on the same universal level that Abraham now enjoys with his own name change.

2.      Inclusion of the Woman in the Covenant Sign In Genesis 17 the only physical sign explicitly commanded is male circumcision (vv. 9–14). Hegg points out that the name change for Sarah is YHVH’s way of giving the woman her own irrevocable covenant marker. While men receive a sign in their flesh, Sarah receives a sign in her very identity/name. This balances the covenant: both the man and the woman are renamed and re-identified by YHVH Himself as full partners in the Abrahamic promise.

3.      Connection to the “H” in the Divine Name (YHVH)

·         Abram → Abraham: YHVH inserts the letter ה (hey) from His own name (Yahweh).

·         Sarai → Sarah: YHVH removes a י (yod) and inserts the same ה (hey). Hegg (following traditional Jewish and Christian commentators) sees this as YHVH “breathing” part of His own name into both Abraham and Sarah. It is a divine adoption formula: they now carry the letter of the divine name in their identity, showing that the covenant is not merely human but has YHVH’s own essence imprinted on the covenant family.

4.      Reversal of Shame and Barrenness Sarai had been defined by barrenness and social shame for decades. By renaming her, YHVH redefines her future: “I will bless her, and moreover, I will give you a son by her… she shall become nations; kings of peoples shall come from her” (17:16). The name change is the public announcement that her story of reproach is over.

5.      Abraham’s Response Shows the Weight of the Change Abraham immediately laughs and says “Shall a child be born to a man who is a hundred years old? Shall Sarah, who is ninety years old, bear a child?” (17:17). Notice he uses the new name “Sarah” even in his incredulous objection — the name change is already in effect the moment YHVH speaks it.

Hegg’s Summary (paraphrased from his teaching on Genesis 17)

“The renaming of Sarah is YHVH’s covenantal act of giving the matriarch her own ‘sign.’ Just as circumcision marks the male body with the covenant, the insertion of the ה into Sarah’s name marks her identity with the divine name and promise. She is no longer ‘my princess’ in a limited, barren story; she is ‘Princess/Mother of Nations,’ elevated to the same international, royal level as Abraham.”

In short: the change from Sarai to Sarah is YHVH’s way of exalting the woman, inscribing His own name on her, ending her shame, and making her an equal covenant partner whose seed will bless the entire world — a change every bit as significant as circumcision itself.

 

1Pe 3:1  In the same way, wives, be subject to your own husbands, so that if any are disobedient to the Word, they, without a word, might be won by the behaviour of their wives, 

1Pe 3:2  having seen your blameless behaviour in fear. 

1Pe 3:3  Your adornment should not be outward – arranging the hair, wearing gold, or putting on dresses – 

1Pe 3:4  but the hidden man of the heart, with the incorruptible ornament of a meek and peaceable spirit, which is of great value before Elohim. 

1Pe 3:5  For in this way, in former times, the set-apart women who trusted in Elohim also adorned themselves, being subject to their own husbands, 

1Pe 3:6  as Sarah obeyed Araham, calling him master, of whom you became children, doing good, and not frightened by any fear. 

1Pe 3:7  In the same way, husbands, live understandingly together, giving respect to the wife, as to the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the favour of life, so that your prayers are not hindered. 

 

Eph 5:31  “For this cause a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.” Gen_2:24

Eph 5:32  This secret is great, but I speak concerning Messiah and the assembly. 

Eph 5:33  However, you too, everyone, let each one love his own wife as himself, and let the wife see that she fears her husband. 

 

Gen 17:17  And Araham fell on his face and laughed, and said in his heart, “Is a child born to a man who is a hundred years old? Or is Sarah, who is ninety years old, to bear a child?” 

Gen 17:18  And Araham said to Elohim, “Oh, let Yishma‛ěl live before You!” 

Gen 17:19  And Elohim said, “No, Sarah your wife is truly bearing a son to you, and you shall call his name Yitsaq. And I shall establish My covenant with him for an everlasting covenant, and with his seed after him. 

Gen 17:20  “And as for Yishma‛ěl, I have heard you. See, I shall bless him, and shall make him fruitful, and greatly increase him. He is to bring forth twelve princes, and I shall make him a great nation. 

Gen 17:21  “But My covenant I establish with Yitsaq, whom Sarah is to bear to you at this appointed time next year.” 

Gen 17:22  And when He had ended speaking with him, Elohim went up from Araham. 

Gen 17:23  And Araham took Yishma‛ěl his son, and all those born in his house and all those bought with his silver, every male among the men of Araham’s house, and circumcised the flesh of their foreskins that same day, as Elohim told him. 

Gen 17:24  And Araham was ninety-nine years old when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin. 

Gen 17:25  And Yishma‛ěl his son was thirteen years old when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin. 

Gen 17:26  Araham and his son Yishma‛ěl were circumcised that same day. 

Gen 17:27  And all the men of his house, born in the house or bought with silver from a foreigner, were circumcised with him. 

 

Hegg’s Main Theological Conclusions about Hagar

1.      Hagar is never “cast out of the covenant.” She and Ishmael are sent away from the inheritance of the land and the messianic seed-line, but the covenant promises made to them (great nation, 12 princes, blessing) remain in full force. Circumcision continues in Ishmael’s descendants (Gen 17:23–27 shows Abraham circumcised his entire household, including Ishmaelites).

2.      Ishmael is a circumcised covenant member. Hegg repeatedly stresses that Ishmael received the sign of the covenant before Isaac was even born and 13 years before Isaac received it. This is decisive proof (in Hegg’s view) that the sign (circumcision) does not equal “being the seed of promise” or “being Jewish.” It simply marks covenant membership.

3.      Hagar prefigures Gentile inclusion. Hegg sees Hagar (an Egyptian) as the first Gentile covenant member by faith and divine encounter. She believes the word of the messenger, names YHVH, and returns in submission — all while still a slave. This becomes a type of how Gentiles later enter the same Abrahamic covenant without having to become physical descendants of Isaac/Jacob.

4.      The expulsion (Gen 21) is disciplinary, not rejection. Paul’s allegory in Galatians 4 (“cast out the bondwoman and her son”) refers to the Judaizers’ attempt to force Gentile believers under the Sinai covenant and rabbinic conversion, not to Hagar/Ishmael being outside the Abrahamic covenant. Hegg insists Paul is using typology, not teaching that Ishmaelites are eternally excluded from YHVH’s promises.

Hegg’s Summary Statement (paraphrased from his Genesis teachings)

“Hagar and Ishmael are full members of the Abrahamic covenant through the sign of circumcision and direct divine promise. The distinction is not covenant vs. no covenant, but heir-of-promise (Isaac) vs. recipient-of-blessing (Ishmael). This is exactly why Paul can later say that Gentile believers are ‘children of Abraham’ by faith without having to become physical Jews — because Hagar and Ishmael already model that very reality in Genesis.”

In short: Hagar is not the villain or the outcast of the covenant story. She is the first named Gentile believer, the recipient of a unique revelation of God, and the mother of a circumcised covenant son who receives massive divine blessing — all while remaining distinctly non-Israelite. For Hegg, that makes her an essential foreshadowing of New-Covenant Gentile inclusion.

 

Example of Hagar and Sarah

Gal 4:21  Say to me, you who wish to be under Torah, do you not hear the Torah? 

 

 Because there is no Greek word for “legalism”, often times Paul would have to use the phrase “works of the law” or even simply “law” in place of the idea of legalism. Legalism is any attempt by man to earn acceptance before YHVH by their own works.

 

“Under the Law” – What is the Meaning of this Critical Phrase

https://pathofobedience.com/topics/under-the-law/

 

Gal 4:22  For it has been written that Araham had two sons, one by a female servant, the other by a free woman. 

Gal 4:23  But he who was of the female servant was born according to the flesh, and he of the free woman through promise. 

Gal 4:24  This is allegorical, for these are the two covenants: one indeed from Mount Sinai which brings forth slavery, which is Haar, 

 

An allegory is a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or spiritual one.

Hegg insists that most Christians (and many Messianics) completely misread Paul’s allegory because they import later theology instead of letting Paul define his own terms from the Torah itself

 

 

Gal 4:25  for this Haar is Mount Sinai in Araia, and corresponds to Yerushalayim which now is, and is in slavery with her children. 

Gal 4:26  But the Yerushalayim above is free, which is the mother of us all. 

Gal 4:27  For it has been written, “Rejoice, O barren, you who do not bear! Break forth and shout, you who do not have birth pains! For the deserted one has many more children than she who has a husband.” Isa_54:1

Gal 4:28  And we, brothers, as Yitsaq was, are children of promise. 

Gal 4:29  But, as he who was born according to the flesh then persecuted him born according to the Spirit, so also now. 

Gal 4:30  But what does the Scripture say? “Cast out the female servant and her son, for the son of the female servant shall by no means be heir with the son of the free woman.” Gen_21:10

Gal 4:31  Therefore, brothers, we are not children of the female servant but of the free woman. 

 

Hegg insists that most Christians (and many Messianics) completely misread Paul’s allegory because they import later theology instead of letting Paul define his own terms from the Torah itself

 

‘’The allegory is not ‘Hagar = Old Covenant, Sarah = New Covenant.’ It is not ‘Ishmael = all Arabs/Muslims, Isaac = all Jews/Christians.’ It is not teaching that the Torah or the Sinai covenant is slavery.

 

Paul’s allegory is laser-focused on the Galatian crisis:

·         Hagar represents the Sinai covenant as it was being misused and added to by the Judaizers in “present Jerusalem.”

·         Their demand that Gentiles must be circumcised and keep the whole rabbinic Torah to be justified turned Sinai into a system of slavery.

·         Therefore, Paul says, ‘Cast out this Hagar-and-her-son teaching!’ — meaning reject the idea that justification comes through proselyte conversion and works. We (all believers) are children of the free woman, Sarah — the Abrahamic covenant of promise received by faith alone.”

 Hegg Stresses

Gentile believers do NOT need to become proselytes (“son of Hagar/Sinai”) to be full members of the covenant. They are already children of Sarah, the free woman, through faith — exactly like Isaac. Once they are in by faith, they are free (and obligated) to obey Torah as beloved children, not as slaves trying to earn justification.

This is why Hegg says the common supersessionist or dispensational reading (“Hagar = Judaism/Torah, thrown away forever”) is the exact opposite of what Paul is arguing. Paul is defending Torah (properly understood) while rejecting the Judaizers’ addition of proselyte conversion to the gospel.

 

Jer 33:14  See, the days are coming,’ declares יהוה, ‘when I shall establish the good word which I have promised to the house of Yisra’ěl and to the house of Yehuah: 

Jer 33:15  In those days and at that time I cause a Branch of righteousness to spring forth for Dawi. And He shall do right-ruling and righteousness in the earth. 

Jer 33:16  In those days Yehuah shall be saved, and Yerushalayim dwell in safety. And this is that which shall be proclaimed to her: ‘יהוה our Righteousness.’ 

Jer 33:17  “For thus said יהוה, ‘For Dawi there is not to cease a man to sit on the throne of the house of Yisra’ěl. 

Jer 33:18  And for the priests, the Lěwites, there is not to cease a man to offer ascending offerings before Me, to kindle grain offerings, and to slaughter continually.’ ” 

Jer 33:19  And the word of יהוה came to Yirmeyahu, saying, 

Jer 33:20  “Thus said יהוה, ‘If you could break My covenant with the day and My covenant with the night, so that there be not day and night in their season, 

Jer 33:21  then My covenant could also be broken with Dawi My servant – so that he shall not have a son to reign upon his throne – and with the Lěwites, the priests, My attendants. 

Jer 33:22  As the host of the heavens is not counted, nor the sand of the sea measured, so I increase the descendants of Dawi My servant and the Lěwites who attend upon Me.’ ” 

Jer 33:23  And the word of יהוה came to Yirmeyahu, saying, 

Jer 33:24  “Have you not observed what these people have spoken, saying, ‘The two clans which יהוה has chosen have been rejected by Him’? So they have despised My people,a no more to be a nation before them. Footnote: a Psa_83:3-4, Ezk_28:24-26, Ezk_36:2-6

Jer 33:25  “Thus said יהוה, ‘If My covenant is not with day and night, and if I have not appointed the laws of the heavens and earth, 

Jer 33:26  then I would also reject the descendants of Ya‛aqo and Dawi My servant, so that I should not take of his descendants to be rulers over the descendants of Araham, Yitsaq, and Ya‛aqo. For I shall turn back their captivity, and have compassion on them.’ ” 

 

This is our calling - 2Ti 2:2  And what you have heard from me among many witnesses, entrust these to trustworthy men who shall be competent to teach others as well.

 

Jud 1:24  And to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to present you blameless before the presence of His esteem with exceeding joy, 

Jud 1:25  to the only wise Elohim, our Saviour, be esteem and greatness and might and authority, both now and forever. Aměn. 

 

Blessed are you YHVH, our Elohim, King of the Universe, you have given us your Torah of truth and have planted everlasting life within our midst. Blessed are you, YHVH giver of the Torah – Amein.

 

Additional Midrash:

Yes, Acts 15:21 is very frequently cited as an indirect reference to the ancient Jewish practice of reading the Torah (and often the Prophets) in a systematic, cyclical way in the synagogues every Sabbath—what we today call the weekly Torah portions (parashiyot hashavua in Hebrew).

Let’s look at the verse in context (Acts 15 is the Jerusalem Council, ca. 49–50 CE):

Acts 15:19–21 (most English translations are similar) “Therefore my judgment is that we should not trouble those of the Gentiles who turn to God, but should write to them to abstain from the things polluted by idols, and from sexual immorality, and from what has been strangled, and from blood. For from ancient generations Moses has had in every city those who proclaim him, for he is read in the synagogues every Sabbath.” (ESV)

James (Ya‘akov) is arguing that Gentile believers do not need to be circumcised or take on the full yoke of the 613 commandments immediately, because:

·         They will hear Moses (i.e., the Torah) every Sabbath in the synagogues they already attend with Jewish believers.

·         Therefore they will learn the rest of God’s instructions progressively as they hear the Torah read week by week.

This is strong evidence that by the late Second Temple period (1st century CE):

1.      There was already a widespread custom of publicly reading the Torah every Shabbat in synagogues in virtually every city that had a Jewish community.

2.      The reading was sequential and systematic enough that, over time, a person attending regularly would be exposed to the entire Torah (“Moses…is read…every Sabbath”).

3.      Most scholars believe this reflects an early form of the annual or triennial Torah reading cycle that later became standardized.

·         In the Babylonian tradition (which became dominant), the entire Torah is read in one year (the system used by almost all Jewish communities today).

·         In the ancient Land of Israel, a triennial (roughly 3–3½ year) cycle was common in the same period.

Either way, Acts 15:21 shows that the practice of weekly, sequential public Torah reading on Shabbat was already taken for granted by the mid-1st century, and James expects Gentile believers to learn the deeper ethical and ritual details of Torah by hearing “Moses” portion by portion each week.

So yes — Acts 15:21 is one of the earliest non-Jewish references to what we now recognize as the weekly Torah portion (parasha) system.