Verse of the Day
Author Spotlight
Loading featured author...
Report Issue
See a formatting issue or error?
Let us know →
Verse Takeaways
1
The Weight of Every Word
Commentators highlight how God's command is deliberately structured to be as trying as possible. Each phrase—"your son," "your only son," "whom you love," "even Isaac"—is described by scholars like Matthew Henry and John Calvin as a "sword" that pierces the heart. This specificity removed all ambiguity and forced Abraham to confront the full weight of what was being asked, testing his love and obedience at the deepest level.
See 3 Verse Takeaways
Book Overview
Genesis
Author
Audience
Composition
Teaching Highlights
Outline
+ 5 more
See Overview
7
18th Century
Theologian
2. מריה morı̂yâh — “Moriah”; Samaritan: מוראה môr'âh; Septuagint, ὑψηλή hupsēlē — Onkelos, “w…
19th Century
Bishop
Take now. — Now is not an adverb of time, but an interjection of entreaty, usually coupled with requests and intended to …
19th Century
Preacher
"But, Lord, I have two sons, Ishmael and Isaac."
Go ad-free and create your own bookmark library
16th Century
Theologian
Take now your son. Abraham is commanded to immolate his son. If God had said nothing more than that his son should die, even this message …
17th Century
Pastor
And he said, take now your son
Directly, immediately; not your ox, nor your sheep, nor your ram, nor your lamb, nor …
17th Century
Minister
We are never secure from trials. In Hebrew, to tempt, to try, or to prove, are expressed by the same word.
Every trial is indeed a temptatio…