God Tested Abraham - The Covenant That Would Not Break

Curated by Maggid·Edited by Arthur Sabintsev·

After the conquest of Canaan, God deliberately left certain nations in the land, not because He couldn't remove them, but to test Israel (Judges 3:1-2). The rabbis found this practice disturbing enough to need explanation. A psalmist had already asked for it: "Do not kill them, lest my people forget; make them totter by your power" (Psalm 59:12). Left without enemies, Israel forgets. Given enemies, Israel remembers who it needs.

The midrash then traces the angel Michael through the wilderness narrative: he appeared to Moses in the burning bush (Exodus 3:2), guarded the camp at the sea (Exodus 14:19), and stands throughout as Israel's divine protector. But the rabbis make a distinction: Michael guards, God leads. When Moses refused the angel-as-intermediary and demanded God's direct presence, "If your presence does not go with us, do not bring us up from here" (Exodus 33:15). God agreed. No substitute. No proxy. The covenant demanded the presence itself, not its representative.

This is the heart of Israel's test: not whether they can survive enemies, but whether they can remember the difference between God's presence and God's representative. Nations can be kept in check by angels. Only Israel demands. And receives, the thing itself. The nations left in the land are not God's failure to complete the conquest. They are the ongoing conditions for Israel's faithfulness.

Themes

Biblical References