Why Abraham Left Everything to Isaac
Seven sons are sent away. One is given everything.
Seven sons are sent away. One is given everything.
By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
The twenty-fifth chapter of Genesis presents a seemingly mundane administrative detail that carries profound theological and emotional weight. After recounting the lineage of Abraham through his second concubine Keturah, the text makes a stark declaration: “Abraham left everything he owned to Isaac” (Gen 25:5). To understand why Abraham left everything to Isaac, we must recognize that “everything” includes not just movable wealth but also the irrevocable divine grant of the land of Canaan itself. This essay will explore the differentiated status of Abraham’s sons, especially in connection to the painful but necessary exile of Hagar and Ishmael and the surprising moment of brotherly unity at Abraham’s burial, all through the lens of land as the central, non-negotiable asset of the covenant.
The Eight Sons of Abraham: Status and Distinction
The text tells us that after Sarah’s death, Abraham took another wife, Keturah, who bore him six sons: Zimran, Jokshan, Medan, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah (Gen 25:1-4). Adding Ishmael from Hagar and Isaac from Sarah, Abraham fathered eight sons in total.
The text calls Keturah a “wife” (אִשָּׁה, isha), yet this Hebrew word does not necessarily mean “wife”; it can simply be translated as “woman.” First Chronicles 1:32 uses the term for “concubine” (פִּילֶגֶשׁ, pilegesh) to describe Keturah’s status. The plain sense of the narrative suggests that for the purposes of the covenant with YHVH, Abraham had only one woman with full wife status: Sarah. Hagar and Keturah, though they bore Abraham sons, were concubines and remained so. Consequently, their children, Ishmael and the six sons of Keturah, held a different and inferior status as far as the covenant was concerned. They were blessed as descendants of Abraham, even though they were not the carriers of the specific divine promise.
The Legal and Spiritual Meaning of “Everything,” Especially the Land
Verse 5 states clearly: “Abraham left (literally: gave) everything he owned to Isaac” (וַיִּתֵּן אַבְרָהָם אֶת־כָּל־אֲשֶׁר־לוֹ לְיִצְחָק, vayiten Avraham et kol asher lo l’Yitzchak). The Hebrew phrase “everything he owned” (כָּל־אֲשֶׁר־לוֹ, kol asher lo) is intentionally all-encompassing. It includes material wealth such as livestock, silver, gold, tents, and servants. But far more critically, it includes Abraham’s legal and covenantal rights to the land of Canaan.
To miss these details is to miss the entire point of the patriarchal narrative. God’s promises to Abraham were twofold: large offspring and a special land. From the very first call, God said, “Go to the land that I will show you” (Gen 12:1). Later, He declared, “To your offspring I will give this land” (Gen 12:7). This promise was formalized in the covenant of the pieces (Gen 15), where God specified the boundaries from the river of Egypt to the Euphrates. The land was not an afterthought; it was the concrete physical space where the covenant people would live as God’s representatives.
When Abraham left “everything” to Isaac, he was legally transferring his title deed to Canaan. Abraham himself was a sojourner and foreigner in the land (Gen 23:4), but he held it by divine promise. The only piece he ever legally owned outright was the cave of Machpelah (Gen 23), which became the family burial plot and the first down payment on the larger inheritance. That cave also passed to Isaac. By giving Ishmael and the sons of Keturah “endowments/gifts” (Gen 25:6) and sending them eastward, Abraham ensured that no other heir could make a future claim on the territory of Canaan. Abraham’s decision to leave “everything” to Isaac was an act of obedience, not paternal favoritism. He recognized that the land could not be partitioned among multiple heirs; it had to flow through a single divinely chosen channel.
The Sending Away of Hagar and Ishmael: Painful but Necessary
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To fully grasp Abraham’s decision, we must revisit the painful episode of Hagar and Ishmael’s expulsion. In Genesis 21, Sarah saw Ishmael “mocking” or perhaps playing in a way that threatened Isaac’s status. She demanded that Abraham cast out the slave woman and her son, saying, “For the son of this slave woman shall not be heir with my son Isaac” (Gen 21:10). The text tells us that this matter was “very distressing” to Abraham (וַיֵּרַע הַדָּבָר מְאֹד בְּעֵינֵי אַבְרָהָם, vayera hadavar m’od b’einei Avraham), because Ishmael was his son. Yet God commanded Abraham to listen to Sarah, promising that Ishmael would also become a great nation because he was Abraham’s seed.
This sending away (שִׁלּוּחַ, shiluch) was not mere cruelty. It was a spiritual act. By sending Hagar and Ishmael away and later the sons of Keturah in Gen 25:6, Abraham was protecting Isaac’s unique territorial inheritance. The sons of the concubines could not remain near Isaac, lest confusion arise over succession or a future challenge to the ownership of Canaan. Thus, Abraham sent them “to the land of the east” (אֶל־אֶרֶץ קֶדֶם, el erets kedem), removing them physically and legally from the land of promise.
The Reconciliation at the Cave of Machpelah
Given this background, one of the most moving and theologically rich details comes next. After Abraham’s death at the age of 175, we read, “Then his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him in the cave of Machpelah near Mamre” (Gen 25:9). The verse deliberately names both sons together. This is astonishing. Years earlier, they had been separated: one sent into the wilderness at God’s command, the other kept in the tents. Yet at their father’s death, they reunite. This shared burial tells us something profound. The sending away had never been a complete severance of love or family recognition. Abraham had provided for Ishmael, and Ishmael clearly maintained enough connection to return for the burial. The burial takes place on the very piece of land, the cave of Machpelah, that Abraham had purchased and that now belonged exclusively to Isaac. Ishmael enters that land as a guest and a mourner, not as an owner. This scene is a picture of a reconciled fraternity without usurping the covenant’s territorial integrity. Ishmael accepts Isaac’s primacy, for Isaac is named first, and Isaac accepts Ishmael’s presence as a son.
Jesus and the Sole Inheritance
This story of sole inheritance through Isaac finds its ultimate meaning in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Isaac, the beloved son of Abraham, carried the covenant promise of land and blessing. Yet Isaac himself was not the final heir. The New Testament reveals that the promises made to Abraham were always pointing toward a greater son. In the Gospel story, Jesus Christ is presented as the true and ultimate heir of the covenant. Just as Abraham left everything to Isaac, God the Father has given everything to His Son. The writer of Hebrews declares that God has appointed Jesus the “heir of all things” (Hebrews 1:2). But here is the stunning twist of the Gospel: Jesus, the sole heir, did not hoard His inheritance. Instead, He willingly gave His life so that others might be adopted into His family.
Conclusion
Abraham’s decision to leave everything to Isaac was not an act of favoritism but an act of faith. He understood that God’s covenant could not be divided, watered down, or shared among competing claims. It had to flow through one chosen channel, and that channel was Isaac. For Abraham, the decision meant the painful departure of Ishmael and his other six sons (seven sons may speak of the fullness of Abraham’s sacrifice and trust). For Isaac, it meant carrying a weight almost too heavy to bear alone. And for us, it means something breathtaking. The same God who drew a single line of promise through Abraham and Isaac and Jacob has drawn that line straight to our hearts. Through Jesus Christ, the ultimate Son of the Promise, God has brought you near. God’s blessings are freely given to all who believe. So take courage. The Father who gave everything to His Son has given that Son to you.
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Comments (26)
Also, I personally have seen and agree what Acts 10:35 says when: “Then Peter opened his mouth, and said, Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons”, so as I seek the living true word of God in this story in the Torah, I gather that God had differentiated purpose of God through each person in serving Gods will. Not lesser status but different purpose.
Respector of persons (I think) basicaly means that God does not judge people based on their status of some kind (for example wealth). THe context is court.
❤️✝️🙏🕊️
Amen Dr.Eli
Thank you, Stanley, let's keep thinking and studying together!
Dr. Eli the way you have clarified the story of Isaac and Ishmael's life makes it much easier to digest emotionally.
The other sons of Abraham who were birth by Keturah the modern day Arabs predominantly in the Middle East region. Islamic Culture is something that was founded by the descendants of these two women who Abraham father children with.
when examined closely it is easy to under stand the animosity and heart ache that is at the root of their hearts being harden towards Israel Nothing will change between these kinspeople until Christ returns💗
🙏💔💔💔💔💔💔🙏
Thank you for sharing, Donita.
IN MY VIEW: The Book of Jubilees establishes that when the three sons of Noah divided up the known lands between them, the strip that connected three continents (the Levant) was bequeathed to Shem. Yet Canaan, son of Ham, usurped that claim, thus it was named after him. The OT prophets claim that that is the land that will be the heart of God's future kingdom on Earth. So why did God tell Abram to move to Canaan? Because by God's Will it belonged to Shem's offspring. Shem's line is the line of Messiah; Messiah is the foundation of God's Kingdom. The birth of Ishmael set up a spiritual conflict for that covenant - which is the basis for all the turmoil that is going on today. In my view.
Your view captures a coherent reading of Jubilees and its theological logic. According to that text, the Levant was indeed Shem’s allotted portion, but Canaan’s seizure created an illegitimate claim. When God told Abram (a descendant of Shem) to move to Canaan, He was not endorsing Canaan’s usurpation—rather, He was reclaiming Shem’s rightful inheritance for the line through whom Messiah would come. Abram’s journey was an act of divine restoration, not recognition of Canaanite ownership. The birth of Ishmael introduced a competing thread within Abraham’s own household, setting up a spiritual conflict over which son would carry that Shemitic covenant forward. In this framework, the ongoing turmoil in the region reflects that ancient struggle: a contest between the line of promise (Isaac, then Jacob/Israel) and the line of natural priority (Ishmael) over the very land that Jubilees says belonged to Shem but was named for Canaan. Thus, present conflicts are seen as echoes of that primordial dispute.
Thank you, Doctor. :^) Sometime Shem will reclaim his allotment so that prophesy can be fulfilled. His Will be done!
May His will be done.
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Eli, flawless as always
ELI lmpecable como siempre ......
You are too gracious!
Thank you Dr. Élie for the rich and profound details in this fantastic story. I think the present conflict between Israel and his neighbors is from this story, right ?
If so, do you think this is going to end one day or just endless ?
I have to give more thought on the connection that you and several others have suggested. Let's keep thinking!
My life is a mirror of Abram’s 3rd born sons , 2 sons in 1st family, Extended Families , eldest brother died before father and died at his nativity. Eldest sons Ishmeal and mine Brian have no relationship with Father . Both split land with relative , Bith give relative 1st choice of land, both received Hi Ground. Abram went to promise land at Age 75, I turned 75 on Rosh Hashanah 2025. I also was born on the day the Generation started spoken of in Matthew 24:34. I am also a mirror of Noah . My nickname is Noah given name Thomas is twin in Hebrew Methusalah and my Fathers ages are divisible by 17 as 17 means Victory. All my brothers and I have 17 letters in our names , my eldest died the day the flood started my other brother died the day the Ark landed.
May God keep you safe and bless you.
Thank you for this lesson.
Your lesson is enlightening on God’s covenant with Abraham, and it is understandable as well. Since Sarah was Abraham’s wife, all others were secondary women, concubines, as they were called.
Abraham and Sarah were blessed with Isaac, at a very advanced age! I love that story, because only GOD could do that!
I think the six other sons understood that Isaac was the ‘chosen’ son, not only through Abraham, but through God’s covenant with Abraham.
That’s my take away.
Not sure they understood it, but at least in the case of Ishamael. There was no enmity.
Thank you Dr. Eli for clear thoughts.
Thank God. Father Son and Holy Spirit !
God bless you, my brother!
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.