ICC Genesis PDF
ICC Genesis PDF
ICC Genesis PDF
Critical Commentary
On
New Testaments
EDITORS' PREFACE
THERE
now
are
written
by
British
many Commentaries,
Schools, the
Biblischer
Theologisch-homiletisches Bibelwerk
Kalisch,
when
scholars
it
in
Commentary
is
practicable to
the
production
combine
of
its
van.
British
critical,
modern
this enter-
and American
comprehensive
biblical scholarship,
The International
Messrs.
T.
&
Critical Commentary
New
York, and
Messrs.
New
Testaments, under th
the Rev.
Driver, D.D.,
for the
and
Old Testament, and
New
Testament, in
Great Britain.
The Commentaries
and
be
will
free
will
ecclesiastical
They
bias.
still
The
remaining open.
details
Commentary.
Each section of
be introduced
Technical details
as
will
be kept
rule,
;
and
be arranged,
in
the
as far as
Hebrew.
dealt with,
as
will
be
critical
Historical
a uniform
series.
The Volumes
will
con-
GENESIS
JOHN SKINNER,
D.D.
The International
Critical
Commentary
COMMENTARY
ON
GENESIS
OF
/^ -^^'''
JUN23I910
.&Ckl
BY
JOHN SKINNER,
PRIKCIPAL
D.D.,
Hon. M.A.(Cantab.)
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
1910
StW'
TO
MY WIFE
PREFACE.
was entrusted by the
Commentary" with
the preparation of the volume on Genesis.
During that
time there has been no important addition to the number
of commentaries either in English or in German.
The
It
is
little
English reader
still
finds
best guidance in
his
Spurrell's
valuable Notes on the text, Bennett's compressed but sugexposition in the Century Bible^ and Driver's
thorough and masterly work in the first volume of the
Westminster Commentaries all of which were in existence
gestive
when
will
still
commenced my
task.
the
**
ship demands.
felt
and
its
parallels,
illuminating
use
has breathed a
of
aesthetic appreciation of
its
new
The last-mentioned
feature
is
PREFACE
VIII
first
part
of which (1909)
this
for
notes.
applies to
list
many books
of
'*
of a more
Abbreviations
'*),
my
and
it
neces-
sary to occupy
who
are of
critical analysis
am
very far
in its conservative
its
scholarly
events,
my own
belief in
the essential
soundness of the
my
present under-
It will
pushed further than is warranted, and that dupliwhere common sense would have
suggested an easy reconciliation. That is a perfectly fair
line of criticism, provided the whole problem be kept in
view.
It has to be remembered that the analytic process
is a chain which is a good deal stronger than its weakest
link, that it starts from cases where diversity of authorship
is almost incontrovertible, and moves on to others where
analysis
cates
it
is
is
are discovered
less certain
and
composition of sources
it
is
is
when the
PREFACE
IX
differences of representation or language assume a significance which they might not have apart from that presumption.
way
It is
and
it is
will
heed to the
little
naturally difficult to
it
advis-
is
possible to
we
of Genesis.
It will
still
be neces-
It is
men
in
such forms as
a means of religious
mind of our age.
As regards the form of the commentary, I have endeavoured to include in the large print enough to enable the
reader to pick up rapidly the general sense of a passage
the
employ small
type
ideally desirable.
to a
much
series (Driver's
in
me
I
to
was
have
Deuteronomy)^ by putting
all
the textual,
PREFACE
of footnotes
but
who has
rendered
me
J.
G. Morton, M.A.,
who
and
for
numerous
and
and archaehave been able to
criticisms
JOHN SKINNER.
Cambridge,
April 1910.
'
CONTENTS.
.
.....
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Introductory
I.
general Scope
A.
2.
3.
Book
its
History or Legend?
......
.
xiii
xxviii
Title
i-lxvii
....
and
PAGES
XIII-XX
vui
8.
9.
Characteristics of
6.
7.
xxxn
xxxiv
....
Prophecy
10.
II.
Commentary
xliii
iterary
xlvii
lii
Ivii
1-540
31
....
....
38
41-50
62-66
80
Extended Notes
The Divine Image in Man
The Hebrew and Babylonian Sabbath
:
5, etc.
89
90-97
iii-iiS
122-124
134-139
174-18
185-187
228-231
CONTENTS
XII
PAGES
Chronolog-y of
1^'^*
Circumcision
The Covenant-Idea
in
271-276
296
The
The
The
The
The
Index
Edomite Genealogies .
.
Degradation of Reuben
,
Fate of Simeon and Levi
.
" Shiloh " Prophecy of 49I*'
Zodiacal Theory of the Twelve Tribes
I.
English
<
II.
Hebrew
<
297
310
331
402
411
421
436
521-524
534
541-548
548-551
ABBREVIATIONS.
I.
SOURCES
E
J.
JE
PorPC
RE^
RJ
RP
RJE
RJEP
.
.
EV[V].
Jub.
MT
OT
Aq.
.
e.
s.
Gr.-Ven.
S^
ffiA.B
TEXTS,
AND VERSIONS.
ABBREVIATIONS
XIV
2.
Ayles
COMMENTARIES.
H. H. B. Ayles,
a.
critical
Commentary on Genesis
Ben[nett]
Calv[in]
2^ (1904).
C. J. Ball, The Bool of Genesis: Critical Edition of
the Hebrew Text printed in colours . . . with
Notes ( 1 896). SeeSBOT.
W. H. Bennett, Genesis (Century Bible).
Mosis Lihri V cum Joh. Calvini Commentariis.
De[litzsch]
F. Delitzsch,
Ba[ll]
/f-iii.
Genesis seorsum,
etc. (1563).
Neuer Commentar
ilher die
Genesis
Di[llmann]
Dr[iver]
Gu[nkel]
Ho[lzinger].
lEz.
Genesis.
Von der dritten Auflage an erhldrt
The work
von A. Dillmann (6th ed. 1892).
embodies frequent extracts from earlier edns. by
Knobel these are referred to below as " Kn.-Di."
The Book of Genesis with Introduction and NoteSy
by S. R. Driver (7th ed. 1909).
Genesis ilbersetst und erkldrt, von H. Gunkel (2nd
Die
ed. 1902).
Jer[ome], Qu,
Jerome
in Gefiesim,
Kn[obel]
Kn.-Di.
Ra[shi]
Spurrell
Str[ack]
A. Knobel.
See Di[llmann].
Rabbi Shelomoh Yizhaki (f 1105).
G. J. Spurrell, Notes on the Text of the Book of
Genesis (2nd ed. 1896),
Tu[ch]
3.
Die Genesis
iibersetzt
und
ausgelegt,
von H. L.
Barth,
,,
ES
NB
Barton,
B.-D. .
BDB
SO
Barth, Etymologische Studien zum sem. insbesondere zum hebr. Lexicon (1893).
Die Notninalbildung in den sem. Sprachen {\%%<^(^\).
G. A. Barton, A Sketch of Semitic Origins (igoz).
S. Baer and F. Delitzsch, Liber Genesis (1869).
The Massoretic Text, w^ith Appendices.
F. Brown, S. R. Driver, and C. A. Brig-gs, A
J.
Ber. R.
Bochart, Hieros.
OT (1891-
),
-(4rc/z.- I.
793-96).
XV
ABBREVIATIONS
Bu[dde], Urg.
GP
Buhl,
,
.
Burck[hardt]
,,
Che[yne], TB\_A'\I
CIS
Cook,
Gl.
NSI
G. A. Cooke,
tions (1903).
C. H. Cornill, Einleitungin das /1 7" (see p. xl, note).
Cooke,
Co[rnill], inl.
Hist.
,,
Curtiss,
PSP
Dav[idson]
DB
O TTh
, ,
Del[itzsch],
Hwb
.A
Dictio7iary of the
(1898- 1 902).
Friedrich Delitzsch,
Bible,
ed.
Assyrisches
by
J.
Hastings
Handworterbuch
(1896).
Par..
Prol,
Wo
Doughty,
AD
Dri[ver],
LOT
,,
Sam.
,,
T,
Eine
biblisch-assyriologische
Hebrew
(3rd
ed. 1892).
EB
EBL
.See
Ee[rdmans]
Erman,
LAE
Cheyne and
Die Vorgeschichte
Israels.
(tr.
by H. M.
(tr.
by A.
Tirard, 1894).
Hdbk.
,,
S.
Griffith, 1907).
Ew[ald], Gr.
Field
HI
Ant.
ABBREVIATIONS
XVI
Frazer,
AAO
J.
GB
>
V. Gall,
OT (igoy).
A.
est.
(1898).
G.-B.
Gesenius' Hehrdisches und aramdisches Handwb'rterbuch iiber das ^7" (14th ed. by Buhl, 1905).
Geiger, UrscJir,
Ges[enius], Th.
G.-K.
W.
tr.
Glaser, Skizze
ETG
1898].
und Geographic
Gu[nkel], ScJiopf.
Guthe, GI
Harrison, Prol.
Endzeit (1895).
H. Guthe, Geschichte des Volkes Israel (1899).
Jane E. Harrison, Prolegotnena to the study of Greek
Gordon,
Gray,
HPN
.
EBL
Ho[lzing-er], Etnl.
or Hex.
Hom[mel], AA
F.
Hilprecht,
Affr.
Aon.
Gesch.
SAChrest.
Hnpfleld], Qu.
,,
Jastrow, I^BA
/E
(i-iii,
1892-
).
Je[remias],^rZ<92 A. Jeremias,
Das
Alte
Jen[sen],
KAT^
Kosm.
KAT^,
Third
ed.,
by
ABBREVIATIONS
Kent,
SOT
KIB
XVII
by Eb. Schrader
(1889-
).
Kit[tel],
BH
GH
,,
K6n[ig-], Lgb.
})
( J 888-g2).
Historisch
Sprache
(1897).
KS
Kue[nen], G^j.
-<4dA.
Ond.
,,
Lag"[arde], Ank.
Abh.
),
Ges.
Mitth.
Gesa7nnielte
Orientalia,
Semiticay
Symm.
Symmicta,
OS
Sem.
,,
i,
i,
2 (1879-80).
2 (1878).
2 pts. (1877-80).
Lane, Lex.
ME
.An
,,
Modern Egyptians
Len[ormant], Or.
{1866).
,,
Abhandlungen
Lenormant, Les
F.
Origines
de
Thistoire^
(i-iii,
1880-84).
J.
or NSEpigr.
Lu[ther],
INS
Marquart
,
,
Lidz[barski], Hb.
graphik (1898).
See Meyer, INS.
J. Marquart, Fundamente
israel.
undjild. Geschichte
(1896).
Meyer, Entst.
,,
GA^
GA^
,,
INS
Miiller,
AE
Nestle,
MM
N6[ldeke], Bsitr.
Unters.
OH
Oehler,
Ols.
ATTh
Die
,,
,,
und
Nachbarstdmme, von E.
Meyer, mit Beitrag-en von B. Luther (1906).
W. Max Muller, Asien und Europa nach altdgyptIsraeliten
ihre
wissenschaft (1904).
Untersuch ungen zur Kritik des
Oxford Hexateuch = Carpenter
AT
{i
869).
and
Harford-
AT
J.
Olshausen.
ABBREVIATIONS
XVIII
POT
Orr,
OS
J.
.
.
P[ayne] Sm[ith],
Thes,
Petrie
W.
Pro[cksch]
Riehm, Hdwb.
BR
Robinson,
Sayce,
EHH
HCM
SBOT.
BL
Schenkel,
KGF
Schr[2idQrl
Schultz,
OTTh
Schiirer,
GJV
The Higher Criticism and the Verdict of the Monuments (2nd ed. 1894).
The Sacred Books of the OT, a cnt. ed. of the Heb.
Text printed in Colours., under the editorial direction of P. Haupt.
D. Schenkel, Bibel-Lexicon (1869-75).
Schrader, Keilinschriften und GeschichtsEb.
forschung (1878).
See KA T and KIB above.
H. Schultz, Old Testament Theology (Eng. tr. 1892).
E.
Geschichte
Schiirer,
Volkes
des jildischen
and 4th
Chrisii (3rd
Zeitalter Jesu
ed.
im
1898-
1901).
Schw[ally]
Smend,
Fr. Schwally,
ATRG
(1892).
HG
GASm[ith],
Land
(1895).
Rob. Smith,
KM^ W.
,,
OTJC^
,,
x-r.
Spiegelberg
W.
ed. 1894).
zum
^^(1904).
Der Aufenthalt Israels in Aegypten im Lichte der
aeg.
B.
Sta[de]
Monumente
Stade,
Abhandhingen
BTh
GVI
Steuern[agel],
Einw.
TA
Ausgewdhlte
akademische
Reden und
(1899).
C. Steuernagel, Die
Stdmm,e in
Amarna
Tafeln (1908-
)].
Knudtzon, Die eU
ABBREVIATIONS
Thomson,
LB
W. M. Thomson,
XIX
(3 vols.
1881-86).
Tide, Gesch.
Tristram,
NHB
We[llhausen], Comp.^
J.
AT
De gent.
Heid.
enumerantur
.
Prol.^
,,
TBS.
,,
VJ\\x\ck\er\AOF.
ATU
GBA
GI
(1870).
1900).
Zunz,
GdV
See KA T^ above.
Zunz, Die gottesdienstlichen
(2nd ed. 1892).
4.
Vortrdge
der Jtiden
PERIODICALS, ETC.
AJSL
AJTh
ARW.
BA
"wissenschaft,
und
semitischen Sprach-
herausgegeben von
Haupt (1890- ).
Bibliotheca Sacra and
F. Delitzsch
und
P.
BS
Theological
Review (1844-
GGA
The Expositor.
The Expository Times.
Gottifigische gelehrte Anzeigen (1753-
GGN
Nachrichten
Hebr.
Exp.
ET
).
).
).
JBBW
JiS]BL
Journal of
(1849-1865).
JPh
JQR
JRAS
.
'
).
ABBREVIATIONS
XX
JTS
Lit\erarisches\
Zentralhl\att
(1850- ).
Monatsherichte der konigl. preuss. Akadainie der
Wissenschaften zu Berlin. Continued in Sitzungsberichte der k. p. Ak.
(1881- ).
M[B'\BA
MVAG
Mittheilungen
(1896-
NKZ
OLz
PA OS.
der
Zeitschrift fiir
.
.
ZATW
MBBA
(188 1-
ZDMG
ZDPV
ZJ^F
).
alttestamentliche
Wissenschaft
).
845- ).
Zeitschrift des deutschen Paldstina-Vereins {i8'j8-
...
.
die
).
schaft
ZVP
Oriental
).
ZA
Gesellschaft
SK
ThT
TSBA
Neue
SBBA
ThLz
vorderasiatischen
).
Society (1851-
PEFS
PSBA
).
Deutschland]
fiir
Gesell-
).
schaft (i86o-
und Sprachwissen-
).
NH
v.i.
v.s.
.
,
New Hebrew
'
OT
'
'
INTRODUCTION.
Introductory
scope
a7id
its
general
title.
The Book
work which,
in the
Hebrew
Bible, extends
the
**
seemingly
artificial
Law
(minn),
Torah
its com-
canonical
attained
'
Canon of
the
OT^, 27
ff.,
loi
ff.
Buhl,
v.
iv.
all
events,
des
AT,
f.
dvaypa^evTUiVy
Kdafiov yep^aeus,
i]
is
Philo,
De
Abrah.,
dvb
rrjs
tov
iv
INTRODUCTION
11
Four centuries of
between its close and the beginning of
Exodus, where we enter on the history of a nation as conand its prevailing character
trasted with that of a family
the division
obviously appropriate.
is
complete silence
lie
its
traditions are
of
Be that as it may. Genesis is a unique and wellrounded whole; and there is no book of the Pent., except
Deut., which so readily lends itself to monographic treatment.
books.
may
Genesis
Origins.
and history
in
woven
contains a
in
Hebrew
Law-book
It is
one
while
its
main purpose
it is
legislative, the
is
minimum
of legislation
nation's
but
its
it
were,
Genesis
life.
narrative
is
the
human
races of mankind.
determined
its
the world.
It is significant,
Israel sprang,
providential position
among
steadily on
and which
the nations of
'
the
r?
it
is
INTRODUCTION
interesting variation in one curs. (129) ^ /Sf^Xos tQv yev4a-e(av (cf. 2* 5')*
tempt one to fancy that the scribe had in view the series of
TdlMoth (see p. xxxiv), and regarded the book as the book of origins in
might
Greek
title is
Euseb.
HE,
unofficial
vi.
'the
e'Din,
psj'Nn
25
first
fifth.'
appellation
nty'.n
Only
nsjD
less usual is
to
'0
the
(the
Delitzsch, 10.
The
first
question
History or
Legend?
that arises
with
reg-ard
these
to
origins
'
is
an authentic record of
is
It
concerns
itself
affairs of state
Cambridge Septuagini,
p. i.
Athanasius
De
above
and
cf.
Pseud>
INTRODUCTION
IV
we
nothing equal to
in antiquity,
it
till
we come down
in
to the
Greece.
Is
the
common
people, or
among
Into a
dawn
pre-literary
legend
not history,
is
than history.
For
it
it
moral aspirations,
its
its
conception of
its
its in-
which represent
own place and
and also,
living' spirit
and moral
to
Traditions, 84:
ideals, aspirations,
and
"A?
a,
iraag-inations."
religious
INTRODUCTION
we approach a
We
an
Israel is
background of history
whether
we
its
be so or not must
it
Should
records.
it
spirit
we
are called to discuss, but only of the kind of truth and the
particular
mode
of revelation which
of the strangest
it is
itself
hard to see
of so
parable
to find in
many
should
is
it.
One
that which
Legend
science or in history.
and
we are
theological prepossessions
why a
it
fable,
which
is
allegory,
the most
As a
of a primitive people.
advantages over
deeply implanted
and fashion
its
literal history
in the heart of
and the
spirit of religion,
legendary lore as to
make
it
a plastic ex-
through
its
come
to
it
experience of God.
characteristics as these
of an
fact,
(i)
centuries.
Few
memoranda
will
for
Hebrew
knowledge of a remote
past.
INTRODUCTION
Vi
shown
memory
was so
and
(2) The
narratives stamps
The
artistic imagination.
lost
||
II
||
Amalekiter, p. 25
t Cf. Wi.
f.
Abraham ah
Bahyloniery
7.
||
INTRODUCTION
Vll
We
angels do not cohabit with mortal women, that the Flood did not cover
the highest mountains of the world, that the ark could not have accommodated all the species of animals then existing, that the Euphrates
and Tigris have not a common source, that the Dead Sea was not first
formed in the time of Abraham, etc. There is admittedly a great
difference in respect of credibility between the primaeval (chs. i-i i) and
But even the latter, when taken as a
the patriarchal (12-50) traditions.
whole, yields many impossible situations. Sarah was more than sixtyfive years old when Abraham feared that her beauty might endanger
she was over ninety when the same fear seized him in
his life in Egypt
Gerar. Abraham at the age of ninety-nine laughs at the idea of having
a son yet forty years later he marries and begets children. Both
Midian and Ishmael were grand-uncles of Joseph ; but their descendants
appear as tribes trading with Egypt in his boyhood. Amalek was a
grandson of Esau yet the Amalekites are settled in the Negeb in the
time of Abraham. t It is a thankless task to multiply such examples.
;
The
contradictions
and
violations of probability
and
scientific possibility
legend,
In the
first place,
a legend
may embody
a more or
originated.
it
may
which gives a
far any of these
light a correspondence
to the legend.
How
may
lines
can be followed
to a successful issue in
we
sider
we have examined
the
later
after
bring to
historical significance
shall con-
obviously
legendary motives which enter into the tradition. Mean(
4),
*SeeDri.
XXXI
ff.
its
19 ff.
d. heil. Schr.
AT^, 167 f.
purpose
INTRODUCTION
viH
if
teaching of Genesis
lies precisely in
here maintained.
life
religious
of ancient Israel.
It
3.
Types of
mythical motive.
I.
Some
might be expected.
that mythology
is
in Genesis, as well as
has been
all
legends?
On
OT
in the
The more
prevalent
seems
For attempts to discriminate between myth and legend, see Tuch, pp.
Hoffding-, Phil, of Rel. (Eng. tr.), 199 fF. ; Gordon,
i-xv; Gu. p. xvn
The practically im77 fF.; Procksch, Nordhehr. Sagenbuch, I. etc.
portant distinction is that the legend does, and the myth does not, start
from the plane of historic fact. The myth is properly a story of the
gods, originating in an impression produced on the primitive mind by
the more imposing phenomena of nature, while legend attaches itself to
Thus the Flood-story
the personages and movements of real history.
is a legend if Noah be a historical figure, and the kernel of the narrative
an actual event; it is a myth if it be based on observation of a
;
t Goldziher,
Der Mythos
bei
den Hebrdern
(1876).
INTRODUCTION
IX
p. i8of.).
OT
at
all.
The
2,
The
distinction
is
influence of foreign
mythology
is
most apparent
The discovery of
Babylonian versions
(p. i37f.)
The
it
its
nearest analogies
All
Tower of
Babel)
INTRODUCTION
The
variety of
mission, the myths having first passed into Canaanite tradition as the
result (immediate or remote) of the Babylonian supremacy prior to the
Tell-Amarna period, and thence to the Israelites, t The strongest
argument for this theory is that the biblical versions, both of the
Creation and the Flood, give evidence of having passed through several
stages in Hebrew tradition. Apart from that, the considerations urged
There are
in support of either theory do not seem to me conclusive.
no recognisable traces of a specifically Canaanite medium having been
interposed between the Bab. originals and the Hebrew accounts of the
Creation and the Flood, such as we may surmise in the case of the
Paradise myth. It is open to argue against Gu. that if the process had
been as protracted as he says, the divergence would be much greater
than it actually is. Again, we cannot well set limits to the deliberate
manipulation of Bab. material by a Hebrew writer and the assumption that such a writer in the later period would have been repelled by
the gross polytheism of the Bab. legends, and refused to have anything
On the other hand, it is unsafe
to do with them, is a little gratuitous.
to assert with Stade that the myths could not have been assimilated by
Israelite theology before the belief in Yahwe's sole deity had been
;
Monotheism had
firmly established by the teaching of the prophets.
roots in Heb. antiquity extending much further back than the age of
written prophecy, and the present form of the legends is more intelproduct of an earlier phase of religion than that of the
But when we consider the innumerable channels
through which myths may wander from one centre to another, we shall
hardly expect to be able to determine the precise channel, or the approximate date, of this infusion of Bab. elements into the religious
ligible as the
literary prophets.
tradition of Israel.
It is remarkable that while the patriarchal legends exhibit no traces
of Bab. mythology, they contain a few examples of mythical narrative
The visit of the angels
to which analogies are found in other quarters.
to Abraham (see p. 302 f.), and the destruction of Sodom (p. 311 f ), are
Incidents of obviously mythical origin (stories of the gods) ; and to both,
The account of the births of Esau
classical and other parallels exist.
See
Rosters,
Bu. Urg. (1883), 515 f.; Kuenen, ThT, xviii. (1884), 167 ff.
xix. (1885), 325 ff., 344; Sta. ^^7-1^(1895), 159 f, (1903),
ih.
i75ff-
(1895),
143
ff-
Gen.^
(1902),
64
f.
Cf.
INTRODUCTION
XI
They are
rather to be
mingle myth
with legend by transferring mythical incidents to historic personages.
3.
It
we go on
remains, before
to
(p. ix),
It will
literal historicity
of the records,
some
from Gu.
is
p. XVIII
fF.
is
taken, with
INTRODUCTION
xil
{b)
The commonest
what may be
tives, is
class of
all,
It
is
an obvious
feature of the narratives that the heroes of them are frequently personifications of tribes and peoples, whose character and history and
mutual relationships are exhibited under the guise of individual biography. Thus the pre-natal struggle of Jacob and Esau prefigures the
'
at Lahairoi (16), Abraham at the oak of Mamre (18), his planting of the
tamarisk at Beersheba (21^3), Jacob at Bethel with the reason for
anointing the sacred stone, and the institution of the tithe (28^^-), and
The general idea is that the places
at Peniel (3224^*) ; and many more.
Gordon,
ETG,
88.
INTRODUCTION
suffers
it
to
Xlll
visit
of the patriarch
It is
'
4.
has already been remarked (p. vii) that there are three
chief ways in which an oral, and therefore legendary, tradiIt
INTRODUCTION
XIV
tion
may
yield
by
real events
historical
solid
memory
and personalities
the
by the recovery
'
known about
I.
The
historical
first
traditions.
narratives *
may be
seems to us) on
ch.
with Hammurabi,
The
dynasty.
14, that
the
is
Babylonian
first
probably
c.
2100 B.c.f
because
it is
is
for
that the
first
(first
published in 1880
and
Country
of the Sea,'
was
at least partly,
if
has proved beyond dispute (i) that Ilima-ilu, the founder of the Second
dynasty, was contemporary with Samsu-iluna and Abi-eu', the 7th and
8th kings of the First dynasty and (2) that Ea-gimil, the last king of
;
INTRODUCTION
The lower
limit
XV
is
it
must be
if
Ex.
i^^ is
is
genuine) to the
Egyptian dynasty
Allowing a sufficient period for the
sojourn of Israel in Egypt, we come back to about the
middle of the millennium as the approximate time when the
(c.
1234-1214
family
left
B.C.).
much
earlier
{c.
1490),
Canaan
to
and reduces
215 years;
to the
narrow
which
limits
it
in Palestine.
numerous that
than the
it is
desirable to
five centuries
1450 B.C.
(c.
1205).
INTRODUCTION
XVI
historicity
it is
of
the
It
is
men
fit
perfectly,
(see p. 218).
It tells
of a place in
?)
f.),
us that
Canaan
and that
was
Hebrews f Apriw) were a foreign population in Egypt from
the time of Ramses 11. to that of Ramses iv. (Heyes, Bib,
Israel
I.e.
ff".
**
* Jeremias, ATLO'^, 365
Wir haben gezeig-t, dass das Milieu der
Vatergeschichten in alien Einzelheiten zu den altorientalischen Kulturverhaltnissen stimmt, die uns die Denkmaler fur die in Betracht kommenden Zeit bezeugen."
:
INTRODUCTION
XVll
We
The
following- effect
While the latter is full of detailed informaabout the people among whom the writer lived, the former (except
in chs. 14. 34. 38) have hardly any allusions (24^ 371s'-) to the aboriginal
population of Palestine proper. Luther {INS, 156 f.) even maintains
that the original Yahwist conceived Canaan as at this time an uninhabited country
Without going so far as that, we cannot but regard
the fact as an indication of the process of abstraction which the narratives
have undergone in the course of oral transmission. Would they appeal
to the heart of the world as they do if they retained, to the extent
sometimes alleged, the signature of an obsolete civilisation ?
INTRODUCTION
XVlll
question (Lv. i8^^) is late ; and does not its enactment in the PC rather
imply that the practice against which it is directed survived in Israel
till the close of the monarchy ?
The distinction between the mohar, or
purchase price of a wife, and the gift to the bride (6.), should not be
the
societies
it
'
not appear that the examples given differ from another class of usages,
"die nicht spezifisch altbabylonisch sind, sondern auch spatern bez.
the
Hebrew
tradition.
of world history.
If
it
we have a
fixed
See
S.
INTRODUCTION
XIX
on a basis of fact
oral tradition
is
Ethnological theories.
2.
pressed above
(p. xvii
f.)
The
negative
conclusion ex-
life in
susceptible of illustration
embodied
in
we
We shall
in
migratory movements,
and
tribal divisions
fusions,
and
Ewald * and
since
variety of theories.
it
has given
rise to
an extraordinary
it
into
fall
two groups
The
theories in
the
narratives as ideal projections into the past of relations subsisting, or conceptions formed, after the final settlement in
Canaan
try to extract
deny a
story,
solid tradition of
* Hist, oflsr.
t So
Sta.
We.
GVI,
i.
145
ff.,
ZATW,
i.
tr.
112
flf.,
318
ff.],
347
ff.
Isr.
undjiid. Gesch. 11
flf.
;;
XX
INTRODUCTION
tion to those
As a specimen
to him,
was so reduced that it might have been submerged, but for the arrival
of a fresh contingent from Mesopotamia under the name Jacob (the
names, except Abraham's, are all tribal or national). This reinforcement consisted of four groups, of which the Leah-group was the oldest
and strongest. The tribe of Joseph then aimed at the hegemony, but
was overpowered by the other tribes, and forced to retire to Egypt.
thus deprived of its natural support, was assailed by
Reuben but the attempt was foiled, and Reuben
Subsequently the whole of the tribes were driven to
lost his birthright.
seek shelter in Egypt, when Joseph took a noble revenge by allowing
The Bilhah-group,
them
to settle
Israel, 29
It
by
side in the
its
will
Egypt
{Hist, of
frontier province of
ff. ).
we have
seen
that there
(p. xii)
and migrations.
name
It
is
by various phases
As regards the
a true principle at
somehow
inferior to
The
* Guthe {GVI, 1-6) has formulated a set of five rules which he thinks
can be used (with tact !) in retranslating the genealogical phraseology
INTRODUCTION
idea of migration
is
XXI
less trustworthy.
still
{e.g. that
37^^^*
Certainly not
of Joseph from
pace Steuernagel)
Even when
movements of
tribes may be necessary corollaries of the assumed relationships between them {e.g. Jacob's journey to Harran
p.
357); and it will be difficult to draw the line between these
The case of Abraham is no doubt a
and real migrations.
the ethnological background
apparent, the
is
strong one
at
all,
his
(or
We
cannot
feel
altogether doubtful
forced
if this
movement of the
the
tribe of
Joseph to Egypt
advance
in
and journeys to
ethnological
is
breakdown of the
The obvious
truth
meets us
and the theory
patriarchal legends
stultifies itself
by as-
It will
fill
in his
scheme
fit
into his
extension of
its
principles.
neglects
it.
on the consistent
The consequence
is
endless
INTRODUCTION
XXll
diversity in detail,
in general out-
line.*
It is
He would
INTRODUCTION
The patriarchs as
3.
i7idividuals,
Xxiii
We come,
through
its
own
some
retained
true impression
a picture true in
every
tradition,
may have
refers.
in the last
detail
it
is
it
be recoverable from
ages of the monarchy.
will
in the earliest
to which
numerous and
it
varied,
tions
some elements of actual reminiscence of the premovements which determined the subsequent
historic
tradition, which traces the origin of the nation no further than Moses
and the Exodus. There are indications that in an earlier phase of the
patriarchal tradition the definitive conquest of Canaan was carried back
to Jacob and his sons (chs. 34. 38. 48^^)
^^ Meyer's view this does not
necessarily imply that the narratives refer to a time subsequent to
.
Joshua.
tradition,
INTRODUCTION
XXIV
judgement has
its
contrary
falls
effect.
and one
value,
The
is
and
[b)
to be concentrated are
patriarchs
in
(a)
tion.
(a)
It is
maxim
We
that tradition
as Abraham,
and Joseph into the imagination of the
Israelites
and amongst possible avenues of entrance we
must certainly count it as one, that they were real men,
who lived and were remembered. What other explanations
can be given ? The idea that they were native creations of
Hebrew mythology (Goldziher) has, for the present at least,
fallen into disrepute
and there remain but two theories as
to account for the entrance of such figures
Isaac,
Jacob,
;
that
viz.,
deities.
INTRODUCTION
XXV
name Abram
of the
'
Field of
Abram
'
in
There
is
writers to put
Abraham on a
different plane
patriarchs,
An
many
important element
he represents.
in
No
but the
It is this
Abraham with
it
still
phantasy.
If there
be any truth
in the description of
legend
we may
his
may
life
be.*
colouring.
,"
INTRODUCTION
XXVI
called
is
What
it
really concerns us to
And
it is
know
is
Hebrew
that
we do
It is
tion
it
is
justice to the
spirit
of the
tradition.
Some attempts
looked at
biblical narrative
seems to us disappointing
in the
extreme.
and ideas of
Moses
just as well as with Abraham, is more than we have a right
In short, positive proof, such as would satisfy
to affirm.
the canons of historical criticism, of the work of Abraham is
Abraham.
distinctive institutions
not available.
if
What we
can say
is,
is
just
it
and
this fact is of a
INTRODUCTION
nature to evoke that centripetal
XXVll
memory
mark and
*
intensification of
In
the second place, the appearance of a prophetic personality, such as Abraham is represented to have been, is a
phenomenon with many analogies in the history of religion.
The ethical and spiritual idea of God which is at the founda-
and nothing
piety
religion, first
became a
force in
human
aff"airs.
nothing.
As we read the
story,
It is difficult
grown out
we may well
we are face to
of
trust the
essential significance
The
g'eneral
was never
Abrahamic migration
significance of the
movements of
religious
thought
relation
to the
the theme of
als Babylonier, Joseph als
in the
in
East
is
INTRODUCTION
XXVlll
In
Preservation
5.
traditions.
all
the short
is
Book of Genesis
part of the
description,
single
tales,
itself,
and a satisfying
conclusiorr.
unities
kind detach
'of this
mostly
stand, in
The
their origin.
and of the
composed of single
history of
Abraham,
is
almost entirely
When we
* Cf.
Gu.
der Sagen
of
XXXII,
" this
is
to
whose
mode
greatly indebted.
**
of narraKunstform
INTRODUCTION
tion begins to change.
XXIX
their original
in
not
we come
till
to the history of
made up
indeed,
number of
of a
Joseph's
but
they are made to merge into one another, so that each
derives its interest from its relation to the whole, and ends
is,
incidents
(except
This no doubt
more frequent
popularity and
is
of
The short
stories of Genesis,
Lord are
ductions
in
of
works of
exquisite
own kind
theirs.
They
fireside
gossip,
but
almost as
art,
bear
Now, between
some
p. xxx).
random prounmistakable
the
already at
is
secure
on
Were
adrift
with
preservation
their
original form,
and
the people ?
Or
a special class of
it
of the narratives,
and
welded into
they cast
nothing to
its
present shape
And
(2),
under whose
was gradually
how
is
this
whole
XXX
INTRODUCTION
Was
use of writing?
the
work of
and syste-
collecting
commenced
already
To such
given,
(i)
it
not
is
possible to discriminate
accurately
On
this
assumption, too,
we can
for
best underit
is
evident
use of writing,
of
all
it
is
as an aid to the
memory
As
came
(2)
it
to
in
the
in first
and
that
left
In this
from
father
copied
some guidance
in
the
and
parallel
p. xliii
ff.
practically
below).
before us in
two
is
The
closely
contemporaneous recensions
Since there
lies
(see
made independently
of each other,
it
documents.
When we
find,
further, that
we must assume a
very consider-
I^ise
p.
92
ff.
INTRODUCTION
XXXI
We
conjecture.
cannot
tell
certain
for
what kind
of
nor whether
it
was
stage of translation.
first
We
done
may
in
But we
Or we may
national epic.f
work
the time of
Samuel, were foci of enthusiasm for the national cause, and
might conceivably have devoted themselves to the propaga-
the
to
Or,
we may assume,
among the Arabs,
finally,
in Israel, as
and such
mental
activities
sources.
It
is
which
The one
must be allowed
lie
behind
our
certainty
for the
complex
earliest
literary
unity
its realisation in
no reason
we have
1904-5) to resolve
If his theory should be established,
ii.,
INTRODUCTION
XXXll
work
The
is
to
the Fragmentary
Hypothesis of
INTRODUCTION
The
been
Israel, the
among
briefly
indicated
peculiar relation to
of the world
God was
show how
historical
its
position
how
particular,
in
to
is
ii),
(p.
the nations
XXXlll
its
'
'
><
clue to the
main
book
divisions of the
is
and convenient
I.
II.
III.
IV.
book
INTRODUCTION
XXXIV
A detailed
is
commonly held by
It is
marked
'"'/n[i],
which occurs eleven times in the book: 2^*5^*6^ 10^ 11^" 11^ 2^^"^ 25^^
36^ 36^ 37^.
Transposing 2^ to the beginning, and disregarding 36'
arbitrary proceedings),
(both
scheme
25'^"^^
and
is
we
of no practical utility,
actually adopted
for
it
is
his
theoretically
it is
Here
it
37^^-50^^;
will suflfice to
point out the incongruity that, while the histories of Noah and Isaac
under their own Toledoih, those of Abraham, Jacob, and Joseph fall
under the T6lM6iJi of their respective fathers. See, further, p. 40 f.
fall
7.
The Book
position
Pentateuchal
of
criticism.
literary
first
in
It
strategic
was the
1753,! to the
positive achievement
Having noticed the significant alternation of the divine names in different sections of
the book, and having convinced himself that the phenomenon
in this
department of research.
two
writers,
use of the
name
Q^n^?^,
^^J\\
twelve.
T\rh\r\
nap m.
(ist ed.).
il
INTRODUCTION
XXXV
history
is
a deeper reason
why
this particular
While the
confident assertions of
single instance in
'
same
for the
(10 in all
whole Pent.).
INTRODUCTION
XXXVl
Dahse urges
for
niiT,
ffir
Synagogue
and others
lectionary
but
why some
consecutively the
first
name
new vocabulary,
atmosphere, in order to feel how paltry all
such artificial explanations are in comparison with the hypothesis that
the names are distinctive of different documents.
The experience
repeats itself, not perhaps quite so convincingly, again and again
throughout the book and though there are cases where the change of
manner is not obvious, still the theory is vindicated in a sufficient
number of instances to be worth carrying through, even at the expense
of a somewhat complicated analysis, and a very few demands (see
p. xlviiif.) on the services of a redactor to resolve isolated problems.
(5) It was frankly admitted by Kuenen long ago (see Ond. i. pp. 59, 62)
that the test of the divine names is not by itself a sufficient criterion of
source or authorship, and that critics might sometimes err through
a too exclusive reliance on this one phenomenon.* Nevertheless the
opinion can be maintained that the
is far superior to the Vns., and
that its use of the names is a valuable clue to the separation of documents.
Truth is sometimes stranger than fiction and, however surprising it
may appear to some, we can reconcile our minds to the belief that the
sudden change
representation,
in the divine
and
coincides with a
spiritual
MT
LOT^,
names
is
but one of
many marks
ff".,
where more than ./?/?>' such distinguishing
and that after Ex. 6, where this particular criterion
disappears, the diff"erence is quite as obvious as before.
As regards J
and E, the analysis, though sometimes dependent on the divine names
(see Dri.
131
alone,
is
INTRODUCTION
XXXVll
MT does
MT
modern documentary
name
the
two
Elohist
confused.
It is
diflferent
cvn^Jj^
so that under
divine
succeeded
in
all
to add. t
confined to Genesis,
it
had
results of the
In par-
Die Quellen der Genesis und die Art ihrer Zusammensetzung (1853).
Hupfeld's discovery had partly been anticipated by Ilgen {Urkunden
*
des ersten
criticism
by
its
oldest source
dispelled
the position of
We.
INTRODUCTION
XXXVlll
ticular,
Moses while the former states emphatically that God was not known
by that name to the patriarchs.* Consistency demanded that these
writers should use the generic name for Deity up to this point while J,
who was bound by no such theory, could use mn' from the first, f From
Ex. 6 onwards P regularly uses nirr E's usage fluctuates between 'k
and '' (perhaps a sign of different strata within the document), so that
;
does not
lie
and of the
reflex results of
One
is
in the Pent.,
in the art. of
+ For a
Riehm,
especially p. 64
ff.
INTRODUCTION
XXXIX
fairly faced,
it
was
in
remaining source P
though
is
JE
-f-
D.
(3)
The
it
independent work,
patriarchal history.
will, it is
INTRODUCTION
xl
we must
subject.
here
to
refer
works
devoted to the
specially
**
'
'
'
clinging to
The first is the denial of the distinction between J and E (216 ff.).
As soon as Hupf. had effected the separation of E from P, it ought to
(i)
to suggest, that the sections thus disentangled are really parts of J (217). And yet, even to Dr. Orr, the matter
The
is not quite so simple as this, and he makes another concession.
and so he is driven to admit that
distinction in the divine names remains
but different literary reJ and E were, not indeed independent works,
;
existed separately and he cannot possibly know how far their agreement extended. The issue between him and his critical opponents is,
nevertheless, perfectly clear they hold that J and E are independent
recensions of a common body of tradition, while he maintains that they
;
* The following may be mentioned Kuenen, Historisch-critisch onderzoek naar het ontstaan en de verzameling van de boeken des Ouden Ver:
i.
(1885) [Eng.
Ahhandlungen
(transl.
tr.,
into
INTRODUCTION
xli
What
mn' or cnhtt.
between J and
linguistic evidence is very
is
much
original
The
pendent work.
facts that
is
now
it is
its
narrative (even
any reason
if
it
history presupposes a
'
'
'
'
INTRODUCTION
Xlll
full
if
'
the Joseph-stories
the
groundwork of
chs.
i.
20.
28^"^
6^-9^'.
;
(2)
4. (^^-"^ 22.
transferred to
Yahwe
is
work of Genesis.
It is
(it
contains,
of in the words cited is simply the question whether the three documents,
P, E, and J, were combined by a single redaction, or whether two of
them were first put together and afterwards united with the third.
Dr. Orr, on the other hand, is thinking of "the labours of original
working with a common aim and towards a common end "
composers^
(375).
is
nothing
INTRODUCTION
xlii
however, leg"ends of all the first three classes !), Yah we being- to the
compiler simply one of the g"ods and must therefore have orig-inated
before the Exile
a lower limit is 700 B.C. This collection was soon
enlarg-ed by the addition of leg-ends not less ancient than its own
and
;
work
of the
we cannot
through
was
set in after
tell
The
as polytheistic in
monotheistic manipulation
is
The
8.
E we
In J and
ofJ and E,
collective authorship
had
at
in
first
correspondence in
close
their
is
When we com-
outline
is
and contents.
The
does not seem
have embraced the primitive period, but to have commenced with Abraham. But from the point where E strikes
to
into the current of the history (at ch. 20, with a few earlier
The
document
What
is
is
room
land at Shechem,
peculiar to J are
Sodom,
Esau,
igi-^s
25^^"^^
15,
birthright, 252^"^^
in
which there is
the analysis followed in the comto which there is no trace of a parallel
On
33^^"^"
:
the theophany at
1930-38
in 2S^'^ "'^-
Those
the destruction of
^he birth of Jacob and
;
the Isaac-narratives, 26
(?)
.;
INTRODUCTION
xliv
Thus
na.rr3.t10n
changes
indeed surprising,
in the
is
that the
Abraham
p. xxviii f.),
It is this extraordinarily
equally noticeable in J and in E.
close parallelism, both in matter and form, which proves
is
reduced to writing.
"'*
In
the body of the commentary, and need only be recapitulated here.
been most clearly made out in the Primseval
J, composite structure has
History (chs. i-ii), where at least two, and probably more, strands of
Gu. seems to have shown that
narrative can be distinguished (pp. 1-4).
common
*
One
tradition
is
which
behind both.
lies
the diPFerences are not of a kind that can be accounted for in this
(see Procksch, 305 f).
way
INTRODUCTION
xlv
narrative
'
'
While the
now
some kind
is
no agreement as to the
interpretation which best explains all the phenomena.
Some
generally recognised, there
is
is
certainly very
much
*
school.' f
It is
very
difficult
to results far
(see p. xxxif.).
INTRODUCTION
xlvi
complexity
in
authorship
may
documents
the
If
we
could get
through with only a J^ and J^, E^, E^ etc., i.e.^ with the
theory of one main document supplemented by a few later
additions,
schools.'
it would be absurd to speak of
And
'
The
them.
theory,
while not
necessarily excluding
the
medium
of suggesting a
and that
is all
of investigation.
Whether
it
is
altogether so
artificial
and
must judge
seems
to
go
for himself.
far
although he does
justice to the
INTRODUCTION
9.
Characteristics of
xlvii
to
Literary
Prophecy*
It is
as, in the
tradition,
and
if
of individuals,
If J
main, recensions of a
it is
much
differences loses
of
its interest
and
two well-defined
in point of fact
literary types is
have to find a place in one and the same picture. Our object
is simply to specify some outstanding differences which
justify the separation of sources, and which may assist us
later to determine the relative ages of the two documents.
J presents, on the whole, a more uniform literary texture
here
than E.
It is
OT
and
in
Genesis
it
rarely,
if
ever, falls
in
level.
in the
power
and character:
to
life
inimitable
emotions find
pathos
Rachel
* Driver,
LOT,
p. 119.
is
(48^), or his
tender-
INTRODUCTION
xlvill
in
E.
Where
tendency,
it is
found
in several
show a
of a leg-end which in
is
The
So again, E
(ch. 20)
introduces
material comprised
in
literary differences
case
is,
Yahwe
in J
and Elohim
in
E.*
But round
this are
grouped
when they
it
sources.
While
is fully
Eerdmans).
;:
'
INTRODUCTION
xl IX
ni.T
i4/);.r
2211-
in
where
28-' 3i'*">
scribal error
The
characteristic of J
J
the latter,
4725.29 2o4
^1. 17.25
+ ,_m{3
4420. |n
(without
N2iD,
ig5. 8
253. B'S
2^
3),
'^i?jOn
68 i83'
19* 24^^'"^^
P). n"?'
+ . V^'
(in
sexual sense),
i6i-
5-
3020b ^^30^^
35
12. 43
326. 23 33I.
2.
(20^4 30^8
common
also
P)
in
29. 31. 32
38^+
192'
times
10. 19. 31
E and P
(in
once each).
W, in
Gen.).
(in
^ ^_.r^^2^^
about 40 times,
in
3!! 4I5
about 6
and
'
younger
'),
13
29^- ^8 42^3.
.^naa'
(^f.
4o8ff.
4i8ff.+
jnne, 405^-
41^^+
dujj,
4128;
no'ts'p,
forms
the occasional use of long forms of the nominal
42^1]+
by a
The
+ ), and
documents are
The
cross
of the Hex.
in the
(-t-)
is
INTRODUCTION
is
is
it
indicates
sacrifice.
The most
manner of His
the dream
^iii. 24 462),
5-
or night-vision (15I
20-^-
21^2 [cf.
i*] 22iff-
28io-
In this respect
E undoubtedly
represents a
more advanced
The
national feeling
J.
scheue
the
buoyant and hopeful
heidnische Stimmung,' the sombre and melancholy view of
life which marks the primaeval history of J disappears absolutely when the history of the immediate ancestors of Israel
The strongly pessimistic strain which some
is reached.
in
both
sources
is
document
is
INTRODUCTION
writers note as characteristic of
ever in Genesis
and so
far as
E
it
finds
H
no expression what
it
we
It
is
commencing
movement which,
Israel,
The
decisive fact
prophecy
find
is
that the
no echo
in
INTRODUCTION
Hi
we have
with which
These
to do.
Israelitish
of
deities,
its
the
means of recovering
Not only are these conceptions absent
Yahwe's favour.
were composed.
religious ideas
For, though
may exist
difficult to
it is
the documents
is
by side
side
when
in the
same community,
is
This
strata of E,
to JE,
which do
ID.
Redaction ofJE.
critics still
lies
The
We. Kuen.
Sta,
Meyer
16^"^'*
21^"^*
(J)
(E)
produces an
J's explana-
al.
so Luther, Procksch,
al.
al.
INTRODUCTION
tion of the
name
Issachar, with
its
(30''')
Hii
Reuben
an element of
the orig"inaI tradition which J has altered in favour of Judah.
A
peculiarly instructive case is i2'''"' (J) 20 (E) 26'^*'^- (J), where it seems
to us (though Kuenen and others take a different view) that Gunkel is
clearly right in holding that J has preserved both the oldest and the
youngest form of the legend, and that E represents an intermediate
the Joseph narratives the leadership of
||
(E)
is
||
stage.
before that.
its
two documents.
INTRODUCTION
llV
Between these
precise determination.
guide us to a more
loss of the
(Is.
7^^),
of Isaiah
Judah
was
the 8th cent., and
show
felt
in
that there
if
E belongs
more
ft'.
INTRODUCTION
Iv
and
Manasseh)
brightest figure in
common
places
Mahanaim,
all
to
Ki.
recensions
Shechem,
Bethel,
resort of
5^ 8^*,
The sacred
both
Beersheba
Peniel,
Israelite territory;
(Am.
"'^
the
was
graphically to Judah,
favourite
The
Rachel,
for
19^).
pilgrims
It is
when we look
at the diver-
and
sistent
clear.
Whereas E never
It is
26).
(35^^),
(Jos.
The
*
alone
who
and Joshua
(^^),
We.
Prol.^ 317.
It is
al.).
xliii)
(^),
of Joseph
nearly
all
of local
Fripp, Luther,
all in
INTRODUCTION
Ivi
Judasan interest:
legend of the
i8 the scene
in
Dead Sea
basin
Hebron;
is
igSOff-
19^-^8
jg
tribe
was too
the
narratives).
These
to
Judah
indications
(49^^- 35^^*",
make
it
at
least
the Joseph
relatively
probable that in J we have a Judaean recension of the patriarchal tradition, while E took its shape in the northern
kingdom.
operation, which
and
care,
strands
it is
glosses.
Of
tions, of similar
in J
some of
may
these, however,
be later
number of short
addi-
passages
we seem
to detect a
is
15.
In these
tenure of the
at
some
al.
INTRODUCTION
1 1.
It is
Ivii
all
The Code
as a whole
is,
was
to systematise the
accumulated
mass of
ritual regulations
in the
in
the legislative
Here, however,
of later material.
the great historical
the
we have
We.
to
do only with
Pent., the
document
distinguished by
as
f.,
etc.), it
No
critical
of this work,
operation
down even
is
easier or
more
which
it
is
'
Orr's assertion {POT, 348 f.) that P's account of the Flood must have
contained the episodes of the birds and the sacrifice, because both are
in the Babylonian version, will be worth considering when he has made
it
if
probable either that P had ever read the Babylonian story, or that,
he had, he would have wished to reproduce it intact. As matter of
(P'^),
which
is
older
INTRODUCTION
Iviii
fact,
neither
presently,
dwelt
in the
cities of the
cities of the
dwelt.
Sarai,
Abram's
wife, took
Hagar
wife,
children.
So
Abram
Abram
had dwelt ten years in the land of Canaan, and gave her to
her husband for a wife to him. ^* And Hagar bore to Abram a son, and
Abram called the name of his son whom Hagar bore to him Ishmael.
^^ And Abram was 86 years old when Hagar bore Ishmael to Abram.
17^ And when Abram was 99 years old, Yahwe appeared to Abram,
and said to him," etc. Here follows the account of the covenant with
Abraham, the change of his name and that of Sarai, the institution of
circumcision, and the announcement of the birth of Isaac to Sarah
The narrative is resumed in 21^*^ "And F^A?^^ did to Sarah
(ch. 17).
as he had spoken, ^^ at the appointed time which God had mentioned.
^ And Abraham called the name of his son who was born to him, whom
Sarah bore to him, Isaac. ^ And Abraham circumcised Isaac his son
when he was 8 days old, as God had commanded him. ^ And
Abraham was 100 years old when Isaac his son was born to him.
23^ And the life of Sarah was 127 years ; ^ and Sarah died in Kiryath
Arba, that is Hebron, in the land of Canaan." This introduces the
story of the purchase of Machpelah as a burying-place (ch. 23), and
this brings us to
2^ ** And these are the days of the years of the life
And
of Abraham which he lived: 175 years; ^ and he expired.
Abraham died in a good old age, an old man and full [of years], and
was gathered to his father's kin. ^ And his sons Isaac and Ishmael
buried him in the cave of Machpelah, in the fiel^ of Ephron the son of
Zohar, the Hittite, which is opposite Mamre ^^ the field which Abraham
bought from the sons of Heth there was Abraham buried, and Sarah
^^ And after the death of Abraham, God blessed Isaac his
his wife.
son." The reader can judge for himself whether a narrative so continuous as this, every isolated sentence of which has been detached
from its context by unmistakable criteria of the style of P, is likely to
have been produced by the casual additions of a mere supplementer of
an older work.
And
if
19-^, let
him
INTRODUCTION
Hx
note at the
that verse
is,
Paddan Aram,
of his marriage to
'
it
certainly
was not
at Machpelah, as in
in
(see p. 538
f.).
And
so on.
patriarchal households.
It is inconceivable that a supplementer
should thus contradict his original at every turn, and at the same time
leave it to tell its own story.
When we find that the passages of an
opposite tenor to JE form parts of a practically complete narrative, we
cannot avoid the conclusion that P^ is an independent document, which
has been preserved almost entire in our present Book of Genesis. The
question then arises whether these discrepancies spring from a divergent
in the
tradition followed
INTRODUCTION
Ix
The
central
is
is
the institution
the Tabernacle,
by Moses at Mount
whole previous history of mankind is a preparation. The Mosaic dispensation is the last
of four world-ages from the Creation to the Flood, from
Noah to Abraham, from Abraham to Moses, and from
Moses onwards. Each period is inaugurated by a divine
revelation, and the last two by the disclosure of a new name
El Shaddai to Abraham (17^), and Yahwe to Moses
of God
after its heavenly antitype,
erected,
For
Sinai.
(Ex.
of
6^).
the Sabbath
(2^^-)
blood
(9^^-);
circumcision (17)
fashion.
Religion
is
INTRODUCTION
command
of God.
Ixi
the other hand, such as the origin of evil, the writer evinces
It
God
(cf.
22.
2^.^^^-
32^^-
P*^
life
of the type of
istic
is
Gn.
2^^".
Ex.
cf.
31^^^);
angels, dreams,
to.
'
1^1.
22f.
'
^-9. 13 ^^gs^
Ex.
6^),
'
is
and the
makes
it clear that P's departure from the older tradifrom a deliberate intention to exclude sensuous
imagery from the representation of Godhead.
tion springs
It
remains to consider,
it is
clear that
INTRODUCTION
Ixii
In the
tradition closely akin to, but not identical with, that of J.
history of the patriarchs there seems no reason to suppose that he had
name
of the
(47^'^^)
Jacob to his sons (48^^). But these are practically all the incidents to
which V^ attaches any sort of significance of their own and even these
derive much of their importance from their relation to the chronological
scheme into which they are fitted. Hence to say that P's epitome would
be unintelligible apart from JE, is to confuse his point of view with
our own. It is perfectly true that from P alone we should know very
little of the characters of the patriarchs, of the motives which governed
But
their actions, or of the connexion between one event and another.
these are matters which P had no interest in making intelligible.' He
The indiis concerned solely with events, not with causes or motives.
vidual is sufficiently described when we are told whose son he was, how
long he lived, what children he begot, and such like. He is but a link
and even where he is the
in the generations that fill up the history
recipient of a divine revelation, his selection for that privilege depends
on his place in the divine scheme of chronology, rather than on any
;
'
'
'
The
style
and
qualifications
difference
the qualities of the legal mind, in its stereotyped terminology, its aim at precise and exhaustive statement, its
monotonous
repetitions,
and
its
general determination to
INTRODUCTION
1 Xlll
The
jurist's love of
facility
in
the construction
of
as
well
whole.
in
It is
full effect
monotony of
this characteristic
On
markedly
is
of literature.
Though capable
the other
at
times of rising to an
47'^"^^),
absent
is
is
and
life
of the
Even
in the
in ch. 23,
which
is
measurement.
lifelike
narrative
itself in
the
4f%
'
lists
of Dri.
(/.c.)
i.
pp. 208-221).
INTRODUCTION
Ixiv
pf,
swarming- things
i^ y^^+ (only
P and
'
i22. 28
^8^ (Ex.
in
Lv. 20>
i',
'
'
._To
+
may
thesc
criticism.
it
Dt.
is
in
nearer determination of
That the
INTRODUCTION
Code as a whole
Is
than Ezekiel
later
IxV
is
unknown
and
origin
Levites, which is
and of which we find the
Ezk. 44^~^^ is presupposed as
It is possible, how4. 8, etc.).
in
3.
to a stratum of the
which case P^ might very
well be earlier than Ezk., or even than the Exile.
The
question does not greatly concern us here.
For the understanding of Genesis, it is enough to know that P^, both in
conceptions and its attitude towards the
its theological
national tradition, represents a phase of thought much later
than J and E.
ever,
The view
in
that Ps
is
and recognising the priestly status of the entire tribe of Levi, just
as in Dt. (Nu. 17I6-24 and P^ in its original form). If that fact could be
established, it would go far to show that the document is older than
Ezk. It is admitted both by Kuenen and Wellhausen {Prol.^ 116) that
the disparity of priests and Levites is accentuated in the later strata of
P as compared with P, but that it is not recognised in P? is not clear.
As to pre-Exilic origin, the positive arguments advanced by Pro. are
not very cogent ; and it is doubtful whether, even on his own ground,
he has demonstrated more than the possibility of so early a date. In
Genesis, the only fact which points in that direction is one not mentioned
by Pro. viz. that the priestly Table of Nations in ch. 10 bears internal
evidence of having been drawn up some considerable time before the
but that may be sufficiently explained
5th century B.C. (p. 191 below)
by the assumption that the author of P^ made use of pre-existing documents in the preparation of his work.
(P^),
The
Pent,
in
is
the amalgamation of
P with
formation of the
process has
a priori
though
it
naturally difficult
is
redactional changes of
this
(cf.
to
distinguish
22. 23
The
INTRODUCTION
Ixvi
was
appears to have
made
but he
it
slight lacuncB
which occur
in
after ch.
25
away
That
it
(P^
brought down to a later period, the terminus ad quern being the borrowing of the Jewish Pent, by
final
redaction
is
of
JE and
tradition, or
place in an authoritative
So We. Di.
Kit. al.
record
But
of God's revelation of
f So Corn. Ho.
al.
INTRODUCTION
in
which the
spiritual
insight of the
XVll
We
know
of P's manifesto
were at work
of Jeremiah,
in
necessary as
the individualism
Isaiah,
the
And
to these
we may
surely
add the vein of childlike piety which turned aside from the
abstractions and formulas of the Priestly document, to find
its nutriment in the immortal stories through which God
spoke to the heart then, as He speaks to ours to-day.
COMMENTARY,
THE PRIMAEVAL HISTORY.
Chs. I-XI.
It has been
shown
in the
Introduction
book of Genesis
(p. xxxiii)
which
and the history
These chapters are
of primitive mankind prior to the call of Abraham.
composed of excerpts from two of the main sources of the Pent, the
Attempts have been made
Priestly Code, and the Yahwistic document.
from time to time {e.^. by Schrader, Dillmann, and more recently
Winckler) to trace the hand of the Elohist in chs. i-ii but the closest
examination has failed to produce any substantial evidence that E is
division of the
the
first (chs.
is
GENESIS
variety of
sections, viz.
life
i.
An
I-XI
should have compiled a narrative from a number of detached legends
which he reported just as he found them, regardless of their internal
consistency.
Nevertheless, there seems sufficient evidence to warrant
the conclusion that (as Wellhausen has said) we have to do not merely
with aggregates but with sequences although to unravel perfectly the
various strands of narrative may be a task for ever beyond the re;
(a)
ceive that
We.
4i-i6a
and on chs.
is
jji-9 g2o-27^
51. 2.4.JQ9
ni.T
down
to 4^),
seem too
One
subtle
feels that
(i) chs.
2. 3.
io9? 61-2?;
(3)
the Flood-legend,
added later to the other two, by a redactor who also compiled a Sethite
genealogy (425*) and inserted the story of Cain and Abel, and
s^^
the Song of Lamech i^^^-).
{d) Gunkel {Gen^ i ff.) proceeds on somewhat different lines from his predecessors. He refuses in principle
to admit incongruity as a criterion of source, and relies on certain
verses which bear the character of connecting links between different
sections. The most important is 5^^ (belonging to the Sethite genealogy),
where we read **This (Noah) shall comfort us from our labour and
from the toil of our hands on account of the ground which Yahwe has
Here there is an unmistakable reference backward to 3^',
cursed."
and forward to 920^-. Thus we obtain a faultless sequence, forming
the core of a document where nin' was not used till 4^8, and hence called
J% consisting of: one recension of the Paradise story; the (complete)
Sethite genealogy and Noah's discovery of wine.
From this sequence
.
CREATION
(p)
ment (JJ). Again, 9^^^* fomi a connecting link between the Flood and the
Table of Nations but Gu. distinguishes two Yahwistic strata in the
Table of Nations and assigns one to each of his documents similarly
The legend of Cain and
with the section on the Tower of Babel.
Abel is regarded (with We. Bu. Sta. al.) as an editorial expansion.
In this commentary the analysis of Gu. is adopted in the main
but with the following reservations (i) The account of the Flood
cannot be naturally assigned to J-", because of its admitted incompatiGu.,
bility with the assumption of the Cainite genealogy (see above).
indeed, refuses to take such inconsistencies into account but in that
case there is no reason for giving the Flood to JJ rather than to J^
There is no presumption whatever that only two documents are in
evidence and the chapters in question show peculiarities of language
which justify the assumption of a separate source (Sta.), say ]^.
(2) With the Flood passage goes the Yahwistic Table of Peoples
(9^^^*).
The arguments for two Yahwists in ch. 10 are hardly decisive
and J^ at all events had no apparent motive for attaching an ethnographic survey to the name of Noah. (3) Gunkel's analysis of 11^"*
appears on the whole to be sound but even so there is no ground for
On the
identifying the two components with J and JJ respectively.
contrary, the tone of both recensions has a striking affinity with that
of JJ
note especially (with We.) the close resemblance in form and
substance between 1 1^ and 3^^^ Thus
;
Je
Jd
65-822*
Jr
^^1-16*^
Jj
24b_-il9*-23 .25f.
c2
gaO-a?
.
10*;
glSf.
be found.
will
I -II.
I.
3.
short
chaos
followed by an
(i^-2)
is
world
in six days,
by a
(i)
darkness,
^"^
;
(2)
two masses, one above and the other below the 'firmament,'
^~^
(3) the separation of land and sea through the collect;
ing
the formation
its
*'one place,"
^-
^^
(4)
mantle of vegetation,
of the heavenly
bo^g^^^-i^
bogl^''
i^^Bfds,
W>
the
^^"^^
(6)
20-23.
the
^^j
i-II. 3
I.
5
24. 25
of
bare outline of
Genesis
section of
is
unknown
the opening
contents that
its
universe
science
to
whose
originated.
origin
It
a world
is
here described,
is
the
came
ally
into being,
(Wellhausen, Prol.^
we
how
it
actu-
296).
But the
fundamental
differ-
may
be,
it
not a revelation of
is
The
fact referred to
on the attempt
to
theory
moon
it
is
exegetically indefensible.
(2)
is
The
essential to their
and
day and night, and even
creation of sun
and their whole development compressed into special periods, are all
opposed to geological evidence.
For a thorough and impartial
discussion of these questions see Driver, Genesis, 19-26.
It is there
shown conclusively, not only that the modern attempts at reconciliation
fail,
but (what
is
The
at issue
is
not one of
is
CREATION
(p)
physical fact which can be brought into line with the results
The key
of modern science.
must be
to its interpretation
found elsewhere.
In order to understand the true character of the narra-
follow certain
common
lines
of
Hebrew
shown
later (below, p. 45
is
if.),
we
The
in
at the
residuum
was
tradition
moulded
of a particular religion
retained
and
find
it
ample
that the
in this fact
tion,
There
lation
evidence, as will be
plastic,
and there-
same
of unassimilated
material
cosmogony
of
its
is
this
of
Hebrew
religion
it
was gradually
which were
and
purity of these ideas that the narrative mainly owes that
character of sobriety and sublimity which has led many to
regard it as the primitive revealed cosmogony, of which all
formed into a vehicle
It
is
to the depth
10).
The
cosmogony
classical expression.
idea of God,
in all its
first
proclaimed
lies,
there-
The great
h er^ embodied in a
\^^B|e, which
lays
I.
i-II. 3
world
is
personal
The
ever do.
created^
Being
that
and
universe
it.
that the
is
it
transcending the
independently of
statement of the
central doctrine
of a
existing
Theogony
is
entirely banished.
sentation goes
It is,
indeed, doubtful
if
the repre-
postulated (see on
v.^)*,
affirms that
'very good'
its
(v.^^),
parts
i.e.
was
that
it
'
much more
impossible to decide
is
how
CREATION
(p)
The
(And God
MT
introduces (both in
and
eight works of creation (vv> " i*- ^o- 24. 26)_
ffi) each of the
(j)
And it was so occurs literally 6 times in MT, but virtually 7 times
^- " ^''
i.e. in connection with all the works except the sixth (vv.f'^- '
(a)
fiat
said, Let
2*-
in
8");
made
aSc
.
times
also in v. 20.
with
in
(&
(vv.'-
The execution
(c)
variations)
of the
fiat
(And God
MT
is
(^ The
25.27),
sentence
and
of divine
approval (And God saw that it was good) is pronounced over each
work except the second (in ffir there also), though in the last instance
^"^ ^2. 18. 21. 26. 8i^
with a significant variation: see vv. *
jjie
(^)
t^^^-
naming
{And God
the three
acts
of separation
(vv,^-
8-
^*').
called
(/)
is
And God
peculiar to
blessed
is
The occurrence
of the
may
successive efforts of
many
The Seven Days' Scheme. The distribution of the eig^ht works over
six days has appeared to many critics (Ilgen, Ewald, Schrader, We.
Di. Bu. Gu. al.) a modification introduced in the interest of the
Sabbath law, and at variance with the original intention of the cosmogony. Before entering on that question, it must be pointed out that
*A
i:
is the 'ten sayings' of Pirki 'Abdth, 5,
nnoNO mcyn, where the number 10 is arrived at by adding to
the 8 fiats the two other occurrences of ncN'i in MT (vv.^s- 29).
t See, now, Sta. BTh. i. 349 and Schwally in ARW, ix. 159-175,
which have appeared since the above paragraph was written. Both
writers point out the twofold conception of the creation which runs
through the chapter and Schwally makes out a strong case for the
composition of the passage from two distinct recensions of the
familiar instance
oViyn Nn33
cosmogony.
I.
i-II. 3
'
'
See below, p. 43 ff. On the other hand there are Persian and
Etruscan analogies see p. 50.
;
CREATION
lO
(p)
the seventh
{Urgesch. 487 fF. ; cf. also Di. 15), who rightly protests against the
subsuming of the creation of heaven and that of land and sea under
one rubric as a 'separation of waters,' and gets rid of the difficulty
presented by 2^^* by reading sixth instead of sevefith (see on the verse).
Bu. urges further that the idea of the Sabbath as a day on which
is one not likely to have been entertained in the
from which the Priestly Code emanated,* and also (on the
ground of Ex. 20") that the conception of a creation in six days followed
by a divine Sabbath rest must have existed in Israel long before the
age of that document. It is to be observed that part of Bu.'s argument
(which as a whole seems to me valid against the specific form of the
theory advanced by We.) only pushes the real question a step further
back and Bu. himself, while denying that the seven days' scheme
is secondary to P, agrees with Ew. Di. and many others in thinking
that there was an earlier Hebrew version of the cosmogony in which that
scheme did not exist.
The improbability that a disposition of the cosmogony in eight
works should have obtained currency in Hebrew circles without an
attempt to bring it into some relation with a sacred number has been
urged in favour of the originality of the present setting (Holzinger, 23 f.).
That argument might be turned the other way for the very fact that
the number 8 has been retained in spite of its apparent arbitrariness
suggests that it had some traditional authority behind it. Other
objections to the originality of the present scheme are {a) the juxtaposition of two entirely dissimilar works under the third day
(6) the
separation of two closely related works on the second and third days
{c) the alternation of day and night introduced before the existence of
the planets by which their sequence is regulated (thus far Di. 15), and
{d) the unnatural order of the fourth and fifth works (plants before
heavenly bodies). These objections are not all of equal weight and
explanations more or less plausible have been given of all of them.
But on the whole the evidence seems to warrant the conclusions that
the series of works and the series of days are fundamentally incongruous, that the latter has been superimposed on the former during the
Heb. development of the cosmogony, that this change is responsible for
some of the irregularities of the disposition, and that it was introduced
certainly not later than P, and in all probability long before his time.
Source and Style. As has been already hinted, the section belongs
This is the unanimous opinion of all critics
to the Priestly Code (P).
who accept the documentary analysis of the Hexateuch, and it is
abundantly proved both by characteristic words and phrases, and
circles
name
'n'?N)
in Qucest.,
adloc.
(be-
wn
1
I.
p^ n.
i-IT. 3
['n n'n]
25. so^
21.24.25.26.28.30^
nSaw^
p^^
29. so^
p^
20.21^
and
.^^pj^
nn'?in
in
and even a
to
all
'
in Israel,
it
the form into which the cosmogony had been thrown by the writer
called J2.
Of direct evidence for that hypothesis (such as would be
CREATION
12
(p)
463^)
{ib.
but
when we
realise
how
little
is
known
of the diffusion of
presumption that J^ was the parthrew the Hebrew cosmogony into shape becomes
ticular writer
who
We
I.
member
many moderns
take the
of
v.^.
While
all
On
the latter
Gods creating
the heavens
and
the earth
rT'K^X'pzi
being in
Is. 29^,
(cf.
The form
n'E'Nn]
is
directly
:
13
1.
v.^
In the
be subordinate the reference of
defined by what immediately follows, and no further
Is
it
If the clause
beginning^
is
ri''SJ>N"i
But
question arises.
beginning
is
pretations
become
if
be an independent statement
it
in Jn.
and two
i^),
inter-
{a)
or
that
(b)
it
summarises
the
whole
creative
process
prevailed
'
analysis
[h)
v.^
protasis:
to create
parenthesis:
v.^
was
apodosis
v.^
.
God
Who, however,
redactional operation.
2*a in its correct
hands of
form
D'n'?N ON-13?
pxm
transposed
it
am
When
introduction,
v.^ (similarly,
this
and
Sta.
was
in the
BTh.
349).
CREATION
14
(p)
admits that
universe as a whole,
it
is
chaos
is
so designated.
the
earth
'
(v.^)
it
The
appropriate
The
the influence of ffi from a desire to exclude the idea of an eternal chaos
militates
preceding the creation, f But the fact that ZP agrees with
against that opinion. The one objection to {h) is the 'verzweifelt
* The view that v.^ describes an earlier creation of heaven and earth,
which were reduced to chaos and then re-fashioned, needs no refutation.
The Mechilta (on Ex. la*':
t See Geiger, Urschr. 344, 439, 444.
Winter and Wunsche's Germ, transl. p. 48) gives v.^ as one of thirteen
and Gei. infers that
instances of things written for King Ptolemy
The
the change was deliberately made for the reason mentioned.
reading alleged by Mech. is n'E'Nna xna D\n'?K, which gives the sense but
'
'
not the order of ffir. The other variations given are only partly verified
by our texts of ffi ; see on i^^f- 2^ 11' 18^^ 49^
I.,
15
(a)
novelty (Is.
is
that
486'-
Nu. 16^^
noteworthy that
(Ex.
is
it is
34^<>,
[J])
of result
is
extraordinnriness
it
it
[c]
is
[d)
Mac.
an idea
first
7^^.
'
Close parallels (for it is hard to see that the M'1 makes any essential
difference) are Gn. f'^ (J), 22I (E), or (with impf.), Lv. f^^ (P).
The
construction is not appreciably harsher than in the analogous case of
a'*, where it has been freely adopted.
ni3] enters fully into OT usage
only on the eve of the Exile,
Apart from three critically dubious
Is.
4^
emergence
in
prophecy
at the Exile the thought of the divine creation of the world became
prominent in the prophetic theology, and that for this reason the term
197 b;
NS
Lidzbarski,
word
is
CREATION
Description of Chaos.
2.
(p)
perhaps impossible to
a single picture,
It is
and Water
The weird
The words
are nouns
'
'
desert
to
'
the abstract
On
make
(Dinn, D^n).
very impressive.
{v.i.).
non-
The
down
[J])
'
(Ezk.
'
'
'
'
which
ZDMG,
N"i2
2. inai inn]
dSidKptTov
'
'
K4vu}/xa k.
U inanis et vaciia
2L N':pni
k.
xnx
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
case of a word with a long history behind it. The identification with
Baau, the mother of the first man in Phoen. mythology (see p. 49 f.), is
I.
But our
17
guide
perhaps Jeremiah's
which is simply that
of a darkened and devastated earth, from which life and
The idea here is probably similar, with
order have fled.
this difference, that the distinction of land and sea is
effaced, and the earth, which is the subj. of the sentence,
must be understood as the amorphous watery mass in
which the elements of the future land and sea were commingled. Darkness {sin almost invariable feature of ancient
conceptions of chaos) was upon the face of the Deep] The
Deep (Qinn) is the subterranean ocean on which the earth
Space? (Gu.).
rests
safest
of Chaos-come-again
vision
(Gn.
8^
7^^
Am.
49^^,
was formed,
superincumbent darkness.
the primal chaos
The Heb.
and
it is
the
name
doubtful
term for
sense
may
if
ocean
'
etc.)
lay bare
which,
is
therefore,
free
name
Ti'amat.
In Babylonian,
Dinn.
7*
is
narrative
is
(4^^"^^),
and
it
is
tVamatu or tdmtu
is
in
a generic
literal
(see p. 47).
The Spirit of God was brooding] not, as has
sometimes been supposed, a wind sent from God to dry
probable.
Ttamat
Dinn]
is
of Bab.
195),
and
is
i^,
Ps.
104^,
In later writings
8'^'),
is
it
CREATION
(p)
up the waters
{tH^j lEz.,
Spirit, figured as
i.
19
vii.
fF.,
233
ff.
It is
remarkable, however,
The
idea of the
is
given to
life
if
this
be
in the sequel.
Spirit
it
OT
doctrine that he
is
40^^).
(nsnip)
(2)
is
the
word brooding
but introduced
suggestiveness.
for
the
sake
of
its
religious
myth was
^o
blow
Jerome {Qucest.)-. **incubabat sive confovebat in similitudinem volucris ova calore animantis."
It is impossible to say whether brood
or hover is the exact image
here, or in Dt. 32^^,
the only other place where the Pi. occurs (the
Qal in Jer. 23^ may be a separate root). The Syriac vb. has great
latitude of meaning; it describes, e.g., the action of Elisha in laying
himself on the bod}- of the dead child (2 Ki. 4^^) and is used of angels
hovering over the dying Virgin. It is also applied to a waving of the
hands (or of fans) in certain ecclesiastical functions, etc. (see Payne
N32'3D
('
'
or 'breathe');
,S
j.21.K;iiD.
'
'
'
I.
3,
'
19
It
is
singular, however,
that of the three clauses of v.^ only the second (which includes the two
elements mentioned) exercises any influence on the subsequent descrip-
tion (for
the
T^hom
waters
of the second).
It
'
is
First
3-5.
work
Creation of
On
light.
[And]
God
first
by the phenomenon of the dawn, appears in several cosmogonies but is not expressed in any known form of the
Babylonian legend. There the creator, being the sun-god,
;
is
in
kosmos; and the antithesis of light and darkness is dramatised as a conflict between the god and the Chaos monster.
cosmogony
In Persian
Mazda
dwells,
In
is
295
of
Is.
Rel.
ii.
f.).
also, light, as
is
Comp.
iii.
'
work
to the chaos of
which
Gu. goes too far in suggesting
that the expression covers a
strong anthropomorphism
darkness
is
an element.
3. iiK
'n^i
corresponds to the
'n'l
of subsequent acts.
4.
3it3 '3
niNn]
CREATION
20
(p)
But he rightly
view of the world implied in the
series of
To
common
Judaism.
in later
And God
time
but Heb. conceives of a spatial distinction of light
and darkness, each in its own place or abode (Jb. 38^^'*).
Even the separate days and nights of the year seem thought
of as having independent and continuous existence (Jb. 3*).
in
'
difficulty in
'
rule the
day and
cosmical light diffused through the nebula from which the solar system
was evolved. It is not merely light and darkness, but day and night,
and even the alternation of evening and morning (v.^), that are represented as existing before the creation of the sun.
5.
thing
And God
is
called^ etc.\
summoned
The name
into the
field
that
by which the
of thought
belongs
to
the
full
itself.
'
'
method in
this
passage.
x")!?]
syll. n^:^] (also MiVel) a reduplicated form ('V;^ cf. Aram. N'"?^"?) see
Noldekej Mand. Gr. 109; Pratorius, ZATW, iii. 218; Kon. ii. 520.
nnx Dv] 'a first day,' or perhaps better 'one day.' On nnx as ord. see
G-K. 98 a, 134/ ; Dav. 38, R. i but cf. Wellh. Prol.^ 387.
;
'
I.
21
5,
etc.).
The Jewish day may
have begun at sunset, but it did not end at sunrise and it
is impossible to take the words as meaning- that the evening
and morning formed the first (second, etc.) day. Moreover,
there could be no evening before the day on which light
was
created.
first
al.).
One
from views of the world which are foreign to the OT. To introduce
that idea here not only destroys the analogy on which the sanction of
the sabbath rests, but misconceives the character of the Priestly Code.
If the writer had had aeons in his mind, he would hardly have missed
the opportunity of stating how many millenniums each embraced.
Second work
The
firmament.
The second
whose function is to
divide the primaeval waters into an upper and lower ocean,
leaving a space between as the theatre of further creative
developments.
The *' firmament" is the dome of heaven,
which to the ancients was no optical illusion, but a material
structure, sometimes compared to an "upper chamber"
(Ps. 104^^ Am. 9^) supported by *' pillars " (Jb. 26^^), and
6-8.
fiat calls
resembling
in
Above
this
its
descends through
''
windows "or
''
(Jb.
37^^).
6. ii"pl]
(fflr
(TTe/j^WjCta,
'S Jirmamentum)
The absence of
art.
The
idea
is solidity,
(intrans.) to
6^^),
or
CREATION
22
is
widely diffused
'heaven
'
is
it
(p)
'
form
special
in
which
in
it
appears here
intelligible
climatic
found
is
it
phenomena on which
it is
is
perhaps not
fully
and
creation-myth,
the
p. 46).
for-point correspondence
to
which
9, 10.
Third work
sea.
The
shore-
(trans.),
'stamp
firm,' 'consolidate'
(Is.
42^ etc.).
It is
curious that
the vb.
Jb. 37^^
is
'
Kai ffVPi^x^V
7}
^Tjpd
i.e.
'^^
^Sup TO
nvpyn
N-ini
viroKCLTU}
tov ovpavov
Dn'ipp-'?x d^d^'H
els
nnnp
n^.x d^eh
x\^>\.
The
/cat locpOr]
addition
is
adopted by Ball, and the pi. avT(2v proves at least that it rests on a
Heb. original, Uwp being sing, in Greek (We.). 10. ':] the pi. (cf.
in
Waitz, Anthrop.
v\.
245
fF. ;
I.
day,
now
is
figuration
23
seem
appear
solid
7-II
gathered together
Ps.
in
104^-^;
but Di.
suggested by
v.^.
(commonly called
and streams '), and the
circumfluent ocean on which the heaven rests (Jb. 26^**, Ps.
Tehdm, but
24^
Ps.
in
sea
'
such idea
may have
Fourth work
11-13.
Creation
of
plants.
The
is
is
II.
v. ^^
Gn.
see Kon.
74)
as v.^^^ t^^-n
a?'H] CEr {^oT&vTiv xbprov) and TB treat the words as in annexion, contrary
to the accents and the usage of the terms.
It is impossible to define
them with scientific precision and the twofold classification given
above herb and tree is more or less precarious. It recurs, however,
in Ex. 9^5 10^2. 15 (aij j)^ g^j^j ti^g reasons for rejecting the other are, first.
i.
42, 7.
<S (
N^in
CREATION
24
of flora
but
is
not threefold
(p)
grass, herbs,
^2vofo\d,
the fruit)
(i.e.
after
is
its
upon
kind.
its
kind\
v.i.
remote.
14-19.
On
p.
work
Fifth
The heavenly
The
8f.
moon
the clause
the absence of
the
describe
vv.
and
first
day's
luminaries.
work
see above,
Nd
'
'
(II
'
'
belong to
'wid,
but Heb.
abj;
has no such
I.
'
12-14
25
(in
(c) in
The idea
Hebrew poetry
of them
(Ju.
40^^,
Is.
in
but here
is
it
5^^,
entirely eliminated,
embodiments of
here
depends on them,
is
viz.
Comp.
festivals, etc.
human
restricted
work of
elaborately specified.
gen.
inserts at this point
'B'H
y'pnn] the
nnNS]
The word
light
j^ jg
(rih[i]N?p)]
is
used
of the tabernacle
is
:
in
general,
creation of which
luminaries
in
the purpose
affairs
to
i.e.
i.e.
lamps
'
noteworthy that
is
simply
perhaps
or
It is possible,
{v.L).
light
heathen
In Jer. 10^
fear,
and that
d^'Dett
is
commonly taken as
CREATION
26
(Ex. 25^ etc.)
and
speak of
to
finnament^
(p)
as expressing a markedly
(Gu.)
T^''\
misleading.
is
in prescribed
paths on
in
the
lower
its
surface.
of
moving
etc.\
it
Day and
now
they are
22).
separate between
to
but
(Ho.
2^1, Jer.
8''^
ventionally agreed
circumstance.
moon
this
(cf.
Ps.
If the natural
104^^).
nhx
(signs)
given
day
is
more
difficult,
entirely satisfactory
.
is
and the
by some
to the sacrea
ecclesiastical year,
seasons of the
fixed
is
plausible.
{y.i.).
16.
to supply
an express naming
first
three
works
(Tu.).
und zwar
{videlicet)',
"as
signs,
and
that
BDB,
s.
"and
see
i.
b,
{Hehr.
ii,
33) renders
Kon.
i.
10,
6e.
I.
16-20
27
functions are stated with perfect clearness in ^'^^ (a) to give light
upon the earth, {b) to rule day and night, and (c) to separate light from
:
darkness. I am disposed to think that ^^^ was introduced as an exposition of the idea of the vb. h^D, and that "* was then added to
Not much importance can be attached to the
restore the connexion.
insertions of dSc {v.i.), which may be borrowed from v."'\
20-23. Sixth
work
living creatures^
distinct forms
etc.]
creative
has
led
to
under
one
act
Gu.
surmise that
of life
separate
works
have
been
combined
originally
in order
two
to bring the
may fly)
Ben.
six days.
was
on
The
2^^).
conjecture
is
attractive,
ably
[EV
connexions
(in
like
8^],
the
is
present:
see Ex.
7^^
[J]
the
place
abound,
in
'
20. y^v
ijsnts"]
On synt.
2.
OT
where that
the sense of 'creep,' and there are many passages in
idea would be appropriate (Lv. 1 1^* ^^"''^ etc. ) ; hence Rob. Smith {RS^,
But here and Gn. 8" 9', Ex. i*^ 7-8,
293), 'creeping vermin generally.'
Ps. 105^ it can only mean 'teem' or 'swarm'; and Dri. [Gen. 12) is
probably right in extending that meaning to all the pass, in Heb.
Gn. i^'-, Ex. 7^, Ps. los*** are the only places where the constr. with
cog. ace. appears elsewhere the animals themselves are subj. of the
vb. The words, except in three passages, are peculiar to the vocabulary
of P. But for the fact that pa' never means 'swarm,' but always
* swarming thing,' it would
be tempting to take it as st. constr. before
.Tn rs3 (ffi, Aq. TB).
As it is, 'n '3 has all the awkwardness of a gloss
(see 2^*).
The phrase is applied once to man, 2' (J) elsewhere
to animals, mostly in P (Gn. i^^-^-^ 910.12.15.16^ Lv. ii^o-^e etc.).
]Sij; ^iyi] The order of words as in v.^^ (3T ^lym), due to emphasis on
the new subj. The use of descriptive impf. {(&, Aq. S0U) is mostly
'JS '?y] = 'in
poetic, and for reasons given above must here be refused.
;
CREATION
28
swarms
^D3]
used
weakened,
or
being- (ct. v.^*' and see on
individual
as often, to
2^).
The creation of the aquatic animals marks, according
to OT ideas, the first appearance of life on the earth, for
over
life is nowhere predicated of the vegetable kingdom.
the earth in front of the fimiament\ i.e. in the atmosphere,
21. created] indisfor which Heb. has no special name.
appear
in
(v.t.).
l^'H
'living soul';
lit.
here collectively,
'
(p)
'
K'DJ
'
tinguishable from
made
introduction of this
is
remarkable.
in v. 2^.
new
The
D3"'i3rin
is
Ps. 74^^
(see
below).
22.
And God
21.
'
(see
etc.]
see
"There
BDB,
The
v.^^).
5,
is
distinction
is
act
natural.
be
nas, II. 7,
a, (
inserts
}3 '.ti
Drjnn] It
is
is
I.
21-25
was
29
work
Seventh
25.
24,
animals.
Terrestrial
riTl K^s:
(again
here a generic
is
stricted
earth's substance
(2^- ^^)
animals,
DB^
Dri.
appears
of the
42
f.
i.
in
518).
somewhat
a Babylonian tablet
field
King,
similar threefold
*
Tab.
112
f.).
division
25.
city' (Jen.
God saw
KIBy
that
vi.
it
i,
was
good]
Lv. ii^
'3
though without
art. is really
determined by
'^a
209 (i)). ^^^^\v nc'N] 'n, ace. of definition, as \-\v in v.^. 22. uni n^]
highly characteristic of P (only 3 times elsewhere).
24. The distinctions noted above are not strictly observed throughout
T.
OT.
r]Dn:j
'
'
collectively, ^r^/,
CREATION
^d
yy22.
28
but
surprising,
Js
(p)
speculate on the
to
idle
is
it
reason,
Eighth work
26-28.
narrative approaches
of
suggests
hymn
work are:
last
of
man.
As
the
that
ancient creation
this
Creation
terse rigidity,
its
which
its
The
(Gu.).
{a)
distinctive features of
we
have
animals,
made
(b)
in contrast to the
lower
in
been
felt.
Amongst
ng'jy
'
'
OT.
(see above, p.
model,'
14),
fflr
Ex. 25*^;
cf.
Mechilta
reading mcnai oSiia. On the 3 'of a
III. 8. dVx] Ass. salmu, the technical
gives as
BDB,
ffi's
s.v.
expression for the statue of a god {KAT^, 476^) Aram, and Syr. no^5>,
= image the root is not zalima, be dark, but possibly alama, cut
The idea of 'pattern' or 'model'
off' (Noldeke, ZATW, xvii. 185 f.).
it stands intermediate between
is confined to the P pass, cited above
the concrete sense just noted (an artificial material reproduction
Sa. 6^ etc.) and another still more abstract, viz. 'an unreal semI
blance' (Ps. 39' 73^) n^^l is the abstr. noun resemblance; but also
;
'
'
'
'
used concretely
The
Ch. 4^
is
Aramaic
Ins. nrn
(2
cf.
Ar. )
5> {v.s.\
with
like Syr.
xi.
is
'effigy.'
no proof of
216. pN.T'?33i]
26
1.
is
31
that
than
beings other
heaven:
cf.
3^2
that
it
man, which
Himself,
ii7,
Is.
68,
al.).
ascribes to angels
is
nowhere alluded to by
and
probably the ultimate explanation has to be sought in a
that the very existence of angels
at
There
all.
is
force
is
these considerations
in
is
represented
in
Dn.
due to the
is
38^,
i,
in spite of his
fact that
classical literature,
cerning
man "
is
an exaggeration
although
it
true that
is
than
precise form
is in
the
OT peculiar
to
The
idea in this
(5^- ^ 9^)
the con-
examples are
Sir. 17^^-,
equivalent to immortality),
WS.
Co.
2^^
later
1 1^,
Col.
3^^,
Eph.
4^*,
Ja. 3^-
the
operis
f.)
of
Istar,
partem
CREATION
32
(p)
Ea forms a
1.
between
cf.
5^'^ 9.
(3)
The view
image consists
in
dominion
image
image
refer primarily to
(cf.
Ps.
8^^-,
Sir.
17'-"^).
(4)
Does the
seems
free
Ps. 17^)
the
OT
would be
tioned
if
difficult to
On
prove.
the other
was
and
spirit
ques-
thought.
It
might be truer
to
say that
and
76
self-evident symbol.:;:
if.
Man
*
(0^^)
is
A good summary
human
race),
not the
is
De
I.
proper
27-29
33
majority of
contemplated, there
is
nothing
in the narrative to
bear out
tion
is
of dominion
fertility,
hymn.
29-31.
The
r\D:^-:i-:x-\
29. "nna]
'I give'
T. 13.
yni
(over Athnach)]
CREATION
34
(p)
the relation of
The
to
man and
passage
wholly intelligible
not
is
The
beast.
apart from
from
9^^-,
first
that
state of
is
a state
This
is
P's
that
distinction
of animals
is
to
the
former
is
important
fishes,
nor
is
and
in cereals
to the latter
i.e.
no provision
is
made
for
(probably
in cultivation,
not exhaustive
is
plants
fruit-bearing trees
{b)
The statement
seeding
{a)
where man
made
is
(3K^y)
assigned to him.
31.
The
wrongly omitted by C&. h^dn] found only in P and Ezk., and always
preceded by ^. It is strictly fern, inf., and perhaps always retains
verbal force (see Dri. //%. xi. 217). The ordinary cognate words for
food are Vrk and "^ab*!?. 30. 'iai Vs^i The construction is obscure. The
natural interpretation is that ^ expresses a contrast to ^ the one
specifying the food of man^ the other that of animals. To bring out
this
sense clearly
it
is
al.) to
p^'-'?o-n^^
thesis (Di.)
and pn^^SmN as
22*).
may
The word
is
voh in
still
alone
n'.T
rare (6t.)
still
10^^)
= 'grass' (Nu.
may sometimes be
r\-\^'^
rarer form
p"v
'"
confounded with it (Is. 372^ = 2 Ki. 172^?).31. 'is-ifn or] The art. with
On the constructhe num. appears here for the first time in the chap.
tion, see Dri. T. 209 (i), where it is treated as the beginning of a usage
prevalent in post-biblical Heb., which often in a definite expression uses
the art. with the adj. alone (n^M^n nD33,
footnote)
Dri.
/Ph.
xi,
etc.).
229
f.
Cf.
G-K.
126
(with
I-
30-11. 3
35
all
made, and
rises to
Vy
29f.
sections
thus
Hi?
instead of ynjD
(" ^2)
na
and
reptiles (ct.
^*-
lyni "Wtt
^)
n^'y
n'n vs:
.
to
man
nullifies
vv.^^-
28^
But
his infer-
ence (partly endorsed by Ho.) that the vv. are a later addition to P
does not commend itself they are vitally connected with g^^-, and must
have formed part of the theory of the Priestly writer. The facts point
rather to a distinction in the sources with which P worked, perhaps
(as Gu. thinks) the enrichment of the creation-story by the independent
and widespread myth of the Golden Age when animals lived peaceably
with one another and with men. The motives of this belief lie deep
horror of bloodshed, sympathy with the lower
in the human heart
animals, the longing for harmony in the world, and the conviction that
on the whole the course of things has been from good to worse all
have contributed their share, and no scientific teaching can rob the idea
of its poetic and ethical value.
;
the
institution of the
Why
Sabbath.
It
supplies
is
THE SABBATH
36
And
I.
is
'
heavenly
the
(Dt.
4^^
bodies,
organised army
the earth
the
especially
sometimes
etc.),
pi. suff.
here
as
and
worship
of
objects
angels
it
is
33"'^^
is
the
elsewhere called
of the
conte?its
been described.*
to the
pxn
xpp
If
just
support
little
'
'
AT
(Smend,
Rel.-gesch. 201
ff.),
or the
demons
finished^
'host' or
Lit.
N3i:]
The
etc.\
duplication of v.^
is
And
harsh,
and
<&. kSctimos
which
in
2.
I.
most
is
has
(Is. 6^ 34^,
and
earth,
it
would be
it
of Hosts
God
of
a question whether
is
Dt.
as an
considered
(i
nowhere occurs
'
the
and
(chiefly
'ny.
ffir
all.
K6<Jixo%
2.
'?3'iJ
the
Used
first
For the
alleged negative sense of Piel (see above), examine Nu. \'f^, or (with
p) I Sa. 10", Ex 34^^ etc. r\-::)>i!h'6\ the word "used regularly of the
work or business forbidden on the Sabbath (Ex. 20^* ^*' 35^, Jer. 17^^ '^
al.)"(Dri.); or on holy convocations (Ex. 12^^, Lv. 16-^23-^^-, Nu. 29').
It has the prevailing sense of regular occupation or business, as Gen.
'yutyn^] nxf&i^ Juh., Ber. A". 'wvr\, given as fflr's read39^1, Jon. i^
'
'
'
'
* Cf.
Neh.
9^
them."
57
which
comm.
Bu.
But
is
so
it
To
al.).^
On We.'s
sible.
remaining course
\h. Jinish:
sixth
is
many
the easier
the preference.
The only
The
al.).
HD^
much
last
may
view
be accepted,
and Jerome,
i6,
grammatically impos-
al.) is
'desisted from,'
i.e.
on the seventh
ii.
is
(Ilg. Ols.
1-3
n.
QucBst.),
essentially negative
The
rested]
Even
and he
(lEz,
in spite
is
desist
Ezk.
'
{b) is
16^^ 34^
blessed
3.
found only
(Hiph.)
'
'
'
'
'
'
* Expressly mentioned as
and Geiger,
I.e.
ffi's
reading
in
Mechilta
439.
THE SABBATH
38
The day
sanctified]
the beginning
is
remark
made
is
in
view of the
(cf. Sir.
applied to things,
manently
This
is
well-being to the
To
27^^,
the Sabbath
man who
sanctify
endowment with
their
purpose.
means
it
Ex.
Dt. 28^).
a constant source of
is
recognises
its
is
23^^,
common
things
which
is
given,
it
is
contrary to the
still
is
God
from creation it
thought of. It is, of
distinct
day that
course, a
Although no closing
per-
The author
all.
instance, therefore,
;
the order of the world," and was a survival of the mythological idea of
The vb. there
the appeasement of Marduk's anger against Ti'amat.
used
is ndl}ti,
in
Ex.
20^*.
;;
II.
4A
3,
39
/4
r [1905],
and
its
we know
it
Bab. institutions. It is hard to suppose that there is no historical connexion between the Heb. Sabbath and the dies nefasti of the Bab.
calendar and if such a connexion exists, the chief difficulties remain
where they have long been felt to lie, viz., (a) in the substitution of
a weekly cycle running continuously through the calendar for a division
of each month into seven-day periods, probably regulated by the phases
of the moon ; and (6) in the transformation of a day of superstitious restrictions into a day of joy and rest.
Of these changes, it must be
confessed, no convincing explanation has yet been found. The established sanctity of the number seven, and the decay or suppression of the
lunar feasts, might be contributory causes ; but when the change took
;
is
The
4a. nn'?in] only in pi. const, or with suff. ; and confined to P, Ch.
and Ru. 4^^ Formed from Hiph. of n"?', it means properly begettings
not, however, as noun of action, but concretely ( = progeny')
and this
is certainly the prevalent sense.
The phrase 'n ' (only P [all in Gn.
except Nu. 3'], i Ch. i^^, Ru. 4^^) means primarily "These are the
descendants "
but since a list of descendants is a genealogy, it is
*
'
'
practically the
register."
THE SABBATH
40
This is
what precedes, and render the noun by origin
But it is doubtful if nn^in can bear any
of,' etc.
such meaning, and altogether the half-verse is in the last
*
'
the origin
degree perplexing.
It is
in all
probability a redactional
insertion.
is characteristic of
invariably stands as introduction to the
But in this case the next section (2*^-4^^) belongs
section following.
to J ; and if we pass over the J passages to the next portion of P (ch. 5),
and
that
in
document
it
the formula would collide with 5^, which is evidently the proper heading
Unless, therefore, we adopt the improbable hypothesis
to what follows.
of Strack, that a part of P's narrative has been dropped, the attempt to
treat 2^ in its present position as a superscription must be abandoned.
On
ground most
this
critics
36^-
^
a few
nor
4-'^)
the addition of
a genealogy,
by it. There are
Gn. 6^ 25^^ 37^
just three cases where this meaning is inapplicable
But it is noteworthy that, except in the last case, at least a fragment of
a genealogy follows and it is fair to inquire whether 37^ may not have
been originally followed by a genealogy (such as S5^^'^^ or 46^"^' [see
Hupfeld, Quellen, 102-109, 213-216]) which was afterwards displaced
With that assumption we
in the course of redaction (see p. 423, below).
could explain every occurrence of the formula without having ref:ourse to
the unnatural view that the word may mean a "family history" (G-B.
" (BDB). The natural
5.7/.), or " an account of a man and his descendants
hypothesis would then be that a series of m-i'?in formed one of the sources
employed by P in compiling his work the introduction of this genealogical document is preserved in 5^ (so Ho.); the recurrent formula
represents successive sections of it, and 2^ is a redactional imitation.
When it came to be amalgamated with the narrative material, some
dislocations took place hence the curious anomaly that a man's history
sometimes appears under his own TolMoth, sometimes under those of
and it is difficult otherwise to account for the omission
his father
is
of the formula before 12^ or for its insertion in 36^ On the whole, this
theory seems to explain the facts better than the ordinary view that
the formula was devised by P to mark the divisions of the principal
work.
DNna'"'3] 'in
lit mintisc.
inf.
Qal
has
(DNin?)
their creation' or
'
created.'
If the
and
this requires to
form that Di. thinks the clause originally stood at the beginning of Gen. (see on 1^). But the omission of D'n'?x and the insertion
of the ^ minusc. are no necessary consequences of the transposition of
the sentence and the small ^ may be merely an error in the archetypal
MS, which has been mechanically repeated in all copies.
It is in this
'
II.
4A
41
Lagarde,
overcome
Or.
ii.
38
ff.,
and Ho.).
And
even
if
but to assume with Ho. that the formula in this place owes
manner of P by a later
hand. The insertion would be suggested by the observation that the
formula divides the book of Gen. into definite sections while the advantage of beginning a new section at this point would naturally occur to
an editor who felt the need of sharply separating the two accounts of
the creation, and regarded the second as in some way the continuation
of the first.
If that be so, he probably took 'n in the sense of history
difficulty
its
'
to
what
follows.
The analogy
of
5^,
Nu.
would
3^
outlines of Bab.
brief notices in
It is therefore unnecessary to
Nineveh by George Smith in 1873.
examine them in detail but since the originals are not very accessible
to English readers, they are here reprinted in full (with emendations
;
ffi):
On
BABYLONIAN
42
Kal TeTpawT^povs Kai Bnrpocruirovs' Kal awfia fikv ^xoJ'T-as iv, KecpaXas Si 8vo,
Gutschm., cod.
id^av
ttjv
Gutschm.,
liriroKevTavpovs
re] 5to-rd,
eTvai.
Kal
dk
TtUioyovrjdTjvai
raijpovs
dvdpibTrcov
K(pa\ds ^xoiras Kal Kijvas Terpaffwixdrov^, ovpds ix^vos iK tCjv diriadev fiepQi'
^Xovras, Kal iTnrovs KvuoK6(pd\ovs Kal dudpuirovs, Kal ^repa ^Qa K(pa\ds fikv
Kal adj/xara
'Ittttwu
d-qptwv fiop(f)ds
fwa
^x^^'^'^i
ovpds
5i
IxduuV
rds
fiiva']
aXX-qXiov
6\}/eis
^x^^'''^
'^^
'
339,
i(r6\f/ri<pov
axicat
84
yvvalKa
rdv
Oi/tws
5^
fi^arjp,
Kal rb jxkv
ijfiKTv
(prjai
TOVTO ir<pvaioXoy7](r6ai
yeyewTfixevoiv
rj
Qa/xre [corr.
fiiv
'
6Xu3v
W.
R. Smith,
iiraveXdbvra
auveaTTjKdToou,
rj/xiav
Td
^-qXov
dXXo
dtpapiaai, dXXrjyopiKivs
fW
'^'^^
tt]v
5i\
tov
6v Ala
dXX^Xwv,
"QriXov,
oipavbv
dir'
rival,
Kap-rrocpSpov']
KeXevaai evl
Trpurrrj
TrXavqTa^.
roi'S irivTe
Trj
'QrjXov vai^
depa
dWa
irapriXXay-
aeXrivr].
TT]v
^Qa iravToSaTrQu
v.
"^^^
'^^t'
di
Gutschm., cod.
eUdvas iv ry rod
[em.
^A,
dWa
Kal
^xof'T^tt-
TaDrd
(prjatv
6 TroXvtcrTCjp
(pd(TKiv
yfi,
tJjXiov
dvdpibwovi'
Damascius
(2)
SXcov
dpxw
dvSpa
TTJs
Twv
Tavde
Tavde Kal
deuv
iraTda yevvTjd^vai
dpx^v
Tbv
Trapaybfievov.
Miavfjiiv,
'E/c
avTov
olfiaL
Tbv vorjTbv
5^
(pacrtv.j"
* The sections commencing with [A] and [B] stand in the reverse
order in the text. The transposition is due to von Gutschmid, and
seems quite necessary to bring out any connected meaning, though
there may remain a suspicion that the two accounts of the creation of
man are variants, and that the second is interpolated. Je. ATLO"^, 134,
plausibly assigns the section from aXX-qyopiKtSs to (pdaprjvat to another
recension (restoring [B] to its place in the text).
t The Greek text of Berossus will be found in Miiller, Fragm. Hist.
GrcBC. ii. 497 f.
that of Damascius in Damascii philos. de prim, princ.
(ed. Kopp, 1826), cap. 125.
For translations of both fragments, see
;
COSMOGONIES
43
2, The only cuneiform document which admits of close and continuous comparison with Gn. i is the great Creation Epos just referred
to.
first
fragments,
many
lacunas
above').* The actual tablets discovered are not of earlier date than
the 7th cent. B.C., but there are strong reasons to believe that the
originals of which these are copies are of much greater antiquity, and
may go back to 2000 B.C., while the myth itself probably existed in
writing in other forms centuries before that.
Moreover, they represent
the theory of creation on which the statements of Berossus and
Damascius are based, and they have every claim to be regarded as the
authorised version of the Babylonian cosmogony.
It is here, therefore,
if anywhere, that we must look for traces of Babylonian influences on
the Hebrew conception of the origin of the world.
The following outline of the contents of the tablets is based on King's analysis of the
epic into five originally distinct parts (CT", p. Ixvii).
The Theogony. The first twenty-one lines of Tab. I. contain a
1.
description of the primaeval chaos and the evolution of successive
generations of deities
When
Dam.
'IWivos
(In-lil
f.
28.
ATLO^,
132
ff.
EB,
art.
Creation.
BABYLONIAN
44
'
in the fight.
The conflict between Marduk and Tiamat. Tabs. II. and III. are
occupied with the consultations of the gods in view of this new peril,
and Tab. IV.
resulting in the choice of Marduk as their champion
gives a graphic description of the conflict that ensues. On the approach
of the sun-god, mounted on his chariot and formidably armed, attended
by a host of winds, Tiamat's helpers flee in terror, and she alone conMarduk entangles her in his net, sends a
fronts the angry deity.
hurricane into her distended jaws, and finally despatches her by an
arrow shot into her body.
iv. The account of creation commences near the end of Tab. IV.
After subduing the helpers of Tiamat and taking the Tables of Destiny
from Kingu, Marduk surveys the carcase, and devised a cunning
iii.
'
plan
'
He
One
He
split
her up like a
two halves
watchman.
He
Ea
meant
b}'
the founding
He made
The
He
him.
He
COSMOGONIES
45
(?)
him,
(saying,)
the land,
The rest of Tab. V., where legible, contains nothing bearing on the
present subject ; but in Tab. VI, we come to the creation of man, which
is recorded in a form corresponding to the account of Berossus
:
When Marduk
That the
man, who
service of the
etc.
etc.
At the end of the tablet the gods assemble to sing the praises of
Marduk and the last tablet is filled with a
v. Hymn in honour of Marduk.
From this we learn that to Marduk
was ascribed the creation of vegetation and of the 'firm earth,' as well
as those works which are described in the legible portions of Tabs.
;
IV.-VI.
How far,
now, does
5),
BABYLONIAN
46
theogony must have originally stood between vv.^ and ' of Gn. i (Gu.)
Gu. thinks it is the necessary
is more than can be safely affirmed.
sequel to the idea of the world-egg in the end of v.*. But he himself
and if in the
regards that idea as foreign to the main narrative
original source something must have come out of the egg, it is more
likely to have been the world itself (as in the Phoenician and Indian
cosmogonies) than a series of divine emanations. (3) Both accounts
assume, but in very different ways, the existence of light before the
In the Bab. legend the assumption
creation of the heavenl)' bodies.
the fact that Marduk, the
is disguised by the imagery of the myth
god of light, is himself the demiurge, explains the omission of light
In the biblical account that
from the category of created things.
motive no longer operates, and accordingly light takes its place as the
first creation of the Almighty.
(4) A very important parallel is the
conception of heaven as formed by a separation of the waters of
In Enuma elis the septum is formed from the
the primaeval chaos.
body of Tiamat in Gen. it is simply a rdkfa a solid structure
But the common idea is one that could
fashioned lor the purpose.
hardly have been suggested except by the climatic conditions under
which the Bab. myth is thought to have originated. Jen. has shown,
to the satisfaction of a great many writers, how the imagery of the
Bab. myth can be explained from the changes that pass over the face
of nature in the lower Euphrates valley about the time of the vernal
equinox (see Kosin. 307 ff. cf. Gu. Schdpf. 24 ff. Gordon). Chaos is
an idealisation of the Babylonian winter, when the heavy rains and
the overflow of the rivers have made the vast plain like a sea, when
thick mists obscure the light, and the distinction between heaven and
sea seems to be effaced. Marduk represents the spring sun, whose
rays pierce the darkness and divide the waters, sending them partly
upwards as clouds, and partly downwards to the sea, so that the dry
land appears. The 'hurricane,' which plays so important a part in
the destruction of the chaos-monster, is the spring winds that roll
away the dense masses of vapour from the surface of the earth. If
this be the natural basis of the myth of Marduk and Tiamat, it is
evident that it must have originated in a marshy alluvial region, subject
to annual inundations, like the Euphrates valley.
(5) There is, again,
a close correspondence between the accounts of the creation of the
heavenly bodies (see p. 21 f.). The Babylonian is much fuller, and more
saturated with mythology it mentions not only the moon but the signs
of the Zodiac, the planet Jupiter, and the stars. But in the idea that
;
of the
moon
is
to regulate time,
we must
(6)
Enuma
elis narrative.
(7) With regard to the order of the works, it
evident that there cannot have been complete parallelism between
In the tablets the creation of heaven is followed
the two accounts.
is
COSMOGONIES
47
inhabitants
The Deep had not been created, Eridu had not been built
Of the holy house, the house of the gods, the habitation had not been
;
made.
All lands
Then arose a
cities
them.
movement
In the
sea
and
'
Then
Marduk
He formed
heart's desire.
He
Next he formed beasts, the rivers, grasses, various kinds of animals, etc.;
laid in a dam by the side of the sea, he made reeds and
trees, houses and cities, and the great Babylonian sanctuaries.
The
whole description Is extremely obscure, and the translations vary widely.
then, having
'
In
27
while Jen.
t So King; but Je. *a reed-hurdle' {Rohrgeflecht)
renders
Marduk placed a canopy in front of the waters, He created
earth and heaped it up against the canopy
a reference to the
;
'
'
PHGENICIAN
48
The main
and of the
process of world-building. Of special correspondences with Gn. i there
are perhaps but two
(a) the impersonal conception of chaos implied
in the appellative sense of tamtu ( T^hom) for the sea
(jb) the comparison
of the firmament to a canopy, if that be the right interpretation of the
phrase.
In the order of the creation of living beings it resembles more
the account in Gn. 2 but from that account it is sharply distinguished
by its assumption of a watery chaos in contrast to the arid waste of
Gn. 2^ It is therefore inadmissible to regard this text as a more illuminating parallel to Gn, i than the Enuma elih tablets. The most that can
be said is that it suggests the possibility that in Babylonia there may
have existed recensions of the creation story in which the mythical
motive of a conflict between the creator and the chaos-monster played
no part, and that the biblical narrative goes back directly to one of
these.
But when we consider that the Tiamat myth appears in both the
Greek accounts of Babylonian cosmogony, that echoes of it are found in
other ancient cosmogonies, and that in these cases its imagery is
modified in accordance with the religious ideas of the various races, the
greater probability is that the cosmogony of Gn. i is directly derived
from it, and that the elimination of its mythical and polytheistic elements
is due to the influence of the pure ethical monotheism of the OT.
:
Gu.
in
his
to call attention to
first
Hebrew myth.*
4. The Phoenician cosmogony,
The
y^i2ff.^
Is.
si^*-,
26^2f.
(Rahab)
Ps.
pp. 90-99.
t Eus. Prcep. Evang,
vo\i>v aluiya
fir]
?xe' iripas.
rod
airrb
irveij/xaTos,
i]
"Ore
ttXo/ctj
5^,
<j>t]<xlv,
iKelvrj
iKX-qOr]
Avrrj 8k
Tlbdos.
dpxv
KTiaeici
iyivero Mcir.
ol
COSMOGONY
49
'
'
'
'
'
Kal iK Ta&rrjs iyivero iraaa airopa Kriaews, Koi yiveais tQv SXojv.
Hu
^Qa ovk exovra atadtjaiv, e^ Cbv eyevero ^Qa voepa, Kal eKk-qd-q Zo}(f)a<T7]iJLlv
[ZuxpTjaafXLfx] tout' iaTLV ovpavov /car^Trrat.
Kat aveirXdcrdri ofioicos [ + woO, see
<T?i\piv.
5^ Ttva
Or.]
rrjs
axnt^o-Ti-'
fieydXa"
yri%
Kai
Kal xvaeis.
fccpr],
irvpuxyi-v
iTreiSr) 8i,Kpidr],
Kal
iyp-rjydpTjcrev
Kal daXdaarj
^v T y-Q
Kal
iirTvpr],
'*'AX\' oSroLye
rrpuTOL d(pipco(Tav Ta ttjs yTJs fiXaa-TrjfxaTa, Kal deovs ivbiiiaav, Kal irpocreKvvovv
TavTa, d0'
tDv
iiri9v(Tis eTroiovv."
Xods Kal
6/xoLai
irpo(TKvvr)(jeu}s,
Ty aiiTuv
on
ol
"
iiriXiyei'
dcrdeveiq.,
dvifiov,
ep/xr]Vijt,p,
Kal
dvdpas,
at
Etrd
Kal
t^s
iirivoiai
dToX/Miq..
\pvxrjs
^aav
Afirat 5'
<pr]<Ti
ovru:
KaXov/x4vovs.'^
124 belowj.
other versions are from
[the sequel
The
Kal
native writer
Damascius
2t5t6i'toi
p.
Mochos
385):
p.
VTTOTldevTaL Kal
Hbdov Kal
Eudemos)
irpb
irdvTwv Xpbvov
'O/xixXTjv.
us
bvolv
dpxCjv 'Aepa yeveadai. Kal Avpav, 'Aipa ixkv &KpaTov tov votjtov irapadrjXovvTes,
Avpav bk t6
i^
fjv
JldXiv 8^
TrpoTOTrwfJia.
(hop]
olfiai.
Tbv vorjTbp.
(hv
yeppaTai
OiX<ji)/j.bs,
6 porjrbs
Tbp
8k dpoiyia
Xovaupbp,
dSidKpiTOP
<l>v(np,
eh, Tb 8k
fjiiffop oi
el firi
tt]p
porjT^p
bvpafiip
8vo dpe/xoi
Ai\}/
els S60,
yij,
irpdyrriv
fikv
&Kpop
StaKplpaaap
tt)p
icrrlp dpe/xos 6
dre
tup
etr]
6 ovpav6s'
bLxoTO/xTj/xdTotp eKaTepov.
COSMOGONIES
50
proceeds *an
egg.''
More
striking
is
(oViy),
from
egg.'
It is
afterwards explained that the egg is the heaven, and that when it is split
in two (? by Xouawpos) the one half forms the heaven and the other the
earth.
It may introduce consistency into these representations if we
suppose that in the process of evolution the primaeval chaos (which is
coextensive with the future heaven and earth) assumes the shape of an
eg-g-, and that this is afterwards divided into two parts, corresponding
to the heaven and the earth.
The function of Xovau)pos is thus analogous
to the act of Marduk in cleaving the body of Tiamat in two.
But
obviously all this throws remarkably little light on Gn. i^. Another
supposed point of contact is the resemblance between the name Baav
and the Heb. ?nii. In Sanchuniathon Baav is explained as night, and
is said to be the wife of the Kolpia-wind, and mother of Al(vv and
Ilpurrdyopos, the first pair of mortals.
It is evident that there is much
confusion in this part of the extract and it is not unreasonably conjectured that Alibv and UpcoTdyovos were really the first pair of emanations,
and Kolpia and Baau the chaotic principles from which they spring
so that they may be the cosmological equivalents of TohA and Bohd
There is a strong probability that the name Baau is connected
in Gn.
with Bau, a Babylonian mother-goddess (see ATLO^, i6i) but the
evidence is too slight to enable us to say that specifically Phoenician
influences are traceable in Gn. i^
5. A division of creation into six stages, in an order similar to that of
Gn. I, appears in the late book of the Bundehesh (the Parsee Genesis),
where the periods are connected with the six annual festivals called
Gahanbars, so as to form a creative year, parallel to the week of Gn. i.
The order is: i. Heaven; 2. Water; 3. Earth; 4. Plants; 5. Animals;
We miss from the enumeration Light, which in Zoroastrian6. Men.
ism is an uncreated element and the Heavenly bodies, which are said
to belong to an earlier creation (Tiele, Gesch. d. Rel. im Altert. ii. 296).
The late date of the Bundehesh leaves room, of course, for the suspicion
of biblical influence ; but it is thought by some that the same order can
be traced in a passage of the younger Avesta, and that it may belong
Caland,
to ancient Iranian tradition (Tiele, /.c, and AJ?W, vi. 244 ff.
ThT, xxiii. i79fF.).^The most remarkable of all known parallels to the
six days' scheme of Gn. is found in a cosmogony attributed to the
Here the creation
ancient Etruscans by Suidas (Lexicon, s.v. Tvpprjvia).
is said to have been accomplished in six periods of looo years, in the
following order i. Heaven and Earth 2. the Firmament 3. Sea and
Water 4. Sun and Moon 5. Souls of Animals 6. Man (see K. O. Muller,
Die Eirusker, ii. 38; ATLO^, 154 f.). Suidas, however, lived not earlier
than the loth cent. A.D., and though his information may have been
derived from ancient sources, we cannot be sure that his account is not
Hebrew cosmogony.
II.
II.
4b -III.
24.
4B-III. 24
5^
(J).
closely articulated
original innocence
independent
interest
yet
it
contains
little
that
not
is
'
fundamentally both
differs
in its
(2^^-
ct.
The
is
idylls in
2'^^^
Cf. especially
^asf.
.
;
2I9
2i
with
3'
^'^' 14
with 3^9- 23
with 3^2
221-23
;
2^' f-
(2^4
52
(j)
Source.
name
We.
Prol.^ 302
ff.
Gu.
fF.
m,T,
The
2^^,
contrast to P) li", create,' instead of Nin, :\-\'^r^ n'n instead of X-w^r^ 'n,
D"n nDty: instead of 'n nn (see on 7^^) ; and the constant use of ace. suff.
*
(in
to the verb.
The
main narrative
is
where
life
it
and we
is an irrelevance
does enter into the story is
;
precisely the part where signs of redaction or dual authorship accumulate. (3) The clearest indication of a double recension is found .in the
'^^.
Here 22 and "^
twofold account of the expulsion from Eden
f^'
^i
^
their proper
of
out
clearly
as
are
together;
and
hang
clearly
:
II.
4B-III. 24
53
which
^'
it
'
||
* So Gu.
A still more complete explanation of this particular point
would be afforded by the somewhat intricate original hypothesis of Bu.
He suggested that the primary narrative (J^) in which nin was regularly
used, except in 3^'^, was re-written and supplemented by J^ who substituted DM /N for ni.T the two narratives were subsequently amalgamated
in rather mechanical fashion by J^, with the result that wherever the
divine names differed both were retained, and where the documents
agreed d'hSn alone appears {Urg: 233 f.). Later in the volume (471 ff.)
the hypothesis is withdrawn in favour of the view that J^ contained no
Paradise story at all. A similar explanation is given by v. Doorninck
;
{I.e.
239),
who thinks
3'"^
was due
Yahwe
to the redactor's
and
alone
occupied a position analogous to that of the tree of knowledge in the
other (see, further, Gressmann, ARW, x. 355 f.).
it
is
life
PARADISE AND THE FALL
54
4b-7.
The
creation of man.
On
(j)
somewhat
the
AI
the time
name
which
-^^n],
Q"''7^^?
all
is
etc.]
in-
4b.
The double
is
f.,
taken.
appears
jijul(!J^)
there
al.)
as a feature of
earth
reversed by
5.
Reuss, Ayles,
the isolated
again only
Or
The
Ps.
148^^.
is
etc.]
etc.
in
rare
word
n'^ii'
denotes
4b-7.
to say
whether here
The
it
note there)
same
syntactic ambiguity as
i^'^
(see the
We may
as an independent sentence.
*^
Prol.^ 297 f.
KS. al.) that the clause is the conclusion of a lost
sentence of J, as inconsistent with the natural position of the time
determination in Heb. *^ must therefore be joined as prot. to what
follows
and the question is whether the apod, commences at ^ (Tu.
Str. Dri. al,), or (with ^^' as a parenthesis) at
In
(Di. Gu. al.).
(We.
"^
"^
(v.^)
with a point
again Dri. T.
[v.'')
78.
4.
of time" (Spurrell).
On the form of apod., see
ova always emphasises contemporaneousness of
(cf. 2" 3^); the indefiniteness lies in the subst., which often
Ex. 6"^^ 32^*, Jer. 1 1^ etc.). dmVn nin']
covers a space of time (= when
in Hex. only Ex. (f^
elsewhere 2 Sa. 722- -\ Jon. 46, Ps. 72^8 g^9. 12^
I Ch. 17^^ 2 Ch. 6^^
ffir uses the expression frequently up to 9^2^ but its
usage is not uniform even in chs. 2. 3. The double name has sometimes
been explained by the supposition that an editor added dmSx to the
original mn' in order to smooth the transition from P to J, or as a hint
but that is scarcely
to the Synagogue reader to substitute dmSn for mn'
satisfactory.
A more adequate solution is afforded by the theory
two events
'
'
4-6
II.
55
are assigned:
cultivation.
(i)
irrigation
hence the two conditions of fertility correspond broadly to the Arabian (and Talmudic) contrast
between land watered by the Baal and that watered by
is
human
ff.).
to till the ground]
man's original destiny, though afterwards
imposed on him as a curse,
an indication of the
This, therefore,
it
is
is
"^97^'
'
soil,'
'
arable land
v.^,
'
has
(cf. 4^*).
cultivation
" (Ayles).
the
flood
'
than to induce
fertility,
'
'
Che. conj. hn; others ]]]l (after Vns.). The word has no etymol. in
Heb., and the only other occurrence (Jb. 36^'^) is even more obscure than
this.
Cloud (C) or mist is a natural guess, and it is doubtful if it
be anything better. The meaning flood comes from Ass. edi7, applied
to the annual overflow of a river (Del. Hd-wb.),
note the freq. impf. Gu.
thinks it a technical semi-mythological term of the same order as Teh6?n,
with which Ra. seems to connect it; while lEz. interprets 'cloud,' but
confounds the word with tn, calamity (Zeph. i^^) so Aq. who renders
the latter by ^m.pXvafxos in Pr. i^**, Jb. :^o^^{see Ber. R, 13). On the tenses.
;
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
56
(j)
valley,
than
'
mythic exaggeration
'
EB,
(Che.
949).
"iVJ (avoided by
and that figure underAn Egyptian picture shows the
lies the representation.
god Chnum forming human beings on the potter's disc
{ATLO^j 146). The idea of man as made of clay or earth
appears in Babylonian but is indeed universal, and pervades
7.
P)
is
the whole
OT.
hreath of
where
life]
Omit the
art.
The phrase
life, and
supposing another meaning here.
qui de animali
<' Subscribere eorum sententise non dubito
hominis vita locum hunc exponunt " (Calvin). man became
there
is
(J),
no reason
it
for
human
'
irv^pbv
iyeySvei
Jos. Ant.
34) is
(recent
i.
it
it
animated the
person.
The
n.
7,
57
teach that the soul (B'^a) arises through the union of the universal lifecf. e.g. Griineisen, Ahnenprinciple (nn) with the material frame (T^?)
kultus, 34 f.
No such ideas are expressed neither -\iif2 nor nn is mentioned, while 1^33 is not applied to a separate element of man's being-, but
to the whole man in possession of vital powers.
"All that seems in
question here is just the giving of vitality to man. There seems no
allusion to man's immaterial being, to his spiritual element.
Vitality
is communicated by God, and he is here represented as communicating
"
it by breathing into man's nostrils that breath which is the sign of life
(Davidson, OTTh. 194). At the same time, the fact that God imparts
his own breath to man, marks the dignity of man above the animals
it
image of God.'
is J's equivalent for the
:
'
with a misconception of
This
is
graphical designation)
is
(cf. 210-15
5i3^
323.24 ^16^
Hebrew
proper
3585^ JJ^
There
{y.i.).
name was
it is rendered by
no probability that the
is
It is
KAT^,
but
is
it
'
2'^
plain,'
KAT^,
26L',
^^g);
of the author
T}^,
derived
*
was conceived
^1i?P]
^3,
to a
and
(often)
distinguished
40^^).
Sir.
Is.
i.e.
2 Ki. 19I2
= Is.
3712],
Ezk.
2723,
Am.
i^).
appears also
'E5e/i
and Pss.
it
'
'
of old
'
')
and so
it is
misunder-
58
(j)
and the
is
sentence,
The
v.i.
On
(3^^*0-
^^^ ^^^
^^^^ ^f
two
trees
must
for the
The
tree
stood here by
127
b.
all
nynn]
The use
f.)
is
is
II.
of
whose
life,
9-1
59
immortality
fruit confers
(3^2;
cf.
13^^ 15*;
Lebenswasser).
The
conception
good and
knowledge
tree of
is
a more refined
its
however, magical,
evil is,
meant by
The
ii.
227)
is
not so probable.
'
evil,'
see p. 95
As
i.
to
other
85
f.
what
is
ff.
{SO^, 92
10.
to
f.)
-river
stream at
Zee.
14^,
its
Jl.
source (Ex.
4^^).
17^,
5<V^ is
Nu.
Whether the
ptcp.
The
used of the
rise of
Ezk. 47^,
expresses past or
-from thence
it
divides
river issues
The
site
of Paradise, therefore,
is
at the
is
may be
II. Pison]
The name
6o
in Sir.
24^^,
name
familiar
graphical
(j)
to
Hebrews
the
which
description
is
On
follows.
various
the
identification
known
of the
the
to
/SSekXa.
gum
3nn]
^"in
?)
called
xii.
from
(Nu.
35
it
f.)
was found
loham
Ihe
slone]
highly esteemed
On metheg and
6e5
well
undoubtedly the
is
11^),
substance
bedolah]
locality.
Israelites
12.
10,
1^^).
Nin] The first instance of this Qr^ perpetuum of the
where the regular N'n is found only Gn. 14^ 20'' 38-% Lv. 7}^ 11^"
j^io. 31 j53i 2i9j Nu. 5^^^-.
Kon. {Lgh. i. p. I24ff.) almost alone amongst
modern scholars still holds to the opinion that the epicene consonantal
but the verdict of philology and of Hex.
form is genuinely archaic
It must be a graphic error
criticism seems decisive against that view.
of some scribe or school of scribes whether proceeding from the original
scrip, def. Nn or not does not much matter (see Dri. and White's note
onLv. i^^\x\SBOT,^^. 25f.). 3ib] ux + nxp. n'?n3n] Of the ancient Vns.
(of.
Pent.,
green stone)
8vv^,
and so
That
ffi
it
is
not a
gem
is
3J (onjychtnus)
P0;.lli,
k'?ti3.
times
it
was green
felspar,
1214
II.
gem
6r
(Jb.
Eden (Ezk.
86).
76,
name
Gikon] The
13.
of a well on
was
it
the
of
which lEz.
In Jewish and Christian
28^^),
"lintJ'
is
i.
39,
10*).
ably from
nu
sj
burstings forth.'
'
14.
dk']
13.
pn'j]
Prob-
om. Spin]
'
'
similarly
of
in,
was
it
'sharp,'
and
S"3>
'wadi,'
and
n^jpi
Rendered
'
in their
name a compound
'swift,'
connexion with
Hebrews saw
= 'wadi
his
in front
'
by
(Wnool^)
(& {KarhavTi), Si
and
5J {contra)
'
Pers. Ufrdtuy
whence Gr.
Ei'0pdr7;s.
62
^erkat on the
legend had wandered to Palestine before 1300 B.C. (Gressmann, ARW, x. 2iM)'Euphrates\ The name (niB) needed
it
is
the inj
par
excel-
lence of the
The
and
site
it
is
^"^^.
element in the geography of
1. Several recent theories seek an exact determination of the locality
i""^*,
at the cost of a somewhat unof Paradise, and of all the data of
natural exegesis of v.^^ That of Frd. Del. {Wo lag das Paradies?,
1881) is based partly on the fact that N of Babylon (in the vicinity of
Bagdad) the Euphrates and Tigris approach within some twenty miles
of each other, the Euphrates from its higher level discharging water
through canals into the Tigris, which might thus be regarded as an
offshoot of
it.
The land
of
Eden
is
of Bagdad)
nearly a hundred miles
rivers from Tekrit (on the Tigris
and 'Ana (on the Euphrates) to the Persian Gulf; the garden being one
specially favoured region from the so-called isthmus to a little S of
:
'
II.
II-I4
6^
desert lying
and S of the Euphrates and Kush is a name for
northern and middle Babylonia, derived from the Kassite dynasty that
once ruled there. In spite of the learning and ingenuity with which
this theory has been worked out, it cannot clear itself of an air of
artificiality at variance with the simplicity of the passage it seeks to
explain.
That the Euphrates should be at once the undivided Paradisestream and one of the heads into which it breaks up is a glaring
anomaly; while v.^'' shows that the narrator had distinctly before his
mind the upper course of the Tigris opposite Assur, and is therefore
not likely to have spoken of it as an effluent of the Euphrates. The
objection that the theory confuses rivers and canals is fairly met by the
argument that the Bab. equivalent of n-nj is used of canals, and also by
the consideration that both the canals mentioned were probably ancient
river-beds
but the order in which the rivers are named tells heavily
against the identifications.
Moreover, the expression the whole land
of Havilah seems to imply a much larger tract of the earth's surface
than the small section of desert enclosed by the Pallakopas and to
speak of the whole of northern Babylonia as * surrounded by the
Shalt en-Nil is an abuse of language. According to Sayce [HCM,
;
'
'
'
'
'
DB,
the garden of
Eden
95
ff.
at Eridu
i.
643
f. ),
i.
'
Tigris).
2.
of the problem,
identifies
THE
64
interpretation of
v.^**,
SITE OF PARADISE
it
As a matter
the Euphrates
make
the
common
the supposition of a
source possible
Asia
(for,
we
as
shall see,
is
and
it is
it is
its
Indus, as Alexander the Great did in his time f and we might then
But it
fall back on the old identification of Pishon with the Ganges.^
must be admitted that the names Havilah and Kush are a serious
;
Indian rivers
The fact that in mediaeval Arabian
rise in the Caucasus (xv. i. 13).
geographers (^ei}}un is a proper name of the Oxus and the Cilician
Pyramus, and an appellative of the Araxes and the Ganges, might
seem at first sight to have a bearing on the question at issue but its
*
all
II.
II-I4
The
65
indeed,
latter,
may
retain
its
OT
meaning- if Gihon be the upper Nile, either as a continuation of the Indus or a separate river but if it be the Indus alone, Kush
must be the country of the Kassites, conceived as extending indefinitely
E of Babylonia. Havilah has to be taken as a name for India considered as an extension of NE Arabia, an interpretation which finds
no support in the OT. At the same time, as Di. observes, the language
employed (* the whole land of H.') sug-g-ests some more spacious region
than a limited district of Arabia and from the nature of the passage
we can have no certainty that the word is connected with the Havilah
of Gn. lo.
An interesting- and independent theory, based on ancient
Babylonian g-eographical documents, has been propounded by Haupt.
The common source of the four rivers is supposed to have been a
large (imaginary) basin of water in N Mesopotamia the Euphrates
and Tigris lose themselves in marshes the Pishon (suggested by the
Kerkha) is conceived as continued in the N&r Marrattim (Persian Gulf)
and the Red Sea, and so encompasses the whole of Havilah (Arabia)
beyond this there was supposed to be land, through which the Gihon
(suggested by the Karun) was supposed to reach Kush (Ethiopia),
whence it flowed northwards as the Nile. The theory perhaps combines more of the biblical data in an intelligible way than any other
that has been proposed and it seems to agree with those just considered in placing the site of Eden at the common source of the rivers,
usual
'
of Mesopotamia.*
seems probable that the resources of philology and scientific
geography are well-nigh exhausted by theories such as have been
described above, and that further advance towards a solution of the
problem of Paradise will be along the line of comparative n^ythology.
Discussions precisely similar to those we have examined are maintained
with regard to the Iranian cosmography whether, e.g.^ the stream
Ranha be the Oxus or the Yaxartes or the Indus the truth being that
Ranha is a mythical celestial stream, for which various earthly
equivalents might be named (see Tiele, Gesch. d. Rel. ii. 291 f.).
If
we knew more of the diffusion and history of cosmological ideas in
to the
It
3.
we
ancient religions,
that Gn.
2"^"^*
is
Ueber
66
(j)
346
f.).
15. to till it
or the
and
to
guard
second member
it]
(Di.),
To
as
inconsistent
man
The
but
ideal
3^^^-
with
existence for
is
**the
The
keep a garden.
to be protected
belief that
man
is
and appears
point
lies
in Phoenician
i^^)
was widespread
in antiquity,
mythology.*
in
For the
the imposition of a taboo on one particular tree.
proposed
been
it
has
and
evil
good
words of the knowledge of
to substitute "which is in the midst of the garden" (as 3^),
*
i.Trb
i.
evpelv 5k rbv
kldva T^r
n. 15-19
tests
and, after
there
all,
serpent to disclose,
viz.
fulfilled
but
its
remained something
day
in the
for the
that such
force
die\
The
threat
was
is
man from
considerations as that
(Jer. al.),
still
67
that time
became mortal
human
life.
*i"^^?3]
(only here)
lit.
i.e,
corresponding
him.
to
19.
watch
recognise in
18. ncyN]
i^).
^l];]
where
chiefly of
are Ezk.
ffir
niy
be cohort. (G-K. 75
succour ')=* helper'
*
God
v.^*^
D'n'?N.
Ho.
(KF render as
{ahstr.
pro concr.)
Omission
v.^O)
call
it]
To
S>
CTlZoD
of tin before
Qt^
n'n-'?3 is
used
is
else-
possible exceptions
13'' (if
S^otos avrQ)
after
/)
avrbv (but
/car
aiiTov
May
what he would
it
(usually
to see
its eff"ect
n''?3'p3.
BDB. njaa]
;
S. dvTiKpvs
19.
remarkable
;uu. ins.
in this ch.
(see
on
possible
'
PARADISE AND THE FALL
68
the effect of a
man
new
experience on a
(j)
whatever
little child.
name] The spontaneous ejaculation of the first man becomes to his posterity
a name such is the origin of (Hebrew) names. The words
n'H L"D3 are incapable of construction, and are to be omitted
as an explanatory gloss (Ew. al.).
20. The classification
the
should call
it,
its
of animals
is
inch.
I.
is
'
^^
(domestic and
still
simpler than
'
HD'l'iri]
to produce
is
human
There
spared.
(it
on
29^^).
Is.
divine
ribs\
easily be
is
it
a hypnotic trance,
Duhm
representation:
is
(cf.
woman upon
man, her close relationship to him, and the foundation
existing in nature for
the feelings with which each
should naturally regard the other" (Dri.). The Arabs use
similarly a word for rib,' saying hUa lizkl or hUa bilizkl for
of the sexes to each other, the dependence of
'
'
he
is
my bosom
that the
first
separated
finds
On
companion.'
no countenance
in the
passage.
22.
built
up
the rib
fatal, to say nothing- of the addition of db'. 20. flij;*?!] Rd. with MSS
ffirU^^ qiy-'^^D'?! (Ba. ). D"3N^^] Here the Mass. takes Adam as a proper
name. De. al. explain it as generic = for a human being' (Gu.); Ols.
emends DnNm. The truth is that the Mass. loses no opportunity presented by the Kethib of treating Dnx as n. pr. Point d^n^]. N^iD n*?] Tu.
but it may be pass, expressed by indef. subj.
al. take God as subj.
(G-K. 144 f/, e) = there was not found.' 21. no-nn] ffi ^Karaaw Aq.
be
'
Karacpopdv
S. Kdpov
Sa. 26^^
Is.
29^", Jb.
4^2 33^^
Pr.
The examples of
i9''t)> all
except the
its
and some
use (15*'',
confirm
last,
II.
a woman] So
into
brothers," the
Batau,
20 23
in the
god Chnum
69
operation
(see
ition the
him
is
man
now brought
to
There
the exclamation that breaks
[v.z.):
note
bone of my bones^ etc.] The expressions originate in the primitive notion of kinship as resting
the thrice repeated DXT.
on ''participation
in
the
same
The
(cf.
to
Wo?nan] English
language
is
('/i,
is
is
unique.
without straining
Duhm's view
is
less
is
marked.
indicated.
23.
cyan
It is
nsM]
The
construction
rendered above takes nxM as subj. of the sent, and 0^2.1= 'this time,' the
art. having- full demonstrative force, as in 2^^^- 30^ 46^, Ex. (f^ (so (&.
SOU; De. Di. Gu. al.). The accents, however, unite the words
in one phrase 'this time,' after the rather important analogy of ntoyS) n
(27^^ 43I"), leaving the subj. unexpressed.
This sense is followed by
SQT^J, and advocated by Sta. {ZATW, xvii. 2ioff.); but it seems less
acceptable than the other. t^'x, -i^JS] The old derivation of these words
from a common fj e'jn is generally abandoned, iff'H being assigned to a
hypothetical ^J '?=' be strong' (Ges. Th.). Ar. and Aram., indeed,
show quite clearly that the ^ seen in the pi. DT:^{ (and in t^ux) and
that of HK'N (nv'4J<) are only apparently identical, the one having 5 where
the other has /.
The masc. and fem. are therefore etymologically
distinct, and nothing remains but a very strong assonance.
The
question whether we are to postulate a third ^ for the sing. i^'N does
not greatly concern us here the arguments will be found in BDB, s.v.
See No. ZDMG^ xl. 740 (" Aber i^'n mochte ich doch bei m^ lassen").
In imitation of the assonance, 2. has &v5pis,
Virago.
0. XtJxI/ls, represents NB'N, I will take
a curious blunder which is fully elucidated by
'
JO
Virago
(e.g. Jer.
it
Whether even
Luther, Mdnnin).
is
doubtful
is
leaves
and
cleaves
and
(j)
[v.i.).
This
in
Heb.
24.
An
why a man
is
they become^
etc.\
It
is
Mt.
Mk.
19^^-,
lo^^-,
What
to the question,
5^^)
it
is
an answer
is
the
man
It
only in
3^^.
v.
own kindred
for good,
it
and goes
in
may be an
heena marriage. Cf. Benz. EB, 2675: "The phrase .
old saying dating from remote times when the husband went to the
house (tent) of the wife and joined her clan. Still the passage may be
merely the narrator's remark and even if it should be an old proverb
we cannot be sure that it really carries us so far back in antiquity."
See, however, Gressmann, ARW, x. 353^ van Doorninck, ThT^ xxxix.
.
3^^ to different
recensions).
'
'
'
'
the quotation from Origen given in Field, p. i^^^.Yov b"nd, axx(&W^ read
riv'^ND, which is by no means an improvement. riNrnnf;^^] See G-K. 10 A,
20
c.
24.
D.TJB'D rrm,
vni]
Add
Dn'i?'
NT
fully distinguished
'crafty,' in
3^
citations.
tjx
has
naked,' to be careis
either
a by-form
of QTy {sj niy='be bare') in 3^*-, or (more probably) a different formamy ('be bare'). See BOB, s.vv.^tffv;1T\^] The Hithpal.
tion from
(only here) probably expresses reciprocity (' ashamed before one
another
') ;
the impf.
is
frequentative.
:;
II.
24-III.
71
^i).
(3^, cf.
It
then our
often seen
V.^
is
first
naked
in the
East (Doughty,
ADy
to the
ii.
before
who
are
475).
main theme
to
which
all
1-7.
III.
is
The
temptation.
Attention
is
at
once
happiness of Eden
But
iii.
246
the
the serpent
fF.),
preternatural
was
wily]
The
less
KwTaTov yap to
(Sanchuniathon, in Eus.
PrcBp. Ev.
it
i.
sensu bono
10).
(</)poVt/Aos),
the category of
Yahwe
and an
beasts of the
effort
72
there
was an
earlier
in
(j)
which he figured as
a god or a demon.
The
Comp.
quoted above
TTj/ei^/uaros
iraplarria-i, X^P'-^
Kara
iroSQv re Kal
kiv7)<TLS
iroLeirai'
^x"
x^'-P'^^t
&'>0<ov rivbs
^0'8 ^ovXerai
j^'Coop
III.
solved, as
is
well
73
Alexandrian Judaism
in
his subtlety
by addressing
his first
said^ etc. !\
"'3
^jX
{v.u).
Something
It is
cmm] The usual order of words when a new subject is introG-K. 142 (f; Dav. 105. ony]
(ppoviixdrraTo^, Aq. . vavovpyos,
The good sense (which appears to be
S. iravovpydTepos, U callidior.
secondary, cf. Ar. 'arama='he ill-natured') is confined to Prov.
elsewhere (Jb. 5^2 j^5j
means 'crafty,' 'wily.' The same distinction is
observed in all forms of the /J except that in Jb. 5^^ DTy has the good
sense.
The resemblance to D'Dny in 2^ is perhaps accidental. tdn'i
t^h] as a compound part, generally means 'much more
(J&^ + B'njn.
I.
n'H
duced,
ffi^
j(-
":>
PARADISE AND THE FALL
74
(j)
is
explanation
reflected
is
upon
(see
p.
it is
53).
But
(322^).
J's
doubtful what
2,
3.
usage
is
in
the true
The woman's
first
nor
death had not followed the touch, so it would not follow the
Equally futile inferences have been
eating (Ber. 7?., Ra.).
midst] See p. 66
syntax,
f.
The
v.i.
4.
Ve
is
the tree
hypercritical.
thus
serpent
advances
to
On
an
the
open
tion of
fear
8%
'
'
'
G-K.
G-K.
113 V.
It is
adopting the same form of words but the phrase had not been used
by the woman, and the exact words are 7iot repeated. More probably
its effect is to concentrate the emphasis on the neg-. part, rather than on
;
III.
2-6
75
etc.] And
therefore has falsely
you with death. The gratuitous insinuation
reveals the main purpose of the tempter, to sow the seeds
of distrust towards God in the mind of the woman, your
eyes shall he opened] The expression denotes a sudden
acquisition of new powers of perception through supernatural influence (21^^, Nu. 22^^, 2 Ki. 6^^).
as gods] or
'divine beings,' rather than
as God': the rendering as
5.
But
God knowethy
threatened
The
with
p.
not equality
is
correctly stated
good
God
is
<f>0ovp6v
is
now
Oe7ovy
an
the highest
antique
(Gu.).
sentiment
The
6.
spiritual
how
to
Greeks"
is
He grudges
envious, inasmuch as
man
to
attractive to taste
tree with
and sight
new
its
eyes
fruit
she observes
seems, and
how
so Tu. Ges.
lation is the
his eyes
open
ffiUom.
in order not to
(cf.
Am. 9^
%^
panana.
;
.-..VnX
take the vb. as vb. of sight QT*^ .Ta N'?DnDN'? is indeterminate (see Levy,
Chald. Wb. 163 a).
In OT the word is used of mental vision (insight, or
all
PARADISE AND THE FALL
76
been a
common
of the narrative.
of the serpent
so far
is
7*
^^^ ^y^^
of
shame
is
fulfilled
(j)
The
opened]
they
knew
prediction
fills
them
is
theil
fact
of being
shame and
unclothed.
between sexual
connexion
single
that
effect
forbidden
the
fruit
An
allusion to the
so-called fig-tree
is on
geradezu philisterhafter
every ground
improbable;
For
*'ein
see
original
8-I3.
The
with what
may
allegorical
Lagarde, Mitth.
leaves,
inquest.
his
Thus
i.
73
ff.,
own.
far the narrative
has dealt
the
Aram,
it
means
The
On
comes
the other
view the Hiph. is intrans. (='for acquiring wisdom': Ps. 94^) rather
than caus. ( = 'to impart wisdom': Ps. 32^ etc.). Gu. considers the
clause 'rh ['yn lomi a variant from another source.
npni] (&^ + r\z'^:\.
jDN'i] .ui(5 i'?DN'i. 7. D'DTy] See on 2-^ n'?y] coll.; but some MSS and
XXX have '^y,.
7-12
III.
77
Yahwe
to
and
this is
the temptation
itself.
footsteps, as 2 Sa.
s^*,
8.
in
representation
the cool
when
cf.
Ezk.
2^.
Jl.
(lit.
'
if
but
at the breeze
it
we
(with De.)
')
is
3I2'.,
used
of the day\
i.e.
in
towards evening,
2^^
Ca.
4^
Such,
(24^^).
we
was Yahwe's daily practice and the man and woman had
been wont to meet Him with the glad confidence of
;
innocence.
9.
ignorance;
illustrate,
he has shown
bring himself to
make a
clean breast of
it
but with 4 quaint
mixture of cowardice and effrontery he throws Hhe blame
8.
l'?nnD]
ace. of condition:
Da v.
'jo{a).^r\
(SDQ-5
T\rh\
(& rh deiXtvdv,
Jb.
24^^.
'
78
directly
to him.
(j)
The woman
13.
by pleadingthe serpent.
in like
manner exculpates
No
herself
(truly
motive
evil
is
question
understoo'5)
**
hope of pardon."
14-19. This section contains the key to the significance
Fall.
It
the
is
first
example of a
men and
more perplexing
doom
or
weird
human
out.
15. The curse on the serpent is legible, partly
degraded form and habits (^*), and partly in the
deadly feud between it and the human race (^^).
14. on thy
belly etc.] The assumption undoubtedly is that originally
14,
in
its
serpent
the
moved
erect,
but
not
necessarily that
its
r^vnr:,
(G-K.
Ex.
hyo]
19",
Probably from
again only Lv.
jnj
11*2^
III.
logical
79
13-1S
representations
in
the
its
7^'',
Is. 65^^.
a prosaic explanation to say that the serpent, crawling on the ground, inadvertently swallows a good deal of
It is
iii. 245
Di. al.)
and a mere metaphor
humiliation (like Ass. ti-ka-lu ip-rw, KIB^ v. 232 f.) is
too
weak a sense
Probably
^inn eat
(We. Held.
dirt
serpent as long
each
i.e.
serpents as long as
comm.
seem
150).
all the
as
lives,
lasts.
it
it
It is
it
a piece
is
days of thy
and
the
life]
race of
think
Hebrew jurisprudence
in
that
(9^,
these
Ex.
2i28f-,
But
Lv. 20^^*).
it
is
is
conceived as re-embodied in
and suffering
serpent's
woman
in
of the species.
15.
The
between them.^
and
all
each member
-thy seed
15. Vl]] in the sense of 'offspring-,' is nearly always colIn a few cases where it is used of an individual child (4^* 21^',
Sa. i") it denotes the immediate offspring as the pledg-e of posterity,
KoiKla.
lective.
I
never a remote descendant (see No. AJ^ W, viii. 164 ff.). The Messianic
xm] the renderingapplication therefore is not justified in grammar.
ipsa (U) is said got to be found in the Fathers before Ambrose and
Augustine (Zapletal, ATltches, 19). Jer. at all events knew that ipse
n3itr]
The form qw recurs only Jb. g^"^,
should be read. usitrn
Ps. 139", and, in both, text and meaning are doubtful.
In Aram, and
the sj (i"i; or y"y) has the primary sense of 'rub,' hence 'wear
down by rubbing- '= crush ; in Syr. it also means to crawl. There are
a few exx. of a tendency of V'y vbs. to strengthen themselves by
insertion of N (Kon. i. 439), and it is often supposed that in certain pass.
NH
'
"
Fit
iii.
250) "
ut
ab
ipsis
abhorreat
dixeras
quam dudum
and
^/c
-rraidbi
rbv \pvxpbv
aeque
fidXiara
PARADISE AND THE FALL
8o
on the heady
*
seed
of the
'
In the
etc.]
woman
(i^^^) it is
second
prompted by a
serpent
the
is
sentence
is
is
(&in)
the
woman
:
(ipsa)
feeling that
clear
He
first
*seed.'
(j)
herself.
the
in
the former will crush the head of the foe, while the latter
in the sense
mode
of attack.
man
The
in the heel.
which
'
bruise
We
'
^IIK^,
is
may speak
of a serpent stHking a
'
'
al.)
*aim at' (Ges. Ew.
word
means
bruise'
in
masia
the
suppose that by parono
second.
But
may
in
the
it
aim
at
the first clause, and
be questioned whether this idea is not even less suitable
Di.^al.);
for,'
(Dri.).
cannot be given
'
{v.i.).
in
The Messianic
STJ and Targ.
interpretation of the
where the
Jer.,
v.
is
(Ezk. 36^, Am. 2^ 8^, Ps. 56" ^ ^1^) ^ii> is disguised under the by-form qNB'.
But the only places where the assumption is at all necessary are
Am. 2^ 8*, where the K may be simply mater lectionis for the d of the
in the other cases the proper sense of ^'^
ptcp. (cf. Dxpi, Ho. 10^'*)
(* pant
or metaph. long for ') suffices. The reverse process (substituand the only possible instance
tion of fjic for INK') is much less likely
would be Jb, 9''^, which is too uncertain to count for anything. There
;
'
'
thus not much ground for supposing a confusion in this v. and De.
points out that vbs. of hostile endeavour^ as distinct from hostile achieveis
ment
',
U conterei
insidiaberiSy
while 2r paraphrases
NS10S.
and perhaps
n'^ n3
'nn
rm
,S
.JOrJ
ponpSo
n'"?
>'Tt^
^^^ril
mayn no tdt
kh' Kin
III.
munity and
The
81
15
its
was taught by
King Messiah."
was
Irenaeus, but
never so generally accepted in the Church as the kindred idea that the
serpent is the instrument of Satan.
Mediaeval exegetes, relying on the
ipsa of the Vulg., applied the expression directly to the Virgin Mary
and even Luther, while rejecting this reference, recognised an allusion
to the virgin birth of Christ
In Protestant theology this view gave
way to the more reasonable view of Calvin, that the passage is a
promise of victory over the devil to mankind, united in Christ its divine
Head. That even this goes beyond the original meaning of the v. is
admitted by most modern expositors and indeed it is doubtful if, from
the standpoint of strict historical exegesis, the passage can be regarded
as in any sense a Protevangelium. Di. (with whom Dri. substantially
agrees) finds in the words the idea of man's vocation to ceaseless moral
warfare with the serpent-brood of sinful thoughts, and an implicit
promise of the ultimate destruction of the evil power. That interpretation, however, is open to several objections,
(i) A message of hope
and encouragement in the midst of a series of curses and punishments
is not to be assumed unless it be clearly implied in the language.
It
would be out of harmony with the tone not only of the Paradise story,
but of the Yahwistic sections of chs. i-ii as a whole it is not till we
come to the patriarchal history that the '* note of promise and of hope "
is firmly struck.
(2) To the mind of the narrator, the serpent is no
more a symbol of the power of evil or of temptation than he is an incarnation of the devil.
He is himself an evil creature, perhaps a
demonic creature transmitting his demonic character to his progeny,
but there is no hint that he represents a principle of evil apart from
himself.
(3) No victory is promised to either party, but only perpetual
warfare between them
the order of the clauses making it specially
hard to suppose that the victory of man was contemplated. Di. admits
that no such assurance is expressed but finds it in the general tenor
of the passage " a conflict ordained by God cannot be without prospect
of success." But that is really to beg the whole question in dispute.
If it be said that the words, being part of the sentence on the serpent,
must mean that he is ultimately to be defeated, it may be answered
that the curse on the serpent is the enmity established between him and
the human race, and that the feud between them is simply the manifestation and proof of that antagonism.
It is thus possible that in its
;
'
reflects
which
lie
It is
psychologi-
serous
of
82
And
(j)
that
is
'
'
narrator.
16.
The doom
of the
woman:
consisting
the
in
The
East.
mind as
at
fflr
multiply^
It is,
3, i?. (2)).
therefore to be
woman
on
from the
More strictly, I
have much suffering and pregnancy'
will
cause thee to
Dav.
makes
is
elc]
will
(see
meant.
is
groaning'
(v.t.);
For
but to
hendiadys
planatory
'
clause which
follows).
The pangs
of
extremity of
human anguish
and
oft.
Ex.
are
childbirth
in
'
pain
(as
.
proverbial in
(Is.
the ex-
in
.
children^
OT
i^^
for
the
thy
On the
So 16^" 22".
'?n] Read -h^], with aju(&S. nmN nann]
form of inf. abs., see G-K. TSff-V^^^] (3^' S^'^t [J]). (K X57ra5
miJinm (Ru. 4'^, Ho. 9II). Ols. {MBA,
( = ^nny ?)._-|nni] {^Insn):
<& rbv (rrevayiibv
1870, 380) conj. larin?, to avoid the harsh use of %
^iij; ('sorrow') has also been suggested (Gu.)
aov probably = HJVjn
aisya] mx }i3sy3
and MDiy (Di. Ho. al.). The other Vns. follow MT.
npwn] Probably connected with Ar.
dR likewise repeats iv \virais.
Sauk, 'ardent desire' (Rahlfs " 'ili und M,]^," p. 71); cf. pptff, Is. 29^
16.
irreg.
Aq. avvacpeia, 2. bpfi-q. Although it recurs only 4' and Ca. 7",
found in
and should not be suspected. <& i] diroaTpocp-q aov
Ps. 107^
it
is
and
NH
Si
>
1 <7^
7 /
Tin^^E'^,
III.
husband
^,
of
etc.
(v.t.).
woman's sexual
Gu.)
njjirri
It
desire
weaker
nD^E'ri.
is
is
however,
not,
is
S^
17
desire] It is quite
i6,
both
lot,
the man.
The
vb.
he (on his
while
part)
but
it
over thee\
rule
shall
lie
in the
is
(cf.
There
is
is
sexes
hard, unremitting
toil
grudging
the
the
is
standing
on the earth
all
had
and this
now
;
extorted in
name death
is
avoided
now
a gardener,
itself is part
and the
man
man
it
formerly
Originally,
he
a fellah.
is
of the curse.
It
The
the
inevitable
return
'
of
Point DiK^i
17.
there
V read
of J
ixT]
?Ii3j;3,
is
no conceivable reason
ijdd
O. eu
rrj
nDN*?]
imnyn]
dSc
(&.
why
onx should be
reads
roirrou ixbvov
The phrase
is
2.
characteristic
84
exceptional fertility
and
etc.),
23^^),
Jer.
was ascribed
barrenness
exceptional
(j)
to
curse
24^,
(Is.
See
The
5^^.
laborious
'
but this
of the
OT; and
to the
Hebrew a
work
of the
'
qualification.
by the curse ?
It
It
was
same time a
'agriculture
is
well to be re-
18.
re-
is
is
of this passage.
[of] ii\
husbandman
is
in suffer-
it
it
would
mood
on i^^. The
creation of this order of vegetation has not been recorded by
Are we to suppose that it comes into existence simply
J.
in consequence of the earth's diminished productivity caused
the herb of thejield] See
seems implied
will
human
labour (see
2^).
19. in the
more expressive
repetition
may mean
but here
'
earn a livelihood
must be understood
it
of the thought of
literally
etc.]
'
The
1^^^.
(Am.
7^^),
as the immediate
'
but
is
III.
The connexion of
reach.
2?
it
18-20
85
;;;
is
rather with
and
again.
to
TrdXtv yc'yova.
The arrangement of the clauses in "'^^ is not very natural, and the
repeated variations of the same idea have sug-g-ested the hypothesis of
textual corruption or fusion of sources.
In Jub. iii. 25 the passage is
quoted in an abridged form, the line Cursed
sake being immediately followed by 'Thorns ... to thee,' and "*' being omitted.
This
is, of course, a much smoother reading, and leaves out nothing essential
but "b is guaranteed by 5^.
Ho. rejects ^^^ and to avoid the repetition
of '?3 proposes nnayn instead ofnj'jDNn in
Gu. is satisfied with v."^*
*
'
^'^.
and
^^^
to another source
(JJ), as
perhaps on the whole
the most satisfactory analysis.
The poetic structure of the vv., which
might be expected to clear up a question of this kind, is too obscure
Dn"?)
This
^^*^.
is
any guidance.
to afford
embedded, and
is
it
all
10
f.)
tentative.
20-24.
of the
ffir
Eua
Aq. Ada,
Heva,
The
Jer.
Eva
(Eng. Eve)
similarity of the
name
[Mt.
7^**])
('.5n,
K;in,
i.
'
PARADISE AND THE FALL
S6
most
The
would be before
(so /ub.
it
^^
(j)
we
traditional,
[b)
that
it
in
any case be
is
(c)
it
is
v.^
name Eve has been preno distinctive name for the man,
suggests that nin is a survival from a more primitive theory
of human origins in which the first mother represented the
the mother of every living thing] Accordunity of the race.
ing to this derivation, Hjn would seem to denote first the
idea of life, and then the source of life the mother.* But
order or not.
The
Precarious as
of 'Mother of all living' (see Gres. Lc. 359 f.)such combinations may seem, there is no objection in principle to an
explanation of the name Havvah on these lines. Besides the Hivvites
of the OT (who were probably a serpent-tribe), We. cites examples of
title
The
simply *man,'
i.e.
the personification of
So Baethgen,
mankind" {KM"^,
208).
The
no support.
Beitr. 148,
who appends
the note
" Im holstein-
20-22
III.
87
is
is
commonly
includes
animals
all
(8-^
(v.t.).
but
etc.),
restricted to
here
however,
Cf.
epithet of the
21.
Another
v."^,
it
is
It
^n"^3
is
it
is,
be
most probably
**The
coa^s 0/ skin]
use"
(Dri.).
An
Interesting" question
arises as to the
connexion between
That
it
this
exhibits
God's continued care for man even after the Fall (Di. al.) may be true
as regards the present form of the legend ; but that is hardly the
original conception.
In the Phoen. legend of Usoos, the invention is
connected with the hunting- of wild animals, and this again with the
institution of sacrifice
... 6s (TK^Trrjv t^ aibfiaTi TrptDros iK dep/xdruv <bv
:
evpe
a/ia re cirivSeiv a^ats i^ S)V ijypeve
Ev. I. 10; Orelli, p. 17 f.)- Since sacrifice and the use of
animal food were inseparably associated in Semitic antiquity, it may
be assumed that this is conceived as the first departure from the Golden
Age, when men lived on the spontaneous fruits of the earth. Similarly,
Rob. Sm. {RS^i 306 ff.) found in the v. the Yahwistic theory of the
introduction of the sacrifice of domestic animals, which thus coincided,
as in Greek legend, with the transition from the state of innocence to
taxvo'^
(TvWa^elv
drjp'nav
dfiplwv {PrcBp.
the
life
of agriculture.
22-24.
The
This
no
us\
is
admission that
actual expulsion.
22.
Behold
man
al.),
,
,
one of
but a serious
,
His
130
a.
ist pi.
sp]
The
as
in
all
v.".
22.
and S
suffix)
has
i5sp,
G-K.
knowing': gerundial
inf.
p. 81).
2^*^
[respect ofj
nnxD]
His
OT attribute
resentment of
am
alone above."
nj/'n"?]
in
1140; Dri.
SS
In v.^ the
(j)
same words
mouth
God; and
to
is
it
{e.g-.
the phrase
like
one of us
retains
it
')
more of the
and
characteristically
it
is
pagan
feeling of the
Man
has not
unfounded.
And
now,
etc.]
be prompt to seize, viz. immortality: to prevent his thus attaining complete likeness to
God he must be debarred from the Tree of Life. The
expression put forth his hand suggests that a single
attribute
which man
will
partaking of the
fruit
idea of immortality
is
/introduced,
and the
23
is
it.
On
the aposio-
clearly a doublet of
22.
V.^^
is
205. The pregnant use of "js (=* I fear lest') is common (Gn. 19^*
Here it is more natural to assume an
38" 44^, Ex. 13^^ etc.).
anakolouthon, the clause depending on a cohortative, converted in v.^
T,
26^
in.
89
24
23,
and
it
On
in brackets.
MT, which
that the
There
is
It is
2^^
that
that
it
it
was
Eden from
2^
or
2^^^-.
extreme east, or in
nor is it here implied
in the
race in
The account
of
quite consistent
ii^ is
still
further east.
'
the
Cherubim and
sword.'
in the
Hunusa he made
bronze.'
to be
a lightning of
otherwise unknown,
flaming sword
of this passage.
The Cherubim. See the notes of Di. Gu. Dri. KAT^, 529 f., 631 ff.
Che. in EB, 741 ff.
Je. ATLO^, 218; Haupt, SEAT, Numbers, 46;
Polychrome Bible, 181 f. Furtwangler, in Roscher's Lex. art. Gryps.
The derivation of the word is uncertain. The old theory of a connexion with ^pv-^ {Greif, griffin, etc.) is not devoid of plausibility, but
lacks proof. The often quoted statement of Lenormant {Orig. i. 118),
that kirubu occurs on an amulet in the de Clercq collection as a name
;
into
historic tense.
Karc^Kiffev airbv
kt\.
='w
dj]
(&% om.
24.
D'3n3n-nN Dbji
py pV mpo
pE'-'i
rrjs rpvcpT^s,
onNn-nx
ty-in
Kal ^ra^ev
tcl x^P^^P^"
Ball rig-htly adopts
to supply
7^^,
Jb. 37^^
na3nnDn]
j^ Jb. 38^*
it
^^
THE PARADISE
90
winged
bulls of
winged genii often depicted by the side of the tree of life in Babylonian
These figures are usually human in form with human heads, but
art.
sometimes combine the human form with an eagle's head, and occasionThey are shown in the act
ally the human head with an animal body.
of fecundating the date-palm by transferring the pollen of the male
and hence it has been conjectured that
tree to the flower of the female
they are personifications of the winds, by whose agency the fertilisation
Starting
of the palm is effected in nature (Tylor, PSBA, xii. 383 fF.).
with this clue, we can readily explain (i) the function of the Cherub as
the living chariot of Yah we, or bearer of the Theophany, in Ps. 18^^
It is a personification of the storm-wind on which Yahwe
(2 Sa. 22^^).
;
The theory
that the
that
it
28^*- 1^),
and guardians
of the Tree (as in this passage). (3) Thence they came to be viewed as
guardians of sacred things and places generally, like the composite
figures placed at the entrances of Assyrian temples and palaces to
prevent the approach of evil spirits. To this category belong probably
in the first instance the colossal Cherubim of Solomon's temple (i Ki.
523ff.
gef.^^
(Ex.
25^^^- etc.)
'
'
man
any such existed) has not yet been discovered. There is in the
British Museum a much-debated seal-cylinder which is often cited as
(if
evidence that a legend very similar to the biblical narrative was current
It shows two completely clothed figures seated on either
in Babylonia.
LEGEND
91
side of a tree, and each stretching^ out a hand toward its fruit, while a
crooked line on the left of the picture is supposed to exhibit the serpent.*
The engraving- no doubt represents some legend connected with the tree
of life ; but even if we knew that it illustrates the first temptation, the
story is itill wanting and the details of the picture show that it can
have had very little resemblance to Gn. 3. The most that can be
claimed is that there are certain remote parallels to particular features
or ideas of Gn. 2^-3", which are yet sufficiently close to suggest that
the ultimate source of the biblical narrative is to be sought in the
Babylonian mythology. Attention should be directed to the following
(a) The account of Creation in 2^' has undoubted resemblances
to the Babylonian document described on p. 47 f., though they are
hardly such as to prove dependence. Each starts with a vision of
chaos, and in both the prior existence of heaven and earth seems to be
assumed although the Babylonian chaos is a waste of waters, while
that of Gn. 2^^ is based rather on the idea of a waterless desert (see
The order of creation, though not the same, is alike
p. 56 above).
in its promiscuous and unscientific character: in the Babylonian we
have a hopeless medley mankind, beasts of the field, living things of
the field, Tigris and Euphrates, verdure of the field, grass, marshes,
reeds, wild-cow, ewe, sheep of the fold, orchards, forests, houses, and
cities, etc. etc.
but no separate creation of woman. The creation of
mati from earth moistened by the blood of a god, in another document,
may be instanced as a distant parallel to 2'^ (pp. 42, 45).
(5) The legend of Eabani, embedded in the GilgameS-Epic (Tab. I.
KIBy vi. i, p. i2off.), seems to present us (it has been
Col. ii. 1. 33 ff.
thought) with a 'type of primitive man.' Eabani, created as a rival
to GilgameS by the goddess Aruru from a lump of clay, is a being of
gigantic strength who is found associating with the wild animals, living
their life, and foiling all the devices of the huntsman.
Eager to capture
him, GilgameS sends with the huntsman a harlot, by whose attractions
he hopes to lure Eabani from his savagery. Eabani yields to her
charms, and is led, a willing- captive, to the life of civilisation
;
When
One
But later in the epic, the harlot appears as the cause of his sorrows,
and Eabani curses her with all his heart. Apart from its present
setting, and considered as an independent bit of folk-lore, it cannot
be denied that the story has a certain resemblance to Gn. 2^^'^*. Only,
we may be sure that if the idea of sexual intercourse with the beasts be
implied in the picture of Eabani, the moral purity of the Hebrew writer
never stooped so low (see Jastrow, AJSLy xv. 198 ff. Stade, ZATW,
;
xxiii. i74f.).
(c)
Far more
THE PARADISE
92
of the Fall are found in the myth of Adapa and the South-'wind, discovered amongst the Tel-Amarna Tablets, and therefore known in
Palestine in the 15th cent. B.C. {KIB, vl. i, 92-101). Adapa, the son
of the god Ea, is endowed by him with the fulness of divine wisdom,
but denied the gift of immortalitj'
"Wisdom
While plying the trade of a fisherman on the Persian Gulf, the southwind overwhelms his bark, and in revenge Adapa breaks the wings of
For this offence he is summoned by Anu to, appear
the south-wind.
before the assembly of the gods in heaven and Ea instructs him how
Then the gods, disconcerted by finding
to appease the anger of Anu.
a mortal in possession of their secrets, resolve to make the best of it, and
to admit him fully into their society, by conferring on him immortality.
They offer him food of life that he may eat, and water of life that he
may drink. But Adapa had previously been deceived by Ea, who did
not wish him to become immortal. Ea had said that what would be
offered to him would be food and water of death, and had strictly
cautioned him to refuse. He did refuse, and so missed immortal life.
;
Anu laments
lord,
"
'
This looks almost like a travesty of the leading ideas of Gn. 3 yet the
In both we have the idea that
features are very striking.
wisdom and immortality combined constitute equality with deity in
both we have a man securing the first and missing the second and in
both the man is counselled in opposite directions by supernatural voices,
and acts on that advice which is contrary to his interest. There is, of
course, the vital difference that while Yahwe forbids both wisdom and
immortality to man, Ea confers the first (and thus far plays the part of
the biblical serpent) but withholds the second, and Anu is ready to
bestow both. Still, it is not too much to expect that a story like this
will throw light on the mythological antecedents of the Genesis narrative,
if not directly on that narrative itself (see below, p. 94).
What is true of Babylonian affinities holds good in a lesser degree
of the ancient mythologies as a whole everywhere we find echoes of
the Paradise myth, but nowhere a story which forms an exact parallel
The Graeco-Roman traditions told of a 'golden age,' lost
to Gn. 2. 3.
through the increasing sinfulness of the race, an age when the earth
freely yielded its fruits, and men lived in a happiness undisturbed by
toil or care or sin (Hesiod, Op. et Dies, 90-92, 109-120; Ovid, Met. i.
Indian and
89-112, etc.); but they knew nothing of a sudden fall.
Persian mythologies told, in addition, of sacred mountains where the
gods dwelt, with bright gold and flashing gems, and miraculous trees
conferring immortality, and every imaginable blessing and we have
The
seen that similar representations were current in Babylonia.
nearest approach to definite counterparts of the biblical narrative
;
common
LEGEND
93
are found
who
in
lived at first
gave way
to pride,
and
fell
evil
serpent
Dahaka
(see Di. p. 47 ff.)But these echoes are too faint and distant
to enable us to determine the quarter whence the original impulse pro-
(the
knowledge
not Bab;f Ionian though a single detail of that kind cannot settle the
question of origin. But until further light comes from the monuments,
all speculations on this subject are very much in the air.
;
tains features
accommodated
are not native to it {Gen. 51). Amongst the features which are at variance
with the standpoint of Hebrew religion we may put first of all the fact
that the abode of Yahwe is placed, not in Canaan or at Mount Sinai,
but in the far East. The strictly mythological background of the story
emerges chiefly in the conceptions of the garden of the gods (see p. 57 f.),
the trees of life and of knowledge (p. 59), the serpent (p. 72 f.). Eve (p. 85 f.),
and the Cherubim (p. 89 f). It is true, as has been shown, that each of
these conceptions is rooted in the most primitive ideas of Semitic religion
but it is equally true that they have passed through a mythological
development for which the religion of Israel gave no opportunity. Thus
the association of trees and serpents in Semitic folk-lore is illustrated by
;
THE PARADISE
94
'
LEGEND
95
it
suggested to more
We
clothing
right
it
and wrong
good and
evil
or hurt " cf. 2 Sa. 14^' with ^** all things that are in earth (Gn. 24^*^ 31^^).
We. maintains that the non-ethical sense is fundamental, the expressions
:
'
'
THE PARADISE
g6
implies equality with God,
(b)
(c) is
actually secured
In the leading- narrative (b) certainly holds good (2^'), but (a)
are doubtful. Did the serpent speak truth when he said that
Lby man.
and (c)
knowledge of good and evil would make man like God? Did man
actually attain such knowledge ? Was the perception of nakedness a
first flash of the new divine insight which man had coveted, or was it a
bitter disenchantment and mockery of the hopes inspired by the serpent's
words ? It is only the habit of reading the ideas of 3^^ into the story of
A^_^he temptation which makes these questions seem superfluous. Let us
consider how far the various interpretations enable us to answer them.
i.
The suggestion that magical knowledge is meant may be set aside as
inadequate to either form of the biblical narrative magic is not god:
like
knowledge, nor
is it
ii.
The
usual explanation identifies the knowledge of good and evil with the
moral sense, the faculty of discerning between right and wrong. This
is ably defended by Bu. {Urg: 69 ff.), and is not to be lightly dismissed, but yet raises serious difficulties.
Could it be said that God
V- meant to withhold from man the power of moral discernment? Does
not the prohibition itself presuppose that man already knew that
obedience was right and disobedience sinful ?
have no right to say
that the restriction was only temporary, and that God would in other
view
We
the narrative
holds that the
knowledge in question is insight into the secrets of nature, and intelligence to manipulate them for human ends and this as a quality not
so much of the individual as of the race, the knowledge which is the
It is the faculty which we see at work
principle of human civilisation.
in the invention of clothing (3^1 ?), in the founding of cities (4^'^), in the
discovery of the arts and crafts (4'^^"), and in the building of the tower
sort.
iii.
We.
{ProlJ^ 299
ff".)
LEGEND
97
knowledge
is
we may be
content to
sin.
\,
'
98
Beginnings of History and
Ch. IV.
Critical Analysis.
Civilisation.
Cainite genealogy.
It is probable that the first link occurs in v.^*^*, and
has to be disentangled from the Cain legend (so We. Bu.); whether
it can have included the whole of that legend is a point to be considered
later (p. 100).
We have thus a list of Adam's descendants through
Cain, continued in a single line for seven generations, after which it
branches into three, and then ceases. It has no explicit sequel in
Genesis; the sacred number 7 marks it as complete in itself; and
the attempts of some scholars to remodel it in accordance with its
supposed original place in the history are to be distrusted. Its main
purpose is to record the origin of various arts and industries of civilised
and apart from the history of Cain there is nothing whatever to
life
indicate that it deals with a race of sinners, as distinct from the godly
line of Seth.
That this genealogy belongs to J has hardly been
questioned except by Di., who argues with some hesitation for assigning
it to E, chiefly on the ground of its discordance with vv.^-^^.
Bu.
(p. 220 flF.) has shown that the stylistic criteria point decidedly (if not
quite unequivocally) to J;:J: and in the absence of any certain trace of E
in chs. i-ii, the strong presumption is that the genealogy represents a
stratum of the former document. The question then arises whether it
be the original continuation of ch. 3. An essential connexion cannot,
from the nature of the case, be affirmed. The primitive genealogies
are composed of desiccated legends, in which each member is originally
independent of the rest and we are not entitled to assume that an
account of the Fall necessarily attached itself to the person of the first
man. If it were certain that 3^*' is an integral part of one recension of
the Paradise story, it might reasonably be concluded that that recension
was continued in 4^, and then in 4""24. In the absence of complete
certainty on that point the larger question must be left in suspense
there is, however, no difficulty in supposing that in the earliest written
collection of Hebrew traditions the genealogy was preceded by a history
of the Fall in a version partly preserved in ch. 3. The presumption that
this was the case would, of course, be immensely strengthened if we could
suppose it to be the intention of the original writer to describe not merely
the progress of culture, but also the rapid development of sin (so We.).
;
We.
nV;
= 'beget,'
2220. 24*^26)
vn
^^
DB-i, 2^ (cf.
io23)
cf. ^^
IV.
99
(cf.
Ew.
JBB W,
This hypothesis
is
vi. p. 4)
and that
view of ch. 5.
assumes (see ^sb)
list in
It
an original constituent of
J's narrative
that story takes for granted that the worship of Yahwe was
practised from the beginning, whereas '^^ explicitly states that it was
;
now
Enosh
also for
make
altered so as to
intelligible.
(4)
of
Code in ch. 5.
an inevitable assumption of any
theory except (i) and (2) it must have taken place after the insertion
of the Cain and Abel episode and on the view we are now considering
it must be attributed to RJ.
In other respects the solution is free from
difficulty.
The recognition of the complex character of the source called
J is forced on us by many lines of proof and it will probably be found
its
v.^^ is
that this view of the genealogies yields a valuable clue to the structure
lOO
(j)
of the non-Priestly sections of chs. 2-1 1 (see pp. 3, 134). One important
consequence may here be noted. Eve's use of the name D'hSn, and the
subsequent notice of the introduction of the name ni.T, sugg-est that this
writer had previously avoided the latter
and Ex.
title
Hence,
of
God
(as
E and P
pre-
viously to Ex.
6^-).
if it
Still more complicated are the relations of the passage to the history of
On the one hand, a series of material incongruities
the Fall in ch. 3.
seem to show that the two narratives are unconnected : the assumption
of an already existing population on the earth could hardly have been
made by
brothers,
the representation (3^^) that husbandry is the destined lot of the race ;
and the curse on Cain is recorded in terms which betray no consciousness of a primal curse resting on the ground. It is true, on the other
4^"^^ contains striking reminiscences of
surprising of these (4''' 3^^^) may be set down
to textual corruption (see the note on the v.) ; but there are several other
turns of expression which recall the language of the earlier narrative
3.
The most
||
cf.
4^*
^' ^^
with
investigation
* Cf.
ni.T,
1- 3. 4. 6. 9. 13.
16. 16
the
-^^j,^ 11
times
:J:
Even
if
{^' ^^),
is
.jy^^^^ 16
not,
6 6e6s 5
we adopt
naming of the
child
however, observed
times
and
in (&.
In (K^
K6pios 6 Beds 3
Cambridge LXX).
Bu.'s emendation of
v.^'',
city-founder (see on the v.), it still remains improbable that that r6le
should be assigned to the son of a wandering nomad.
IV.
lOI
ness of conception in 4^*** which contrasts unfavourably with the convincing lucidity of ch. 3, as if the writer's touch were less delicate, or
his gift of imaginative delineation more restricted.
Such impressions
are too subjective to be greatly trusted
but, taken along with the
material differences already enumerated, they confirm the opinion that
the literary connexion between ch. 3 and 4^^* is due to conscious or
unconscious imitation of one writer by another. On the whole, the
evidence points to the following conclusion The story of Cain and Abel
existed as a popular legend entirely independent of the traditions
regarding the infancy of the race, and having no vital relation to any
part of its present literary environment. It was incorporated in the Yahwistic document by a writer familiar with the narrative of the Fall, who
identified the Cain of the legend with the son of the first man, and linked
the story to his name in the genealogy.
How much of the original
genealogy has been preserved it is impossible to say any notices
;
that belonged to
isolated
but v.^
assigned to
it
Other
important questions
and
3^
be best considered
in connexion with the original significance of the legend (p. iii ff.).
(Cain's sacrifice).
IV.
1 6.
will
Eve bears to her husband two sons, Cain and Abel the
becomes a tiller of the ground, and the second a keeper
of sheep (^- 2).
Each offers to Yahwe the sacrifice ap;
first
is
(3"^).
1.
yT mxm]
of words
is difficult
The euphemistic
239) regards it as a proof of editorial manipulation.
use of yT is peculiar to J in the Hex. (7 times) Nu. 3i^'' ^^' ^ (P : cf. Ju.
:
2
I
1 11.
Ki.
12^
I*,
;'
I02
(j)
sistently observed
even there
therefore be a relic
peculiar to the
It is
(J
is
Ex.
naming by the
verb
ri"in^'ns
But
nj|5.
C^''^?
produce, and
or)
determine which
''ri''2i5
[h)
acquire
to
and
The
name
connects the
T^'l\>
it
may
2^^)
it
is
XP.
difficult
with the
to (create,
{a)
not easy to
intended here.
is
The second
but
it
is
'?ni,
'
{b)
We
(Bu.
al.
The
(c)
in the text
idea that nK
is
'
'
literary school of J.
= Syr.
Oj
X.\i\s] I'P
(Ar. kana).
In Ar. kain
means 'smith
'
'
'
acquiring
or 'originate,' though
'
{iKryjadfxrjp,
'nup]
possedi, etc.).
The sense
'create'
IV.
2,
I03
Hawwah was not a mortal wife and mother, but a creative deity taking
part with the supreme god in the production of man. See Cheyne,
TBI^ 104, who thinks it "psychologically probable that Eve congratulated herself on having 'created' a man."
That e^'n is not elsewhere
used of a man-child is not a serious objection to any interpretation (cf.
And
2.
Tr\J\ is
OT
may
The
regarding twin-births.
The
Adam,
seems
to be ignored (Gu.).
is
condemned
to husbandry,
to be accounted for
'
'
of Yerahme'el.
An
3.
4311^-,
offering^ "^H^Pj
lit.
a present or tribute
see below.
The use of
(32^^^- 33I0
word
this
even there, is established by Dt. 32*, Pr. 8^2, Ps. 13913, Gn. 1419- 22 ^^j
Of the Vns. ZP alone can be thought to have read nND (onp }d) one
anonymous Gr. tr. (see Field) took the word as not ace. {Avepuirov
the rest vary greatly in rendering (as was to be expected from
Kvpiov)
the difficulty of the phrase), but there is no reason to suppose they had
;
different text
ffi Sid,
toO
d.,
5J
6.,
per
(v. ^5)
D'D'
shorter
fpo]
(24"-^).
To take
D'D' in
(i
Sa.
(i
29^) or
Sa.
i^i 2^
AND ABEL
CAIN
I04
shows that the
(j)
was
'
'
no doubt,
(RS^y 221 and
this,
Cain's offering
n. 3).
ritual
and
is
it
rite also
"
thus analogous to
is
Heb.
Hebrew
is
Nu.
of
1320 etc.)
what he had
God.
for
4.
(see G-K. 154 , iV; i {h)) of their fat-pieces'] cf. Nu. 18^^.
Certain fat portions of the victim were in ancient ritual
(i
pp. 4, 65).
4b, 5a.
of the one
How
use
Ar. vtinhat
nnjp
is
DB^
did
and
offering
Yah we
of the other?
rejection
It
2^^
'loan': J manaha.*
Is.
On
al.).
17^
i^^ Jer.
is
etc.
and n3.] (i Sa. 2^^ 3^*, Is. 19^^ Am. 5^^ etc.) may show that it denotes
vegetable as distinct from animal oblations (see RS^, 217, 236). (3) In
P and late writings generally it is restricted to cereal offerings Ex. 30^
Nu. 18^ etc. Whether the wider or the more restricted meaning be the
older it is difficult to say. 4. in?^npi] On Meth., see G-K. 16 d. We
might point as sing, of the noun (in^^n, Lv. 8^^- ^ G-K. 91 c) but ux
:
has scriptio plena of the pi. jn'aSnm. j;b"i] ffi koX iiriSev
Aq. iireKkldr] 2. iripcpdr) 0. iveirvpiaev (see above)
;
F respexit %
;
to the
>
*^
meaning here
to' idle
words).
^ 1 1
mn]
in
evddKijffev
S5/).
"
the nearest
5.
is
Ex.
5^
(*
look
away [from
their tasks]
ffi
gift
theory
'
would
fall
to the ground.
IV.
commonly answered
etc.),
that
(in
4,
I05
9^*,
18^
Ki.
fire
offering (0.
In favour of {a)
it
is
was not
in
From
is
wrongly
Ai5ir77<rej'
has
-,
.;V>n/j
Nu^
(lit.
so
<S.
On
,615 gtc.
'became
The word
is
G-K.
not used by
1446
P. For
h^\
cf.
black').
and the
altar.
I06
(j)
Yahwe
than husbandry.
been bad
(Di. al.).
human heart.
Warning, murder, and sentence. 7. The point
temper or
The
7.
in
is
43^, Ezk.
20^^).
So
opdQs
dpdQs de
irpoffeviyKrjiy
fi^
r]avxa<rov
'
_and
Mai.
i8- 9)
so Aq.
(dp^o-eis),
% (Z\\nO), U
0. {UKTbv\
{recipies)
or
(c)
I07
IV. 5-8
more or
al.), is
psychologically
altogether improbable.
is
country (see on
2^),
'
commonly
beast, or less
word
(Calv.
al.)
nj5^^]j_js_equally unsuitable,
actually reversed'fj^r:)
J^LmJI OOIO
paraphrase of
W^
irremediable
affords no help,
and the
textual confusion
is
probably
Che.
(reading 'hk) Cain's answer to v.^
8. TDK, in the sense of * speak,' 'converse' (2 Ch. 32^^), is excessively
rare and late the only instance in early Heb. is apparently Ex. 19-^,
where the context has been broken by a change of document. It might
mean 'mention' (as 43^ etc), but in that case the obj. must be indicated.
Usually it is followed, like Eng. say,' by the actual words
spoken. Hence niBn rta^j is to be supplied with jiud&SU, but not Aq.
(Tu. De. see the scholia in Field) a Pisqa in some Heb. MSS, though
avail,
I08
(j)
(i Ki. 11^^).
9* Yahwe opens the inquisition, as in 3^, with
a question, which Cain, unlike Adam, answers with a
It
impossible to
is
terrible
power of
me^
sin.
10.
The
or vengeance (Ex.
in the
22^^-^^,
Ju.
107^*^
Ps.
4^,
Ezk.
the
OT
In
persistently vivid
is
in
this
is
it
advance
Hark! Thy
etc.\
for redress
etc.).
thou from
the ground\
(off)
And now
II.
cursed art
i.e.^
(cf.
v.^*,
(We.
ordinary
covered
OT
conception
Eurip.
[o-i.
that
is
Electra^ 318
blood
the
The
f.).
relation
'
wished he
will
if
he
and
not recognised by the Mass., supports this view of the text. To emend
9, -x] ux -tn.
10.
nb^'l (Ols. al.) or ion, ns'i (Gk.) is less satisfactory.
On the interjectional use of Vip, see G-K. 146 h No. Mand. Gr. p. 482.
D'py,s]
G-K.
juu. ^)))i.,
\\'^Xyy,ff.
'?yp in
v.", but
is
(?).
This sense of
quite
common
II. fP
|D is
esp. 27'^).
(cf.
Other renderings, as
frcym (indicating the direction from which the curse comes) or hy^ are
12. fjph]
less appropriate ; and the compar. more than is impossible.
juss.
form with
ti"?
(G-K.
109
?,
Dav.
63,
R.
3, 66,
R. 6)
fol-
IV.
he
(2)
is
second
to be a vagrant
I09
9-14
and wanderer
in the earth.
The
and need
not be regarded as a separate curse, or a symbol of the
inward unrest which springs from a guilty conscience.
13-16. Mitigation of Cain's punishment.
13. My
punishment is too great to he borne\ So the plea of Cain is
understood by all modern authorities. The older rendering
is
first,
my guilt
is too
preferable), is
some ways
abandoned because the sequel shows that
great
to he
forgiven (which
is
in
see below.
14. from Thy face 1 shall he hidden] This
anguished cry of Cain has received scant sympathy at the
sin
of
God with
is
it
one to
whom
The
me<, etc.]
(so
many
all
first
story
was
man.
Hg^hts
lowed by
'
no
(j)
is
in
What
15.
follows
must be understood as a
divinely
him a
his
vagrant existence,
Whoso
idea that the sign is a pledge given once for all of the truth of
after the analogy of the prophetic nix, is certainly
The
Yahwe's promise,
may
proves that
it
necessary to avoid confusion between subj. and obj. 15. J?^] o^x oiJrws
(S20) implies J3 t^"? so ,SU but this would require to be followed
3I1
by '?. 'p 3in-'?|] see G-K. 116 w, cf. Ex. i2^\ Nu. 3530, i Sa. 21^
etc. D|T] The subj. might be pp (as v. 2^) or (more probably) impers.
(Ex. 21^^), certainly not the murderer of Cain. D^nj^i?'] = '7 times':
Q_K. 134 r. Vns. (& eTrra iKdiKovfieva Trapa\6a'ei Aq. c7rra7rXa<rfws
:
III
IV. 15, i6
and dwelt
l6.
in the
name
*li3
participle
Ch.
5^^
is
traditional
"^5
land of wandering"
cannot be geographically
it
py
belong
riDlp
the
to
natural to regard
'
(so most)
original
at all events
If the
identified.
narrative,
words
would be
last
it
iKSiKrjdi^aeTai
S.
e/356/iws
n'j'D
Adam
[see
Nestle,
the
iKSlKij^iv
duicrei
0.
e^Sofxddos
5i'
iKdiKT^aei
septuplum punietur\
on
MM,
thing
v.^'*]). 16.
p.
word as a
see on 2^\
Si
9).
nu]
2GU
participle
In front of E.'
aju.
no,
ffir
Nai'5
(n'J?)
{habitavit profugus in
(324).
* Smith,
I.e.
KM^y
251.
% Comp. 2
^r*
o f.
ORIGIN OF THE
112
see below) the fundamental fact that his descendants are doomed to
wander in the uncultivated regions beyond the pale of civilisation. The
vengeance which protects him is the self-acting law of blood-revenge,
that 'salutary institution
'
While
life
of the desert.
reprobation of every form of nomadism known to the Hebrews. A disparaging estimate of Bedouin life as a whole is, no doubt, conceivable
on the part of the settled Israelites (cf. Gn. \G^^ but Cain is hardly
(i) The ordinary Bedouin could not be
the symbol of that estimate,
their movements
described as fugitives and vagabonds in the earth
are restricted to definite areas of the desert, and are hardly less
;
'
'
CAIN LEGEND
II3
some of
"
manner
life (Ju.
411-
524,
Burck. 14 f.
An
interesting parallel
114
associating Cain with the higher levels of nomadism apply with full
When we consider,
force to his identification with this particular tribe.
further, that the Kenites are nearly everywhere on friendly terms with
and that they seem to have cherished the most ardent attachment
Yahwism, it becomes almost incredible that they should have been
Israel,
to
This relation
fixed tribute to the nomads (cf. i Sa. 2^^-).
spoken of as a brotherhood, the tributary party figuring as the sister
The murder of Abel is thus resolved into the
of the Bedouin tribe.
massacre of a settled pastoral people by a Bedouin tribe which had been
on terms of formal friendship with it. But the analogy is hardly conthat certain nomads were punished
vincing.
It would amount to this
the fact that Cain was
for a crime by being transformed into nomads
Gu., with more consistpreviously a husbandman is left unexplained.
ency, finds in the narrative a vague reminiscence of an actual (prehisthe extermination of a pastoral tribe by a neighbouring
toric) event,
agricultural tribe, in consequence of which the latter were driven from
Such changes
their settlements and lived as outlaws in the wilderness.
of fortune must have been common in early times on the border-land
between civilisation and savagery * and Gu. 's view has the advantage
over Sta.'s that it makes a difference of sacrificial ritual an intelligible
factor in the quarrel (see p. 105 f.). But the process of extracting history
from legend is always precarious and in this case the motive of individual blood-guilt appears too prominent to be regarded as a secondary
payment of a
is
The truth is that in the present form of the story the figure of Cain
represents a fusion of several distinct types, of which it is difficult to
single out any one as the central idea of the legend, (i) He is the
originator of agriculture (v.^). (2) He is the founder of sacrifice, and
(as the foil to his brother Abel) exhibits the idea that vegetable offerings alone are not acceptable to Yahwe (see on v.^). (3) He is the
individual murderer (or rather shedder of kindred blood) pursued by the
curse, like the Orestes, Alcmseon, Bellerophon, etc., of Greek legend
(v.sff-).
the mesquin fled for his life and he has gone ever since thus armed,
" {Ar. Des.
lest the kindred of the deceased finding him should kill him
;
ii.
293, cited
by Stade).
115
IV. 17-24
(4) Lastly,
he
in vv.^^"^"
is
nomad
tribes of
and orderly
civilisa-
'
resources of criticism.
IV. 17-24.
list
The
line of Cain,
origin
life.*
pessimistic estimate of
human
civilisation, as
a record of
That
is
who
after the
as an exhibition of
human
depravity.
In itself, however,
no moral judgment on the facts
recorded.
The names have no sinister significance polygamy (though a declension from the ideal of 2'^^) is not
* Gu.,
however
insertions in the
CAINITE GENEALOGY
Il6
own day
(j)
ment by a cataclysm
On
(p.
on some
122
question where
ff.).
iv. 1,9: she was his sister, and her name was Awdn.
For other traditions, see Marmorstein,
Die Nanien der
Schwestern Kains u. Abels,^ etc., ZATW, xxv. 141 ff. and
he became a city-hnilder\ So the clause is rightly rendered
by De. Bu. Ho. Gu. al. (cf. 2i20b, ju. 1621, 2 Ki. 155).
The idea that he happened to be engaged in the building
of a city when his son was born would probably have been
expressed otherwise, and is itself a little unnatural.
Juh.
That
is the subj. of 'n;i only appears from the phrase 13? D?'? towards
Bu. (120 ff.) conjectures that the original text was io-f?, making
Enoch himself the builder of the city called after him (so Ho.). The
emendation is plausible it avoids the ascription to Cain of two steps in
civilisation- agriculture and city-building
and it satisfies a natural
expectation that after the mention of Enoch we should hear what he
became, not what his father became after his birth, especially when
But the
the subj. of the immediately preceding vbs. is Cain's wife.
difficulty of accounting for the present text is a serious objection, the
motive suggested by Bu. (123) being far-fetched and improbable. The
incongruity between this notice and vv.^^"^^ has already been mentioned
(p. 100). Lenormant's examples of the mythical connexion of city-building
with fratricide [Origines^, i. 141 ff.) are not to the point the difficulty is
not that the first city was founded by a murderer, but by a nomad. More
relevant would be the instances of cities originating in hordes of outlaws, collected by Frazer, as parallels to the peopling of Rome {Fort.
Rev. 1899, Apr., 650-4). But the anomaly is wholly due to composition
the Cain of the genealogy was neither a nomad nor a
of sources
^''^
as an addition
fratricide.
It has been proposed (Ho. Gu.) to remove
to the genealogy, on the ground that no intelligent writer would put
pp
the end.
'
IV.
17,
117
i8
name
(G-B.^^
(s^*^") is
5.7;.),*
name
the
'
The next
18.
advance
in civilisation Is concerned.
general interest
is
ch. 5.
On
Bu.
the
Urg.
first
123-9.
by
Philo),
'
MT
may
God makes me
Deus
(cited
live'
by Lag.).
18.
On
beget'
*
is
ace.
m with
pass, see
Omitted
G-K.
116 ,
style of J (see
b.
n"?;
Ho. Einl.
in the
99).
sense of
?np] archaic
in 13th edition.
t Lenorm. Orig."^ i. 262 f., Di. Bu. al. Che. EB, 625. It does not
appear that mutu-ia-ili occurs as an actual name.
J Hommel, AUisrael. Uberl, 117 n.: "Lamga ist ein babylonischer
CAINITE GENEALOGY
Il8
(j)
No judgment is passed
19. The two wives of Lamech.
on Lamech's bigamy, and probably none was intended.
The notice may be due simply to the fact that the names of
the wives happened to be preserved in the song afterwards
quoted.
Of
that of
fflr
20-22.
At
little
p. 100.
The sons
introducing (as
since
it is
On the significance
{i.e.
originator:
'^
of nomadic shepherds.
i.e.
(v.i.)',
20.
90
Erman) np='man'
20.
'ijjpp?
Snk
aty']
its
progenitor.
of an old Sem.
6)
word
fflr
cf.
21.
(also
Egypt, according
G-B.
s.v.
Yuhal^ also a
perhaps reading
takes naj?D as a
U {atque pastorum)
1 oOj
and CT^ nDi, before 'cattle'; similarly
5 inserts
Kuenen proposed njpD napi. The zeugma is somewhat hard, but is
retained by most comm. for the sake of conformity with v.^^'-; G-K.
ptcp.
117 66,
DB')] cf.
io25 (J) (i
|j_1^0
^^ N2UN1 N113D
(II
vhii).
'3]
(& 6 KaraSi
J5A-_D
2i9f., 222
f.;
Riehm, Hd-wh.
10436".
The
We.
ni33 is
IV. 19-22
19
son of 'Adah,
oldest
Nddmah
smith, and
Zillah
mythology
(Di. al.).
We should expect
brass
cf.
is
and
iron
^^
are corrupt.
(see
footnote).
The
(BE^a, flute or
g^^]) is
pp
characteristic of J.
get any kind of sense from MT, it is necessary either (a) to take B'eS
sharpener or 'hammerer') in the sense of 'instructor'; or (5) take
or (c)
tynh as neut. (* a hammerer of every cutting implement of,' etc.)
adopt the quaint construction (mentioned by Bu. 138) 'a hammerer of
All these
a (successful) artificer in bronze,' etc
all (sorts of things),
are unsatisfactory and neither the omission of "72 with ffi^ (Di.), nor the
Bu.'s emendation (i 39 ff.)
insertion of '3 before it yields a tolerable text.
'131 tih ID*? '.Ti [for pp] is much too drastic, and stands or falls with his
utterly improbable theory that Lamech and not Tubal-cain was originThe error must lie in the
ally designated as the inventor of weapons.
words sya"? pp, for which we should expect, '3n n\n Nin (Ols. Ball). The
it Is easy to say that B'ti'?
difficulty is to account for the present text
and pp are glosses, but there is nothing in the v. to require a gloss, and
neither of these words would naturally have been used by a Heb. writer
'?n3] The Semitic words for 'iron' (Ass. parziUu,
for that purpose.
To
(*
'
Aram. Vng, f-Hr^) Ar. farziV) have no Semitic etymology, and are
'
'
On
i.
616 ff.
CAINITE GENEALOGY
I20
(j)
On
Orig.^
192
i.
'
(in
'
'
MM,
10]).
23, 24.
fierce
implacable
spirit
of revenge
it comTubal-cain,
and is
weapons
by
memorates the invention of
Sword
Song.'
But
the
Lamech's
accordingly spoken of as
It is
The words pixn and n"ipx are almost exclusively poetical. On the form
Dri. T.
'npn is perf. of experience (Dav. 40 (c)
jypf see G-K. 46/:
12), rather
Bu.
al.).
'll^Bh,
"?
"r^-nznh]
On
this use of
^,
see
BDB,
s.v. 5,
f.
ffir et's
rpaOfia [fiuiXuira]
121
IV. 23, 24
in
which
stands makes
it
On
necessary to study
It is
that
its
independently, as
it
may have
con-
point see,
into
^ Adah and
Zillah,
my
hear
voice
^ For Cain
'
Adah and
and
decides (with 5J) for the latter view, on the ground that in
the remaining vv. the second member is shorter than the
(which
first
not
is
The exordium
the case).
of the song
Hear my
voice, ye
Attend to
my word
women
of
Lamech
me
mars
the
metrical
effect
besides,
Lamech
?.
23b.
strict
syntax would
The meaning
is
that
assailant belongs.
('>
rarely bears;
[Bu.
child
Ki.
12^^-,
Dn.
i^^-,
but
an innocent man-
ism therefore
is
members
of the
same
not to be taken
clan.
literally,
The
as
if
of the
parallel-
Lamech
24.
Cain
is
mentioned as a
tribe
CAINITE GENEALOGY
122
of
its
vendetta
knows no
(7
limit (70
times)
(j)
and 7 times).
the
disappear if
view seems preferable, the coincidence in the names goes to show that
the song was known to the authors of the genealogy and utilised in its
With regard to the second, Gu. rightly observes that
construction.
glorying over an ancestor is utterly opposed to the spirit of antiquity
the Cain referred to must be a rival contemporary tribe, whose grim
vengeance was proverbial. The comparison, therefore, tells decidedly
against the unity of the passage, and perhaps points (as Sta. thinks)
to a connection between the song and the legendary cycle from which
The temper of the song is not the
the Cain story of ^^^* emanated.
primitive ferocity of '* a savage of the stone-age dancing over the corpse
of his victim, brandishing his flint tomahawk," etc. (Lenorm.) its real
character was first divined by We., who, after pointing out the baselessness of the notion that it has to do with the invention of weapons,
describes it as " eine gar keiner besonderen Veranlassung bediirftige
Und wie
Prahlerei eines Stammes (Stammvaters) gegen den anderen.
die Araber sich besonders gern ihren Weibern gegenuber als grosse
Eisenfresser riihmen, so macht es hier auch Lamech" {Comp.^ 305)' On
this view the question whether it be a song of triumph or of menace does
not arise as expressing the permanent temper and habitual practice of
a tribe, it refers alike to the past and the future. The sense of the
passage was strangely misconceived by some early Fathers (perhaps by
ffirU), who regarded it as an utterance of remorse for an isolated murder
committed by Lamech. The rendering of E is based on the idea
(maintained by Kalisch) that Lamech's purpose was to represent his
I have not slain a man
homicide as justifiable and himself as guiltless
on whose account I bear guilt, nor wounded a youth for whose sake my
seed shall be cut off. When 7 generations were suspended for Cain,
Hence arose the
shall there not be for Lamech his son 70 and 7?'
fantastic Jewish legend that the persons killed by Lamech were his
ancestor Cain and his own son Tubal-cain (Ra. al.; cf. Jer. Ep. ad
Damasunty 125).* The metrical structure of the poem is investigated
by Sievers in Metrische Studien, i. 404 f., and ii. i2f., 247 f. According
to the earlier and more successful analysis, the song consists of a double
Sievers' later view is
tetrameter, followed by two double trimeters.
vitiated by an attempt to fit the poem into the supposed metrical scheme
of the genealogy, and necessitates the excision of n'?si my as a gloss.
Apart from v.^^^-, the most remarkable feature of the genealogy is
;
'
second part of the sentence " (BDB, s.v. 3, c) cf. Dt. 18^*, Jer. 30". op;
on ace, see G-K. 29 g. The Niph. Ufi\ would yield a better sense
'avenges himself* (Bu. Di. Ho.).
:
See, further,
Lenorm. Orig.
i.
i86fF.
'
;
IV. 24
the division of classes represented
difficult
to understand the
123
prominence given to
It is
this classification of
and Tubal
But against this view, see p. 112 above, and Meyer, INS^ 303 fF.
evades this objection by deleting v."**, and reducing the
genealogy to a bare list of names but why should the Kenites have
interposed a whole series of generations between their eponymous
ancestor and the origin of their own nomadic life ?
t Ho.
SETHITE GENEALOGY
124
(j)
of the legendary heroes to whom the discovery of the various arts and
Whether the biblical or the Phoenician
occupations is attributed.
tradition is the more original may be doubtful; in any case "it is
difficult," as Dri. says, "not to think that the Heb. and Phcen.
representations spring from a common Canaanite cycle of tradition,
which in its turn may have derived at least some of its elements from
The
p. 74).
vv. are
the
been preserved
in 5^^
(Noah).
Since
it is
les
and
critical introduction).
to be quoted in
and
its
a copious commentary
Eusebius is much too long
passage
in
full,
contents and
its
ff.
The
Of
UpLorbyovo^,
it is
recorded
evpetv 5k rbv
ry
a-Kk-rrrjv
6p{i(i)v,
fcrxi'O'f
dakaaaav
kfi^rjuai'
ijypeve drjpLuu.
The
TOIJTOV
TTJs
Kal fiavrelas
T7]s
irXlvdov
i^evpov
dypas evperds
(ntyo)
born
{e) "Afivuos
and
Ttjluos
(TvfXfjLiyvijLV
{d) 'Ayp6s
(b)
and
names
and Mdyos
ot
{a) 'Aype^s
and
dcTKTjcrai.,
Kal
iTrevoTjcrav
oiSrot
iircpdcLS
t(^ tttjXc^
cat TrepijSoXaLa
AvtSx^oiv
rjXict}
KvvTjyoi
Kal
Kal cnrrjXaLa' iK
dyporai Kal
tovtujv
{/") Mi(rdjp
and Xv8vk
AidcTKOvpoL
(pi^')
After
Kal ^ordvas edpov, Kal tt)v tQv 8aKeTu>v taaiv, Kal iir(^8ds.
It is
ot
impossible
to doubt
125
IV. 25
The preservation
has survived.
of
4^^^- is
no doubt due to
Yahwe-worship
more expedient
it
shows on how
tions
may
in this
The circumstance
hang.
But
its
a different course.
25- And Ada7n knew^ e^c] see on
That
v.^
denotes
Vy_^
God
Sa.
me
has appointed
i^^.
it
v.
is
n^nbi^
is
On
3^- D\"l^t< is
used
very
it
is
not
harmon-
in dialogue.
It
up
Eve's use of
Cf. 3^^.
v.^.
remainder of the
seed] (the
probably an interpolation).
is
The
the Cain
Before
n'?ni
ffic^
insert
nnpii.
xnpm]
xx
snp'i.
'?]
(& X^yovaa
so
Hand
SETHITE GENEALOGY
126
(j)
narrator.
The excision of these suspicious elements leaves a
sentence complete in itself, and exactly corresponding- in form to the
naming of Cain in v.^ yni D'nhn 'h nr, God has appointed me seed'
There is an obvious reference to 3^^ where both the
(i.e. posterity).
But this explanation really implies
significant words n'^ and ynt occur.
that Seth was the first-born son (according to this writer), and is
How
unintelligible of one who was regarded as a substitute for another.
completely the mind of the glossator is preoccupied by the thought of
substitution is further shown by the fact that he does not indicate in
what sense Cain has ceased to be the 'seed' of Eve. As a Heb. word
the
'
'
On
26.
the
name C^ii< ( = Man^ and therefore in all probmember of an older genealogy), see below.
Then
men began
He was
i.e.
to call ^ etc.]
behind this
lies
ture;
but
its
J).
Better (with
fflc)
etc., v.t.):
What
historic reminiscence
(if
any)
significance
is
when
even SD^26. wn dj] (G-K. 135 A) (& om. t^"i3t|] like din, properly a
En6 is a personification of mankind. The word is rare and
coll.
mostly poetic in Heb. (esp, Jb. Ps.); but is common in other Sem.
Nestle's opinion {MM,
dialects (Ar. Aram. Nab. Palm. Sab. Ass.).
6f.), that it is in Heb. an artificial formation from dtj*?, and that the
genealogy is consequently late, has no sort of probability the only
There is a preartificiality in Heb. is the occasional individual use.
sumption, however, that the genealogy originated among a people to
whom tsnJN or its equivalent was the ordinary name for mankind
(Aramaean or Arabian). ^mn m] so Aq. 2. jux hnn in ffi oCros i)\iri<Tev
(from si ^n') implies either Vnn n? or 'n Nin so 5J {iste coepit) and Juh.
The true text is that read by ffir, etc.
iv. 12; ^ has t^;-* -ip-iCTI.
:
'
'
MT
if
ungrammatical
(lEz.).
al.),
After
ni.T (&.
is
deov.
absolutely
IV.
127
is
it
25-V
fancy.
It
Hebrew
nationality.
The expression DK'3 Knp (lit. 'call by [means of] the name of Y.')
denotes the essential act in worship, the invocation (or rather evocation)
of the Deity by the solemn utterance of His name.
It rests on the widespread primitive idea that a real bond exists between the person and his
name, such that the pronunciation of the latter exerts a mystic influence
on the former.* The best illustration is i Ki. i8^^-, where the test
proposed by Elijah is which name Baal or Yahwe will evoke a
manifestation of divine energ-y. The cosmopolitan diffusion of the name
ni.T, from the Babylonian or Egyptian pantheon, though often asserted,!
and in itself not incredible, has not been proved. The association with
the name of Eno might be explained by the supposition that the old
genealogy of which Eno was the first link bad been preserved in some
ancient centre of Yahwe-worship (Sinai ? or Kadesh ?).
'*
Ch. V.
(P).
(ii-2^*)
A Tliche
p.
2sfr.,98ff.
tW.
6i
f. ;
291
ff.
ff.
Sta. BTh. \. 29; Me. GA^, i. (2te Halfte), 545 f.
Rogers, Rel. of Bab. and Ass. (1908), p. 89 ff.
355
Cf., further,
ANTE-DILUVIAN PATRIARCHS
128
(p)
But that
is
at
if we had the
names would be
those of ch. 5. The
It is
found to correspond
closely
with
its
chronology^
some
or to
thoroughly characteristic of P
the details are set.
It
is
consists
dren),
and
life
(c)
is
remaining
What
{h)
age at death.*
The
stiff
and
precision
and the monotonous iteration of them, constitute a somewhat pronounced example of the literary tendencies of the
Priestly school of writers.
phraseology of P (o'n''?^, N")?, mD"n, nap^i naj) is seen
^,
which, however, may be partly composed of
Note also n'lVw (^'*), xh-i, niDi
glosses based on i^^^- (see on the vv.).
the syntax of the
-iVn^n (^2. 24^ ^f. 6**)
(3), n^^in (throughout), cn^Nn-nx
numerals (which, though not peculiar to P, is a mark of late style see
G-K, 134 i'l Dav. 37, R. 3); the naming of the child by the father (^).
The one verse which stands out in marked contrast to its environment
is 2^, which is shown by the occurrence of the name mn' and the allusion
to 3^'' to be an extract from J, and in all probability a fragment of the
genealogy whose first links are preserved in 4^^- '^.
The
most
distinctive
clearly in vv.^^*
**
is
first
period of
its history,
as
element
in the
" (Dri.
Gen, p. 75). With regard to the extreme longevity attributed to the early patriarchs, it must be frankly recognised
that the statements are
meant
to be understood literally,
and
The
* Only in the cases of Adam (v.^), Enoch (^2. 24^ .^^^ Lamech i^- 2^)
are slight and easily explicable deviations from the stereotyped form
admitted. The section on Noah is, of course, incomplete.
CH. V.
129
many
that
(b)
links of the
(c)
is
true that
**
of such
correct";
but
*'
the com-
'
'
the
known
Budde
tendencies of
human
nature.
The more
to be counted as
ANTE-DILUVIAN PATRIARCHS
130
I, 2.
Introduction
consisting of a superscription
2j^
see on
This
jQ^
See the
crit.
2**.
is
(^*),
naming of Adam
note below;
lb.
(p)
When God
Man
(or
Hlpin,
Adam) he made
him
2.
The
vv.
show signs of
editorial
(as in
^^),
in
see, further,
manipulation.
^
it
In
^*
din
i^^ff-.
is
pre-
is
Since the only new statement is and he called their name Adam, we may
suppose the writer's aim to have been to explain how mx, from being a
But he has no clear pergeneric term, came to be a proper name.
and so, instead of starting with the generic
ception of the relation
sense and leading up to the individual, he resolves the individual into
the generic, and awkwardly resumes the proper name in v.^. An
Ho.
original author would hardly have expressed himself so clumsily.
observes that the heading mx mSin nsD ni reads like the title of a hook^
suggesting that the chapter is the opening section of an older geneaand the fuller
logical work used by P as the skeleton of his history
formula, as compared with the usual mSin rh\^, at least justifies the
assumption that this is the first occurrence of the heading. Di.'s
opinion, that it is a combination of the superscription of J's Sethite
genealogy with that of P, is utterly improbable. On the whole, the facts
point to an amalgamation of two sources, the first using onx as a
designation of the race, and the other as the name of the first man.
;
3-5.
i^fi)
Adam.
hegat [a
on
av6p(Jjiru)v, 2 ^Addfi
conversely 1 Adam, 2"
(&^ iD?'. 3. iVvi] ins. 13 as obj. (Ols. al.). n^Vi-i con"i"?; both for
fined to P in Pent.
J, and older writers generally, using
'beget' and 'bear.' id^S? iniDi?] (fSi Karh rrjv elS^av avrovKat k. t. eiKbvaa.
avoiding ofiolioa- is (see the note on i^).
4. Dix 'D' vrt')] (RL jns. As
^^ etc.
i^rjtre, as in v.^
,S reads din 'n;i (but see Ball's note) as in vv.'^But vv.'"" contain several deviations from the regular formula : note
The
'n -itffK in v.'^, and the order of numerals (hundreds before tens).
reverse order is observed elsewhere in the chapter.
I. For DIN
hominem.2.
(R has 1
DC-if']
V. 1-24
131
call for
no detailed com-
4^.
cf.
it, means
smith or artificer (cf. Syr- i 1 i O see on
Whether the longer or the shorter form is the more ancient, we
have no means of judging. It is important to note that \yp or pp is the
possibly, like
'
'
'
'4^).
name
'
HPN^
Gray,
201),
but are
Hommel
first
'
'
21-24.
features
OT
with
Mai. 2^
fellowship
Mic.
'
6^,
[^r?]),
We
14^).
shall
religiously
(17I 24*0)
Rafter
qj.
God'
literally.
The
<&.
B loT^]]
art.
before
'a is
2^
(37'''-
isx(B,
etc.).
42-82.36[E]
24.
I
iJrNi]
Ki. 20*0);
dec^ (ffiL
'n Nn'?m3
adds
yhn
Ki.
included
Instead of
i.e.
he was
Aq. and
U render
unusual
(MSS,
t^
ev-np^arrjaev
;-21-,
13^,
it
{h)
;
(cf.
commoner
(Dt.
see,
perfect
(*
in
indicating-
see
G-K.
152W. np^]
ffi
fier^dvKev,
ANTE-DILUVIAN PATRIARCHS
132
mysteriously translated
Though
'
(p)
(He.
1 1^).
tality in later
ages
not to be denied
is
it
(cf.
Ps. 49^^
73^"*) > it is
as containing a presentiment of
that idea.
Enoch and
Elijah suggested
of
God
like
life
{365 years)
is
and the conjecture has been remarkably verified by the Babylonian parallel mentioned below.
(1893), pass.
man of the
n^r?np commonly explained as
25-27. Methuselah.
dart (or weapon),' hence tropically man of violence,' which Budde (99)
'
'
but W> n'DN. The vb. became, as Duhm (on Ps. 49^^) thinks, a
technical expression for translation to a higher existence ; cf. 2 Ki. 2^,
The Rabbinical exegesis (QT", Ber. R., Ra. ) understood
Ps. 49^^ 73".
H tulit,
Apocalyptic influence.
V. 25-31
133
'
'
tion of V.
An
29.
Lamech on
toil of our
hands [proceeding] from the ground^ etc.] The utterance
seems to breathe the same melancholy and sombre view of
life which we recognise in the Paradise narrative
and Di.
;
the
Lamech
There
is
to 3^^
between
42^^-.
(cf. {"invy,
m^ nanxn).
The forward
nWino
ins. As itv<^V (cf. v. ). 29. WpnJ:] (S diavairaiJiTei
hence Ball, Ki. ^^n"!].
The emendation is attractive on two
grounds (a) it yields an easier construction with the following jD and
(b) a more correct etymology of the name m.
The harshness of the
etymology was felt by Jewish authorities {Ber. ^. 25 cf. Ra.) and
We. {Degent. 38^) boldly suggested that m in this v. is a contracted writing
of Dm = comforter.' Whether ni (always written defectively) be really
connected with 0" = *rest' is very uncertain. If a Heb. name, it will
naturally signify 'rest,' but we cannot assume that a name presumably
so ancient is to be explained from the Heb. lexicon. The views mentioned
by Di. (p. 116) are very questionable. Goldziher {ZDMG, xxiv. 207 ff.)
shows that in mediaeval times it was explained by Arab writers from
Ar. naha, *to wail
but that is utterly improbable. I3b'j;;p] Some MSS
and ux have ^y'm^ (pi.) so <&, etc.
27. After
rjfjLcis
'
'
AOD
*
Here Amemphsinus is resolved into Amel-Nisin :
[1902], 29.
formerly {PSBA, xv. [1892-3] 245) Hommel propounded the view now
advocated by Zimmern (see next note).
t
Zimmern, KAT^,
X Aufs. u. Abh.
iarbu
(*
ii.
all-powerful
')
532.
CHRONOLOGY OF
134
one person
the evidence that the two figures were distinct, and belong" to different
Di.'s objection, that a biblical writer would
strata of the J document.
not speak of wine as a comfort under the divine curse, has little force :
has considerable critical importance. It furnishes a clue to the disentanglement of a strand of Yahwistic narrative in which these sections
formed successive stages. The fragment is undoubtedly rhythmic, and
has assonances which suggest rhyme but nothing definite can be said
of its metrical structure (perhaps 3 short lines of 3 pulses each).
V.
32.
born
is
of
Noah
Flood was a fixed datum (7^- ^^), as was also the fact that
no grandchildren of Noah were saved in the ark. The
chronologist, therefore, had to assign an excessive lateness
either to the birth of Shem, or to the birth of Shem's
first-born.
CH. V.
135
They are due
to
sought.
the MT, we may notice (a) the remarkable
discovered by Oppert* between the figures of the biblical
account and those of the list of Berossus (see the next note). The
Chaldean chronology reckons from the Creation to the Flood 432,000
years, the
1656 years. These are in the ratio (as nearly as possible)
might, therefore, suppose
of 5 solar years (of 365^ days) to i week.
the Heb. chronologist to have started from the Babylonian system, and
to have reduced it by treating each lustruvi (5 years) as the equivalent
I.
Commencing with
relation
MT
We
of a Heb. week. Whether this result be more than a very striking coincidence it is perhaps impossible to say. (5) A widely accepted hypothesis
is that of von Gutschmid,t who pointed out that, according to the
Massoretic chronology, the period from the Creation to the Exodus is
2666 years :t i.e. 26| generations of 100 years, or 5 of a world-cycle
(c)
more
intricate theory
Working on
lines
tr.
of the Temple ritual in A.M. 3001, the Exodus in 2501, the migration
Abraham in 2071 and divided this last interval into an Ante-diluvian
and Post-diluvian period in the ratio of 4 i (1656 414 years). Further,
of
MT
Ki. 6^ (&).
*
GGN,
For the
1877, 201-223
ff.
We.
m Jewish Enc.
iv.
66 f.
Prol.^ 308.
CHRONOLOGY OF
136
These
CH. V.
priority of the
MT.
MT
logical
scheme at
all.
It
P
was
of
(as explained
is it
somewhat important
MT
to redactional
and
A connexion between
nio^-
first
period of i (2242)
is
ffi
and ux
is
MT
is
not probable
though
it
ingenious,
* 1307
+ 940
ii^*'*''-
(p.
234 f.).
(see p. 233)
+ 290
(as before)
+ 430 + 40 =3007,
37
to
it
in
original
may
is
portance to any correspondence that can be made out between his list
and the names in Gn. 5. A detailed analysis was first published by
Hommel in 1893, another was given by Sayce in 1899. The firstnamed writer has subsequently abandoned some of his earlier proposals,^
substituting others which are equally tentative and while some of his
combinations are regarded as highly problematical, others have been
widely approved.**
The names of the Kings before the Flood in Berossus are i. "AXiopos,
||
2.
'A\dirapos, 3.
['A/xlXXapos], 4.
'A/atjAwj/
'Afi/x^vcov,
EvedJipaxos, 8.
5.
MeydXapos [Me7d-
9. '(irtdprT/s [Rd.
equivalents put forward
by Hommel, the following are accepted as fairly well established by
i. Aruru (see p. 102),
Je. and (with the exception of No. i) by Zimmern
QirdpTT^s], 10.
'
Afj.^ix\pivos,
'S.laovdpos.
Adapa
Atnelu
= Man),
Ummanu
(p. 126), 3.
Enmeduranki
{p.
4.
8.
132),
'
'
'
'
etc.
AOD
RELATION OF SETHITE
138
obscure,
but that
identity of the
names
in
Gn.
and
4^-
^'^-
^^
table
in the other,
ing,
Cainite.
Sethite.
1.
'Adam
2.
Seth
3.
'En6 (Man)
Adam (Man)
4.
Kenan
?dyin
5.
Mahalal'el-
Han6kh
6.
trad
7.
Y^red
Hanokh-
8.
MSthA-Selah
M^thft-ga-el
Lemekh
Noah
Lemekh
9.
10.
-MShfiyael
em
Ham
Y^pheth
Yabal
Yfibal
TCibal-Kiyin.
one at the end, so as to bring it into line with the story of the Flood,
and the Babylonian genealogy with which it was linked. The difficulty
of this hypothesis arises from the curious circumstance that in the
Berossian list of kings, just as in the Sethite list of patriarchs, the
name for *Man' occupies the third place. It is extremely unlikely
* Hommel's view {AOD, 29 f.) is that the primary list was Chaldean,
that the Sethite list most nearly represents this original, and that the
Cainite springs from a modification of it under Babylonian influence.
It would be quite as plausible to suggest that the Cainite form came
and
AND CAINITE GENEALOGIES
39
VI. 1-4.
how
*
I,
But against
KIBy
vi.
362.
or Enos),
tradition.
THE NEPHILIM
I40
(j)
supposed that the myth originated solely in this reflexion. Its pagan
colouring is too pronounced to permit of its being dissociated from two
notions prevalent in antiquity and familiar to us from Greek and Latin
literature
viz. (i) that among the early inhabitants of the earth were
men of gigantic stature * and (2) that marriages of the gods with
mortals were not only possible but common in the heroic age.f Similar
ideas were current among other peoples. The Koran has frequent
references to the peoples of 'Ad and Thamiid, primaeval races noted for
their giant stature and their daring impiety, to whom were attributed
:
to
where
it is
||
{Einl. 276), thinks it an extract from E which had passed through the
hands of J ; but borrowing by the original J from the other source is
*
32.
Hom.
//.
v.
302
4; Lucret.
ii.
1151
Lenorm.
Cf.
Hom.
\sc. ol
Orig."^
//. xii.
i.
Virg. Aen.
68; Paus.
xii.
5f.,
35.
i.
900; Pliny,
HN,
viii.
vii.
29.
73
fF.
3;
etc.
ff.
i/\p(j}e%\
uncertain)
Herod,
350
i.
23
f.
^ deov
'Sa/HTjjj.pov/j.os
6 Kal 'T\povpdvios'
cLTrb
jxriTipwv
oh Slp i[i']T6xoiV.
The literary indications are not absolutely decisive (except nin% v.^)
but the following expressions, as well as the structure of the sentences
(in v.-^'-). ^^^} on the whole, characteristic of J
hnrj, nonxn 'j?-'?^ (^), .Trr
pN^i, niaa (^)
see Bu. Urgesch. 6 ff., 39 A.
5^,
<l)r]crlv,
ixPVf^<^'^''tov tQ)v
fiicryo/j.ivu3v
II
VI.
The
cannot be determined.
141
introductory clause
it
There
I,
was
is,
**
when mankind
closely preceded
beg^an
by an account
however, no reason
why
it
should
not have followed a genealogy like that of 4"-2' or ^^^^- (against Ho.),
though certainly not that of P in ch. 5. The idea that it is a parallel
to the story of the
though
plausibility,
Fall
it
in
ch. 3
(Schr. Di.
We.
Schultz) has
\\.
little
presupposes
There remains the question whether the passage was from the first
an introduction to the story of the Deluge. That it has been so
regarded from a very early time is a natural result of its present
But careful examination fails to confirm that impression.
position.
The passage contains nothing to suggest the Flood as its sequel,
except on the supposition (which we shall see to be improbable) that
the 120 years of v.^ refer to an impending judgment on the whole
human
race.
Even if that view were more plausible than it is, it would
be remarkable that the story of the Flood makes no reference to
nor to any such incident as is here
the expiry of the allotted term
still
recorded.
The
belongs to a
stratum of J which knows nothing of a flood (p. 2 fi^.). The Babylonian
Flood-legend also is free from any allusion to giants, or minghng of
gods and men. O. Gruppe, however {Philologus, Neue Folge, i. 93 ff.
ZATW, ix. i34fF.), claims to have recovered from Greek sources a
Phoenician legend of intermarriages between deities and mortals, which
presents some striking affinities with Gn. 6^-^ and which leads up to
an account of the Flood. Of the soundness of Gruppe's combinations
but he himself admits that the Flood is a late
I am unable to judge
importation into Greek mythology, and indeed he instances the passage
before us as the earliest literary trace of the hypothetical Phoenician
legend. Even, therefore, if his speculations be valid, it would have
to be considered whether the later form of the myth may not have been
determined partly by Jewish influence, and whether the connexion
between the divine intermarriages and the Flood does not simply
reproduce the sequence of events given in Gn. That this is not inconceivable is shown by the fact that on late Phrygian coins the biblical
name Nfi appears as that of the hero of the Deluge (see p. 180 below).
;
I, 2.
The sense of
these vv.
is
perfectly clear.
The
sons
Jos.
'?
17^^
'n;i]
peculiar to J in Hex.
See Bu.
6.
(v.i.).
Ex.
\.^.
i'^
13I5
hnn] see
THE NEPHILIM
142
(j)
"The angels are not called *sons of God' as if they had actually
derived their nature from Him as a child from its father nor in a less
exact way, because though created they have received a nature similar
nor yet as if on account of their steadfast
to God's, being spirits
These ideas
holiness they had been adopted into the family of God.
are not found here. The name Elohim or sons {i.e. members of the
race) of the Elohim is a name given directly to angels in contrast with
;
men
name
the
given to
is
angels in common He is
inferior sense " (Davidson,
God and
an
in
2.
themselves
men
mortal women)
[i.e.
'
'
'
On
inp'i] = marry
whom,' the rare |D of
11971; 2; Gn. 722910.
explication',
BDB,
iB'N S30]
5.z;.
3b
(e);
^consisting
cf.
G-K.
O'B'j
o/" all
'
VI.
143
2,
in these relations.
angels
in
creatures.
heathen
myths,
It is
to be
noted, in
that the
contrast with
element
divine
is
analogous
exclusively
masculine.
3.
divine sentence
on the
limit
term
tions
{a) 'abide':
so
of
pr]
so
The former
^TJ).
ffli
{KaTafiehrj),
is
'
'
'
'
'not
...
3^1;
Djr?]
'
D'3>f'7> the enallage numeri ('through their erring he is flesh ') would
be harsh, and the idea expressed unsuitable. If we refer it to the
angels, we can avoid an absurdity only by disregarding the accents
and joining the word with what precedes
shall not (abide ?) in man
for ever on account of their (the angels') erring
he is flesh, and,' etc.
The sentence is doubly bad in point of style the first member is
overloaded at the end by the emphatic word
and the second opens
awkwardly without a connecting part. Moreover, it is questionable if
the idea of "i^vo (inadvertent transgression) is appropriate in the connexion. Margoliouth {Expositor, 1898, ii. 33 fF.) explains the obscure
to
'
(cited
by Bu.).
THE NEPHILIM
144
[
in?]
shall he
(j)
he
is fleshy
and
his days
20 years.
now
practically abandoned.
of Klostermann,
{Gemiit) excited
view
in
(2)
Even
who understands
by human sinf
modern times
it,
and
it is
(similarly Ra.).
nn
(3)
is
The commonest
do not appear before Eccl. {e.g. 2^^) and {b) that the Di has no
there being nothing which serves as a contrast to N^n.
We.
observes that '? must represent a causal particle and possibly nothing
like '9
force,
more.
The
old translators,
(&:
(5ia
to
etvai
avrovs)
^'B'li'^
seem
to
have been of the same opinion and it is noticeable that none of them
attempt to reproduce the Da, The conjectures of Ols. ((Da e'^)), Cheyne
(n;j'3 n'laiif'p?), and others are all beside the mark.
'ui vd' vni] The only
natural reference is to the (maximum) term of human life (so Jos. Tu.
Ew. and most since), a man's D^p; being a standing expression for his
lifetime, reckoning from his birth (see ch. 5. 35-"^, Is. 65-** etc.).
The
older view (^T^J, Jer. Ra. lEz. Calv. al.
so De. Klost.), that the
;
was
was
naturally suggested
NKZ,
(= Pent.
[1907] 28 ff.).
;
:
VI. 4
145
of life implanted in man at creation, the tenor of the decree being- that
this shall not 'abide' * in man eternally or indefinitely, but only in such
measure as to admit a maximum life of 120 years. There are two
{a) It has no connexion with what
difficulties in this interpretation
precedes, for everything- the v. contains would be quite as intelligible
apart from the marriages with the angels as in relation to them.f
{b) The following words 'W'2. Nin have no meaning
as a reason for the
withdrawal of the animating spirit they involve a hysteron proteron
and as an independent statement they are (on the supposition) not
true, man as actually constituted being both flesh and spirit (2').
(4) The most probable sense is that given by We. {Comp.^ 305ff)> viz.
that nn is the divine substance common to Yahwe and the angels, in
contrast to "i^^?, which is the element proper to human nature (cf. Is. 31^)
so Ho. Gu. The idea will then be that the mingling of the divine and
human substances brought about by illicit sexual unions has introduced a disorder into the creation which Yahwe cannot suffer to 'abide
permanently, but resolves to end by an exercise of His supreme power.
(ii.) We have next to consider whether the 120 years, taken in its
natural sense of the duration of individual life {v.i.), be consistent with
the conclusion just reached.
We. himself thinks that it is not the
fusion of the divine and human elements would be propagated in the
race, and could not be checked by a shortening of the lives of individuals.
The context requires an announcement of the annihilation of
the race, and the last clause of the v. must be a mistaken gloss on the
first.
If this argument were sound it would certainly supply a strong
reason either iov revising We.'s acceptation of ^% or for understanding
^'^
as an announcement of the Flood. But a shortening of the term of
life, though not a logical corollary from the sin of the angels, might
nevertheless be a judicial sentence upon it.
It would ensure the extinction of the giants within a measurable time
and indirectly impose a
limit on the new intellectual powers which we may suppose to have
accrued to mankind at large through union with angelic beings. J In
view of the defective character of the narrative, it would be unwise to
press the antagonism of the two clauses so as to put a strain on the
:
'
interpretation of either.
4.
Who
4.
Nnnj.
tKP
On
Aq.
The etymology
this traditional
is
oi iirnrlirTOVTes
S.
ol
^iaiot
123).
&
(pQJLi|
There
is
no
p. 143.
Just as in
knowledge, but
10
3'^^- ^^
man
is foiled
is
The
THE NEPHILIM
146
;
'
(j)
The
sentence here
(cf.
12^
13'^) is
circumstantial
the days
form of the
till
'z
the alliances with the angels, and that the result of the latter
were the
D^')i32
(Lenormant,
The
al.).
idea undoubtedly
is
of the divine
spirit'
with
human
and
flesh.'
also after-
'?|).3,
wished to avoid.
in
11^"^: in
liberis,
convenit
is
is
humbled by
nomen cadentium."
VI. 4
wards whenever
and
they (the
(ffi
147
women)
That
came
is
in
to say, the
through
visits
was continued
in after
ages
conception
but D'^S3n.
tion in
40 f.).
Flood.
t/'
THE FLOOD
148
(j
AND
p)
65-8
VI. 5-IX. 29
149
history, J and P.
The J sections are a graphic popular tale, appealingto the imagination rather than to the reasoning faculties.
The aim of
(6i)
ni)\n (6^)
(912);
)m
in
n'T^
(69 9^2)
enumerations
n^Vm
(6^^
pD
(6^0
loi]
2^V (6)
nrnxn
^^a-hu
'"^
(f-
8^
(^
^^
lxx))
'
-,^2i}2 (S^^).
THE FLOOD ACCORDING TO
150
in position
Some
slight
least disturb
and a number of glosses have been introduced but how far these last
are due to the Redactor himself and how far to subsequent editors, we
;
cannot
tell (for
is
We shall therefore
treat
importance.
first
them separately.
nature.
It is
by
6^~*
(Ho.).
human
The ground
rather the
is
if
reveal
ises the
tion
Yahwistic tradition.
mind
5.
*)
whether
IV''.
is
'
5.
(& KipLos
nin']
SiavoelTat
cogitatio.
It
form
'
'ui n2i'"'?3i]
(6 'E/Sp,,
iTrl
'
forma-
ffi
is
und Trachten)
loosely:
to,
see Field,
formed
irovTjpd
ad
nif'
comm. (Ra. on
148
flf.
simply) which
8"^^) is
based on
is
and
irds rts
cuncta
loc.) is (pvaiKby
On
man,
found here
Porter, Bibl.
this
'
/cai
but in 8-^ the same translator has to irXda-fxa ttjs Kap. dvd.
;
the later Jewish theologoumenon of the yin nr (the evil impulse in
also called
say
impressed on the
'
Siyinen
irrifxeXt^s
(lit.
difficult to
is
that which
Tou dvd.
37,
not
before the
VI. 5-8
Cf. 821,
Dt. 3121,
Is.
VII.
151
attributes to
Yahwe
regret
(DC'i'''5)
*].
Yahwe.
God's resolve to hlot out (^HD) the race not as
yet communicated to Noah, but expressed in monologue.
8. But Noah had found favour^ etc.] doubtless on account of
but see on 7I. The Yahwistic narrative must
his piety
have contained some previous notice of Noah, probably at
:
Is
in
Not
P.
till
the purpose
the
it is
work
is
finished does
to serve: v.*
is
Yahwe
reveal to
obviously the
first
Noah
intima-
command
Heb.
11^.
is
implicit
The
J's brevity is
cf.
here far
'
'
97f.).
I.
Dav.
76.
152
^13 316.
head
its
(cf.
19^^).
cisely the
same
force as the
food
of
x-i^i
fit
is
Comp.
6^.
which,
^*^9>
here avoided,
The
impossible to say.
distinction is
174)
He regards it
2.
however,
is
or not
is
it
was once
as
not,
also 6^.
and human
for sacrifice
in
Levitical
his religious
it
rm^
The same
here.
with regard to
ny^C']
sacrifice,
by sevens (G-K.
of each kind
lEz. Di. Gu.
'
(De. Str.
al.),
in
134^);
see
4^*-
'
'y (individuals)
i.e.
rather than
al.),
7 pairs' [Ber. R.
a plausible conjecture
is
altars, etc.
(Ra.
De.
Str.)
that
the
It
odd
2.
For
D'3B',
Au-ffir^iT
read
d'jb'
D'Jty,
probably correctly.
the
n:zp:) nst,
words
fir]
dpcreu k, dTjXv,
MT
due to homoioteleuton.
Ball accepts this, thinking the omission in
But the phrase r\1p:^ -\3) shows that ^ has been manipulated and it is
on the whole more likely that it is entirely redactional. Birds may be
;
32^
\
;
2-7
VII.
than of
all
3*.
4.
With great
these preparations
to the end.
153
reserved
is
knows no other
(cf.
12,
that
skill
still
is
it
possible to restore
which
narrative, of
little if
anything appears to be
The
lost.
is
as follows
survive
(^^^').
points
{e.g.
doubtful
jg
j^g mainly
a protracted process
others
ff.),
{e.g. ^^^)
The most
the
may
nical
7*
name
Noah
for the
common
Deluge,
to both sources
(z;.^.).
Flood
Hiph. (61^*-). yij] as Jer. Z^^--^- ''^] O" \ as denoting the close of a
term (cf. v.^), see BDB, s.v. 6b. Dip;n] a rare word (only f-^, Dt. ii^),
meaning that which subsists ( sj Q""?)avdarefjia (other exx. in Field,
hild. 181
7.
^BX
'
4^avd(rTa<nv)y
stibstaniiuy 5>
Kon.
I'j^i]
ii.
146
^].D J
G-K.
85
The enumeration
^\d.
Barth, Nom.-
'd.
is in
the
manner of P
(obs. also
'iriK)
THE FLOOD ACCORDING TO
154
hence
presupposes
v.'^
v.^^.
of events
is
found
in
(^^' ^^)
and
in the
any case follow immediately on v.^) contains a fine anthropomorphism, which (in spite of the Bab. parallel just cited)
it is a pity to spoil by deleting mn^ and making Noah the
implicit subject (Klost. NKZ, i. 717). 12. for^y days and
forty nights] This determination, which in J expresses the
entire duration of the Flood, seems to have been treated by
in
8^).
(cf.
to
the
^^
(P).
words
22,
23.
either replace
a pure insertion ; in
9" (P) (ct. d:d 'an, 61' 76).
and ^^ N3Dia (SP Njynio). The word
in'n-'?3i
so
'd]
710 (J),
diluvium 5
S^ao] <& KaraKXvfffxSs ;
has usually been derived from '?3% 'streaming' (see Ges. TA., Di.) but
is more probably a foreign word without Heb. etymology (see No.
ZDMG, xl. 732). Del. {Parad. 156) proposed the derivation from Ass.
nabdluy 'destroy,' which is accepted by Konig (ii. 153), Ball (p. 53), and
The Bab. technical equivalent is abAbu, which denotes both a
others.
the double sense has been thought
light-flood and a water-flood
A transformation
to explain P's addition of d:d to the word (see on 6").
of the one name into the other is, however, difficult to understand (see
KAT^, 495^, 546^). In Ps. 29" "pud appears to be used in a general
sense without a historic reference to the Noachic Deluge (see Duhm,
;
'
'
'
adloc.).S, 9 present a mixed text. The distinction of clean and unclean points to J but all other features (dm^n [though a reading m.T
seems attested by jjuFSTJ, and MSS of (K] nnpji nai the undiscrimin;
ated
D'MJ'
D':^
(cf. 6')
VII. 8-VIII. 3A
effect of the
Flood, which
is
155
versal.
first
redaction.
'^'^
6a.
At
restrained ; lb.
the earthy
to be redactlonal,
it.
^*
arrangement
(^^**- 22*
^^)
may be
of the ark.
v.
28 no date
is
156
on decreasing from off the earthy 4. and the ark rested on the
mountains of Ararat. On the landing-place of the ark, see
p.
166 below.
appears
in
many forms
the Babylonian.
It
*'siderum in navigando
Indians):
notably in
is
of the Deluge-tradition
observatio
nulla
meatumque earum terram petentium comiHe sent out a raven] The purpose of the action
tentes saepius,
tantur."
is
7.
not stated
v.^
till
Ho. Gu.
ZATW,
Dahse,
al.).
is
marked with
The
the obelus.
immediately
we must
see
But
below.
if v."^
be a later insertion,
days (see
"j
v.^*^).
The
9.
de-
and admission of the dove is unsurpassed even in the Yahwistic document for tenderness and
beauty of imagination. 10. Seven other days] implying a
scription of the return
similar
or
v.^
v.^.
II.
a freshly
plucked olive leaf] The olive does not grow at great altitudes, and was said to flourish even under water (Tu.).
But it is probable that some forgotten mythological significance attaches to the
p. 60).
symbol
emblem of peace
ramum prcetendit
Virg. Aen,
olivce)
here and in
N1S' KS'i]
v.'.
see on ^.
8.
7.
ffi
no more
el
;
and then
126 r; but
KeKoiraKev rb
so
U5
manu
The
12.
at last
Smith's
as in v.^
cf.
iiScop,
(accepted by Ball)
that both birds
v.^^ (juu. has '7n'i both
:
= vinN); assuming
10.
:
G-K.
times).
branch as an
116 [Paciferaeque
viii.
2W^
in the
"^n:;!
(Bu. Dt.
al.).
VIII. 4-21
Noah ventures
13b.
Noah's
20-22.
to
is
dry.
sacrifice.
^J's
effect
its
is
177)
The
sacrificial
to offer a
The resemblance
is
is
v.^i
to move the
new humanity.
Babylonian parallel
act
first
sacrifice,
to the
Noah's
pitiation
157
20. an altar]
institution
is
Lit.
carried
4^*- 72'-),
slaughtering-
back by J to
but this
is
the
first
altar,
21.
niT*:
n*'^
{kvicth]^
nidor)'^
but
cf.
Sa. 26^^.
It is
p. 177
elucidates primitive
13b.
"^v
nifT"?]
1^ |j^K-5 "jZo-CDj
* II.
xii.
153.
\.
317
Kviai] 8'
cf.
Ov.
Met
158
'"lai
all
5*^).
division
seasons (Ra.), or even into two halves (De.), is not intended the order of nature is simply indicated by a series
;
whose
of contrasts,
alternation
is
Yahwe
a 'covenant'
(9^^),
whereas
in
a striking
it
33
earth.
Noah's piety;
This
9.
is
to
P.
The
corruption of the
Noah] The formula is
the genealogy of
Jer. 31^'-
cf.
25f.
"ix']
(Sc
24I8,
3722, Jb.
Htl ^yKeirai
7)
Is.
g^^*-.
Noah
dLdvoLa r. dv6.
is
Sm
iiri/xeXQi kt\.
dealing
characterised as
rk ipya, as
See on
6^.
3". '3
22. ny]
see on 2^.
come to an end
The asyndeton is harsh but it is hardly
9. D'Dn pns] (so Jb. 12*).
To
safe to remedy it on the authority of ax (o'Dm) and U, against
ffi
om.
Ball,
i]l.
inns?']
'
'
ffir.
remove
p'-^^
'
'
9-12
VI.
159
on the construction
(P^'^^) and faultless (Q^^^)
There is perhaps a correspondence between these two
epithets and the description of the state of the world which
follows; pn^ being opposed to the 'violence,' and D''Dn to
righteous
v.i.
'corruption' of v.^"-.
the
sacerdotal in
meaning
free
tio7is {y.i')\
its
from
i.e.
is
(Ex.
12^,
alone
among
his
Lv.
i^
D'')iDn
etc.),
in his genera-
contemporaries
(cf.
7^).
The expression
II
"N0 of
3^
(De.).
result
is
divinely -appointed
violated the
violence
(^^^,
fflr
remarked
tion of the
olSlklo)
ruthless
the weak.
is
outrage per-
''nature red in
although,
(p.
the world.
'
So Jerome
l6o
being-s,'
jj-
nouncement
[area),
2^- ^)
the
where, however,
it is
25^^ etc.).
word
for
vessel
is
to be
coated inside
us
to
ship
(lit.
nests
'),
and
Ex.
(cf.
is
2^).
13. ''iih N|i] not (as Est. 9^^) *has come to my knowledge,' but 'has
entered into my purpose.' This is better than (with Di.) to take N5 y^.
absolutely (as Am. 8^), and 'ja"? as 'according- to my purpose.' Dn'^gp]
through them Ex. 82*' 9^1, Ju. 6^ etc. [nK.rnx [cri\n:f','?] (& Kal rrjv yrjv
cum terra so <S CT^J. As Ols. says, we should expect 'n '?i;p (nxD
But the error probably lies deeper.
[Graetz] is unsuitable).
Ball
emends '-TnNi dhn n^ry^r^ ; Bu. '.thk on'np'D [en] '3 Dn'n:j'p Gu. on'n^'p Djn^
rrnK.
Eerdmans {^AT Studien, i. 29) finds a proof of original poly-
He
reads
"we
about to destroy
is the Egyptian
teb{t) = 'chest,' 'sarcophagus' (Bi^is, 6i^r], in (S of Ex. 2^-^): see Ges.
Th. Erman, ZDMG, xlvi. 123. Jensen {ZA^ iv. 272 f.), while admitting
the Egypt, etymolog-y, suggests a connexion with the Ass. ilippu ti-hiI am informed by Dr. C. H. W. Johns that
turn (a kind of ship).
theism.
the earth."
'1JI
14. nan]
on'n^pp ^nr\
<S
Ki^ojrbs
STST Nnu'n.
The word
'
:;
l6l
VI. I3-I6
Somewhat
napiStim
similar details
(p.
176).
are
Asphalt
is
still
f.).
16.
obscure.
'light*
'opening for
or
aperture (Tu.), or
"a
light,*
either
a single (square)
Pr^Ol, 'windows,' QT^ t.tj). They connected it (as Aq. shows) with
D!in_:^|
noon-day
but tf onnii means properly summit (see G-B.
BDB, S.V.), there seems nothing in Heb. to connect the root with
The meaning 'back' is supported by Ar. zahr.
the idea of light.
rthiiD^D n|V5fi hdn-'^ni] The suff. may refer either to the ins (whose gender
the latter is certainly
cf. Kon. S. p. 163) or to the n^ri
is unknown
The prevalent explanation that the cubit
most natural after nVs.
indicates either the breadth of the light-opening, or its distance below
the roof (see Di.) is mere guess-work. Bu. (following We.) removes
the first three words to the end of the v., rendering: " and according
Di. objects that this would
to the cubit thou shalt finish it (the ark) "
<S
'
'
'
require noNn.
na-iN-Vxi,
"and
for
its
(the
ark's)
whole length thou shalt cover it above"; Gu. niV^in 'n'Sni, "and on
a pivot (see Is. 6*) thou shalt make it (the roof) revolve," a doubtful
:
suggestion.
II
62
sides of the
etymological basis
its
G-B.
The
al.)
take
clause
footnote.
The
to
The
is
(see Di.
it
doubtful
mean
:
{lit.
to be
is
above
it
unin-
is
be arranged
(longer?)
its
in three stories.
some suggestions
weak, and
141) are
(v.t.).
the roof
De.
(Dri., so
is in
stands
it
and the
to
it
and
telligible as
side
little
Exegetical tradition
al.).
The purpose
61-63).
(11.
ark. Gunkel
of the
the ark
was recorded
before
to
thinks that
Noah
and
its
in
There
is
really
'^'^^'
are
i3-i6^
j^^
coming judgement
17. 'Jin
':ni]
cf.
Dri.
but that
JPh.
xi.
is
Noah
of safety in the
226.
d:d
^non
|'n.T'?y
(cf.
The
7^)]
D'D is
necessary to the
is
completeness of the sentence. (& omits d'd in 7^, and inserts it in g^^^ (P).
Whether it be an explanatory gloss of the unfamiliar ^130 (so most), or a
peculiar case of nominal apposition (see Dri. T. 188), it is difficult to
decide on the idea that it is meant to distinguish the water-flood from
the light-flood, see above, p. 154.
The pointing- D;p (JDMich. al.) is
objectionable on various g-rounds for one thing-, P never speaks of the
Flood as coming from the sea.' J's phrase is '?i3Dn 'D 7'^' ^" cf. 9^^* (P).
nng'?] uxy n^rvff^
but elision of n in Hiph. is unusual some Sam. MSS
haven'ntynS (Ball).
yi j:] 'expire,' peculiar to P in Hex. (cf. 7^^ 25^-"
:
'
vi.
i,
487), the
VI. I7-VII. II
to
whom
nnn
the
is
163
will,
The
entering- of the
is
Noah
and thy
sons^ etc.\
except in 8^
cf.
The enumeration
8i- i^
f^
ct. J
in
never omitted by P
7I. 19 f. One pair of
is
The
distinction of clean
20.
The
classification
variations in
v.i.
on
v.^.
(which
Ifc^b;
is
to be
and unclean
to a later dispensation
is
repeated
with
slight
came of themselves (Ra. lEz. al.), any more than K^nn (v.^^)
necessarily means that Noah had to catch them.
21. all
food which
tions
of
is (or
i^^'-.
may
22.
peculiar to P;
cf.
so
did he]
is
42f.^
49*8,
*nn]
^i
v.^. 20.
(see
B'Dr'?3D]
i^^-
Ins.
MT
21.
rh^vh] see
'
'
164
below, p. 167
f.
V.*,
however,
it is
who
rain.
Gunkel was the first to point out the poetic character and structure
note the phrase nan Dinn (Am. 7^, Is. 51^", Ps. 36^), and the
of ^'^^
parallelismus tnembrorum. He considers the words a fragment of an
older version of the legend which (like the Babylonian) was written in
:
poetry.
On
13.
in
8^
an
example
The
(J
idea that
all
allows a week)
of P's
love
of the
'k is
rare,
Here
12^.
it
(B^ WN
(8^^-
(cf. v.^^);
DV] Bu.
14.
^^).
see on
6^^.
n;nn]
'iji
"n3s
^d]
^ om.
dSc
it
of
adds
would
'
165
VII. I2-VIII. IB
came upon
v.^^.
The
the highest
mountains.
18,
19.
prevailed]
"133,
lit.
*be
Aq. iveSvvafjLwOr)). The Flood is conceived as a contest between the water and the dry land.
The
20. fifteen cubits] is just half the depth of the ark.
strong
'
cVc/cparet,
(ffl^
is
the Flood
slightest
tion is
to P)
is
but
it is
purely arbitrary.
24.
number
(v.^^)
see p. 168.
remembered] in mercy, as
I.
The
inclusion
touch of nature in
The mention
P which
is
lb.
(2*).
It is
present order that the sending of the wind and the stopping
19.
\T\-i\
iDD^i]
(K
^B3:i,
with
d:o
TO. {r}l/r]\d
I.
as subj. (better).
So
v."^.
20.
n?a] C5
MT
{v\pu)d7)), is
The
otJ';i]
The
tQ>v TrereLvCov k.
1^ is
rr.
r. epirerCbv is
Nu.
17^
add
here
(P),
66
The
4.
See, further, p.
difficulty.
on {one
(7^*).
of) the
mountains
Ararat
Parnassus.
Armenia;
Mount
Ararat,
= Is.
traditionally
(Massis, Agridagh
tains, rests
Urartu)
(Ass.
19^^
Ki.
cf.
the
NE
part
of
The name
51^7.
17,000
c,
is
37^^, Jer.
ft.)
of the Armenian
on a misunderstanding of
moun-
this passage.
NE
SW
potamian
This view
plain.
traditional
is
adopted
among
in
the
the Moslems.
name
this
in the
p.k'^a.
What
Damascenus
(Jos.
Ant.
i.
as
95).
The
it is impossible to say.
was identical with the Bab.,
Hara haraiti (the ancient Iranian
writers just
*
fluit,
4.
T^**.
3b.
For 17th
fflr
in
u'won n^pn]
has 27th
Ho. Gk.).
incredibilis ubertatis,
extenditur."
(Str.
(7").
3B-I9
VIII.
16;
discovered that the northern mountains are in reality higher than those
of Kurdistan.
5.
i.e,
d?^> (arefacta
cf.
Jer. 50^).
Exit
an example
MT
follows
Commencement
1.
of Flood
4.
5.
Earth dry.
2.
3.
2nd mo.,
7th
6ooth year,
17th
17th
ioth(C5iith), ist
6oist year,
ist mo.,
2nd
,,
,,
ist
27th
day
(ffi
27th)
(^ 27th)
The chief points are these (a) In f& the duration of the Flood is
exactly 12 months and since the 5 months between (i) and (2) amount
:
to 150 days (7^'' 8^), the basis of reckoning is presumably the Egyptian
solar year (12 mo. of 30 days + 5 intercalated days).
The 2 months'
interval between (3) and (4) also agrees, to a day, with the 40 + 21 days
less idiomatic
5. mom iiSn vn] 'went on decreasing' (G-K. 113 w)
adds m "nV (7").
than'^(J). TVnM] (S eleventh. iz3l. After naty
so v.^^
17. xxx(&3s read .Tnn-'?3i
15. D'hSn] (& Kipios 6 e.
Nsin]
;
p. 641.
This
19.
is
U"ji nsi]
(& ^1^
'1?'
N;^;n is
not clear
see on
9^*-
see Kon.
pxa
\%'\m.
D.TnnsB'D'?]
(Jer. 15')
* Jub. V. 23-32 (cf. vi. 25 f.) adds several dates, but otherwise agrees
with MT, except that it makes the Flood commence on the 27th, gives
no date for the resting of the ark, and puts the drying of the earth on
the 17th, and the opening of the ark on the 27th day of the 2nd month.
68
MT
8"i2
the total duration is 12 mo. + 10 days; hence the
In
(J).
reckoning appears to be by lunar months of c. 29^ days, making up a
solar year of 364 days.* {h) The Massoretic scheme, however, produces a discrepancy with the 150 days for 5 lunar months fall short
of that period by two or three days. Either the original reckoning
was by solar months (as in (5), or (what is more probable) the 150
days belong to an older computation independent of the Calendar.f
It has been surmised that this points to a 10 months' duration of
the Flood (150 days' increase +150 days' subsidence); and (Ew. Di.)
that a trace of this system remains in the 74 days' interval between
(2) and (3), which amounts to about one-half of the period of sub(c) Of the separate data of the Calendar no satisfactory
sidence.
explanation has yet been given. The only date that bears its significance on its face is the disappearance of the waters on the ist day of
the year and even this is confused by the trivial and irrelevant distinction between the drying up of the waters and the drying of the earth.
Why the Flood began and ended in the 2nd month, and on the 17th or
27th day, remains, in spite of all conjectures, a mystery.J {d) The question whether the months are counted from the old Heb. New Year in the
autumn, or, according to the post-Exilic (Babylonian) calendar, from the
spring, has been discussed from the earliest times, and generally
decided in favour of the former view {Juh., Jos. Ant. i. 80, S^, Ra. and
most). The arguments on one side or the other have little weight. If
the second autumn month (Marche^wan) is a suitable time for the
commencement of the Flood, because it inaugurates the rainy season
in Palestine and Babylonia, it is for the same reason eminently unsuitP elsewhere follows the Babylonian calendar, and
able for its close.
there is no reason to suppose he departs from his usual procedure here
{e) The only issue of real interest is how much of the
(so Tu. Gu. al.).
chronology is to be attributed to the original Priestly Code. If there
be two discordant systems in the record, the 150 days might be the
reckoning of P, and the Calendar a later adjustment (Di.) or, again, the
of
150 days might be traditional, and the Calendar the work of P himself
On the former (the more probable) assumption the further
(Gu.).
question arises whether the additions were made before or after the
amalgamation of
and
P.
The evidence
is
not decisive
gences of (& from MT seem to prove that the chronology was still in
process of development after the formation of the Canon. See Dahse,
ZATWt xxviii. 7 fF., where it is shewn that a group of Greek MSS
* So Jub.
t That it
vi. 32.
is
and 56 f.
much
less likely.
t King (/TS, V. 204 f.) points out the probability that in the triennial
cycle of Synagogue readings the Parasha containing the Flood-story
This might conceivably have
fell to be read about the 17th lyyar.
suggested the starting-point of the Calendar (but if so it would bring
down the latter to a somewhat late period), or a modification of an
original 27th (ffi), which, however, would itself require explanation.
See De.
175
f.,
IX.
169
agree closely with Juh.., and argued (but unconvincingly) that the
original reckoning was a solar year, beginning and ending with the
27th of the 2nd month.
The new
IX. 1-7.
world-order.
The
mind of the
religious
sig-
Priestly writers
It marks the
and the following sections.
new and less ideal age of history, which
The original
under which mankind now lives.
is^ that
harmonious order of nature, in which all forms of slaughter
were prohibited, had been violated by both men and
animals before the Flood (see on 6^i'-). This is now replaced
by a new constitution, in which the slaughter of animals for
and only two restrictions are
human food is legalised
imposed on the bloodthirsty instincts of the degenerate
life
of an animal, and
(i) Man may not eat the
creatures
(2) human blood may not be shed with impunity either by
appears
in this
introduction of a
man
'
or beast.
'
'
their
number.
See Schiirer,
(cf.
i28f.
iii.
n',T d3^,
h'pdn'?
ddV 'nnj
and
esp.
nss'y
pT),
ancient traditions.
I.
An
Noah and
religious
significant that
here
(in
OT
(so v.^).
contrast to
The wives of
i^^.
his
women having no
It
i^^)
is
perhaps also
f&
adds at end
Sd31 (bis).
The
as i^.
2.
'?D31
^D3]
ffi<g
170
yy
Man's
2.
now
established, but
The
3.
re-
'
in the
1^^)
tn^o
life
central injunction
of animal food.
life.
Observe P's resolute
between clean and unclean
Abstention from eating
animals.
4. The first restriction.
blood, or flesh from which the blood has not been drained,
is a fundamental principle of the Levitical legislation (Lev.
y27 jyio. i4j. and though to our minds a purely ceremonial
precept, is constantly classed with moral laws (Ezk. 33^'*
The theory on which the prohibition rests is reetc.).
vague
animal
of
definition
ignoring of
the
distinction
12^3)
the blood
is
the
life,
life is
sacred,
a motive not for abstinence, but for drinking it.* All the
same it is unnecessary to go deeper in search of a reason for
the ancient Heb. horror of eating with the blood
i432ff.-j-).
life.
Life
DDTiK'Qjf',
v.i.
will
(42^2,
^4.
IDT is
oit/ju
Ezk.
and
D'n
an
:3. SrnK
rel.
cl.
(i
On
INI is
or
of,
That God
D3^ 'nm]
is
seems a slavish
5.
Sa.
human
K'W.
account
('?3n)
to irsn
S. (o5
<ri)v
taken as circumscription of
'your blood, your own' in contrast with
It is better to render 'according to your persons,' ue.
**dem eloh. Sprachgebrauch entspricht distributive
doch am besten " (De.). vnx B^'tt td] 'from the hand of
omits.
QyntPSih] usually
the animals.
sanctity of
avTov) as
MX. (DSDTriKi)
"].
exact
require^
We should
repetition
supplies.
restriction
expressed alternately by
is
'
equivalent for
*
The second
5j 6.
individually;
Fassung des
See i?52, 234 f. Frazer, GB^, i. 133 f., 352 f. Kennedy, EB, 1544.
It has been thought that the offence warned against is the barbarous African custom of eating portions of animals still alive (^TJ, Ra.
De. al.) but that is a mistake.
*
IX. 2-II
171
is
to
rests
it
beast]
D'n ^Sb'
and the perfect symmetry of the two members
DnNH
r\p\^^ to DnXB
it is possibly an ancient judicial
formula which had become proverbial (Gu.). The JCST (vJ.)
:
al.)
others
it
8-17.
its
In
Sign.
as in J
^g20-22j tj^g
and
in
is
In
and
it
flesh,
all
the
of two
first
is
always nna
covenant
or
D^-pn
f.
establish
9.
my
covenant] m.iv\^vci^x\X.
of
'3 jnj
technical
(172,
'2 n"n3.
Nu.
n.
The essence
of the
is
Whether
its
one man that of another.' The full expression would be B'S3"nN K"N td
VHK (Ols.); but all languages use breviloquence in the expression of
reciprocity.
The construction is hardly more difficult than in 15^**
^226.33. a^jjjj 2^ exact parallel occurs in Zee. 7^".
See G-K. 139c;
Bu. 283 ff. The vnNi of juu 5U makes nonsense ffi omits the previous
DHNn TDi.
It would be better to move the Athnach so as to commence
om. W^ N'jn no'DD jnnoa
a new clause with b"n td. 6. D^N3]
is
;
still
more
explicit.
7.
na
mi]
Read
na
mi
=
in
'
in short
many as
as
'
cf.
'
23^^ see
see on &.
G-K.
*wild animals,'
makes
(&.
om.
Vd^]
perhaps
143
^.
'
11.
'?13D]
xix.
^i3Dn
172
is
difficult
when
'*In times
12-17. The
reduced to
'
may
of the upturned
For
the rest,
The
original form.
its
bow
its
On
its
accompanying
sign.
14-16.
(7vken)
the
^^^
mencing with
^^
all
The
the apodosis
and
com-
bow seems
conceived
appear at
(against De.).
^**:
continues
Kiyptos 6 ^. + (with
ux T\'vwrh\ so v.". 12. dmVn]
hardly historic pf. ('I have set'), but either pf. of
instant action (' I do set'), or pf. of certainty (' I will set') see G-K.
io6i,m,n.
14. py 'J3y3] lit. 'when I cloud with cloud'; see G-K.
nrpn] (S5J 'riB'p
so (& in v.^^ 15. n'n] xx%
52 fl? and 1177-.
(K adds
^)
nr'?N.
r\T\^S\
D!P.
13.
nnj]
D3nN
the
IX.
moment
the right
God.
Lv.
The
Nu.
was
Ex.
31^^,
rainbow occurs
in
many
mythologies.
To
177.13.19^
idealisation of the
the Indians
with the
an everlasting covenant] so
16.
248,
173
it
personified as
up
'Ipts,
by Homer
Olympians
ii. 786, iii. 121; cf. Ov. Met. i. 270 f. ), but also regarded as a portent
of war and storm (xi. 27 f., xvii. 547 flf.).
In the Icelandic Eddas it is
the bridge between heaven and earth.
further stage of idealisation
(//.
DB'jn
Dva pyn
We.
al.)
-th' na-N
but see
that elsewhere
rr^j?
an arc of a circle.
With regard to the covenant itself, the most important question
theologically is whether it includes the regulations of vv.^^^ or is confined to the unconditional promise that there shall no more be a flood.
For the latter view there is undoubtedly much to be said (see Valeton,
ZATW^ xii. 3f ). Vv.^"'^ and ^'^"^ are certainly distinct addresses, and
possibly of different origin (p. 169) and while the first says nothing
of a covenant, the second makes no reference to the preceding stipula;
action
nai"?]
^^o
(&
ua
FLOOD
174
and we have seen that there are independent reasons for regarding
If that
vv.^"' as supplementary to the Deluge tradition followed by P.
be the case, it is probable that these vv. were inserted by the priestly
author with the intention of bringing under the Noachic nna those
elementary religious obligations which he regarded as universally
binding on mankind. On the conception of the nna in J and P, see
chs. 15 and 17.
The death
28, 29.
of
Noah.
The form of these vv. is exactly that of the genealogy, ch. 5 while
they are at the same time the conclusion of the n: mSin (6^). How much
was included under that rubric? Does it cover the whole of P's
narrative of the Flood (so that mSin is practically equivalent to biography '), or does it refer merely to the account of his immediate
7^
descendants in 6^^? The conjecture may be hazarded that 6^;
^'^
formed a section of the original book of mSin, and that into this
skeleton the full narrative of the Flood was inserted by one of the
The relation of the assumed
priestly writers (see the notes on 2**).
genealogfy to that of ch. 5 would be precisely that of the m'?in of Terah
^jj27ff.)
In each case the second geneto the m'jin of Shem (11^"^).
alogy is extremely short further, it opens by repeating the last link
of the previous genealogy (in each case the birth of three sons, 5^^ 6^^)
and, finally, the second genealogy is interspersed with brief historical
It may, of course, be held that the whole history of Abraham
notices.
belongs to the mVin of Terah that is the accepted view, and the reasons
Fortunately the question
for disputing it are those mentioned on p. 40 f.
is of no great importance.
^28. 29
Next
interesting
29.
n'l,
Heb.
MSS
v.Ti.
collected
LEGENDS
175
On
The scientific evidence for the antiquity of man all over the
world shows that such an event (if it ever occurred) must have taken
place many thousands of years before the date assigned to Noah and
that the tradition should have been preserved for so long a time among
savage peoples without the aid of writing is incredible. The most
reasonable line of explanation (though it cannot here be followed out in
detail) is that the great majority of the legends preserve the recollection
of local catastrophes, such as inundations, tidal waves, seismic floods
accompanied by cyclones, etc., of which many historical examples are
on record while in a considerable number of cases these local legends
have been combined with features due either to the diffusion of Babylonian culture or to the direct influence of the Bible through Christian
missionaries, t In this note we shall confine our attention to the group
of legends most closely affiliated to the Babylonian tradition.
2. Of the Babylonian story the most complete version is contained
in the eleventh Tablet of the GilgameS Epic.:}:
GilgameS has arrived at
the Isles of the Blessed to inquire of his ancestor UtnapiStim how he had
been received into the society of the gods. The answer is the long and
exceedingly graphic description of the Flood which occupies the bulk
of the Tablet. The hero relates how, while he dwelt at Surippak on
able.
words
done
"And
FLOOD
176
the Euphrates, it was resolved by the gods in council to send the Flood
(ab^bu) on the earth. Ea, who had been present at the council, resolved
to save his favourite Utnapistim ; and contrived without overt breach of
confidence to convey to him a warning of the impending- danger, commanding him to build a ship {elippv) of definite dimensions for the
'
" When the seventh day came, the hurricane, the Flood, the battlestorm was stilled,
Which had fought like a (host?) of men.
The sea became calm, the tempest was still, the Flood ceased.
When I saw the day, no voice was heard,
And the whole of mankind was turned to clay.
When the daylight came, I prayed,
I opened a window and the light fell on my face,
I knelt, I sat, and wept,
On my nostrils my tears ran down.
I looked on the spaces in the realm of the sea
After twelve double-hours an island stood out.
At Nisir* the ship had arrived.
The mountain of Nisir stayed the ship ..." (11. 130-142),
This brings us to the incident of the birds (146-155)
**When the seventh dayf came
I brought out a dove and let it go.
The dove went forth and came back
Because it had not whereon to stand it returned.
I brought forth a swallow and let it go.
The swallow went forth and came back
Because it had not whereon to stand it returned.
I brought forth a raven and let it go.
The raven went forth and saw the decrease of the waters,
It ate, it ... it croaked, but returned not again."
:
See
p. 166.
LEGENDS
On
UtnapIStim released
this
offered
sacrifice
"The
all
177
the animals
sacrificer" (160
ff.).
made me dwell"
(202
ff.).*
'
'
survivors. t
By
close
and marked
parallelism, the
material differences on which Nickel (p. 185) lays stress viz. as to (a)
the chronology, (6) the landing-place of the ark, (c) the details of the
Two
is
12
FLOOD
178
sending" out of the birds, (d) the sign of the rainbow (absent in Bab.),
and [e) the name of the hero sink into insignificance. They are,
presumption that the story had taken the shape known to us in BabyAnd since
lonia before it passed into the possession of the Israelites.
we have seen (p. 177) that the Babylonian legend was already reduced
to writing about the time usually assigned to the Abrahamic migration,
it is impossible to suppose that the Heb. oral tradition had preserved
an independent recollection of the historical occurrence which may be
assumed as the basis of fact underlying the Deluge tradition. The
differences between the two narratives are on this account all the
more instructive. While the Genesis narratives are written in prose,
and reveal at most occasional traces of a poetic original (S'^^ in J, 7-^''
8^ in P), the Babylonian epic is genuine poetry, which appeals to a
modern reader in spite of the strangeness of its antique sentiment and
imagery. Reflecting the feelings of the principal actor in the scene, it
possesses a human interest and pathos of which only a few touches
appear in J, and none at all in P. The difference here is not wholly
due to the elimination of the mythological element by the biblical
writers it is characteristic of the Heb. popular tale that it shuns the
'fine
and
finds
its
source, but
It is
key
to
Thus
some
subtle
Bab.
precedes the
announcement of the Flood, is explained by the consideration that
Ea cannot explicitly divulge the purpose of the gods whereas in J
Which reit becomes a test of the obedience of Noah (Gu. p. 66).
presentation is older can scarcely be doubted.
It is true, at all events,
that the Bab. parallel serves as a "measure of the unique grandeur
of the idea of God in Israel, which was powerful enough to purify
affinities
command
to
tradition.
in the
LEGENDS
179
and
4.
Of
The Indian
story, to
which there
is
a single allusion
in the
Vedas,
is
(Mahabharata,
iii.
187. 2ff.),t the Babylonian affinities are somewhat
but even in the oldest version they are not altogether
negligible, especially when we remember that the fish (which in the
Mahabharata is an incarnation of Brahma) was the symbol of the
The Greeks had several Flood-legends, of which the most
god Ea.J
widely diffused was that of Deukalion, best known from the account
of Apollodorus (i. 7. 2fF.). Zeus, resolved to destroy the brazen race,
sends a heavy rain, which floods the greater part of Greece, and
drowns all men except a few who escape to the mountain tops. But
Deukalion, on the advice of his father Prometheus, had prepared a
chest, loaded it with provisions, and taken refuge in it with his wife
Pyrrha. After 9 days and nights they land on Parnassus Deukalion
more obvious
Zeus and prays for a new race of men these are produced
from stones which he and his wife, at the command of the god, throw
over their shoulders. The incident of the ark seems here incongruous,
since other human beings were saved without it.
It is perhaps an
sacrifices to
25
iii.),
ff.
t Translated by Protap Chandra Roy (Calcutta, 1884), iii. 552 ff. See
Usener, 29 ff.
X Usener, however (240 ff.), maintains the entire independence of the
Indian and Semitic legends.
Cf. Ovid, Met. i. 244 The earliest allusion is Pindar, 01. 9. 41 fF.
415 Paus. i. 40. i, x. 6. 2, etc. The incident of the dove (in a peculiar
modification) appears only in Plut. De sollert. an. 13.
Usener, 31 ff.,
;
244
ff.
FLOOD
l8o
local
Deluge
Gen., has been preserved by the Pseudo-Lucian {De dea Syra, 12, 13).
of men had become so great that they had to be
fountains of the earth and the flood-gates of heaven
were opened simultaneously the whole world was submerged, and all
men perished. Only the pious Deukalion-Sisuthros * was saved with
his family in a great chest, into which as he entered all sorts of animals
crowded. When the water had disappeared, Deukalion opened the ark,
erected altars, and founded the sanctuary of Derketo at Hierapolis.
The hole in the earth which swallowed up the Flood was shown under
the temple, and was seen by the writer, who thought it not quite big
enough for the purpose. In Usener's opinion we have here the Chaldean
legend localised at a Syrian sanctuary, there being nothing Greek about
A Phrygian localisation of the Semitic
it except the name Deukalion.
tradition is attested by the epithet kl^<j)t6% applied to the Phrygian
in
The wickedness
destroyed. The
Apameia (Kelainai) from the time of Augustus (Strabo, xii. 8. 13, etc.);
and still more remarkably by bronze coins of that city dating from the
Text AevKoXiuva
ingeniously
emended
rbv lliKvdea,
to A. r. XiavOia
Abydenus.
t See the reproductions
in
'
192)
ATLO^,
131, ^235.
LEGENDS
l8l
in the course of ages the spring- equinox must traverse the watery
(southern) region of the Zodiac this, on their system, signified a sub:
mergence of the whole universe in water and the Deluge-myth symbolises the safe passage of the vernal sun-god through that part of the
ecliptic.
Whatever truth there may be in these theories, it is certain
that they do not account for the concrete features of the Chaldean
legend and if (as can hardly be denied) mythical motives are present,
it seems just as likely that they were grafted on to a historic tradition as
that the history is merely the garb in which a solar or astral myth
arrayed itself. The most natural explanation of the Babylonian
narrative is after all that it is based on the vague reminiscence of
some memorable and devastating flood in the Euphrates valley, as to the
;
period of some duration the water of the Persian Gulf was repeatedly
driven by earthquake shocks over the plain at the mouth of the
Euphrates. Warned by these floods, a prudent man, Hasis-adra, i.e.
the god-fearing philosopher, builds a ship for the rescue of his family,
and caulks it with pitch, as is still the custom on the Euphrates. The
movements of the earth increase he flees with his family to the ship
;
the subterranean water bursts forth from the fissured plain ; a great
diminution in atmospheric pressure, indicated by fearful storm and
rain, probably a true cyclone, approaches from the Persian Gulf, and
accompanies the most violent manifestations of the seismic force. The
sea sweeps in a devastating flood over the plain, raises the rescuing
vessel, washes it far inland, and leaves it stranded on one of those
Miocene foot-hills which bound the plain of the Tigris on the north and
north-east below the confluence of the Little Zab " (Eduard Suess, The
Face of the Earth, i. 72). See, however, the criticism of SoUas, The
316.
IX. 1827.
Noah
is
immoderate indulgence
in its fruit.
new
character, as
and the
first
victim
This leads on to an
The
probability,
all
noah's drunkenness
82
narrative at
who
the
all.
men
they
(j)
for J)
here,
on the contrary,
are represented as
their father
tent
'
with
obviously
is
of the passage.
youngest son
while Shem and Japheth are
True, in v.^^ the misdeed is attributed to
referred to as his brothers.
Ham the father of Canaan but the words '5n dpi have all the appear^s^and
to ^offance of a gloss intended to cover the transition from
the clause JJ?:? 'ax Nin Dm in ^^^ can have no other purpose. Now ^^ is
the close of J's * account of the Flood and ^^ points forward either to
Tower of Babel.
J's list of Nations (ch. lo), or to the dispersion of the
First of
of Noah,
we
all,
and
observe that
named Canaan
in v.^^ is
'
'
Vy
20-27
separate source.
partly by the language (niH!, v.^^ [in spite of D'hSn in v.^'j and ^n.l, v.^")
and more especially by the connexion with 5^^ (see pp. 3, 133 f ). It is
clear, therefore, that a redactor (RJ) has here combined two Yahwistic
documents, and sought to reduce the contradiction by the glosses in
18b
and 22.
;
18,
19.
f.).
20.
19. pN.rV^ n:33] 'the whole (population of the) earth was scattered.'
For the construction cf. lo^ n^^j] hardly contracted Niph. from ^ fsa
[ = ps] (G-K. 67 dd); but from
V Y^i, whether this be a secondary
formation from ^ ps (G-B.^^ 465 f), or an independent word (BDB,
Cf.
659).
41^^ (E).
Sa. 13!^
11^2
Is.
The rendering
333.-20.
'131
Vn^i]
Noah commenced
83,
Comp.
earth) with
nvsa
ii^-''
with
lo^^ 4. 8.9.
(Bu.)
ni-'j-i
nVx
n^^
with
IX. 18-24
183
agriculture,
which now
in his
this discovery
was
frequently attributed to
Niebuhr, Geschichte
d.
Mohammed) viewed
The
native religion
this
roundings.
to
22.
That
'^r^]
was
nJ'Di^n]
On
G-K.
126
r.
ihe 'b
So Mr. Abrahams,
in
a private communication.
noah's drunkenness
184
Shem);
less
still
The conclusion
youngest (lEz.).
:'
(j)
(Ra.); or
'
Ham's
is
(cf.
2728^-
concluding note,
186
f.).
p.
when the
^^^-
'
Him
read ^^
[both
^113
TV\r}\
Blessed of
Yahwe
be
Shem
(cf.
2431' 2629
J]).
much
force to
70 n.
G-K.
26.
1870, 382)
2^''
with
iD^
103/
may
The
D'^ni'^^
of
pi.
(J^?.').
name
a play on the
latter is the
proposed to omit
ref.
name
Yepheth
(riD^)
suff.
(coll.)
more natural
-^^,
to vnx.
substituting
<&.
has avrov
or
here.
27a^
i"?
Ols,
see Note 3 in
{MBBA,
(db' pci),
in ^eb
and
and
airOiv in
June
retain
^^
God
{y.s,\
IX. 25-27
niiT'
was the
he dwell] or that he
be God ijub.
may
^"^j Ber.
The
dwell.
a7id
85
may
convey no
blessing
to
For the
Ps
78^^,
Ch.
5^^.
A Messianic
covery of wine.
Here, however,
is
it
its
Read in its own light, as an independent fragment of tradition, the Incident signalises the transition from nomadic to
agricultural life.
Noah, the first husbandman and vine-grower, is a
tent-dweller (v.^^) and this mode of life is continued by his oldest and
favoured son Shem (-'). Further, the identification of husbandry and
vine culture points to a situation in which the simpler forms of agriculture had been supplemented by the cultivation of the grape.
Such a
situation existed in Palestine when it was occupied by the Hebrews.
The sons of the desert who then served themselves heirs by conquest to
Yahwistic document.
the Canaanitish civilisation escaped the protracted evolution of vinegrowing from primitive tillage, and stepped into the possession of the
farm and the vineyard at once. From this point of view the story of
Noah's drunkenness expresses the healthy recoil of primitive Semitic
morality from the licentious habits engendered by a civilisation of which
a salient feature was the enjoyment and abuse of wine. Canaan is the
prototype of the population which had succumbed to these enervating
influences, and is doomed by its vices to enslavement at the hands of
hardier and more virtuous races.
In the setting in which it is placed
by the Yahwist the incident acquires a profounder and more tragic
The key to this secondary interpretation is the prophecy
significance.
of Lamech in 5^^, which brings it into close connexion with the account
of the Fall in ch. 3 (p. 133). Noah's discovery is there represented as
an advance or refinement on the tillage of the ground to which man was
sentenced in consequence of his first transgression. And the oracle of
Lamech appears to show that the invention of wine is conceived as a
How far it is looked on as a divinely approved
relieffrom the curse.
mode of alleviating the monotony of toil is hard to decide. The
moderate use of wine is certainly not condemned in the OT on the
other hand, it is impossible to doubt that the light in which Noah is
noah's drunkenness
86
(j)
to
may
lead.
Canaan
to
inhabitants
Shem
of
Palestine
who
As regards
never have been described as enslavement (see Mey. GA^, i. 311 f.) ; and
the capture of Tyre by Alexander, the Roman conquest of Carthage,
etc. (De.), are events certainly beyond the horizon of the writer,
unless,
we adopt
very late.
For the latter, Di. hints at an absorption of Japhetic peoples in the
Semitic world-empires but that would rather be a dwelling of Shem
in the tents of Japheth.
indeed,
v.^'' is
IX. 27-X.
after the time of
187
Jews
feeling of the
which
is
Japheth stands for the Hittites, who in that age were moving down
from the north, and establishing their power partly at the cost of both
Canaanites and Arameans. This theory hardly explains the peculiar
contempt and hatred expressed towards Canaan and it is a somewhat
serious objection to it that in lo^"* (which Gu. assigns to the same source
as g^^') Heth is the son of Canaan. A better defined background would
be the struggle for the mastery of Syria in the 14th cent. B.C. J If, as
many Assyriologists think probable, the Habiri of the Tel-Amarna
Letters be the D'l^y of the OT, i.e. the original Hebrew stock to
it would be natural to find in Shem the reprewhich Israel belonged,
sentative of these invaders; for in 10^^ (J) Shem is described as 'the
father of all the sons of Eber.
Japheth would then be one or other of
the peoples who, in concert with the Habiri, were then seeking a foothold in the country, possibly the Suti or the Amurri, less probably (for
These surmises must be
the reason mentioned above) the Hittites.
taken for what they are worth. Further light on that remote period of
history may yet clear up the circumstances in which the story of Noah
and his sons originated ; but unless the names Shem and Japheth should
be actually discovered in some historic connexion, the happiest conjectures can never effect a solution of the problem.
;
'
Ch.
In
its
tion, in
X.Tke
GA^y
i.
We. Comp.
p. 214
14
f.
known
J).
a redactional composi-
is
(if
Sta.
GVI,
i.
f. ),
that Japheth
109; Mey.
f.
Meyer's
in the 1 2th
,
longed, does not diminish the improbability that such a prophecy should
have originated under the monarchy.
t See Mey. GA^, i. p. 212 ff. ; Wi. GI, i. 37, 130, 134; Peiser, KIB,
iv. p. viii.
(p.
158),
who, however,
is
inclined to
88
a genealogical
Analysis.
lucid
and
(p
AND
j)
in the
The
convincing- analysis of
We.
{Coinp.^
(^* nipiin
due to the
is
The hand
6flF.).
and
(^),
u?
^<v
(^2)
of
ns; 'i?
(2),
is
.vn),
closing- formulas.
on
form of
tree.
"
summary. This framework, however, contains several continuous sections which obviously belong to J.
^"^2
the account of Nimrod (who is not even mentioned by P among()
the sons of Kush) stands out both in character and style in strong- con(mutilated)
'*'
^^,
v.^^ being-
final
trast to
Mizraim
{y.
(^^,
21. 25
note also
^^, 26^^
introduction to
g-arding n^'iq
follows
Shem
and
ni.T (9).
(n^:).
{d)
{h)
^i-
^^*-
^-^
the sons of
the Shemites
p
T
a^fjfj
(2i||22)^
The documents,
n?^.
9. i6-i8a
(S),
the Canaanites
Duplication of sources
Yy
instead of TVin
-h\
(c) ^^-i^
i"?;).
la
24 g^j-g
lb
2-5
l'?\
\' )
.
>
6f.
8-12
rcg-ardcd
20
.
22f. 31
13f.
>
16-19
S3
.
21.
25-30
>
CH. X,
189
hm
in ^ (cf
9^*^
4^).
V.^''*
in
brilliant speculation,
which
is
g^^^-
or
and
(2)
that there
is
The names
that
is
in
personage bearing
its
name, who
conceived as
its real
progenitor.
is
unity, but
its
eponymous
by an imaginary
is
From
affinities
same time
was an easy
at the
this
it
of
the various
etc.,
'
'
'
3ff-)-
in
190
(p
AND
j)
'
'
'
and over against them we have to set not only the names of Noah,
Shem, etc., but also Nimrod, who is certainly an individual hero, and
yet is said to have been 'begotten' by the eponymous Kush (Gu.).
The bulk of the names lend themselves to the one view as readily as
to the other but on the whole it is safer to assume that, in the mind of
;
of the Table
is
whom
the different
very restricted
than in J.J J's survey extends from the Hittites and Phoenicians in the N to Egypt
and southern Arabia in the S on the E he knows Baby-
but
is
considerably wider in
lonia
"An
Greeks.
subdivisions were
the Dorians,
is
on the
includes
the
the
and
whole
was Hellenes
the .^olians,
the lonians,
and the
CH. X.
Mediterranean coast on the
limits is ignored, for the
its
W.
191
The world
outside these
existence.
192
AND
(p
j)
known
tabulated.
The
(interpolated)
tell
list
regard to the section on Nimrod (^^^), all that can fairly be said is
how
it is probably later than the Kassite conquest of Babylonia
.nuch later, we cannot tell. On the attempt to deduce a date from the
description of the Assyrian cities, see p. 212. There are, besides, two
s*pecial sources of error which import an element of uncertainty into
that
all
these investigations,
really duplicated in
(a)
P and
J,*
names
(n??'
and
nh'\n)
are
we may suppose
to
The threefold
P and J, and
(above, p. 188
division of
mankind
a feature
is
to both recensions of J
f.).
It is
if
common
two
there were
order of birth
Shem (see
Japheth
v.^^).
Ham Shem
The
or
Canaan
^Japheth
may
not
etc.).
Still,
the
classification
must
(4^^^-
follow
5*^
some
The
ib.
1904, 302.
CH.
193
(P*s Hamites) as dark brown (Di. 167); but the characteristic was
not shared by the offshoots of Kush in Arabia
and a colour line
between Shem and Japheth could never have been drawn. The test of
language also breaks down. The perception of linguistic affinities on
;
is a modern scientific attainment, beyond the apprehenan antique people, to whom as a rule all foreign tongues were
alike 'barbarous.'
So we find that the most of P's Hamites (the
Canaanites and nearly all the Kushites) are Semitic-speaking- peoples,
while the language of Elam among the sons of Shem belongs to an
and Greek was certainly not spoken in the
entirely different family
a wide scale
sion of
came from
or that
the
to the Cushites
Africa, etc.
But
other hand,
Similarly,
is
when
(see p. 188).
So far as P is concerned, the main principle is undoubtedly geographical: Japheth representing the North and
West, Ham the South, and Shem the East. Canaan is the
solitary exception,
(so far as
many
of the
to
make
although too
this absolutely
The exact
is
less arbitrary
or Elam to
and there is no need
13
194
(p
AND
j)
(iiB'N
and S53
^'^"^
in
{ZA,
it is
As
impossible to lay
rule.
Jen.
a particular identification.
for or against
The
ethnology, are
now
sufficiently
apparent.
As a
by
modern
scientific
it
is
dis-
qualified
its
the
old
common
History
shows that nationalities are for the most part political units,
formed by the dissolution and re-combination of older peoples
and it is known that the great nations of
and tribes
antiquity were preceded by a long succession of social
aggregates, whose very names have perished. Whether a
single family has ever, under any circumstances, increased
until it became a tribe and then a nation, is an abstract
question which it is idle to discuss it is enough that the
nations here enumerated did not arise in that way, but
through a process analogous to that by which the English
nation was welded together out of the heterogeneous elements of which it is known to be composed. As a historical
;
'
X. lA
195
repeated in
is
The
textual variations.
which omits
^^'^^
and
list
all
Ch.
still
is
names
i*"^^
further abridged in
after
Arpachshad
in ^.
CEr
of
On
Chr.,
the ex-
The Table of P,
la.
Superscription.
Shem,
Ham, and
YephetK\
cf.
On
reported,
db'
is
'
'
Again, since in some late Pss. (78^^ 105^^- ^' 106^^) on is a poetic designation of Egypt, it has been plausibly connected with the native keme
or chemi= h\a.ck,' with reference to the black soil of the Nile valley
(Bochart, Ebers, Bu. 323 ff.).* A less probable theory is that of Glaser,
cited by Hommel {AHT, 48), who identifies it with Eg. 'amu^ a collective
name for the neighbouring Semitic nomads, derived by Miiller {AE^
123 ff.) from their distinctive primitive weapon, the boomerang.
ns; is connected in 9^ with ^ nn3, and no better etymology has been
proposed. Che. {EB, ii. 2330) compares the theophorous personal name
Yapti-Addu in TA Tab., and thinks it a modification of *?N-nJ?9% *God
opens.' But the form nnE3 {pitA) with the probable sense of 'open' also
occurs in the Tab. {KIB, v. 290 [last line]). The derivation from J ns'
(beautiful), favoured by Bu. (358 ff.), in allusion to the beauty of the
Phoenician cities, is very improbable. The resemblance to the Greek
lapetos was pointed out by Buttmann, and is undoubtedly striking.
'IdircTos was the father of Prometheus, and therefore (through Deu'
word
Din,
'
black,' ^o^^'
TABLE OF PEOPLES
196
(p)
xnMVAG,
170
vi.
ff.
fourteen in
2-5. The Japhetic or Northern Peoples
number, chiefly concentrated in Asia Minor and Armenia,
but extending on either side to the Caspian and the shores
It will be seen that though the enumeraof the Atlantic.
tion is not ethnological in principle, yet most q>^ the peoples
:
named do belong
to the
family.
apheth.
\
1.
Gomer.
5.
Magog.
6.
Madai.
7.
Javan.
Tubal.
Meshech.
13.
14. Tiras.
2.
12.
Ashkenaz.
3.
Riphath.
4.
8.
Togarmah.
Elishah.
named
g.
Tarshish.
along" with
Kittim.
10.
Togarmah
11.
Rodanim.
as a confederate of
Gog in
Ezk.
Gamir
The earliest
oi the Ass. inscr., the Cimmerians of the Greeks.
Ki/x/j-^pLoi {Od. xi. 13 ff.) reveals them as a northern
38*', is
by
reference to the
Their irruption
Asia Minor, by way of the Caucasus, is circumstantially narrated
by Herodotus (i. 15, 103, iv. 11 f.), whose account is in its main features
confirmed by the Ass. monuments. There the Gitnirrai first appear
towards the end of the reign of Sargon, attacking the old kingdom of
Urartu (see Johns, PSBA, xvii. 223 f., 226). Thence they seem to have
moved westwards into Asia Minor, where (in the reign of Sennacherib)
they overthrew the Phrygian Empire, and later (under Asshur-bani-pal,
c. 657) the Lydian Empire of Gyges {KIB, ii. 173-7).
This last effort
seems to have exhausted their strength, and soon afterwards they
vanish from history.* A trace of their shortlived ascendancy remained
in Gamir, the Armenian name for Cappadocia f but the probability is
into
was named
and not
and it is
more likely
vice versd
It is
common
stock of
Wi.
AOF,
i.
and
ii.
p. 12 {T6fxep, ^| o5 Ka7r7rd5o*cs).
flf.
95=*
Je.
ATLO^,
253.
{Gtmmert = Ca.ppa.-
X.
197
2,
m-^u
('Ao-xai/af)
usual (Bochart,
al.) to
'
is
(6) '1?
2 Ki. 176
(MaSai)
i8^
Is.
the
13"
28,
Est.
for
i^-i^-isf. ,02^
). 82 9I [iji]
TABLE OF PEOPLES
198
(p)
(Ass. Madai).
in Asiatic history.
4221?.
i.
KAT^,
100
ff.
ATLO^,
254.
('Iwyai')
P-r
is
Greek settlements
in
iEsch. Pers. 176, 562). Whether the word here includes the European
Greeks cannot be positively determined.* The 'sons* of Javan are
(v.^) to be sought along the Mediterranean, and probably at spots
known to the Heb. as commercial colonies of the Phoenicians (on which
see Mey. EB, 3736 f.). Very few of them, however, can be confidently
identified.
(8) h^'Sn ('BXto-a, 'EXt<r(ra) is
mentioned only
Ezk. 27'
in
as a
('k '^k)
below on
d'Fid.
would not
affect
Red. 125-142.
]v in
Arabia (which
ATLO^,
Cf., further,
pass.),
in
see
any case
Akad.
Sta.
255.
C on
Ezk.
27''
N'Va'K
DB,
80
Her.
V.
120, etc.
b.
i.
163,
iv.
152
Strabo,
iii.
151
Plin.
HN^
iii.
7,
iv.
X. 2,4
al.); but this in Semitic is
Jer.
Miiller,
OLz.
nn {Tarzi).
199
Cf.
Wi. AOF,
i.
445
f.;
291.
iii.
Kmoi)] cf. Jer. 2^0, Ezk. 27, Is. 23'- ^^^ Dn. ii^o,
Nu. 24^. Ag-ainst the prevalent view that it denotes
primarily the island of Cyprus, so called from its chief city Kiriov
(Larnaka), Wi. {AOF, ii. 422^; cf. KAT^, 128) argues that neither the
island nor its capital * is so named in any ancient document, and that
the older biblical references demand a site further W.
The application
to the Macedonians (i Mac.) he describes as one of those false identifications common in the Egypt of the Ptolemaic period.
His argument is
endorsed by Miiller {OLz. iii. 288) and Je. {ATLO^j 261) they suggest
S Italy, mainly on the authority of Dn. 11^". The question is obviously
bound up with the identity of nt^'SN Alalia {v.s.).
(11) DU-iM or D'inn {asx(& ['PoSioi] and i Ch. i*^)] a name omitted by
If (& be right, the Rhodians are doubtless meant (cf. //. ii. 654 f. )
Jos.
the sing, is perhaps disguised in the corrupt pT of Ezk. 27^^^ (cf. (&).
The MT has been explained of the Dardanians (CJ, De. al.), "properly
a people of Asia Minor, not far from the Lycians " (Che. EB, 1 123). Wi.
and Miiller D'J3(i)i, Eg-. Da-nd-na =
{I.e.) proposes nTn, the Dorians
coast of Asia Minor.
TA, Da-nu-na {KIB, v. 277), on the
(10)
D'Pi?
Mac.
{K-qTLoi,
i^ 8^,
and
slaves
army
of Gog),
Is.
66^^
(ffi)
IK'D
Sea.
(14) D"j'JPi (9et/)as)] not mentioned elsewhere, was almost unanimously
taken by the ancients (Jos. ^J, Jer. etc. ; and so Boch. al.) to be
the Thracians ( GpS/c-es) but the superficial resemblance vanishes when
the nominative ending- s is removed. Tu. was the first to sugg-est the
Tvp<r-r]VLol, a race of Pelasgian pirates, who left many traces of their
ancient prowess in the islands and coasts of the ^gean, and who were
;
The
city,
however,
i.
is
downwards
18
f.,
64
f.,
TABLE OF PEOPLES
200
(p)
doubtless identical with the E-frus-ca.ns of Italy.* This brilliant conjecture has since been confirmed by the discovery of the name Turusa
amongst the seafaring peoples who invaded Egypt in the reigti of
i.
260;
W. M.
MiiUer,
in Africa
6, 7, 20. The Hamitic or Southern Group
and S Arabia, but including the Canaanites of Palestine.
:
Ham.
I.
5.
Seba,
6.
Havilah.
Kush.
7.
2.
Sabtah.
Mizraim.
8.
Ra'mah.
9.
10.
Put.
3.
4.
Canaan.
Sabtekah.
Sheba.
11.
Dedan.
(i) B'ls {(& Xovj, but elsewhere AZ^^o7r-es, -la)] the land and people
S of Egypt (Nubia), the Ethiopians of the Greeks, the K6^ of the Eg.
monuments:! cf. Is. i8^ Jer. 13^3, Ezk. 29^*', Zeph. 3^ etc. Ass. Kusu
occurs repeatedly in the same sense on inscrs. of Esarhaddon and
5.
order.
The
subscription to the
We
division of the
first
ns' 'Ji
n'?t<
(cf.
Table
w.^*
is
not quite in
which is here
not (with We.) at the
''),
Strabo, V.
ii.
2,
iii.
other
reff. in
'
X.
*
sons' of
Kush
20I
5,
is
Red Sea
6fF., 24).
(2)
cent] Mtifur
Bah.Mtsir; Syr.
>>
Vn
>
Ar. Misr).
Etymology and
'
i.
many
now deny
is
quit of.
66^^) in
Is.
but elsewhere
At/3u6s)]
although Nah. 3^ and probably Ezk. 30^ ((K) show that the
two peoples were distinguished. Another identification, first proposed
by Ebers, has recently been strongly advocated viz. with the Pwnt of
Eg. monuments, comprising the whole African coast of the Red Sea
Jos.
al.),
'
(W. M.
Miiller,
AE,
ii4ff.,
is
andZ>^,
iv. 176 f.
Je. 263 f.). The only serious
the order in which the name occurs, which
;
\m
Palestine,
x. 325 ff.).
of the pre-Israelitish inhabitants of
primarily a geographical designation. The etymology is
eponym
(Xamaj/)] the
is
'
'
(see,
the northern part of the seacoast. The fact that Canaan, in spite of its
geographical situation and the close affinity of its language with Heb.,
is reckoned to the Hamites is not to be explained by the tradition (Her. i.
I, vii. 89, etc.) that the Phoenicians came originally from the Red Sea;
for that probably implies no more than that they were connected with
:'
TABLE OF PEOPLES
202
(p)
Neither is it
suppose that Canaan is thus placed because it
had for a long time been a political dependency of Eg-. in that case, as
Di. observes, we should have expected Canaan to figure as a son of
Mizraim. The belief that Canaan and Israel belonged to entirely
different branches of the human family is rooted in the circumstances
that gave rise to the blessing and curse of Noah in ch. 9. When, with
the extension of geographical knowledge, it became necessary to
assign the Canaanites to a larger group (p. 187 above), it was inevitable
that they should find their place as remote from the Hebrews as
altog-ether natural to
possible.
* Jos. Ant.
ii.
249.
In
i.
134
f.
203
X. 7
Homm.
xix. 253;
5"^ Chrest.
7.
30,
27^ as a
ttnty
(Glaser, 252).
(9) K3n?p (2a/Sa/fa^a)]
unknown.
XafivSaKr) in
Carmaniaf
8. 7f., 11) is
word
is
a duplicate of
(Ptol. vi.
Je.
sug-
nnap.
N^if'
assigned
in
SW
ij:
paying tribute to Tiglath-pileser iv. (B.C. 738) and Sargon (B.C. 7i5).
It would seem that about that time (probably with the help of the
Assyrians) they overthrew the older Minaean Empire, and established
themselves on its ruins. Unlike their precursors, however, they do
not appear to have consolidated their power in N Arabia, though their
To the Hebrews, Sheba
inscrs. have been found as far N as el-Crof.
was a 'far country' (Jer. 6^*', Jl. 4^), famous for gold, frankincense, and
precious stones (i Ki. lo^^-, Is. 6o^ Jer. 6^'^, Ezk. 27^2, Ps. 72^^) j^ all
.
these passages, as well as Ps. 72^, Jb. 6^^, the reference to the southern
Sabaeans is clear. On the other hand, the association with Dedan (25^,
Ezk. 38^3 and here) favours a more northern locality in Jb. i^^ they
appear as Bedouin of the northern desert and the Ass. references
appear to imply a northerly situation. Since it is undesirable to assume
;
the existence of
it is
pass, last quoted preserve the tradition of an earlier time, before the
translated
by
Miiller,
ZDMG,
Homm. SA
xxx. 121
f.,
Chrest. 103)
Glaser, 1155:
322,
AHT,
249 f.
so Glaser, ii. 252 but see his virtual withdrawal on p. 404.
important that neither in their own nor in the Ass. inscrs.
are the earliest rulers spoken of as kings.
t Boch.
X
It is
Cf.
KIB,
ii.
21, 55.
TABLE OF PEOPLES
204
(p)
mentioned
arranged
join
all lie
in
The Shemitic
^^
(see
SE
to
NW,
till
they
Shem.
II
Elam.
2.
II
Asshur.
3.
Arpachshad.
Lud.
4.
5.
Aram.
I
6.
Uz.
7.
Hul.
8.
Gether.
9.
Mash.
(i) nVy (A^a/t)] Ass. Elamtu,-\ the name of **the great plain E of
the lower Tigris and
of the Persian Gulf, together with the mountainous region enclosing it on the N and E " (Del. Par. 320), corresponding
to the later Elymais or Susiana.
The district round Susa was in very
Sprenger, ZDMG,
i.
403; Glaser, ii. 399 ff.
Horn. AHTy 77 ff.,
Margoliouth, DB, i. 133, iv. 479 ff.
and in EBL, 728 ff. KAT^, 148 ff. ATLO"^, 265.
highland (Schr. Del. Hwb. etc.), but
t Commonly explained as
according to Jen. {ZA, vi. 170^, xi. 351) = * front-land,' i.e. East land.'
* See
xliv.
501
Mey. GA^,
ff.
'
'
X.
1,
205
22
2^
Dn.
82.
(2) TiB'N]
See below on
Assyria.
Ptol. (vi.
2)
I.
lakes
still
called in
'
f\-Mt.
'
'
* See the interesting historical sketch by Scheil, Textes elamitessemitigues {igoo), pp. ix-xv [= vol. ii. of de Morgan, Delegation en Perse:
Memoires'].
Cf. Sayce, ET^ xiii. 65.
KIB,
i.
177, 213,
ii.
13,
89;
cf.
Ap^as avTu)v
II
Ant.
A different
i.
144.
conjecture in
EB, 2l^^
p. 205.
TBI,
178.
'
TABLE OF PEOPLES
206
(p)
al.),
but
it
'
NE of Palestine (Damascus especially) and Mesopotamia (AramNaharaim, Paddan-Aram) these, however, were really the chief centres
of Aramaean culture and influence. In Ass. the Armaiu {Aramu, Artmu,
Arumu) are first named by Tiglath-pileser i. {c. iioo) as dwelling in
the steppes of Mesopotamia {KIBy i. 33) and Shalmaneser ii. (c. 857)
encountered them in the same region {ib. 165). But if Wi. be right
(KAT^, 28 f., 36), they are referred to under the name Ahldmi from a
much earlier date (TA Tab. Ramman-nirari I. [c. 1325] Aur-riHence Wi. regards the second
ii \_c. 1 150]: see KIB, v. 387, i, 5, 13).
half of the 2nd millennium B.C. as the period during which the Aramaean
nomads became settled and civilised peoples in Mesopotamia and Syria.
In I Ch. i^' the words dhn '331 (v.^) are omitted, the four following
to the
'
unknown.
tt pocr
ay opeiovaiv
as Jos.
correctly explains.
X. 22,
(*
(9) r'?
Nts'O, ffi
207
32.
23, 31.
Ch. i"
MT
^^d)]
perhaps
Jen. {KIB,
MdSu
tain
of GilgameS ix.
i f.,
ii.
{^^)
and
his
{^^),
If so,
it
Nimrod and
8-12.
with
the
his empire.
Kush
(see below).
Nimrod
is
The
section
deals
Empire,
described as a son of
is
in the chapter,
Gibbor or
was
The statement
8.
that he
is
8.
^^D
-hqi (Ne^/)w5)]
'
rebel
'
all
The Heb.
(^J, Ra.
al.)
'h '7nn
TABLE OF PEOPLES
208
and
(j)
it is
The assumption
9. Nimrod was not onlya great tyrant and ruler of men, but
a hero of the chase p^V "1133). The v. breaks the connexion
between ^ and ^^, and is probably an interpolation (Di. al.)
although, as De. remarks, the union of a passion for the
trated
Assyrian monarchs, an observation amply illusby the many hunting scenes sculptured on the monu-
ments.
Therefore
the
of
cf.
it is
Gn. 22^*
"When
etc.
the
Hebrews
v. as an
assigns it to his J^,
and finds a place for it between 6"* and ii\ a precarious sugges''
niiT-^]
\4S^] 'before Yahwe.'
The phrase is
tion.
(R + Toi) Beov.
variously explained: (i) 'unique,' like D'n'?x'? in Jn 3^ (Di. al.); (2) in
the estimation of Y.' (cf. 2 Ki. 5^ etc.); (3) 'in despite of Y.' (Bu.)
with the assistance of Y.' the name of some god of the chase
(4)
having stood in the original myth (Gu.) (5) 'in the constant presence
to
first
become'; see on
4^^ 9^.
9.
ff. )
'
of Y.'
an
but hardly in
will prefer (1) or (2).
possible in
^'',
*,
because of the
ZA,
vi.
340-2
Sayce,
HCM^,
KAT'^, 87
f.
n\n.
Wi.
The
last view is
sober exegesis
ATU,
146 ff.
Jen.
i48ff., etc.
vii.
iii.
421
ff.
Jen.
ZDMG,
1.
244 f.,
etc.
209
X. 9
'
meaning
is
obscure
{v.t.).
The
of the figure of
derivation of the name
iii.
552
f.
first
propounded
commends
KAT^, 581);
still
cf.
but the material points of contact between the two personages seem too
The identification with Nazito establish an instructive parallel.
Marutta, a late [c. 1350) and apparently not very successful king of the
Kaite dynasty (Haupt, Hilprecht, Sayce, al.), is also unsatisfying the
supposition that that particular king was so well known in Palestine as to
eclipse all his predecessors, and take rank as the founder of Babylonian
civilisation, is improbable.
The nearest analogy is that of Gilgame,f
the legendary tyrant of Erech (see v.^), whose adventures are recorded
in the famous series of Tablets of which the Deluge story occupies
the eleventh (see p. 175 above, and KAT^y 566 ff.).
Gilgamel is a true
Gibbor "two parts deity and one part humanity" he builds the walls
of Erech with forced labour, and his subjects groan under his tyranny,
until they cry to Aruru to create a rival who might draw off some of his
vague
superabundant energy {KIB, vi. i, 117, 119). Among his exploits, and
those of his companion Ea-bani, contests with beasts and monsters
figure prominently and he is supposed to be the hero so often represented on seals and palace-reliefs in victorious combat with a lion (see
ATLO^i 266 f.). It is true that the parallel is incomplete; and (what
is more important) that the name Nimrod remains unexplained.
The
expectation that the phonetic reading of the ideographic GI$. TU. BAR
might prove to be the Bab. equivalent of the Heb. Nimrod, would seem
to have been finally dispelled by the discovery (in 1890) of the correct
pronunciation as Gilgame (but see Je. I.e.). Still, enough general
resemblance remains to warrant the belief that the original of the
biblical Nimrod belongs to the sphere of Babylonian mythology.
A
striking parallel to the visit of Gilgames to his father Ut-napitim
occurs in a late Nimrod legend, preserved in the Syrian Schatzhohle
Lidz. ZA, vii. 15).
On the theory which con(see Gu. Schopf. 146^
nects Nimrod with the constellation Orion, see Tu. ad loc.
Bu. Urg.
395 f. KAT^y 581^; and on the late Jewish and Mohammedan legends
;
ix.
309 fF.
Sayce {TSBA,\\. 243 ff.) derived it from the Akkadian equivaMarduk, Amar-ud, from which he thought Nimrudu would be
lent of
a regular (Ass.) Niphal form. We. {Comp.^ 309 f.) explains the 3 as an
Aram. impf. preformative to the fj itd, a corruption from Mard-uk which
took place among the Syrians of Mesopotamia, through whom the myth
reached the Hebrews.
t So Smith-Sayce, Chald. Gen.
14
lyGff.
Je.
Isduhar-Nimrod.
TABLE OF PEOPLES
2IO
(j)
land of Shinar\
or
the gods
'
(though this
(V.S.).
p^'S'i and
cf.
The name [Akkad) frequently
IJK ('ApxaS
P^?"!"^)]
occurs in the inscriptions, especially in the phrase Sumer and Akkad,'
= South and North Babylonia. But a city of Akkad is also mentioned
:
by Nebuchadnezzar
I.
{KIB,
Agad^
iii.
lyoflF.),
though
its
site is uncertain.
identity with
the
of Sargon
I.
{c.
Tab. {KIB,
i.
V. 83)
7a/jos ipo%
KAT^,
240, 399;
31) puts
11.
1155'N
The
NV;]
'
W of Nineveh,
II, 12,
it
is
much
{AOF,
(6
2*7-
'
ST J, Cal.
Babylonia.
and
is
all moderns).
grammatically
21
X. IO-I2
From
were not
where
cities.
cities
'
That n?5yN is here the name of the land (along- the Tigris, N of the
Lower Zab), and not the ancient capital (now KaV at Serkdt^ about halfway between the mouths of the two Zabs), is plain from the context,
and the contrast to nyjB' in v.^".
(Ass. Ninua, Nind, dSc Nij/cut; [-t]) the foremost city of Assyria,
royal residence from at latest the time of Aur-bel-kalu, son of
Tiglath-pileser I. (nth cent.); but did not apparently become the
ni^j]
was a
political capital
is
Ty
places of a city
'
has
in
(U plateas
civitatis).
'
'
'
correct,
of Assyria.
i^)
(cf.
and
Is.
23^^).
(2) in
But
Mic. 5'
Nimrod
is
the hero
TABLE OF PEOPLES
212
(j)
Hoffmann
Ri-ini
text in the
wrong
14.
13,
The
sons of Mizraim.
These
doubtless
all
Egypt;
although of the eight names not more than two can be
On Q)"]^'? = Egypt, see v.^. Since
certainly identified.
Mizraim could hardly have been reckoned a son of Canaan,
the section (if documentary) must be an extract from that
Yahwistic source to which 9^^^- belong (see p. 188 f.).
represent
parts
or
(supposed)
dependencies
of
{A TLO^,
274),
who can
ii5f.
(2)
OLz,
woiz
V.
475;
D'ory
(juu-
Libyan desert
al.
i.e.
(&
A/j'-['E'-]e/AeTtet/i[j'])]
Miiller
reads
Wdhdt
el-Khdrigah).^
d'dj3
Knmt
or
in the
Empire.
+ OLz.
V. 471 ff.
It should be explained that this dissertation,
frequently cited above, proceeds on the bold assumption that almost
the best known name in the section (D'P"i^9, ^*) is an interpolation.
X.
(3) D'?nS (Aa/Siet^w)]
of Nah.
D'??^
variant of
213
14
commonly supposed
Dn. ii,
38,
13,
Ch.
Muller thinks
it
on;*? (i).
D'n:n2 = P-to-n- hf, 'cowBut there is a strong- presumption that, as the next name stands for Upper Egypt, this will be a
designation of Lower Egypt. So Erman {ZATW, x. ii8f.), who reads
(4)
land,'
D'nnsj
Muller proposes
(NecpOaKieifi)]
the name
Na-patM =
Ezk.
see
30^^),
i.e.
Erman,
Upper Egypt:
P-to-resi
'
(Is.
south-land
'
(Ass. paturisi):
I.e.
Muller restores
D'^DDJ,
'
it
for the
SW
'
NW
When
Egypt are
all
'
'
TABLE OF PEOPLES
214
(j)
**
Keftiu is the old Eg. name of Caphtor (Crete), Keptar a Ptoleff.).
maic doublet of it, taken over when the original meaning of Keftiu had"
been forgotten, and the name had been erroneously applied to Phoenicia
In OLz., M. questions the
(Hall, Man, Nov. 1903, No. 92, p. 162 ff.).
so also Je. ATLOP-, 275.*
originality of the name in this passage
The Canaanites.The
15-19.
up
and
(3)
the Hittites
(2)
phrase
in the
(i)
^^^.
^}t}j^^ nina^'p in
It is
summed
surprising to
The
may be supposed
which survived as
writer
i6-i8a
a,s
a gloss
what could have induced a glossator to insert four of the most northerly
Phoenician cities, passing by those best known to the Hebrews? Is it
=
(J). 18. nnx] adv. of time, as iS^ 24^5 3021 etc.
Niph. fr. J pa see on g^^ cf. ii"- ^'
'iy^5n m^-jfal can hardly, even if the clause be a gloss, denote the Phoen.
colonies on the Mediterranean (Brown, EB, ii. 1698 f.). 19. npK^] *as
one comes' (see G-K. 144 A) might be taken as in the direction of
but there does not appear to be any clear case in
(so Di. Dri. al.)
which the expression differs from ?ixi3ny = 'as far as' (cf. lo** 13^ 25^8
15.
nbg]
l3-n.q: see
cf.
22^1
[all J],
ii=,
Sa.
17^2, 2
Sa.
52^,
pi.,
(later?)
Egyptian geography.
X.
15.
215
i6
'^^
pass. 25^
Hermon
Ju.
i^^?).
al.).
(Jos.
It
ii^ [(K^-^'J
and
Ju. 3^ [as
amended by Mey.
al.]),
cf.
does not appear what grounds Moore {Ju, 82) has for
There
is
certainly no
(i) 'pn;n]
191, 2
Sa.
5*^-9
clan settled in
etc.
An
no^n]
'
TABLE OF PEOPLES
2l6
(j)
2ii3ff.^
'
other passages (Ju. 1^^). The most significant fact is that E (followed
by D) employs the term to designate the pre-Israelite inhabitants of
Palestine generally (cf. Am. 2^^), whom J describes as Canaanites.
Apart from the assumption of an actual Amorite domination, it is
difficult to suggest an explanation of E's usage, unless we can take it
as a survival of the old Bab. name Amurru (or at least its ideographic
See,
equivalent MAJ^. TU) for Palestine, Phoenicia and Coele-Syria.
further, Miiller, AE, 218 ffi, 229flF.; Wi. GI, i. 51-54,^^7^, 178^; Mey.
ZATW, i. 122 ff. We. Comp.^ 341 Bu. Urg. 344 ff. Dri. Deut. iif..
Paton, Syr. and Pal. 25-46, iisffi,
Gen. I25f. Sayce, DB, i. 84 f.
147
f.
Mey.
GA\
i.
ii.
396.
NT
'
'
people long settled in Palestine (Moore). We. {ffeid. 154) more plausibly
connects it with n3n = serpent (see on 3^0), surmising that the Hivvites
were a snake-clan. Cf. Lagarde, OS, 187, 174, 1. 97 (EvaToi (tkoXioI wj
'
'
The
extreme
and the
cities,
in the
last in Coele-Syria.
(Jos.
'
Jer. {Qucsst.)
'
It is named
of Tripolis (now Rtiad).
i.
109) about 35 miles
frequently, in connexions which show its great importance in ancient
K'lB,
X. 17-19, 21
217
nnyn
(8)
Sumra
'A/ia^O]
now ffamd.
The delimitation
SW
BH
suggests
We. {Comp.^
y'?|(i42).
15)
reads
rv^h
'
(see on 20^)
hence
we cannot
'
i?i
if
a gloss (Gu.
On the situation of Sodom,
On any construction of the the northern cities of
Most probably
see on ch. 19.
njy-ny is
are excluded.
jnnNn d'.t nyi m3
21,
Shem
24,
al.).
etc.,
^''-
v.
ixx
inj,
was traced
^^
onsD
'\n^'D
genealogy
of
"^nan nnjn ly
ii^^.
25-30.
a classification of the
to 'Eber.
These
fall
into
Shem
is
Hebrew
'
Shemite and
This recognition of the
:
associated.
eponym of Dn^y (Hebrews), the name by which the Israelare often designated in distinction from other peoples, down to
the time of Saul* (see G-K. 2 ^> the pass, are cited in BDB, s.v.).
It
is strange at first sight that while the iny 'J3 of v.^i include all Shemites
known to J, the gentilic word is historically restricted to Israelites.
uy is the
ites
The
difficulty is
still
disputed, but
now widely
* After I Sa. it occurs only Dt. 15^2^ j^j.. 348. "^ jon. i*.
But see
the cogent criticisms of Weinheimer in ZATW, 1909, 275 ff., who propounds the view that Hebrews and Israelites were distinct strata of the
population.
;'
TABLE OF PEOPLES
2l8
(j)
OT
]l.
OT
amongst
Palestine,
whom
The
chief uncertainty arises from the fact that the phonetic writing Ffa-bi-ri
occurs only
in
a limited group of
letters,
those
of 'Abd-hiba of
equating the two, the ^abiri are in evidence over the whole country,
occasionally as auxiliaries of the Egyptian government, but chiefly as
The inference is very plausible that they were the roving
its foes.
'
'
'
'
21. The father of all the sons of *Eber\ The writer has
apparently borrowed a genealogical list of the descendants
21.
It is
doubtful
if
the text
is
in order.
Shem
is
suspicious.
The
First,
it is
extremely likely
in J
219
X. 21, 24
was at a loss
Hence he avoids the
of Eber which he
Shem.
direct
assertion
name of
Shem
that
begat Eber, and bridges over the gap by the vague hint
that
tion.
nothing else
The
{y.i.).
difficulty is
immediately preceded
of age
the sequence
whether because
in the
f.),
Table of J
or because
who
finds
the remark an
in
24
Canaan
an interpolation (based on
is
indication
Japheth
Shem (see
11 ^^-uj
p. 188).
intended to harmonise
less in the
It is also
obviously
with the subj. nor does the Hoph. the Niph. does so once (Gn. 17^^ [P])
but there the ellipsis is explained by the emphasis which lies on the fact
Further, a wn is required as subj. of the cl. '1JI '3K. The
of birth.
impression is produced that orig-inally nny was expressly named as the
son of Shem, and that the words 'iai 'DN nih referred to him (perhaps
'1J1 'DN Nin na^nx n^; db'Si).
Considering- the importance of the name, the
tautology is not too harsh. It would then be hardly possible to retain
the clause 'iai nN ; and to delete it as a gloss (although it has been proposed by others see OH^ I admit to be difficult, just because of the
obscurity of the expression. Nin dj] cf. a^^. Snjn ns' mN] 'S correctly
fratre J, ntajore. The Mass. accentuation perhaps favours the grammatically impossible rendering' of (& {d5e\<p<^ 'I. rod fMi(;ovos), 2, al.
which implies that Japheth was the oldest of Noah's sons, a notion
extorted from the chronology of 11" cpd. with 5^^ 7^^ (see Ra. lEz.).
It is equally inadmissible (with lEz.) to take hiMn absolutely ( = Japheth
;
the great).
24.
n'?B'-nN]
(& pref.
n*?'
]yp^ p'p-riN.
new
ff.).
TA
deserves to be reconsidered
ii.
197
ff.).
(cf.
Eerdmans,
I.e.
52
ff.,
or Expos. y 1909,
220
TABLE OF PEOPLES
'
(j)
25.
Southern Semites
corresponding roughly to
respectively,
(||
etc.)
'
There
3825).
dispersion
to;
it
is
'
(cf.
is
(^njli^S,
etc.) of the
possible that
distribution of nations
is
has been thought that the name orig-inally denoted some region
intersected by irrigating channels or canals, such as Babylonia itself.
Of geographical identifications there are several which are sufficiently
plausible Phalga in Mesopotamia, at the junction of the Chaboras and
the Euphrates (Knob.) ^el-Fal^, a district in NE Arabia near the head
of the Persian Gulf (Lag. Or. ii. 50) 'el-Afla^, S of 6ebel Tuwaik in
central Arabia (Homm. AA, 222^).
it
jep;
otherwise unknown,
('le/cra;/)]
is
p.
67)
(Margoliouth,
sinister
DB,
ii.
26-30.
25.
etc.
743).
reputation in the
n^*;]
(G-K.
i.
The sons
Jtw-ffi-
have mD-i^n, as
n*?'
i2ia,
if
of
but
Yoktan number
0^:5
'J?'
13,
ii.
39
but
ff.,
in
437.
(^ (see on
is
6) rnx nnxn]
court of death.'
MSS
X. 25-28
?2)V
below) only
i2,
221
home
of these tribes.
the Ar.
art.
'
(but this
unknown.
is
'
ZDMGy
iv. 2),
(4)
xi.
153
fif.,
the Chatramotitce of Pliny, vi. 154 (AtrajnitcBy vi. 155, xii. 52?).
('lapaS)] uncertain.
The attempts at identification proceed on
""^v
word
= *moon'),
Dauram
435).
{jjx hvi<, (& M^TjX)]
'
(7)
''^i?''
(Ae\'Xa)]
??!, IJj^})
for 'date-palm,'
oasis of Arabia.
a frequent geographical
omitted by many MSS of
'Abily
name
in
Yemen
(Glaser, 427).
The name
ffi,
also
identified.
'
TABLE OF PEOPLES
2 22
(j)
Solomon and Hiram, which brought home not only gold and
and precious stones, but almug-wood, ivory, apes and (?) peacocks
Whether this familiarity with the name
(i Ki. 9^8 io^^-2"^; cf. 22"*^).
implies a clear notion of its geographical position may be questioned
ships of
silver
but it can hardly be doubted that the author of the Yahwistic Table
believed it to be in Arabia and although no name at all resembling
Ophir has as yet been discovered in Arabia, that remains the most
probable view (see Glaser, Skizze, ii. 357-83)- O^ other identifications
the most important are Abhira in India, E of the mouths of the Indus
(Lassen); (2) the Sofala coast (opposite Madagascar), behind which
remains of extensive gold-diggings were discovered around Zimbabwe
the ruins, however, have now been proved to be of native
in 1871
;
African origin, and not older than the 14th or 15th cent. A.D. (see D.
Randall-Maciver, Mediceval Rhodesia [1906]) (3) Apir {ori^mBWy Hapir),
Sin old name for the ruling race in Elam, and for the coast of the
Persian Gulf around Bushire (see Homm. AHT, 236^ Hiising, OLz, vi.
If we could suppose the name transferred
-167 ff.
Jen. ZDMG, 1. 246).
to the opposite (Arabian) coast of the gulf, this hypothesis would
satisfy the condition required by this passage, and would agree in
For a discussion of the various
particular with Glaser's localisation.
Price,
theories, see the excellent summary by Che. in EB, iii. 3513 ft
;
DB,
iii.
626
ff.
and
f.,
131.
the Sabsean
unknown.
(ii.
303)
compare
name Yuhaibab.
The
limits (probably
specified in v.^
the Euphrates-Tigris (Ges. Th. 823; Tu.); but the antiquity of this
25I*) in
name is not established. Di., following (&, reads Niyp (see on
Arabia. This as northern limit would just include Diklah, if
Glaser's
by
rendering- npNi
in the direction
of
223
(see on v.^')
for in
any
case Zafar must have been the terminus in a southern direction. The
commonly received opinion is that Dipn nrt is the name of the Frankincense Mountain between Hadramaut and Mahra (see Di.).
(]),
mankind
The
same time the impression made on
Semitic nomads by the imposing monuments of Babylonian
at the
story reflects
civilisation.
only an
and the
itself;
a divine judgement on
is
enterprise.
**
'
The Tower-Recension:
had one (^) And when they broke up from
(^*) that
the East, they found a plain in the
Come ! Let land of Shin ar, and settled there,
A. The Babel-Recension
it was, when all the earth
speech and one vocabulary,
they said to one another,
us
make
bricks
thoroughly.
(^)
^nc?
(*^*. 7)
And
they said,
B.
from
the7ice
Yahwe
{^^)
dispersed them
2 24
(j)
weak
Its
point
II
closes.
is
itself
thing- not
II
II
II
i|
also
may
historical sequence.
be doubted if it could be followed by another '.Ti with inf. cl. (v.^) and
may be reckoned a point in favour of Gu.'s analysis. If there be
any distinction between nQ\(; and d'"!?^, the former may refer to the
;
this
Overthrow
name
" (/caracrT/Jo^^).
is
XI. 1-3
2 25
a plain]
the East\
v.i.
Babylon
Kccrai Iv
Shinar\ see on
legend describes
TrcSto)
cf. '^7?'?
^'^)'
^'?'?
broke up from
(Her.
178).
i.
where
Ike land of
lo^'^.
3a.
first
With great
The
(fialbantu)
with stone-masonry.
Comp.
(i.
179).*
The accuracy
'
'
'
'
cf.
{ES,
2),
but
is
interjectionally
* Cf. Jos.
15
(G-K.
c.
Ap.
"'
i.
139, 149
Diod.
ii.
9; Pliny,
HN,
xxxv. 51.
THE TOWER OF BABEL
226
(j)
work
their
gods
a huge
pyramidal tower
RBA,
f.
see Jast.
615-22).
embodied a half-cosmical,
half-religious
is
it
4b. Lest
we
disperse]
race,
by
fflrU
and
%\
which render
to be at once
ere
we be
The
idea
rallyingis
missed
dispersed.'
30^ (both E), 47^', and pi. (nn) 47^^, Dt. i" 32*,
the whole, the two uses are characteristic of J and E
respectively ; see Holz. Ei?il. 98 f.
D'j?^ "'ilr^] Ex. 5'- ^^.
So in Ass.
labdnu lihittu {KIBy ii. 48, etc. ), although libittu is used only of the
wwburned, sun-dried brick. See No. ZDMG, xxxvi. 181 ; Hoffmann,
verbal
Jos.
use
iS*.
29^^
On
Dt.
(cf.
29^2,
'
'
XI.
4-9
227
of
Yahwe
is
place of
Yahwe,
2 Ki. 2II;
twice mentioned, in a
discontinuity of narration.
cf.
and with
2812'.,
On
1911-20 3^6
Ex.
24W
j^i.
22i,
Ex. f.
On
(Ak. Red.
some of
that
it
involves,
original
It
is
more natural
was
to believe
controlled by
its
spiritual faith.
that the
Hebrew mind
dSi
(see Dri.
Sam. 217
f.),
B:
ps}]
w.^'''.
cf.
'iJi
niiK
Dy
jn]
incomplete interjectional sent. (G-K. 147 i). niiJ'i;;^ oVnn ni] lit. 'this
is their beginning to act.'
On the pointing 'nn, see G-K. 67 7y.
^Di; n;f3! n*?] imitated in Jb. 42^. isa] lit. b^Jnaccessible (cf. Is. 22^",
1D|;] coiiitr. for lai; (G-K. %6'jdd).
Jer. 51'*'); hence 'impracticable.'
reading in
7. 'iJi m-u] (& retains the pi. in spite of the alleged
Mechilta rh-y^ mnK (see p. 14 above). nj'a^] (see last note) fr.
S^3
*
'
= 'mix'
(not 'divide,' as
ib^k]
G-K.
165J. yce?]
understand': 4223, Dt. 28^ Is. 33", Jer. 5" etc. 8. It is perhaps
a distinction of sources is recognised, to point iV^n:i (juss. of
purpose: G-K. 109/), continuing the direct address of '^ ryn]
*sx pr. nx, and (with ffi) adds SiJD-rnNi.
9. Nnp]
one called (G-K. 144 d).
Vn?] 'mixture' or 'confusion.'
The name is obviously treated as a
contraction from Sa^S, a form not found in Heb., but occurring in
vP) and Arab. On the Bab. etymology of
Aram. (cf. % v.^ and
*
better, if
m.T]
+ 6 Beb^.
'
'
228
(j)
I.
is
On
the passage.
finished
Temple-tower {zikkurat),
built
now
is.
evident that ideas of this order did not emanate from the
They originated rather in the unsophistiof Babylonia.
cated reasoning of nomadic Semites who had penetrated into the
country, and formed their own notions about the wonders they beheld
there: the etymology of the name Babel { = Balbel) suggests an
Aramaean origin (Ch. Gu.). The stories travelled from land to land,
It
is
official religion
till
On
flF.
p. 9iflF
its
its top
equal
to
heaven
"
{KIB,
iii.
2.
Langdon, Expos.
5).
The
1909,
ii.
XI. 1-9
229
Dispersion.
2. In regard to its religious content^ the narrative occupies the same
standpoint as ^'^- ^2 and 6^"^ Its central idea is the effort of the restless,
scheming, soaring human mind to transcend its divinely appointed
of humanity " (Dri.). The pagan notion of the envy of the gods, their
fear lest human greatness should subvert the order of the world, no
in
OT
human
230
(j)
coelo
negflecto
est,
caducum
evanidum
et
immortalitatem
(Calv.).
No
Babylonian version of the story has been discovered and for the reason given above (p. 226) it is extremely unlikely
that anything resembling the biblical form of it will ever be found
In Greek mythology there are dim traces of a legend ascribing
there.*
the diversities of language to an act of the gods, whether as a punishment on the creatures for demanding the gift of immortality (Philo,
De Conf. ling.), or without ethical motive, as in the 143rd fable of
Hyginus.f But while these myths are no doubt independent of Jewish
influence, their resemblance to the Genesis narrative is too slight to
suggest a common origin. It is only in the literature of the Hellenistic
period that we find real parallels to the story of the Tower of Babel
and these agree so closely with the biblical account that it is extremely
doubtful if they embody any separate tradition. J The difference to
which most importance is attached is naturally the polytheistic phraseology ('the gods') employed by some of the writers named (Polyhistor,
Abyd.) but the polytheism is only in the language, and is probably
nothing more than conscious or unconscious Hellenising of the scriptural
Other differences such as the identification of the towernarrative.
builders with the race of giants (the Nephilim of 6* ?), and the destruction of the tower by a storm are easily explicable as accretions to the
legend of Genesis. The remarkable Mexican legend of the pyramid
of Cholula, cited by Jeremias from von Humboldt, has a special interest on account of the unmistakable resemblance between the Mexican
pyramids and the Babylonian zikkurats. If this fact could be accepted
Parallels.
3.
||
The fragment (K
163 ff.
(cf.
HCM^f
i53f-)> a^nd
...
**
est
est."
X Cf. Orac. Sibyll. iii. 98 ff. (Kautzsch, Psexidepigraphen, 187); Alexander Polyhistor (Eus. Chron. i. 23 [ed. Schoene]) ; Abydenus {ib. i. 33) ;
Jos. Ant. i. 118; EupolemDs (Eus. Prcep. Ev. ix. 17); and Book of
Jub. X. 18-27.
typical
The
(iii.
6fi6<f)0)voi
Kal poiXoPT
avrlKO, 8'
dva^rjvai
dddvaros
els
Kal BvrjToiaip iv
may
be quoted as a
dvavres
ovpavbv aarepbevra.
dvdfKtjv
/JLcydX-qv iTidrjKev
99 f.)
&ve/JLOi.
fxdyav
{jxj/odi.
irOpyop
So Gu.2 88 f.
Mythen, i. 677 ff.
On
II
cf.
ff.
XI.
231
lo
XI. 10-26.
(P).
In
life.
merely adds to
juu.
MT
number of generations
sponding with
identified;
ch. 5.
Hebrew
in
Few
MT
is 9,
but in
NW
10,
names can be
of the
Mesopotamia as the
a-n-eOaviv.
on the whole to
the
while
The
corre-
plausibly
and point
original
home
of
race.
'
GENEALOGY OF SHEM
232
ology of
7"
5^^
not to be
9^^** is
al.),
(p)
g-ot rid of either by wire-drawn arithor by the assumption that in the other
passages round numbers are used (Tu. De.). The clause is evidently
a gloss, introduced apparently for the purpose of making the birth of
ArpakSad, rather than the Flood, the commencement of a new era.
It fits in admirably with the scheme of the B. of Jub., which gives an
integral number of year-weeks from the Creation to the birth of Arp.,
and from the latter event to the birth of Abraham (see p. 234 below).
12. n^B* (SaXa)] probably the same word which forms a component of
This need not
nSfinp (s^^^Oj ^"^ therefore originally a divine name.
exclude a tribal or geographical sense, the name of a deity being frequently transferred to his worshippers or their territory. A place Salah
Others regard
or Salah in Mesopotamia is instanced by Knobel (Di.).
but very improbor dismissal
it as a descriptive name = offshoot
Hommel {I.e.) combines the
16. J.^?] lo^'.
ably.
1^. lay] see on lo^^
two names and takes the compound as a notice of Shelah's birthplace
of the lower
'Shelah from Eber-peleg' = Eber-hannahar, the region
*
'
'
(Edessa).
It is
unknown
certainly
i\<\]n (36*,
Ex.
2^^
Homm.)
so
it
a divine name.
An Aramaean
tribe
22.
nina
and Nahardu found in Assyrian Deeds {I.e. 71 Ass. Deeds iii. 127 cf.
KAT^, 477 f-)- As a divine name Naxa/) is mentioned along with other
Aramaean deities on a Greek inscription from Carthage {KA 7^, 477)
and Jen. {^A, xi. 300) has called attention to the theophorous name
jj,^ ,^V in the Doctrine of Addai,' as possibly a corruption of
^
'
^~^
j.j.,j
clan-name
24.
n"]n
(Ga/ipa)] is
goat.'
Ilarran.
vi.
who
turdhi, the
{ZA^
\k^hL{?) being the Syr. and turAhU the Ass. word for 'wild
name
of a
70; Hittiter
und Armenier^
150
ff.
[esp.
154]) is inclined to
identify
TapKo,
*
167
f.
Cf.
Noldeke,
TarTju,
ZDMG,
xl.
XI. 12-26
The Chronology.
The
233
(MT, ux and
GENEALOGY OF SHEM
234
(p)
We
cordingly must have proceeded on the theory that after the Flood the age
of paternity suddenly dropped to one-half of what it had formerly been.
[It is possible that the key to the various systems has been discovered
by A. Bosse, whose paper * became known to me only while these sheets
were passing through the press. His main results are as follows
he finds two distinct chronological systems, (a) One reckons
(1) In
by generations of 40 years, its termini being the birth of Shem and
In the Shemite table, Terah is excluded entirely,
the end of the Exile.
and the two years between the Flood and the birth of Arp. are ignored.
This gives from the birth of Shem to that of Abraham 320 (8 x 40)
years; thence to b. of Jacob 160(4x40); to Exodus 560 (14x40); to
founding of Temple 480 (12x40); to end of Exile 480: in all 2000
This system is, of course, later than the Exile but Bo. con(50 X 40).
cedes the probability that its middle section, with 1200 (30x40) years
from the b. of Abr. to the founding of the Temple, may be of earlier
{b) The other scheme, with which we are more immediately
origin.
concerned, operates with a Great Month of 260 years (260 = the number
of weeks in a five-years* lustrum). Its period is a Great Year from the
Creation to the dedication of the Temple, and its reckoning includes
Terah in the Shemite table, but excludes the 2 years of Arpakad.
This gives 1556 years to b. of Shem + 390 (b. of Abr.) + 75 (migration
of Abr.) + 215 (descent to Egypt) + 430 (Exodus) + 480 (founding of
Temple) + 20 (dedication of do.) = 3166. Now 3166 = 12 x 260 -f 46.
The odd 46 years are thus accounted for the chronologist was
accustomed to the Egyptian reckoning by months of 30 days, and
a solar year of 365^ days, requiring the interposition of 5J days each
year ; and the 46 years are the equivalent of these 5J days in
(For, if 30 days = 260 years, then ^\ days
the system here followed.
MT
5JX260 =
= ^^
21x26
7x13
N
T-u c
i-i-' J
r xu^=
=45i [say 46] years.) The first third of this
2
4 3
Great Year ends with the b. of Noah 1056 = 4 x 260+16 (^ of 46). The
second third nearly coincides with the b. of Jacob but here there
30
i.
-"^
1908,
b.
AT
und
bet
Josephus
{MVAG,
2).
X See
Ki. 61 ((S).
it
and the
XI. 27-32
Significant subdivisions cannot be traced.
235
(3) jot
Heb. reckoning by generations, its terminus ad quern being the measuring out of Gerizim, which, according to the Sam. Chronicle published
by Neubauer, took place 13 years after the Conquest of Canaan. Thus
we obtain 1207 + 1040 + 75 + 215 + 215 + 42 (desert wandering) * + 13
(measurement of Gerizim) = 2807 = 70 X 40 + 7.!
(4) The Book of
Jubilees counts by Jubilee-periods of 49 years from the Creation to the
Conquest of Palestine 1309 + 567 + 75 + 459 (Exodus) + 40 (entrance to
Canaan) = 2450 = 50 x 49.]
The
P and
^7.
J,
31. 32j^
J).
vv.
the genealogical
is
The suppression
tradition
of the
Hebrews
On the analysis, cf. esp. Bu. Urg. 414 ff. Vv.^ and ^^ belong quite
obviously to P and ^^, from its diffuse style and close resemblance
to P's regular manner in recording the patriarchal migrations (12 31^^
36*46^: see Hupf. Qu. 19 f.). may be confidently assigned to the same
source. ^^ presents nothing distinctive of either document
but in ^sb
^ is J because
m'?iD px is peculiar to JE (see the footnote on the v.).
presupposed in 22^**^* and its continuation (^^) brings as an additional
criterion the word niijy^ (cf. 25^^ 29^^), which is never used by P.
The
extract from J is supplementary to P, and it might be argued that at
least ^^ was necessary in the latter source to explain why Lot and not
Haran went with Terah. Bu. points out in answer (p. 420) that with
still greater urgency we desiderate an explanation of the fact that
Nahor was left behind if the one fact is left unexplained, so a fortiori
might the other.
The formula nnph nV><i does not occur again till 25^^ and it is very
widely held that in v." it stands as the heading of the section of P
;
t The odd 7 years still remain perplexing (see p. 136). One cannot
help surmising that the final 13 was originally intended to get rid of
it, though the textual data do not enable us now to bring out a round
number.
GENEALOGY OF TERAH
236
(p,
j)
life of Abraham.
That is wholly improbable. It is
enough that a heading- (DmiN 'n ') has been somewhere omitted
We. Bu. Ho. al.) but the truth is that from this point onwards
(so
On
27.
the
Haran
above.
name Ahram^
begat Lot]
see on 17^;
on Nahor,
in J (see 12**).
Haran has no
v.22
effect
signifi-
]-\r\
is
occurs elsewhere only in '.th'? (Nu. 32^^ cf. D"^n"n'3, Jos. 13^')* in the
this has suggested the view that pn was the name of a
tribe of Gad
deity worshipped among the peoples represented by Lot (Mez cf. Wi.
AOF, ii. 499). The name BiV is also etymologically obscure (? Ar. Idf
= cleave to '). A connexion with the Horite clan \'d'h in Gn. 36^"- ^' ^
is probable.
:
'
28.
of
i.e.,
Ur
l^N
(v.^^
15',
28.
'iS'Vy] is
coram (
evioinov),
(U
so Tu.), or 'in
BDB
From
way
in
'
'
'
'
Though
tions of D'mn.
W^i.
{A OF,
ii.
'
XI. 27-30
237
very strong-. Uru is the only city of the name known from Assyriolog-y (although the addition of the g-en. DntJ'3 suggests that others were
known to the Israelites G-K. 125 A) it was situated in the properly
Chaldsean territory, was a city of great importance and vast antiquity,
and (like Harran, with which it is here connected) was a chief centre of
the worship of the moon-god Sin {KAT,"^ i29fF.).
The only circumstance
that creates serious misgiving is that the prevalent tradition of Gen.
points to the NE as the direction whence the patriarchs migrated to
Canaan (see below) and this has led to attempts to find a northern
Ur connected probably with the Mesopotamian Chaldaeans of 22^^ (see
Syrian tradition identifies it with Edessa
Kittel, Gesch. i. 163 ff.).
{Urhdi, Urfa). It is generally recognised, however, that these considerations are insufficient to invalidate the arguments in favour of Uru,
D'"=)f 3] := Bab. KaMuy Ass. Kaldu (Xa\5-aioL), is the name of a group of
Semitic tribes, distinguished from the Arabs and Aramaeans, who are
found settled to the SE of Babylonia, round the shore of the Persian Gulf.
In the I ith cent, or earlier they are believed to have penetrated Babylonia,
at first as roving, pastoral nomads {KAT^, 22 ff".), but ultimately giving
their name to the country, and founding the dynasty of Nabopolassar.
By the ancients Dn^D was rightly understood of Babylonia (Nikolaos
Damasc. in Jos. Ant i. 152 Eupolemos in Eus. Prcep. Ev. ix. 17
but amongst the Jews n?N came to be regarded as an appellaJer. al.)
tive = fire {in igne Chaldceorum, which Jer. accepts, though he rejects
the legends that were spun out of the etymology).
This is the germ of
the later Haggadic fables about the fire
in which Haran met an
untimely fate, and the furnace into which Abraham was cast by order
of Nimrod (yd. xii. 12-14; J^^- Qucest., ad loc. ST J, Ber. R. 38, Ra.).
:
'
'
'
29.
While we are
daughter,
it
is
surprising"
that
nothing
was
is
his brother's
said
of the
the rule
among
29^^).
With regard
n-i"^
to the
'princess' (see on
GENEALOGY OF TERAH
238
(p,
j)
31, 32.
accomplished
two stages.
in
Canaan
to
is
The obvious
he dies.
the journey
is
implication
resumed by Abram
is
(12^);
although ux alone
gives
and
in the
subsequent narratives P
carefully to avoid
city of
Harran.
pn (with virtually doubled n cf. ffi Xappav Gr. Kd^pat Lat. Carree^
Syr. and Arab. Harran) was an important
Charra
Ass. Harrdnu
Mesopotamia, 60 miles E of
centre of the caravan trade in
Carchemish, situated near the Balil), 70 miles due N from its confluence
Though seldom mentioned in OT (12^ [P],
with the Euphrates.
27^^ 28'" 29^ [J], 2 Ki. 19^^, Ezk. 27^^!), and now ruined, it was a city of
great antiquity, and retained its commercial importance in classical
and mediaeval times. The name in Ass. appears to be susceptible of
'way,' 'caravan' (TA Tab.), 'joint-stock
several interpretations
enterprise (Del. Hdwb. s.v.y KAT^, 29^) any one of which might denote
its commercially advantageous position at the parting of the route to
Damascus from the main highway between Nineveh and Carchemish.
Harran was also (along with Ur) a chief seat of the worship of Sin, who
had there a temple, E-^ul-}}ul, described by Nabuna'id as "from
remote days" a "dwelling of the joy of his (Sin's) heart" {KIB, iii. 2.
Asia as the "Lord of Harran"
97), and who was known in
cf. Lidzbarski, Hb. 444, An.).
(Zinjirli inscr.
See, further, Mez, Gesch.
Tomkins, Times of Abraham, 55 ff. etc. This double
d. St. ffarran
connexion of Abraham with centres of lunar religion is the most
:
NW
'
NW
daughter-in-law
by Rob. Sm. as a
gives no sense.
*
'
(Axn,
in Syr.
relic
Read
Ar.
'
sister-in-law,'
a fact adduced
nnn-';] (&
iv Xaf>pdv.
XI. 31, 32
239
'
'
'
the appearance of a
conflicting traditions.
The
In
itself,
perfectly reasonable
it
The view
of
We.
between
J,
XII-XXV.
i8.
P are so
The
is
seldom a serious
its
are interlinked
19I-28.
i^30-38^
Sodom,
supposed to be descended from him. In this sequence 12**- 13^ is (as will
be more fully shown later) an interruption. Earlier critics had attempted
to get rid of the discontinuity either by seeking a suitable connexion for
12^^- at a subsequent stage of J's narrative, or by treating it as a
But neither expedient is satisfactory, and the
redactional expansion.
suggestion that it comes from a separate source is preferable on several
grounds. Now 12^^- is distinguished from J^, not only by the absence
of Lot, but by the implication that Abraham's home was in the Negeb,
and perhaps by a less idealised conception of the patriarch's character.
These characteristics reappear in ch. 16, which, as breaking the connexion of ch. 18 with 13, is plausibly assigned to J*'. (To this source
Gu. also assigns the Yahwistic component of ch. 15; but that chapter
shows so many signs of later elaboration that it can hardly have
belonged to either of the primary sources.) After ch. 19, the hand of J
appears in the accounts of Isaac's birth (21^'''*) and Abraham's treaty
with Abimelech {21^-^^*): the latter is probably J'' (on account of the
Negeb), while the former shows slight discrepancies with the prediction of ch. 18, which lead us (though with less confidence) to assign
240
XII.-XXV.
241
i8
iq1-28
iq80-88
editor
22^**"^^)
will
The hand
2.
21I-7*. 218-21
of
is recognised in the following sections : 15*; 20;
2122-34*. 22I-19 (24*?).
Gu. has pointed out that where
and E run parallel to one another, E's affinites are always with
and never with J^ (cf. the variants \2^' 20; 16 21^"^^; and the
compositions in 21^"' and 2\'^'^'^). This, of course, might be merely a
consequence of the fact that E, like J^ makes the Negeb (Beersheba)
the scene of Abraham's history.
But it is remarkable that iiajc h. 26 we
find unquestionable Yahwistic parallels to E and J**, with ^Bjkas hero
instead of Abraham. These are probably to be attributed ^Jlfie writer
whom we have called J'*, who thus succeeded in preser|J|ig the Negeb
traditions, while at the same time maintaining the theory that Abraham
was the patron of Hebron, and Isaac of Beersheba.
J
J^
||
||
Putting all the indications together, we are led to jgtentative hyporegarding the formation of the Abrahamic l^Kid, which has
some value for the clearing of our ideas, though it must be held with
great reserve. The tradition crystallised mainly at two great religious
thesis
centres,
in
Gu. analyses 24 into two narratives, assig ning one to each source.
question is discussed in the Note, pp. 34o^PRvhere the opinion is
hazarded that the subordinate source may be Egjki which case the other
The
would naturally be
+
J''.
interesting to
It is
compare
this
ponent narratives can be traced from the one period into the other.
It is impossible to prove that this is the case
but certain affinities of
thought and expression suggest that J^ in the biography of Abraham
may be the continuation of J in the primitive history. Both use the
phrase 'call by the name of Yahwe (4'^^ 12^ [13^]. [but cf. 21^ (J**)]);
and the optimistic religious outlook expressed in the blessing of Noah
(gSSflf.)
is shared in a marked degree by the writer of JK
Have we here
fragments of a work whose theme was the history of the Yahvvereligion, from its commencement with Enosh to its establishment in the
;
'
16
See
12'
^^^
MIGRATIONS OF ABRAM
242
p)
(j,
added) the second is ethically and religiously on a hig-her level than the
first.
These were partly amalgamated, probably before the union of J**
^^ and J'' (see on ch. 26). The Hebron tradition was naturally indifferent
to the narratives which connected Abraham with the Negeb, or with
W^^^"*^
K** -' its sanctuary Beersheba hence the writer of J^, who attaches himself
"^
to this tradition, excludes the Beersheba stories from his biography of
"^
^ Abraham, but finds a place for some of them in the history of Isaac.
16^''
15
3.
21'
redaction.
is
:
that
death of Abraham)
is
J**,
Chs. XI^^III.
(J
and
P).
enters
iz***;
the form of
Abram
(^^).
is
represented by
12"*;
vy\, v^y],
I2-***-
12"*
13';
j^e
j^is
12''
-,|3n
and see on the
^^y^
jy^? pjx, 12' 13^2
These fragments form a continuous epitome of the events
between the exodus from Harran and the parting of Abram and Lot.
With a slight and inherently plausible transposition (la^-"*^ Bu. p. 432)
they might pass for the immediate continuation of ii''^, if we can
suppose that the call of Abram was entirely omitted by P (see Gu. 231).
The rest of the passage is Yahwistic throughout obs. the consistent
r?3,
person,'
>-sj}^^
vv. below.
use of m,T
j^io. 13,
13^*^;
rvfiS^,
12^
Ti.'^h
12^; nn??'^ Sa
XII. 1-3
12^
T?"3,C,
13^0."
n.
It falls
'"*
243
i?3j;;3, 12''- ^^
i2b|3-i8
'y
(a)
nrfrno, 12^^
iz^'*''-
^'^
;
p-irn ^^?,
(b) I2^<'-I3'
j2
of
12^^"^,
The journey
XII. 1-8.
of the Land.
characteristic of the
There
is
to
The opening
I.
story
of
Abram
the
trial
of faith.
the things he
to leave
is
and
thy
father^ s house
among
of optimism which
is
its
exceptional
1,
?ih.^ (222
no
z)
futures.
[Ej;
cf.
Ca.
2^-
")] see
G-K.
1195. On
nnV^D
(ffi
<riry7ej'eta)
see
ii'^.
2.
no"j5 n:.m]
So
Di.
Ho. Gu.
MIGRATIONS OF ABRAM
244
Abraham
p)
(j,
legends
(cf.
prophecy
reflected in
The
ideas
(i Ki. 18^^
antiquity of the
name
is
now
Rehoboam, there
D")3N ^pn,
but from
is
'
'Field of Abram.'
its
place in the
list
it
AJSL^
xxi. 35
in the
cf.
S of
Meyer,
descendants (so
The
Vns.
all
cf.
Sir.
is
Ac.
44^1,
3^^,
Gal.
3^).
bless themselves]
Abram,'
etc.
72"
fflr
f.
below.
XII.
** So the ancient
of a man's prosperity " (Gu.).
Jer. 29^).
sion of ^^
the
name
3-6
and
The
4a.
will
discussed below.
245
Abram
of
^;
exegetical
The mention
of Lot
it
question
(see
on
is
ii^^)
** {v.t.)
P's parallel to
is
a theophany, the
first
The
noiD nn Nnpon^' in
Dn5N3 wnhti
-p'tif"
i3n23i
p^
'?d
->nh '?NnB''
idea
is
well expressed
un"? idin oin
nmnxD Nnn
(Gn.
48^").
4.
-S
1.^.'.!]
,*^V f^
by Ra.
laiB-s
(
inn
= B'y!l),
pi^j,
general.
in
n;^?"i,
vsi] in
Hex. (Ho.
the sense of
345).
ibi;]
'
person
'
is
iii.
no)
then property in
acquired,'
as
31^,
the story of Joseph (42. 44-47. 50^) and Jos. 24^. jyj? ^xan.] ^l q^^^
probably from homoioteleuton.
6. p^?^] so ^^, but ffi^- ^', read
nrixi' (13").
For n-iio, S and S> read Nipo. The convallem illustrem of
3J is an amalgamation of fir {Ty\v 8p0v tt}v v\I/7]\i^p [ohD ?]) and 'QL^ (nt5"D
miD=* plains of M.'); the latter is probably accounted for by aversion
to the idolatrous associations of the sacred tree.
W^ has 'n"D 11m nB"D
on which see Levy, Chald. Wh. 33. The absence of the art (ct. nyaa
p'?N] unlike
rrjien, Ju. 7') seems to show that the word is used as nom. pr.
its
Aram, equivalents
(^
j^'x),
in general, is
never
'
MIGRATIONS OF ABRAM
246
Yahwe by
name
worship.
however, a singular
It is,
no record of actual
see p.
of
sacrifice
(j,
p)
1.
22*
28"
Shechem
the
is
first
EB,
iv.
4437
f.
an ancient sacred
tree
oracle-giving terebinth')
was
evidently
sacred tree
'
Besides Dt.
1^"
(a difficult pass.,
The
pVx of
is
called
obtaining of oracles from trees, see Rob. Sm. RS^, 195. Comp. Ju. 4^
and the oak of Zeus at Dodona. Duhm's brilliant generali2 Sa. 52^
sation {Isaiah^, 13 f.), that Abraham was traditionally associated with
sacred trees, Isaac and Ishmael with sacred wells, and Jacob with
sacred stones, though not literally accurate, has sufficient truth to be
suggestive and may possibly correspond to some vague impression of
;
1899. 356.
i.
455
v. Gall, I.e.
cf.
Schwally, TliLzg.^
XII. 6-8
ad
see Dri.
loc.y
and
v.
247
ff.),
it
seems
to be
mentioned
(a mere
v.L\ Gn. 35^, Jos. 2d^^ Du/iyo p'?N ('terebinth of
soothsayers'), Ju. 9^^; and nyo 'n (U- of the pillar' [n^mn]) Ju. 9^.
The
tree is not said to have been planted by Abram (like the tamarisk of
Beersheba, 21^^), an additional indication that Abram was not origin-
difference of pointing,
n^Nn,
nVhcrt
Gall, 117.
Abram moved
tent
(26'^^
on,
Namen
des Herrn,'
is
Jacob
(ch.
28).
Here
of Bethel
was ascribed
(ch. 13).
On
2810*^-
35'
pillar,
view
cf.
Jos. f.
Di. distinguishes
the site of
is
Ch.
7^8;
and
n:y, Is.
GP,
177.
variants of
before us
note the
circumstances
entire
introduced
absence
of the extenuating
the
accounts,
into
other
the
(J).
'
MIGRATIONS OF ABRAM
248
(j,
p)
'
country.
The admission
Egypt
is
social
women
in
The Hebrew
early Israel.
all
others,
9.
yiDii t^hri]
Dav.
86,
R. 4; G-K. 113
on ii^), but in
(see
yiD3
The
idea of continuous
n3J|ri]
(K
eprj/Mi}
^i 192.8.19 272
(all J).
i827The free use
Gen.) is very characteristic of J (Ho. Einl. no). 13.
oratio ohliqua without '?, G-K. 157 a.
ffir, on the contrary, on
of
^N
Ni (c.
'nni<]
* Cf,
40
t.
in
59
DB^
ii.
531''
(note
J),
::
XII. 9-i6
first.
if
249
Sarai
is
known
is
confronted
probably be slain
will
will
husband
at the same time she is a free
moral agent: Abram's proposal is not a command but a
request.
deferential
Lastly,
circumstances lying
is
is
it
excusable.
request
the narrative
beyond
appealed.
expectation.
15.
14,
Sarai
attracts
the
notice
of
the
courtiers,
and
incident
is
is
brought
into
Pharaoh's
The
harem.
Ebers {Aeg:
is
The
20
it
is
gifts
MIGRATIONS OF ABRAM
250
p)
(j,
The
17.
story reaches
moment
its
Yahwe
climax.
interposes at
to save Sarai
it
is
we
How
smote with
omitted.
cf. 20^'^,
Ex.
11^, Ps.
Jos. {Ant.
i.
164
f.)
pretty nearly
Gu.
is
omitted between
^'^
and
^^.
18,
19.
Abram
is
To
The
unable to reply.
is
in
the
is
man who
is justified
at the bar of
human
conscience
He
prophets (Am.
3^).
20.
2 Ki. 15',
17. yari] The Pi. only of smiting with disease
in'5"nNi] possibly a
Ch. 26^ (Pu. Ps. 73').
D'Vi|] ffir + KoX vovTjpoh.
gloss from 20"^- (KS. al.); see on 2'. 19. n,?Ni] 'so that I took'; Dri.
r. 74 a, 1 16, Obs. 2. ?!fiyi<] ffi + ?;'JsJ'. 20. Mx(!& add at the end isy oiV],
as in
of 13^ the phrase is interpolated in both places.
before onbnj.
MT
Erman, LAEy
Miiller,
AE,
493.
142,
EB,
634.
name
is
corrected by
;
:
251
XII. I7-XIII. 6
injury
fresh
Abram
XIII.
The
I.
home
to his
narrative
Negeb
in the
129).
(cf.
Source 0/12^^'^. It has already been pointed out (p. 242 f.)that, though
the section breaks the connexion of the main narrative, it is Yahwistic
in style ; and the question of its origin relates only to its place within
that
it
is (i)
Abram and
2-18. Separation of
Lot.
The
among
2, 5, 7.
The
their retainers.
watering-places being a
common
purely nomadic
5.
'ahl,
Sab.
Chrest, 121).
flocks^ herds^
(Miiller,
3, 4.
2.
life
and
Silver and
nomadic
feature of
and
ZDMG,
The
tents.
people,'
families
xxxvii.
341
Aredactional addition
last
'
word
cf.
Ar.
Homm. SA
(p. 243),
bringing
6.
cf. 36^.
had come
simply
((!5U Ra.)
by stages
:
cf.
Ex.
It
has
'
17I
{y.i.).
ap^'^ etc. 5.
<XKr]pai
(so
D'Snxi
(G-K.
93 r,
n^J]
many MSS). 6.
to J,
MIGRATIONS OF ABRAM
252
8, 9.
tolerable to
his
(j,
p)
relatives (D^nx
D^tJ'JK) is in-
The
for the
rights
from
fellowship
with
The peaceable
God.
is
tives.
disposition
the fordan\
\YtJy 13?
jgi7.25. 28f^
cf.
and
(only here
82^),
f.
from the Lake of Galilee to the Dead Sea, but the expansion of the
Jordan valley towards its S end, defined in Dt. 34^ as the plain of
'
Jericho' (see
HG,
but on insufficient grounds (cf. Hupf. Qu. 21 f.) 7b. 3t?'] xxx c'^e". Tl?!?]
The name is coupled with 'Jj;;^|n in 34^, Ju. i^- ^ (J), and often appears
If, as is
in enumerations of the pre-Israelite inhabitants (15=^*^ etc.).
probable, it be connected with Mi,? (Dt. 3**, i Sa. 6^^ Est. 9^^), nijng
(Ezk. 38^^, Zee. 2^ Est. 9^^), it would mean hamlet-dwellers as distinguished from Canaanites, occupying fortified cities (see on '^nn, lo")*^
That the P. were remnants of a /r^-Canaanite population is hardly to
be inferred from the omission of the name in lo^^^-, or from its
association with the Rephaim in Jos. 17^^: this last notice is wanting
in (&.^'^ and is perhaps a gloss (Moore, Jud. 17).
9. K'?q] (&^ r\irr\.
*
'
^NDi^n
reads
'li^y'O]
pp.'u]
n^NO^i'n
in the
sense of
Thi<o^n
dn.
watered region
'
lo.
j'p'n
(infs.
abs.).
ux.
(&^ om.
XIII. 7-17
253
Yahwe
(2^^"'^^',
417. lia.
by
now
14-17-
confirmed to Abram.
the contrast
Abram, by
to
his
Lot's
over-reached him-
The promise
self-interested
glance
magnanimous surrender of
12^.
eyes,
etc.]
while
(v.^^),
had
his claims,
of the land
up thine
14. Lift
is
very doubtful
new element
16. the
of
dust of the
earth] 2814.
This solemn assurance of the possession of the land (i^-i^) ig someto the simple promises of la^-'
and has affinities
with a series of passages which appear to represent a later phase of
religious reflexion (see on ch. 15, p. 284).
Other reasons are adduced
for thinking that ^^"^'^ are the work of a younger hand than the original
(a) It is not the habit of J to cite divine oracles without a specificaJ.
tion of the circumstances under which the theophany takes place (but
see 12^^-). {b) The conception of Abram as wandering over the land
is not that of J^, who fixes his permanent dwelling-place at Hebron,
(c) While Bethel commands a view of the Jordan valley, it affords no
what of a contrast
the text
is
10I9.ly^i]
which
ceding
is
corrupt)
and
Sir.
^JLf =Tanis
II.
Egypt (Nu.
in
is
we
Should
39^^.
(lys)
read
1322,
njjy-'D?
Is.
nasa]
19".
i3
see
etc.),
ab oriente. But
hence Sta. {Ak. Reden,
lib, in spite of its resemblance to ^*)3,
292) and Gu. emend to nonp,
must be assigned to P, being necessary to the completeness of that
account, and because it disturbs the connexion of ^^* with ^^b^.
16. i?'k]=*so that' (G-K. 166 b).V]. (&. adds at end koX ry airipfiaTi
Dn^jp.
D-nijp
(cf.
11^)]
is
fflr
airo avarokQiv,
eastward
'
MIGRATIONS OF ABRAM
254
(j,
p)
wide prospect of the land as a whole. We. {Comp,^ 25 f.) admits that
these g-eneral impressions are not such as to procure universal assent.
and Di.'s answers may
In point of fact they are rather overstated
satisfy those who refuse to carry critical operations further than is
Nevertheless, We.'s impression is probably
absolutely necessary.
The w.
correct, and has commended itself to KS. Ho. Gu. al.*
may be omitted not only without injury to the context, but with the
The
obvious advantag-e of bringing out the reference of ^^ to ^'^^'.
redactor has rightly seized the point of the story, which is that by his
selfish choice Lot left Abram the sole heir of Canaan.
*
'
Abram moves
18.
Mamre^
site
(see
on
12^).
not known.
is
There was a
distance
is
inconsistent
cov
els
12^.
t6v alQva,
(&
TTjv
approved
by
Ball.
18.
K-iDD
"i^H
(14^^
18^)]
see on
may
be
XIII. I8-XIV.
255
The present
Abrams
Ch. XIV.
at
Victory over
Four Kings.
Hebron, a revolt of
five petty
kings
successful
detail
ended
campaign
the
in
the
course of which
is
traced in
in
basin, followed
(^~^^).
Abram,
allies to
moves as a 'great
prince'
amongst
his
contemporaries,
a concluding note
ception
it
stands
and
in
it
is
it is
a question reserved
unfair to deny to
it
for
nobility of con-
The
story does
all
we
abram's victory
256
impression that
prophet
'
Literary character.
had a peculiar
Many features
literary history,
(a)
of the chapter
The
show
that
it
has
sporadic affinities with P (eJid-i, " ^"^ ^^' ^^ n:3 T^?, ^"^ B'I'i [= person '], ^i)
^^
n;;^?, 2-*)^ contains several expressions which are eithe**
or E (noNn,
unique or rare (see the footnotes) X^n, ^^ (aTr. Xe7.) ^'-\j\, ^^ i3'V?n, ^^
'^^'^' ^
^^
Tio, ^.*
n:p, jv^j; "^n,
(6) The numerous antiquarian glosses
J30,
and archaic names, sug-gesting^ the use of an ancient document, have no
parallel except in Dt. 2^-^2. 20-23 ^. ii. i?b. 14 a.nd even these are not quite
style, specially
(c) The annalistic official
of the same character.
noticeable in the introduction, may be genuine or simulated in either
case it marks the passage sharply off from the narratives by which it
That the chapter as it stands cannot be assigned to
is surrounded.
;
'^-
(say)
sure,
1-4.
I.
'p'?]
the nom.
The
ffir
iv
^aaiXelq,
The
I.
four
names
XIV.
I,
257
as
subj. to
ib'V
'"O
faulty syntax
traditions.
In ch. 19, only Sodom and Gomorrah are mentioned as destroyed
so 13I0, Is. i9'-, Jer. 23^^ etc.) and Zoar (19"*) as spared.
Admah and Zeboim are named alone in Hos. ii^ in a manner hardly
(1924.28 [i82oj.
consistent with the idea that they were involved in the same catastrophe
as S. and G. The only passages besides this where the four are
associated are 10^^ and Dt. 29^2, although 'neighbour cities' of S. and
G. are referred to in Jer. 49^8 ^o^o^ Ezk. i6"*^^-. If, as seems probable,
there were two distinct legends, we cannot assume that in the original
tradition Admah and Zeboim were connected with the Dead Sea (see
Che. EB, 66 f.). The old name of Zoar, yVa (Destruction?), appears
nowhere
else.
The four names in v.^ are undoubtedly historical, although the monumental evidence is less conclusive than is often represented, (i) Ss-jpN
of J^ammurahi
{'Afj,ap(f>a\) is thought to be a faulty transcription
{Amviurah\_p'\i\ the name of the 6th king of the first Bab. dynasty,
who put an end to the Elamite domination and united the whole country
under his own sway {c. 2100 B.c.).t The final
presents a difficulty
which has never been satisfactorily explained but the equivalence is
"?
third.
The reading of the Sixtine ed.
two names in gen. coupled by /cai), which is appealed to in support
" I have little doubt
of Wi.'s construction, has very little MS authority.
that both in H. and P. 19 (which is a rather carelessly written MS) and
in 135 the reading is due to a scribe's mistake, probably arising from
misreading of a contracted termination and induced by the immediately
K0.I
(first
preceding
sure."
^vfiop,
/SacrtX^ws.
J 2.
v\i\
ffir
How
BaXXa,
it
came
etc.
into the
3x4?']
KetMh
Roman
&
in Pent, (see
17
i^Npa']
do not
dSc
feel
l,v/xo^opf
edition,
l^evvaap.
first
2^2^^
ff.
approved by Gu.
abram's victory
258
by Mey. GA^,
i.
ii.
551. (On
now
n^t?'?
Dn.
(cf.
Ti'inN
2^*,
Jth.
seems,
is
satisfactorily identified
{ZDMG,
367)-
The
1896, 247
ff.),
Bezold
{op.
II
OT
trans, in
PSBA,
1906, 193
ff.,
241
1907, 7ff.
Jen., Peiser, and
ff.
XIV.
is
no doubt
259
second is very widely questioned by Assyrimoreover, nothing to show that the king in
his name, belonged to the age of yammurabi.f
There
question, whatever
ologists.*
I,
is,
OapyaX,
^,JL5Z) was
.,"
who
identified
by Pinches with a
is
name (^ has
,..)
thinks that
sar
D^ia
^70
is
kissati.
The
it is
quite possible they are late insertions in the text, and, of course (on
y^a
is
elsewhere a royal
name
(36^2^.
read Kudur-lakhkha-mal ; but the reading appears to be purely conand, unless it should be corroborated, nothing can be built
jectural
upon
it.
* e.g.
tur-bity
I.e.
486^), Peiser
(who reads
it
Kudur-
does not appear that any fresh facts have come to light to make the
guess more convincing than it was when first propounded.
abram's victory
26o
3.
What
chapter.
is
(Di. Dri.),
but
exactly the v.
means
to say
not clear.
is
is
formed a
This
earlier part of
importance attributed
of the Pentapolis
is
in this
The
5-7.
preliminary campaign.
One
of the sur-
as confederates to
'
20^^ {v.
Moore or Bu. ad loc.) and the "^n may have some vague
all these had formed a confederacy at (?) the V. of
reference
local
S.
'
pcy]
(S^
rriv
(pdpayya
'
tt)v akvKr}v,
Noldeke {Unters. 160^), Renan {Hist. i. 116), We. {Gesch.^ 105), Je.
{ATLO^, 35i)> al. think the true form is D'"]^ 'valley of demons.' 4.
tySy?] Ace. of time (G-K. 118 )
"na] rare in
but ux vhvy\ is better.
Hex. (Nu 149, Jos. 2216- 18. 19. 29 ["pj) ^nd mostly late. 5. D'Nn'n?] The
art. should be supplied, with jui.
(& rovs yiyavras
so ^^'^L'p nhnyy?]
26
XIV. 3-7
NW
it has been suggested that the real object of the expesecure conrmand of the caravan routes in
Arabia,
especially that leading through the Arabah from Syria to the Red Sea
(see Tu. 2578".).
It must be remembered, however, that this is the
account, not of the first assertion of Elamite supremacy over these
regions, but of the suppression of a revolt of not more than a few
In explanation,
dition
was
to
meaning
description
is
The reading
of
the
Sixtine
the
two
certainly not
cities,
has,
adduces
text.
6.
m,-]n3]
aju^^F
'l^'"^?-
Duplication of
T is
common
rare
and doubtful
Buhl
an explanatory gloss, retaining D^^n?. pHp h'H] (^SS
render 'terebinth of Paran,' and so virtually U^T^J, which have 'plain'
(see on 12*).
If the ordinary theory, as given above, be correct, ^'X
is used collectively in the sense of 'great tree' (here 'palms').
7. For
E'^i3, S>3rJ (also Saadya) have Dp^, apparently identifying it with Petra :
in const, pi.
f.
ni^'J
^^
'1^> 'princes.'
abram's victory
262
'
'
'
Dt. i^ Jos.
g^'^
12* 13^2.
QYi. 65^[
31^ J
= n-i^;pi;3, Jos.
Karnaim is named
21^].
is
supposed to mean
somewhat problematical.
On
plain
'
the phrase
(Syr.
|Z.Q_)
but that
Tj/b'
foot-
Gesch. d. Edomiter^ 28
(Dt.
28, 2
ff.).
Ki.
9-6,
with n^'X
of the desert
is
meant
(see Che.
EB^
3584). J
The
'
wilderness'
is
the
often mentioned 'Wilderness of Paran (212', Nu. 10^2 etc.), i.e. the
desolate plateau of et-Tih, stretching from the Arabah to the isthmus
of Suez. There is obviously nothing in that definition to support the
'
theory that 'kl-Pdran is the original name of the later Elath. E^ip (16^*
The controversy as to the
a.413 'p (Nu. 34*, Dt. i^- 19 2^*).
20^ etc.), or
Barnea,
p. 37).
XIV. 5-7
263
situation of this important place has been practically settled since the
appearance of Trumbull's Kadesh-Barnea in 1884 (see Guthe, ZDPV, viii.
Mm
ff.).
WadI
It is
of the
'
'
Prol.^ 341 ff.) ; but there is no reason why the institution just alluded
to should not be of much greater antiquity than the Mosaic age.
apri ji^rt
"
WSW
uncertainties
the
Thamara
(i)
of
that
nci? 'n
OS (85^,
of Ptol. xvi. 8
Cf.
EB, 4890
Og
Rephaim
The
D'pT,
'
SW
* Cf. Muller,
AE,
136
f.,
148 fF.
abram's victory
264
'
Rephaim
is
too persistent to
make
bitumen]
The
notice
is
facts.
vii.
xvi.
ii.
they
42
Diod.
still
ii.
xix.
48,
98
BRy
i.
518,
ii.
189, 191).
Seetzen
(i.
bitumen oozes from rocks round the sea, *'and that (und
zwar) under the surface of the water, as swimmers have felt
and seen " and Strabo says it rose in bubbles like boiling
water from the middle of the deepest part.
II, 12. Sodom
and Gomorrah are sacked, and Lot is taken captive. The
;
10.
ni.^! n-1^3]
R. 8 G-k. 1 23
as Mx(& 'v ^^CT.
;
B'pi]
in
<& tinrov
OT.
12.
On
^ (cf. 130
r\-y^'\
{i.e. tyan)
On
;
e).
ffi^L
and
duplication, see
the peculiar
^_^
see
G-K.
the
Dav.
n"ibj^;]
27 y, 90?.
^^* ^^,
29,
better
an
II.
words immediately
after
d-h,
It is
to be
XIV. 8-13
265
The
is
repetition of
a mark
inp*")
and
of inferior style
I^P'l in
Abram
probably a
in v.^^, is
gloss [vJ.).
13-16. Abram's pursuit and victory. The homeward
march of the victorious army must have taken it very near
Hebron, Engedi itself is only about 17 m. off, but Abram
had Met the legions thunder past,' until the intelligence
reached him of his nephew's danger.
13. Abram the Hebrew]
is obviously meant as the first introduction of Abram in this
The
narrative.
we
epithet
is
Amarna
if
period
murabi (against
Pal. 39
NKZ^
Sellin,
xvi.
That, however,
ff.).
936
cf.
Paton, Syria
and
is
it is
a synonym of Hebron
name
cluster,'
Nu.
The
two, at
first
grove.
13^^^-)
all
ny
Tj^g
la^s^
of the chapter,
manner
name
''Eskol is
events, are
'''heroes
Unters.
eponynii oi
166),
origin.
\}[i%
most
misconcep-
126
* Di.'s
r.
we
'
'"iSVC']
remark
or the (lord) of
is
clause
Ezk.
13. tt'^sn]
G-K.
like
the personal
In
is
it
here
"^^
2 Sa.
15^^)^
Aq.
n^y] xxx
(p. 235),
Mamre
-\'mr\,
abram's victory
266
Abram
the confederates of
patrons to client,
joined
Abram
in V.2*,
Neh.
that
6^^.
it
inherently improbable.
is
presupposed
in narration.
relative
v.i.)
is
f.),
in his pursuit is
As soon
14.
(f o-wcDftoTai)]
recur;
view {Bundesvorstg. 23
'
as
Abram
is
commonly explained as a
It is
(i.e.
'),
not likely to be
piece of Jewish
"iTri?X
139
ii.
f.]).
D"i3y,
(Sr
Dan]
to
27).
Ai^vai/.
14.
Now Tell
p"3;i]
Lit.
'emptied
out,'
Hermon.
of a sword (Ex. 15^ Lv. 26^^, Ezk. 5^* ^^ etc.), but never with pers. obj. as
Tu. cites the Ar. ^arrada, which means both ' unsheath a sword
here.
analogy,
)m (* equip
Wi. {AOF,
937.
5t2r^
juu.
:
'
i.
has
P1l\=-' scrutinize
and CJ) settle
Ball changes to
*
'
'
I'^'^D]
i'pS"l.
The
young men.'
j^/
IJn
air.
expeditos,
'experienced,' etc.
Sellin (937) compares
word ^anakuka = thy men,' found in one of the Ta'annek tablets.
If it comes direct from the ceremony of rubbing the palate of a new-born
'
child (see p.
Mamre and
them
for
names of
14.
^
267
XIV. I4-I8
Ju. 18^^);
of antiquity.
15.
He divided himself
Hebrew
533J
the
it
(cf.
c.
i.e.
i^'^,
Mac.
15^)
Jth.
20 hours' journey
N of Damascus.
TA Tablets, the
booty.
Abram and Melkizedek. **The scene beMelkizedek is not without poetic charm
Abram
and
tween
17, 18-20.
(Grosse)
17.
The scene of
kin^s
vale.
the meeting
place of this
is
name
mentioned
in 2 Sa. 18^^
was two
{Ant.
vii.
tion
harmonises with
243),
18.
the
common view
The
situa-
that Salem
is
'*'."!^
abram's victory
268
The
Canaan
in very early
perfectly credible,
is
{Qu\
^^, Jer.
where
is
lEz.
The
occurs.
it
the
al.),
chief
argument
typical
in
attached
significance
Melkizedek
in
Ps.
lo^ which is hardly intelligible except on the supposition that he was in a sense the ideal ancestor of the dynasty
I
or hierarchy of Jerusalem.
know.
from the bibUcal statements (Ju. I9^^ i Ch. 11^); but the shortened
form Salem is as yet unattested. It has been suggested that the cuneiform uru was misread as the determinative for 'city' (see Sellin, 941).
The identifications with other places of the name which have been
discovered e.g. the Salim 8 R. m. from Scythopolis (where, according
to Je. [Ep. ad Evagr.\ the ruins of Melkizedek's palace were to be
seen) have no claim to acceptance.
On
bread
Arabian and
Beitr.
'
'
Phoenician
deity
(Baudissin,
Stud.
128).
i.
for
Baethgen,
15
Jerusalem (see
;
19. mi3
Is. i2i-28, Jer. 31^^50'', Ps. 1 18^^) there is no reason to believe.
has two senses in the OT (if, indeed, there be not two distinct roots
see G-B.i^ s.v.)\ (a) 'create' or 'produce' (Ps. 139^^ Pr. 8^2, Dt. 32'
purchase or * acquire by purchase (frequent). The
{h)
[? Gn. 4^])
idea of bare possession apart from purchase is hardly represented
and since the suggestion of purchase is here inadmissible,
(? Is. i^)
That this meaning can be
the sense
must be accepted.
create
established only by late examples is certainly no objection so far as
the present passage is concerned see on 4^. 20. After ^n^i, fflc^ ins.
:
'
'
'
'
who discharged
priestly duties
as descendants of deities"
(p. 31).
XIV.
Melkizedek
is
i8,
269
20
in
meaning
in
it is
but
blessing'
infra.
By
payment of the
tithe,
Abram acknowledges
7*), and
bond of a common monotheism uniting them
at the same time the action was probably regarded as a
precedent for the payment of tithes to the Jerusalem
sanctuary for all time coming (so already in Jub, xiii.
25-27 comp. Gn. 28^2).
the religious
The
seems
to
v.^^
with
v.^'^,
is
ii.
29),
a temptingly
which
facile
operation
but it is doubtful if it be justified. The designation of
Yahwe as 'God Most High in the mouth of Abram (v.^^) is unintelligIt may rather have been the writer's object to
ible apart from ^^^.
bring the three actors on one stage together in order to illustrate
Abram's contrasted attitude to the sacred (Melkizedek) and the secular
Hommel's ingenious and confident solution
(king of Sodom) authority.
;
'
{AHTy
158
ff.),
<
The mystery which invests the figure of Melkizedek has given rise
a great deal of speculation both in ancient and modern times. The
Jewish idea that he was the patriarch Shem (2P, Talm. al.) is thought
to be a reaction against mystical interpretations prevalent in the
school of Alexandria (where Philo identified him with the Logos),
which, through Heb. 7^^-, exercised a certain influence on Christian
theology (see Jerome, Ep. ad Evagrium cf. JE, viii. 450). From a
critical point of view the question of interest is whether M. belongs
to the sphere of ancient tradition or is a fictitious personage, created
to represent the claims of the post-Exilic priesthood in Jerusalem
In opposition to the latter view, Gu. rightly
(Well. Comp.^ 312).
points out that Judaism is not likely to have invented as the prototype
to
nin\
jap]
only Hos.
11^,
Is.
is
a denom.
4).
4*.
fr. i:d,
The etymology
is
BDB)
ABRAM
270
VICTORY
'
(3320), SNn'3
Sx (357),
and
fv^j;
?}<
(here
and
jyij^;
Ps. 7835). J
'
upper,'
Times,
vii.
340
flF.,
478
ff.,
565
f.,
viii.
43
f.,
94
ff.,
142
ff.
(arts,
and
letters
in classical
religion,
Zeus
'
XIV.
Maccabees were
that the
17,
21-34
271
v^piaTov (Jos.
Ant. xvi.
163; Ass. Mosis, 6^).* This title, the frequent recurrence of j'v'?y as a
divine name in late Pss.,the name Salem in one such Ps.,and Melkizedek
in (probably) another, make a group of coincidences which go to show
that the Melkizedek legend
was much
in
Maccabees.
21-24.
17,
Abram and
booty.
is
22.
lift up my hand\ the gesture
accompanying an oath (Ex. 6, Nu. 14^^, Dt. 32*^, Ezk. 20^^,
Dn. \2^ etc.). to Vakwe, El 'Elj'Sn] A recognition of
religious
affinity
with
Melkizedek, as a fellow-worshipper
The
nin\ however,
23.
12^^)
lest
and
etc.]
probably an
is
while
<>>
An
xxx
has
earlier writer
this scruple
this
*
'
AHT,
165).
figure of
that
it
sets the
the case
confirmed, or
It is
22. 'nb-iq]
On
the
pf.,
G-K.
(in
p"5
On
106 /. 23.
asseveration, 149 a, c.
The second
negation, is not rendered by (& or U.
DXi,
24.
the dn of negative
lit.
not unto
to
me
have read
* Siegfried,
also
DBy
iii.
1897, p. 200
450,
ff.
HISTORICITY OF
272
by some
we have now
How
The question
raised is one of
extreme difficulty, and is perhaps not yet ripe for final settlement. The
attempt must be made, however, to review once more the chief points
is
justified
to consider.
which
it
leads.
The case
the
historic
fictitious
To suppose
that
them, merely for the purpose of casting an air of antiquity over his
It is fair to
narrative, is certainly a somewhat extreme hypothesis.
admit the presumption that he had really before him some traditional
(perhaps documentary) material, though of what nature that material
was it is impossible to determine.* (2) The general verisimilitude of
It is proved beyond question that an
the background of the story.
Elamite supremacy over the West and Palestine existed before the year
consequently an expedition such as is here described is
2000 B.C.
Further,
(broadly speaking) within the bounds of historic probability.
the state of things in Palestine presupposed by the record a number of
petty kingships striving to maintain their independence, and entering
harmonises with all we know
into temporary alliances for that purpose
of the political condition of the country before the Israelitish occupation,
though it might be difficult to show that the writer's knowledge of the
situation exceeds what would be acquired by the most cursory perusal
of the story of the Conquest in the Book of Joshua.
(3) The consideration most relied upon by apologetic writers is the proof obtained from
Assyriology that the names in v.^ are historical. The evidence on this
question has been given on p. 257 ff., and need not be here recapitulated.
Babylonian legend, which was brought into connexion with the story of
Abraham by arbitrary identification of names whose primary significance
The question cannot be
was perhaps mythological. See G7, ii. 28
flf.
'
CH. XIV
it is
273
identifications
(see,
further,
fully qualified
is disputed by
Mey. GA^, i. ii.
to judge of the
tion as assured.
At the same time, it is quite clear that the names
are not invented
and it is highly probable that they are those of
contemporary kings who actually reigned over the countries assigned
to them in this chapter.
Their exact relations to one another are still
undetermined, and in some respects difficult to imagine but there is
nothing in the situation which we may not expect to be cleared up by
;
It would seem to follow that the author's informaderived ultimately either from a Babylonian source, or from
records preserved amongst the Canaanites in Palestine.
The presence
of an element of authentic history in v.' being thus admitted, we have to
further discoveries.
tion
is
been
traversed
least
is, if
the
have
their
with the actualities of the situation (see the Notes on p. 261). (6) It is
difficult to resist the impression that some of the personal names
especially Berd and Birshd (see on v.^), and Mamre and Eshcol (v.^^)
are artificial formations, which reveal either the animus of the writer,
or else (in the last two instances) a misapprehension of traditional data
into which only a very late and ill-informed writer could have been
betrayed, {c) The rout of Chedorlaomer's army by 318 untrained men
It is no sufficient explanation to
is generally admitted to be incredible.
say that only a rearguard action may have taken place the writer
does not mean that and if his meaning misrepresents what actually
took place, his account is at any rate not historical (see p. 267). {d) It
appears to be assumed in v.^ that the Dead Sea was formed subsequently
This idea seems to have been traditional in
to the events narrated.
Israel (cf. 13^"), but it is nevertheless quite erroneous.
Geological
evidence proves that that amazing depression in the earth's surface had
existed for ages before the advent of man on the earth, and formed,
from the first, part of a great inland lake whose waters stood originally
several hundred feet higher than the present level of the Dead Sea.
It
may, indeed, be urged that the vale of Siddim was not coextensive
with the Dead Sea basin, but only with its shallow southern Lagoon
18
HISTORICITY OF
274
is,
of course,
common
to all stages of
Israelite
the question
is
to
historians" (Moore,
EB,
677).
ii.
At
first
sight
it
is
might appear
the mark of a
ff.
DB,
i.
Gautier,
EB,
1043
f.,
1046; Hull,
also Robinson,
576''.
BR,
ii.
187
f.
CH. XIV
it?
Or
did
it
come
275
directly
late author,
who used
it
The former
alternative
is
history.
In conclusion,
it
no
real
antagonism
They deal
* P. 256 above.
is
276
(je)
with quite distinct aspects of the problem and the fallacy lies in treating the chapter as a homogeneous and indivisible unity it is like discussing whether the climate of Asia is hot or cold on conflicting evidence
drawn from opposite extremes of the continent. Criticism claims to
;
make
is full
actual discoveries.
Ch. XV.
Abram
(JE).
mis-
explicit assurances,
and by a symbolic
is
a clear division
and the promise of the land ('^~^^), the latter alone being
strictly embraced in the scope of the covenant.
(^"^)
1889
{Comp.^ 3io)-
Iri
XV.
277
I3b.i4b^.i5.i8b^. 19-21
On
a redactor.
to
He
assigns
'**
V ^-
jt
^^' * ^- ^
^^d
'
the omission of
promise of an
the land.
'^-
heir,
nin'
where observed in that document, and are coloured by ideas characteristic of the Deuteronomic age.
The following points may be here noted
(a) the prophetic character of the divine communication to Abram {}- ^)
:
{b)
the address
ni,T
(c)
the school of
This
writers.
1-6.
The promise
posterity
I.
n'?Nn
used by J
(E).
Dnmn
l.
[']nnN]
The
frequent in
ry\;)
(cf. v.*)]
THE COVENANT WITH ABRAM
278
(je)
some meri-
following on
It is
writer,
The attempts
Comm. and
14 (Jewish
ch.
and misleading.
the
The conception
va.
in J
55^33 (20^,
in
call (Gu.).
to establish
q.v.),
God
The
representation
is
in a
vzsion]
the
to
v.^), in
which case
The mediate
E.
E.
t/i}'
later writings:
shield]
Dt.
is
332^,
y^^ oft.,
3*
common
in
^d'.thy
Pr. 2^
reward [will be] very great] a new sentence (^S)j not (as }J,
EV) a second predicate to ^^bx. 2. seeing I go hence childless]
found occasionally in the older writings (i Sa. 15^, 2 Sa. 24^^), but
chiefly in later prophets and superscriptions
specially common in Jer.
and Ezk.ntqp] Only Nu. 24^- ^^ Ezk. 13''.
The word is thus not at
all characteristic of E, thoug-h the idea of revelation through dreams
and visions (nx-ip, Nu. 12^ ^hy^ nx-ie, Gn. 46^) undoubtedly is. Considering the many traces of late editing in the chapter, it is highly
nann (inf.
precarious to divide the phrases of v.' between J and E.
ux na^N, *I will
abs.) as pred. is unusual and late (Ps. 130^, Ec. 11^).
multiply,' is perhaps preferable.
2. ni,T 'jik] (cf. ^) is common in the
elevated style of prophecy (esp. Ezk.), but rare in the Pss. In the
historical books it occurs only as a vocative (exc. i Ki. 2^')
Jos. 7', Ju.
:
622
1 628^
_ Dt.
324 926, 2
Sa.
Ki.
8^3.
Of
these the
first
MSS
of Philo (before
oSros).
paraphrases
Eliezer's mother,
Aq,
pc'D is
air.
omnVn ;^
Xe7.,
as
;]
in
some
V|n
the Vns.
(ttot/^oi'tos)
Kk-qpovoix-qaei /xe,
XV. 2-5
So
all
Vns., taking
in
"Hpn
279
= live ')
(* walk
would be quite admissible. To die childless and leave no
name on earth (Nu. 27^) is a fate so melancholy that even
cf.
2b
agree
in
'
'
absolutely unintelligible
is
reading the
probably correct
is
is
is
so corrupt
that
^^?"I? is
member
i. 391 ;
Benzinger,
of the household, but not
of a numerous
'
seed'
5.
The promise
of
'
Eliezer,'
Damascene
is
city is contrary to
obviously belongs to
than E (cf. vix with
J,
v.*), it
71-2
16I1,
n:iinn]
Is.
in J,
19"
242^ 3912-
is. 15. is
(jos. 2^'^?)
-5.
:;
28o
26S Ex.
32^3,
Dt.
1^0
io22
2862)._6. coutited
(je)
it (his
implicit
Mac.
2^^.
(see
We.
God
Pss.,
conferred
SBOT,
174).
by
'
'
(161) well
came
to light.
unsatisfactory.
poxm] (on the tense, see Dri. T. 133; G-K. 1125^): (!&F<S add
The construction with 5 is usual when the obj. of faith is God
(Ex. 1431, Nu. 14I1 20I2, Dt. iK 2 Ki. if\ 2 Ch. 20^0, Ps. 78^2, Jon. 3^)
The change to '?^ (Ps,
niji^] second obj. ace.
\ only Dt. 9^^, Is. 43^".
106^^) is unnecessary.
6.
D"J??<-
28l
XV. 6-12
on
9, 10. The preparations for the covenant ceremony
which see below, p. 283. Although not strictly sacrificial,*
the operation conforms to later Levitical usage in so far as
the animals are all such as were allowed in sacrifice, and
the birds are not divided (Lv. i^"^).
of three years old] This
;
is
elsewhere
'
and
(cf.
Sa.
i^*
[(^]:
which renders
curiously enough the only Vn. that
it is
4^^).
21^,
On
al.
the
is
the
three in
on
(see
2^^).
deity (omit
The
as a gloss).
HD.t/'n
text
is
mixed
(see below),
J,
and the
religious
(Gu.).
was no perfunctory
below the
piece of symbolism
of consciousness
level
(heightened in this
ecstasy or vision.
13-16.
An
oracle in which
is
unfolded
9.
139
Jer.
c.
Dnjsn and
away
and
'
aSc
34^8-
II.
D'"lJ?n]
D'^^^^ri
so Aq.
DON
(v.^').
(&.^
TCL
2^V}.]
{aTread^rjcrev)
2i^!,\
10.
"i?5;i]
i^ ima] ux mna
is
a technical term
(inf.
cru}fj.a,Ta
abs.). 'ui
tcl
in the
G-K.
a conflation of
sense of
scare
2>^i\,
in-
young dove'
dLXOTOfnfifiara
SU. C^ read
being
(MVAG,
iii.
282
and
direct
(je)
incidental.
therefore be the
on the understanding
^~^,
25^).
15
is
(or
Ovid, Met.
xii.
parallels
from
is
To
lat. 6,
upon
frequently dwelt
cited
e.g.
doubtful
v.^^)
188, etc.).*
(cf.
if
own
to his
fourth generation]
Moses) (Ex. 6^^^-).
II
as
16. ^ke
Amram, Aaron
a parenthesis,
Abram
by Knobel (Gn.
in
but the
are
Yy
13-16
g^^g
although
E?p-i3
in
^^
and
n^io n^'E'?
n3|3Pi
in
^^
as characteristic
'ui no-n-ini and 'ui no'N n^ni are doublets (note the repetition of h]} ^33)
and the poetic nasj'n (only here in Pent.) is doubtless a gloss to rio-n.
The opening clause huS 'lyn 'np. is presumably J (in E it is already night
in v.).
Jos. 2'
D^
'^3i;l,
(J).
13.
avoiding the
/cat
KaKiJjaoviXLv air.
awkward interchange
(cf.
16.
Jer. 31^);
nm
G-K.
iiS^r.
* Cf. We. Prol.^ 308 (Eng. tr. p. 308), who cites these w. as positive
proof that the generation was reckoned as 100 years (see p. 135 above),
a view which, of course, cannot be held unless vv.^^"^^ are a unity.
XV. I3-I8
283
making an emblem
HlVb.
pieces]
178;
cf.
provision
is
the possession of
sarily implies
two or more
'
the land.'
parties
but
it
Bertth neces-
may happen
that
its
17. nKa \Ti] pf. with sense of plup. (G-K. iii^). npj'yj only
here and Ezk. i2- ' ^. (&. <p\6^ is certainly wrong (n?n^? K>r}h?).]^ii]
Q'lun] the noun recurs
ass's & read the ptcp., hence Ball emends i;?y,
only Ps. 136^^; but cf. the analogous use of the vb. i Ki. 325- ^.
* "
tum illo die, Juppiter, populum Romanum sic ferito, ut ego
hunc porcum hie hodie feriam, tantoque magis ferito quanto magis potes
.
poUesque." Cf. //. iii, 298 ff. Precisely the same idea is expressed
with great circumstantiality in an Assyrian covenant between Aursee Peiser, MVAG, iii. 228 ff.
niriri and the Syrian prince Mati'ilu
:
hagar's flight
284
(j)
in
The
344
and
ff.,
lists
The Hivvites,
(after
Girgashites)
p.
215
The
appear
Qij5
who
and <&
'33 (29^),
(after
Canaanites).
Yahwe
On
see Kraetzschmar, 61
ff.
xxx.
till
by
Of
and Deut.
31 passag'es in
JE where
27
XVI. 7%^
Ch.
Flight of Hagar
Ishmael
(J
and
and Birth of
P).
Sarai, having-
persuades
concubine.
Abram
is
born.
XV. I9-XVI.
nomads and
Ishmaelite
285
The
is
^'^
9.
10.
11.
13.
nn??^,
addition in
ni.T !iK*^p
^^-
1-
{y.s.)
2-
6.
6.
betrays
(also
its
f., 1 26 f.).*
an Egyptian]
This consistent tradition points
to an admixture of Egyptian blood among the Ishmaelites,
.
cf. 21^^.
2.
peradventure
I may
"Some
physiognomy
(Dri.
DB,
ii.
of
504*).
hagar's flight
286
(j)
be built
5.
My
wrong
be avenged on thee
in a passionate
is in
'
are
be
peculiarly
upon
her
thee] i.e.
sphere
of divine
May my
grievance
6.
Thy maid
it mean
authority?
excessive severity
to
Hagar's
Yahwe]
by the indignities
(v.^^).
The theophany
7-14.
the
flight is justified
(see below) is
medium
of the theophany.
The scene
is
a fountain of
on the way
of Egypt
(see Dri.
DB^
iv. 510^),
which gave
15^2,
NE
its
frontier
name
to
{v.i.).
The
ni.T !]X^d
or, in other
'
'
'^*'^y
XVI. 4-12
287
the theophany
'
'
8.
of Hagar's circumstances,
(v.i.).
II,
alone: Gu.)
is
(cf. iS^^-).
9,
10 are interpolated
12.
in metrical
form: two
^^
(not
with lines of
triplets
properly,
May God
'
hear,' is rendered
*God
hears,' in token
{'^'^pV
cf. HfJ^ri),
^"j,
families of
(Jb. 39^"^,
is
to be manifested in
Ishmael's
(as Jb.
i^^),
cursives
to be
Knjn of
% has
omits X^rrh^.
^OJ
'^r^^x (
'
(if
=*'1?> 20^)*
it
nit^] (*
line of fortifications
though
Possibly the
in the
sense of
wall
'
The command
and
(22^*^*)
and
"i?"''"']
x\^});^\
G-K.
28/6,
/.
Si
has
a.l
Ij-O) \\r^^
^""^
^^
*"^^
'^^^
"'"J''^
'D^D.
hagar's flight
288
meaning
(j)
is
13, 14.
From
this experience
of Hagar the local deity and the well derive their names.
be trusted) both
'
Kadesh, see on
the well of
14"^.
Hagar
is
me
lives'".
The name
25^^.
between
ii.
354
If.).
The
well
of
must
The
it
Zemzem
at Mecca.
15, 16.
by P.
The
g-eneral scope of '^^^' is clear, though the details are very obscure.
process of syncretism the orig-inal numen of the well had come to
be regarded as a particular local manifestation of Yahwe and the
attempt is made to interpret the old names from the standpoint of the
higher religion. 'NT "? and 'kt 'nV are traditional names of which the
real meaning had been entirely forgotten, and the etymologies here
By a
given are as fanciful as in all similar cases, (i) In 'NT 'n^ the Mass.
punctuation recognises the roots Ti, 'live,' and hni, 'see,' taking
as
circumscribed gen. but that can hardly be correct. We. {Prol.^ 323 f.),
following Mich, and Ges. {Th. 175), conjectures that in the first element
*?
reading
fflc
'Ni (ptcp.
with
suff.).
For
TB
niPiN,
'^'^^'
which x substitutes
nxTp. T13]
^j-ti'^^
*<"'^n
(see on
SW
V.').
est
43.
XVI. I3-XVII.
289
we have the word 'n), 'jaw-bone' (Ju. 15^^), and in the second an
obsolete animal name: hence 'Well of the antelope's (?) jaw-bone.'
V. Gall (est 40 ff.) goes a step further and disting^uishes two wells,
'NT (nx?) fa, and 'n^^ -1N3, the former peculiar to
J and the latter to E (cf.
(& of 24^2 25ii)._(2) 'NT Sn, whatever its primary significance, is of a
type common in the patriarchal narratives (see p. 291). Of the sug-gested restorations of ^^^, by far the most attractive is that of We.
(I.e.), who changes nSn to d'hSn, reads 'kt as V!<"3, inserts 'nxi between
'n'NT and nnx, and renders, " Have I actually seen God and lived after
my vision ? " an allusion to the prevalent belief that the sight of God
is followed by death (Ex. 332, Ju. 6^ 13^3 etc.).
The emendation has
at least the advantage of giving a meaning to both elements in the
name of the well. Gu.'s objection that the emphatic 'here' is indispensable, is of doubtful validity, for unfortunately D% does not mean
'here but 'hither.'
'
Ch. XVII.
To Abram, who
God
is
new name
of which
(^~^)>
The
(^~^*).
Code the
sign
is
covenant
incident
is
the rite of
is
to be
changed to Sarah)
(23-27^^
'Pq
important
(i)
all
writer of the
as an explanation
and
in the
circumcises
^-j^^
(^),
entering into a
Abraham immediately
(^^~22j^
is
(i),
the
heir of this
Abraham
henceforth to be called
(P).
(2)
as
become
marking
a new stage
and Moses) into which the Priestly theory divides the history
of mankind. On the ethnic parallels to this scheme, Gu.'s
note
(p.
233
ff.)
may be
consulted.
The
jhapter.
7- 8- 10-
Dn-n"?,
19
' ^-
12
on^D,
|yj3
i"- 12.
23
^<;,^.^,
20
in
other
THE COVENANT OF CIRCUMCISION
290
The
(p)
chapter, in
its
||
1|
|i
|I
These
are
three
in
number
terity
The Covenant-promises.
1-8.
|i
||
{a)
^7b. 8bj
We recognise
tion
an
indissoluble
triad,
the
land,
land
being
cation of
patriarchs.
lost,
The
^El Shaddai\
is
origin, etymology,
I am
and significance of
this
ings of the ancient Vns., see the synopses of Di. (259), Dri. (404
f.),
It is unfortunately impossible to
and Valeton {ZATW, xii. 11^).
ascertain whether 'W was originally an independent noun, or an
Noldeke and Baethgen decide for the latter view. The
attribute of Sn
= T^N and n,
traditional Jewish etymology resolves the word into
:
t5'
the allrsufficient
nnn
Sd*?
'
'mn'?Na n).
or
self-sufficient
Though
'
{Ber. R. 46
this theory
cf.
XVII. 1-4
title
signature of the
patriarchal
291
God
age (Ex.
In
6^)
is
it
the
or rather
it
48^^)]
38^;
Is.
2.
i.e.y
On
Live consciously
cf.
Jn.
My
in
presence,'
perfect] or 'blameless'
i^.
Sa.
see on
(^^"13),
12^,
6^.
see p.
297
f.
and
below.
35^^
4.
(D)'l3
P)
While
^13),
P speaks
of
nations
'
in
the
some support in Is. 13*, Jl. i^"^, and is free from difficulty if we
it as an ancient title appropriated by P without reg-ard to its
The assumption of a by-form ma? (Ew. Tu. al.) is
real significance.
g-ratuitous, and would yield a form 'W, not '^r.
Other proposed
least
accept
'
equivalent of
hurl' (Schwally,
ZDMG,
lii.
VoUers
["j?']).
an original "'?(>/ nits'), afterwards, through
popular etymology and change of religious meaning, fathered on ,J iib'.
Several Assyriologists connect the word with SadA rabti, 'great
mountain,' a title of B^l and other Bab. deities (Homm. AHT, 109 f.
Zimmem, I^A 7^, 358) a view which would be more plausible if, as Frd.
Del. {Prol. 95 f.) has maintained, the Ass. ^i^ meant 'lofty'
but this is
denied by other authorities (Halevy, ZKF, ii. 405 if. Jen. ZA, i. 251).
As to the origin of the name, there is a probability that *^^ Sk was an old
(cf. On. 49-) Canaanite deity, of the same class as 'El Ely on (see on
(ZA,
xvii.
nin
in
'
14^^),
whom
(as
G-K.
135/).
(4)),
Yahwe
(so
Gu.
235).
4.
"ivi
is
292
(p)
descendants of Abraham.
name
is
The equation
= [D'iJ]
5.
'
Abram's
Father of
al. doubt if a
between word-play and
etymology is difficult to draw and all that can safely be said is that
the strained interpretation here given proves that Dn-i^N is no artificial
formation, but a genuine element of tradition, (i) The form n-iix is an
Dn-i3X
was
serious etymolog^y
poq 3N
is
The
intended.
line
abbreviation of
q-j'^n
cf.
n:?K,
Sa. 145"
i'7^?N, 2
Di'?^'';^!, i
Ki.
'
(*
possibility
fusion in
noty-riN]
5.
G-K.
121a, 6
but nx
is
omitted in some
Hammurabi
AHT,
MSS and
in ux.
tablet of Abil-Sin,
has proved to be incorrect, the true reading being AM-Eral} (see Ranke, Personennamen
The name has, however,
in d. Urk. der Ham. -dynastic, 1902, p. 48).
recently been discovered in several documents of the time of Ammizaduga, the loth king of the same dynasty. See BA, vi. (1909), Heft 5,
the grandfather of
(see
96),
where Ungnad shows that the name is not West Semitic, but
Babylonian, that the pronunciation was Abaram, and that the first
element is an accusative. He suggests that it may mean " he loves the
father " {rdma = nr\'\), the unnamed subject being probably a god. Comp.
p. 60,
ET,
t
The
ZDMG,
Ar. kunyd,
xlii.
X Similarly
appearing
in
'
Abu-ruhm
is
No.
4842.
v.
Heb. as
e'la.
XVII. 5-9
293
is
9')
the form
The promise
of kings
again peculiar to
Hebrew monarchy
(DN^K^J,
Abraham
found
is
OT.
in
(35^^).
reference
is
and those of
V.20),
alone
Edom
'
to
the
princes'
^'k^,j.
Ezk.
Ex.
(ex.
Lv.
6'^,
determination of
word God
God
34^^),
The
26^-).
is
usually omitted by
to be to
all
that the
on man's part
8. land of thy
The
The
institution of circumcision.
so pronounced that
9.
is
it
new
my
pi.
section
from
^^
onwards),
being
opposed
to "^Sn, 'break,' in 1*; hence it cannot mean 'watch over'
(Valeton), but must be used in the extremely common sense
of observe or act according to.* The question would
the antithesis to
P
*
Ex.
in
*.
keep
covenant]
"'PK^ is
'
6.
in
"'?5<
ipo]
&
^=
^f-*^
Ezk.
see on 15^
4428,
Ch.
8.
ninx]
common word
7^8.
The
list
2913 (cf.
?i'i;sp
2^,
2Sa. 72^(=
Ch.
1722),
Zee. 8\
294
(p)
10.
covenant.
This
my
is
covenant^ Circumcision
ideas
vague and
sufficiently
It is
Ball) to read
nx nxT
^n"'"i3
after the
is
both
the writer's
include
both
representations.
i.e.^
to
elastic
(see v.^^).
analogy of
g^^^-,
Jew
before
Yahwe.
Jos. Ant.
214.
i.
12b, 13
obligation to slaves^
obedience
the other
its
is
is
kindred
who
he cut off
from
[v.i.).
ffi
+ els
The whole
is
possibly a
(KS. Ba. Gu.), due to confusion between the legislative standpoint of ^^^' with its plural address, and the special communication to
Abraham see, however, vv.^^'* Sinn] inf. abs. used as juss. G-K.
H. n^?^^] treated by ^OJ as
113 ccygg: cf. Ex. 12^, Lev. 6^ Nu. 6.
active, from s] ^^^, but really abbreviated Niph. of \j SS^ (cf. G-K. 67 dd)^
a rare by-form (Jos. 5^) of '?id. n'ni] au. nriMi, adopted by Ba. 12. n'3 t*?']
2^]D3 nopo] only vv.^^see 14^1
" and Ex. 12^*. lyniD is the individualising- use of 2nd p. sing., frequently alternating with 2nd pi. in legal
enactments.
So v.^^ 14. in'?ny] jui(!& + 'J'Dsjti nra (Ba.). n'oyo nmaji]
So Ex. 3033.38 3ii4^ Lv. 720f.25.27 1^9 1^8 2329^ Nu. 9^3_all in P, who
employs a number of similar phrases * his people,' Israel,' the congregation of Israel,' 'the assembly,' etc. to express the same idea (see
Dri. 1872).
D'sy is here used in the sense of *kin,' as occasionally in OT
(see 19^ 25^).
It is the Ar. 'amm, which combines the two senses of
'people,' and 'relative on the father's side'
see We. GGN, 1893, 480,
and cf. Dri. on Dt. 32^ (p. 384); Krenkel, ZATW, viii. 280 ff. Nestle,
ih. xvi. 322 f.
KA 7^, 480 f. With regard to the sense of the formula
g-loss
'
'
XVII. io-i8
The
295
birth of Isaac
is
(v.i.).
17.
Abraham's demeanour
and incredulity:
is
It is P's
traditional
18.
The
under Thy
fine
comment.
is
Calvin's
is
touch of nature
lies
rather in
human
feeling
150^.
'
296
of Israel
(^^).
^ny^^']
i'Kvbe^:,
endowed
except
for
princes]
The
section,
(cf. 7^^)]
H'P
kings
'
twelve
of
^- 1^.
as 35^^.
23.
Abraham's household.
repeated in
v. 2^.
Throughout the
is
years
25. thirteen
among
^^T^-
'
stantiality of narration.
covenant.
the
25^^) as
(cf.
23-27. Circumcision of
ever,
(p)
that the
22.
old\
is
is
a sign
214.
i.
Origen (Eus. PrcEp. Ev. vi. 11 :* cf. We. Heid.^ ^75^) and
Ambrose [de Abrah. ii. 348) give a similar age (14 years)
j
for
Egyptians.
the
It
is
Arabs there
fifteen
years
no fixed
is
Circumcision
rule, the
is
Hebrews
the
is
modern
Dri. in
a widely diffused
among
Among
rite
DB^
ii.
504^.
of primitive relig'ion, of
whose
the
there
is
19.
I
^nx]
Ki. 1^)
'^^,
cf.
XVII. 19-26
297
belief that
common
it
was an indispensable
44^'
to
show that
^,
Yahwe
various aspects of the subject, see Ploss, Das Kind in Branch und Sitte
der Volker"- (1894), i. 342-372; We. Heid."^ 174^-? Prol.^ 338 ff.
Sta.
ZATWy vi. 132-143 the arts, in
(Macalister) and EB (Benzinger)
and the notes in Di. 258; Ho. 129; Gu. 237; Dri. 189 ff.; Strack^,
67; Matthes, ZATWy xxix. 70 ff.
The Covenant-idea in P (see also p. 290 f. above). In P's scheme
of four world-ages, the word nn^ is used only of the revelations associated with Noah and Abraham. In the Creation-narrative the term is
avoided because the constitution of nature then appointed was afterwards annulled, whereas the Berith is a permanent and irreversible
determination of the divine will. The conception of the Mosaic revelation as a covenant is Jehovistic (Ex. 24^"^ 34^^^- etc.) and Deuteronomic
there are traces of it in secondary strata
[P^])
but it is not found in the historical
work which is the kernel of the Code (P^). Hence in trying to understand the religious significance of the Berith in P*^, we have but two
examples to guide us. And with regard to both, the question is keenly
discussed whether it denotes a self-imposed obligation on the part of
God, irrespective of any condition on the part of man (so Valeton,
ZATW, xii. I ff.), or a bilateral engagement involving reciprocal obligations between God and men (so in the main Kraetzschmar, Bundesvorst. 183 ff.).
The answer depends on the view taken of circumcision
According to Valeton, it is merely a sign and nothing
in this chapter.
;
DB
*
*
Could
sign
'
this,
of the
298
more;
(j)
i.e.,
cording- to Kraetzschmar,
it
is
Sodom
(J).
(^~^),
and
is
rewarded by
The
(^~^^).
cedes eloquently on
The
lucid,
first
and
its
behalf
(22-33^.
(^"^^)
characteristic of that
document
^3. 14
rv\r\\ i-
nN-ii?V p"i, ^
(only in J 24"
29^^ 33^); 10 ^^^y ^; J. ^*; ^l?y (for ist per.), 3.5; jrSr'?, '^; n? rvp), 13;
rypwT^, i.
The latter part (""33) is also Yahwistic (m.T, 20. 22. 26. 33 . HT[T^ir(]^
nL,t,p,^
25
nygn^
32)^
\^^^
We. {Comp.^ 27
it
here
but
homogeneous
to
up to
^^
XVIII. 1-3
tion of the
phenomenon
in question
299
The entertainment
1-8.
The
description
**
manner
in
In
in the th,ree
three were
all
Yahwe
in self-manifestation (De.)
we
can
hardly
tell.
Yahwist the men were emissaries and representatives of Yahwe, who was not visibly present (see p. 304 f.).
dVh Dh^] at the hottest (and drowsiest) time of the day
2. and behold] The mysteriously sudden advent
(2 Sa. 4^).
of the strangers marks them as superhuman beings (Jos. 5^^),
though this makes no impression on Abraham at the time.
The interest of the story turns largely on his ignorance of
original
'
implies that
^j'lX
m.T] (B 6 6e6s.
I.
on the
*
v.).
In
ktdd 'jSn^]
The same
vhtt
ffi
solution
the suff.
may
had occurred
by him as unproved.
refer
M.
back
see on 13^^
to Ball
{SBOT,
3.
Read with
1896), but
was
300
The
a mistake.
correct form
is
the
throughout the
pi.
speech
etc.
1^,
restoring (with
Sirs/
The
v.
(j)
whole of Abraham's
is
wash your
4.
Lk.
7**, I Ti.
Cf.
feet]
24^2
19^
^^^^^
Amos
^^
5^*^.
seems
Even
j^2i^
2 Sa.
meat
(Gu.), but
n^,
the time of
in
(6^)
to
5.
support your heart] with the food, Ju. 19^104I5. cf. bread the 'staff' of life, Lv.
^,
Ps.
seeing
Ki.
26^6,
13^,
Is.
3I.
Abraham's
corollary of passing
tent.
6-8.
The
preparation
On
8.
and
the Deity
avT(o 7rapea-)(OV
is
(ct.
Ju.
6^^^-
where
13^^).
the items,
OT
only cases in
represented as eating
is
anthropomorphism
9-15.
the
oi 81
The
Bo^av
The promise
of a son to Sarah.
skill.
The
subject
leads
to an
which
aSt
i^'*)
or
n'?D
XVIII. 4-12
30I
less
far
2
delicate
handling of an
Ki. 4i3"i^.
9.
identical
situation
in
In the
was
last
Yah we.
On
listening]
cf.
behind
(the tent or
it
the door)
cf.
Sarah
The
27^.
she being
the footnote.
II.
after
(v.^^j.
the
TO.
yvvaLKta;
JJ muliebria.
12.
Sarah laughed
9. nON'i] fflr nONM (wrongly). V''?n] The superlinear points (cf. 16^) are
thought to indicate a reading "h. 10. njn n^!?] This peculiar phrase (recurring only v.^^, 2 Ki. 4^''^-) is now almost invariably rendered at the
(this) time, when it revives,' i.e.^ next year, or spring (so Ra. lEz,
cf. Ges. Th. 470; G-B.^^ 202 a; BDB, 312 a; Ew. Gr. 337 a; G-K.
Ko. 5". 387 e) but the sense is extremely forced. It is sur 118 M
prising that no one seems to suspect a reference to the period of pregn;n means a woman in child-birth (so perhaps n;n in Ex.
nancy. In
1^^ [Ho. adv.^); and here we might point n;n ny? or .rn 'a, rendering
'according to the time of a pregnant woman,' or 9 months hence, lyia'?
in v.^* is no obstacle, for ni?iD is simply the time determined by the previous promise, and there is no need to add r\xr\ ( after 1721).
2 Ki. 4'^
{r\\j\ 'sS) does present a difficulty
but that late passage is modelled on
this, and the original phrase may have been already misunderstood, as
2^o ^^ ^ time
e.g. ffi Kara rhv Kaipbv tovtov els &pas
it is by all Vns.
when you are living 5 at this time, she being alive
tempore isto,
vita comite.
Ba. also points as constr., but thinks .rn an old name for
HMi]
spring.
read r\'r\\ rinK mm] ux ' N'm ; so ffir olao. dirLadev
airrov.
is perhaps a neglect of the Q^re perpet (Nim).
n. d'D'3 C'Na]
13I 231-2, I
cf. 24I, Jos.
Ki. i^. D'K'JD mx] Ba. Kit. more smoothly, n^k?
12. r\r\y^
DTJ.
'lOfj] ffir Oijirw fxiv fioi yeyovev ^ws tov vvv presupposes an
impossible text njij^; "h n;i;{5 'p^?. The change is perhaps alluded to in
'
NH
<
'
'
^5
MT
'
ABRAHAM ENTERTAINS ANGELS
302
the
name
PW
(see
on
17^"^),
(j)
in this
docu-
ment has not been preserved. waxed old\ lit. 'worn away,'
a strong word used, e.g.y of worn out garments (Dt. 8* 29*
etc.).
This leads to a
insight
still
the speaker
Yahwe and
denied
it]
the angel of
startled
From
the religious-historical point of view, the passage just conits sequel in ch. 19, is one of the most obscure in Genesis.
sidered, with
Homer
Kal re
iraPToioi reX^dovTes,
dvdpdiruv
iwia-TpucpQffi ir6\r]as,
Dr. Rendel Harris goes a step further, and identifies the gods with
the Dioscuri or Kabiri, finding in the prominence given to hospitality,
and the
Mechilta on Ex. 12^ (see p. 14 above Geiger, Urschr. 439, 442). 'inJ
S. (less accurately) fi. r. iraXaMdijval
'rh"^] Aq. ixera t6 KaTaTpL^TJval fie
fie.
14. p N^n^n] Jer. 32"- ^, Dt. 17^ 30".
;
The
primitive rites in
XVIII. i3-i6
name a wish
and
he, being
widowed and
303
childless,
Pudor
'
on
19^).
See Gu.
171,
The judgement
i6-22a.
iv.
of
4667
f.
Sodom
revealed.
^,
The
soliloquy of
and
is
to all
^'^
'
the
ways of Yahwe.
16.
in view of Sodom
[ci.
19^^)]
The Dead
Sea not
being* visible
l6.
Dip] (&
+ Kal
Vo/xSppai.
304
mountains
g-aps in the
17.
said\
(j)
seen through
is
BR,
(see Robinson,
i.
sc.
Himself;
'to
Seehig Abraham,
18.
Yahwe reflects,
etc.\
as
Abraham but
to
For
I have known
Am.
with': as
Hos.
3^,
[i.e.
were, on the
a7id all
22^8
cf.
'13;
12^.
it
Him.
6^-^.
Dt.
him
\'^)
There
is
Abraham's
election
suming
An
v.^^.
npN'l instead of
v.i.
earlier
question
junctive
22b-33.
the
is
20.
Re-
On
that
we may
see
Abraham's intercession.
following- considerations
to
pi.
go down
we would know.
away
Abraham.
to
JVe will
or not :
made
v.
the purpose of
ipx*1,
Hin"'
Restoring the
21.
whether
in ^^^ the
of the promises
fulfilment
is
Sodom
in
^'^^
of
(a) In
Yahwe
22b-33a
^^
^g^g p^
the
men
'
{i.e. all
That
^^
read 'i?j;.
19. vnyi'] juaffiF omit the suffix,
17. After ^n-r^^
while rF<S treat what follows as an obj. cl. {quod, etc.), through a
misunderstanding of the sense of yT. 20. npyi] mx npyii as v.^i. ? {bis)\
The particle is ignored by fflrU also by <2>, which supplies
'dlP 'IK.
.^
>
^o
\\ V and
omits nai
If the
'3.
'3
is
(G-K.
'
'
Its
removal
D^NBn
is
and render,
great, that
nxarr for
r\^'^r\,
it
is
see
G-K.
XVIII. 17-27
305
Yahwe was
fate of Sodom still hangs in the balance, while in ^^^- its destruction is
assumed as already decreed, (c) The whole tenor of the passag-e
stamps it as the product of a more reflective age than that in which the
ancient legends originated. It is inconceivable that the early Yahwist
should have entirely overlooked the case of Lot, and substituted a
discussion of abstract principles of the divine government.
Gunkel
points out that the most obvious solution of the actual problem raised
by the presence of Lot in Sodom would have been a promise of deliverance for the few godly people in the city that consequently the line of
thought pursued does not arise naturally from the story itself, but must
have been suggested by the theological tendencies of the age in which
;
the section was composed. The precise point of view here represented
appears most clearly in such passages as Jer. 15', Ezk. i^^'*^- and in
general it was not till near the Exile that the allied problems of indi;
vidual responsibility
to
yet sufficient
and
unjustly.
etc.]
The question
strikes
of an indiscriminate judgement
there should he fifty
to press heavily
in Israel.
(cf.
small
produce misgiving
Jb.
9^^).
number
24.
in
Suppose
city,
but
if
OT, righteousness
of this
application
fudge^
etc.]
principle
Unrighteousness
subject?
in the
cf.
P'Kin
Jer. 12^.
inward reluctance
certain
alliterative
combination
25.
(Jos.
7^).
dust
and ashes] an
As adescrip-
E^
)J^'3n,
mistaking for
Hos.
25.
fjN
24.
'anger'
Nc-n] sc.
profanum
so SM^.'Z^ end] (5
\\]i=' forgive': Nu.
koI iarai.
14^8,
Is. 2^,
20
n^"?/!] lit.
{sit),'
DESTRUCTION OF SODOM
306
tion of
human
28. '^^'PO.?]
'
is
Abraham
XIX.
'
reduction by 10 instead of 5
human charity is
the limit of
till
ceases to plead.
departed.'
^33b
33. weni]
not to
22a.
1-29.
just
Abraham
left
as guests by Lot
(^~^),
Thus convinced of
by
Thus far J
1
cf. ni,-i%
ns3, 3-
ny, rwi^
(cf.
6"
fire
^.
^^ [--njn],
which the
after
(^^-22^^
and brimstone
^p\c;r\^
(*~^^).
nNnp"?,
reach
nDDH
ly^^.
somewhat para5
3O-32. Emboldened by success,
on account of the
reached, and
(j)
lit.
(De.); this
(23-28j^
2- 7. 8. 18. 19.
20
q^^,
The summary
from
The passage continues
in
^9
<
is
p-Vya,
dmSk,
cf.
9^^- ^^\
in
Abraham's
tent
(18^"^').
and
The
and pi. is less confusing- than in 18; and Kraetzschmar's theory (see p. 298 f.) does less violence to the structure of the passage. Indeed, Gu. himself admits that the sing, section ^''"^^ (with ^^) is
an 'intermezzo' from another Yahwistic author (Gu. 181).
alternation of sing,
Jb.
for
29'^
business
or
intercourse
Ru. 4^^- ^^,
iS^. ":'1N] Sirs! See on iS^.
social
Cf.
mistake the sense. 28. jnon'] The regular use of the ending p (G-K.
The form, though
47 m) from this point onwards is remarkable (Di.).
etymologically archaic, is by no means a mark of antiquity in OT, and
32. oysn] see
is peculiarly frequent in Deut. style (Dri. on Dt. i").
on z^.
I. o'DK^Dn '38?] This word has not been used before, and recurs only
in v.^^ (in xxx also v.^^, and in C& v.^^).
The phrase is, no doubt, a correction for DVj?<i7, caused by the introduction of 22b-33a^ ^^^j ^^ ^q^_
sequent identification of Yahwe with one of the original three, and
2. nj n-n] so pointed
the other two with His angels (We. Coinp.'^ 27 f.).
XVIII. 28-XIX. II
De.'s
inference
Lot's
that
than
Abraham's may be
2b.
The
of Oriental
politeness, or
purpose of the
visit
vision
spiritual
edifying,
may
it
307
but
may
is
was
less clear
hardly sound.
be merely a piece
In an ordinary city
(18^^).
it
would
it
would mean
The
in
Sodom.
(nVj^O
'
6-8.
Ju.
Lot's readiness
daughters,
his
(Dn"i;)p:
v.i.).
only here
2 Ki.
4.
2"
G-K.
20 dy 100
o.
3. njss]
Only again
5i.
of
njfp.Tiyi
so
Is.
njipn-)D
56^1, Jer.
(Gn.
Ex.
26^8,
'
nnnsn] om.
Dt. 4*2 722 i^n,
6.
by
i&'B.
8.
'?Nn]
= n!fXi7
DESTRUCTION OF SODOM
308
The
12-16.
tion, v.i.
warns
deliverance of Lot.
Yahwe has
13.
who
of Yahwe,
(^^^
De.
lEz.
summons. the
are at hand (i
'the
angels^
Sa. 21*).
him without
is
of 2500-3000
ac-
17. the
of
side
mountain] the
heights
steeply to
the
(186)
Sea.
in
not
look
legends and
x.
51
Virg. Ge.
oriental
the past,
of Zoar.
from the
ft.
(Ovid, Met.
brightness
his
Others
16.
Lot
14.
in safety.
The sparing
euphemism (Kon.
491);
cf.
near enough
is
517
a).
'
&
and
ii.
p. 404), or dazzling-
ZATW,
Hoffmann,
'
iv.
iv.
439. 20.
to flee to].
cf.
v.
and blindness
blindness (/,
marry
al.
referring to
common
to
lyVP]
are agents
only half-convinced.
viii.
'
(2^*)
incantations
the construc-
three
as the
17-22.
'
who were
as
''np'S
(cf. 27*^).
complished by sunrise
le/t
On
12.
the
i.
take
al.)
possible
is
i.e.
which
15.
sent us\
(j)
is
^^^.
from excess
in
ii.
68^
ST"
12. '1JI lS''D ny] The stiff construction has led to various operations
on the text.
CRU seem to have read ni^i d'j^i D'jnq S has ^I'Jnq.
Di. suggests that the letters 33i have been accidentally thrust into the
word T"Jnn Ho. and Gu. omit 1 in TJai (so juul) and commence a new
Ba. Kit. delete 1 jnn. The text may be retained if
sentence there
Whomsoever thou hast here as
we take the first cl. as indirect qn.
bring forth,' etc. At end add nvn
a son-in-law, and thy sons
Here used as conj.
with JUUL. 15. idd] "rare and poetic" (Di.).
nNSDjn] <& As ^X^'s Kal ^^e\de
quas habes. 16. n'?Dn] f. inf.
( = nE'N3).
const.
l6b is omitted by A- ', but is found in many cursives.
17. nONM] ffiU5> have pi., which is supported by the previous an'sin
and the following chSk, though the sing, is maintained in the rest of the
;
section.
a'3n]
is
for 3n
G-K.
loy/*.
t3'?an]
five
times repeated in
<&.-\-iviKiv aov,
a.
slavish imitation of
12^'.
oiS.
20.
'
^og
XIX. 12-26
OT
city of Zo'ar
Dt.
142-8,
(13^0
343,
(ffi IiTjyiop)
Is.
23-28.
The
catastrophe.
Brevity
the description
in
of physical
excision
(G-K.
feature suggested
and
by permanent
Yahwe
physical
rained
ii)]
phenomena of
from Vahwe]
2^.
is
The
prohibition of
and
^^,
still maintained by
mentioned as still existing in
10', Jos. Ant. i. 203
the reference obviously being to some
curious resemblance to a female figure, round which the popular
Strack,
literal interpretation
is
WS
n'BTi)
pillar is
21. TJS
'33
The
clearly inadmissible.
'riNtyj]
here
quent in
Mai. 2^, Jb.
'
'
in
1310 etc.).
+
MX HKS' cf. 15^^25. SnH (v.S)]
JH? IXS^ HB't?, aS V.^^.
26. The V. stands out of its proper position (note the 1 consec, and the
suffs.), and belongs to ^'"^ rather than to the main narrative (Gu.).
23.
N!i']
tD')'?
'
DESTRUCTION OF SODOM
310
(j,
p)
Whether
it
SW
many
fantastic projections
supposed
periods.
have attached
to
DB,
See Dri.
iii.
to
itself
different
tradition
may
be
objects at different
152.
that
original
its
position
in
P was
Dead
the
13^^*.
The
The
narrative of ch. 19
an actual
the destruction of a group of cities situated in what is now
first
of the Plain.
after
Cities
sight to be based on
vague
recollection of
constr.
27b. must have been interpolated after
the expansion of ch. 18 by vv.^^*^"^ 28. n33n pN does not occur elsewhere. The variations of .uifflr^ warrant the emendation ii^.tV^ (Kit.).
27. "*? DDB"i] preg.
{tf^an
-lO'pa]
the
same
J). nb'p]
nDijnn]
'the overthrow,'
Slit.
\ey.
unhebraic form of inf., with the fact that where subj. is expressed it is
always (even in Am.) DM'?n and not n^n\ justify the conclusion that the
phraseology was stereotyped in a heathen version of the story
(Kraetzschmar, ZATW, xvii. 87 f.). Comp. the use of the vb. 1921- 25- 29^
Dt.
2922, Jer.
called
'
20^^ La.
4^ lana]
jm. iDjjna is
easier.
i& m.r
'na.
pillar is
now
XIX. 27-29
3^1
'
'
times.
Strabo (xvi.
arrjfxdTcjv Trvpbs
ii.
BJy
iv.
it
took place
its
i.
Tacitus, Hist.
v. 7.
in ancient
fire,
consequence
and so
on.
Cf.
LOT AND HIS DAUGHTERS
312
many
(j)
The
interesting"
New
Cheyne
is
so great that
version of Gn. 19
of vapour hanging over it, its salt rocks with their grotesque formations,
its beds of sulphur and asphalt, with perhaps occasional conflagrations
ever truth there may be in these speculations, the religious value of the
biblical narrative is not affected.
Like the Deluge-story, it retains the
power to touch the conscience of the world as a terrible example of
divine vengeance on heinous wickedness and unnatural lust
and in
this ethical purpose we have another testimony to the unique grandeur
of the idea of God in ancient Israel.
;
XIX. 30-38.
This account of the
(J).
Ammonites
really
Source.
Though the criteria of authorship are slight, there is no
reason to doubt that the section belongs to J : note the two daughters,
XIX. 30-38
and the mention of Zoar in
nyHh 31. 33-35. 37. 38^ with 2928.
30a
^"28,
is
and
^^
;
3^3
*^
4,
with 7^
and
n-j*?:}!,
esp. with
he was afraid
Moab
/A^ mountain] of
to
cf. v.^'^.
should be consumed,
it
The
named
is
habit
as a Horite (Troglodyte
is
till
?)
modern
31.
Syria [1825]).
there
is
no
man
in the earth]
We are
the
So Gu., following
al.), or
all men
shrink from us'
hardly do justice to the language. n^jn-i^a 7]^n3] So
will
in the
*'
When
at stake, the
is
woman
is
'
30 end] joifflrF + 10^.-31. 'Sy Nu] in this sense only Dt. 25". 32. nD^]
MX '3*?.
On
33. ppcni] (so 35-36j. G-K. 47^. Nin nh'^n] (xxx Kinn).
omission of art. with demonstr., see G-K. 126^; cf. 30^^ 32^^ 38^^!
n'^NTiN] ffir +
I Sa. 19^''.
quasi incredibile
(Je.).
'
fluous letter
Trarpds
/iiov
Tr]P
(cf. v. 2^).
(['JaKp).
34.
vOKTa
iKeivTjv.
ncipn^i]
Appungunt desuper,
marks a super-
ffir
'3n.
37.
3NiD]
iD
fflr
and
a, cf.
xvi.
iD is
Aram.
'ID
(=
'D),
'water,'
38.
{i.e,
'Djrjn] r'A/4/4dj',
ja {v.s.).
314
(j)
'
in J,
name
the children.
It is
'
know what
in that region
a wife
of the Exodus,
ii.
is
to
make
(p. 312).
XX.
Ch.
XX.
The chapter
recorded in
315
i2^o~'^^.
It is
two are variants of the same tradition a view which is confirmed rather than shaken by Strack's enumeration of petty
;
differences.
show
to
f.
below) appears
written from a
is
more
Source.
The narrative is the first continuous excerpt fi-om E and
contains several stylistic and other peculiarities of that document esp.
** ^* " ^^ " (^^
hdk (J nns^'), " n^S (J n"?), ^ see
is a gloss)
'C'*^^['7]>
12 (^f. Di.
6
also the notes on iVjjj, ^ -"^k tdx, 2. is
.^^pj^;^
j^^^
279 Ho.
;
"'I'"''
i,
E and
a young
woman
it is
1, 2.
Introductory notice.
Gu. points out, is to let the story unfold itself in the colloquies which follow, vv."- containing just enough to make
these intelligible.
between Kadesh
S of the Negeb,
Tiaa
1JJ1 (note
I.
(14'^)
if
and Shtlr
not beyond
(16^)
its
would be
in the
extreme
The words
natural limits.
new
fact,
I.
3J|rt
ny]N]
'an
py
only
i^'^
(J),
Nu.
(E?). ni^] (ioi9'26i--" [TJ3 ^OJ], 20-28, 2 Ch. 14^2!. I) iQ. Tepapa,
5 5-i|; commonly identified, on the authority of OS, 2402^*' {airixo^'^''132*
Umm
^EXevdepoTrdXeus
of water-pots
ffi)iJ.eioii
'),
ABRAHAM AT GERAR
3l6
2.
(v.t.).
was
(e)
in
felt
{v.i.).
is
"H^?'?^
the
This suits
2 Ch.
al.).
and
10^^
26^ (according- to
14^^
"wv)
which
it
was
pn?
s'lij
it
There happens
pa.
in Philistine territory),
is
certainly inconsistent
to be
a Wddt Gerur,
SW
c.
was
(Gu.), or
notice
'
cf.
2.
^N, v.",
"Sx "i?x]
Ju.
9^*,
'said regarding'
Ps.
3=*
is
it
as a definition
rare: 2 Ki.
19^^^
inserts
TTJs
yap
el-jretv 6'ti
7r6Xews 81 avTifv
mm
XX. 2-9
317
*such as
am'
2 Sa. 15I1,
[v.i.).
5. ^^Iip'ona]
'unsuspectingly';
cf.
6.
The
sin
is
suffered thee
not]
by sickness
(v.^^).
7.
The
situation
is
Abimelech if he
now retains Sarah, he will be on every ground deserving of
punishment. he is a prophet] in a secondary sense, as a
'man of God,' whose person and property are inviolable:
Ps. 105^^.
cf.
Dt.
920,
thou
On intercession as a
Sa.
may est
live] or
'
but
cf.
recover.'
an unjust
fate.
8-13.
sin] i.e.,
8.
&
y\
'ntyy no,
ABRAHAM AT GERAR
3l8
(e)
code of morals:
Abraham
in
10
n^S")]
cf.
inquire
to
this
rebuke
reply,
his
'
exculpation, which
conduct,
his
for
To
has no
into
13^2 etc.
Sa.
34^,
(as in 12^^*)
at the
is
consists
life
writer's apology
of three excuses:
;
(2)
he was
(i)
Israel (2
(Dt.
2722,
stray]
13^^),
Lv.
though prohibited by
i8^- ^^
The expression
20").
is
later legislation
13.
peculiar, as if
God
to
tL
rashly adopted by Ba. Ho. Kit. "TNtan] (& TjfidpTo/xev.io. 0'><1 ""?]
Gu. n'-yj. The translation given above is
iviSu)v ; so F. Ba. conj. riNi;
taken from Bacher, ZATW, xix. 345 ff., who cites many examples from
of the idiom (lit. What hast thou experienced ? '). II. '?] ux 'nxT '3
;
NH
3.
p"]]=
[I
(BDB) seems
to
me
etc.
D^'^SN {pi.
35'^,
insufficiently established
>vr^r}] xu.
Jos. 24'^),
nynn.
The
constr. of
(31'^
by any
I
so Ex.
2o24,
Dt.
ii^^.
XX. io-i6
wanderer
forth an aimless
(Di.).
319
It
proves that in E, as
in
P,
dwell
the land
in
is
peremptory dismissal of
brother\
12^^^-.
betrothed (Ex.
of sarcasm,
(shekels) of
Dt. 22^^^')
22^^^-,
Sarah
puts
in
not the
si'lver]
the
husband
if
married or
former category.
money value of
1000
(Str.),
condoned.
Gn.
Jb. 924,
The
fig.
is
3221,
Ex.
238,
applied in various
I
Sa. 128.The
sense
is
is
ways
in
cl. nriDiii
{v.z.).
i.e., is
OT
cf.
ys-riNi is
The general
completely rehabilitated.
probably a gl.
1 1D3 ^Vn (fr.^^) wrongly. nnsts'i onayi]
being the only instance of rinzp in an E context. 16. nm
7]nN
Kin] mSc ravra iarai aoi eh rifxrjp toO Trpoawirov <rov Kal wdcrais rats fiera
aov
hoc erit tibi in velamen oculorunt ad omnes qui tecum sunt [et
quocungue perrexeris]
S -<^ \ ^' - "^ \ vd-Gl- OOl %.2i\ JOIO
14. ]H^] jml(& pr.
fr.
12^^,
this
.Vnv ^
mence
^\l)5 ]i
here.
V ujA-*-2LkJ.
The suggestion
The
difficulties
of the
Abraham
(lEz.)
v.
com-
may
be
woman
To
!
The first qn. is, Whose eyes
or those of the people about her
Di. adopts the second view, taking
(24)
("n)),
as dat. comm.
this
BIRTH OF ISAAC
320
17.
(j,
E, p)
first
')
XXI.
-2 1
(J,
The
birth, circumcision,
briefly
Then
(1-'^).
by a
which,
weaning
touch
descriptive
finely
festival
is
(^),
below
"^^'^
found
D\n'7x, 2^. 4
sacrificed,
leaving
^*
to J
(niiT,
^^
^,
naming by
n:^ nxp,
^.
is
to be
v.t.)
U
way
the
obs. the
dom
(^^^2^).
P (who by
are from
to
the
(p. 324).
Analysis.
(5)
(^),
linked
II
hensam
>
hast reproached
(2
s.
pf.) is
vAmn I
me ')
isO,lD
^\d
^<^ nnDin'N
mONT nd
b2
h]}\
The change
to
FinDJi
which
but must with
Vb-ns'i,
MT
'
18.
nin'l
jua D'n'?N.
'
XXI. 1-8
belongs to
J**
18
321
is
wholly Elohlstic
D\nVN, ^^ "
and rare
expressions like non, ^*- i^. i9 ncp nnoD, ^^ nK'p nm, 20. Further characteristics are the revelation of God by night {^^'), and in a voice from
! 20.
noN,
12.
!''
^ijt,
18.
Q^B,^
'1^
(J
ntj'y,
'?
jnj,
1720)
(i').
heaven
1-7.
The birth
2^3 ^^20
2^^86
122
(^2i\\
was a
Isaac
of Isaac.
AH
J).
a son
2.
to his
late-born
child
but
section
this
chs.
(ct.
18).
17,
contains
3-5.
The
^^
laughter
is
expresses incredulity.
6b, 7
is
in
iS^^^- 17^^ it
It
has been pointed out by Bu. (Urg. 224: so Kit. KS. Ho.)
that the transposition of
^^
to the end of
'^
greatly improves
the sense, and brings out the metrical form of the original
(in
Heb. 4 trimeters)
Who
"Sarah gives
For
Abraham,
suck"?
to
children
is
Israel also
it
n%n]
Jer. (except
Ju
i627,
2^^ 6^-^^):
in four cases
(Am.
7- !,
name
pf. ('
::f.
6b.
see G-K.
On the modal use of
G-K. 106 p Dri. T.
of species
(Di.).
Ca.
(& has sing.
i&
ry y^pei
of an extinct tribe
10^.
7.
'?!?p]
Aram.
Ex.
2i22,
21
Sa.
'),
17'*^
(cf.
in
'^n^d?':,
"^Nprii;,
cf.
2^
etc.).
prt^]]
poetic.
19.
d'jd] pi.
vjpi'?]
iv
fiov.
EXPULSION OF HAGAR
322
y27f.j^
(e)
9.
Jub.
xvii.
4,
the spectacle of
It is
the
that
distinctions,
Sarah's
excites
social
more
with
fanciful
my son\
If this
still
10.
shows a
certain opposition
(see
ii^^-
to that
custom
cf.
it
the
this
affection.
12.
It is
Sarah's maternal
instincts
purpose.
11^^).
jyi9. 2ij^
^
seed,
cf. ^*)
that
i,e.^
in the line of
Heb.
Hagar's child
j^.
though
'
(still
unnamed)
is
also Abraham's
known
as such.
17^^
cf.
so
(cf. Zee. 8*).
;
play with in a bad sense) would require a following39^*- " may be explained after
3, but it is doubtful if it actually occurs.
26^
in 19^'* it means simply play as opposed to serious behaviour (cf.
see G-K. 52 n.
See above on v.^. On the pausal
Pr. 26^^).
11
12. ^T.] (& + rb prj/j-a.
end] fflr + 'la-fiarjX (wrongly).
13. mx(& read
['j] "ij^ d''^] so v.^^ 46^ (E).
bna 'uV riNin noNn Vna also in U^.
9.
pnsp]
fflc
'
(*
'
'
Ber. R.
based on
liii
Dri.
this pn^p.
DB,
ii.
503b,
XXI. 9-19
l4-i6.
Mother and
323
and insight.
fine feeling
14.
i.
cf.
227,
and the
585).
ii.
^^- ^^.
the wilderness
^i)]
implying that Abraham dwelt
of Beersheba (see on
near^ but not necessarily at^ Beersheba.
15. she cast the
boy (whom, therefore, she must have been carrying) under
one of the bushes] for protection from the sun (i Ki. 19^').
To save P's chronology, De. and Str. make cast = eilends
*
niederlegen
'
with what
a bowshot
16.
and the
boy lifted
off]
The
up
last
his voice
cl.
and wept
(v.^^)
ffi
the change of
now
a grown lad.
effective
was
a more
is
The
remedy
an awkward
MT
'
'
for
as second obj. to
constr.
jrin,
and
In
it
nDDtr'?y djp
do'; (&
(hffel
On
text.
(5
TI?n
(5
tS^ov poX-^v,
nVn
[i-h?]
|Z\
O *^
N'a'-:. 17b.
D''n,attractive
|,
^nna, only
(cf.
26i).
^ip-Sx]
V>
here), see
MSS
G-K. %y^kk.'M)
we'm]
d'd n<a]
EXPULSION OF HAGAR
324
(e)
the
country
(v.^)
That
Comparison of
variations of a
ch.
is
ntyp
nm
'n'l]
an archer
up,
'
3J
mD
'
'
has
The
little
well
to
is
not identified in E.
commend
it.
it
was Beersheba,
XXI. 20-26
XXI.
Abrahams Covenant
22-34*
(E and
Two
325
with Abimelech
J).
up
(A) In the
to a covenant
first,
Abraham,
name
its
(22-24. 27.
31)._(b) In the
wells of Beersheba,
sacred tree
Gu.,
who
appear
?7b
32aj
assigns
the notes.
in
The
^Q j^ ^j^g
j-gg^
J.Q
reasons will
^^j^g
(^'^
^'',
a^j^jj
in
^''^-
Procksch (10
ff.)
^'2;
his
between
(E).
22.
his people
Ptkol
{v.t.)y
his
latter consents
commander-in-chief
seems here
merely a symbol of the military importance of Gerar: otherwise 262^^-, where P. is a party to the covenant. 23. Swear
to me here\ in the place afterwards known as Beersheba (^^).
Abraham's departure from Gerar, and Abimelech's visit to
him in Beersheba, must have stood in E between 20^"^ and
2i22 (cf.
2613-26).
24.
of
25,
26
(J),
is
incon-
which pre-
22. 73'fli]
pr. ffai'Oxofa^ 6 vvfKpayuiyb^ avrov (fr. 26^^).
Spiegelberg
{OLzy ix. 109) considers this one of the few Egyptian names in OT
=p^H-r{j)y ** the Syrian." 23. dk] G-K. 149 c. idji pj] {proles etsoboles)
an alliterative phrase found in Is. 14^, Jb. i8^^ Sir. 41^ 47^t.
25.
n3im] " must be corrected to njVi " (Ba., cf. G-K. %ii2tt): *xx n'an.
But
326
(e,
j)
quentative
n?^"^*!,
(2)
the
pi.
'
wells
'
(retained
of
parallel
fuller
several wells
took
answer]
that
knew nothing
he
2* (E).
Giving (or exchange?) of presents
when a covenant was made
customary
have
been
seems to
The action would be no suit(i Ki. 15^^, Is. 30^, Ho. 12^).
able answer to v.^^.
28-3O (J), the seven ewe lambs are set
27.
Continuing
It is clear
from
^^
Abimelech's question
^9
^^;
but the
is
in J,
(Di.).
30.
may
while
that
it
may mean
lit.
to
put oneself
Hom.
MT
is
8;
following
iii.
27b^*
(the
so that in
etc.]
^V^^^y cf.
the central
not in
shows
art.
nON'i
(instead of
tdni),
pf. g-iven
above.
iNa]
<&.
For the
ut
(\)pe6.Tiav,
sup.
considered distinctive of E. 31. yasy nxn] fflr ^pkap opKia-fiov, but in ^^ $. tov
The constr. (num. in gen. after sing, noun) has been supposed by
Sta. to be Canaanite idiom (cf. ysiN nnp, 23^).
33. hi^n] Ar. 'a^l, Aram.
6pKov.
XXI. 27-34
32 7
26^^).
Among the sacra of that famous shrine there must
have been a sacred tamarisk believed to have been planted
The planting of a sacred tree
by Abraham (see on 12^).
is
than
well.
and
subj. is Isaac,
that the v. should stand after 26^^, rests on the incorrect as-
see
16^^).
6 Kal
KpoVos (Eus.
PrcBp. Ev.
123).
10, 13
i.
ff.),
The assumption
the
is
some 28 miles
SW
xvii. (1901),
Joel
247
and Amos^
ff.
Gautier,
(i90i)> P- 239
tb. xviii.
f.
The
ised as a
trial
'
of his faith
is
life
f. ;
R^^).
expressly character-
D*?!!;]
xix D'^iyn.
34
is
wanting
in ST^ (ed.
Ginsburger).
THE SACRIFICE OF ISAAC
328
command
as a sacrifice at the
(e)
The
of God.
story,
which
is
is
told
shows how
fully the
author realises
by
^^- ^^,
^- ^'
cf. D'n''7^[n],
^-
^^
;
^*^*'
^^
nriy
^^.
On
In spite of mn'
the revelation
"^'
see below.
1-8.
fice.
belongs to
^^-
night,
Comp.
this
I.
Abraham's willing preparation for the sacriGod tempted Abraham] i.e.^ tested him, to "know
what was
presentation
Ex.
cf.
an
anthropomorphic
re-
This
a good ending.
Isaac\
2.
thy son
God knows
say that
of Moriyyah
right well
asks.
{T\'>'''iybT\y^
sacrifice, as if to
how much He
have been
the land
name and
futile.
The prevalent Jewish and Christian tradition puts the scene on the
Temple mount at Jerusalem (nnian nn, 2 Ch. 3^ t6 ViihpLov 8pos, Jos. Ant.
But (a) the attestation of the name is so late and unrei. 224, cf. 226).
;
it is
'
but
it
other way.
is difficult,
As
cir. el. it
that
is
dxraaias,
impossible.
U visionis),
(& t^v
vx/z-qXifiv
(cf.
though a
I2).
<S
real derivation
from
'
XXII. 1-8
329
'
'
When
this
3.
The
off]
4.
(v. 2).
We are left to imagine the pang that shot
through the father's heart when he caught sight of it.
5. Another touch, revealing the tense feeling with which the
indicated
story
told
is
whose
(Gu.).
curious that
It is
of producing
inimitable
N3n'?i3
fire.
7, 8.
('worship').
That
peculiar.
OT
it
3.
'wm] So
'a
means
the
Nu. 2222.
The determination is
two slaves with whom a person of import-
BDB,
my
the
son
lently
'
tL iffTiv,
See
t But
Here
it
is
this
vi.
am
'
Quid
198,
EV
of
if
is
visyfili?
vii.
')
much
8.
cf.
2>^^.
7.
'ja
too pompous.
na-n] jju
was a Jewish
doubtful
Vn. reads
('rare, chiefly in
T^Kvov;
ZDPV,
when he says
for that
s.v.
'jjn]
'Yes,
ffi^U
excel-
112)
seems
in error
tradition.
V'Q^1?
I^CL^
in 2
Ch.
3I also.
330
'
(e)
Sa.
Mook out'; as
The word points forward
6^- ^^.
The
9-14.
sacrifice averted.
The w.
10.
9,
12I3
41^3 [Dt.
3321]^
to v.^*.
describe
the extreme
is
stayed by a voice
now I know,
21^^.
16^^,
Thus
etc.]
early
sacrifice is the
was the
truth
moral disposition
51^^*-).
The
13.
substitution of the
assigned to E.
alludes
niH"'
'^i<"|''.
name
it
seems
to
v.^;
scarcely probable.
is
i.
14b.
The
no sense appropriate to
the
words
i^Ji^^
^i^"3,!.
In
name,
450), which
yield
">'"!?
context.
MT
mig-ht be rendered
seen' (Str.), or
(b)
iny]
Is 30^^
'
In the
npy]
(6t7r.
Xey.) in
NH
avixirodicras.
lO.
^nv
ZATW,
is
techni-
xvii. 51).
ni,r]
D'nSg
Str. (3:^, 2. in
so v.^^
13.
temp, sense).
MT
(Ta^eK,
S. iv dLKTvcp (np^f?),
paraphrase of
C*-' is
Aq.
interesting
iv avxveQvi,
:
'
And
inter vepres.
14.
The
XXII. 9-19
33^
in this case the saying would be hn"): nin' (^'**), and ^^^ would
seen
merely mean that it was used in the Temple mount. All these are obWith a slight change (n.na for '3) the cl. would
viously unsatisfactory.
read In the mount Y. appears (so fflr), or (with ni<y. for nN-j;.) In . . .
Y. sees (US'). The text has probably been altered under the same
tendency which gave rise to ^nb in v,^ and the recovery of the
original is impossible.
Gu., with brilliant ingenuity, conjectures that
the name of the sanctuary was '?Nn; (2 Ch. 20^^) this he inserts after
wnn and restores the remainder of the v. as follows nn^ n'vn tcn tb'k
D'nSs riKV = |for he said, ** To-day, in this mountain, God provideth."
:
'
'
'
'
15-19.
The
seemed to a Jehovistic
occasion
hence a supple-
swear]
49^^t.
cf.
nin^
DX3]
lit.
murmur
Even P (Nu.
phrase.
17.
it
is
myself I
22^
more discriminating
bless themselves
in his
use of the
(ffi TroXeis)
cf.
24^*^.
(Hhhp.)] 80*26*;
cf.
i.e.^
take
18. by thy
Dt.
29^^, Is.
Ps. 721^1.
Beersheba
45^^, Jer.
By
Is.
significance
14^^) is
16.
whose
forgotten before
elsewhere
R-'^),
15.
demand an
to
red.
v.^*.
The secondary character of^^"^^ is clear not only from its loose
connexion with the primary narrative, but also from its combination
of Elohistic conceptions with Yahwistic phraseology, the absence of
originality, the improper use of nin' dn^, etc.
Cf. We. Comp.^ 20 ; Di.
291 ; Ho. 165. The view of De. (324 f.) and Str. (82), that ""^^are from
a
22^"^*, is untenable.
J parallel to
Dominus
16 end]
2 Sa. 12^.
Add
'Jsp
as v.^
<&.
iv
ry
Ut^ M^
:
so <&1B.
Bpei KiJ/jios
&<f>dirfy
TB in
monte
IjCL^.
332
(e)
to
(J,R).
is
here introduced a
descent to Nahor.
list
of
12 tribes
Abraham,
tracing their
identified
The
(20-23j
^^d
illegitimate
XXII. 20-24
P*) sons expresses a distinction
333
The
Cf.
N\T 03 20.24^
(see
21a
^^
jqIS
a Yahwistic genealogy
23b
-,"7,
28
reg-ard to
the
'
'in nnN is not exclusively Elohistic (see on 15^), and in any case
would be an insufficient reason for ascribing- (We. Comp.^ 29 f.) the whole
section to E.
See Bu, Urg. 220 ff. The genealogy appears to have
been inserted with reference to ch. 24, from which it was afterwards
separated by the amalgamation of P (ch. 23) with the older documents.
Its adaptation to this context is, however, very imperfect.
Here
Abraham is informed of the birth of Nahor's children, whereas in the
present text of 24 the grandchildren (Laban and Rebekah) are grown
Moreover, with the excision of the gloss ^^^ {v.i.')^ the only point
up.
of direct contact with ch. 24 disappears and even the gloss does not
agree with the view of Rebekah's parentage originally given by J
Hence we must suppose that the basis of the passage is
(see on 24^^).
an ancient genealogy, which has been recast, annotated, and inserted
by a Yahwistic writer at a stage later than the composition of ch. 24,
but earlier than the final redaction of the Pent.
20. ry-^h'o] see on ii^^. ^hn nim*?] 1122.-21. py] in \o^ a subdivision
of Aram, is here the principal (nn?) Nahorite tribe (cf. 36^8).
na (Bai^f
Baiy^^, etc.)] mentioned in Jer. 25^3 after Dfidan and Tema, is probably
the Bdzu of Esarhaddon's inscr. {KIB, ii. 130 f.), an unidentified district of N Arabia (so Jb. 32^).
'?NiD|t)]
unknown
see Praetorius,
ZDMG, 1903, 780, D-JJ* '3^? (Traripa Supcoj/) is possibly a gloss (Gu.),
but the classification of the powerful Aramaeans (see on lo^^) as a
minor branch of the Nahorites is none the less surprising see p. 334
below. 22. "i??'3] The eponym of the D^-nip?. But whether by these the
well-known Chaldaeans of S Babylonia are meant is a difficult question.
Probabihty seems in favour of the theory that here, as in 2 Ki. 24^, Jb.
i", an Arabian (or rather Aramaean) nomadic tribe is to be understood,
from which the Bab. Dn^3 may have sprung (Wi. AOF, ii. 250 fF.
The result has a bearing on the meaning of Arpaksad in lo^^
Gu.).
iTn ( A^aO)] probably the HazH mentioned after Bdzu
(see also on ii^^).
in Esarhaddon's inscr. (above).
v^hs and f]h-]: {'le\Sd<p, 'leSXdtp) are not
known. With the former have been compared Palm, i&ihs (Levy,
ZDMG, xiv. 440) and Sin. wiJS (Cook, Gl. 98 Lidz. Hdb. 352), both
'?N^n?] as personal name 24^^^personal names.
(J), 2520 282- " (P).
23a. is a gloss (Di. Gu.) excluded by the general scheme of the
genealogy and by the number 8 in ^sb^
The last consideration is
decisive against Di.'s view that the original text was njjn-i-nNi jn^'DXi.
'n.t
G VI,
468
i.
ff.,
pend.
G-K.
iwh,
147^.
GENEALOGY OF NAHOR
334
in 2 Sa. 8^
(MT
no?
|I
(j)
nn?j?,
Ch.
a city
No. 127,
i8^),
TA
and Pap. Anast., near Kadesh on the Orontes (but see Miiller, AE^
ana (Taa/i, Faa/i, etc.)] unknown.
tynn (Toxoj, 6aas, etc.)]
173, 396).
probably Eg-. Tehisi, on the Orontes, N of Kadesh {AE, 258
Wi.
MVAG, i. 207). HDyp (Maaxa, Mw^a, etc.)] Dt. 3^*, Jos. 12** 131^- i'
2 Sa. lo^'^, I Ch. 19^^-; an Aramaean tribe and state occupying the
modern 6olan, S of Hermon, and E of the Upper Jordan.
To the discrepancies already noted (p. 333) between the genealogfy
and ch. 24, Meyer {INS, 239 ff.) adds the important observation that
theory of
He
J,
Nah6r
fits
in
city of
On
(P).
Abraham becomes,
'
XXIII.
for the writer of the
of
Code
That the
I,
though
was
interest
(25^*- 492^^-
335
not easy to determine
it is
chapter belongs to
Code
50^^)
P
;
is
(6)
proved
by the
{a)
by
allusions in
formalism
juristic
and redundancy of the style (c) by the names nn '33, n'?3DD, yanx nnp,
ninx,^- ^' 20; n'cj, 6
|y:D pN and the expressions DB'in, *
nip,"- 20 T\ipOy ^^ (see
the notes and cf. Di. Ho. Gu.). Against this we have to set the '33N of
V.*, which is never elsewhere used by P.
At the same time it is difficult to
acquiesce in the opinion that we have to do with a free composition of
The passage has far more the appearance of a transthe writers of P,
cript from real life than any other section in the whole of P
and its
markedly secular tone (the name of God is never once mentioned) is in
;
'
I, 2.
name
The death
of Hebron,
of
v.i.
lay.
to
Sarah. 2.
not
^^2*!!]
wail
DBy
iii.
453
in
Tode,
d.
ff.).
end (wanting
to
{(& iv irbXei
'
cf.
Kp^bK)]
nnjj'
^f\'.n
The
The
^).
at the
U'f
old
name
of
{EHH, 57 fF.), that the incident belongs essentiBabylonian and not to the Assyrian period,' is not borne
out by the cuneiform documents to which he refers the correspondences
adduced being quite as close with contracts of the later Ass. kings as
with those of the age of IJammurabi. Thus, the expression full silver
under
(v.^) is frequent under Sargon and subsequently {KIB, iv. 108 fF.)
silver to the full price {ih.
the first Babylonian dynasty the phrase is
The formula for 'before' (a witness) is, in the earlier tablets,
7fF.).
mahar in the later, p&n^ neither the precise equivalent of those here
used ('.4|5 and '^s'j;^). There remains only the expression weigh silver,'
which does appear to be characteristic of the older contracts but since
this phrase survived in Heb. till the latest times (Zee. ii^^^ Est. 3^), it is
Sayce has not strengthened
plain that nothing can be inferred from it.
see Dri. 230, and
his case by the arguments in ETy 1907, 418 ff.
Addenda}, xxxvn f.
* Sayce's contention
'
THE CAVE OF MACHPELAH
^^6
The request
3-7.
tions
fall
The
a burying-place.
for
into
(p)
East
such matters,
in
To
by purchase (Gu.).
negotia-
Abraham
is
at
3. arose]
2^).
document
the only
S of Canaan
(cf.
26^
36^)
in
and the
'
'
\\^
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
4.
(in
means 'Four
an
cities'
artificial
(see
on
(cf.
25^^-
Pe.
archaism [Mey.
y^a* 1x5,
p. 326).
*'^,
2^^),
Nu.
35^^,
The
technical
The name
Efitst. 106]).
The
and
personification of
as heros epotiytnus (Jos. 14^^ 15^^ 21^') has no better authority (as ffir
shows) than the mistake of a copyist (see Moore, Jud. 25). Jewish
Midrash gave several explanations of the numeral amongst others
from the 4 patriarchs buried there Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Adam.
{Ber. R.
P. R. Eliezer, 20, 36; Ra.) the last being inferred from Dnxn
Vnjrr in Jos. 14^5 (Jer. OS, 84^2).
The addition of ^^x poy "^N (ffi ^ kcTil iv
T(^ /cotXw/Ciart) seems a corruption of poy '3X (Ba.) or (with <&)
qn in Jos.
15^2 21^^.
nsD*?] In Heb. usage, as in that of all the cognate languages,
n3D means *to wail'; see Mic. i^.
4. 3^ip] lEz. px3 yjvn "un n^n.
According to Bertholet {Stell. z. d. Fr. 156-166), the 'n is simply a^<?r(see
on 12^'*) who resides fixedly in one place, without civil rights, and perhaps incapable of holding land see EB, 4818. 5. i^ noN^ (so v.^'*) is an
abnormal combination, doubtfully supported by Lv. 11^. The last word
VT\}<
'i'
XXIII. 3-15
distinction
between
"13
and
(rd.
337
obscure
3C'in is
I^Vp^ ^^ v.i.)\
{v.i.).
6.
if
D'^nl^N t<-^3 is
'
withhold^
^/c.
therefore there
is
no need to buy.
Behind their
The
7.
V.
The appeal
Abraham shows
tion of a free
is
The
(cf. 12).
first
concluded.
to 'Ephrdn.
In
gift,
and
wishes to reach.
in the
close.
with the
(cf. 'V
^fc<V\
34^*).
13-16.
The purchase
of the
Abraham
tactful persistency,
With
field.
thou
same
the
13.
If only
the polite
The
last is the
with impve.,
8.
I
cf.
to
v.*",
G-K.
DSB'ijrnK] 'in
and read
no ^.6.
all
n^?']
so
xxx<&)y
(^- ^i*
four cases
= K5>?:, G-K.
or
^^
iS
^'').
(as
^^).
On
\h
75 gg.
BDB,
showing that
always with
art.,
22
'
'
<*.
THE CAVE OF MACHPELAH
338
tion of generosity
/foo shekels
observed
still
whal
that
is
;
it is
(p)
land [worth]
in the East."^
.
?J
The word
for
'
land
money
'
is
that
'
391
iii.
ZAy
f.).t
upon
at all periods
loi,
it,
Papyri
are
cf. e.g.
common
KIBy
iv. 7, 17,
{^Wv cent.);
Assouan
Inscr. cited in
The
narrow valley
in
which Hebron
NW
^-ni]
better
PiKi (ffi^).
nonsense but
in quo erat spelunca duplex suggests a
i?*}? which (if it were better attested) would remove the
double cave was applied to
difficulty of supposing that the name
'Js'?] ux ':s '?V as in ^^='in front of,' perhaps *to
the district around.
<Tirr)\al(p
is
reading
'en ia
'
the
'
of.'
* *' The peasants will often say, when a person asks the price of any
this answer
thing which they have for sale, Receive it as a present
having become a common form of speech, they know that advantage
and when desired again to name the price, they
will not be taken of it
Lane,
will do so, but generally name a sum that is exhorbitant."
'
'
XXIII. I6-XXIV.
339
iii.
197
ff.
The motive
usually assigned
is
is
XXIW ,Procuring a
Ch.
(] ,
[E?]).
Abraham on
amongst
Isaac
servant
is
whose daughter
the
his
Mesopotamian
relatives
i^-^).
The
divinely
(see
on
appointed
v.^^)
Rebekah he
bride
for
is
Isaac
led to recognise
(io-49j^
Having
her
(^^~^^),
(62-67).
'
340
(je)
We
'
'
him (' ^^), is met by Abraham in two ways on the one hand
by the confident assurance that this will not happen C^- ^**), and on the
other by absolving him from his oath if his mission should miscarry
( ).
In 29f- Laban twice goes out to the man at the well {^^ ^^) ^8
in ^ the servant
speaks of the mothers house, ^sb of t^g father's
with the brother and mother
negotiates with Laban and Bethuel, in *^'
of the bride in ^^ the request is at once agreed to by the relatives without regard to Rebekah's wish, whereas in "^ the decision is left to
to follow
II
^'^
herself; in
Rebekah
II
P's
-,^,^,
1. 3. 7.
mN jns)
12^^); yr,
21. 40. 42. 56
16
12. 21.
26.
'mSiDi 'snx,
(see
(3^2.
3.
on
23)
(12^)
4^); B"
44.
D'D*3 3,
with
j^^^n^ 13 (gySO)
suff.
;
(see
and
nKip*? pi,
56
on 18")
ptcp.
" (sCC
*^-
Q,^.^3 q^jj^ 10
;
nnD nna,
iS^)
mo,
K3,
^6.
(against
^^
(26', cf.
45
.
p'Ssn,
41
XXIV.
everything"
I,
is
341
Abraham's residence
''**'/3'
The
1-9.
His
servant's
as recorded
life
the oldest
2.
{i.e.
default of an heir,
is,
commission i. had
blessed,
etc,\
and
still acts as the trusted guardian of the familycomp. the position of Ziba in 2 Sa. 9^^- i6^^-.
put thy hand, etc.] Only ag^ain 47^^ another death-bed scene
It is, in fact, only the imminence of death that can account for
had Abraham expected to live, a simple
the action here
command would have sufficed (Gu.).
(152^-),
interests
The
reference
life-giving'
"One
under him
approaches
342
(je)
posterity (oi;
'N^,
46^6,
Ex.
i^,
oath.
God of
3.
and of
heave7i
5-8.
The
servant's fear
not
is
for
would the oath bind him in that event to take Isaac back to
Harran ? The suggestion elicits from the dying patriarch a
last
heaven] vJ.
The Angel
is
fication of
God's providence;
in
cf.
Ex.
7.
23^^- ^3 ^32,
God of
Nu.
20^^.
i67ff-.
The
10-14.
life,
see
Thomson, LB,
i.
261.
of
fidelity
ten
10.
(^i).
camels] to bring
D^p as
'33^1
V.'
n^x]
5.
10.
Unless
omit the
Ju.
38,
first
as^n n"?
(but
we admit a
^.^'l
Ps. 6o2,
"''?
jom.
a'trn)]
juss. with
^i'?
duality of sources,
it
G-K.
will
109 d,
be necessary to
Ch.
element with Eg. Nahartn, TA. NaJirima (79^"* [rev.], 181^^, \\<f^) is bebut it is perhaps too readily assumed that geographically
the expressions correspond.
The Eg. Naharin extended from E of the
Euphrates to the valley of the Orontes {AE, 249 ff.); all that can be
certainly affirmed about the biblical term is that it embraced both sides
of the Euphrates (Harran on the E Pethor on the
[Dt. 23^]).
Since
there is no trace of a dual in the Eg. and Can. forms, it is doubtful if
yond dispute
XXIV. 3-15
343
things]
On ^Aram
goodly
(22- ^^).
the city of
Nahor
case a
much
29^).
12-I4.
is
illustrated
may
The
servant's prayer.
by Ju.
S^^^-,
148^-
Sa.
be referred to (see on
The request
:
note
for a sign
three cases.
in all
camels would
usual,
position.
in
(if
9".
15-27.
The
15.
to
Bethuely
all
The somewhat awkward phrasing- has led Di. al. to surmise that
these vv. have been g-lossed, and that here the orig-inal text ran hk'n
np^p n-1^;, Rebekah being the daughter of Milkah and Nah6r.
Comp.
'1JI
insertion of Bethil'el
'
MVAGy
1908, 2, p. 8f.
G-K.
and
There would in
no need to find a second river (Tigris, Chaboras, Balih,
Orontes, etc.) to go with Euphrates. The old identification with the
See, further, Di.
Greek Mesopotamia must apparently be abandoned.
12. ry^pn] 'make it occur,' 27^0 (J).
302 Moore, /w. 87, 89; KAT^, 28 f.
14. 'liij^] Kr^. n^v^n; so vv.i^-^-^^.ev 348.12^ Dt. 22^^^ ^^^^.
myjn
307 f.:
cf.
88
c,
Str. p.
135
f.
with
reff.).
It
G-K.
15.
'
135
After
Dnc3
rd.
nVs; (cf.
G-K.
107
c. .oiffiF
ins.
iaH^
after
344
1
Taking no
6.
down
4^^.
Jn.
the water
The
19, 20.
21.
Ex.
ct.
maiden went
In Eastern wells
2^^ (njpnril),
damsel.
is
(je)
alert
at
The
nose-ring
3.n6.
stranger, and
the
in
maiden.
320, 323
cf.
R^^
is
453^-
perhaps
the scene.
her mothcT^s house cannot mean merely the female side of the
Laban belongs
to
it,
Some
house.
Gu.)
dead.
is
I have cleared
31. seeing
18
20.
ngn^ (^).
^^-^^
and
end]
ffir
+ ^'ws
is
was
two words
G-K.
130
nptyn] the
a.
22.
DU accordingly
is
(E) an earring.
iVpt^D]
juuL
+ nsN
Sy nr'i,
A mere
1436, iSSdye).
a mistake
28.
for
n^x]
noy nam]
S)
see
j.
]]] implies
'hn]
perhaps DX
'3
(Ba.) or
'?
(Kit.); if not
XXIV. i6-48
into a stable.
it
.
32.
and ungirt
saddles.*
to
33-49.
wash
The
345
man
in {v.i.^
servant's narrative.
recapitulation of
commodates the
text
to
before,
35. Cf.
is
of
(^ frequently ac12^
but
132.
its
36b.
40.
unauthorised
before
to
the
TikkzinS
^^-2*.
'
as Lv.
<3;i]
(Ols.
14^*', Is.
40^ etc.
cf.
KS. Gu.).
awkward change of
The objection (Di. al.)
(U) avoids an
Kre and
33. Dg'i]
in
MT
of 50^
ixx.
(d??"'.!)*
dip' eavTTJs
(conflate ?)
"B de
humero
(cf. ^^).
* ** The camel is very delicate, and could easily catch a chill if the
saddle were taken away imprudently and on no account can the camel
stay out of doors in bad weather. It is then taken into the house, part
of which is turned into a stable " (Baldensperger, PEFS^ 1904, 130).
;
34^
49,
where
that 1
(Di.),
may tum^
but generally
most
I
by the Nahorites
etc.]
that
eligible
(je)
to act.'
answer had or
Nu. 24^^ etc.
to
good', i.e.,
anything whatever, as
3124.29^
'
is
settled in accord-
53.
The
relatives.
(34^2^
Ex.
22^^,
we may have a
sadak (the
all
but disappeared.
terms for dowry (KM^, 93, 96) cf. Benzinger, Arch.'^ 106.
The reluctance to part with Rebekah is another indica:
55*
On
The
master
Rebekah
is
still
alive.
57, 58.
now
to
Ch. 21' 32^^)] ' costly gifts,' fr. ^ nJD, Ar. magada
ffi^U read n'riNil and so ^F and many Greek
curss. in ^^
iiB'y ix D'D']
a few days, say ten,' is a fairly satisfying rendering (fflc ijfi^pas (ha-el 8^Ka)
a year or ten months (^^ Ra. ) is hardly ad53. n3^JD (Ezr. i^ 2
n'nNi]
missible.
In deference to axx& we
or at least ten days' (Ols. Ba.).
(cf.
29").
'
may
"nhn]
au
nn in D'D' ^ ___LDQ-
;
xj^j^
a month
all
Vns.).
XXIV. 49-62
but whether she will go at
may be
of the bride
^^
*your daughter,'
of.
The
all.
347
34^,
rid of.
59.
MSS
^.
of
the marriage
Ru.
(cf.
35^.
rhythmic
4^^^-),
60.
The blessing on
in form, is
perhaps an
Rebekah.
variants.
parallel to
62-67.
Isaac
her nurse
'
in
name
of
^^.
had come
is
The
circumunexplained disappearance
Keeping- these points in mind, the most conservative
of Abraham.
exegesis is that of De.
Isaac (supposed to be living with his father at
Beersheba) 'was coming /row a walk in the direction of B.', when he
met the camels this, however, makes n;*'! (^3) plup., which is hardly
right.
More recent writers proceed on the assumption that the death
of Abraham had been explicitly recorded.
Ho. suggests that Isaac
had removed to Lahairoi during his father's life (transposing 25^^^ before
24^^), and that now he comes /wtw that place (reads laisp) on hearing of
Abraham's death. Di. reads ^^a /- -yy^^ ^^ [pns']N3'i, and finds in these
words the notice of Isaac's migration to B. KS., reading as Di., but
making the servant implicit subj. of .y\ puts the chief hiatus between
*^* and "''
the servant on his return learned that Abraham was dead ;
stantial
form of the
sent.,
and partly
in the
59"
'"lOpJl^]
ffi Ttt
{firdpxovra airrjs
PtJ^ipO,
a word of
(G-K.
P.
is
62. 'i3p]
an
34^
(je)
then
63.
nib^'j']
Rebekah dismounts
of a stranger
of respect
still
Reisen,
190)
iii.
Jos. 15^^,
cf.
Abraham
viro),
dead.
is
as 2 Ki.
(i'EJ
is
The
Sa. 25^^.
65.
mark
5^1),
762
i.
Seetzen,
It is m.y master]
ME^,
The next phrase (il3S
i.
217
f.).
(cf.
nubere
is
part of
67. brought
nnb*) violates
a funda-
Isaac's
own
tent
is
tent]
referred to.
marriage ceremony
This
in the
is
al.)
(Lag. Procksch)
'NT
'n"?
nN3]
ffir
to substitute [yaiyiJNaD
and
(*
from Beersheba to
'
Ba.).
'
V {ad meditandum
con-
place.
p.
*
(here
f.).
It is
(o/itX^o-at), S. (XaX^o-at),
the sense of
from
mourning'
n'if (21^').
(hn^s"?
noVmVnX
is
(adopted by Ges. al.), but is rather a conjecture. No. {Beitr. z. sent, Spr.
43 f.) suggests a connexion with Ar. 5/fa = stroll (point vfixh),
D''?DJn of jju. is wrong (t;.^.).65. ni^n] zf^\\ ux iSn. t]'ysn] 38'''- ^^t (J).
On the art. cf. G-K. 126^. After Lagarde's brilliant note {Sem. 23 ff.),
it can scarcely be doubted that the word denotes a large double square
wrapper or shawl, of any material. 67. nN3'i] ffi eiarfKdev 8L rrwa n^nnri]
G-K. 127^^ For ISN^
art. with const, is violently ungrammatical
read V59 niD (Kit.) v.s.
'
XXIV. 63-XXV.
349
Sons of Keturah
tribes with
whom
(J ?
R?).
EdomAbraham by a
second marriage
(cf.
Ch.
i^^f.j^
The names Midian, Sheba, Dedan (see below) show that these
Keturean peoples must be soug-ht in N Arabia, and in the tract of
country partly assigned to the Ishmaelites in v.^^ The fact that in
Ju. 8^^ Midianites are classed as Ishmaelites (cf. Gn. 37-'^*) points to
some confusion between the two groups, which in the absence of a
Yahwistic genealogy of Ishmael it is impossible altogether to clear up.
We. {Comp.^ 29') has dropped a hint that Keturah may be but a traditional variant of Hagar * Ho. conjectures that the names in ^'* are
taken from J's lost Ishmaelite genealogy and Kent {SOT, i. loi) thinks
Keturah was originally the wife of Ishmael.
it not improbable that
Glaser (ii. 450) considers the Ketureans remains of the ancient Minaean
people, and not essentially different from the Ishmaelites and Edomites.
See, further, on v.^^ below.
{a) The genealogy (}'^) contains slight traces of J in "i^;, ^
Source.
\J5 nVx-"?!! * (cf. lo^** 9^9)
P is excluded by ^'?^ and the discrepancy with
10'' as to Sheba and Dedan
while E appears not to have contained any
genealogies at all. The vv. must therefore be assigned to some Yah;
Sheba
in lo"^.
The
(i)
in ch. 24,
that 25^"^
work
is
the
and 24^
refers back to
of a compiler,
who has
So Jewish interpreters ST J, Ber. R., Jer. Qu.j Ra. (but not lEz.).
The mere transposition of 25^"^ before ch. 24 (Hupf We. al.) does
not fully meet the difficulty, there being, in fact, no suitable place for a
second marriage of Abraham anywhere in the original J (Ho.).
t
350
I.
Keturah^ called a
below),
concubine
'
in
(j,
r)
Ch.
i^^
(^f.
v.
is
2.
pD] (Ze^pdv,
[Zadpafi?] of Ptol.
of Pliny,
HN^
The name
is
ZofJL^pdv,
vi. 7. 5,
etc.)
W of Mecca (Kn.)
(which is common in the Keturean and Horite lists and rare elsewhere)
A connexion
cf. '"!PI, Nu. 25^^ i Ch. 2^ 8^ 9^^.
being- apparently gentilic
with np] {Si vr^1)> Jer. 25^ is very doubtful. On j^i7: ('le^di', 'lefcrdc,
:
etc.) see
on
Medan near
v.^
(Ma5ai/i)]
J'JP
unknown.
j;"ip
(MaStct/i)]
1;
XXV. 1-7
35
AHT,
28
f.
f.,
252
f.,
lay,
prii
327 ff.
found
AA,
248
Nabat.
in
attention
is
inscrs.
see Levy,
ZDMG,
xiv.
403
and a connexion of
with
n^'y
'*?
iyt?S
in 4^^ is
is
24^^.
6. The exodus of the Bne Kedem (comby
redactor).
posed
a
the concubines] apparently Hagar and
Keturah, though neither bears that opprobrious epithet in
in 16^ Hagar is even called n^N.
Gen.
Moreover, Ishmael
and his mother, according to J and E, had long been
separated from Abraham. sent them away from off Isaac]
so as not to be a burden upon him.
Cf. Ju. 1 1^.
eastward
land
Kedem]
the
the
Syro-Arabian
desert.
to
of
See on
5.
So we must render, unless (with Gu.) we are to take the two phrases
and nij^ p^!"^ as variants. But D-ii? in OT is often a definite geographical expression, denoting the region E and SE of the Dead Sea
(cf. 29^ Nu. 23', Ju. 63- 33 712 810^ Is. 11", Jer. 4928, Ezk. 25*- 1", Jb. i^)
and although its appellative significance could, of course, not be forIt is so used in the
gotten, it has almost the force of a proper name.
Eg. romance of Sinuhe (c. 1900 B.C.): see Miiller, AE, 46 f. ; Wi. GI,
52 ff. ; Mey. INS, 243 f.
nipnp
a^j.g
phrases
^^^
\'n
u^
continuation of 23-" in
"^
'D;,
',
5 end] /juC&S
DmaN*?
'"i33.
6.
b^j^'?
(see
on
(P).
P.
^dnj,
ologfy
tjjg
D'nS^,
^^^
;
the chron-
backward reference
22^^) is
used of a
in 49^1.
nns?' in 35^2.
DEATH OF ABRAHAM
352
gathered
8.
to his
kindred (sqq on
(p)
denoted burial
expulsion of Ishmael
Abraham) were
and Ishmael] The
(like
Isaac
consistently ignored by P.
is
Iia.
(25^^^-).
(like V.')
v.^^,
16.
the exception of
of the Priestly
Code.
and
'
peoples
'
(^b.^, ^^)
eponymous ancestors of
forming a
political
'
another isolated
is
is
The
which
v.^^,
(P).
(i3-i6j
that
is
the promise of
cf.
12 tribes
172*^)
assumed
name of Ishmael.
In the geography of P the Ishmaelites occupy a territory intermediate between the Arabian Cushites on the S (10''), the Edomites, Moabites,
i.e., roughly speaketc., on the W, and the Aramaeans on the N (lo^^*-)
In J they extend
ing, the Syro-Arabian desert north of Gebel Shammar.
;
to the border of
mark
in history.
Egypt
From
(v.^^).
The
Ishmaelites have
left
very
little
Ass. records, Meyer infers that their flourishing period was from the
In
the latest possible traces
1 2th to the 9th cent. B.C. {INS,
324).
OT
of Ishmael as a people are in the time of David (cf. 2 Sa. 17^^, i Ch. 2"
27^), though the name occurs sporadically as that of an individual or
clan in
much
Ch. 8^
9**, 2
Ch.
19^^ 23^,
riDKM]
mvT^I
<&.
is
possible that
Ishmaelites
'
is
in
8. nD'i yii'i]
'1JI
S'^*, it
as
D'D' yatri,
32''
(all
35^^.
P). 10.
XXV. 8-i8
353
ND'n
unknown.
show)
6'^) is
25^^ Jb.
250 miles
the
by the Reubenites in the time of Saul, ma' is no doubt the same people
which emerges about 100 B.C. under the name 'Iroi/paioi, as a body of
fierce and predatory mountaineers settled in the Anti-Lebanon (see
Schiirer, GJV, i. 707 ff.).
Of no"]p nothing is known. Should we read
niij as I Ch. s'" (Ball,
Kit.)? 16. Qnnvjn|] in their settlements' or
villages
cf. Is. 42^^ the villages that Kedar doth inhabit.'
Dnh':??;] nyo
<
'
3ii,
Ezk.
23
'
GENEALOGY OF ISHMAEL
354
Abraham
dwelt.
If Havilah
has been
(p)
rig-htly located
on
p. 202
above,
see on
but
it
'
XXV. 19-XXXVI.
main groups
A. Jacob
I.
The
(see
and Esau
birth
by a fraud
and Laban
The
trans-
(29^"^^).
2.
and Rachel
Jacob's
2.
(27).
B. Jacob
I.
(25^'''^).
Jacob procures
3.
(29^5-30).
Treaty of Gilead
^^
6.
4.
the
(31I-32I).
5.
The
Reuben's incest
birth of
The meeting
4. The visit
of
to
(352"-).
(35^-").
20*^.
9b. 22
2il8a/3y3b 33l8a/5
^^^.
9f.
U-13a.
^6*.
Evcn
here,
HISTORY OF JACOB
356
with the exception of ch. 34, which seems to belong- to an older stage of
But the component documents are no longer
tradition (see p. 418).
represented by homogeneous sections (like chs. 16. 18 f. [J], 20. 22 [E])
they are so closely and continuously blended that their separation is
always difficult and occasionally impossible, while no lengthy context
can be wholly assigned to the one or to the other. These phenomena
are not due to a deliberate change of method on the part of the redactors,
but rather to the material with which they had to deal. The J and E
recensions of the life of Jacob were so much alike, and so complete, that
they ran easily into a single compound narrative whose strands are
and of so closely knit a texture that P's
naturally often hard to unravel
skeleton narrative had to be broken up here and there in order to fit
work were
fitted
Aram and
return to
Canaan
and Esau
and before
it
came
Jacob
and E, the
to be written
down by
assumed a
is
the strongly
marked biographic
motive which lends unity to the narrative, and of which the writers
must have been conscious, the development of Jacob's character from
the unscrupulous roguery of chs. 25, 27 to the moral dignity of 32 ff.
Whether tradition saw in him a type of the national character of Israel
is
more doubtful.
As regards the
it
has to be observed
in
first
nations of Israel and Edom and similarly at the end of ch. 31, Jacob
and Laban appear as representatives of Israelites and Aramaeans. It
has been supposed that the ethnographic motive, which comes to the
;
XXV.
357
19
between the Exodus from Egypt and the conquest of Palestine {Einw.
38 ff., 56 ff. cf. Ben. 286). There are indeed few parts of the patriarchal
history where this kind of interpretation yields more plausible results
and it is quite possible that the above construction contains elements of
truth.
At the same time, the method is one that requires to be applied
:
with very great caution. In the first place, it is not certain that Jacob,
Esau, and Laban were originally personifications of Israel, Edom, and
Aram respectively they may be real historic individuals or they may
be mythical heroes round whose names a rich growth of legend had
gathered before they were identified with particular peoples. In the
second place, even if they were personified tribes, the narrative must
necessarily contain many features which belong to the personifications,
and have no ethnological significance whatever. If, e.g., one set of
legends describes Israel's relations with Edom in the south and another
its relations with the Aramaeans in the east, it was necessary that the
ideal ancestor of Israel should be represented as journeying from the
one place to the other but we have no right to conclude that a similar
migration was actually performed by the nation of Israel. And there
are many incidents even in this group of narratives which cannot
naturally be understood of dealings between one tribe and another.
As
a general rule, the ethnographic interpretation must be confined to
those incidents where it is either indicated by the terms of the narrative,
or else confirmed by external evidence.
:
XXV.
19-34.
and
(^^"^^),
In the circumstances
in their contrasted
modes of
life
teristics,
peoples,
Edom and
his birthright
(29-34)
Israel
explains
how
Israel, the
younger nation,
1^5'
Vv.^^-
To P must
"^
note
r\-h^r\
^^^,
which
358
to
Je)
in 27^.
assig-n
it
cisive,
nrnajj, 32
(p,
in favour of J (k^,
^;
marriage. P
Isaac's
19, 20.
scribing Rebekah's
follows
Mesopotamian
de-
(si^o-^^j in
relatives
as Aramceans
28^),
(cf.
naturally
(lo^^).
alone 48^]
Mco-oTroTa/xta?) is P's
for 'Aram
The
21-23.
pre-natal oracle.
equivalent
in all probability
21.
With
denotes
the prolonged
Rachel
Sa.
(i
(29^^),
i^),
Vahwe]
Cf.
(of
Gen.
No
i^^^-.
miraculous intervention
n'?Ni]
the birth of
It
is
section
P ending with the death of Isaac (35^^) but see the notes
235 f. The use of the formula is anomalous, inasmuch as
Isaac, already recorded in P, is included in his own gene-
or) of
on pp. 40 f.,
alogy.
Sa.
looks as
20.
had handled
the editor
if
words
pn^: in
-j|
his
document somewhat
DCfi^ti!
hx. faddan =
niVin
v.^2).
'
cf.
'
of the
21.
slain in sacrifice
'
XXV. 19-25
and our only regret
suggested
everyday
family
piety
so
is
359
that this glimpse of
is
meagre.
tantalisingly
22.
{v,i.) in
who
yaarpbs
Karb.
Bihl.
6X\-fjKovs.
ii.
2.
ff.),
sons
to the history of
Esau and Jacob, which has a bearing on the question whether there is
an element of mythology behind the ethnological interpretation of the
biblical narrative (see pp. 455 f.).
Another parallel is the Polynesian
myth of the twins Tang-aroa and Rongo (Che. TBI, 356).
two
nations]
naming of the
twins.
either
tawny or red-haired
Birth and
24-26.
2327-30^
J^DnN
nahe
lieg-en
is
24. Cf.
OT. 25.
bei einander"
(We.
142).
22.
issinij
iffKlpruv (the
with
fsi,
(&
ei
oCtwj
fioi
fioi
tovto;
But the
merely emphasises the intern (G-K. 136 fr), and the latter part of the
sentence seems incomplete:
quid necesse fuit concipere? ^ 1 1 Vr>\
nj
PI
]ji.>j.
85.38
2g
^gH
4388
Jog.
6^
[l
Ki. l68^]
is
characteristic of J
(1931.34.
f).
'
BIRTH OF ESAU AND JACOB
360
Edom
on
(see
v.^^)
a play on
(^VK^) is
(p,
a mantle of hair
Se'ir,
Je)
is
finds
name
Jacob.'
Their manner of
27, 28.
man
The
38^^^).
(cf.
explanation of the
skilled in hunting,
life.
clause
27.
is
meant as an
Esau becomes a
man
stupid
(Dri.).
'),
A connexion with
strict
Mey.
ZATW,
of
MVAG,
ZATW,
xxi. 60
Ramses
t
'
II.,
1907,
i.
fF.
vi.
The
and
27.
Homm. AHT,
INS, 251
f.,
name has
281
f.
Muller,
(defectively written) in
AE,
112.
f.
one of Ramses
162
by Muller
Luther,
in
ill.
a
:
list
see
(1909), p. 90.
So
2p.ii
'follow'
(Ps. 49^t)>
3PV (Jer.
17^),
in
nspv (2
Ki.
lo'^f)-
The meanings
XXV. 26-30
Though
documents.
different
occupation
doubtless
some ethnographic
Jacob,
pastoral
where
life
'an
conception of
this
Esau's
is
significance
has
it
and game
is
3^1
man'
blameless
ethically
(Jb. 1^
man
etc.),
here
douce '),
as contrasted with the undisciplined and irregular huntsman.
28. A preparation for ch. 27, which perhaps followed im-
[Scotice,
V.^^,
however,
is
also pre-
supposed by
29-34.
ority of Israel to
superitypical
bordering on the
'
Edom, as a
hunters.
civilisation
were
^Jacob
firmly fixed
the
the
in
obvious corollary.
29.
an inten-
red
1^
v.^*.
With a
30.
slight vocalic
change
{v.i,)y
we
28. VE3 'V^ '?] A curious phrase, meaning 'venison was to his taste.'
would be easier to read (with Ba, al.) vd^ or an adj. (3ic3?) may have
fallen out.
(Ir<S appear to have read 'r\-^.
only here in the lit. sense; elsewhere =* act prenn]
29. TTJ
It
"111
sumptuously.'
na (common
The
The
derivative
in Ass.).
;
used
TU
(2
'Jc^'ivn (Stt.
in
NH
2^^)
DiNn
Dixn]
repetition of the
impatient greed.
30.
ESAU SELLS HIS BIRTHRIGHT
362
may
render
').
The name
is
^Ed67n\ a
(je)
play on the
word
for
'
red
'
(0*^^).
the long-coveted
to secure
birthright,'
the
i.e.
superior
The rare term iTib? denotes the advantages and rights usually
enjoyed by the eldest son, including such things as (a) natural vigour^
px n'?'N-i.), creating a preof body and character (Gn. 49^, Dt. 21^":
sumption of success in life, (6) a position of honour as head of the
family (Gn. 27^^ 49^), and (c) a double share of the inheritance (Dt.
2ii5ff.)^
By a legal fiction this status was conceived as transferable
from the actual first-born to another son who had proved himself more
worthy of the dignity (i Ch. 5^''). When applied to tribes or nations,
and
it expresses superiority in political might or material prosperity
this is the whole content of the notion in the narrative before us.
The
idea of 5'/>?W/wa/ privilege, or a mystic connexion (such as is suggested
in Heb. I2^''^-) between the birthright and the blessing of ch. 27, is
foreign to the spirit of the ancient legends, which owe their origin to
||
aetiological
reflexion on
The passage
{Bibl. Arch.
46
32. Esau's
:
Israel
ff.),
by the patriarchal
man
and Edom.
presupposed
tradition.
is
exaggerate.
H^O?
T]>n
34*
al.),
but
story
exposed to death
Esau's unconcern
for
23^^,
Ezk.
darkish brown
'
lentil
common
name 'adas:
4^), still
(DBy
iii.
soup.
^''^^V. (2
95a).
article of diet in
the colour
The
Sa.
17^*,
Egypt and
said to be
is
if
a
a
Esau was
was incapable
of appreciating.
the
first
(cf.
XXV. 3I-XXVI.
363
Ch.
20
ch.
(^"
The
f.).
cf. 20^'-) is
Rebekah
(^~^^
||
Abraham
esp.
success in agriculture
without an Abrahamic
(^^"^^
parallel), his
(^^"^^
||
2y^^-)^
and,
(cf.
R, P).
(^*^-) is
p^"^^
21^2-34),
||
jhe
notice of Esau's
an excerpt from P.
The
style, except in *^*- and some easily recog-nised repatches (^*^r ^^^b. sb-e. is. is gee the notes), is unmistakably
Yahwistic: cf. mn' (2.12.22.28 [even in the mouth of Abimelech, '^
Source.
dactional
HKnO n310,
29]);
m.T
'
22
11^3, 29 (24^^).
Some
(138)
m.T
08^3 Nnp,
25.
n^^,
28
i*-,
but these
are dubious. The relation of the passage to other strata of the J
document is very difficult to determine.
On the one hand, the
extremely close parallelism to ch. 20 f. suggests that it is a secondary
compilation based on JE as a composite work, with the name of Isaac
But it is impossible to imagine a
substituted for that of Abraham.
motive for such an operation and several considerations favour the
theory that ch. 26 is a continuation of the source distinguished as J^ in
the history of Abraham, (i) The Abrahamic parallels all belong to
the Negeb tradition (J^ and E) and it is natural to think that J^, representing the Hebron tradition, would connect the Negeb narratives
with the name of Isaac (whether Abraham or Isaac was the original
hero of these legends we cannot well ascertain). (2) The language
(24^^)
of
in
on the whole confirms this view (cf. q'ptJ'n, p^nyn, '' db'3 Nnp, '' nti, and
the phrases of 25).
(2) The ideal of the patriarchal character
agrees with that which we find in J^ (magnanimity, peaceableness, etc.).
In any case, it is to be observed that the ch. stands out of its proper
order.
The Rebekah of '* is plainly not the mother of two grown-up
and 27^ is the immediate consons, as she is at the close of ch. 25
tinuation of 25^* or 28 (see We. Comp.^ 30).
all
Sojourn in this land, and I will be with thee and bless thee.
(^"')
I.
ISAAC AT GERAR
364
On
25^^.
that Gerar
anachronism (see on
3a.
and bless
husbandry
ful
10^*),
(j)
Beer Lahai-roi,
The assumption
E.
was a
made
Philistine
also in
J'^
kingdom
(21^^)
20^'-.
is
an
but not in
thee\ a
(^^^),
Abraham.
naSo)
(Dm3N
^*i3y
12^".
^*/3^
('1JI
is
nn'W)
is
many
7-1 1. Rebekah's
lie
honour compromised.
7, 8.
Isaac's
it.
ns pnvp]
2 Sa. 11^.
it is
unmotived.
xt}'^^-
20,
26'^"^^
msnNn] so v.*
use of
pi.
(which
is
characteristic of
7.
Dipon
'5J':k]
ffi
rare
P (Ho.
Ju.
+ ?i'nN.
"ibxl?]
;uuffi^
19^^.
II.
Dyn]
juxffi iDy.
'
XXVI. 3-i6
365
from particular phrases recurrent in each e.g. Nin 'nnN, ann, ij*? n'ry nNrriD,
HNiD [riD'] naitj, etc. (cf. Kuen. One?, i. 228).
Although many good
scholars (We. Kue. Ho. al.)are of a different opinion, the present passage
appears to be the most colourless and least original form of the tradition.
In li^'^^- (J**) the leading features the beauty of the heroine, the
patriarch's fear for his life, his stratagem, the plagues on the heathen
monarch, his rebuke of the patriarch, and the rewards heaped on the
latter
are combined in a strong and convincing situation, in which
each element stands out in its full natural significance. In ch. 20 (E),
the connexion of ideas is in the main preserved though a tendency to
soften the harsher aspects of the incident appears in God's communication to Abimelech, in the statement that no actual harm had come to
Sarah, and in the recognition of the half-truth in Abraham's account
In zG^' (J^) this tendency is carried so far
of his relation to Sarah.
as to obscure completely the dramatic significance of those features
which are retained. Though Isaac is the guest of Abimelech (v.^), it
men of the place who display a languid interest in his
is only the
beautiful wife no one wants to marry Rebekah, least of all the king,
who is introduced merely as the accidental discoverer of the true state
of affairs, and is concerned only for the morality of his subjects. No
:
^^J,
'
'
situation arises
and the exemplary self-restraint manifested
by the men of Gerar affords no adequate basis for the stern injunction
of ", which would have been appropriate enough in ch. 12 or ch. 20.
critical
12-16.
Isaac's
successful husbandry.
is
still
ii.
296).
in
Cultiva-
12.
See
ff.
37*^.
13-16.
13-16. Gu. thinks the vv. are a pendant to the Rebekah incident, corresponding to the gifts of the heathen king (12^^ 20^^) and the expulsion of
Abraham
(12-").
indeed,
might
it
It is
more natural
fairly
'
'
NH
)iy'B'=*
measure').
13.
G-K.
113 w.
ISAAC AT GERAR
366
(j)
Seeon2i25f'.
^rf el-Gerary
the
vi^adis
above (SE)
converge, including
W.
er-Ruhaibeh
(v.22)
(*
22.
Rehohdth
Ruhaibehy
in the
('
room
')
with er-
plausibly identified
is
ii.
382
SW
f.).
^a
practice
reads
thy father.'
Nowhere
else
in
Gen.
is
Abraham
spoken of as the servant of Yah we. 25a. Note the correspondence of the phraseology with 12^^' 13*- ^^ 25b. Seev.^.
so (of an individual) 33^^ (E). 18. 'D'3] x(!ErF, Juh. n?a.
'".
On the masc.
in the same sense 2 Ki. 3^^- ^5, 2 Ch. 32'suf. (so v.^**), see G-K. 60 h, 135 0. 19. '?n33] ffi + Vepipwv.20. ptry]
poy is common in NH, Tg-. in the sense of ' be busy, occupied
&-K. X7.
hence in Ethpa. difficilem
in Syr. it means durus, asper, molestus, fuit
17.
DiDDO'i]
|n^i]
used
'
se prcehuit.
v.22: cf.
XXVI. 17-33
26-33{v. I.)
The
3^7
common
adviser,
26.
official
2 Sa. 16I6'.,
See
vv.^*-
^^.
Ki. 45,
28.
in
Ch.
The n^X
2f%Pikdi\
is
'Ahuzzath
or 'vizier,'
an
and
period,
2^^
10^^; cf.
see on 2122.-27.
n"'")3
'
place.
possible to recognise in these imperfectly preserved leg-ends a
It is
disputes,
rig-ht
of Beersheba (21^).
is lost
sight
26. ninK] (for the ending, see Dri. Sam. 107) has sometimes been
mistaken for the noun meaning * possession' (17^), taken m the sense
of a body holding together (see Ra. ad loc.) so C iniDm nyo, company
of his friends ; Jer. collegium amicorum ejus Gr.-Ven. KcnToxn ^e rov
152- ^^
jno] a rare word for companion,' sodalis (Ju. 14^^'
<f>IXov (Field).
2 Sa. 3^, Pr. 12^ (?) I9't)> whose use in the story of Samson suggested
the pvix<pay(aybs of fflr here. 28. irnir^] need not be deleted (ffit^F, al.).
The form mra (42^3, Jos. 22^4, Ju. ii^o, 2 Sa. 21^, Jer. 251^ Ezk. lo^- fi'-t)
is always two-sided, and is here resolved into the commoner pai
pg,
exactly as 2 Sa. 21''. Hence in the first case ** us " means all the parties
to the covenant, in the second only the Philistine representatives.
nny nnN] juu. nnx nny, (& 'n 'yi,
29. nfc'yn] On the -, see G-K. 75 hh.
*
'
^'^
32.
1^]
V Abundantiam, &
\\*^ro
ffi
{dir.
{n-ji'y,
Ezk.
16^^).
of sibilants, one
is
'
'
368
and the covenant becomes a general treaty of peace and amity, which
In E there
also have had historic importance for a later period.
is no mention of contested wells at all, nor even a hint that Abraham
had dug the well of Beersheba while J^ seems expressly to bar any
connexion between the covenant and the discovery of the well.
of,
may
34,
Esau's
35.
represented as
Hittite for
Canaanite
wives
Hittite
living with
still
'
:
see on 23^.
I.
-45
Esau
P,
Mamre
Hivvite
is
(35^^).
however,
It is possible,
(P). In
Isaac at
'
(so
36^*-.
How Jacob
Blessing (JE).
read
25^"*
(or
25^^),
to be
is
The
Rebekah succeeds
Edom
in the
race for
power and
Esau
to Jacob,
related with
is
tions
fine
ethical
traditions.
Sources.
The presence of a
dual narrative
is
rendered probable by
34
35-38,
35
and ^ (Esau's
II
II
II
II
XXVII. i-s
369
umerated, however, the stylistic criteria are hard to trace and in the
attempt to disentangle them almost everything- hangs on the word ni.T
in ^.
As to (b), 24-27 jg certainly J, and ^^'^ consequently E it will
follow that in (c) ^' belongs to J and "-" i to E.
With regard to (a), it
is almost impossible to decide which is J's variant and which E's.
Gu.
assigns ^^'^^ to E, on the somewhat subtle ground that in J (^ ^7) Isaac
is ignorant who it is that has personated Esau, whereas in E {^- ^) he
knows very well that it is Jacob (so Off, SOT). Most critics have
taken the opposite view, but without any decisive positive reason. See
Gu. p. 270 f. Pro. I9f. It is not worth while to push the precarious
analysis further anything else of importance may be reserved for the
;
notes.
1-5. Isaac's
his
his
It is quite
(25^^).
of 25^^.
I.
of old age
^^y quiver
3*
weapon
thee] so
its
Blindness
(Is.
^^'
^'
(v.t.)
7^*;
^^.
and
if
OT
{^S^^^- 502^*-,
2 Ki. 13^*^). 5.
2^^-y
4.
that
my
soul
may
bless
often in
2 Ki. 13^^).
cf.
As
is
Sa.
(cf. 4810, i
all
2Z^',
Ki.
The
close connexion of the blessing and the eating, which is inon throughout the narrative, is hardly to be explained as a reward
for the satisfaction of a sensual appetite
it rests, no doubt, on some
religious notion which we can no longer recover.
Ho. compares the
physical stimuli by which prophetic inspiration was induced (cf. i Sa.
sisted
I.
pnDni]
and
q.
The last
'''
^^
31^^
so
v.^*),
is
read.
24
JACOB SECURES THE BLESSING
370
(je)
''
of Yahwe's
see on v.*.
II-13
and may be omitted from
the other narrative, with the effect of making Rebekah's
initiative still more apparent
Jacob obeys her without a
word. II. a hairy man] see 25^^. The objection shows
just enough shrewdness on Jacob's part to throw his mother's
consciousness
probably belong to
presence
(see above),
16^.
relief.
13.
raiment
this
to his
own
resources.
18-29.
quickly
21-23
"i3.y
6. n33] cf.
'1J1 n?'t<j2
may be
v.
the addition of
variants
jai^n (ffl^) is
^^^
(E)
unnecessary.
is
etc.
(J).
the clause
8.
'Vp?
characteristic of E,
and
and
])D\ff of
12. ynyno (
yyn)]), properly * a stammerer (cf. An tdtda) then
J.
*a mocker '(2 Ch. 36^^); hence not a mere practical joker (Kn-Di.), but a
'
'riNnm] 5'
jAjZo
(2 s.f ).
Day.
27).
18.
^^,
!<* ^'-
XXVII. 6-27
371
the words of
24-27 bring the parallel narrative (J) up to the
same point. 27a,. The smelling of the garments seems to
have a twofold significance on the one hand it is a final
test of Esau's identity (otherwise the disguise v.^^ would
have no meaning), on the other it supplies the sensuous impression which suggests the words of the blessing 27b
blessing.
(so Gu.).
seen, is composite (perhaps ^^ "* ^"^ ^s g y i9b.
primary documents the interview was less complicated,
and the movement quicker, than it now appears but since neither has
been preserved intact, we cannot tell how long Isaac's hesitation and
Jacob's suspense lasted in each case. In J as it stands, it would seem
that Isaac's suspicions are first aroused by the promptness of the supposed hunter's return, and perhaps only finally allayed by the smell of
Esau's garments. In E it is the voice which almost betrays Jacob,
and the feel of his arms which saves him from detection. For details,
The
20.
section,
24-27-- J)
we have
jj^ j.j^g
(^^),
and
is
partly natural
(2^^- ^8),
partly politi-
Its nearest
Dt. 33^^^-
and
it
is
originated in N. Israel.
27b
its
(J),
d^(f^^'^
cf.
The
Dri. T. 75.
resemblance to
^sa^g
128.
(from mn)
is
(cf.
^)
(so Gu.).
^^^o.^
;
In
ii.
79, 316.
trimeters
but
27b. mty]
xix
372
(v.z.).
cf. Is. 5^
with
'oil'
28. 22
etc.).
reference
(2 Sa.
At
zgsia
(J).
nations]
29a^
all
mediate situation
forgotten.
is
29b
Ho.
7^^,
The
25^^.
cf.
subdued by David
is
8).
Peoples
(cf.
49^).
(pi.)
Cf. 12^.
(J).
detected
little
is
he.
{v.i.).
more
.
certainty
whom
the
now
anything
H^o^ then^
is if
33.
and blessed he
see above).
of (Gu.
(v.^^).
?]
scarcely to be thought
shall be]
nature irrevocable.
is in its
same words
in ^.
Here
34. bless
me
too] parallel to
the
and ^ (E)
because he was
off,
Sap,
surprising.
after 49^
n*3J] v.'^f.
^'n^/"]
^r^T*^
^'H?^,
wrongly.
("inx, nna),
see
IDN
G-K.
'33]
145
(&.
?i'5n 'a
/.
30a contains two variants, of which the second is connected syntactic^^ Since the form of * resembles 18^^ 2^ 43^^ (all J), we may
ally with
assign this to
(juss.).
33.
J,
'?3p]
to E.
31.
inf. abs.).
d;:;]
n'.T
Pt.
rather
^n3
dj 'k]
Dp;
The
emendation of Hitz. (Ols. Ba.) 'n:i Tina d? '3N is hardly suitable such a
sentence would require to be preceded by another action, of which it
was an aggravating or supplementary circumstance (cf. 31^^ 46^,
Nu. 16^^). It is better (with ax) to read dji, and (with OSr) to insert 'n;i
at the beginning of *. 36. -an] cf. 29l^ 2 Sa. 9^ (231^ ?), Jb. &^. The
:
XXVII. 28-40
me? Note
All that
wealth
makes a blessing
has
political
373
wept] corresponding to
^**.
trapped
tears
almost
among
are
creature,'
"Those
the
draws
what
forth
most pathetic
39, 40a.
some
the
in
His importunity
though couched
virtually a curse,
is
of Esau, the
in
dwelling be;
caravans, etc.*
Edom
jection of
Joram
Ahaz
or even
(2 Ki. S^^^-),
(16^).
40b.
The
prosaic
common
The
^^
30^,
Lv.
territory of
to the
figure
is
Kal fidKuTTa
ij
irpbs'lovdatq,.
Modern
travellers,
however, speak of
it
as
* is it that ?
etc., satisfies every case (see BDB, 472 a),
simpler than that given in G-K. 150^.
Ho. (so Gu.) thinks ^^
a redactional expansion but it has to be considered whether ^^ (II ^^a)
38. '2H '3N* DJ '3D"i3] = 34b (j).
Qn the syntax
is not rather a fragment of J.
rendering- above,
and
'
is
of
see
':n,
some
retain,
'ui n&'.\] (&^- aJ- om., but MSS and daughter- Vns.
135 e.
with the addition Karavvx^^vros 5^ 'I<raa/c (pni;: D'nn.). 40.
G-K.
Ezk. 33I9. nnj? (Jer. 2^\ Hos. 12I [?], Ps.'ss^ Ju. ii^?
[em.]t) probably connected with Ar. rdda, 'go to and fro (No. ZDMG,
when thou becomest restive.' ajul ^^Nn, fflr /ca^ Atjj = nnw.
xxxvii. 539 f)
Vy n;n]
cf.
Dt.
8',
'
Comp. Josephus on
re
the Idumaeans
KLvfuxara Kal
/xera^oXaLS
310).
iv.
alel
231),
re
and
Isaac's
374
charge to jacob
(p)
extremely
cf.
curse.
It is probable that J's narrative contained a form of the curse on
Esau, but whether any part is preserved in ^^^' is doubtful. ^^ is certainly
from the same source as ^^ (E) with regard to ^"* the question stands
open. On the metre, see again Sievers, i. 404 f., ii. 78 f., 317.
Ba.'s
denial of metrical form is based wholly on the doubtful ^^.
;
Esau's
41-45.
purpose of
of thee
days
a
few
45.
satisfaction
known
instability,
(Is.
and
Ezk.
i^^,
till
5^^)
by killing thee.
44,
at the
light of the
trial
of separation.
to
facob
it.
(P).
Two
from
and
stories of
viz.,
inhabitants of Canaan.
law, Esau forfeits his
which
is
By
title
intro-
to the
blessing of Abraham,'
and Jacob's
The romantic
is
in
flight is
search of a wife.
^ws TQv
6.iT0<JTp^^a.i
XXVII. 41-XXVIII. 9
375
(cf.
Gu. 341).
Marks of P's
n^i] n-j9,
'^INJ,
243- s^)
m,K
D'oa
}^9,
2- 8.
Snj?, 3.
46
is
supplied by
to
XXVIII.
{v.t.).
^^.
2.
I.
P he simply
Qn
t^
(]'E).
night ,at_Bi:bel,
dreajn-olji^ladderJeading from
tithe
him byAwaking,
-a:,
place.Bejtlieljt'l
in the
all
Iain, as a'
event
of)
'
MT
al.)
ALQDCIO
(cf.
^J)
see on
36=*.
JACOB AT BETHEL (je)
^y6
Analysts.
18. 22
(i^-ie).
For E,
cf.
D\n'?N,
12. 17. 20
''.
818 22^5a.
To
2624 3213.
and
("*
^^^^^
^.jjg
353-
17-22)^
in 31^^
'
13"^
genuine) ^^,
^^* breaks the
though
connexion of ^^ and 20, and may be taken from J ^^^ is an explanatory
(So nearly all recent critics.) Kuenen (C^n^. i. 145, 247) considers
gloss.
^^"^*a redactional addition to E, similar to 22^**^^ etc., on the ground
that J attributes the inauguration of the worship at Bethel to Abraham
(12^), and nowhere alludes to the theophany here recorded (so Meyer,
INS, 236^). But (to say nothing of ^^*) the parallelism of ^^ and " appears
to prove a real amalgamation of primary sources (Di.).
Gu. regards ^^
as secondary, on account of its stereotyped phraseology.
1
^" (nnn),
J belong, further,
the latter is more probably interpolated.
(if
10-12
place]
Jacob's dream.
(E).
the
i.e.y
holy- -plase^'
oL
ii.
Beihel (see
12^),
whflse
by what followed. he took [at haphazard] 0716 of the stones of the place] which proved itself to
be the abode of a deity by inspiring the dream which came
stair' (the word only
12. a ladder] or
to Jacob that night.
was
sanctity
reveal^gjd
The
here).
is difficult
v.^'^).
Its
(cf.
En.
Ixi. i).
is
that nigjht^vertook the patriarch just at the sacred spot (see Ex.
The
is
3').
that the
inherent sanctity ofjhe place, and ia particular of -the jtone^ was unknown
It is very probable, as Ho.
till J_tJ53;S discovered Jby Jappb^s dream.
suggests, that this points to an ancient custom of incubation at Bethel,
in which dream-oracles were sought by sleeping with the headioucontact
with the sacred stone (see Sta. G F7, i. 475 f.).
13-16
(J).
The
promise.
appears from
^^a,
3?b' in ^^
in
26-'*)
is
257.
11.
16^
j^i^
1^6^
j2.
nam
(lit.
oSn'i]
partly a re-
Sa. ig^s- 18
usual vivid formula in relating a
The
The promise
(^^- ^),
XXVIII. IO-I7
377
latter is not
improbably a
lnijjijiiilj^eon_thou liest\
totb.e solitary
de3cription_^..gecu.liarly aj)pro^xiate
16.
Qn
^^^
see
bec^se
iterance
he had. treated the holy place as common ground ( C^). The
in
exclamation doubtless preserves an echo of the local tradition, more forcibly represented in E (v.^^).
It is the only
case in Gen.
Ex.
(cf.
3^).
17-19. Consecration
place.
pensable (see
fully
awaking
(^^)
is
17
even
^^).
expressed than
in J
the place
is
Only a
Israelite could
intercourse between
The first designation naturally arises from the name BHh-el, which
(as we see from v.^^) was first applied to the sacred stone, but was afterwards extended to the sanctuary as a whole. When to this was added
the idea of God's dwelling- in heaven, the earthly sanctuary became as
were the entrance to the true heavenly temple, with which it communicated by means of a ladder. We may compare the Babylonian
theory of the temple-tower as the means of ascent to the dwelling-place
it
37^ ((&) ^ 40^ 41MU. 7^^^ Is. 298. 13. v^y 3X3] 182 24^^ ^51 (all J).
rU,S take D^p as antecedent to the suff. but the idea would have been
expressed otherwise (i*? '?3,?ep), and the translation loses all its plausibility
when the composition of documents is recognised. Before le^v^r^^ <&. ins.
dream:
/iTj
0oj3oi;.
ps^ for
Ex. i^S Is.
aSc
pxn nD^D]
ojs ^ (l;U/xos Tri% daXdaa-rjs,
the word properly break through
543 etc. 15. '?3a] (!& + Tinin.
14.
fflr
'
after 32^341^9.
[bounds],
cf.
n:in3i]
30^*
^^,
Tl,
2,7^
'
'
AT
sanctuary
20-22
in the
(E).
neighbourhood.
Jacob's vow.
The
vow
in
OT
**
consists
18. n^vD] (' thing set up; Ar. nush, Ph. nasD) is the technical name
of the sacred monolith which was apparently an adjunct of every fully
equipped Canaanite (or Phoenician) and early Hebrew sanctuary (see
f.
of a spirit or deity,
belief of
140).
XXVIII. i8-22
379
essentially of a
tion
bread
{c)
safe return
to eat
except as
and raiment
to
The
wear.
separation of sources
On 2lb,
shall be
(ffi
adds
v.i.
to
It is to
:
i.e.
be
the stone
a ma^zebah.
22b.
(cf.
He
will
1420).
In its present setting the above narrative forms the transition link
between the Jacob-Esau and the Jacob-Laban cycle of legends. In substance it is, we can hardly doubt, a modification of the cultus-legend of
Bethel (now Beittn, situated on an eminence about 10 miles N of Jerusalem, a little E of the road to Nabulus), the founding of which was
ascribed to the patriarch Jacob. The concrete features which point to
a local origin the erection of the mazzebah, the ladder, the gate of
heaven, and the institution of the tithe are all indeed peculiar to the
account of E, which obviously stands nearer to the sources of the native
From
tradition than the stereotyped form of the theophany given by J.
E we learn that the immemorial sanctity of Bethel was concentrated in
the sacred stone which was itself the original Bith-el, i.e. the residence
of a god or spirit. This belief appears to go back to the primitive stone-
Ex.
9I8,
Nu.
known
1421.
For nS
'iki,
i^f.
The name
cf.
may be
in the time of
* But We. {Heid.^ 190) remarks of the Arabian custom : " Die Araber
geloben nicht in eventum wenn der und der Fall eintritt, so will ich das
tun sondem sie iibemehmen durch das Geliibde eine absolut bindende
:
Pflicht."
380
worship of which traces are very widely diffused over the surface of the
g"lobe.*
The characteristic rite of anointing- the stone, originally perhaps
a sacrifice to the indweUing numen, was famiUar to classical writers.
The most instructive parallel is the fact mentioned by Pausanias (x. 24,
6), that on a small stone in the sanctuary of Delphi oil was poured every
day we may conjecture that a similar practice was kept up at Bethel
:
XXIX.
1-30.
UE,
P).
viz.
in the
his
marriage to Leah
* See Tylor, Prim. Cult.^ ii. 160 fF. Frazer, Pausan. iv. 154 f., Adonis,
21; PS^, 204 ff., 232 f. The wide distribution of these sacred objects
seems fatal to the theory of Lagrange, that they were miniature reproductions of the Babylonian temple-towers, which again were miniature
symbols of the earth conceived as a mountain, a difficulty of which the
author himself is conscious {Aiiides^, 192 ff.).
t On anointed stones (Xidoi XnrapoL, aXrjXijxfiivoi, lapides uncti, luhricatif etc.), see Clem. Alex. Strom, vii. 4, 26; and the remarkable statements of Theophrastus, Char. 16 Lucian, Alexander, 30; and Arnobius,
Adv. Genies, i. 39, quoted by Frazer, Pausan. v. 354. For Assyriological parallels see KIB, i. 44 f., ii. 113, 151, 261.
A curious development of the ancient belief appears in the name Ba/ri;Xos, BairuXtoj/, Betulus,
applied to small stones (aerolites?), supposed to be self-moving and
endowed with magical properties, which played a considerable part in
the private superstitions of the beginning of the Christian era ''Eus.
PrcBp. Ev. i. 10, 18; Photius, Bihl. [Migne, ciii. 1292 f.]
Pliny, HN,
;
The
I.e. 196).
Since BairvKos is also the name of a god in Philoseems unreasonable to doubt the etymological and material
connexion between the ancient Semitic Sx'n'a and the portable betyl of
the Grffico-Roman period, which was so named as the residence of a
spirit; but see the important article of Moore, Journal of the Archceological Institute of America, vii. (1903), No. 2, p. i98ff.
Lagrange,
Byblius,
it
XXIX.
and Rachel
The
(^^~^^).
I,
381
first,
2^^'^^,
legends.*
is
Laban
is
ex-
which
is
sure to ensue.
Analysis.
Fragments of P's narrative can be easily recognised in
yy 24. 29^ g^nd probaWy also in '^^. The separation of J and E is uncertain
on account of the close parallelism of the two documents and the absence
of material differences of representation to support or correct the literary
Most subsequent critics agree with Di. that v.^ belongs to E
analysis.
and
^-i-*
to J
cf.
^^
m-\ph pn,
(182 24")
ne-ai 'D^iy,
!*
{2^).
^^^-
1-14. Jacob's
and
29*)
i.
to be
in P,
this third
Harran (28^^
presumed that
is in J,
Now the
DTP
''33
are
Canaan
as
Harran
It is possible, therefore,
on
(see
241^'- [city
of Nahor]).
The
is
(cf.
24^^).
v.^ is
For
they
an explanatory par-
The custom of
referred
The
is
to
by
aSt'B
om.
'23
curious expression
'
^ thinks
it
'
(v.^^).
382
Robinson,
BR^
Ex.
f.
319
ii.
a great
city
i.
cf.
also Diod.
nomad sheikh
the desert.
graphy of E
(v.^)
Nahdr\ see on
24^^.
7) 8*
i.
351).
10.
The
happy termination of
The
(Piel)]
his journey.
12.
disinterested,
hone
and my
is
characteristic of
Laban
9^, 2
(cf. 242^^-).
Sa. 5^
\<^^^',
14.
my
It is
an
v.",
where
jot o'ynn,
supported by
An
original
v.^.
in impf.
Nin nyn]
131
fl?.
ffi
critical
value.
9.
cerning,' followed as
G-K.
<&..
ptcp. nSa in
see
nmyn]
3.
au, is
yDt? ((&
14. D*D'
avTTJs.
Oiff)
vm]
end of the
.1x3] perf.
=
*
ct.
the
with
the report con10.
*?J'1]
a whole month
'
XXIX. 3-25
3^3
15-30. Jacob's
man
of a
ostensibly-
selfish
generous
for
conduct (see
his nefarious
for
His
vv.^*- ^6).
apparently
offer
l6-l8a.
An
which Rachel
The manner
explanatory parenthesis.
is
introduced, as
if
is
in
thought
(ni3"i,
Aq.
dcr^evct?,
which
brilliancy
5. aTrakoi)
i.e.
is
in the
East.
price
service instead.
Arabs, and
Syria^
is still
297
i.
f.).
The
19.
cousin has
first
the ancient
f.
Burck.
a prior
still
Bedouin and
Mod. Eg.^
i.
in
He
men
(v. 2^).
some
15.
man
'3n]
(30^* ^^)
for
and to retain
price,
seven years
of a
Leah
(v. 2'''),
like
Laban.
see on
and E
characteristic of
27=*^.
(31^,
his
nephew's services
was a master-stroke of
25.
n-i3^o] 3i7-*^(E),
Ex.
2).
(v.^^42'^-
for other
16.
Ru.
and
'?na
;
2^2
1.
^^-^ jg
common
to J
*ewe' (Ar. ra^7= she-lamb) hence by analogy hn^ has been explained
by Ar. la at, bovine antelope (see No. ZDMG, xl. 167 Sta. ZATW, i.
1 12 ff.), and the names are cited as evidence of a primitive Heb. totemism
{KAPy 254 f. ). Others prefer the derivation from Ass. It at, lady (see
Haupt, GGN, 1883, 100). 18. Vmn] ^ p ret ii {G-K. ii9/>); so 20- ^s. 20.
nnN vn'i] <&^ om.
21. .lan] Milra before n(G-K. 690).
24. nnisty] better
;
'
'
'
marriage
Jacob's
384
Laban no doubt
26. It
is
(je)
not so done]
cf. 34^,
2 Sa. 13^^^
Sa.
18^^).
27,
15^^-,
i.e.,
festival
for
festivities
week of
Ju.
14^2^
To.
11^^)
this one]
of the wedding
Leah.
success
is
for the
moment complete
husband becomes a member of the wife's kin (Rob. Sm. KM'^, 207).
Taken as a whole the narrative hardly bears out that view. It is true
that Jacob attaches himself to Laban's family but it does not follow
that he did not set up a house of his own.
His remaining with Laban
was due to his inability to pay the mohar otherwise than in the way of
;
'
A
Israel
difficult section,
in
tribes of
is
to
the
it is
remark-
{"x^^); see y.^. 26. nTystn] distinctive of J see v.^^. 27. njmi is
f. s. pf. Niph., than
ist pi. cohort. Qal (as most).
ixx(&S>'S
read \m]. 28b. ntj-x"? ^h] The double dative is characteristic of P, to
whom the whole clause may be assigned along with -^. 30. The second
Da has no sense, and should probably be deleted (ffiH).
'v)
rather 3rd
XXIX. 26-31
3^5
is
names of Leah and Rachel, representing perhaps an older and a later settlement of Hebrews
the chief tribes under the
in Palestine (Sta.
ZATW,
i.
112
f.).
The
Mesopotamia may
occupation of Canaan
be applied in
detail,
attempt to discover
tribes.
ZATW,
xxi. 36flf.
cf.
509
f.,
ff.)
"^
31-35.
is
The sons
too strong.
HN^ib' is
21^^^-)
where the two are sisters
most acute, hence this practice is
forbidden by the later law (Lv. iS^^). The belief that Yahwe
takes the part of the unfortunate wife and rewards her with
children, belongs to the strongly marked family religion of
25
Jacob's children (je)
386
Israel (i
i2ff.)._32. Re'uben]
Sa.
name
is
plausible ex-
is
it
(t^.z.)
divine
The only
that
is
75??.
[''']f[V]?
[^]^1
but that
is
too extrava-
Am I in
than Abraham.
3.
bear upon
my
knees']
(16^),
An
is less
means that
patient
allusion to a primitive
but Jacob
God's stead?] So
ceremony
Bilhah's children
274.
32.
Its origin is
jn^N-)]
(JEr
jx.
455
"^ov^rjv, etc.
the
f.
<S
ff.);
'-^ni
then
it
became a symbol of
Jos. 'Vov^tjKos.
The
origin of
rise to
form (that on which the etymology is based: v.s.) was '?aiNn. In that
form the name has been connected with Ar. ri'bdl, Mion,' or* wolf,' in
which case Reuben might have to be added to the possibly totemistic
names of OT. Another plausible suggestion is that the word is softened
from ^Wiyi a theophorous compound after the analogy of "^xiy;
33.
After 13, (& ins. 'JK', which may be correct (cf 3o'^- ^2- n- 19- 24)
jiyp?']
Another supposed animal name, from Ar. sim a cross between the wolf
and hyaena (see Rob. Sm. JPh. ix. 80). Ewald regarded it as a diminutive of "^NyD-^:, and similarly recently Cheyne {TBI, 375).
34. tr\p\
JuuffiL^ nxip^; (&A iKkiidtj.'^h] We.'s conjecture that this is the gentilic
of r^v^h is widely accepted (Sta. Rob.-Sm. No. Mey. al.)
Homm., on
the other hand, compares S Arab. laviu= 'priest,' Levi being the
priestly tribe
3.
nin^?] (of
to be connected with
XXIX. 32-XXX.
'
387
II
iV
^"""^J
child.
*j^<^g^') is very
abbreviated theophorous
dany etc.).
8.
God I have
wrestlings of
ff.).
my
The words
have had *' a
wrestled]
Either
'
or (less probably)
sister,'
supposition that the concubinage of Bilhah followed immediately on the birth of Reuben.
tively:
an
With luck!
earlier time
it
(v.i.).
It is
was current
'|J"j]
in the sense
On
With Gad's
G-K.
help
'
26g:yaph
must be assigned
nowhere else the sense of 'wrestle,' but means primarily to 'twist' (cf.
hence '^ri?J might be the 'tortuous,' 'cunning'
Pr. 8^ Jb. 5^^ Ps. iS^^t)
one (BDB). But a more plausible etymology derives it from a hypothetical Naphtal (from ns2 [Jos. i7"tj
if correctly vocalised], usually
;
cf. '?9^3 fr. Dn|), denoting the northern hightaken to mean height
of the Upper Jordan (Mey. INS, 539).
lands
The Vns. render the v.
more or less paraphrastically, and give no help to the elucidation of the
'
'
sense.
by S
(so
Ti5x?7,
(.j,..^.
Ra)
(lEz.).
10.
(& 'Ey
v.^^
ffi
IS Feliciter.
49^', is
'
388
children
Jacob's
(Ba. Gu.).
13.
The name
writers a
word
for happiness
""liJ'iSn,
my
In
happy.'
'Zif^;'
and
happiness^
'(women) count me
'^l^B'K
name
It is
(je)
historically related to
is
Aramaean
Aser appears
deity.
NW
name of a district in
Palestine
Ramses 11. (Miiller, AE^ 236 ff.).
The
14-24.
love-apples
Gad
is
to the
in
The
incident of the
is
(J),
significance.
The
to explain the
name
of Leah's child.
14.
D'X'l'n {vA.) is
the
which
in Syria ripens in
is still
ff.).
Reuben
is
The
4^^).
episode
is
he shall
lie
agricultural
out of place in
its
/ have
13.
-i?'n
is
Stt.
Xey.
"'bb')]
-jn^x]
pf.
field (cf.
Ex.
21^^).
16.
Obviously an anticipation of
It is
and impfs.
may be only apparent, and due
the
two exceptions
(29^-^-)
(Ca. i^^\)\
fflr
/i^Xa fiav5pay6pov,
] ->n j-^
<S
C^J pnnn'
The
sing-,
is
'
Reuben
(inf.)]
is
Dri. T. 204
'i^;^'!i.
N''"!
'i^;^5]
but ^np^i
see on 19^.
15.
n^]
(&.
hn'?,
r\vh
rh.
nnp)i
(pf.
f.)
XXX. 13-24
3^9
J's
"I3b'tp),
<
'
'
make
it
with a view to
v. is interpolated
ch. 34.
23b, 24b.
derives the
XXX.
Yoseph.
name
away
add
<
^PJ,
from ^DN,
*
<
take
'
to
me
25-43.
word
i8a/3,
nn??',
which
Aram.
(cf.
The interchange
is
and
common
in
S.V.).
of
*?
is
'
'
flf.
'
390
who,
in his
price for
which he
will
name
the
interesting to
It is
bearing in
and correspondingly
demands so reasonable
when he discovers how completely he has been
deceived by Jacob's apparent moderation. The story, as Gu.
reminds us, was originally told to shepherds, who would
nephew's
mortified (31^)
Sources.
In
the earlier
and E
Here ^' 27.
position of J
26
26a
w,
{^-^^)
26b
29a
28
several duplicates
n su
^^.^ i^ 27 and
.
nyT
nnw, 2b
and
29a.
29-31
the
journey, under the charge of his sons (^^a^ [from ncn] ^'). Thus Jacob
receives for the present nothing at all (^* J).
The narrative must have
gone on to explain that his hire was to consist of any variegated animals
appearing in the normally coloured flock now left in his charge {^^)
Laban's precautions aim at securing that these shall be few or none.
32aa5b.
33. 34
37-45
and
ffir
has
many
variations.
'
XXX. 25-32
25-31.
A preliminary parley,
to an understanding. 26
of service
27
(J).
(^nrm
23^^.
44^-
cf.
him.
28
v.^2),
an abject
answer
is
in
29, 30 in J, Jacob presses for a disservice has been of immense value to Laban,
his
which
this thing]
tion.
am
about to men-
120^.
32-36.
whereas
charge
is
(cf.
followed by aposio-
etc.]
continues
Ki. 2o33)
Laban surrenders
(E).
way
Laban
15,
house.
feel their
(E). thou
18^
pesis, as
E always
etc.]
own
for his
in
^).
391
both narratives
7^)
'
my
hire
26.
'
(in future), is
n'p'-riNi]
Not necessarily a
g-loss
27.
28.
the children might fairly be conOn e^nj, v. 44^ l'?'?J3] (& ry a-g
fflrU
om.
nDN^i,
smoothing over
the transition from J to E. napj] 'designate' (lit. 'prick [off] ') : cf. the
use of Niph. in Nu. 1", i Ch. 16*^ etc. 29. he'n m\ 'the manner in
31.
nor'K]
{(&% pr.
1)
Its
awkward
position.
sources)
natural rendering
f&.
wdv TTpo^arov
is
impve.
(cf. ^)..
CIr
(paibv iv tols
/cat
nc-^j]
a'ly
\evK6v iv rats
overloaded
<
'
'
'
'
392
my
righteousness shall
so transparently fair
is
it
'
forth be born
to Jacob.
The
J, to
many
interpolations.
37-39-
main account
The
first
step
is
from
is essential,
is
to
work on
such a
in
way
as to
dark-brown.' 33. 3 njy] 'testify against' (see i Sa. i2^ 2 Sa. I^^ Is.
An easier sense would be obtained if we could translate * witness for,'
but there seem to be no examples of that usage. Dri.'s interpretation
'there will be nothing whatever to allege against my honesty,' seems,
on the other hand, too subtle. "inD ora] in time to come' (Ex. 13",
If we could insist on the literal rendering on the morrow,'
Dt. 6^").
the proof of divergence between J and E would be strengthened, but
or
3^).
the sense
is
13'3]
36.
31U-13.
(Tov.
less suitable.
Mx(& uyi.
jiu
y^th
37. nja*? (Ho 4^^ t)] the * white tree ; according to some, populus alba
(Di. al.), but very probably sty rax officinalis (Ar. luhnay, so called from its
'
al.).
tree.'
f]
Nn*?,
\)'\
i(f)aLveTO
ttolk'lKov,
clause '(with) a laying bare (G-K. 117 r) of the white on the rods,' is
jna] pi. ; hpr:^ being coll.
superfluous, and certainly looks like a variant.
38
The
(v.^S
XXX. 33-42
count reads
came
And he placed
the runnels
And
had peeled in
and they bred when they
to drink.
speckled^
393
We. Comp.^
41).
And
{these)
freely.
Jacob's stock
is
The
difference corresponds to a
The consequence
hardy and Laban's delicate.
difference of breeding--time
{y.i.).
that
is
friendly Parting
(J,
E).
on a secret
Laban pursues, and overtakes him at Mt. Gilead
where, after a
ivibinop
tQv
rendering thus
pd^SiiJv [Kai]
(^^*')
iXdbvTwv avrcov
j^
IVa ws hv ^Xduicriv
els
flight
(22-25
ra TrpS^ara
t6 vieTv, ivKKTCTT^aojaLv
irielv,
/Sara.
41.
distant.
'i?
ivavrlop,
and
"I'pj^'Vx
make
Kpibv
8id\VK0P.
;
-^32]
394
with
many demonstrations
Sources.
^'^^
^^
(22^*
^' ^^)
"^^
D^nVx,
^- ^^- ^^
by dream,
the revelation
is
its
of goodwill (3i'**-32^).
'^^'
;
*^
29^")
the
''^*
cf.
^^
nin', ^
Tjfi^ViD, '
the
ence to
sons of Laban, ^ (cf. 30^^). In ^'''^ E still preponderates, though J is
more largely represented than some critics (Di. Kue. KS. Dri. al.) allow.
The detailed analysis is here very intricate, and will be best dealt with
under the several sections. " (except the first four words) is the only
'
'
extract from P.
Preparations for
1-16.
flight.
i,
(J).
The jealousy
(v.2)
narratives
(v.^^).
is a feature of both
Jacob vindicates his conduct towards
4-I3.
Laban, and sets forth the reasons for his projected flight.
of the speech is not purely literary, affording
The motive
righteousness (Gu.)
to
E which
said nothing
32
t).
[Jer.])
made
7.
tG}v
into
MX
m'K- (so
fjSnm]
d^Ka
juuk
;ux
d/xvwp
ra,T
(cf.
6.
ri'?n'\
a Gr. word).
D'9Ji.a'n^Nl
V.'').
ffir
('
*^
D'p
(^^f)
(sq ^-i^*).9.
from
-jik]
XXXI. i-i6
395
could two such dissimilar revelations be coupled together in this way? "
an incident of the past, while ^^ is in the sphere of the
present moreover, ' I am the God of Bethel' must surely open the communication. We. solves the difficulty by removing- ^ and ^^ (assigning
them to an unknown source), and leaving ^^ as the introduction to ^^
V.^*' recalls
:
Gu.
and
^**
13.
that of
/ am
the
28^^^-,
and
that his
vow
God of
is (in
[2^^-'^)
E) the
first
14-16. Jacob's
^as sold
15.
tis\
14b.
(cf.
his wives
Ex. 21^).
are
Ki. 12^^.
like slaves.
Comp.
The complaint
t.e.y
the
implies that
change
similar
GGN^
mahr appears
1893, 434
in
16. is ours
f.).
G-K. 135 o.
rule of syntax
13. '?Nn'3 Snh] The art. with constr. violates a well known
(G-K. 127/) and it is doubtful if the anomaly be rightly
explained by supposing the ellipsis of hi< or ^jh^. The original text may
have been '?Nri'3 [o'lpp? ^'h^ nK-jan] Sxrt (so [but without '?Nn'3] (&, adopted
by Ba.) or W^E^ j^xn (^OJ, Kit.). imSiD pN] see on ii^s. It is the
only occurrence of 'd in E.
Kal iao/xai fiercL aov.
ffi adds
15. nin33]
ux^SiTB 'j?. '?i3N DJ] see on 27^3, 16. ntj'y] (& + Kal ttjp 86^av.
17-25. A complete analysis of the w. cannot be effected.
The hand
of E is recognised in ^^^ (o's-jfi, cf. ^ 3S^^'), ^ (? '^I^i}, as ^% and especially 24 (dm'?n, dSo
cf. 29- 42),
J bctrays its presence chiefly by doublets
2i/3
" (Dijji), and 25a 23b (jjy.^^ p^y.^y -phc assignment of ^la/s to J is
warranted by the mention of the Euphrates hence " is E. Further
;
II
ji
than this we cannot safely go. Gu.'s division (i^*- 21-23. 25b_ j 17. isaa. i9b. 20.
24. 25a_)
jg open to the objection that it ignores the discrepancy between
.
and our
children's]
apparently looks
never
on
heiresses.
17-25.
The
with Laban's
36^ 46^).
flight
and
pursuit.
to
(33^^^).
The
18.
his
from P
rest of the v. is
to
(cf.
12^
19.
(2^,
'
at this point
ii.
293 f., iii. 148 f. 20. stole the heart]
deceived
the heart being the seat of intelli'
cf.
2*)]
is
{^S^'^^-j 1
Aen.
cf. Virg-.
2 Sa. i5^t)
The emphasising
hard to explain.
it
the River
That
is
it
the correction
21. crossed
v.^'^
Aramcean
of Laban's nationality
the
l/cXci/^e
is
:
;
396
and
etc.).
23.
a proof that
tribal
The
waT'^l'riN'!) is
18. (&
19.
obviously P.
om. the
D'S1J?|]
cl. \y]\i
pi.
iK't;
17.
sons
(so Si)
of eminence,
and wives']
and adds
like O'n'^x,
xxx<!&
after
etc.
d;^!<,
Kal iravra
hence
it
to.
aurov.
doubtful
is
whether one image or several is here referred to. The teraphim was a
god {^), its form and size were those of a man (i Sa. 19^^*- ^^), it was
used in private houses as well as in temples (Ju. 17"^ i8^^**, Ho. 3*), and
was an implement of divination (Ezk. 21^^, Zee. lo^). The indications
point to its being an emblem of ancestor-worship which survived in
Israel as a private superstition, condemned by the enlightened conscience
It seems implied by the present
of the nation (35^, i Sa. 15^, 2 Ki. 23-^*).
narrative that the cult was borrowed from the Aramaeans, or perhaps
rather that it had existed before the separation of Hebrews and
Aramaeans. (See Moore, Jud. 379 ff.) 20. 'h^-^i;] air. \ey., is difficult,
BDB, 758 a) 'hi (poet, for
^y for nsJ'N '?y is rare and poet. (Ps. 119^^^
Since the following clause is a
t(h) is also rare with fin. vb. (ib. 115 b).
wegen Mangels davon dass (Di.) is
specification of the preceding,
not a suitable rendering. We should expect Tjn "rhjh, in not telling+ ry SjJpy.
him that,' etc. ux has 'n'?a ny.22. p^*?]
'
'
XXXI. 17-28
350 miles as the crow
(r.
397
much
flies) is
too great to be
If the V.
is
no doubt
was
defective.
God
24.
Angel of God, as
(not the
warns Laban
v.^^)
in
see p. 402
f.
The
26-43.
The
altercation.
32-35
24)^ 30.
29 (cf.
(Q^ann),
of
is
26.28^
interrupted by
('ten times'),
^^
3ib
(1126)-
(t^e natural
^nd (because of
24. 29)
(cf.
29" 42
nncN,
The sequence
^^.
answer
to
27),
36a
(n
36b)
narrative
complete
(2'* ^la- b-
36a.
38-40)
jhe Yahwistic
^g miss something
j^^^-
We may suppose
is
after
^^
is
all
^^"^'^
is
but
to account
and that
his flocks,
Procksch's division
parallel
Laban
a reply
to
slightly different.
demonstration
in
in J his desire to
_ 27.
usually
't^r\it
nh)] ^
reject
'
or
h)],
abandon
'
wy]
for n^j^
(G-K.
39^
(7;. 2.)
30.
do
to
infs.
is
is
my god{s)\
stolen
This
dispute.
32.
Jacob
is
can be proved
44^-.
33-35-
if
the theft
The search
for the
teraphim
is
in
described with
J).
Women
in
were pro-
condition
this
Lv. 15^^
Jacob
Laban, treating the accusation about the
teraphim as mere pretext for searching his goods. 38-40 (J).
now
(cf.
etc.).
36, 37.
turns on
fine
picture
of
shepherd,
the ideal
solicitous
for
his
and careless of
beyond
as a witness
thee]
39.
/ brought
not to
22^).
'
75.29.
meaning
(Ex.
obscure.
n;
^i<)-^:']
certain
is
(*
That
^i<
is
God
my
of
Culf.*ii. 127).
have
sing. suff.
+ direXdeiV
should probably be restored. 31. I& om. -riNn' 'D. ^32. The
opening words in (& 3py.; i'? "iijn'1 may be original, introducing the duplicate from E. 32b is preceded in (& by the variant Kal oiiK iiriyvu) trap
aiiTi^ ovdev.
so HSc. The cl. ^'*^ disagrees
33. faS] jju. + B-anM (rd. cijnn)
with what follows, and may be a gloss. (& reduces the discrepancy by
omissions, and a complete rearrangement of clauses. 36. n?^] Rd. nai
with Heb. MSS Aja(!BrS.39. On n^n^ for njN?)DN, cf G-K. 74 i or
Kal.
The
XXXI. 29-43
399
(Meyer,
INS, 254
Laban maintains
f.),
right,
his
do to
?]
means
Dri.); not
The
adopts a more
but speedily
what
last kind-
how can
do
'
The
44-54.
treaty of Gilead.
Evidences of a double recension appear in every circumstance of the(a) Two names are explained
Gilead if'^), and Mizpah (*^)
'^' '^*
^^), and a
(6) two sacred monuments are erected, a cairn {^^'
monolith C^^- ^^- 2)
(c) the covenant feast is twice recorded {^^' ^) j
{d) the terms of the covenant are given in two forms
(i) Jacob will not
ill-treat Laban's daughters (^), and (2) the cairn is to mark the boundary
between two peoples {^^) {e) God is twice called to witness (^^^- ^2). To
arrange these duplicates in two parallel series is difficult, because of the
numerous glosses and dislocations of the text but some connecting
lines can be drawn.
Since J always avoids the word n?;fO (p. 378), we
assume first of all that the monolith (and consequently Mizpah) belongs
Now the cairn goes with \he frontier trGaXy
to E, and the cairn to J.
^61. 52 [removing glosses],
J), and Mizpah with t\i& family compact {^^, E).
To J we must obviously assign ^- ^, and also (if we may suppose that
only the h% was spoken of as an ny) " while E as naturally claims ^.
narrative,
;;
At the end,
^^
is
^^b
ig
probably J
^% and
||
mazzebah
which excite
to the
(Gu.): (K om.
'n'?K.
TREATY OF GILEAD
400
(je)
yv 47. 49aa .-,3JfDn Him in ^^ n32^Dn myi and nxin nn^Dn-riNi in ^^ on these v.i.
Nearly all are retained by fflr, where, however, the confusion is increased
^^- 5^*- *^^- ^^- 5"*- ^'^^,
by a complete change in the order of clauses ^50b
being inserted] after ^. The analysis works out in translation as
follows (glosses being enclosed in square brackets, and necessary
additions and corrections in r ^)
.
^''-
^ And now
(the speaker is
J
Laban), come, let us make a covenant, I and thou
and it shall be
for a witness between me and thee.
:
And
TheT
Laban) [Jacob],
said
to
his
brethren,
Gather
stones and they took stones, and
made a cairn, and they ate there
[^''
upon the cairn.
And Laban
called it Y'^garSdhdduthd, but Jacob
{i.e.
called
said,
GaV ed.]
it
This cairn
^^ If
thou ill-treat my
daughters, or take other wives besides my daughters, no man being
with us, see, God is witness be-
another.
"^
is
tween me and thee this day therefore he called its name '"Gil' ad""
^i
[49aa and Mizpah, for he said],
And Laban said to Jacob, Behold
;
this cairn
pillar]
will not
and thou
[and this
intent.
53a
to
me, with
God
-phe
of
evil
Abraham
father].
2i23ff.
^''J}'\,
is fern.,
cf. ^^, J)
it
of the stone
3py^_ is to
44b.
(^^), it
is
avry
Ta/c., T5oi>
ovBeU
al.).
fied'
{v.s.)
To
ij/xQv
XXXI. 44-49
subj.
set it
4^1
28^^-
The mono-
^.
may have
stood on an eminence and formed a conspicuous feature of the landscape (Di.). 46 (J). And he
lith
(Laban) said^
Here
The
Di.).
of Gilead
etc.]
certainly
SpV"!. is
itself,
The covenant
they
feast,
said]
ao\)
The
v.>).46.
(fr.
From
(S itDp^n. ^3]
inp'i]
ungrammatical,
sj ^^J
'roll'
is
a very
(stones,
29^,
On
'
2$^ (J ?)49- "??'?':ii] Jju. nnisDni, which We. thinks the original name of
the place, afterwards changed to nsiiDn because of the evil associations
He instances the transcription of ffi Maaaricpa,
of the word mazzebah.
as combining the consonants of the new name with the vowels of the old
{Comp? 44^), The argument is precarious ; but there seems to be a wordplay between the names and since the opening is evidently corrupt, it
Ball's restoration U'^s;^^ hb'k nasoni
is possible that both stood in the text.
;
26
TREATY OF GILEAD
402
:;
(je)
(read so with
^)
see p. 403;
its situation,
Mizpah means
'waic}i\
watch-post.'
The purport
50*
On
of the covenant,
according to E.
The
is
iv.
187,
God
No. XL).
is
witness]
idea
is less
We
sanction
42^^,
both E).
5I-53a.
invoked where
is
reff.
to the
The
is
mazzebah
(^i^'-
52a. bj
^re to be deleted as
Nahor] Whether a
two gods is attributed to
Laban can hardly be determined. The pi. vb. would not
necessarily imply this in E (see 20^^), though in J it
The
might. 53b, 54. The covenant oath and feast in E.
Isaac] See on v.*^.
Fear of
54. his brethren] not
Laban and his companions, but his own fellow-clansmen
glosses.
God of Abraham
differentiation
polytheistic
of
(v.^^).
ceremony?
(Gu.).
N^i^
Str.)
lay {jacere) a foundation (Jb. 38^), but it could hardly be applied to the
It is an advantage of the analysis given above
erection of a pillar.
that it avoids the necessity of retaining- the mazzebah as obj. of 'n'T and
D.TDtt
'n'?N]
(&
cm.
and Heb.
53.
i"?'!]
ifis;^']
'n,
xffiF.S
^ ^01^
!ijn 3V',*1.
j.
XXXI. 50-S3
Yarmuk
403
Arnon
the
two parts
to the
(Jos. 12^),
'
'
seems
The
becomes
feasible.
JACOB PREPARES TO MEET ESAU (je)
404
situation reflected
is
We.
860 to
c.
Prol.^ 320
f.).
;
to
tions
XXXII.
suggest,
in
the
ravine of the
Vv.^-'
[2811])
4-"a
and
"^-22
XXXII. 2-6
40S
2. angels , . . mel
2, 3. The legend of Mahanaim.
him] The verb for 'meet,' as here construed (v.i.), usually
means
to
gods.
The
oppose.'
'
3.
This
is
God's camp] or a
camp of
OT
(cf.
5^^),
'
site, v.i.
lost.
The
conflict
and
was
has been
between Jacob and
;
somewhat similar
The word 'camp' (cf. the fuller
it
to the wrestling
of vv
24ff.
(Qu^ Ben.).
and the verbal phrase 3
4-i4a.
j;33
Jacob's precautionary
and Esau's settlement
Isaac's death
measures
in
(J).
^v
4.
2.
After lannS
irapefi^epXTjKvTav,
ffi
y^?]
'encounter with hostility,' Ju. S^i 1512 igss, 1 Sa. 22"^-, 2 Sa. i^^, i Ki.
225ff-,
Ru. 222;= 'intercede,' jb. 21^^, Jer. f^zf^ Ru. ii. The neutral
sense 'meet,* with pers. obj., is doubtfully supported by Nu. 35^^* 2^,
elsewhere this is
Jos. 2^^, where hostile intention is evidently implied
expressed by ace. pers. (Ex. 520 23^, i Sa. lo^ Am. 5^^). Gn. 28^^ is
somewhat different, the obj. being impers. (cf. the use in Jos. 16^ ly^^
etc.).
3. D':nD] an important East Jordanic city and sanctuary, the
capital of Ish-bosheth (2 Sa. 2^), and David's headquarters during
the revolt of Absalom (2 Sa. 172*- 2?), the centre of a fiscal district under
Solomon (i Ki. 4'*). The situation of Mahne or Mihne on W. el-Himar,
some 14 m. N of the Jabbok (see Buhl, GP, 257), suits all the other
references (cf. Jos. 1326' > the boundary of Gad and Manasseh), but
On the ending,
is too far from the Jabbok for this narrative (v. 23).
which is probably no real dual, see on 24^.
4. vjs^] (& om. mnK mr] (cf. Ju. 5*) is probably a gloss on "VDv n)i-\H.
:
5.
pnDNn]
cf.
chiefly
late
(G-K.
64 A).6.
nnSB-Ni]
Cohort.
;
G-K.
JACOB PREPARES TO MEET ESAU (je)
406
wealth
his
resource
to divide his
is
company
hope that one might escape while the other was being
captured. The arrangement is perhaps adverted to in 33^.
IO-I3. Jacob's prayer, consisting of an invocation (i<^),
thanksgiving (i^), petition i^'^)^ and appeal to the divine
faithfulness (^^), is a classic model of OT devotion (Gu.);
though the element of confession, so prominent in later
supplications, is significantly absent.^
12. mother with
(or 071) children] Hos. 10^*
cf. Dt. 22^.
A popular saying,
the mother conceived as bending over the children to
them
protect
Mahanaim
(Tu.).
14a.
We
(v.^^).
may suppose
explicit
ceded or followed
'
(with
We.
two camps
'
i.e.y
at
Gu.) that an
(vv.^- ^^), pre-
this clause.
'
The
i4b-22.
present for
Esau
(E).
14.
a present] Not
8.
49 e.
67/.
n^'i]
D''?Djm]
sj ^^^ intrans.
ffi^A
current pronunciation
which
is
(Albrecht,
is
demanded by
ZATW,
'
Qrn^
tl.e
xvi. 52).
The
ii.
'n:i2p]
Mahanaim
G-K.
the
but the allusion, in an editorial passage, has
perhaps no great topographical importance.
see G-K. 138 >&; Dri. Sam.
14. K3.T|D] Art. with ptcp. (not pf.)
133
c.
nin
p'^''^]
vicinity of the
Jordan
in
XXXII. 7-24
407
8^'-)
17-20.
By
arrang-
series of surprises.
obviously be weakened
if
me pacify
him\
'
lit.
cover
'
(or
'
his presence
cf. 43^-
'
44^^-
The phrase
We.
^**.
[CovipP'
22.
spent
renders
46)
obtain access to
142*- 28. 32^ 2
Sa.
lo^^, 2
'in
camp [p}J}y^'^)\
Mahaneh
{i,e,
.
'
The
f.
Jb.
nmo] see
on
3220). 18.
On
G-K.
64/ 20.
see
92;,
i2i'i]
nn
(Est.
the forms
?i^3D;
4^.
10^
T<{;
17.
(c),
Ki.
is
Ex.
2^,
let
2lb. Let
YahhoJi
is
now almost
24.
The
univers-
irpd}T({}.
D2Nsb]
(G-K.
74 A,
is beset by insurmountable diffiWhile most recognise doublets in ^s'- [v.s.), 25-33 have generally
been regarded as a unity, being assigned to J by We. Kue. Corn. KS.
In the view of more recent critics, both J and
but by Di. to E.
Dri. al.
E are represented, though there is the utmost variety of opinion in regard
In the notes above, possible variants have been pointed out
to details.
so
(^he name and the blessing)
in 26=^ M 26b (the laming of the thigh) and 28- 29
to these may be added the still more doubtful case ^^ ^2 (Peniel, Penuel).
As showing traces of more primitive conceptions, 26a and ^ would natur-
culties.
|i
ally
go
name
together,
and also ^
for the
same
reason.
^'-
is
pyn) (Nu.
Dt.
2=" 3I6,
ri^3. 22^) jg naturally explained as the 'gurgler,' from sj PP^ (Ar. bakka), the resemblance to
p2U (v. 25) being, of course, a popular word-play. 24b. Insert "^5 before
p3: {xxx
212-*,
408
ally,
(je)
Nahr ez-Zerka
Smith,
to cannot be determined
HG^
that oi
583-5.
Muhadat
ET^
xiii.
459.
passag-e of the river seems to be twice described, *^ and ^*' beingapparently doublets. The former continues ^^, which belongs to J (nnsB').
Following this clue, we may divide thus ^' ^*^=] 23b. 24b=E (go Gu.).
The
While
^s*,
that after sending the others
is consistent with the statement of
across he himself was left alone.' On any view the action is somewhat
perplexing".
To cross a ford by night, with flocks, etc. , was a dangerous
operation, only to be explained by apprehension of an attack from
Esau (We.). But Esau is represented as advancing from the south ;
and Jacob is in haste to put his people and possessions on that side of
the river on which they were exposed to attack. Either the narrative
is defective at this point, or it is written without a clear conception of
the actual circumstances.
25. a
Only
later does
'
26a.
pretations open
it
(v.i.).
two
inter-
The
159),
IK'N
NH
and
it is
(au^^SU).
p3Nnn,
25.
make
p3KM]
26.
oneself dusty,'
ypni]
XXXII. 24-29
409
AE,
163I
ZATW,
me go^ for
27. Let
Amphitr.
Tempus
the
ff.
dawn
is
Comp. Plautus,
hreaking\
532
est
xxi. 65
f.,
and
But
superhuman character of
hi adversary, and he resolves to hold him fast till he has
extorted a blessing from him. 28, 29. Here the blessing is
the request reveals to Jacob the
imparted
in the
memory
of this
interpreted as
tion of
H'3V
(<
God
Striver with
Baal contends
')
'
'God
strives' {v.i,)^ is
a similar transforma-
cf.
Such a name
in Ju. 6^^.
is
nation which
refer
(S[ ivdpKTja-ev,
'),
all conjectural.
29. Vx^f :]
meaning as
God
strives
'
or
etc. ,
'
>*
'
'
'
'
4IO
(je)
DB,
cf.
13^^
Ju.
v. 640).
(the
that Jacob had seen '*God/c^ to face'' (Ex. 33^1, Dt. 34^^),
and yet
on
lived (see
ETy
16^^).
The
site
of Peniel
is
unknown:
conflict, is
xiii.
if.,
OT
is
nowhere
dependent on
Ass. Sir--lai
= ''?Knt5")
Z55A-1,
E^
The formal
SBOT Chroniclesy
(see Kittel,
iviaxvffas,
ffi
B 31.-31. ^x'JS]
ffi
33.
The
else referred to In
is
probably
it
from the
380^) *
p. 58).
Comp.
and
also
Aq.
EWos
deov,
(G-K. 900).
Strabo (xvi. ii. 16, 18)
montory near Tripolis called Qeov irpbawirov it is not improbable that
in both cases the name is derived from a fancied resemblance to a face.
33. rimn Tj] nm is to be explained by Ar. nas^*^ (for nasay"**), which
means the nervus ischiadicus, or the thigh in which it is found (Ges.
Th. 921 f.).
The question remains whether Ti denotes here a nerve,
an artery, a sinew, or a muscle the first seems by far the most probable.
So it seems to have been understood by % (I ' ^ ^ U? |i * it
:
= tetanus-nerve), and by
(&
to
have connected
\).
according to De., to the " Spannader, d. h. die innere Ader des sogen. Hinterviertels mit Einschluss
der ausseren und der Verastelungen beider."
restriction applies,
* " The nature of the lameness produced by injury to the sinew of the
thigh socket is explained by the Arabic lexx., s.v. hdrt/at; the man
can only walk on the tips of his toes. This seems to have been a
common affection, for poetical metaphors are taken from it."
XXXII. 30-33
We.
Arabia.
ii.
4^^
For primitive
The
f.
it
in ancient
Golden Bought
precise
meaning of
\W17\
begin with the fact of a hand-to-hand conflict between a god and a man.
A similar idea appears in Ex. 4^*^', where we read that Yahwe met Moses
and sought to kill him.' In the present passage the god was probably
not Yahwe originally, but a local deity, a night-spirit who fears the
dawn and refuses to disclose his name. Dr. Frazer has pointed out
that such stories as this are associated with water-spirits, and cites
many primitive customs (/b/>^/or^, 136 ff.) which seem to rest on the belief
that a river resents being crossed, and drowns many who attempt it.
He hazards the conjecture that the original deity of this passage was
the spirit of the Jabbok in which case the word-play between p^: and
p3N may have greater significance than appears on the surface. (2) Like
many patriarchal theophanies, the narrative accounts for the foundation
of a sanctuary that of Peniel. Of the cultus at Peniel we know nothing
and there is very little in the story that can be supposed to bear upon it,
unless we assume, with Gu. and others, that the limping on the thigh
refers to a ritual dance regularly observed there (cf. i Ki. 18^^).* (3) By
J and E the story was incorporated in the national epos as part of the
history of Jacob. The God who wrestles with the patriarch is Yahwe
and how far the wrestling was understood as a literal fact remains uncertain. lTo these writers the main interest lies in thej)rigin of the name
Israel, and the blessing bestowed on the nation in the person of its
*
"^ancestor.
'
412
(je)
part in friendship
the brothers
Esau returning
to
first,
or
Vv.^"^'^
it is
which
I-7
'
is
taken from
The
(see on the
meeting".
I, 2.
^^"'^
w.
below).
;'
XXXIII. i-ii
413
of
my
Lord,
my
Sun,
fall
It does
not follow, however, that Jacob
(38 ff. pass.).
acknowledged himself Esau's vassal (Nestle, MMy 12; Che.
TBI, 405) cf. I Sa. 2o4i. 4. fell on his neck] 45I* 462^ (J)
;
Lu.
is^*'.
5-7.
An
interesting picture:
come forward
camp.
The
8-II.
Esau
which he had
present.
camp
cavalcade
in
8.
The
met.
present' of
32^*^- (E)
to, for
'
Read
ordinaria
mark some
first 'n.
4.
inptj-'i]
The puncta
Di. observes
extrathat elsewhere
!|
'
414
(je)
face of God] with the feelings of joy and reverence with which
one engages in the worship of God. For the flattering comparison of a superior to the Deity,
cf.
It is possible that
ig^.
common
the
al.),
God
is
found to be friendly
(see
on
252^; cf.
12-17.
T^^
INS,
278).
parting.
12.
13.
and invents
vV ni7i;]
their condition imposes
in view,
i.e.
I will proceed by
14.
stages
(?
v.i.\ gently^
.
according to the pace of the cattle before me]. till I come
to Seir] It is, of course, implied that he is to follow in Esau's
.
journey causes
difficulty.
f.)
advances the
Hebron.
mVy] sj
Ps. 78'^
159
?'
t).
^4-
'?iy,
DipsTi]
'^'"'
of which only the ptcp. is in use (i Sa. 6'- ^", Is. 40^^,
On the synt. see G-K.
better with xxx.(&S> D'^hO"}^.
'"''^'^^n**]
fflr
ivL(XX^'^^ ^^ "^V
o^V
K-O'TO'-
'
'
'
'
'
v.
continues
^'^
(J).
ilDi]
XXXIII. I2-I8
4^5
distance,
and takes up
name
is
cattle,
his quarters at
Sukkdth
(v.t.).
The
18-20.
Jordan
see on
if,
is
11^.
Ju.
S. of Beisan) is
wrong
to
it
than Peniel
(Jos.
8'- ^- 8).
is
besides on the
We.
to be impossible,
'
'
JACOB AT SHECHEM
4l6
stay at Succoth.
v.i,
from Esau,
On
S of the Jabbok,
little
in safety
after
city] in
C^.c"^')]
of Joseph's burial.
'
(e, P)
It is significant
is
19.
of
it,
The pur-
in the
account
its
right
that of
cf.
2822 357,
Ex. if^,]M.
62*.
For
Israel
builds
'
'
debv 'IcpaiiK.
is
Except
the clause
mx pSD
to E.
in33
'^^'^
'3
'n2
may
"wn in
v.^^,
which
safely be assigned
XXXIV. 7%^
Ch.
Two
Dinah, the daughter of Leah, abducts her, and keeps her in his
house (^"^ * cf. '^^). He asks her in
marriage from her father and
;
brothers,
to
offering'
conditions they
They
Outrage on Dinah.
I.
4^7
("
^'^j.
an objection on the
raise
a marriage (^).
speak to Jacob
Hamor comes
(^),
and
to
him
finds
any and
accept
may impose
ally consent
it
was
(^^).
The
conclusion
justify
i^^' ^^).
legalise
all
is lost.
own
his
cause,
(c)
fulfilled
the compact,
^^ (I.),
before the people of the city are consulted, ^''24 {\\,), (^) Simeon and
Levi alone avenge the outrage, and are alone held responsible for the
The parts left unresolved are w.^"^ and "'. In ^'^j ^* looks like a
mention of Dinah and in ^^ nnN 3db"1 is perhaps tm^'^ nm np'i and
and
with a transposition we might read thus II. ^' ^* And Dinah
saw her, ^^ and lay with her. ^^^ And he comforted the
Shechem
*
first
||
^b
...:!.'* And the soul [of Shechem
and
] clave to Dinah
^ and ' seem
he took her and violated her. ^^o. And he loved the girl
girl
to
me
to belong to
II.
rather than
I.
from the sing, in ^ to the pi. in ^. Naturally the redactor has been busy
smoothing over discrepancies and to him may be attributed D3t5'-nx in
i3, the whole of ^'^^' ^"^, i:d ddss'i in 20a, o^y for n^y in
(cf.^^), 133 d:^-'?ni in
^^^
24
and the removal of ^^^^ from '^ (v.u).
1 niDn-nN") and 133 in
1
'^'^^
27
4l8
consequences, ^*- ^^- (I.) but all the sons of Jacob are implicated in the
sack of the city, 27-29 (H.).
Sources.
If sijyle alone were decisive, I. mig-ht safely be identified
with J note 3 p3i, ^ (2 -4) t^j, 3- 12 'y^ jn H)iD, ^^ 'ns3i 'jy3:33, ^o. In II.,
Corn, has pointed out some linguistic affinities with E (see the notes on
21 etc.)
3*? Vy nm, ^
nno,
m*?' ^
but they are insignificant in comparison
with the strongly marked Priestly phraseology of this recension N'tfJ, ^
;
^'^-
Nets,
5- 13.
TV nyc
27
-*
,nx3, 1"
{bis)
to
is-
22
;
y^p
and
nona,
^3
izj
"^a, 24
.^j^.
t,^
These are so
list in Kue. Ges. Ahh. 269 f.
and Dri. assign the narrative unhesitatingly to P, and
has undergone a Priestly redaction (Corn, calls attention
comp. the
admit that it
a very similar case in Nu. 31).
But there are grave material difficulties
to J or E.
(3)
Against
I.
= J,
in particular, (a) In J
the patriarch
is
named
generally
is
Tx
_J
x C _ JI
3a.
.
2b*. 3ba. H.
1.
2a.
2b*. 3b^.
4. 5?. 6. 7?.
I-I2.
sought
I.
Dinah
is
in marriage.
)c^)^r\
2. the
2.
'inn]
(S
'xri::^.
Confusion of
the
and
n is
XXXIV. I-I4
Hdrite
(v.t.).
3.
phrase means
2^3
Ru.
402,
Is.
spoke
to (lit. over)
4. Comp.
4^9
The
woo';
cf.
Ho.
2i2i-24 386,
ju.
142.
to
2^^,
5.
19^^).
7.
20^-^^;
22^1, Ju.
cf.
HSmor,
20 292^.
or language.
8-10.
arranging this particular marriage, he proposes an amalgamation of the two races thinking apparently that the ad;
sufficient
9.
22^^^-
Ex.
1
825),
and
22^^^*,
Sa.
i^ip
distinguished in 24^^.
13-17.
is merely a pretext
Shechemites incapable of self-defence. 14.
to render the
common
but
ffi
(J''),
good
MT
also because the only other place where (& has nn for
a passage somewhat similar to this (see Mey. INS^ 33i)
confirmation of
clans
(36^*'^-),
ffi
that animal
and
faith,
'in is
It is
and
Jos.
9'',
a slight
23^ 25^.
nx 12^ iy? 35^2
phrase as not. ace. 3. "jp] see 24^^ 5. Nsp] in the sexual sense
yyi3. 27^ Ezk. iS"'* 11- ^^ 22^H; otherwise very frequent in P.
7. di/OE'd]
and there are other small syntactic
occupies an unusual position
anomalies in 5.7,_8. 3 ptJ'n] Dt. f lo^^ 21^^ Ps. 9i^'*t ct. pan, v.^. On
9. jnnnn] 'enter into the relation of }nn
the casus pendens^ G-K. 143 h.
and jnn' (i Sa. iS^^^-, i Ki. 3^), and more generally 'form marriage
alliance' (Dt. f, Jos. 23^^ Ezr. 9"). lO. nno] as 4234(E)
but cf. 23^6 (P).
imNm] Niph. in this sense peculiar to P (47^^ Nu. 32^, Jos. 22^- ^^).
cf.
17^^"
this
12.
jnDl nno]
ffi-
tt\v <pepvi\v.
420
the compact
The
18-24.
condition accepted.
honoured
Hamor
sacri-
The men
the land
spacious
is
enough
and by adopting
accession to their
wealth.
The vengeance
25-31.
when
third day]
of the
the inflammation
Hebrews. 25.
is
said, in
S.
and L,^
on the
the case of
the brothers of
Dinah\ cf. 49^. In ch. 29 f., Leah had four other sons who
were as much full brothers of Dinah as these two. Was
there another tradition, according to which Simeon and Levi
were the only sons of Leah (so Mey. INSy 286^, 426 f.)?
without quarter
26. nin ''*h\ according to the usage of war
:
Si'/tecbz'
KaX Aeiu
ol
for
'
uncircumcised
or (G-K. 72
'1J1
'??3n'?]
19.
and
The
Is.
nDr'?D]
Or
64 d.
22I8 [3321, I
ins.
is this
tt]u
21.
Ch.
15.
an intellig'ent anticipa
mm]
Either
D't
4^0,
impf. Niph.,
(22-23^ 2
Ki. la^f).
(BDB)
intrans. impf.
G-K.
ffi^
as 17^^
nnx]
Ju. l8l^
/f)
'
(cf. ^')
'
^^.
avoided by dSc.
27-29 are regarded by Di. as a late interpolation and this is perhaps necessary if the second account is to be identified with P. The
is
XXXIV. IS-3I
2 Sa.
(cf.
ii25).
of the exploit.
421
the close
is
27.
Quibus
JJ
must be transferred
25^
be substituted
for
DvPn
to this v.
28, 29.
I am few
in
number]
it is
the
sion here.
The legend
Hebrew
its inhabitants.
Whether Dinah was a weak Hebrew clan
threatened with absorption by the Hamorites is not so certain it is
more natural to suppose that a literal outrage of the kind described was
the cause of the racial quarrel which ensued.* There are two historic
events which seem to stand in some connexion with the narrative the
Hebrew conquest of Shechem, and the dissolution of Simeon and Levi
as tribal entities, (i) The conquest of Shechem is presupposed in Jos. 24
but it is remarkable that it is never mentioned either among the cities
terms with
mind
31 in
not to be denied.
27. D^'^Vn] lit. 'pierced,' means either 'slain'
(Nu. 19^^ 318. 19 etc.), or (rarely) fatally wounded (La. 2^^ ^^.c.) neither
Gu. suggests D-'pn, 'sick' D'3N3, v.^^ 29.
sense being suitable here.
is
'
'
||
a;i ^3^]
Remove athnach
n'a3]coll.
13j;]
= Ar.
to
13B'
'a>^iVa,
'be turbid,
^J
iv
'in
naiJ')
ry
Heb.
and omit
irSXet Kal
lit.
before
'make
turbid
'
'
30.
undo,'
strong word cf. Jos. 6^^ 7^^, i Ki. i8^^^- ^3D0 'no] lit. men of number,'
numerable, and therefore few Dt. 4^' 33", Jer. 44-^ etc.
;
'
Bennett
(p.
318
f.)
interesting
modern
parallel
ii.
114.
is
quoted by
JACOB IN CANAAN
422
that
(e,
J,
p)
it
to that time.
On
the conquest to Jacob himself, but as an honourable feat of arms unstained by the treachery which is so prominent in ch. 34.
How these
retaliated by the slaughter of Simeon and Levi, while the other brothers
escaped. That is just possible but if so, the narrative departs very
widely from the prevailing tradition, according to which S. and L. not
only survived, but went down into Egypt with the rest of the family.
;
And
is
the result of
Ch.
The
name
XXXM.Jacob in
of Jacob.
Canaan
(E, J, P).
Canaan
Isaac,
27-29^
Sources.
viz. 6a*
The
last
^o^a.
9b. 22a
^iisais^fib
P was
331^/3,
281-^
;
The
XXXV.
1-5
423
natural position of
transposition
is
^*''
some
attractive,
and
on9f-. To
2-
critical difficulties,
^f. o-n'^^n],
i- e.
^^^^ 3. 7
^^^d,
^^
'n^
njjn
(cf.
"
relieves
in
20. 23)
The
is
^i*
22*
('?Nnt5" bis),
4- 14.
Jacob
I.
is
to Bethel there
is
and
ft.
d7vell
Jacob
2.
household
purifies his
for
it
would appear,
to the
by Rachel
stolen
the notice.
is
v.'^)
3.
v.*).
12^.
tree
4.
2327,
V.*^
I.
12*).
Ju.
and
in false
worship
8^^*^-).
on
explain.
Ex.
Teraphim
reference to the
noticeable.
2^^, cf.
of a great
in the early
(31^^)
(Ho.
memory
Shechem
}}ixipa%.
^ terror of God] a
Sa.
1415, 2
Ch.
presupposes an incident
^xn'D]
5*
3.
15
ntyyNl]
5.
lyo'l]
(fSc
like that
iraviKov
Set/xa
(De.)
cf.
1413 etc.
is
end] <&
recorded in ch.
34.
The
Zikiju-wv.
apy]
inter-
(cf.
(Si'lcrpa-^X.
28"
(r^/xepov
JACOB IN CANAAN
424
probable that
stratum of E.
6a
(P).
*
the sons of Jacob makes it hig'hly
redactional (Kue.), or belongs to a different
'
See below.
:
p)
J,
Jacob to
v.^ is either
the sanctuary
(e,
'
The
7.
2^ 28^^) as 'El
Beth' el
(i.e.
not confirmed by
is
The
pi.
is
not above
suspicion.
to hirn\
more
one
C"'n'Sx.
tree of weeping]
But
t;.z.
connected with
this V. is
a mazzehah] So
which the
g^
angels of
'
v.^^ at
14.
'
'
to the
on 12^).
For the grounds on which
'
sacred tree
'
ad
^,
God
14.
burial of Deborah.
S of Bethel.'
in
(see
set up
These monuloo.
"'^
6a.
See on
nn"?]
28^^.
see on 12^
ni33]
The
Vxn'a
cl. is
"?]
'weeping.'
an amalgam of P and E.
(&'S3:>
The
"^Nnu.
D^poh]
7.
8.
fhn]
is
9.
(&
The
14.
V.
d'hSn.
10.
ffi-
simplifies
by omit-
a schol. in Field).
cannot possibly be from P, who recognises no mazzebas,
//. xxiii.
'nm]
'T\]}'2v;i
(so
196,
in OT,
2614 (To. 4", Sir. 30I8).
mentioned
'
(Hom.
'
XXXV. 6-15
425
in
is
'
'
name
of the tree
was
Tree of
we might
Rebekah,'
'
9, 10.
'when he
cf.
17^-
^-
^^
13a.
13b is an awkward continuation, and has probably arisen through dittography from v.^^.
15.
The naming
That the
as
17^'^.
and no
Bethel depends solely on the words inx Dipon, which can easily be
^^.
The suggestion that the v. continues ^ is due
to Cornill (ZATW, xi. 15 ff.), and seems the most satisfactory solution
t|dj] 2 Ki. i6^^- ^^ is the only other instance of the word
of the problem.
before Jeremiah, though the vb. appears in 2 Sa. 23^^, Ho. g'*.
In Jer.,
is
Ezk.
(20^^),
and
II Isa,
it is
mention here
is
I.e.).
JACOB IN CANAAN
426
pso
D^^e
spot
superfluous after
is
(^)
]l}i^
'n3.
(3)
(e,
we have read
J,
{^'^)
vv. Q^-
^^)
p)
that he
had reached a
should
commence with
'n
i"?
nON'i is
divine speaker
Rachel dies
16-20.
in child-birth
known
v.^^).
V].
dying
This also
woman by
is
Benjamin
(see after
With her
18.
'Ephrath\
The next
ZATW,
Sta.
iii.
clause, that
is
Bethlehem^
is
a gloss (see
many
critics to
16.
^NnOD
mean
"lyo'i]
ffi^
was formed
'ATrdpas 5^
'I.
after
(fr.
^^),
II
'
XXXV. i6-26
427
the conquest of the country (We. Sta. Guthe, al.) Steuern. goes further,
infers that the rise of Benjamin brought about the dissolution of
:
and
intentionally omitted.
by the striking
parallel in
6s tioi
//. ix.
TraWaKtdos
449
fnjTep' efJL-qv
iraWaKidi
Note that
In 30^^- also,
tribe, or
list
one of
irpo[xiyTivaL,
'iv
ixQ'HP^'-^
An
Slkoltiv,
y^povra.
some humiliation inflicted by Reuben on the Bilhahbranches (Dan or Naphtali). See on 49*.
its
list
children
5'
ariixd^eaKe
basis in
22b-26.
the
(Gu.)
5'
ij
ff.
irepixfjoo'aTO KaWcK6fj.oio'
are
JE
JE
is
is
mothers
placed in Mesopotamia.
The
and
Other-
On the
position of the
v.,
EDOMITE GENEALOGIES
428
The death
27-29.
of Isaac
when Jacob
(P).
fled
(p*)
In
JE
Isaac
was
An
is
seen in Esau's
on
living-
32^),
Hebron (see
him and
in
friendship between
Jacob.
27.
XXXVI.
Ch.
The chapter
Mount
IV.
Seir,
^-8
29.30.
Horite
ni.
lists
*o-43^
(or eight)
His
II.
sections:
I.
migration
to
of Esau's descendants,
list
a genealogy,
clans of Esau,
in
^~^
children,
An enumeration
Two
V.
consists of seven
and
wives
Esau's
Edomite Genealogies^
^^"^s^
^1-39;
2,n^
yil.
list
^-^^
^^^^^
;
of clans,
second
list
of
1^5-54.
Ch.
The chapter
383
f.).
Analysis.
section
headed
unhesitatingly ascribed to
pnr] (K
t-jGlQ.O|.
+ 'n
(as
257).
29
In P's chronology,
(Kit.).
end] S
Jacob at
jn^n]
^Ql^]
his father's
ffir^
+ IV" pN3.
r^l? li*^^^
(cf. 35^^
with
25^^)
XXXVI. 1-5
429
and
if
The argument
III.,
Esau's wives and sons. The scheme here procommon framework of the two Edomite
genealogies, ^~^* and ^^~^^, except that in the following
sections the second and third wives exchange places.
These
1-5.
in
Se'ir.
Here
naturally
we come on
{b)
Y^Mdith bath-
(cf.
v.^-^^);
is itself
instructive.
are really distinct names (see p. 359f.)j and P has no legendary identiHence the connexion is established in
fication of them, such as 25^**.
two ways Esau = Edom (^- ^' ^^) and Esau the father of Edom i^-^^).
pyn:^ nn] juu.^
2. np"? iry] 'had taken,' as already recorded (26^"* 28**).
But in clan names gender is
deleted by Ho. and Gu. as a gloss.
not always carefully distinguished and the writer probably took r\^^
:
Vp
as
fern.
In v.^ 'Oholibamah
is
'inn]
EDOMITE GENEALOGIES
430
(p*)
and that
to
in *'"*
a clumsy
some points
establish
(?
Canaanite), Hivvite
and
(? Horite),
On the Names. (a) r\'\}) is the name of one of Lamech's wives see
on 4^^. (6) nD3''7nN ('OXi/Se/xd, 'EXL^efid, etc.). Somewhat similar compounds with Vhn are found in Phoenician ('?y3'?nN, iSo'^nN) and Sab.
(nnni''?nN, '^x'^nN) as well as in Heb. (3N''?nN, Ex. 31^; nT^nx, Ezk. 23^^-)
The first component is presumably Ar. and
(see Gray, HPN, 246^).
the second ought by analogy to be a divine name,
Sab. ahl, family
though none such is known. It is philolog-ically probable that names
of this type were originally clan-names and 'nx is taken from the old
list of Horite clans (v.^^, cf. ^^).
(c) nDtJ'3 (for which ux always reads
n'?nD, 28^), if from sj D^3, 'smell sweetly,' is likely to have been a
favourite woman's name, but recurs only i Ki. 4^^ of a daughter of
Solomon. On njy and Jiy^^i, see on v.^ the obvious connexion with
that V. makes it practically certain that 'in in v.- is a mistake for nn.
On the sons, see below. It is pointed out by Ho. (187) that both in
'"^^ and ^^"^^ the 'Oholibamah branch holds a somewhat exceptional
This may mean that it represents hybrid clans, whereas the
position.
other two are of pure Edomite stock that it is a later insertion in the
:
'
'
lists
si
ess likely.
6-8.
and
None
his daughters]
Setr] So
we must
separation
is
the
read with
same as
are mentioned in
(13^*),
^.
y.
12^ (34^^).
Cf.
^~^.
to
the land of
The motive
for
the
^^
8.
the
It is strange that
father of Edom] see footnote on v.^.
except in these glosses Edom is never the eponymus of the
j35 g39 23^<''-, 2
Ch.
ii^^t.
({JT^'F) is inadmissible
sible
as
but
it
is
XXXVI. 6-1
nation, although
name of a god
number of the tribes,
it
2 Sa. 6^0)
(d-iK 12Vy
431
_ij
ff^
The
total
is
as in the cases of
12,
wives (so
(a)
The
v.i^).
Adah.
list
(6)
liphaz [Timna].
I.
3.
5.
may
be tabulated thus
Basemath.
RS'ii
{c)
'Oholibamah.
el.
Teman.
2.
Omar.
6.
Nahath.
7.
Zgpho.
K6naz.
4.
Ga'tam,
8.
Sammah.
9.
Zerah.
Mizzah.
10. Y6'(a.
12.
11.
Ya'lam.
Korah.
['Amalek].
(a)
The Names.
and wisest
oldest
this
list.
(Jer. 497-
T3''?n]
Known
Am. i^ Ob.
20,
^,
Hab.
f\ famous
for its
wisdom,
home
14s- ^^
Jos.
15", Ju.
i^^
3^'^^).
The
Edom, a fact abundantly illustrated from the lists before us. The once
powerful people of phou (see on 14'') is here described as descended from
yjDn, a Horite clan absorbed in Edom (vv.^^- ^o)^ of which nothing- else
The reference may be to an offshoot of the old Amalekites
is known.
who had found protection from the Edomites. (b) '?Niyn {'FayovrjX)]
' Friend
of God (?) is one of the names of Moses' father-in-law (a
Midianite) (Ex. 2^% Nu. lo^^), also that of a Gadite (Nu. i^* 2^"^) and of
a Benjamite (i Ch. 9^). (6) nno (Naxo^, ^axofj.)] cf 2 Ch. 3113.(7) nil
(Zape)] (cf V.33).
Also a clan of Judah (383^) cf Nu. 26^3 (Simeonite),
I Ch. 6- 26 (Levite). (8) nDa'(2oAie)] cf i Sa. 16^ (David's brother), 2 Sa.
23^^ (one of his heroes)
also '12V in Yerahmeel (1 Ch. 228-32) and Kaleb
(2**^-).
It is pointed out that the
(9) niD (Mo^e, 'Oyaofe, etc.)] only here.
four names form a doggerel sentence
descent and rising, there and
here' (KS. An. 178); but three of them are sufficiently authenticated
and the fact does not prove them to be inventions of an idle fancy.
As an Israelite name, 1 Ch.
(10) E^'y ('Ie[o]i;s, 'leouX, etc.)] v.t. on v.^
71" 839 (Benjamite), 23'^^' (Levite), 2 Ch. ii^^ (son of Rehoboam).
The
'
'
EDOMITE GENEALOGIES
432
name
(p*)
is
lion-
god Yagui (though CBr must have pronounced . not ji), meaning
helper,' whose antiquity is vouched for by inscrs. of Thamud (Rob. Sm.
KM'', 254 We. Held? 19, 146
No. ZDMG, xl. 168 Fischer, ih.
Mey. INS, 351 f. on the other side, No. ZDMG, xlv. 595 Di.
Iviii. 869
384 Buhl, Edotn. 48 f.). (ii)D'?y''('Ie7Xo/A, etc.)] possibly an animal name
=' ibex' but see Gray, HPN, 90^ cf. H';, Ju. 4^'^^- 5^^, and n^y!,
fr.
Ezr. 2^^.
(12) mp (Kope)] a son of Hebron, and therefore a Kalebite clan
Meyer (352^) traces to this Edomite-Kalebite family the
in I Ch. 2"'^
origin of the ^orahite singers and subordinate officials of the second
Temple, who were afterwards admitted to the ranks of the Levites, and
received an artificial genealogy (Ex. 6^^- ^, Nu. 26^^, i Ch. (P- ^^ etc.).
*
'73;;;
The
15-19.
^^?i<,
v.z.
Edom.
clan-chiefs of
Since the
15.
On
all
list is
the word
vv.^~^*,
we
'
20.
i^s)
cf.
Dt.
2^^,
These
i.e.,
being personified as
Se'ir, Se'ir
'
'
'
18.
itfy
20.
na]
"^tff"]
'lafjieiy
om.
(!Sc
(S[
Aq.
19.
sing.
DHN
24b.
DD.-n]
wild-asses
'
and
U be right (and
'
mules
The word
(see Field)
'
&
] i
is
utterly obscure.
mx D'O'nh (Dt.
V) 01-^
aurQv, vloi'Eddb/x.
(o^en ?)
2!"
so
ffi9.
t6v
E^ xnaa)
aquce callidce.
If
24b
is
XXXVI. 15-30
433
The name nh
is now generally regarded as a geographical designawith the {faru of the Eg. monuments (Miiller, AEy 137,
i49ff., 240; Jen. ZA^ x. 332 f., 346 f.
Schw. ZATW, xviii. 126; Mey.
INSy 330 f.), The older theory that the name is derived from nin and
means 'cave-dwellers,' is not necessarily discredited by this identification.
Even if the Horites were a stratum of population that once
covered the region from the Egyptian frontier to the neighbourhood of
Damascus, there still seems no reason why they should not have been
largely an old troglodyte race, from whom the country derived its
tion, identical
name.
The Classification. According to ^** ^'" there were seven main
branches of the Horites in Se'ir, represented by Lotan, 6bal, Zib'on,
'Anah, Di6n, 'Ezer, and RiSan (see below). Of these, however, 'Anah
and DiSon reappear as subdivisions of Zib'on and 'Anah respectively.
The duplication has been explained by supposing that parts of these
tribes had amalgamated with kindred branches, and thus came to
figure both as sons and grandsons of the original ancestor (Di. Gu.
al.).
It is more likely that 'Anah and Di^on were at first subordinate
septs of Zib'on (so Mey. 341) that they came into the list of 'allilphhn
p9f.^ as heads of clan groups
and, finally, obtained a primary position
amongst the
may
(a)
The
sons of Se'ir.
be exhibited as follows
*
'
L6tan (Timna).
(*)
Sobal.
'
Hori,
(c)
'
Hemam.
Zib'6n.
(cO'Ezer.
'.
Manahat,
Di6n
Sgpho,
'Onam.
Rlgan.
Bilhan,
'Uz,
'bal,
(^)
'
[Ya]'akan.
(Ohdlibamah),
|
Hemdan, 'ESban,
Yithran, KSran.
The Names.
dweller,
IQ^'*),
{a)
pi^
is
'
lion.'
Ar.
ought to be
\ff
in
Heb.
but the
objection
is
28
EDOMITE GENEALOGIES
434
Ch.
2"^
6bal.
{dabu,
tribe
'falcon (Lv.
'
n^n]
\^i],
11^*,
unknown.
p?n) and ptyt< are not known. pn'] Derived from a widely
diffused personal name (Heb. Bab. Sab. Nabat.), best known in OT
also a son of Gideon
as that of Moses's father-in-law (Ex. 3^ etc.)
(Ju. 8-^), and the Ishmaelite father of Amasa (2 Sa. if^ etc.).
pj^n (Ch.
pa
unknown. I'lVa] can scarcely be dissociated from Rachel's handmaid rinh2, whose Horite origin would be somewhat more intelligible if Horite clans were amalgamated in one of her
pyT (juu. |>it,
Zou/cd/*,
subdivisions (Dan see on Maiiahat above).
Zavdj' = li;ii)] unknown.
|py (better fpj-", as i Ch. i-^^)] The tribe is doubtless to be identified with the jijy;. 'i? mentioned in Xu. 33^^^-, Dt. 10^ as
{e) pn ((G P[e]i(rwi')] Rd. jtyn
the owners of some wells S of Kadesh.
py ("fis)] see on 10^
or I^'l, to avoid concurrence with the JE'^i of v.^^-.
22^'.
The
}"in] Perhaps connected with the YerahmeeUte px, i Ch. 2^.
reading cnx (Heb. MSS, ffirUSTJ) is probably a mistake caused by the
(d) i!ix]
ffir
proximity of
\'\^.
The kings
31-39.
a king of the
of
Israelites
Edom. 31.
(z'./.)]
This
monarchy in
sovereign ruled over Edom.
ad quern
is,
natural terminus
is
(p.
list
wanting.
kings (Meyer)
31.
The
either before
or before any
437 below).
of authenticity,
complete
logy
Israel,
ence by David
mark
may mean
S^'ys!^
'33*?]
is
An
Expression of gen. by
S to
prevent determination of
the governing noun by the following determinate gen. (G-K. 129 c),
*
a king belonging to the I.' The second interpretation given above is
^^ kv 'lepovaaXrifx,
the only natural one.
too readily approved by Ball.
ffi^^
iv 'laparjX,
the
latter
XXXVI. 31-36
settled times
435
may
none of the kings being the son of his predecessor; that it was elective (Tu. Kn. Di. De. Dri. al.)
is more than we have a right to assume.
Frazer {AAO, 11^)
finds here an illustration of his theory of female succession,
the crown passing to men of other families who married the
hereditary,
hereditary princesses
fact that the kings
but
cities
The
view.
reigned in different
supports an
a dynasty.
principle
may be
royal'
Ki.
(i
ii^"^^-),
who
is
chief city of
20 m.
SE
Edom (Is.
of the
Dead
Sea.
34.
DE^n
land of the Tema7iite\ see on v.^^. 35. nnn bears the well-known name
of an Aramsean deity, whose worship must have prevailed widely in
Edom (see v.^^ i Ki. n^^^-)- "^ho smote Midian, etc.] The solitary
It is a tempting- sug-g-estion of Ewald
historical notice in the list.
(HI, ii. 336), that the battle was an incident of the g-reat Midianite raid
under which Israel suffered so severely, so that this king was contemporary with Gideon (cf. Meyer, 381 f.). n^iy] r T6daifi = D:n]!, on
which reading Marquart {Fundamente, 11) bases an ing-enious explanation of the mysterious name D'nyii'T jcj'O in Ju. 3^^- (o^ny b^nt D^m,
a confusion of the third and fourth kings in our list).
36. n^Dty]
idSb'
perhaps the same name as Solomon. r\^'\V!y:i\ A place of this name
(Maa-piKci) is mentioned in OS, 137^'' (p. 277), in Gebalene, the northern
EDOMITE GENEALOGIES
436
part of Mt. Seir. 37. h'^atc] The name of the first king- of Israel. ninm
injn] so called to disting'uish it from other places of the same name
(cf 26^^), is probably the 'PowjSci^ of OS, 145^' (p. 286), a military post in
Gebalene. The river is, therefore, not the Euphrates (although a place
side), but some perennial stream
Rahaba has been discovered on its
in the N of Edom, defined by the city on its banks (cf. 2 Ki. 5^^^
Baal is g-racious.' The name of the seventh king- is the
38. j3n ^ya]
only existing trace of Baal-worship in Edom. iudj;] 'jerboa' (Ar.
Here it is probably a clan-name,
see Rob. Sm. KM'^, 235^.
^akhar)
'
but appears as personal in OT (2 Ki. 22^^, Jer. 26^2 36^^)- 39- i"''"'] To
be read inn (Heb. MSS, M.Si<& partly, and i Ch. i^o). For lys (i Ch.
Why
'ys), ffi: has ^6yo}py i.e. "iiy?, the mountain in Moab (Nu. 23^ etc.).
SNnt:':^ (' God does
the wife of Hadad ii. is named we cannot tell.
good ') is a man's name in Neh. 6^^ For nni "d na it would be better to
read 'd |3 (ffi^). But an? 'D (gold- water) is more likely to be the name
of a place than of a person hence Marquart's emendation 'd JD [I.e. 10)
is very plausible, as is his identification of 3nt 'D with the miswritten
Dm n
of Dt.
40-43.
i^.
The
chiefs
of Esau.
This
second
list
of
Of
preceding
(io-39)
lists
the
new names,
ment preserves a
statistical
It is
in the
Edom
of
the case.
is
NNW
40. nnpo'?]
ux DmnarDS
(v. *'').
Dni-iVn'?.
wy
onDcn]
Nin]
ffir
Dn"ii3i
see on v.^
onsnxa (10^-
^^).
43.
cnnK'D'?]
XXXVI. 37-43
437
nomads
wards returned
to trouble
The genealogies
Solomon
(i
and
same name
amongst the descendants of Esau or Se'ir and amongst those of Judah
This might be explained by assuming that a clan
(see the notes pass.).
had been split up, one part adhering to Edom, and another attaching
but a consideration of the actual circumstances suggests
itself to Judah
a more comprehensive theory. The consolidation of the tribe of Judah
was a process of political segregation the desert tribes that had pushed
(5)
Judaean
we have found
In several instances
tribes.
the
their
all vicissitudes
of political
and
religious condition.
The
XXXVII-L.
Book of Genesis
at
OT
fascinating of
biog-raphies.
by the story of Judah and Tamar (ch. 38) and (b) by the so-called
Blessing- of Jacob (49^'^^)
see the introductory notes on these chapters.
Everywhere else the narrative follows the thread of Joseph's fortunes ;
the plan and contents being- as follows
:
and was thrown into prison (39). 3. His skill in interpreting dreams
discovered (40). 4. His interpretation of Pharaoh's dreams, and his
consequent elevation to the highest dignity in Egypt (41).
n. Chs. 42-45. The reunion of Joseph and his brethren
5. The first
meeting of the brethren with Joseph in Egypt (42). 6. The second
:
in
Goshen
(46.
47^"'^),
8.
9.
10.
*''*
438
xxxvii.-L
439
istic
^^ [50^''']; 46^'').
recension,
and makes
analysis.
A comparison
recent critics
is
distinction
this
the basis of
instructive in
an independent
commonly accepted by
one. *
On
the whole,
it
*
373-2^
Eerdmans, of
to
(J)
13-^^48I (E), ^b
8-22
^^^ (P), 29-31
(J) ; 47'- (J [v.^ P*]),
(J),
(J) ;
(j),
E) ; 501-^1 (J), 14-26 (E*).
the Jacob-recension (J-R) he assigns 372
(J
(P), 2^-2' (J), '''' (J), '' (JE), 35 (J) ; 40 ; 41 ; 42 (all E) ; 45I-27 (E*), 46^^-5 (-),
6- 7
(P) ; 476-11 (p*)^ 12 (E), 28 (?) ; 49!^ (p)^ 29-33 (p) . ^^12. 13 ^p) (^Jf^omp. d.
(JE),
2-3^
To
other sources
is
mainly on the ground that it contains the name m.T (the use of the divine
names is thus after all a reliable criterion of authorship when it suits
Eerdmans' purpose !). A more arbitrary piece of criticism could hardly
be found. (3) Apart from these two eccentt-icities, and the finer shades
of analysis which Eerdmans refuses to acknowledge, it will be seen that
except in ch. 37 his division agrees a potiori with that of the majority of
i.e., the I-R corresponds in the main with J and the J-R with
critics
E. (4) In ch. 37, on the contrary, the relation is reversed I-R = E, and
J-R = J. But this divergence turns on a wholly arbitrary and indefensSince the J-R in 45^ speaks of a sale of Joseph
ible selection of data.
28b
belonged to it. It is
(to the Ishmaelites), it is inferred that 3725-27.
conveniently overlooked that 40^^ (also J-R) refers back to 37^^*- ^^- (the
stealifig of Joseph), that 42^ (J-R) presupposes 37^2 (I-R)
to say
nothing of the broad distinction that Judah's leadership is as characterIf Eerdmans had duly
istic of one source as Reuben's is of the other.
considered the whole of the evidence, he would have seen first that it is
absolutely necessary to carry the analysis further than he chooses to do,
and next that the two recensions in ch. 37 must exchange places in order
With that
to find their proper connexions in the following chapters.
;
readjustment,
it is
440
finest
example
in
narrative.
From the
other patriarchal biographies it is distinguished first of all by the
dramatic unity of a clearly conceived * plot,' the unfolding- of which
exhibits the conflict between character and circumstances, and the
triumph of moral and personal forces amidst the chances and vicissitudes
called
novelistic
'
is
the sense of
realising- its
e.g-.)
Nor
is
there
much
foundation for
XXXVII.-L
441
broadly the three kinds of material which have been laid under contribu(i) The element of tribal history or relationships, thoug-h slight
and secondary, is clearly recognisable, and supplies a key which may
be used with caution to explain some outstanding features of the narrative.
That there was an ancient tribe named Joseph, afterwards subdivided
into Ephraim and Manasseh, is an item of Hebrew tradition whose
authenticity there seems no good reason to question (see p. 533) and
the prestige and prowess of this tribe are doubtless reflected in the
distinguished position held by Joseph as the hero of the story. Again,
actual tribal relations are represented by the close kinship and strongaffection between Joseph and Benjamin
and by the preference of
Ephraim before Manasseh, and the elevation of both to the status of
adopted sons of Jacob. The birthright and leadership of Reuben in E
implies a hegemony of that tribe in very early times, just as the similar
position accorded to Judah in J reflects the circumstances of a later age.
These are perhaps all the features that can safely be interpreted of real
tribal relations.
Whether there was a migration of the tribe of Joseph
to Egypt, whether this was followed by a temporary settlement of all
the other tribes on the border of the Delta, etc., are questions which
this history does not enable us to answer
and attempts to find a
historical significance in the details of the narrative (such as the sleeved
tunic of Joseph, the enmity of his brethren, his wandering from Hebron
to Shechem and thence to Dothan, the deliverance of Joseph by Reuben
or Judah, and so on) are an abuse of the ethnographic principle of interFor (2) alongside of this there is an element of individual
pretation.
biography, which may very well preserve a reminiscence of actual
There must have been current in ancient Israel a tradition of
events.
some powerful Hebrew minister in Egypt, who was the means of saving
the country from the horrors of famine, and who used his power to remodel the land-system of Egypt to the advantage of the crown. That
such a tradition should be true in essentials is by no means improbable.
There were * Hebrews in Palestine as early as the 14th cent. B.C.
(p. 218), and that one of these should have been kidnapped and sold as a
boy into slavery in Egypt, and afterwards have risen to the office of
viceroy, is in accordance with many parallels referred to in the monuments
while his promoting the immig-ration of his kinsfolk under stress
(p. 469)
of famine is an incident as likely to be real as invented.
The figure of
Yanhamu, the Semitic minister of Amenhotep IV. (pp. 501 f.), presents a
partial counterpart to that of Joseph, though the identification of the two
personages rests on too slender data to be plausible. The insoluble
difficulty is to discover the point where this personal history passes into
the stream of Israelite national tradition, or where Joseph ceases to be
an individual and becomes a tribe. The common view that he was the
actual progenitor of the tribe afterwards known by his name is on many
grounds incredible and the theory that he was the leader of a body of
Hebrew immigrants into Egypt does violence to the most distinctive feaSteuernagel's suggestion {Einw. 67), that the
tures of the representation.
story is based on feuds between the tribe Joseph and the other tribes, in
the course of which individual Josephides were sold as slaves to Egypt,
tion,
'
442
(p,
Je)
The
of view at once.
tribal
each may contain a kernel of history of its own kind but the
union of the two was effected not on the plane of history in either sense,
but during- the process of artistic elaboration of the theme. (3) There
is, lastly, an element of Eg-yptian folklore, which has been drawn on to
some extent for the literary embellishment of the story. The incident of
Joseph's temptation (ch. 39) appears to be founded on an Egyptian
popular tale (p. 459). The obscure allusions to Joseph as a potent
mag-ician are very probably surviving traces of a motive which was more
boldly developed in an Egyptian source. The prominence of dreams and
their interpretation perhaps hardly falls under this head ; it may rather
be part of that accurate acquaintance with Egyptian life which is one of
the most striking features of the narrative. That in this legendary
element there is an admixture of mythical material is very possible but
a direct influence of mythology on the story of Joseph is extremely
speculative.
It has been argued with some force that the presence of
this Egyptian colouring itself goes far to show that we have to do with
genuine history, not with a legend woven by popular fancy upon the
(Dri. DB, ii. TJib).
At the same time it has to be
hills of Ephraim
considered that the material may have been largely woven in Egypt
itself, and afterwards borrowed as drapery for the Israelite hero Joseph.
Egyptian folklore might easily have been naturalised in Canaan during
the long Egyptian domination, or have been imported later as a result
It is not difficult to
of Egyptian influence at the court of Jeroboam i.
suppose that it was appropriated by the Hebrew rhapsodists, and
incorporated in the native Joseph-legend, and gradually moulded into
the exquisite story which we now proceed to examine.
distinct,
'
'
Ch.
XXXVII.
his Brethren's
As
his
Father through
(P, JE).
portending a
brilliant future,
itself,
(^~^^).
favourable oppor-
With
The chapter
is
not only
full
beast,
moved
to confession (3^"^).
of thrilling
human
interest,
The sudden
but
is
to
XXXVII.
member
443
I,
uncertainty which
all this
the prelude to
is
Vv.^-
fate
some
the
all,
of Joseph, appeal
who
irresistibly to the
that
feels
signal manifestation of
chapter
may
start
||
^^'
Ai^Q^i tO flDD)
35b. 36.
18a. 19. 20. 22. 24. 28aa)3
(to nUn) " 29. 30. 32a;3- SSa^g. 34a.
as the basis of the exposition, though some points are open to question,
particularly the assumption that all references to a tunic of any kind are
to be ascribed to J.
i-ii.
The
alienation
and
between Joseph
his
I, 2.
'^^'^
tj^gn
its
As a parenthesis
(Dri.)
it
The
is
clause
yii\
t^'ini
is
2. '3 nyn]
in Jb. 17^), or
convincing.
nj;T
r\v\
'ni
(= *kept company
14'^'^)]
lit.
'
with'),
neither
proposal just
'n
*
216).
Rather than
46^*^-,
evil,'
is
in-
i^ssf.^^
JOSEPH BROUGHT TO EGYPT
444
(je)
(all)
cubines.
With this change, Di.'s objections to the unity of v.^ fall to the ground,
and the whole may be safely ascribed to P (note the chronology, the
supplementary V3N 'Sf:, and the phrase nyi nai). Short as the fragment
(i) He
is, it shows that P's account was peculiar in two respects
restricts the hostility to the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah, and (2) he traces
It is plain that P is
to Joseph's reporting their misdeeds to Jacob.
no mere supplementer of the older history, but an independent author,
though his account has been sacrificed to the more graphic narratives
of J and E.
it
3,
Now
(J).
Israel lovedJoseph
.]
is
^"^^
i,e.
^r?^?]
the wrists
and ankles, whereas the ordinary under-garment was sleeveless, and reached only to the knees.
That it was an unusual
habiliment appears also from 2 Sa.
13^8!.
speculations
13^^
its
3.
r\v^'\\ txx.
As
B'yn.
D'ds
njn^]
Except
all
S>
iroiKiXov)
and
ffiU
"j
(& {xLTioua
'''^'^
A*^
and
[\
|_iZaD
.wVr)
(*
curiously
(r(f>vp(3u Trpbs
U
:
./pn [=
171
to
best to restore
it is
fir]
e<p6povv
yap
ai Ti3v
^X^irecrdai xtraJi'as.
change
vii.
sides
{x-
tunica striata]).
Kapwutrds,
The
real
In 2 Sa. 13,
fa/arts
meaning
tunicay
is
deter-
NH and Aram. DS (Dn. s''- 24) =a;p?K, Ezk. 47^; see Bevan,
100.4. vnN2] Heb. MSS xxx(& vn S ^OCTlXd ^_SD- diWS n?!!]
On the suff., see G-K. 115 c. But no other case occurring of 13^ with
ace. of pers. addressed (Nu. 26' is corrupt), Gu. points n^n (' could not
take his matter peaceably'). Kit. em. '"? iS 121^ (the might be omitted:
mined by
Da7i.
*?
;;'
XXXVII. 3-13
ably] or,
represents
in VV.2-
i3ff.
salute him.'
445
6, 7*
^^53iff.
|-j^gy
are shepherds.
its fulfilment,
questionable.
is
a failure of the
8a.
Will
l/iou,
sages Joseph's elevation not only over his brothers, but over
his father (Ho.), i.e, Israel collectively.
eleven slars] Supposed by some to be an allusion to the signs of the Zodiac
(De. Gu. al., cf. Je. ATLO^, 383), the twelfth being either
Joseph himself, or the constellation obscured by Joseph as the
sun-god. The theory will stand or fall with the identification
of Jacob's twelve sons with the Zodiacal signs (see pp. 534 f.)
makes
it,
II.
mailer
(in
mind)]
and
^^
are redactional).
Surriprja-cv.
Cf.
'
hated
Lk.
2^^- ^^.
12-17.
brethren.
Jacob' sends
12,
2^ etc.).
cm. by
ffi.
Ps.
||
13b, 14a
after
(see the
his
analysis
see Ex.
the
Joseph to inquire
13a, 14b J
7.
is
is
^r\y^n
fflr.
d'?x] ^tt.
told.
pi.
what immediately
nsD'i
follows,
ffi
is
omits,
in-
and
446
In J, Jacob
below).
is
(je)
same
to the
would perhaps
soon (see p. 418) though it has been argued that this very
circumstance accounts for Jacob's solicitude. In E we find
no indication of either the starting-point or the goal of the
;
journey.
Ddthan
7I8)
Jth. 3^ 46
e^^ff-,
(2 Ki.
is
the
modern
Tell
would be a
^^'^
(J),
and Gu.'s
mention Shechem at
18-30.
The
all,
nor J Dothan.
plot to
iSb J.
or Judah (J). i8a, 19, 20 E
Common to both sources is the proposal to kill Joseph E
develops it most fully, revealing the motive of the crime and
Reuben
(E),
||
cation, but
ht<]
'
common nominal
(Aram.
termination.
?) locative
XXXVII. 14-25
the device by which
it
was
dead body)
447
to be concealed.
;
cf. ^^^.
(his
The
'
and Ass.
ing-
above
BDB,
nin
little
b.
21.
nun-'?x]
insnsTiN] (&
"^yn]
19.
is
n.
1J33]
om.
It is
22.
els
v.^^.
E and
J respectively, or whether
both in the rendering-
U combines
(Di. al.) to E,
'
448
for medicinal
28.
26.
left
the spot.
30.
own
It is interest-
with the
act, in 42^2.
That the
last section is
subj. of
i'?y'i
iDtyDn,
The
31-36.
deceiving of Jacob.
Whether the
popular tales.
common
to J
is
31, 32.
Gu. remarks
a favourite motive in
incident
is
peculiar to J, or
{y.i.)
(34b. 35aj
(^^^- ^^^)
tsS
'
dwells ou
(43^^ t)]
33.
an
slight
to take the
words
34, 35.
The
grief
is
mourning
Gk.
the suits of
woe
'
but J
ladanuni, the gum of a species of cistusMentioned amongst objects of Syrian tribute {ladunu)
\rj8avov, Lat.
f.).
by Tiglath-pileser
IV.
{KAT\
151).
27.
D'SNyDr'S]
ffi
+ n^xn.
The word
is
(& ovx
opq..
3K. The reason for assigning the v. to J (Gu.) is the precarious assumption that Joseph's coat plays no part at all in E. There is a good
deal to be said for the view that it belongs to E (Di, Ho. al.). 32. inu'i]
Gu. iNi3;i, and they came (see on ^^ above), which would be an excellent
continuation of ^^ in E they dip the coat in blood, come to their father,
and say an evil beast,' etc. in J they send the coat unstained, and let
Jacob form his own conclusion. In any case '1JI in'3'i is E's parallel to J's
'
'
'
'ui inSc'i.
NnDH
distinctly to J
XXXVII. 26-36
the bereaved father.
449
of which
is still
Griineisen, Ahncncultus, 6 1
96
ff.
34b.
''?^P'7, chiefly
ff.
used
Ps. 35I*.
Is. 61^,
Tode^
1 1
ff.
d.
A
is
There was
really
similar indifference to
age between Joseph and his brothers (v.^), and the assumption that Rachel was still alive (^^). go down
as a
mourner\ Jacob will wear the mourner's garb till his death,
so that in the underworld his son may know how deep his
grief had been (Gu.).
The shade was believed to appear in
Sheol in the condition in which it left the world (Schw. 63 f.).
36 (E) resuming ^sb, gge, further, on 39^
.
Tam ar (J).
Canaanitish wife,
and
Shelah
(^~^).
the husbands of
without issue
in her father's
Tamar
become
succession
in
Tamar
resorts to
desperate
(27-30j^
cf.
F|"3b
fjnip]
35.
iDip'i]
with
all
<&
44^^
On
inf.
<rvprixdr]<Tav 8^,
29
113 w,
D'JiDm]
Rd.
450
(j)
supremacy of the former and (possibly) the superiority of these two (as
sons of Judah) to the more ancient Shelah (his grandson). See Steuerwhere, however, the ethnological explanation is
nagel, Einw. 79 f.
It is obvious that the legend belongs
carried further than is reasonable.
The
to a cycle of tradition quite independent of the story of Joseph.
latter knows of no separation of Judah from his brethren, and this record
leaves no room for a reunion. Although P, who had both before him,
represents Judah and his sons as afterwards accompanying Jacob to
Egypt (46^-), there can be no doubt that the intention of this passage is
Where
to relate the permanent settlement of Judah in Palestine.
precisely the break with the prevalent tradition occurs, we cannot
It is possible that the figure of Judah here is
certainly determine.
simply a personification of the tribe, which has never been brought into
in this case the events
connexion with the family history of Jacob
reflected may be assigned to the period subsequent to the Exodus.
It
seems a more natural supposition, however, that the legend ignores the
Exodus altogether, and belongs to a stratum of tradition in which the
occupation of Canaan is traced back to Jacob and his immediate descendants (see pp. 418, 507). On some touches of mythological colouring in
the story of Tamar, see below, pp. 452, 454.
The chapter is a pure specimen of Yahwistic narration, free
Source.
from redactional manipulation. The following characteristics of J may
"^
be noted m.T, ' " '3'y3 y^, ' "> v^yr\^^, ^^ nj^dh, 25 (3^32) p-^r'^,
;
j;t, 26
further, the naming of the children by the mother, ^"' ; and the
^'^'^
resemblance of
to 25^^-. Since the sequence of 39^ on 37^ would be
harsh, it is probable that ch. 38 was inserted here by RJ^ (Ho.).
;
is
Mlye
SW
(or
'Aid
is
el- Aid),
is
clear that
indicated.
Adullam
tell
when or
From
it
some place
is
in
the
of Bethlehem and 7
NE
It
Smith, HG, 229).
193
as 1 1 50 ft. above sea-level.
;
The
we cannot
is
marked on the
Judah was a
map
Pal. Surv.
The separation
is
described in Ju.
i^^"
in the
I.
ful.
B'1]
<& acpiKero
The change
is
doubt-
XXXVIII. i-io
451
that the
first
A more permanent
2.
is
is
(ct.
34. 24^)
It is
known
happen
though
'Aksib, an un-
makes
(J^
There
therefore
is
as he
was the
all
three
6.
name
little
probability that
name on
suggested on
is
p.
for
David's family
in
logical origin
be a
there.
is
may
5b. in Keziby
452 below.
it
the
mytho-
As head of the
is
obligation
(^- ^^).
No
7.
crime
is
whose
hand,
is
slain
lo^^).
8-10.
'0?idny
on the other
in which he
renderings of
^^ in
&
and
'B
ZoOl AO-CQ^O
aiZ,Jl- ^D
quo nato
(cf.
7.
ni.T^]
6 ^e6y.
8.
'
nn] only
again Nu.
20^^
comp.
^^q,
Ex.
3^^,
Nu.
22^^-
^*'
^^
10.
ntyj?
ib'k]
452
(j)
brother.
offence
was
interests.
his selfish
His
her.
real
motive
is
some way
to
is
young
to
Tamar
in thy father's
herself.
widow
Ru.
on
marry
to her family,
too
to his
II.
up seed
It is
(Lv. 22^^,
18).
The custom
in primitive times,
its
Hebrew form
and
it
12-19.
II.
12.
'3?',
Ba. al. propose '^^, nv'Ri, after Lv. 22^* but see Is. 47".
Apparently a compound proper name, as in i Ch. 2^ =
nK'ni]
y?t?"n3]
12. Bath-Shud]
was comforted] a conventional phrase for
XXXVIII. II-I8
is
subsequent behaviour:
il
faut
Hirah
see Jer.
i6^.
The
mentioned as a palliation of
comme
453
for
a married
it
his
was con-
man
to
have
S of Hebron
or
it
(Jos. 15^^),
may be
the
is
modern Tibne,
W of Bethlehem,
though
common
on
v.2^),
She
16^.
and sits,
by the wayside; cf.
prostitute,
Jer. 3^,
Ezk.
16^^,
for she had covered her face\ This explains, not Judah's
failure to recognise her, but his mistaking her for a harlot
15*
(see v.^^).
The present
17. a kid of the goats] Cf. Ju. 15^.
of a kid on these occasions may be due to the fact that (as in
classical antiquity) the
love (Paus.
vi.
25.
cf.
2,
3,
yjE'-nn (cf.
dt,
|A>o90
f\
^\<^*^j
to
be at the cross-roads (of which there are several on the short way
from 'Aid el- Ma to Tibne). The sense is good, and it is tempting to
think that these Vns are on the right track, though their rendering has
no support in Heb. usage. If D'Vy be a proper name it may be identical
with the unknown D:'y of Jos. 1$^^, in the Shephelah. ''h riJiPij nS Nini] (&
*
'
15
end] (&
/cat
JUDAH AND TAMAR
454
(j)
absolutely certain.
insig-nia of
staff
man
Seal, cord,
of rank
Arch.'^^2, 179
228
f.,
Judah
seal, as
ff.
fails to
significant that
'
this
23^^,
Hos. 4!^).
is the only place where rvo~\^ appears to be used of an ordinary
and Luther {INS, 180) points out that it is confined to the conversation of Hirah with the natives, the writer using n:ii.
The code of
Hammurabi ( no) seems to contemplate the case of a temple-votary
This
harlot
{kadistu,
tution
KA T^,
and
though not
it is
423 ; A TLO"^, 380) separating- herself for private prostipossible that this custom was familiar to the Canaanites,
in Israel.
(vv.^'*' ^^)
was a symbol
of
dedication to Itar the veiled goddess {KAT^, 276, 432 ; ATLO^, 109) is
possible, though it is perhaps more natural to suppose that the veiling
of Itar
is
an
The
24-26.
(cf.
vindication of
which
rests
on a
24^").
and
falls to
it
to bring her to
justice.
Kin]
xxx.
N'nn
D'J'y (if
;
iveaTL
TreTTOLTjfx^vov
7)
?x^'
'^"^ (TKriirTpov
iari ^x^'**
fj.rj\ov
iiri<Ti^/J.ov
XXXVIII. 19-28
less the
woman
common punishment
in ancient Israel.
of stoningJn.
8^),
the
for adultery
on the part of a
By waiting
455
cf.
Hamm.
no).
25.
the last
Recognise
to
etc.,
right as agahist
conduct
is
justified
belong!
26.
She
is
in the^
by
to her
Judah.
some
25.
On
myth
the
first
<
here.D''?'nsn]
T-jri'i] sc. ;nSn (G-K.
144 ^)
(&
+6
els.
Joseph's temptation
45^
came out
The
red^).
(j)
it.
29.
What a
made
clan in 36^^-
To
the
On
^^.
name
the etymology,
v.i.
Perez,
Ch.
Joseph
is
householder,
^XXV^.Joseph
is
who
finds
(37^^* ^^)
to
(J).
an Egyptian
ere
(^"^).
for him,
prison
(21-23).
way
here narrated,
mean
'
rising
'
60^) or
autochthonous
'
= nnm). A
con-
redness is difficult to establish. It is commonly supposed that there is a play on the Aram. Nnnnt (which is used
here by S^T^, and is the equivalent of Heb. ':^), and Bab. za^uritu (so
De. Dri. Gu. al.) but this is not convincing.
'
XXXVIII. 29-XXXIX. 4
charg-e.
in
457
28
;
in NS'D, ^
hhin,
It is
".
Ho.
231),
^^ (cf, 29^'^)
'iTI
estate.
favourite of Yahwe
^- ^- ^i-
23j,
remained in the house, etc.]
under his master's observation, instead of being sent to
work
in the field.
(cf.
4a.
served him]
i.e.,
'
became
his personal
I. The words D^nnen ns'tiis are a repetition by RJE from 37^^ (E), in
order to harmonise the two sources. But the contradiction appears
(i) in the meaningless ""^^D J"n after the specific designation (this is not
to be got rid of by Ebers's observation that under a Hyksos dynasty
a high official was not necessarily a native Egyptian), and (2) the
improbability of a eunuch being married (though cases of this kind are
known [Ebers, 299]). ns'ois] (& UeT(pp7][s], an exact transcription of
Eg. Pedephre= He whom the sun-god gives (see DB, i. 665b EB,
Cf. Heyes,
3814) but the long o of the Heb. has not been explained.
Dno] means 'eunuch' in NH. Aram. Arab, (as is shown by the
105-112.
denom. vbs. = be impotent '), and there is no case in OT where the
strict sense is inapplicable (Ges. Th. 973 b).
That such a word should
be extended to mean courtier in general is more intelligible than
the reverse process (so Heyes, 122), in spite of the opinion of several
Assyriologists who derive it from ia rest =' he who is the head (Zimmern,
'
'
'
'
'
ZDMG,
liii.
116;
-\w']
(& apxifj-dyetpos,
and D'siN.i 'b' in ch. 40 (E). Cf. 'on 3n, 2 Ki. 25^^-, Jer. 39^- 40^"^The o^n^o were apparently the royal cooks or butchers
etc., Dn. 2^*.
(i Sa. g^^-), who had come to be the bodyguard (Smith, OT/C^, 262I).
2. n'h)iD iff'n] The intrans. Hiph. is thought by Di. Gu. al. to be incontherefore E.
4. vrya] juxffirU 'rya
sistent with J's usage (vv.^- ^3 24^^)
*.
iS-^'-Sdi] Mi. inserts ntrN as v.**
4a is wholly assigned to E by
VJ-iK.
D'pts'Dn
*''^-
a
Joseph's temptation
45^
attendant.*
In
J,
The phrase
Joseph's position
mer en
{mer-puy
is
(j)
a variant from
4b.
(cf. 40*).
is
mer-per
peri-t^ e^c), or
303 if. Erman, LAE, 187 f.). 6a. knew not with hz?n]
held no reckoning with him
with Joseph [v.^])
;
'
first
woman
a married
but
Tt?),
name Yahwe
is
he
mean
is
not.'
there
none
is
pb. sin
more striking
On
sexes,
the
(which would
The
the consciousness
is
tion.
'
against God]
All the
foreigner.
is
does not
^sp/X
9a.
require
7-20.
1-9.
'
intro-
is
^^.
ductory to
The
6b
(i.e,
;
II,
Israelite
The
12.
final
of
the
is
tempta-
But the
difficulties
raised about
when we
remember that J is depicting the life of a simple Egyptian
family, and not that of a high palace official (see Tu.).
13-20. The woman's revenge.
14. A covert appeal to the
jealousy of the men-servants against the hated Hebrew, and
to the fears of the women, whom she represents as unsafe
from insult {to mock us). An additional touch of venom
lurks in the contemptuous reference to her husband as he.'
Hebrew may be here a general designation of the Asiatic
Joseph's access to the harem do not really arise,
Gu.
but
]n
n^^D'i
J.
8.
hd]
mx noiND
(v.^).
non]
in'33.
10.
nbsN
33B''?
Elohistic recension.
II. mn DVna] A very obscure expression, see BDB,
400 b. Of the other occurrences (Dt. 6^, Jer. 44" Ezr. 9'- 1^ Neh. g^H) all
as [it is] this day,
a sense
except the last are perfectly transparent
quite unsuitable here. One must suspect that the phrase, like the kindred
dVj, and mn dvj (cf. esp. i Sa. 22^- ^*), had acquired some elusive idiomatic
meaning which we cannot recover. Neither on a certain day (G-K.
13.
1265) nor *on this particular day' (BDB) can be easily justified.
on] MSS jja(K + N:s'i ("-is). _i4. 133 pnsS] see on 268. 15. '"^ifK] wx^F
:
'
'
wrongly,
since to
have said
this
'
XXXIX. 4-21
459
^'^-
To
an Egyptian
close that
we can hardly
Hebrew
fail
to recog-nise
in
it
parallel so
It is the
Tale of the two brothers in the d'Orbiney
story.
Papyrus, assigned by Egyptologists to the 19th dynasty. Two brothers
lived together, the older Anpu having a house and wife, and the younger
Batu serving him in the field. One day Batu enters the house to fetch
seed for the sowing, and is tempted by his brother's wife, exactly as
Joseph was by his mistress. Furiously indignant **like a panther for
rage " he rejects her advances, out of loyalty to the brother who has
been like a father to him, and expresses horror of the great sin
which she had suggested. Promising silence, he returns to his brother
In the evening Anpu comes home to find his wife covered
in the field.
with self-inflicted wounds, and listens to a tale which is a perfect
Anpu seeks to murder
parallel to the false accusation against Joseph.
his brother ; but being at last convinced of his innocence, he slays his
*
'
wife instead.
Egypt
Petrie,
Tales,
ii.
numerous
that there
is
21-23.
Joseph
iJKov<rev
in prison.
His
8ti C^oxra.
on]
C&<S
+ N^'i. 20.
inon nu]
ff.
Only
elTriv /xoi
\Tl] ffi
18.
^fiov].
in
Dri. Z)B,
20-23
ii.
ws 8i
^q^h
768a,
q^^
n.),
but has not been satisfactorily explained. ib'n Dipp] G-K. 130 c.
moN] so XXX. (and also in v.^^) but rd. with Qre 'tdn p). 21. un jn'i] (as
;
460
anonymous,
in
In
with those of
vv.^"^.
other prisoners.
Ch. XL.
Joseph
is
(E).
{^'^),
which
they have no interpreter (^~^).
He interprets the dreams
^9-i9j^
which are speedily verified by the event (20-22^^ g^^^
his eager request that the chief butler would intercede for
him with Pharaoh (^**-) remains unheeded p^).
finds
for
Source.
The main narrative, as summarised above, obviously belongs to E (see p. 456 f.). Joseph is not a prisoner (as in J 39^'*^-)> but
the servant of the captain of the g-uard (of. 37^ 41^') the officers are
not strictly imprisoned, but merely placed in ward (norcn) in Potiphar's
house (^" * ^) and Joseph was stolen from his native land (^^* of. 37^^*),
not sold by his brethren as 37^** (J).
Fragments of a parallel narrative
in J can be detected in ^^^^ (a duplicate of 2), sa^g (from 'r\ n'a-Sx)
'^^'^.
In the
(Joseph a prisoner), ^^ (the officers imprisoned), and
nsN.i, i- ^^
E's D'pcon ib', d^en.t 'b', 2. 9. 16. 20. 21.
phraseology note J's
;
'
'
'
'
r\'^iZ'T:::,:\,
22- 23
-^r^^:^
n,3^
sa^g.
5b
II
\\
^3tt*D, 3aa.
4. 7.
^^hilc D'nnDH
HB', 3- 4^
and ono,
2-
7,
connect the main narrative with 37^^ (E). That in J the turn of Joseph's
fortune depended on the successful interpretation of dreams does not
explicitly appear, but may be presumed from the fact that he was
afterwards brought from the dungeon to interpret them (41^^"*^ J).
1-8.
I.
Pharaoh's officers
the butler
in
In Babylonia
the highest and oldest court offices are said to have been
cf.
Zimmern,
bakers (E)]
Ex. 321 ii^ i2^^t) gen. of obj. = * favour towards him.' 22. 'K'y] On
omission of subj., see G-K. 1165. nry hm nih] a. ai. o^^ 23. irn]
n'7!iD] (HSi + iv rais x^P'^'-^ avrov.
(K TTCLvra yap ijv 5td xf'pos T.
cf.
I.
HENm npc'o] On
v.^
VD'nj]
2.
^i.'p'i
is
Dav. 27(6):
the synt., see G-K. 128 a, 129-^
the regular continuation of the time-clause in ^* (E).
impurum
st.
XL
l^itXiK. 22-XL. II
461
The
(Erman,
etc.
187).
3a.
in
The
custody
cf. 3922*-.
them
(niK' as 39^,
narration
character
their
2 Sa.
5-8
I'f^),
disclosed.
is
is
5-
a skilful piece of
is
according
^o,ch
to
the
significance.
The maxim
God]
to
sentiment (Herod,
On
83),
Hebrew
expresses the
is
quite
is
ii.
but
idea that
not a nn^S?0
accord with
in
in
O^K^]N
mVD
(Is. 29^3).
Wiedemann,
divin.
i.
De
Egyptian
mouth of Joseph it
inspiration comes directly
the
39
was
ff.
etc.
in
Hom.
//.
ii.
5-34, Od.
iv.
795
i.
Cicero,
330.
While
fF.
the
dream
nificance on
9-19.
fully
its
face
(2812^- 3710),
The dreams
(20^''''
interpreted.
etc.),
or carries
9-1
The
ful'
order,
butler
its
(40' etc.).
place.
sig-
had
growth
a cup and present
1.
had seemed
its
63. i.
So
^3.
V.'.
G-K.
n-^tJ-DD]
4. 0-0'
152 o.
'
D'nns] (&
oanns.
nm33 Nim] Not when it budded (<S^), for such a use of ? with
a ptcp. (G-K. 164^) is dubious even in the Mishnah {JQR, 1908, 697 f.).
If the text be retained we must render *as if budding' (Dri. T. p. 172^).
10.
'
JOSEPH IN PRISON
462
it
(e)
a mixture of the realistic' and the fantaswhich belongs to the psychology of the dream (Gu.).
is disputed whether the drinking of the fresh juice is
to Pharaoh,
tic'
It
realism or phantasy.
''
The ordinary
interpretation
that
is
is
On
two
into
water
mentioned.
is
became wine
12, I3.
so Gu.).
492) cites
z. Sinai'^^
by squeezing grapes
The
interpretation
Commonly understood
thy head]
But
also,
in
it
view of the
if it
it is
the
up
of restoration to honour.
may be doubted
lift
in 2 Ki.
25^''',
Jer. 52^^).
14, 15.
remember me] On the difficult construction, v.z. -from this house] Not the prison (as Vns., below),
but Potiphar's house, where he was kept as a slave. 15a.
I was stolen] cf. 3728aa ^gj^ ^^^ land of the Hebrews] The ex>
Joseph's petition.
Ball
emends
Kit. nrins?.
The masc.
f.4
and a contraction of nn
to
(the vine)
ZATW,
and
mi^D N'm
it
(cf.
(in this
is
V.
(rov; similarly
U<S^.
I?] lit.
'pedestal,' used metaphorically as here in 41^', Dn. n?. 20. 21. ss-j-^
j^^
'jniDrDN '3] (& dXXd ixvfiadrjTt /xov,
tantum memento mei ; similarly 5 and
-H^NTriN
ttjs
dpxvs
5rJ.
Something
like this
the difficulty
is
(since
a precative
pf. is
wilt surely
reason that dn 'd may mean 'except,' but hardly 'except that.' (d) It
may be fut. pf., in which case the DN must have its separate conditional
only, if thou
sense and then it is better (with We.) to change o to tin
:
remember
me.'
The
'
remembrance
is
too
XL. 12-19
pression
an anachronism
is
463
It is
is
uppermost basket]
17. in the
Ben.)
or were they
(Gu.)?
all
Rameses
iii.
bread, but
makes
filled
'
manner of forms.
snails
'
Some
of our confectioners
circumstance
he
in the
cannot.
dream
and
this is the
ominous
19. lift
essential
lowed by
nm
NJ
(G-K.
nnbn
nurr|D, or nin
'
'
'
'
464
Decapitation
is
see Dt.
21^^*-,
lo^^, 2
XL
Ch.
Two
I.
The chief butler is naturally reown experience, and mentions Joseph, who is
summoned into the royal presence i^~^'^). Having
able to interpret
minded of
forthwith
(^~^).
his
way
(^^~^^),
to cope with
impressed by his
execution of the
Egypt
(^'^~^^).
In
from
^*
and
(*^~^'^).
^"^^
note
D'p'^'on -\^,
D'SNn V, D'nnun
'v, tcsj-d,
fjitp
(40^)
Joseph
on Aramaic (Field). 19. T'?yc^] Om. by two MSS and "S (Ba. Kit.).
20. -r\i< m"?.!] as Ezk. 16^ cf. G-K. 69 w, 121 b. 21. npyn] is never
elsewhere used of the office of butler perhaps over his [Pharaoh's]
rest
'
drink (as we should say, his cellar '), as Lv. 1 1**, 1 Ki. 10^^, Is. 32*
(so Ges. Th.f Di.).
23. innDci] Expressing " a logical or necessary consequence of that which immediately precedes" (G-K. iii /); cf. Day.
*
'
47.
XLI. 1-4
the servant of the 'on 'v
465
'
'
The whole
of this section
px
i}''^^)
may
^^
'
II
Pharaoh's dreams.
1-8.
from
2.
the Nile
{v.i.)\
the
agriculture
{tb.
fertility
21).
i.
The
I. D'?n nynsi]
Eg. loan-word
Participial
el.
as apodosis
see Dri. T.
78
(3).
nN\n]
An
{^iotr,
ydaru.
'
i.
*
'
''=\
''n
description.
30
466
possible,
is, if
explicit.
6.
The motive
the
confutation
(chs. 2. 5)
47^2 e^c.
cf. Is.
9.
though
12.
this requires
according
to
each
mans
established
there
a preand the
is
interpretation
of the interpreter
office
to penetrate the
is
beard, a
barely admissible.
dungeon]
is
head and
14.
cf.
Herod,
ii.
219;
'
J.
New
37).
D'Dcnn]
8. Dysni] 'was perturbed'; as Dn. 2^ (2^ Hithp.), Ps. 77'.
Only in this ch., in Ex. 7-9 (P), and (by imitation) in Dn. 2^.
The
word is thus practically confined to Egyptian mag-icians, though no
Eg. etymology has been found and it may be plausibly derived from
Heb. tnn, stylus. onx] Read with (5 inx, after iD'?n the dream is 'one
;
(vv.=^^-^).
blance of the
DriN, ffi ijnN.
nyis-riN]
9.
cl. {^^)
jxt
better
'a '?n.
^NnnJ
II. no'^m-i]
G-K.
49^.
it
12.
ffi
to be
'xen (sing-.).
from J (Gu.).
nna nn3'i]
ffi
The resem-
lO.
"t.n] *sx
Kal awiKpivev
ijfjup.
XLI. 5-28
Pharaoh's
15-24.
of his dreams.
recital
to interpret
when thou
a dream
hearest
467
it
i.e.,
z't]
'
15. thou
thou canst interpret
Comp.
16.
40^.
fine
dream
This
excited.
is
natural,
is
drawn upon.
etc.) are
ril^"^,
due to
22-24.
(*This
what
is
yOBTi]
15.
146,
R.
142*.
)sx<&
I.
meant when]
[1
said to Pharaoh'), or to
16. nj;^?]
read
n:j;:.
^^^
lit.
'
'
On
'
suff. cf.
ms] Om. of
may
is
art.
'
D'^3?' is
fem.
this section.
28-32.
The
Pro. assigns
critical
^s-ai
to J
difficulties of the
'^^(||
ch.
commence
(cf.
\^^
in
zi^^- ^
468
Npl of
Viii
^^.
repeated?
32.
one,
is
why was
it
twice
and
and masterly explana-
So he rounds
urgent.
dream
If the
crisis is certain
Here Joseph
33-36. Joseph's advice to Pharaoh.
proves himself to be no mere expert in reading dreams, but
a
man
manship.
33-35-
There
is
mission of
overseers
(^^*)
'
official (^^*)
;
part
(see
on
47^*),
administration
authority) of Pharaoh\
cf.
Ex.
iS^^^,
f.
3-1^*^ "^51
Gu.
not decisive.
whole more
but a positive conclusion will hardly be reached.
33-36. The passage is certainly composite, and can be resolved into
two nearly complete sequences as follows E=^- 3^*'* ^^^a (to nynsj)' 36a/3y
j_34a. 35ab^ (from '?pN)- ^^a>.
Characteristic of E are c'k, on^fD px, nns
n3, against J's an'ps (with pii^s), pxn, "pdn pp
and the only necessary
change is nas' to n3:i\ The result corresponds pretty closely with Gu.'s
analysis that of Procksch differs widely. ^33. nt] see Baer-Del. p. 78
G-K. 75/. Str., however, holds the true reading to be kt:. 34. ntyy']
jua ^'^'1.
To the peculiar idiom, De. compares the Latin fac scribas
ntfy may, however, mean 'take action,' as i Ki. 8^^.
B'Dm] fflr pi.
some such expedient is
35. iiDsj'i anyn Sdx] Ball prefixes ^:i (as v.^^)
necessary to make sense of the last word. For nDB'i, axx^ have nOB"
obviously suggested here
aSc (Tvvaxdw^ (n3H'?).
36. jn;??] Lv. s^^- ^'t
by Dnp3 in v.^.
:
To
37-46. Analysis.
as 83) "0 to J ^-
DDni
*^
**
E we may
Whether
45.
(Pro.), or is delayed to
(Gu.),
it
^''*
^^
(p33
^ commences with
hard to decide.
^^^
reads like a
'
XLI. 2942
469
it
was followed up, thoug-h it was the former which proved that
Joseph was truly inspired. The statement that the policy
commended itself comes from E in J, Pharaoh improves
upon it by entrusting the supervision to Joseph himself in;
stead of to the
mentioned
38.
the spirit
of God] here
first
mental
which
gifts
in
implied in
is
Ex.
my
'Mayor
over
Nu.
31^,
The
house]
27I8;
see Stade,
dignity
may
are comparatively
it
BTh.
43.
i).40.
be compared to that of
cf.
41.
civic office
king
The
69).
is
of
elevation
Syrian
106, 517
f.).
42.
LAE^ 87 ff.,
such dignities
New Empire
age of the
The form of
investiture
is
[ib.
specifically
Egyptian.
3^^ 8^),
'
crown (Erman,
E=
40.
40.
p2''
42b.
43a.
46b;3
l'3"^yi]
(&
=41.
^irl Tp
42a.
43b.
44.
(TTbixarl
45._38.
n^jDjn]
etc.).
41. IHn]
Se7is),
xD3n
(!S[
ys-bi;
others point
pb';,
run
pi]
+ (rriiJ.pov.
'
;
'
pi.
impf.
The meaning"
Qal
*
kiss
arrange themselves
but no explanation is quite
at thy command (45^^, Ex.
*
'
42.
B't^]
G-K. 118 h.
Apparently an Egyptian word (Copt.
means cotton
ist.
<rov VTraKoufferai.
It
;
is
disputed whether
it
18
470
1
ff.:
43.
word
*^
to
(E).
45a.
new name
44.
An
The
Joseph's marriage.
(J)
conferring of a
Joseph (Erman, 144). the high pHest of un\ was an important personage in the religion and politics of the New Empire
Erman, LAE, 76, S2,, 89, and pass.), and the priestly
was reputed the greatest in the country for
learning (Herod, ii. 3
Strabo, xvii. i. 29).
Un (Eg. Anu)
is Heliopolis, 7 m. NE of Cairo, an ancient seat of the
(see
college there
on Ex.
INip'i]
25*,
JM.CEr,S
semblance to Heb.
and
~-\2
{ut genuflecterent).
^P
^linx]
|^ ju \
renders
N3 jn
has
C ^OJ
{yovaTl^ei.v)
^^
n3k jn
as subj. of vb.
(U also has clamante prcecone). The speculations of Egyptologists are
too numerous to mention: see BDB, s.v., or Heyes, 254 ff. The best
is that of Spiegelberg {OLz. vi. 317 ff.), who considers that it is a call
(Eg. 'b r-k
lit.
Thy heart to thee '). Frd. Del.
to Attention
nd'^d'?
'
(&.
Kripv^
'
'
survived the criticisms of INIuUer {ib. 325 f.): see TBI, /^G'j. pnji] 'thus
As continuation of jn'i in *^, the inf. abs. is grammatically
placing.'
correct (G-K. ii^^z); and though the idiom is infrequent, there is no
text.
45.
D.4ys ^i^^^
r ^ovOofKpavqx (transposing
and s? [see Nestle, ZATW, xxv. 209 ff.]). The old interpretations
follow two lines: (i) Revealer of secrets' (Jos. Ant. ii. 91; 5^0J,
and (2) 'Saviour of the world' (Copt.
Patr.), connecting with Heb. j32c
p-sot-07n-ph-eneh, De. Ho.) so U Jer. Qucest.
Of modern Egyptological
theories the one most in favour seems to be that propounded by
s
f.
that
it
represents Eg.
De-pnute-ef-onT}, and
{ib.
42) that
of a deity) are
common from
Comp. Heyes,
258
ff.,
who
See
ff.
XLI. 43-55
471
cf. 47'^
(P).
5O-52 (E ?). Joseph's two sons. Menaiseh] interpreted quite grammatically as 'causing to forget.' The
etymology is not to be taken too literally, as if the narrator
plenty.
Ps. 45^^).
52- ^nade
his father's
house
of the tribe
54-57-
region in
central
The beginning
Palestine
According to
which
of the famine.
^^^
54,
it
55
the Egyptians
'
'
'13]
{<&.
etc.) is
IJerpecpT],
fuller
children are
named by
the father.
P's authorship
is
s^^)
But the sense by handfuls is doubtful, and is represented by
source.
none of the old Vns. except the clumsy paraphrases of TB and ^J so that
5
'
the text
pifiN*?
is
probably at
(with
fault.
A\kl*jO and
ik-jdi
for
tfyni).
&
48. vn
51.
and
hb'n
'^^ ]V
oj^
and
472
Joseph
this
that
was
the
Hebrew
view
in them]
text
is
connected with
Read with
'all
47^^^-.
5^-
opened all
[v.i.)
57
serfs,
cf. 433 f.), and were naturally drawn upon for the relief of the
107 f.
populace in times of scarcity {ib. 126). The 'superintendent of the
granaries was a high officer of state, distinct, as a rule, from the vizier
or T' ate (p. 469) but a union of the two dignities was just as easy under
exceptional circumstances as the combination of the Premiership with
the Chancellorship of the Exchequer would be with us (see Erman, 89).
We can readily understand that such a wise and comprehensive provision impressed the imagination of the Israelites, and was attributed by
them to a divine inspiration of which one of their ancestors was the
medium (cf. Gu. 384). Besides these general illustrations of the writer's
acquaintance with Egyptian conditions, two special parallels to this
aspect of Joseph's career are cited from the monuments (i) Ameny, a
nomarch under Usertsen I. (12th dynasty), records on his grave at BeniHasan that when years of famine came he ploughed all the fields of his
district, nourished the subjects of his sovereign and gave them food, so
(2) Similarly, on a grave of
that there was none hungry among them.
the 17th dynasty at El-Kab ** When a famine arose, lasting many years,
" (see A TLO^^
I distributed corn to the city in each year of the famine
390 Dri. 346 f.). For the sale of grain to foreigners, we have the case
of Yan^amu, governor of Yarimutu, in the Amarna letters (see below on
^^yisff.),
It is impossible to desire a fuller demonstration of the Egyptian
background of the Joseph-stories than ch. 41 affords. The attempt to
minimise the coincidences, and show that ** in a more original and shorter
form the story of Joseph had a N Arabian and not a Palestinian and
Egyptian background, and consequently that Pharaoh, king of Egypt,'
should be Pir'u, king of Misrim'" {TBI^ 454-473), tends to discredit
rather than confirm the seductive Musri-theory, which is pushed to such
;
'
'
'
an extravagant length.
understanding.
demands a noun
juu.
{(& aLTo^oXQvas,
13 nna
na-N.
|*5fO|).
i.
57) sug-
ajui.
(ffir
XLI.
Ch. XLI I.
56,
57-XLIl
473
to
buy
Food{^,])
One
thing- is still
This
45),
is
dreams.
in retarding the
and not fewer than four interviews with Joseph, are needed
to prepare for the final reconciliation
and the hearers'
attention is all the while kept on the stretch by the surprising
expedients adopted by Joseph to protract the suspense and
excite the compunction of his brethren.
In ch. 42 we are
told how the ten brothers are brought to Egypt by stress of
famine P~*), are recognised by Joseph, and denounced and
imprisoned as spies i^~^'^) and how after three days' confinement they are sent home, leaving Simeon behind them as
Arrived in Canaan, they relate their
a hostage (^^~2^).
adventure to Jacob, who bitterly complains of the loss of two
children, and refuses to trust Benjamin to their charge (29-38j^
The incident of the money found in the sacks \^^' 2^'* ^^)
increases the dread with which they contemplate a return to
;
Egypt.
II
i-14,
(except
b/3-
Gu.]),
(Gu.).
34)
to J
'
*^
niK'p
!"
^o- si-
II
7- 10.
'?3N,
II
II
(e)
more obvious doublets are i* 2*, s* e\ ? , ^^^ i3a characterphrases of J: IT, ^- 2; mD3 n"?! .Tmi, ^(43^47^^); pD ip/(42^^44^*); hn-\ef\
the
istic
VISIT OF
474
1^^-
After
is no trace
an obvious duplicate of '', containing J's
^'^"^
are from E note the name Jacob, ^^' ^
peculiar word nnnDN.
Reuben's leadership, ^7 and the words iN'nn, 3* nnon, ^* (3728 [? 34o*-]) ;
na^3, 36.
We also obtain some new expressions which may be employed
we come
till
to
"*
"
to P).
^^
there
28aba^^
^^'
as criteria of E
35 (cf.
pb,
v.).
25)^
nwp, ^
38
(cf. ')
belongs to
d'3D,
J,
but
3i- 33. 34
its
(^f.
n.
i)
oa'na |uyn,
proper place
33 (cf.
w)
is
chs. is the
name px
which
jyjD,
is
elsewhere
in
1-4.
The journey
change of scene
(cf.
to Egypt.
l,
2.
Another
effective
39^ 41^),
both in J and E.
5-17.
The
Joseph.
On
arrival in
5,
6a,
v.i.
6b.
Reminding Joseph of
connexion
in
is
dreams
his
bowed themselves,
(v.^).
The
original
J.
text
is
is
uncalled
for.
2. nON'i] ffi
om.
DCfO]
(&
"^^x t^VD
(as 43^)
rd.
perhaps
^3N
DtyD.
3.
niE'y]
**
narrative of the
visit,
a view which
XLII. 1-13
(J)
II
475
(E).
natural,
full
advantage.
in
and
is
it
certainly an exaggeration to
speak of
(Gu.),
clearly inadequate.
is
To
as an
it
(De.).
was merely
them
'
On
to punish
official
Joseph
is
encounter (see
was
fortified
Not
II
its
it
excited suspicion.
poverty, but
its
open and
(J)
||
up by
while
(p. 473 above)
Joseph seizes on the reference to Benjamin as a test of
their veracity, and threatens that they shall not leave Egypt
one is not] It is a fine instance of
until he is produced (^^').
;
in E,
cont.
9.
Ap.
n)ij;;]
i.
77,
lit.
'
VISIT OF
476
(e)
fate of the
as
have said'
well-feigned
be tested]
which
is
obstinacy (Di.).
official
The
Joseph maintains
(cf. 41^^).
his opinion
15, 16.
By
with
this shall ye
avowed
explicitly
^y
in J (44^^^ 43^*^)*
l^^ life of
(i
The
17.
meaningless after
prominence of imprisonment
surmises that a good
of an Egyptian
18-26.
rather
the inside
jail.
The second
Joseph appears to
may
in the
is
relent,
interview.
and
them
After
three
days
He now
proposes
to
is
21.
rig-htly
G-K.
is
the
cf.
110
c.
I|
v.^^.
nynD
'n]
16.
G-K.
a Massoretic caprice
(Di.).
93 adS.
At the
The
distinction
end of the
v.
between
juu.
inserts
'n
and
refusal
no/
Did they stand originally after v.^^? 21. '?3n] 'Nay, but,' indicating an affirmation of what one would gladly deny (see on 17'^)-
^^).
XLII. 14-27
man he
for the
477
very blood
diversity
23.
an
his
interpreter\
the
is
(37^^).
is
than
rather
language
of
appears as
a bar
24.
to
where
intercourse.
learned
the
for
The
time.
first
43^^
in
effect
25.
The
on the brothers
rest are treated
Hence
in
till
Benjamin leads
by side by an
The
26-38.
to
ms]
(E).
juii
27.
return to
To leave
ms3.ir^N^-j
ipsJ-j
room
Canaan. 27,
28.
J's
parallel
(as here)
inf.
is
or
night
t.
p'?o]
encampment
'
'
'
478
first
(43^^).
inn
'
courage sank.'
'their
out]
(j)
In
sack.
28.
each
J,
man
Partly from
the
anticipated
nnnjpj^]
more from the supernotion that God was bringing trouble upon them.
corn-sack (v.t.). The last
J's peculiar word for
clause,
however,
accusation of theft
stitious
(43^^),
but
still
'
done
(W^vh^)
to
us?]
is
of
(KS.).
Jacob.
29-34.
ward as
spies.'
35.
Jacob's foreboding
good as
this
They
recount their
lost.
36.
(v.^^)
that
The
27f.,
See on
after another
to
which Reuben's
is
in
Me have ye
is
that
children,
'put us
incident explains
sons
experiences to
{v.t.)^
37
is
is
it
his
away one
two
here
may
be released
hence the discussion about sending
Benjamin takes place at once. In J the thought of returning
is put off to the last possible moment (43^), and the difficulty
about Benjamin does not yet arise. 38 therefore has been
removed from its original context
bring
see on 43^- *.
down
She'ol]
on
to
See
37^.
;
Chs. XLIII.
The supply
council
is
Benjamin
yiLW.The
held, at
is
at last
second Visit
to
Egypt
(J).
another family
Ar.
XLii. 28-xLiii.
for
abandonment
vivial
at
479
mark
(^^*).
their
his
hospitable
table
them
Benjamin's sack, and on
secretly placed in
To
of honour as the
and
hand
in their
I,
trial for
(i^-^^).
his silver
their
But
cup
homeward
theft.
and
**
(a)
J are (a) the discovery of the money at the first halting-place (43^^), (b)
Judah as spokesman and leader (43^^- ^^' 44"' '^^^'), (c) the name Israel
20. 22 ^^i. 25
^' ^^), and the expressions
5^,^^,^ (of Joseph,
'?2n, 432- ^without qualification), 433- 5- 6f. 11. nt. ^^26 ^idj nhi n'nn, 438 ; nDnonn, 4310
ir and Tim, 4311- 1'- 20. 22 nnnON, 4312- is. 2iff. ^^if. s. m. pi^^, 4321 ; nibdc,
The only clear traces of E's parallel narrative are the
432^
I"iD*< 'Tip> 44^'
Pro. makes ^-^ (" ^^ba) i3. i4. isa^b. 16*^. 23b ^
allusions to Simeon in 43^*- ^\
continuous sequence from E ; but the evidence is conflicting (note tff'nn,
(43^-
"
m'l,
^'')
I-14.
see,
however, on ^K
The journey
resolved on.
2.
Jacob speaks
in
hence 42^^
(J)
stands out of
of the transposition
seeming
The
rejection of
is
its
proper place.
The motive
Reuben's sponsorship
in 42^'^.
V.2 there
480
(j)
the necessity for taking Benjamin with them, to which Jacob replies
with the resolute refusal of 43^ (cf. 44^'). Then follows (^^) the more
is
from E, see
tion
according
p.
first
8-10.
of an action.
II-14.
situation.
tDp,
honey]
see 37^^.
modern Syria
dibs of
II.
On
homage.
may
here
On
nn^T, v.i.
(see Robinson,
OT
sense of the
Kennedy's careful
its
^"IV,
viz.,
EB, 2104
art. in
(see
pistachio-nuts
ff.).
{v.i.)
as
is
ZDMG^
(according to Rosen,
not at
502,
xii.
all).
12.
'nVa]
6 veuirepos
KapTToL,
meaning
is
obscure.
is
The
Nynxa njE'D^,
derivation from
5
sj
P3
"iDi,
(j
'
Ol^iiQ-^.
praise
[in
'
The
song]
Aram.
;iiD5,
admire
'
name
is
{A^n
^o (Aram,
v.^"*
131 ^,
see
BDB, s.v.^
XLIII. 3-23
481
double money
take
as
where
'
namely.'
in J or
14. ''El
on
(see
17I),
v.i.
as I am bereaved^
cf. 42^^, 2
else-
elc]
On
An
The house
in
ii.
i.
70, flesh
was eaten
their sacks.
23.
On
money found
in
p.
14.
79
(*
pathachatum
inx]
nnnn.
jumCBr
uti
The phrasing
may have added to J the words pD'JrnKi nnx, at the same time inserting
d"? (which r om.), to bring about the desired allusion to Simeon.
Pausal G-K. 29 u.
DijiK] juxffiUlDON. pD':3] (!5 + iDN-p VON (v.^^). nil!?] The Only case
m-ii.
18. int'i]
z&n] ux
of impve. in o with final gutt. (G-K. 65 b).
^^o read hiim^ (see Ba.). dSt rov
(K 3\f'TOn (v.i2). '?'?Jnn^] &ir. Xey.
The text is not to
<rvKO(pavTri<TaL fj/xcis, 'S ut devolvat in nos calumniam.
be questioned. 20. '3] Always followed by 'JiN (44^^, Ex. 4^<'- ^^^ Nu. 12^1,
'n'?^^']
16.
613- 1
138,
Sa.
i2,
Ki. 3"-26t).
It is
commonly derived
from ^y ny3, *ask,' or (BDB) Ar. hayya^ 'entreat' might it not rather
be regarded as a shortening of ':?k (2 Ki. 5^^^ jb^ 242^) from a^/'^^n, *be
:
willing
'
? 23.
31
482
that
believe
it
was a supernatural
(j)
occurrence,
but
of
The
is
studied prelude to
mother.
The
his
disparity in age
(full)
('33)
ii.
41.
On
34.
om. 25.
Dag-h. or
noun? or
iSsn']
Mappiq
as
Israelites
The custom
(&
more
in N,
peculiar (Gu.).
of honouring a guest by
see
easily
G-K.
'?3'
(of Joseph).
i^d.
nsnx]
<& pr.
Di'?t5'n]
adj. ?
XLIII. 24-XLIV.
321
//. vii.
It
is
f.,
Od.
iv.
65
by
illustrated
is
xiv.
f.,
483
Egyptian
reference to matters
2 Sa. 11^;
Horn.
cf.
437.-^1;^ times].
(413*
45^2
occurs so often in
five
Is.
^f-^,
Whether
19^8)^
XLIV.
1-17.
final test of
is
sack.
This
i, 2.
evidently arranged
between Joseph and the steward on the evening of the banquet, to be carried out at daybreak
(v.^).
lb.
each
mans
^^.
3-5.
The
(v.^)
therefore his
trap
is
skilfully
laid
'
'
On
the widely prevalent species of divination referred to {kvKikoAugust. De civit. Dei, vii. 35 Strabo, XVI. ii.
lamblichus, De myst. iii. 14. Various methods seem to have been
39
I.
ins.
'li>}(rr](f)
as subj.
nn^
p'^^i']
Ba. plausibly,
nncfb
i'?3V.
2.
Used of the golden cups of the candlestick (Ex. 25^^''^'37^'^^-) elsewhere only Jer. 35*^, along with the ordinary word for cup (ois), of the
H'za]
runs
G-K.
142 e,
156/; Dav.
3, 4.
On
;.
5.
c'nj]
'
The addition in
The derivation
(&
of
from i^m, serpent,' first suggested by Boch. {Hieroz. \. 3), is supported by (amongst others) No. {ZVP, \. 413) and Baudissin {Stud. i.
287) on the other hand, see We. Skizzen, iii. 147 and Rob. Sm. JPh,
this vb.
484
(j)
employed e.g.^ among-st the Babylonians oil was poured into a vessel
of water, and from its movements omens were deduced according to a
set of fixed rules of interpretation
see Hunger, Becherwahrsagung bet
den Bahyloniern nach zwei Keilschriften aus der Hammurabi- zeit
{Leipziger Se?nit. Stud., 1903, i. 1-80). An interesting modern parallel
;
quoted by Dri. (358^), and Hunger (4), from the Travels of Norden
(c. 1750), where a Nubian sheikh says
/ have consulted m,y cup, and I
find that you are Franks in disguise, who have come to spy out the land.'
is
'
6-9.
of the
severest punishment
should the
death to the
thief,
10.
The
may
beginning
12.
found
is
youngest]
II-I3.
in
To
the dis-
Benjamin's sack.
their innocence.
he was
I4-I7*
The brethren
before Joseph.
14.
there]
knowledge on Joseph's
part.
is
No
doubt
115.
8.
1D3^]
txi.
out^ etc.]
fiD3n.
9.
inx]
ffi
K6vZv.
r\u\'\
xjx
nov, equally
XLIV. 6-28
485
17.
who
rejected by Joseph,
rest.
is
homes ?
Judah's plea for Benjamin. The speech, which
the finest specimen of dignified and persuasive eloquence
18-34.
is
OT,
in the
is
Sincerity
most
in public
(ct.
skilful selection
governor:
a recital of
(i)
brought down
(19-23)
(2)
(2^-29)
(3)
aged parent
and, lastly,
(^^- ^^);
(4)
inflict
on
on himself (^^~^^).
The Massoretes
commence a new Parashah with v.^^, rightly perceiving that
Judah's speech is the turning-point in the relations between
Joseph and his brethren. 19-23. On the divergent representations of J and E, see on p. 473 above. 20. lo his
inother\ See p. 449.
28. The words of Jacob enable Judah
jamin's punishment
to
Joseph.
Whose
comin'
No, not
home
life-long-
'S3
(so (Sc& in
T03]
27,
>
G-K.
161
and (&&
in
there's
leave
their
C.20.
^%28.
off awaitin'."
iDNi]
Kal eHrraTe.
486
(e,
j)
unconscious.
as
alienable affection;
XhV.Joseph
Ch.
The
crisis
is all
29.
bound up^
a figure
etc.]
for in-
Sa. i8^
and
at last reached,
in a scene of inimitable
known
is
to his brethren
(^~^).
In
lasted
The
(~^^).
invitation
journey
is
rich gifts
(I6-20J
and provision
i^^''^^).
/25-28\
The
sources,
analysis
is
E and
J,
The main
impossible.
appears both from language (dm'?k, ^- 7- s. 9. ^py,^ 25. .y^~^ n^^, ^[31^]; ms, -^
[42^5] 13, 23 perhaps also piD, ^3 and DDTyn-riN ijyt:, " [ct. J's nn-'?y DDy'i,
ct. v.^ with 43^'-, "'^^ with 46^^-47^ (J), where
44"]), and representation
Joseph's kindred are apparently brought under Pharaoh's notice for the
first time.
Indubitable traces of J are found in ^^' ^ (the selling of Joseph),
^* (Goshen,
see the notes), "^ (^Nnc) these are supported by the exniiyo, **
nmn, ^3 nNii-Sy Ss3, ^^ Thus far in
pressions, pSNnrr, ^* (as 43^')
;
More subtle and less reliable criteria are applied by Gu. (402 f., 406), and (with very different results) by Pro. (52 f.).
^^
^
It is probable that ^ (E) is
But it is very
(J).
(J), and (agt. Pro.) (E)
the main
We. and
Di.
||
"
||
if
(^)
'^^'
'
1-8.
The
disclosure.
I, 2,
irresistible appeal.
It is
pressing matters
I.
-w^ri]
Viinn]
without
art.
Nu.
i2''t
(Gu.)
is
(E?).
2.
no improvement.
is
a device
ir3N.34.
'n]
as in v.^*; so
XLIV. 29-XLV. 9
487
question
3*
^^
my father yet
Pharaoh
alive ?\
The
is
Comp.
immediate continuation of
probably the
With
5"^*
singular
The profoundly
50^*^.
'
^'"'"!^?']
7*
see Gu.
'
escaped remnant,'
cf.
32^)
is
r?
seeing the
difficult,
whole family was saved (z;.z.). 8. a father to Pharaoh\ Probably an honorific title of the chief minister (cf. i Mac. 1 1'^,
Add. Est. 3I3 812) see^ further, inf
That both J
9-15. Joseph's message to his father.
and E recorded the invitation may be regarded as certain,
apart from nice questions of literary analysis
Eerdmans'
suggestion that, in J, Jacob conceived the project of going
down to Egypt **auf eigene Faust" (Komp. 65, 70) being
.
Ho. Gu.
ing-, in
The
cl.,
v/hich case
however,
MT
is
preferable.
is
preservation of life
and so here if the pointing be right. Ba. plausibly
emends n-n?, preserver of life (i Sa. 2^). 6. Ti-pi ty'in] Ex. 34^' (J ?). 7.
'
nvnn]
'
no''?!)'?
The want
of
an
harsh
(cf.
47^"^ so^").
The
omission of the (joiffi^S' Ols. Ba, al.) improves the grammar, but the sense
piN] That the words are used in
remains unsatisfying (v.s.). 8. 3N
'lord') is not to be questioned in spite of
their Heb. sense ('father'
*?
DB,
titles,
ii.
774
identical in
;
form
Str. p. 157
f.).
JOSEPH REVEALS HIMSELF
488
(e,
;'
j)
We
may
these vv.
10.
On
he
The
in
^^*.
It is
as dwelling in Goshen.
by
his affectionate
13
^ and
(J) are respectively parallel to
16-20. Pharaoh's invitation.
already
^^
This,
plained,
is
It is just
peculiar to E.
and 14
(E).
as
ex-
(^"^^)
extended
10.
]Vi]
l6a.
The name
Cf. v.^.
is
peculiar to J
(46^^-
gx. 8'8 926!) ? has land of Ramses (47", cf. Ex. i"
12^'', Nu. 33^)
while E uses no geographical desig^nation. That P and
J mean the same locality is intrinsically probable (though Naville considers that the land of Ramses was a larger area than Goshen), and is
confirmed by recent excavations. The city of Pithom (see on 46^) has
been identified by Naville with the modern Tell el-Afaskhuta, 12 m.
of Ismailia, in Wadi Tumilat, a long and narrow valley leading ** straight
from the heart of the Delta to a break in the chain of the Bitter Lakes,"
and therefore marking a weak spot in the natural defences of Egypt
(Erman, LAE, 525 f.). In the same region, though not quite so far E,
excavations at the village of Sa/p el-Henneh have established its identity
29.34 4^].
4. 6.
27
'
it
is
is
stated to have
rare
name
of
is
the
whose
fg'ii
(F^o-e/i)
and
if
capital ^a/coOcrcra (cf Strabo, XVII. i. 26) has long been conjectured
preceded by the art. pa. See Naville, Land of
EEF,
Goshen,
etc. (Fifth
Memoir
1887), 15
ff.,
20
;
'
of
XLV. 10-23
489
said to
(i^^^J!) is
Canaan, with
491.*
to J (Gu.) than to E.
The baggagehave been introduced into Egypt from
it
name
Semitic
its
(Eg. 'agolt)
if
Deuteronomic,
about household
for concern
(^^^- ^^^
Erman, LAE,
is
they brought
46^- ^2)
The
21-28.
common mark
East:
55.22!.^
cf.
22. Presents
of courtesy in the
on
ir6.vT(jiv
''''7'3^"]
27^^).
23.
Benjamin
of the
TcSv dyadu)v.
The
pass,
is
For
n.^s
nnNi
of Egypt\
awkward
emend nm
best{y^roA\xQ,^)
(hence
nT
ni2{
&
uses na'p
(47^- ").
return
nnni
19.
in itself,
Ba. nNTHN
see on
A munificent
inserts y^X-Kj]]
nnxi (after
r^})'
Di.
;
Kit.
cf.
U)
Gu. 'n'lv nnxi the first is best. But it is still difficult to understand the
extreme emphasis laid on this point and a suspicion remains that either
the whole v. (Di.), or the introduction, is due to a scribe who wished to
make it clear that the waggons were not sent without Pharaoh's express
authority see on v.^^.
icfyi] The statement is premature, and furnishes an addi21. '?NnE''
tional indication that this part of the narrative has been worked over.
The repeated jnn also suggests a doublet or interpolation. In ^^'^i, Di.
on'? |nn
leaves to E only im*? m:^ Dn*? jn'i m'?jy
KS. only the second of
:
'
these clauses, the rest being redactional. "im^ mi'] as 42^* (E). 23.
riNM?] (so pointed only here)
in like manner' (Ju. 8^).
pio] (2 Ch. ii-^f)
from an Aram. ^J jii = 'feed.' Of the three nouns, na, an"?, and pro, ffir
:
Cf Heyes,
Bib. . Aeg:
i.
251.
THE SETTLEMENT
490
IN EGYPT
for Jacob's
E,
(j,
p)
com and
(43^^).
bread and sustenance for the journey] cf. v.^^. 24. Do not
get excited by the way] sc.j with mutual recriminations,
caution suggested by 42^^.
26.
2528.
his heart
became
cold, or
action.
28.
From
It
J.
has endured
son
The
enough]
is
grandeur
indifferent to Joseph's
(^-
^i)
father's heart is
and princely
gift^
The psychology
(cf. 46^^).
he
XL VI.
Egypt
persons
(^"'^)
(here
to
inserted a
is
his father
pi-34^^
Joseph presents
of them before
five
*'~^'^).
who
He
proceeds
Having
(28-30j^
of the
list
accompany him,
them
to play
Pharaoh, and
of the migration
Sources.
C^"^^).
The narrative of JE
is
by excerpts
expresses only
&
on'?.
has
&
tO x\l
|J,
^^
psjnn N^
|;.!iQ>j,
24.
(*
nain
quarrel
'
wine,' for
"?]
').
(&
fXT}
on"?,
dpyl^eadejlB
Ne irascaminty
the sj
means
to be or
grow
26.
313]
XLV. 24-XLVI.
we have a
38. 29. 84. 1. 4.
491
invitation
E)
(45^'*^'
nxi!
Sy
Sejj,
^9
cysrt,
46^*
uniyjD, ^13y3, ^.
is
the main from E, as appears from the night vision, the form of
address, ^ Jacob's implied hesitation, ^ (ct. 45-^) the name/acoi, 2- sa .
i^x, 3._ia (Sxn:;-) and possibly ^^
D\nVx, 2
47^^
belong to
in
J.
probably E (SdVd, as
(who assigns 47' to
1-7.
45^^).
See We.
Compr
P and
instead of
60
f.;
doubtful,
is
f.
47^2 ^q J).
shehd\ There
E no
is in
clear indication of
sacrifice,
this
the God of
Isaac] Isaac
regarded as the founder of the sanctuary, as
explanation.
21^^
(E with
2-4.
Comp.
12^^-,
The
J^) its
last
apparently
may have
though in
Abraham.
is
in ch. 26
consecration
is
attributed to
bidden to go
down
to Egypt.
3.
the
Fear
not^
etc.]
The purpose
is
for-
i6^2).
(j'^)
existed
(cf.
who
here
trace of
of the revelation
is
to
ynr iNn] (& here and v.*^ rh <ppiap toO SpKov (see p. 326). 2. Snik'''?]
crept in from v.^ through an inadvertence of the redactor
" God said to Israel, Jacob Jacob
is a sentence
or a later scribe
which no original writer would have penned" (We.). On the form of
3. 'iniD] From .Tin, the rare form of inf. const, of '"s
the v., see on 22^^.
I.
'
LIST OF Jacob's descendants (p)
492
his
(ct.
4S^^
l)-/^^
'
The words,
natiofi]
if
genuine, should
al.)
They
v.^.
are
as an expansion
Hom.
//. xi.
453, Od.
xi.
ix.
6, 7-
f.,
{vJ.).
is
in reality
list
of the leading
These
Ex.
numbered seventy
traditionally
24^-^,
Nu.
number of the
settlement in Egypt
the 70 elders,
(cf.
was an-
11^^).
was 70
Israelites at
more
In the
(Dt. lo^^).
the
careful
In the
As
it
stands,
it is
neither an
number
and
his sons
see on
When
'^^^).
^^^'^
accretions (v331 2\>T
^'^
whole of except the last
;
^^*^
5
word
verbs, peculiar to E
see G-K. 69
273^31". (& els Ti\os.S- 2pi" ^] fflr
:
Further marks of
redundant phraseology.
31^8 36^ (P).
m'
I'^ni
^^^
D^>'3i^*),
we
Ho. Hex.
om. ny-.s]
can, t^m,
k^'t^"l
D^:^C' ^^
and the
190.
4.
<&'lua-q<p.6,
iriN i;;nj
(177-
9^-
7.
35^-),
Cf. 12"
and the
XLVI. 4-10
493
some such
census-list as
Nu.
26^*-
That the section belongs in general to the Priestly strata of the Pent,
seen from its incompatibility with the narrative (and particularly the
chronology) of JE from its correspondence with Nu. 26^^-, Ex. 6^*"^- and
is
from literary indications (moB' nht<\ ^ [cf. 25^^ 36^"] mx p3, ^^ tfSJ, i^- is. 23.
26-27
-,^, ,j5jf,^ 26)^
^g regards its relation to the main document of P,
three views are possible (i) That the list was originally drawn up by
P, and afterwards accommodated to the tradition of JE by a later editor
(No. Di. al.). This implies the perfectly tenable assumption that P did
not accept the tradition as to the death of Er and Onan, or that of
Benjamin's extreme youth at the time of the migration but also the
less probable view that he numbered the sons of Joseph amongst those
who went down to Egypt. (2) That the interpolations are due to P,
who thus turned an older list of Jacob's children into an enumeration of
those who accompanied him to Egypt (Dri.). The only serious objection to this theory is that it makes P (in opposition to Ex. i^) reckon
Jacob as one of the 70. It is nevertheless the most acceptable solution.
(3) That the whole section was inserted by a late editor of the school of
P (We. Kue. Gu. al.). Even on this hypothesis, the original Ust will
have had nothing to do with the migration to Egypt. The discrepancy
in the computation lies in the first section (^^^).
The 33 of v.^ was in
;
'
'
the original
other sign of artificial manipulation of the figures appears in the proportions between the number of children assigned to each wife Leah
32, Zilpah 16, Rachel 14, Bilhah 7 (in all 69); each concubine-wife
receiving just half as many children as her mistress.
The text of ffi
presents some important variations {v.i.\
:
descendants
LIST OF Jacob's
494
(p)
omits inN and reads h^Di for Vnid', and mt for 'iri}i. nni'] The name of
Ephron's father in 23^ the son of the Canaanitess] representing a clan
12. As Nu. 26^^-.
The
ii. (= Ex. 6^^).
of notoriously impure stock.
on
pnsn] (see
Onan
was a town
v.^)
in
(= Nu.
of the tribe of Issachar
3v] MX and (&
an interpolation
is
Judah
(Jos.
15^').
(see above).
^Ninn
xxx
'?'iDn]
ffi-
13.
'le/xouT^X.
\h-\r\]
Cf. the
are glosses.
The sons
Gad {^^), four
16-18.
sons of
of Asher
p:iN]
sixteen in
(As Nu.
16.
26^^
Q-'^)
26^5*-,
(Leah's handmaid)
of Zilpah
ux(&
]vsi)i\
Nu.
Nu.
26^^.
two of Joseph
(2^)
ixi.
seven
'3TN
in
as Nu.
ps2,
The
17.
me'',
26*^^-.
two
does not appear in
grandsons inn and 'jn'dSd have been connected with the J^ahiri and the
(chief) Milkili of the Amarna Tablets (Jast. JBL, xi. 1 20).
The sons
19-22.
Benjamin
20. n^fi]
'!"(?),
(^i),
ffl^
of Rachel
and ten of
in q\\ fourteen.
uioL
But the
rel. cl. Jn
fflr
is
23-25.
(23,
uhv]
-Jn]
ux
26, 27.
(as
The
Ch.
final
'j^^),
(Rachel's maid)
Naphtali
for U'mn
we
find
(2^)
ornB'.
one of
seven in
24.
(as
Dan
all.
Nu.
26*8**).
(& ZuXXtj/*.
summations.
XLVI. 11-31
495
MT
The meeting
28-30.
direct before
able sense.
and
Goshen
The only
be extremely harsh.
(Di.), the
expression would
before
him
in Goshen^
in
at an
interval of 17 years.
&
There
is
the next v.
riMt-m)
The
'Pa/xeao-^.
THE SETTLEMENT
49^
IN EGYPT
p)
(j,
made
Gu. thinks
to
in the
If the
clear.
last
clause
appealed to
is
for
not quite
is
every shepherd,
etc.
be
it was
the Egyptian abhorrence of the class to
which they belonged. But such a feeling would be more
likely to exclude them from Egypt altogether than to procure
genuine,
their admission
to the
Moreover, while
(47^^).
is
herds (Erman,
Egyptians,
the
is
statement
that
shepherds were
;
on
request.
I.
and behold
6b
(J).
Goshen]
the
held in
further,
and cow-
47)
ii.
See,
43^^.
It is
evident that in
vn 'd]
2.
reg-arded as a gloss
Di.
who draws
selves as
*from the
etc.]
al.
On
34.
the
\z'i\
ffi
totality of,'
as
really been so
XLvi. 32-xLvii. 6
497
The
3, 4.
antici-
^n
tion of |NV
(46^^) is
for
'""Ji^p ^t^'^N*.
It is possible that
the repeated
is
^^
frequently mentioned
('^pi?P
ments as one of high dignity (Erman, LAE, 94
ents
"""il^')'
office
The breeding
of cattle
ancient Egypt
(ib.
The admission
436
was
in the
f.,
monu-
108, 143).
ff.).
Egypt
is
an
5,
(v.t.)
tinuing 46^)
Joseph^
etc.
It is plain
that
^^
and not that between Pharaoh and the five brethren. 6a.
Here Pharaoh himself selects the best [part] oJ the land for
1
Auffi5>QP 1DV
-nx.
nyi] ux
'yn (as
32
Gn.
19*).
46'^).5,
np*?]
6.
(plup.)
juu
+ iey.
^3.
vnx]
fflr.
After
(omitting
498
Hebrew
the
13^^
2 Sa.
Joseph
intro-
(cf.
Sa.
13^*^,
i9*^)j
is
7.
7^).
9.
few and
v.^^).
'saluted' on entering
blessed], i.e.
4^^,
an
evil]
(see p. 488)
site at
now
but Petrie
of Pithom [Hjy'ksos
Probably from
XLVI
Joseph
is
and
W.
Tumilat, 8 m.
ff.)
its
W
12.
27a
||
(j).
2,-2^ .Joseph^ s
Agra-nan Policy
(J ?).
<& reads
^^
then ^\dov
= VJ3l
'la/ccbjS
Kal
ol
viol
nonsD 1N31
will hardly be disputed
apy
'"|DV-'?N
MT
tences
scene.
A further
6b.
is
-v:^
nyT
dni]
ii.
3t3'D]
'
'
XLVII. 7-17
Egypt
499
crown.
their
live-stock, in
their
is
The
annum
to the king.
it
Egyptian and without interest for the national history of Israel, occupies
an anomalous position among the Joseph-narratives, and cannot be confidently assigned to either of the main documents (We. Comp."^ 61).
Ling-uistic indications are on the whole in favour of J
n3D, ^^
mD3 k*?! .Tnj, ^'
(42^ 438) nn% 24 (433'i)
^p:^ njpoi ]\<^n njpo, '^ (26") 'J'ya \n toio, "^ (see Gu.
and Di.). But there are also traces of E's diction pm, 20 nnn, ^zr^y ^s'(29^1 3o\
differing from ii'-**'') (Di. Ho.); besides some peculiar ex:
^^
r\rh,
CSN,
and Pro.
^^f.
qo^j,
(Qal),
Nrr, 23
^^
;
are right in thinking the passage composite but no satisfactory analysis can be effected.
That it is out of place in its present connexion is generally admitted,
but that it finds a more suitable position between chs. 41 and 42 (Di.
Gu. al.) is not at all obvious. It is not improbable that a piece of so
(Di.).
It is
f.)
(54
f.)
peculiar a character
is a later addition to the original cycle of Josephlegends, and belongs neither to J nor E. V.^' appears to be from P,
with glosses (see the notes).
it
would be rash
easily.
See
is
12^^.
(Ho. Gu.);
This
is
making a return
to
assume
this
next exhausted.
too
horses]
is
'
'
500
peasants
their
know
land, the
freedom as well.
give seed,
etc.]
temporary provision
sowing
is
was over
first
it
(Ho.).
It
in
'
'
vP
(Di.).
al.)
universal redistribution of
The
lands.
22.
priests'
sell their
his
23-26.
Institution
of the
land-tax.
23.
peated
the famine.
Here
24.
is
The
gift is
not to be re-
see p. 414.
18. D 'd] may be rendered equally well
(with r) 'that, if (protasis to nxB'J kS), or with W^ 'but' [sondern] (De.
Ho.).
19. "ijnmN D3 i3n:N dj] (& avoids the bold zeugma, and substitutes
Koi 7] yij if>r]fji,ojdy, as at the end of the v.
rrnji] ffi 'iva o-irelpufiey (yntjl ?).
21. Dny"? Tnyn]
is supported by &EJ, while xxxtSc read onayS T3yn,
place, goal, etc.)
MT
as does the loose paraphrase of U. 23. nh] Only Ezk. 16*^ and Aram.
Dn. 2^. 24. nNi3n3] It seems necessary here to take 'n as a noun of
action
at the bringings in (C'-' De. Di.), though elsewhere it always
'
'
XLVII. 18-27
excessive;
501
fertility
higher
percentage
(cf.
is
Mac.
Israel in
Egypt
is
and
lo^^,
the severities of
26.
of the writer.
ment of
On
not
is
being frequently
to the time
(v.^^).
New
known
19th dynasty.
The lower
cal.
'
rests
rest
may
ms).
JACOB ON HIS DEATH-BED
502
called Yarimuta,
to
identify with
ATLOy
granaries
the biblical
p)
The
391^).
E,
(j,
had
woodwork
El-Amarna Tafeln^
the very
difficulty
in particular,
and
it
is
of procuring'
alleged that
their daughters,
and
say that " the circumstances of this time correspond in all respects
[ganz und gar] to the statements of the Joseph-stories," is a manifest
exaggeration.
The death-bed
detail
the
by
all
dying-
and
of
his
all
E, P).
(J,
two sons
the tribes
(48)
(49^"^^)
all
Israel.
(2)
and
(i)
(28-3ij
(3)
his
(4)
(29-33j^
regard-
instructions
T\\& first
two may be
Sources.
The triple thread of narrative is shown by the three beginnings 4728 (p)^ 4^29 (j)^ and 48^ (E). To P belong 47^8 483-6 note the
chronology and syntax of 47^, the connexion of 483** with 35^- ^^* ^^ j
ntf ?, '; nmni msjn, ^ ; d'Dj; Vnp, ^ d'?ij; ntnN, ^ I'Sirr, ^
Equally decisive are
:
4729-31
the indications of J in
nDNi non,
doubtful
29
:
^s- 3i
V^nB",
'^y,
.nNSD
D{<,29
XLVII. 28-XLVIII.
503
E (Hupf. We. Comp^6\ f., Dri. al.), but the evidences of double recension
are too numerous to be overlooked. (See Budde, ZATW^ iii. 1^6 ff.)
Thus, while npy, 2*, and D'hSn, " i- 20f., and "iDNn, 22^ poi^t ^q g^ \vr\v\
,
2b.
21. 22
= 2b
(?).
20aa
U^
^\r\r\\
8.11.21 ^s a redactional
explication.
So in general
also Pro., who, however, places 21-22 before
in E's
narrative.
The source
is difficult to determine
usually it has been
assigned to P or R, but by Gu. and Pro. to E (see the notes).
2b{T)-
deleting Vnik" in
Di.
"^
(P).
Comp. the
(J).
28-31.
28
of
on
oath, see
parallel in P, 492^-32.
24^.
30.
On
my fathers]
with
lie
29.
Canaan.
in
29-31
cf. 47^.
the form of
in She'61
i.e.,
49^^'-
Sa.
19^^),
that there
was
carious,
mistaken rendering of
is
may have
{y.i.)
The
I, 2.
protasis to
'JnNC'31
introduction to
Ho. Gu.
(Str.
Ki.
al.).
2^30.
omnpa]
'naDt^i]
must be taken as
is
p6.^5ov airov,
MT, which
I.
to be suspected, small
nDN'i]
is
undoubtedly right
So
(G-K. 144
V. add with
B OI^CLkj (=
Sa. 16^
1922.
we might
d'^)
ffi
npv'-ht<
via)
:
cf.
Heb. n^i.
The
pi.
nDN'i
is
more usual
nri.
2b
is
in
such cases
2^).
At end of
usually assigned
JACOB ON HIS DEATH-BED
504
in v.^ that
lads,
3-6.
p)
E,
(j,
seems implied
Jacob
have been
presence of
in
all
the brethren.
3, 4.
The
own
the
to
is
revelation
Ephraim a7id
Ephraim was the
is
leading tribe
E)
by P
at
(cf. v.^^
but
it is
Nu. 262^^- 34^^^-, Jos. 14* 16* 17^ otherwise Nu. i^^).
as Reuben and Simeon\ The two oldest are chosen for
6.
Later-born sons of Joseph (none such,
comparison.
however, are anywhere mentioned) are to be called by the
(see
name of
their
brethren^ etc.]
i.e.y
7-
are to be counted
^^^ presence
as
of Joseph
way
The
upon me
notice
one
to
Ephrath.
V^]
to
my
The expressions
sorrow)
lit.
(*as a
(cf. 33^^).
'
because of '?NnB'\ But the cl. comes very naturally after ^ ; and as
there are three other cases of confusion between the two names in this
cf. 35". IVT^]
ch. ( " 21), the name is not decisive.4. D'Dy Sip] 28^
ci'^'iy mnN] 17^
7. j^s] Juu.ffi + D"1^|, as in every other case where
dJr 't*?! 1*?.
to J
XLVIII. 3-14
505
imag^ined for the transposition. (See Bu. ZATW, iii. 67 f.) Bruston
ZATW, vii. 208) puts forward the attractive suggestion (adopted by
KS. Ba. Gu. Pro. al.) that the v. introduced a request to be buried in
the same grave as Rachel. Such a wish is evidently impossible in P ;
(in
Machpelah
9.
8,
sees the
(see
on
was buried
in
49^^).
^*
in
for
lOa,
The
right
hand conveys
'?m] + ^
rhu
{so
+ tdkm]
D3n3Ni] (B-D.
On the pausal seghol, see G-K. 29
had not judged
G-K. 75w(cf. 3i28)._'n'?^s]
6od.ll.
only
have the
hardly makes sense.
here = opine.'
arbitrary.
ffi
iJ-'n^-np
(& + 'IttKci^.
<tov
xx).
'd]
8.
^juiffi
p. 80).
nN-i]
9.
Lit.
nS.
pi.
'
q,
V'jn'?]
Rd. with (&^ d:9N 'i'?. 14. U'D-nN] xxx ins. T. "^s^] WP pro'Dnx, deriving
from J '?3iJ', be prudent (whose Piel does not occur) but (& ivaXXd^, U
commutansy ,S i.21-1-k>-, SE^ JIS. These Vns. may be guessing at the
sense but most moderns appeal to Ar. Sakala, a secondary meaning of
which is to plait two locks of hair together and bind them to the other
'
'
506
E,
(j,
The Blessing
15, 16.
p)
(E).
The three-
life
(28^^*^-
of
'
angel
'
for
God
'
is
'
not explained.
let
my name
be
I7-I9* Continuing
^*
on his
will
left
19.
expression
peculiar
('myriads of Ephraim
The
clause
And
'
populousness.
for
By
(^^^).
The
Cf.
Dt.
'thousands of Manasseh
is
(if
').
33^^
20.
not redac-
The formula
diction
first,
and
^^F
'
'
^15: (Niph.
in3n\
22.
nnx, see
G-K.
130^.
On
[Is.
1]^}^
in the
11^*?], etc.
sense of 'mountain-slope'
{v.s.)f
XLVIII. IS-XLIX
507
The
from
probably
all
shoitlder\
The word
in
Exodus are
this
Canaan,
document
50'^^^).
common
22.
one
synonymous
OT. At all
no reasonable doubt that the reference is to
the city of Shechem, standing on the slope of Gerizim, the
most important centre of Israelite power in early times (see
*
events there
is
'
p. 416),
The
(Jos. 24^^).
was a trophy of
is
With
my
my
bow] Contrast
Jos. 2412.
Vv.2i-
precedes.
'
'
XLIX.
difficult
section
Attempts to bring the notice into line with the recorded history, by
N*? before '3nn3 and 'nt^-pa (as Jos. 24^-) (Kue.), or by taking
'nnp*? as a fut.-pf. (Tu. De. Str. al.), are obviously unsatisfactory.
inserting
508
and fortunes of
Judges and under the early monarchy. That it was composed from the first in the name of Jacob appears clearly from
internal indications (vv.^^-
^- ^^^^-
^^)
but that
it
was
actually
sons
is
render incredible.
is
bounded
In the
we
(as
first place,
shall
poem
historical situation,
'
independence by Issachar
(^^),
etc.,
It is
poem
is
The
names
(see ^^)
nor
is
is
more
natural.
(as is clear
from
tribal
is
not
vv.^-'^^- ^)
XLIX. 1-28A
509
the
f.).
(which
is
poem
following conclusion
modern
interpreters)
is
dation of the
separate
may be
certainly pre-monarchic
all
document whose
origin
occupation of
Israelite
and which
shape
underwent
took final
hands of a Judaean poet of the age of David or
The conception of Jacob as the speaker belongs
it
in the
Solomon.
poem
tribes, an idea finely suggested by putting them in the mouth of the heroic ancestor
of the nation.
for
it
in the
who found a
Jacob.
Literary Parallels.
it
will
be useful to compare
it
with
Song of Deborah (Ju. 5), and (2) the Blessing of Moses (Dt. 33).
it exhibits the
I. The former is like an instantaneous photograph
attitude and disposition of the tribes in a single crisis of the national
(i)
the
history.
It resembles Gen. 49 in the strong feeling of national unity
which pervades it, and in the mingling of blame and commendation. It
The chief
reveals, however, a very different historical background.
differences are
and Levi
for
Gad
5IO
dependence on Gn. 49
literary
it
is
kingdom
It is
'
through the
(Judah, Zebulun ?, Dan, Gad, Asher ?), and (2) tribal emblems (chiefly
one or
animal) (Judah, Issachar, Dan, Naphtali, Joseph, Benjamin)
other of these can be detected in each oracle except those on Reuben
and Simeon-Levi. It is, of course, not certain that these are characterbut the fact that both are
istic of two independent groups of oracles
represented in the sayings on Judah and Dan, while neither appears in
those on Reuben and Simeon-Levi, does confirm the impression of
composition and diversity of origin.
The decisive consideration,
however, is that no single period of history can be found which satisfies
all the indications of date drawn from the several oracles.
Those on
Reuben, Simeon, and Levi refer to events which belong to a remote
past, and were in all probability composed before the Song of Deborah,
while these events were still fresh in the national memory
those on
Issachar, Dan, and Benjamin could hardly have originated after the
establishment of the monarchy ; while the blessing of Judah clearly
:
presupposes the existence of the Davidic kingdom, and must have been
written not earlier than the time of David or Solomon. A still later
date is assigned by most critics since We. {Comp.^ 320) to the blessing
on Joseph, which is generally considered to refer to the kingdom of
North Israel and to the Aramaean wars under the dynasties of Omri
and Jehu. It is argued in the notes below that the passage is
susceptible of a different interpretation from that adopted by the
majority of scholars, and may, in fact, be one of the oldest parts of the
poem. As for the rest of the oracles, their character is such that it
seems quite impossible to decide whether they originated before or after
In any case we hardly get much
the founding of the kingdom.
beyond a broad chronological division into pre-Davidic and post-Davidic
oracles but at the same time that distinction is so clearly marked as
to exclude absolutely the hypothesis of unity of authorship.
It has been
supposed by some writers (Renan, Kue. al.) that the poem consists of
a number of fugitive oracles which had circulated independently among
the tribes, and were ultimately collected and put in the mouth of Jacob.
But, apart from the general objection that characterisation of one tribe
;
XLIX. 1-28A
by the
511
inadequacy of
is
song (i) A primary poem, consisting of the two tristichs, vv.^ and ^,
written at the time of David's victories over the Philistines, and celebrating the passing of the hegemony from Reuben to Judah to this v.''
:
Benjamin
period.
(^).
(4)
The
The
(3)
p-^C), a northern
the later Judges.
(5) The blessing of Joseph
poem
from about the time of Deborah. (6) The five distichs on Zebulun,
Dan, Gad, Asher, and Naphtali (in that order: w.^^- ^^- ' ^- 21), commemorating the victory of Deborah and Barak over the Canaanites.
The theory
;;
512
metrical structure, the unit being the trimeter distich, with frequent
The lines which do not
parallelism between the two members.
conform to this type (vv.'*'' "^- ^^, and esp. 24b-26) ^re so few that
interpolation or corruption of text may reasonably be suspected
although our knowledge of the laws of Hebrew poetry does not
entitle
is
in
itself
inadmissible.
probable, especially
(see
on
if "^^^^ ("Ti^m)
was
^''
in
v.^).
(v.^)
incorporated the
Song
in the narrative of J
appears to be a fragment of
orJE; while
divorced from
its
^*
original
I,
^saL^ i^y
connexion with
The poem
eic]
rJep^
'
^^
513
^j^^^
^^^^
make knowHy
is
^sbjj^
which
obviously
it
is
as
contemporary or retrospective
The
days\
2.
508 above).
(p.
trimeter
distich,
exhibiting
the
to attention,
cf. 4^2,
p.
prevalent metrical
Dt. 32^,
and
{v.i.).
is
in the after
may be
i^o
Is.
is
28l^
the literal
doubtful
cf. v.^,
509 above.
Reuben.
3, 4.
Reuben
'
My
The
As
the first-born,
vitality,
which
is
of his undoing
and
niceties not
is
clear.
is
energy degenerates
into
licentious
Dt.
D'D'n
nnnxn]
48"
13 times in
4939,
Ezk.
38^6,
33
': '
514
the
curse.
poem
exceeding
No
excei\
(Gu.).
word brings
English
$hj 43-
out
the
times in
The
'
power,'
3a.
being understood
4b. Then
(Dt. 21",
n'B'NT
'JIN
perhaps preferable to
as well as
censure of Reuben.
still
'
cf.
best part of
my
virility
'
On
(.SCo).
jix,
Not dpxv
;
*
dignity
and
'
malo^ as a
corrupt text
T^i^^f^y fiov ((&Q),
trouble
see p. 12
n'B'Nn,
imperio.
went up\
less
'
sens^u
'
JIK
'
'
CF), or
'
'
'
'
Aq. ^ddfi^evaas
irepia-oreija-r]^
2. virep^^eaas
]j
*^^ L
\^.
The comparison
to
'
'
'
'
'
'
XLIX. 3,4
for various suggestions, v.u
Gu.'s trans.
515
Then
profaned
pers. to 3rd.
birthright
prowess of the
'
tribe
Stone).
(cf.
The
Nu
(**^*') is
interpreted
scanned uu
'
I
'
I
'
(Siev.).
* uncontrollableness
nrnn-SN] For the pausal a, see
{ut s.\
53 , and cf. Ru. 2'^ 4b. No very acceptable rendering of this
If we follow the accentuation, 'yij^'
difficult clause has been proposed.
Then thou actedst
is obj. of nSy, and rh^ 'yis' a detached sentence
He went up to my bed but apart from the harsh change
profanely.
perhaps
G-K.
'
'
of person, this
To
5l6
5-7.
Simeon and
Levi.
"
Weapons
my
(?).
'
And
And
brothers]
brother-spirits
'
soul
in their gloating
will divide
5a.
brothers
them in Jacob,
them in Israel.
scatter
Hardly
(Tu.
al.),
o/xo'yi/w/xot
or
(schol. in Field)
associates
in
'
common
true
enter-
The
prise.
tradition in
epithet
w^hich
is
S.
action.
tOCnJL--2
Aq.
[Je.
arma
So Aq. 'H&'dP
transl. is doubtful,
(OL. consummaverunt
dSidas dvaa-Katpal
aKeirj
The
alpiaeus adrQv
i^
5b.
eortim];
ST J N'n
31^D^D'?
[aiirCov']
JVii05>
nnv^ nvi
PP^
['jkd]
'''73]
(from
v'
""^^j
^^^ lEz.),
The
and probably U.
textual tradition
must
'
'
be a curved knife or sabre. Some weapon suits the context, but what
How far the exegesis has been
exactly it is must remain uncertain.
influenced by the resemblance to the Gr. fidxaipa (R. Johanan [d. 279
Ra.) we cannot tell. Ba. and Gu. take the
A.D.], cited in Ber. ^. 99
word to be n-j^p, the former rendering plots (fr. Ar. makara, to plot ')
;
'
'
XLIX. 5-7
owing
partly
uncertainty of text,
to
obscurity of the
517
Acy.
air.
ni^p
(v.t.).
The
assembly\
tribal
gatherings,
which deeds of
in
The
ings.
6b.
No
sidered inhuman.
assault on
Shechem
The speaker
such atrocity
(see 3428).
>
7b.
recorded of the
is
in Jacob
in Israel]
is
latter 'pits' (cf. n-i?p, Zeph. 2^); but neither Dni?p oan ^Va (Ba.)
nor Dn'ni?p DCm 'S? ['knavery and violence are their pits'] (Gu.) is so
good as the ordinary interpretation. Ba., however, rightly observes that
Dn'"i?p yields a better metre than Dn'n (so Siev.).
6a. n23] Read with
(&. nn?, *my liver,' the seat of mental affections in La. 2^^ (cf. Ps. 16^
nus): cf. kabittu,
30^3 578 108^:
Gemuth,' in Ass.^^n] au nn\
Since nns is masc, rd. ^^.^ 6b. psn] * self-will,' 'wantonness' cf. Neh.
924- 37^ Est. i^ 9^ etc.
-m'] On certain difficulties in the usage of the
word, see Batten, ZATW, xxviii. 189 ff., where it is argued that the
sense is general *make useless.' litt'] Aq. SUSC^ read -\v^, 'wall,'
perhaps to avoid the supposed contradiction with 34-^^'. Hence the
correct ravpov of (& is instanced in Mechilta as a change made by the
LXX translators (see p. 14). 7. nnK, omayi] ux nnK, Dmam. jpj Here
pausal form of ty (ct. v.').
MT
the Zodiac
i.e.
only
its
and
it is
in the
heavens
The
is -qfilro/xos,
sponds to the tyrant Humbaba, who was slain by Gilgame and Eabani
and Jacob's curse answers to the curse of IStar on the two heroes for
mutilating the Bull. Whatever truth there may be in this mythological
interpretation, it does not relieve us of the necessity of finding a historical
THE BLESSING OF JACOB
5l8
The
2 Sa.
(Siev.).
8-12.
Judah.
*
Judah
Thee
Thy hand on
Bow down to
whelp
lion's
From
He
Judah,
my
old lion
gone up
son, thou'rt
who
lion.
shall arouse
him?
And
**
the prey,
And an
10
is
to
And
He washes
the grape!
XLIX. 8-IO
519
hope,
thy
as the premier
(4)
"'.
nature,
29^.
(3)
^0;
(i)
(2)
nn^'"l'.,
hand
'
development
its full
is
represented by the
Hence the
by some (Gu.
al.)
On
and old
^?.l?^ is
it
lion
rendered
But
19^.
The
8.
^^']
17'.
lioness'
24^.
Ezk.
*
son,
security ^^).
staff]
my
prey^
H^y
better to understand
to his
Nu.
is
cl.
lion^
word
latter
juuuffi^
?I"3;.
9.
niao]
(Pi^HD)
ffi
K'n*?]
is
word denotes
(Ir
(TKOfivos,
^k ^XaffroO,
& h5|>
it
sceptre
is
pQ-ii'
in 8",
in
Heb.
It is
THE BLESSING OF JACOB
520
al.)
but
never so
tOT^' is
from
office
The
to
still
The
or
[h)
verse.
lOb.
clear
thighs
ny]
n^'B'
The
^^*
ffi0.
dir<5/cetTat
^\dy
h.v
etc.];
tcl
&
9"^)
^^
ny NoVy ny
W^
lob.
airoKel/xepa
aury [vars. y tA
dTroKcLfxcva
v. is
endure until
shall
*n"
.,
donee
'
Airea-
n pi
ly
with
pf.
and impf.
(1
Sa.
14^^,
Ps. 141IO),
and so
iff
m (Ca.
1^2),
BDB, p.
nV ny (Pr.
and ah
hk'n ly
(Ec.
12^-
^-
^)
see
'
'
in
S''p9'
ficial
'
foetus
'
and
n;^!;'^' afterbirth
'
The
it
(viz.,
NH
[Dt.
28''' t])
XLIX. loB
something
happens which
Whether
glorious future.
person
an
ideal
Ruler
Judah's hands, or a
shall
raise
521
shall inaugurate a
who shall
that tribe to
question on which no
the height of
final
more
still
this
of Judah which
its
destiny,
is
below).
and to him] Either Judah, or the predicted Ruler,
according to the interpretation of 1^^*. obedience of peoples]
The crux of the passage is thus ^'' rh'iff ku'-'3 ny. For a fuller
statement of the various interpretations than is here possible, see
Werliin, De laudihus Judce, 1838 (not seen)
Dri. JPh. xiv. 1-28 (and
:
open to question, and we are free to try any pronunciation of the Kethib
nhtff which promises a solution of the exegetical riddle with which we
are confronted.
n^iff
an
On
is
kind cannot be absolutely excluded (cf. mjN with pjt^). (b) But even
if these philological diflEiculties could be removed, there remains the
objection that hSb* (as contrasted with D*?'^) is in OT at most a negative
word, denoting mere tranquillity rather than full and positive prosperity,
and is often used of the careless worldly ease of the ungodly. For all
these reasons it is difficult to acquiesce in the view that nV can be a
designation of the Messiah as the Peaceful or the Pacifier:, while to
change the pointing and render till tranquillity {jh&) 'come,' is exposed
to the additional objection that the iSi of the following line is left
without an antecedent. nnp'] (Pr. 30^'^t) Dag. forte dirimens. The sj
appears in Ar. wakiha, be obedient' Sab. np\ That a vb. ('"^qi??, "i?!?)
would be more natural (Ba.) is not apparent the vbs. in ^^J paraphrase the sense given above. The sJ was evidently not understood
by f0
{wpoa-doKia),
U {expectatio\
ni,!
Aq.
(avaTrj/xa),
fAq. from
^^P>
U-
^QJUJCQJ
BDB).
all
of which
522
Posnanski, Schilo Ein Beitrag zur GeschAusleg. von Gn. ^9^" im Altert. his zum
Ende des MA, 1904 Di. 462 ff. The renderings grammatically admis(i.) Those which adhere to the text, rec,
sible fall into two groups,
taking nS'B' as nom. pr. {a) Until Shiloh come (Shiloh, a name of the
Messiah), the most obvious of all translations, first became current in
versions and comm. of the i6th cent., largely through the influence of
Seb. Miinster (1534). Although the Messianic acceptation of the passage
prevailed in Jewish circles from the earliest times, it attached itself
either to the reading nW (ii. below) or to the rendering his son (Vv),
more
Theil
'
'
'
or (later and
more
rarely) to
'"h
'p ('gifts to
noK
Snidsj'i
nnS
n"?
n'?'B'
(the
'D
3'n3 rh^')
**
Rab
said,
is
and our pains he hath carried them, though we did esteem him stricken
Now there is nothing
(5C. with leprosy), smitten of God, and afflicted."
here to suggest that Shiloh was already a current designation of the
Messiah any more than, e.g.^ the verb pj' in Ps. 72" can have been a
Messianic title. Yet, as Dri. says, it is "in this doubtful company that
Shiloh is first cited as a name of the Messiah, though we do not learn
how the word was read, or what it was imagined to signify." Subsequently Shiloh as a personal name appears in lists of Messianic titles
of the nth cent. (Posn. 40), and it is so used (alongside of the interprePartly from this lack of
tation iW) by Samuel of Russia (1124).
traditional authority, and partly from the impossibility of finding a
significant etymology for the word (-y.*.), this explanation is now
(i)
Until he [Judah] come to Shiloh' (Herder,
universally abandoned.
Ew. De.
(cf.
Di. [hesitatingly]
Sa.
took place
4^2),
and has
(Jos. 18
f.),
al.).
in its
Judah
is
life.
XLIX. loB
523
that
to Shlloh,
'
'
'
come
is
pretations
is
Until he
come whose
'
this
nearly
etc.
i.e.
the Messiah.
all
The
objection would be
of
We.
first
we
'
524
But
if
possible that
was applied by
and
who
12.
II,
life
a land
where vines are so common that they are used for tethering
the ass, and wine so abundant that garments are washed in
As a description of the vine-culture for which Judah was
it.
famous, the hyperbole is perhaps extreme and Gressmann
;
[I.e.
v.^^,
is
imagery
for the
9^.
is
12.
than wine
this
hard to decide
but Gr.
Zee.
Whether
by his reign.
supplied the
it
(v.i.)
...
is
It
natural.
11.
in w.'^K
'iplB'] Sltt.
cf. '33
nmo]
nx.
mo ( sj
12. 'V'SDn] In Pr. 232^ m'?V?C
?) does not occur elsewhere.
means dulness of eyes,' the effect of excessive drinking. This is
Ar.
be gloomy
the only sense justified by etymology (Ass. aMlu,
hakala, IV, be confused': see BDB, s.v. Ssn), and must be retained
here, although, of course, it does not imply reproach, any more than 138^
etc.).
D'3'y
'"'IP
'
'
XLIX. II-I4
525
The section on Judah lacks the unity of the first two oracles, and is
very probably composed of strophes of diverse origin and date. V.**
opens with a play on the name, like vv.^^- ^^, while v.** starts afresh with
an animal comparison, like vv.^^- " '' (see Introd. Note, p. 510). The
impression of discontinuity is partly confirmed by the poetic form v.*
being- an irregular tristich, and the remainder a series of 7 perfect
trimeter distichs.
The dekastich '"''^ seems distinct from what precedes
(note the repetition of the name in ^"), but is itself a unity.
The proposal
to remove v.^^ as a late Messianic interpolation, and to make v.^^ the continuation of v.^, does not commend itself and the excision of the third
line in v.^" (Meier, Fripp) merely avoids an exegetical difficulty by
sacrificing the strophic arrangement.
;
13-15.
^^
And
And
"
^^
his flank is
is a bony ass
Crouching between the panniers
And he saw that rest was good.
And that the land was sweet
Issachar
(?)
An
allusion to the
etymology
in
30^*^.
It
f^'^-]
(Gu. al.).
The second and
and the text is probably corrupt.
The comparison of Zebulun to a recumbent animal, with
(^^iiT!)
towards the sea-coast, and its hind - parts
itself
towards Zidon (Di. Gu. al.), is unsatisfying and almost
grotesque. Dt. 33^^^ shows that it is the advantageousness
of Zebulun's geographical position which is here celebrated.
Zidon] may be a name for Phoenicia, in whose commercial
pursuits it has been surmised that Zebulun became more and
more involved (Sta. GF/, i. 171). 14. bony] i.e. strongniistaK'^c.'/br
the original
p'^T.
'
f]in is
cf. D'n 'n, Dt. i'^, Jos. 9^, Jer. 47^, Ezk. 2^^\
13. D'D" qin] Ju. 5"
never found with any other gen. except in the next line. 'iai Nim] One
And ihai a shore for ships,
is tempted to construe prosaically thus
with its flank on Zidon ; but this would entail ehsion of h, to the
detriment of the rhythm besides, the repetition of fjin and the unique
combination n'3N 'n are suspicious. Ba. reads iM" for "^inS (after Ju. 5^^),
and deletes the last line. '?y] juu.F<S^-' ^y. 14. D"iJ ion] xxx Dnj 'n, 'ass
'
a
'
526
limbed.
to exertion.
pens
^^^S'frsn]
The common
interpretation
'
based on Ju.
the old Vns.
5^^.
(*
may
sheep-
be a conjecture
fire-places' or
'
'
between
Ju.
i^*^-
Israel
'
^^- ^^).
poem
Song
is
of Deborah.
of sojourners
'
(unless D'lj be
an
p.
adj.
254);
fr.
mj).
\\
(& rb KoXhv
*^-^-ti
iiredijfjLrjcrev
Ir^^l' A^-
^"<^
support on the whole MT.D^nsron pa] Ju. 5^t, but cf. Ps. 68^4. The
three pass, are somehow interrelated, although no sense will suit them
Vns. mostly render 'territories,' or something equivalent, both
all.
here and in Ju. But the dLyo/xias of (& in Ju. (see Schleusner) is noteworthy, and shows that the rendering above has some show of authority.
So the
mo]
jjut
late
Gr.-Ven.
nmo.
nay
7]iJ.L(p6pTLa.
For the
rest, see
Moore on
I.e.).
On
Ju.
dd,
5^^.
see
15.
DBD,
XLIX. 15-18
16-21.
527
judge
shall
his people,
As one
Be Dan
*'
A
That
And
*
[I
Gad raiders
'^
But he
16.
shall
be
fat,
is a branching terebinth
Producing comely tops (?).
Naphtali
**
D&n
own
!]
but his
Yahwe
his people]
The meaning-
tribesmen.
(?)
is
Not
not that
Israel,
Dan
will
(JT*^^),
nor that he will champion the national cause (Ew. De. Di.
al.);
are spoken of as a
clan
as a fully armed
not ignoble,
succeed.
warfare
|b''StJ^]
air.
Note that
(nriEti'O).
'
17.
may unhorse
antagonist
Dan
Xcy. is
by such
in spite
NHB^
274).
18.
The attempts
snake,
insidious, but
may
of his weakness
An
(see Dri.,
interpolation,
the Danites
little
^^
The
poem
and
marking
(as
in
(after
JE'SB']
ffi^
ivKadrj/xevos,
IIDjID).
inept.
taking the
liir.
"Key.
as an adj.
'?3'i]
Ba.
*!>sn
528
and
in
what
is
known
as the
is
Strictly
'
A marauding band
Judges' period
in
5^'^.
Ju.
19.
'
'
'
(^?.^^?).
No
certain conclusion
19. -la] The name is here (otherwise than 30^^) connected with nnj,
i",
*band''(i Sa. 308- '-23, i Ki. ii^^ 2 Ki. 52 623 gt^.), and with
assail' (Hab. 3^^, Ps. 942^).
3py] Rd. D3py, taking the D from the
njCK'] ux JDK'.
T>rN.
20. hb-kd] Read with
beginning of x."^.
21. nn'^r nS^x] So Aq.
(Jer. Qu.).
& and ^TJ probably had the same
On Jerome's ager irriguus {Qu.)
text, but render 'a swift messenger.'
den
and its Rabbinical parallels, see Rahmer, Die hebr. Traditionen
(& crfKexos seems to imply n^'N
but Ba.
Werken des Hier. p. 55.
jnan] After either rh\i< or n^'x, hj^j would be better.
'"ipx]
dissents.
'words,' is unsuitable, and caused S^ and (ZP to change the metaphor
An allusion to the eloquence of the tribe is
to that of a messenger.
The reading noN, topmost boughs,'
out of place in the connexion.
^^N,
lamb,' is
has but doubtful support in Is. 17" (see the comm.).
not Heb., but is found in Ass. Phoen. Aram, and Ar. fflr iv t(^ yev^/xari
"i??^] air. Xey.
is traced by Ba. to 'I??; but?
Ba. argues ingeniously,
but unconvincingly, that rrS;N belongs to v.^^, and that the ma of that v.
stood originally in ^i. His amended text reads
SU
'
nt)hv n^s
''?risj
n5
njnin
-|t3t5
XLIX. 1922
229
22-26. Joseph.
22
fruitful
A
'And
And
Yet
**
fruitful
him
sorely,
his
And
El Shaddai
he bless thee
Blessings of heaven above,
Blessings of T6h6m
beneath,
Blessings of breast and womb,
Blessings of
(?),
Blessings of the eternal '"mountains'',
"
may
''
The
section
translatable.
We may
opening
his brethren.
of obscurities, and the text frequently quite unintegrity has naturally not passed unquestioned.
full
is
Its
tristich
{ZATW,
xxi. 262 ff.) would remove (3) and (4) (24^-26)^ ^^ich he holds to
have been mserted by an Ephraimite editor from Dt. 33 Ho. seems in
Sievers also (II. 362) questions the genuineness of
the main to agree.
24b-26 Qjj metrical grounds.
But we may admit the northern origin of
some of the vv., and the resemblance to Dt. 23t and even a difference
of metre, and still hold that the whole belongs to the earliest literary
recension of the Song to which we have access. The warm enthusiasm
of the eulogy, and the generous recognition of Joseph's services to the
national cause, are no doubt remarkable in a Judsean document but
such a tone is not unintelligible in the time of David, when the unity of
the empire had to be maintained by a friendly and conciliatory attitude
:
22.
On
34
530
the image
is
whose tendrils
A young fruitvine '].
There is
son of a fruitful [tree or
lit.
tree
probably an etymological allusion to Ephraim (ms = n'^2fc<
We.). 23, 24. The figure is abruptly changed: Joseph is
now represented as beset by troops of archers, whose attack
dealt bitterly
he repels.
.] The following word ^211 requires some amendment of text [y.i.).
24. abode unmoved^
or constant.' Taken with the next line, this suggests a
fountain and thus well supplied with water,
a fruitful bough\ Or
'
'
'
'
fine picture
bow
the
17 32^^
termination,
.tins,
Ezk.
'
(Ezk.
17**
same
substantially the
"xw "hv
text.
with archaic
128^), or nns,
Ps.
19^,
boug-h
31^-
'^),
might be thought
p. Down
mys m33]
to
J'j;
feqj.
of,
but
defies explanation.
Lit.
number
/J.OV
j/ewTttTos
n m
l^
(=
Au.
.r>\rr) ^
Vo
(?
^w
(= 2W
'hlf).
&
Zimmern's
reveal
vlb<i
>,.T^
] 1
zodiacal
theory, which identifies Joseph with the sign Taurus, finds two temptingpoints of contact in the consonantal text: reading n-js = rris, 'juvenca,'
and
at the beginning,
lie',
the text on these lines, with the help of Dt. 33" (see ZA, vii. 164!?.;
ATLO^y 399), has no title to respect: against it see Ba. p. 116. 23.
531)]
67
the
the line
too short)
is
Parallelism suggests a
we might
as subj. to
na'j?
= Q9'p
read
'31
D'3l,
(2120).
'
bowmen
24a.
ffi
'
(Jer.
koI
'
may
represent
*
niS'i (see
Ba.).[ffi
Ki.
Di;]
noun
or (since
^ An^CH =
OJf^i.'jO
so"-'*),
22^
in'3]
(&.
vt
2y^^\.
koX
Ps.
Lit.
The
125^
'as a
i^eXvdij,
'yni] is
S^
a hard
XLIX. 23-26
531
(v^^ith
Strojig
Is.
49^^
See,
i^*.
reading of
S and
5I^,
MT.
the Shepherd
Shechem
(Jos. 2426*),
p. 416):
are,
however, uncertain
ambiguous
25, 26.
The construction
25a (*
may he
may
ambiguity
^5'^P'''!
2^^.
to ripp in
is
it is
(v.i.).
which was
is
adopted above
be an intentional refinement.
v.i.
and see on
but the
25aap. 'El
25aY8b,
17^.
combination, but perhaps not too bold. 24b. "i^aijl] occurs only in the
It is reasonably suspected that the Mass. changed
pass, cited above.
the punctuation to avoid association of ideas with "rax, 'bull,' the
of Yahwe in N Israel.
Whether the name as
be really a survival of the bull-worship of Bethel and
Dan is another question ; T3X (strong-) is an epithet of men (Ju. 5",
8i
47^ 50") much
Jb. 2422 3420, Je. 4615, J sa. 218 etc.), and horses (Jer.
more often than of bulls (Ps. 22^^ 68^^ 50^^ Is. 34''), and might have
been transferred to Yahwe in its adj. sense. On the other hand, the
parallelism with Stone of Israel in the next line favours the idea that
the title is derived from the cult of the Bull at Bethel, which may have
had a more ancient significance than an image of Yahwe (cf. Mey. INS,
idolatrous
applied to
emblem
Yahwe
'
'
282
ZATW,
Luther,
ff.;
xxi. 70
fF.).
The
in
the
bull is
pN] Cf.
The translation above
'7nib''
25.
with
13"i3'i
& MT
agrees with
Tiiy'1]
suitable in
an ancient poem.
here redundant
(Siev.).
S> ^i<]
26.
'"ly
-nxi]
^^)
Read
would be
532
The
26a.
the
Blessings of heaven
above] Rain and dew, the cause of fertility (so Dt. 33^^ em.).
first
Tehdm
The subterranean
beneath]
we come
{v.i.)y
9^*.
26a.
of the
...
of the
33^^,
In
3^)]
Hos.
terrible imprecation,
whence
flood,
Blessings of breasts
i^.
first
eternal mountains
Hab.
see on
a source of blessing
not clear,
is
perhaps
as abodes of
the
cf.
dew
of
'
ii26^_VnN
one
TT3]
So Dt.
consecrated
hair (Ju.
13^-
rendering
'^
etc.)
^i^
crowned one
there
'
'
(48^*)
it
Pr. 10
cf.
involving unshorn
are no
For the
4^).
The
examples.
by recent
of the Northern monarchy, of
that
is
some explaining
'lin n^na,
is
God by a vow
The
"i'T3
second interpretation
scholars
The
33^6^
to
'
on the head
laid
is
usually adopted
be restored with
last line is to
(Dt. 33^^,
'
Hab.
3^).
But the
first
'Blessings of father, yea, man and child.' T3N*] jua + ioni, suggested
no doubt by the previous line. mn] U^C'^J render my progenitors,'
be pregnant.' rnxn] EV
by an impossible derivation from a^
nxn or mn see BDB), has no real philo'utmost bound' (so De., fr.
If the text were reliable, it might be
logical or traditional justification.
the common word desire,' from ^J niN (ffi '-""'5- EH^T^^), in the sense of
'"''^'^j
'
'
'
'
<
'
XLix.
27
26,
533
think
thuvier,
10 1
ff.),
interpretation
is
certainly plausible
(||K^i<"i),
1p"|iJ
which
quite
is
is
but
derives no support
it
never used
common
in
in
connexion
other connexions
The
'
'
'
'
l.c,
134).
27.
Benjamin.
^ Benjamin
is
a ravening- wolf:
And
27.
a, see
Iia' 3Ni]
G-K.
29 w.ny] = booty,'
*
Is.
33^3,
44,^. 3, 142.
Zeph. 3^ [? Is. 9^]
On
;
pausaJ
ffi ^rt.
THE BLESSING OF JACOB
534
Benjamin
is
praised for
its
The
its
share
in
Moab
(Ju.
5^*),
fight with
its
famous
i^
its
good
f.);
20^^,
it
was
Ch.
Ch.
17^^)'
28aba
poem
mainder of the
V.
the re-
^^
in
number] The
division into 12 tribes is an artificial scheme, whose origin
Peters, Early
is uncertain (see Luther, ZATW, xxi. 33 ff.
Heb. Story, 55 ff-)- ^^ obtained also amongst the Edomites,
and in Israel betrays its
Ishmaelites, and other peoples
theoretic character by the different ways in which the number
was made up, of which the oldest is probably that followed
In Dt. 33, Simeon is omitted, and
in the Song of Jacob.
Joseph divided into Ephraim and Manasseh in P (Nu. 2)
the tribes of Israel, twelve in
that source.
Joseph
is
of Levi.
28.
'?NnB''
impossible.
't2DK']
We
ffi
must
v\qX 'laKiip.
'?
ntS'N
rel.
C'n]
Such a construction
(Vns.) or read
b-'n
?'
is
(Ols.
XLIX. 28-L. 26
535
(reading h^H for nJ>;K). Stucken (MVAG, 1902, 166 ff.), after a laboured
proof that Reuben corresponds to Behemoth (hippopotamus), an old
constellation now represented by Aquarius, completed the circle after a
fashion, with the necessary addition of Dinah = Virg-o as the missing
sigti
and his results are adopted by Jeremias (ATLO^, 395 ff.). A
somewhat different arrangement is given by Winckler in AOF, iii. 465 ff.
These conjectures, however, add little to the evidence for the theory,
which must in the main be judged by the seven coincidences pointed out
in Zimmern's article.
That these amount to a demonstration of the
theory cannot be affirmed but they seem to me to go far to show that
it contains an element of truth.
It is hardly accidental that in each series
we have one double sign (Gemini, Simeon-Levi) and one female personification (Virgo, Dinah), and that all the animal names occurring in the
Song (lion, ass, serpent, ram ?, ox ?, wolf) can be more or less plausibly
identified with constellations either in the Zodiac or sufficiently near it to
have been counted as Zodiacal signs in early times. The incompleteness
of the correspondence is fairly explained by two facts first, that the
poem has undergone many changes in the course of its transmission,
and no longer preserves the original form and order of the oracles and
second, that while the twelve-fold division of the ecliptic goes back to
the remotest antiquity, the traditional names of the twelve signs cannot
all be traced to the ancient Babylonian astronomy.
It may be added
that there is no prima facie objection to combinations of this sort.
The
theory does not mean that the sons of Jacob are the earthly counterparts
of the Zodiacal constellations, and nothing more. All that is implied is
that an attempt was made to discover points of resemblance between the
fortunes and characteristics of the twelve tribes on the one hand, and
the astro-mythological system on the other.
Such combinations were
;
BURIAL OF JACOB
536
(jE,
p)
Canaan
(50^"^*).
who
He dies
in
fear his
(22-26j^
g-loss),
"^''P
In
*
'ya jn h^d,
and
ftya,
^5-26
'jyjDn, ^^
13
back
that the
[4729-31])
(q^hSn,
i9-
P (Machpelah,
^re from
etc.
note also
are mainly J ('?s<n55", ^
note the reference [^^'J to Joseph's oath
24. 25
1,31,3^ 21 ^^^n ^yi2-j
,jj^ ^^^^^^ n^^.^^ 19
Vv.^-"-
to 49^^).
'''o-
^*
the resemblance to 45'- ' and the backward reference in Ex. 13^^,
The analysis might stop here (Di. We. Dri. al.) but a
Jos. 24^2).
variant in ^^ {^^^ ^^'^fi), and the double name of the place of burial suggest
[3o2]i:
II
may be two accounts of the funeral (see KS. An. 242). Ho.
Gu. Pro., however, seem to me to go too far in the attempt to establish
a material difference of representation {e.g.^ that in E's account Joseph's
brethren did not go up with him to the burial). Traces of J in ^^"^ are
that there
28bP. The
Jacob's charge to his sons.
Note the close formal parallel to 28^ (P)
and charged
and
and blessed
called
each with a special blessing] v.i. 29, 30* See on
28b-33.
^^
sequel to
And
said
ch.
23.
in P.
31.
burying-place of Isaac
the burials of
On
(35"^^) is
The
at
and
all.
p.
504
f.
33.
in
all
to P.
L. 1-14.
The
burial of Jacob.
i.
The forms
in
which
'nn
n-isj-D,
is'i]
variant to
''"^
(so De.
XLIX. 28-L. 9
537
all
till
LAE^
In the cases
307).
(v.^^),
it is
86-88; Diod.
ii.
91
i.
and Budge, The Mummy^ 160 ff., 177 ff. the physicians^ In
Egypt the embalmers formed a special profession. 3. forty
days
.y^7;^/i' fej'^] The process of embalming occupied,
days
tians
Why
5a.
(cf.
Ch.
\'^'^'^^'.
is
possible,
The confused
16^*).
vii.
cession
is
less
(33^^ E),
The
much
but
such a
in
have digged]
Cf.
202
7-9.
plot of
in the
which
ff.).
The
the view
is
On any
view
funeral
pro-
mark
of the
Such proErman,
:
Apparently a Semitic ^/, meaning- in Arab. beHeb. Aram, and Arab, to the process of emabstr. pi, = embalming.'
3. D'Bin] 6jr. Xey.
balming-.
4. in'D3] The
fem. only here, for '33. The suff. prob. gen. obj. (weeping/or Jacob).
Nman] Add with dSc 'hi!. 5. -iH'icn] xu.(&^' ^^- + 'nic 3sS. no ojn njn]
om.
The phrase occurs in E 48"^', and (without nn) 50H 'nns] (ErFS^J have
digged'; & 'have purchased,' ST^ mp];iN = have prepared.' The first
sense preponderates in usage (the second, Dt. 2^, Hos. 3^, Jb. 6^40*'t),
2.
tiJn] v.2^,
Ca.
2^^t'
in
^
'
'
BURIAL OF JACOB
538
(jE,
p)
'
The
here interpreted as ^HVP ^^^y mourning of Egypt.'
meadow of Egypt may have commemorated
real name
'
'
some
'
the situation
is
unknown.
but
in J
two
different places, or
j^.
II
sumed
burial,
doubtful one
in
and
is
here to be preferred.
'dntin]
juu.
laN]
The word
bramble
'
in
IO-22
L.
12, 13.
The account
539
It is
15-21.
theme of
fears.
The
45^^* (Gu.), as if to
'
it
learned
father
their
'
merely that the brethren had not been present at the funeral
E had
not recorded
it
at
all.
16, 17.
They
elsewhere
(not
God of
kinship (Gu.).
from
mentioned).
{y,i.),
my
punish at
is
The
am
19.
1 in God's stead?]
pleasure.
20.
Cf. 45^-
'^-
(30^)
^.
21.
inserted
judge and
to
The
continu-
chronology of P
(47^^).
UIP,
nnN]
'1J1 1"?]
Gu.)-
12.
i*?
VJ3]
The
suff. find
di:^
no suitable
ncwa] ^b. ai.
It is
49*^,
ffi
and
ffir
Koi irapey^vovTO,
.S
'
the copula.
21.
nnyi]
22.
n'3i]
ffir
Kai
oi
dSt\<pol avTov
DEATH OF JOSEPH
540
(e)
no
years
lifetime in
23.
his sons,
another token of a
life
(Ps.
itself (see
25.
13^^, Jos.
24^^.
26.
The de*ath of
mummy-case, the wooden inner shell,
shaped like the mummy, which was placed in the stone
sarcophagus (see Erman, LAE^ 315 f- Ball, Light from the
here the Israelites as
Joseph.
in
coffin\
a whole
(v.^^).
or
East, 121).
(Volter, 55)
is
'
coffin
'
all
spiritual satisfaction in
Israel's
of Osiris
of.
**Is
Egypt."
the
Gu.
admire the
i]
iravoiKia.
23.
D':3
so dSc^tH^K
'33 ought
hence
great-grandchildren (Ex. 34'')
great-grandchildren (not, of course, of Ephraim,
Ephraim's line). But there being no reason why the
carried further in the line of Ephraim than in that
*
'
'
must understand
g-reat-grandchildren,' whether
we
Dt'pb'
mean
to
means
great-
but of Joseph in
descent should be
of Manasseh, we
read with xxx, or
takeV
'33
'
INDEXES.
ENGLISH.
I.
'Akkad, 210.
'Almodad, 221.
'Amalek, 263, 431.
Abida, 351.
'Abima
AM-rdmu,
Abraham,
363
religious
his
xxvi
xxvii
Mahdi,
xliv,
ff.,
ff.
292.
cance,
xxi,
221.
el,
f.
f.
,
f.
'Anamim, 212.
Angel of God,
ff.
as
legend of,
covenants with,
242
238,
xxviii, 247
241
sigriifi-
his migration,
;
Angels, 31,
289 ff.
name of, 244,
death of, 341, 351 f.
292 f.
Abram, name, xxv, 292.
Field of, xxv, 244.
Accusative of condition, 77, 282,
276
ff.,
7 37,
of definition, 29.
129,
instances
149,
154,
of,
172,
356,
358,
403f.
of place, 376.
of time, 260.
Ararat, 166.
Archaisms,
429 f.
the South-wind,
Adapa and
51
300,328,411.
'Apriw, xvi, 218 f.
474-
118,
36, 14 if.
Anthropomorphism,
'Adah,
ofYahwe, 286 f.
myth
'Ariok, 258.
'Arki, 216.
of, 92.
'Adbe'el, 353.
'Adullam, 450.
Aetiological motive in myth and
legend, xif., 70, 95, 140, 332,
'Ahuzzath, 367.
'Ai, 247.
'Akan, 434.
'Akbor, 436.
362.
Article,
541
INDEXES
542
ENGLISH
form
Cohort,
'Avith, 435.
Ayyah,
I.
434.
Concubine-slave,
Ba'al
Hanan,
Cosmogonies,
436.
onian,
f.
Bdellium, 60.
er
Lahay
386.
f.,
294, 297.
*
f.,
Cup
132, 137.
ff.,
Cult-legends, xi
*'
423
50 Indian, 46
50; Phoenician, 46, 48 ff.
Covenants, divine, 171 ff., 280 ff.,
290 ff.
human, 325 ff., 367 f.,
400 ff. -feast, 367, 401 ; idea
of, 283 f., 297!".
sign of, 172,
491.
Ben-'oni, 426.
ff.,
ff.
352.
f.,
BabylEtruscan,
Persian, 19,
18;
41
ix, 20,
384.
Bered, 288.
Berossus (quoted), 41
xvii, 285.
6ff.,
Basemath, 430.
Bg
vav consec,
with
405;
446.
319.
379, 411.
Ix,
f.,
Damascius (quoted),
Dan, 266, 387, 527.
Dead
Sea,
etc.), 294.
42.
vii,
Deborah, 425.
Dedan, 204, 350.
Betyl, 380.
Bilhah, 386.
Bilhan, 434.
graphs on,
of,
ff.
Mono-
512.
180
f.
origin
Babylonian, i75ff.
Greek,
179
Phoenician,
180
f.
f.
Indian,
180;
179;
Phrygian,
Syrian, 180.
Diklah, 221.
Dinah, 389, 421.
Dinhabah, 435.
Dioscuri, 302, 312.
Bozrah, 435.
BAz, 333.
D6danim,
xlviii
in
f.
199.
Dothan, 446 f.
Dreams, 316, 376, 394, 397, 445,
460 ff. 465 ff.
ff.
201, 245.
Dfimah, 353.
399. 524-
Eabani (legend
Eden, 57.
site of,
167
f.,
ff.
62
of),
91
ff.,
517.
ff.
Edom, Edomites,
in Palestine,
INDEXES
Elani, Elamites, 204
257
f.,
ff.,
272,
I.
ENGLISH
Gad,
387, 528.
Gaham,
Eliezer, 279.
of
characteristics
age
style,
of, Hi
ff.
etc.,
ff.
'Elon, 494.
El-Paran, 261.
Embalming-, 537.
'Emim,
Genealogy, Cainite, 98
Sethite,
relation of Cainite and
99 f.
Sethite,
138 f.;
Edomite,
Shemite,
428 ff.
of
231;
Ishmael, 352 f.
of Keturah,
of Nahor, 332 ff.
350
of
Terah, 235 ff.
;
263.
Enoch-legend, 132.
'Enosh, 126.
structure
87,
75,
94,
"Epher, 351.
265.
Ethnographic idea
186,
in legend, xii,
403,
356,
411
f.,
427, 450.
xxxii.
of,
ff.
Gomer, 196.
Good and evil, knowledge
Goren ha- Atad, 538.
in
legends,
the
Serpent,
Had6ram, 221.
Hadramaut, 221.
motive
Etymological
220.
of, 95.
(quoted), 49.
Euhemerism,
Eve, 86,
85 f.
iii ff.,
ff.
'Esek, 366.
Eudemos
in,
composition
GilgameS Epic,
Erech, 210.
xixff.,
xxxii
and
ii f.
229.
':^phah, 351.
xiii,
character
231.
of,
'Eliphaz, 431.
'Elishah, 198.
flf.
334.
Gematria, 266.
Genealogies, artificial
xlvii
54,
102
147.
;
and
See njn.
Exodus, date of, xv.
Family, genealogical division of,
194 patriarchal type of, 1S9
;
93.
f.
Ham,
Ham,
245.
262.
182, 195.
Hamath, 217.
Hammurabi, xiv,
xxii, xxvii,
257
f.,
335-
Code
Hanok,
HarSn,
236.
xix,
285,
INDEXES
544
I.
Harran, 238.
Havilah, 59, 65, 202.
Hazezon-Tamar,
Hazo, 333.
hero, 538.
263.
f.
Hesperides, 94.
Hezron, 494.
Hiddekel, 61.
ff.
compared,
policy,
iiif.
Hittites, xvi,
214
f.,
ures
336, 368.
498
ff.
parallel
history,
in
blessing
Hivvite, 216.
Hobah,
of,
legend
and
story
name of, 389 f.
in
elements
438 - 528
as
Joseph - legend,
441 f.
agrarian
his
diviner,
484
Joseph,
History
ENGLISH
on,
529
fig-
501
ff.
f.
death
of, 540.
267.
Jiibal, 120.
- periods
(Klostermann's
theory of), 233 f.
Judah, name of, 386, 519 separa-
Jubilee
HCisham, 435.
Imag-e of God, 31 f.
Immortality, 88, 92, 95, 132.
conseexpressing
Imperative,
,,
leadership in
unapocopated,
476.
expressing
irony,
398
by
Isaac, name,
321
birth
ff.,
358
321
marriage
death of, 428.
339
of,
ff.
22.
name, 409 f.
Israel-Stone, Shepherd
Israel,
of, 531.
Keturah, 349 f.
Kgzib, 451.
Kid, as gift, 453.
Kiryath-'Arba, 335.
Kittim, 199.
Jabbok, 407.
Jacob, name, 360 history of, 355428 legends regarding, 356
;
J,
faith, 280b
'Irad, 117.
Fear
Justification
Kadesh, 262.
Kadmonites, 284.
Kalneh, 210.
Kaphtorim, 213.
Kasluhim, 213.
Kedar, 352.
Kedeshah, 454.
descriptive, 533.
Incubation, 376.
Infinitive absolute used as juss.,
of,
his
a determination,
294
495, etc.
quence, 243.
,,
tion
Korah, 432.
Koran, 140, 166.
Kudur-lagamar, 258 f.
Kush, 61, 65, 200, 207.
Ivi,
f.
443,
INDEXES
Lamech,
Song
20
f.,
516.
of, xiil.
353.
Mochos
(quoted), 49.
Mohar,
xviii,
ff.
Monotheism,
f.,
395,
ix, 6,
269, 301.
Moreh, 245
Mourning
mtnusc,
419.
Letfishim, 351.
Levi, 386, 420, 518.
Lit.
545
ff.
Legend, idealisation
ENGLISH
Mishma,
117, 133.
of,
I.
f.
Moriah, land
40.
of,
328
f.
517-
Na'amah, 120.
Nahor, 232.
Names, 68 popular etymology
Lot, 236.
LOz, 378
xiii
f.
Magog,
197.
Mamre,
540.
350.
Mehetab'el, 436.
Melkizedek, 267 ff.
207.
Nineveh,
21
Noah, 133,
Nod, III.
Nomadic
Numbers
1.
151
life,
ff.,
f.
353.
Mibzar, 436.
Midian, Midianites, 350, 448.
ff.,
f.,
b)'^
king's
life,
'Oholibamah, 430.
Olive, 156.
'On, 470.
Onam,
434.
195.
in.
(sacred), 8, 39,
'Obal, 221.
35
174, 181
by genital organs,
ff.
Mibsam,
Nimrod,
98, 326,
Oath, 345.
199.
f.
483-
197.
Methuselah, 132
f,
Nile, 465.
Meshech,
with
Naphtdhim, 213.
Nebayoth, 352.
Negeb, 248.
f.
254, 265*
Media, Medes,
296.
Naphish, 353.
405.
Manahath, 432 f.
Manasseh, 471, 504,
Marduk, 209 f.
Mash, 207.
Masrekah, 435.
Massa, 353.
Medan,
f.,
participle, 131.
Makir, 540.
Makpelah, 337
105
314. 385-
Mahaial'el, 131.
Mahanaim,
of,
f.
476.
341.
INDEXES
546
Ophir, 222.
Oratio ohliqua without
ENGLISH
I.
446.
248.
pat, 201.
Paddan Aram,
See Eden.
origin
Legend,
significance of, 90 fF.
Paradise.
Paradise
grave
and
f.,
Rainbow
in
mythology, I72f,
Paran, 324.
Ra'mah,
Pathriisim, 213.
f.
of, 426.
203.
Re'u, 232.
of, xivff.
Re
ft'
431.
el,
Reuben,
Re'ftmah, 333.
Riphath, 197.
Pg'6, 436.
Peoples, Table
of,
187
fF.
Perez, 456.
Perfect of certainty, 172,462.
of confidence, 388.
child
modal use
of,
essence
patriarchal,
1,
Ix, 491.
Salem, 268
Sanchuniathon (quoted),
321.
48,
71
f.,
123, 140.
Pikol, 325.
Pildash, 333.
Pishon, 59.
Sarah,
Seba, 202.
237,
i6o,
of,
303
Serpent, in Paradise, 72
worship, 81.
430, 437.
f.,
Serftg, 232.
Seth, 125
f.,
Shammah,
Ivii fF.
131, 139.
431.
Shechem,
fF.
geographical horizon
Prophet, H, 317.
Prophetic guilds, xxxi.
Protevangeliuniy 81, 97.
of, 191
295,
335.
of, 135.
characteristics of, Ix
flF.,
'
284 fF.,
248 fF.,
,3oofF., 315
of species, 321.
Polytheism, traces
chronology
f.
of, 330.
fF.
Shem,
195, 269.
flF.
93
f.
INDEXES
Shepherd,
xiii
f.
Tree of
"Short
of
Genesis,
of
stories"
xxviii
ENGLISH
547
ideal, 398,
1.
f.
of,
vii,
ff.
Evil, 94 f.
Tiibal, 120, 199.
Shftah, 350.
ShOr, 286, 3i5f., 3S3f.
Siddim, 260.
Signet-ring-, 454, 469.
Simeon, 386, 420, 518.
Sinuhe, Tale
Usoos,
Vav
Sitnah, 366.
*'
Sons of God,"
**
Spirit of
141
f.
419,
Volkssage,
Vow, 378
iv.
f.
Sukkoth, 415.
Supplementary Hypothesis, xxxii,
Word
of God,
7.
Ya'akob-el, xvi,
459-
451.
Tarshish, 198.
Tebah, 334.
Tel-Amarna Tablets,
413. 501
f-
of origin,
Ya'lam, 432.
Iv.
T^ma, 353.
T^man, 431.
Terah, 232.
Teraphim, 396, 423.
Yerah, 221.
Yered, 131.
Ygtar, 353.
Yidlaph, 333.
Yishbak, 350.
Yiskah, 238.
Tidal, 259.
Tikktine Sophertrtif 304, 345.
Timna,
433.
Timnah, 453.
Yithran, 434.
Tlras, 199.
Tithe, 379.
T61a', 494.
Yob, 494.
Yobab, 222, 435.
Yoktan, 220.
Togarmah,
197,
358, 428.
Book
in
169.
Tamar,
OT),
of Jahwe, 277 f.
'World-egg,' 18, 49f.
xxxvii.
Taboos,
Women
of,
40,
130,
236,
428 f.,
443-
Totem clan-names,
f.
INDEXES
548
Zib'6n, 434.
Zid6n, 215, 525.
Zikkurat, 226, 228
HEBREW
II.
Zodiac, signs
f.,
HEBREW
'db"?
'9,
481.
mra, 367.
nx, 55.
n-jD5,
yp? 344-
'4^1^, 359-
consent
Nnn, i4f.
465.
171
nna
200.
398, 49^
270
^H-
'?iy
*?>
289
?,
327
'^a'
P'^i'
Vn,
290
XXXV
ff.
f.,
^^?fc
n*?' ,
367
281.
146, 207.
K'?a,
483-
Sm, 281.
316.
pnj, 78.
Sa,
401.
160.
n)]i,
245, 424.
j-.^K, [iVn,
f.
266.
^ha, 259.
367.
n^N, 245.
r,)^.
(/>z.),
niaa,
'13,
'3 ''?y3,
^**
481.
^*<i^).
225.
nj;,7?,
420.
'),
nriK, 225.
D\n'?N,
3^2-
no-iN, 56.
*?><,
i6a
k3,
nana, 29.
^laN, 470.
'K,
T^K, 432.
"?^, 443D'Nin, 388.
'1?^ 353"iDN
Speak'), 107.
niD^, 30.
nk
i^'K,
69.
= with '),
( = 'sign'),
*
various uses
383* 530-
^p^sil,
214.
103.
^an,
326.
102.
25,
103,
no,
112,
7,'2n(
fi?9q,
172.
9,
24.
n;n, 225.
-nK
f.
f.,
73-
n?<,
n^N and
Se'n,
23
K?>^,
126.
;yi3!<,
278
p"E'E-n,
nnnpx, 477.
'3
tribes,
Zfizim, 263.
296, 476.
^ntj,
the
II.
n'lN (
of
Zimran, 350.
Z6ar, 2S2f., 257, 309.
Dijj,
theory
Zodiacal
377, 380.
Zillah, 118.
Sat*,
22,
of,
= *die'),
279.
3^o-
namely,' 481.
1^. 237.
(termination), 306.
j^
'a (p^pry)
jm,
INDEXES
HEBREW
II.
I!!1:D
nnoi, 480.
"b, 238.
D'W, 475.
IS, 462
1133,
n^b, i6i.
549
^33, 252.
pN
T'3,
in;n, 29.
i^"?n,
118.
516, 537.
305-
506.
I^lih
pSn, 267.
en, 453.
7,
various uses
HKDn, 300.
ion, nph, 226,
"n"?,
383-
n?0, 323-
cS
359.
^n, 537.
K'sS 519.
266.
:i'jn,
1"'?,
116.
Tian,
jnn,
170, 226.
392.
bS, 448.
466.
i9, 35
tytj'?.
= white
nri
153,
nnh, 499.
mn, io4f.
C'D53nn,
of,
bread, 463.
oyS
361.
419.
niND, 24.
D'n2o, 457.
te,
T>'e,
njiJD, 346.
353-
488.
lye,
154.
|jo, ja?,
269.
'i^sno, 311.
nk;,
465.
niViD, 236.
D?;,
451.
nyiD, 26.
nno, 151.
143.
i'^"":.
niT
'
shares
'
or
times
482.
yT
432
f.
56.
ynn
^u',
D'p;,
'D,
153-
n-r,
402.
436.
24, 167.
TI?P,
408.
516.
nrjop, 526.
nciJP,
Bh', 488.
nn',
1?P, 157.
15a
yp',
117,
ppnD, 5i9f.
I'D,
n?:, 195.
is;,
'?N'inD,
.TOP, 487.
Dv, 5,
dp:,
'),
D'^^,
104.
394-
DP, 526.
514.
Dipp
pnn m33,
426.
423.
yip, 367-
DK
D:n9fp, 526.
'3,
500.
'3m31 DK
'3,
462 f.
p^c, 278
f.
|3V'3, 300.
'?NV''n9,
117-
nny
n'^B'in?,
132
'3,
480.
DV3, 362.
wynp, 370-
f.
550
INDEXES
183.
nii?^,
f.
237.
HEBREW
moro
TDB',
nriD?',
285.
55^
364.
I^'B^, 527-
344pE', 27 f.
"i5^
n^, 295.
^Qli^y 524-
B^,
II.
B'i?',
469.
T\9,
126.
B^t?,
niKn, 532.
520.
n^n, i6of.
9?', 474.
n^i^y
36
J3>,
143-
f.
D'lnfi,
nrjV, 60.
nnf',
17, 23,
nn'?in,
262, 267,
358.
r\w, 79.
2t)n, 336.
enK',
330.
'^?.
n'?'B',
520
B'^??,
oi?^,
fF.
474.
415-
dtW,
540.
44
369-
D'Dn, 159.
ipi,
r^j?,
f.,
xxxiiif.,
283.
28.
nOT-)B, 68,
281.
174,
235
y'
DATE DUE
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is
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