genesis
hen God began to createOthers “In the beginning God created.”
heaven and earth—the earth being
unformed and void, with darkness over the surface of the deep and a wind
fromOthers “the spirit
of.” God sweeping over the water—God said,
“Let there be light”; and there was light. God saw that the light was good, and God separated the
light from the darkness. God called the
light
Day, and the darkness He called Night. And there was evening and there was
morning, a first day.Others “one
day.”
God said, “Let there be an expanse in
the midst of the water, that it may separate water from water.”
God made the expanse, and
it separated the water which was below the expanse from the water which was
above the expanse. And it was so. God called
the expanse Sky. And there was evening and there was morning, a second
day.
God said, “Let the water below the
sky be gathered into one area, that the dry land may appear.” And it
was so. God called the dry land Earth, and
the gathering of waters He called Seas. And God saw that this was good.
And God said, “Let the earth sprout
vegetation: seed-bearing plants, fruit trees of every kind on earth that
bear fruit with the seed in it.” And it was so. The earth brought forth vegetation: seed-bearing
plants of every kind, and trees of every kind bearing fruit with the seed
in it. And God saw that this was good. And
there was evening and there was morning, a third day.
God said, “Let there be lights in
the expanse of the sky to separate day from night; they shall serve as
signs for the set times—the days and the years; and they shall serve as lights in the expanse of the
sky to shine upon the earth.” And it was so. God made the two great lights, the greater light to dominate the
day and the lesser light to dominate the night, and the stars. And God set them in the expanse of the sky to shine
upon the earth, to dominate the day and the
night, and to separate light from darkness. And God saw that this was good.
And there was evening and there was
morning, a fourth day.
God said, “Let the waters bring
forth swarms of living creatures, and birds that fly above the earth across
the expanse of the sky.” God created
the great sea monsters, and all the living creatures of every kind that
creep, which the waters brought forth in swarms, and all the winged birds
of every kind. And God saw that this was good. God blessed them, saying, “Be fertile and increase, fill
the waters in the seas, and let the birds increase on the earth.”
And there was evening and there was
morning, a fifth day.
God said, “Let the earth bring forth
every kind of living creature: cattle, creeping things, and wild beasts of
every kind.” And it was so. God made
wild beasts of every kind and cattle of every kind, and all kinds of
creeping things of the earth. And God saw that this was good. And God said, “Let us make man in our image,
after our likeness. They shall rule the fish of the sea, the birds of the
sky, the cattle, the whole earth, and all the creeping things that creep on
earth.” And God created man in His
image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.
God blessed them and God said to them,
“Be fertile and increase, fill the earth and master it; and rule the
fish of the sea, the birds of the sky, and all the living things that creep
on earth.”
God said, “See, I give you every
seed-bearing plant that is upon all the earth, and every tree that has
seed-bearing fruit; they shall be yours for food. And to all the animals on land, to all the birds of the sky, and
to everything that creeps on earth, in which there is the breath of life,
[I give] all the green plants for food.” And it was so. And God saw all that He had made, and found it very
good. And there was evening and there was morning, the sixth day.
The heaven and the earth were finished,
and all their array. On the seventh day God
finished the work that He had been doing, and He ceasedOr “rested.” on the seventh day from all
the work that He had done. And God blessed
the seventh day and declared it holy, because on it God ceased from all the
work of creation that He had done. Such is
the story of heaven and earth when they were created.
When the LORD God made earth and
heaven—when no shrub of the field was
yet on earth and no grasses of the field had yet sprouted, because the LORD God had not sent rain upon the earth and there
was no man to till the soil, but a flow
would well up from the ground and water the whole surface of the
earth—the LORD God formed manHeb.
’adam. from the dust of the earth.Heb. ’adamah. He
blew into his nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living
being.
The LORD God
planted a garden in Eden, in the east, and placed there the man whom He had
formed. And from the ground the LORD God caused to grow every tree that was pleasing
to the sight and good for food, with the tree of life in the middle of the
garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and bad.
A river issues from Eden to water the
garden, and it then divides and becomes four branches. The name of the first is Pishon, the one that winds
through the whole land of Havilah, where the gold is. (The gold of that land is good; bdellium is there,
and lapis lazuli.Others “onyx”;
meaning of Heb. shoham uncertain.) The name of the second river is Gihon, the one that winds through
the whole land of Cush. The name of the
third river is Tigris, the one that flows east of Asshur. And the fourth
river is the Euphrates.
The LORD God took
the man and placed him in the garden of Eden, to till it and tend it.
And the LORD God
commanded the man, saying, “Of every tree of the garden you are free
to eat; but as for the tree of knowledge of
good and bad, you must not eat of it; for as soon as you eat of it, you
shall die.”
The LORD God
said, “It is not good for man to be alone; I will make a fitting
helper for him.” And the LORD God formed out of the earth all the wild beasts
and all the birds of the sky, and brought them to the man to see what he
would call them; and whatever the man called each living creature, that
would be its name. And the man gave names
to all the cattle and to the birds of the sky and to all the wild beasts;
but for Adam no fitting helper was found. So the LORD God cast a deep sleep upon
the man; and, while he slept, He took one of his ribs and closed up the
flesh at that spot. And the LORD God fashioned the rib that He had taken from the
man into a woman; and He brought her to the man. Then the man said,
“This one at last
Is bone of my bones
And flesh of my flesh.
This one shall be called Woman,Heb.
’ishshah.
For from manHeb.
’ish. was she taken.”
Hence a man leaves his father and mother
and clings to his wife, so that they become one flesh.
The two of them were naked,Heb. ‘arummim, play on
‘arum “shrewd” in 3.1. the
man and his wife, yet they felt no shame. *1Now the serpent was the
shrewdest of all the wild beasts that the LORD God
had made. He said to the woman, “Did God really say: You shall not
eat of any tree of the garden?” The
woman replied to the serpent, “We may eat of the fruit of the other
trees of the garden. It is only about fruit
of the tree in the middle of the garden that God said: ‘You shall not
eat of it or touch it, lest you die.’” And the serpent said to the woman, “You are not going to
die, but God knows that as soon as you eat
of it your eyes will be opened and you will be like Others “God, who knows.”divine beings who know
good and bad.” When the woman saw that
the tree was good for eating and a delight to the eyes, and that the tree
was desirable as a source of wisdom, she took of its fruit and ate. She
also gave some to her husband, and he ate. Then the eyes of both of them were opened and they perceived that
they were naked; and they sewed together fig leaves and made themselves
loincloths.
They heard the sound of the LORD God moving about in the garden at the breezy
time of day; and the man and his wife hid from the LORD God among the trees of the garden. The LORD God called out to
the man and said to him, “Where are you?” He replied, “I heard the sound of You in the
garden, and I was afraid because I was naked, so I hid.” Then He asked, “Who told you that you were
naked? Did you eat of the tree from which I had forbidden you to
eat?” The man said, “The woman
You put at my side—she gave me of the tree, and I ate.”
And the LORD God
said to the woman, “What is this you have done!” The woman
replied, “The serpent duped me, and I ate.” Then the LORD God said to
the serpent,
“Because you did this,
More cursed shall you be
Than all cattle
And all the wild beasts:
On your belly shall you crawl
And dirt shall you eat
All the days of your life.
I will put enmity
Between you and the woman,
And between your offspring and hers;
They shall strike at your head,
And you shall strike at their heel.”
And to the woman He said,
“I will make most severe
Your pangs in childbearing;
In pain shall you bear children.
Yet your urge shall be for your husband,
And he shall rule over you.”
To Adam He said, “Because you did as
your wife said and ate of the tree about which I commanded you, ‘You
shall not eat of it,’
Cursed be the ground because of you;
By toil shall you eat of it
All the days of your life:
Thorns and thistles shall it sprout for
you.
But your food shall be the grasses of the field;
By the sweat of your brow
Shall you get bread to eat,
Until you return to the ground—
For from it you were taken.
For dust you are,
And to dust you shall return.”
The man named his wife Eve,Heb. h%awwah. because she was the
mother of all the living.Heb.
h%ay.
And the LORD God made
garments of skins for Adam and his wife, and clothed them.
And the LORD God
said, “Now that the man has become like one of us, knowing good and
bad, what if he should stretch out his hand and take also from the tree of
life and eat, and live forever!” So
the LORD God banished him from the garden of Eden,
to till the soil from which he was taken. He drove the man out, and stationed east of the garden of Eden
the cherubim and the fiery ever-turning sword, to guard the way to the tree
of life.
Now the man knewHeb. yada‘, often in a sexual
sense. his wife Eve, and she conceived and bore Cain, saying,
“I have gainedHeb.
qanithi, connected with “Cain.” a
male child with the help of the LORD.”
She then
bore his brother Abel. Abel became a keeper of sheep, and Cain became a
tiller of the soil. In the course of time,
Cain brought an offering to the LORD from the
fruit of the soil; and Abel, for his part,
brought the choicest of the firstlings of his flock. The LORD paid heed to Abel and his offering, but to Cain and his offering He paid no heed. Cain
was much distressed and his face fell. And
the LORD said to Cain,
“Why are you distressed,
And why is your face fallen?
Meaning of
verse uncertain.Surely, if you do right,
There is uplift.
But if you do not do right
Sin couches at the door;
Its urge is toward you,
Yet you can be its master.”
Cain said to his brother AbelAncient versions, including the Targum, read
“Come, let us go out into the field.” … and
when they were in the field, Cain set upon his brother Abel and killed him.
The LORD said to
Cain, “Where is your brother Abel?” And he said, “I do
not know. Am I my brother’s keeper?” Then He said, “What have you done? Hark, your
brother’s blood cries out to Me from the ground! Therefore, you shall be more cursed than the
ground,See 3.17. which opened its
mouth to receive your brother’s blood from your hand. If you till the soil, it shall no longer yield its
strength to you. You shall become a ceaseless wanderer on earth.”
Cain said to the LORD, “My punishment is too great to bear!
Since You have banished me this day from
the soil, and I must avoid Your presence and become a restless wanderer on
earth—anyone who meets me may kill me!” The LORD said to him, “I promise,
if anyone kills Cain, sevenfold vengeance shall be taken on him.” And
the LORD put a mark on Cain, lest anyone who met
him should kill him. Cain left the presence
of the LORD and settled in the land of Nod, east
of Eden.
Cain knew his wife, and she conceived and
bore Enoch. And he then founded a city, and named the city after his son
Enoch. To Enoch was born Irad, and Irad
begot Mehujael, and MehujaelHeb.
Meh%ijael. begot Methusael, and Methusael begot
Lamech. Lamech took to himself two wives: the name of the
one was Adah, and the name of the other was Zillah. Adah bore Jabal; he was the ancestor of those who dwell in tents
and amidst herds. And the name of his
brother was Jubal; he was the ancestor of all who play the lyre and the
pipe. As for Zillah, she bore Tubal-cain,
who forged all implements of copper and iron. And the sister of Tubal-cain
was Naamah.
And Lamech said to his wives,
“Adah and Zillah, hear my voice;
O wives of Lamech, give ear to my speech.
I have slain a man for wounding me,
And a lad for bruising me.
If Cain is avenged sevenfold,
Then Lamech seventy-sevenfold.”
Adam knew his wife again, and she bore a
son and named him Seth, meaning, “God has Or “established for me”; Heb.
shath, connected with “Seth.”provided me with another
offspring in place
of Abel,” for Cain had killed him. And
to Seth, in turn, a son was born, and he named him Enosh. It was then that
men began to invoke the LORD by name.
This is the record of Adam’s
line.—When God created man, He made him in the likeness of God;
male and female He created them. And when
they were created, He blessed them and called them Man.—When Adam had lived 130 years, he begot a son in his
likeness after his image, and he named him Seth. After the birth of Seth, Adam lived 800 years and begot sons and
daughters. All the days that Adam lived came
to 930 years; then he died.
When Seth had lived 105 years, he begot
Enosh. After the birth of Enosh, Seth lived
807 years and begot sons and daughters. All
the days of Seth came to 912 years; then he died.
When Enosh had lived 90 years, he begot
Kenan. After the birth of Kenan, Enosh
lived 815 years and begot sons and daughters. All the days of Enosh came to 905 years; then he died.
When Kenan had lived 70 years, he begot
Mahalalel. After the birth of Mahalalel,
Kenan lived 840 years and begot sons and daughters. All the days of Kenan came to 910 years; then he died.
When Mahalalel had lived 65 years, he
begot Jared. After the birth of Jared,
Mahalalel lived 830 years and begot sons and daughters. All the days of Mahalalel came to 895 years; then he
died.
When Jared had lived 162 years, he begot
Enoch. After the birth of Enoch, Jared
lived 800 years and begot sons and daughters. All the days of Jared came to 962 years; then he died.
When Enoch had lived 65 years, he begot
Methuselah. After the birth of Methuselah,
Enoch walked with God 300 years; and he begot sons and daughters.
All the days of Enoch came to 365 years.
Enoch walked with God; then he was no more,
for God took him.
When Methuselah had lived 187 years, he
begot Lamech. After the birth of Lamech,
Methuselah lived 782 years and begot sons and daughters. All the days of Methuselah came to 969 years; then
he died.
When Lamech had lived 182 years, he begot
a son. And he named him Noah, saying,
“This one will provide us reliefConnecting Noah with Heb. nih%am “to
comfort”; cf. 9.20 ff. from our work and from the toil of
our hands, out of the very soil which the LORD
placed under a curse.”
After the birth of Noah, Lamech lived 595
years and begot sons and daughters. All the
days of Lamech came to 777 years; then he died.
When Noah had lived 500 years, Noah begot
Shem, Ham, and Japheth.
When men began to increase on earth and
daughters were born to them, the divine
beingsOthers “the sons of
God.” saw how beautiful the daughters of men were and took
wives from among those that pleased them.—The LORD said, “My breath shall not
abideMeaning of Heb. uncertain. in man
forever, since he too is flesh; let the days allowed him be one hundred and
twenty years.”—It was then, and
later too, that the Nephilim appeared on earth—when the divine beings
cohabited with the daughters of men, who bore them offspring. They were the
heroes of old, the men of renown.
The LORD saw how
great was man’s wickedness on earth, and how every plan devised by
his mind was nothing but evil all the time. And the LORD regretted that He had made
man on earth, and His heart was saddened. The LORD said, “I will blot out
from the earth the men whom I created—men together with beasts,
creeping things, and birds of the sky; for I regret that I made
them.” But Noah found favor with the
LORD.
NOAH%
This is the line of Noah.—Noah was
a righteous man; he was blameless in his age; Noah walked with
God.—Noah begot three sons: Shem,
Ham, and Japheth.
The earth became corrupt before God; the
earth was filled with lawlessness. When God saw how corrupt the earth was, for all
flesh had corrupted its ways on earth, God said to Noah, “I have decided to put an
end to all flesh, for the earth is filled with lawlessness because of
them: I am about to destroy them with the earth. Make yourself an ark of gopher wood; make it an ark with
compartments, and cover it inside and out with pitch.
This is how youshall make it: the length
of the ark shall be three hundred cubits, its width fifty cubits, and its
height thirty cubits. Make an opening for daylight in the ark, and Meaning of Heb. uncertain.terminate it within a cubit of the top. Put the entrance to the ark in its side; make it
with bottom, second, and third decks.
“For My part, I am about to bring the
Flood—waters upon the earth—to destroy all flesh under the
sky in which there is breath of life; everything on earth shall perish.
But I will establish My covenant with
you, and you shall enter the ark, with your sons, your wife, and your
sons’ wives. And of all that lives,
of all flesh, you shall take two of each into the ark to keep alive with
you; they shall be male and female. From
birds of every kind, cattle of every kind, every kind of creeping thing
on earth, two of each shall come to you to stay alive. For your part, take of everything that is eaten
and store it away, to serve as food for you and for them.”
Noah did so; just as God commanded him,
so he did.
Then the LORD said
to Noah, “Go into the ark, with all your household, for you alone
have I found righteous before Me in this generation. Of every clean animal you shall take seven pairs,
males and their mates, and of every animal that is not clean, two, a male
and its mate; of the birds of the sky
also, seven pairs, male and female, to keep seed alive upon all the
earth. For in seven days’ time I
will make it rain upon the earth, forty days and forty nights, and I will
blot out from the earth all existence that I created.” And Noah did just as the LORD commanded him.
Noah was six hundred years old when the Flood
came, waters upon the earth. Noah, with
his sons, his wife, and his sons’ wives, went into the ark because
of the waters of the Flood. Of the clean
animals, of the animals that are not clean, of the birds, and of
everything that creeps on the ground, two
of each, male and female, came to Noah into the ark, as God had commanded
Noah. And on the seventh day the waters
of the Flood came upon the earth.
In the six hundredth year of Noah’s
life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month, on that
day
All the fountains of the great deep burst apart,
And the floodgates of the sky broke open.
(The rain fell on the earth forty days and
forty nights.) That same day Noah and
Noah’s sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth, went into the ark, with
Noah’s wife and the three wives of his sons—they and all beasts of every kind, all cattle of
every kind, all creatures of every kind that creep on the earth, and all
birds of every kind, every bird, every winged thing. They came to Noah into the ark, two each of all
flesh in which there was breath of life. Thus they that entered comprised male and female of all flesh,
as God had commanded him. And the LORD shut him
in.
The Flood continued forty days on the earth,
and the waters increased and raised the ark so that it rose above the
earth. The waters swelled and increased
greatly upon the earth, and the ark drifted upon the waters. When the waters had swelled much more upon the
earth, all the highest mountains everywhere under the sky were covered.
Fifteen cubits higher did the waters
swell, as the mountains were covered. And all flesh that stirred on earth perished—birds,
cattle, beasts, and all the things that swarmed upon the earth, and all
mankind. All in whose nostrils was the
merest breath of life, all that was on dry land, died. All existence on earth was blotted out—man,
cattle, creeping things, and birds of the sky; they were blotted out from
the earth. Only Noah was left, and those with him in the ark.
And when the waters had swelled on the
earth one hundred and fifty days, *1God
remembered Noah and all the beasts and all the cattle that were with him
in the ark, and God caused a wind to blow across the earth, and the
waters subsided. The fountains of the deep
and the floodgates of the sky were stopped up, and the rain from the sky
was held back; the waters then receded
steadily from the earth. At the end of one hundred and fifty days the
waters diminished, so that in the seventh
month, on the seventeenth day of the month, the ark came to rest on the
mountains of Ararat. The waters went on
diminishing until the tenth month; in the tenth month, on the first of
the month, the tops of the mountains became visible.
At the end of forty days, Noah opened the
window of the ark that he had made and
sent out the raven; it went to and fro until the waters had dried up from
the earth. Then he sent out the dove to
see whether the waters had decreased from the surface of the ground.
But the dove could not find a resting
place for its foot, and returned to him to the ark, for there was water
over all the earth. So putting out his hand, he took it into the ark with
him. He waited another seven days, and
again sent out the dove from the ark. The
dove came back to him toward evening, and there in its bill was a
plucked-off olive leaf! Then Noah knew that the waters had decreased on
the earth. He waited still another seven
days and sent the dove forth; and it did not return to him any more.
In the six hundred and first year, in the
first month, on the first of the month, the waters began to dry from the
earth; and when Noah removed the covering of the ark, he saw that the
surface of the ground was drying. And in
the second month, on the twenty-seventh day of the month, the earth was
dry.
God spoke to Noah, saying, “Come out of the ark, together with your
wife, your sons, and your sons’ wives. Bring out with you every living thing of all flesh that is with
you: birds, animals, and everything that creeps on earth; and let them
swarm on the earth and be fertile and increase on earth.”
So Noah came out, together with his sons,
his wife, and his sons’ wives. Every animal, every creeping thing, and every bird, everything
that stirs on earth came out of the ark by families.
Then Noah built an altar to the LORD and, taking of every clean animal and of every
clean bird, he offered burnt offerings on the altar. The LORD smelled the
pleasing odor, and the LORD said to Himself:
“Never again will I doom the earth because of man, since the
devisings of man’s mind are evil from his youth; nor will I ever
again destroy every living being, as I have done.
So long as the earth endures,
Seedtime and harvest,
Cold and heat,
Summer and winter,
Day and night
Shall not cease.”
God blessed Noah and his sons, and said to
them, “Be fertile and increase, and fill the earth. The fear and the dread of you shall be upon all the
beasts of the earth and upon all the birds of the sky—everything
with which the earth is astir—and upon all the fish of the sea;
they are given into your hand. Every
creature that lives shall be yours to eat; as with the green grasses, I
give you all these. You must not, however,
eat flesh with its life-blood in it. But
for your own life-blood I will require a reckoning: I will require it of
every beast; of man, too, will I require a reckoning for human life, of
every man for that of his fellow man!
Whoever sheds the blood of man,
By man shall his blood be shed;
For in His image
Did God make man.
Be fertile, then, and increase; abound on the
earth and increase on it.”
And God said to Noah and to his sons with
him, “I now establish My covenant
with you and your offspring to come, and
with every living thing that is with you—birds, cattle, and every
wild beast as well—all that have come out of the ark, every living
thing on earth. I will maintain My
covenant with you: never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters
of a flood, and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the
earth.”
God further said, “This is the
sign that I set for the covenant between Me and you, and every living
creature with you, for all ages to come. I have set My bow in the clouds, and it shall serve as a sign
of the covenant between Me and the earth. When I
bring clouds over the earth, and the bow appears in the clouds,
I will remember My covenant between Me and you and
every living creature among all flesh, so that the waters shall never
again become a flood to destroy all flesh. When the bow is in the clouds, I will see it and remember the
everlasting covenant between God and all living creatures, all flesh that
is on earth. That,” God said to
Noah, “shall be the sign of the covenant that I have established
between Me and all flesh that is on earth.”
The sons of Noah who came out of the ark
were Shem, Ham, and Japheth—Ham being the father of Canaan.
These three were the sons of Noah, and
from these the whole world branched out.
Noah, the tiller of the soil, was the
first to plant a vineyard. He drank of
the wine and became drunk, and he uncovered himself within his tent.
Ham, the father of Canaan, saw his father’s
nakedness and told his two brothers outside. But Shem and Japheth took a cloth, placed it against both their
backs and, walking backward, they covered their father’s nakedness;
their faces were turned the other way, so that they did not see their
father’s nakedness. When Noah woke
up from his wine and learned what his youngest son had done to him,
he said,
“Cursed be Canaan;
The lowest of slaves
Shall he be to his brothers.”
And he said,
“Blessed be the LORD,
The God of Shem;
Let Canaan be a slave to them.
May God enlargeHeb. yapht, play on Heb.
yepheth “Japheth.” Japheth,
And let him dwell in the tents of Shem;
And let Canaan be a slave to them.”
Noah lived after the Flood 350 years.
And all the days of Noah came to 950
years; then he died.
These are the lines of Shem, Ham, and
Japheth, the sons of Noah: sons were born to them after the Flood.
The descendants of Japheth: Gomer, Magog,
Madai, Javan, Tubal, Meshech, and Tiras. The descendants of Gomer: Ashkenaz, Riphath, and Togarmah.
The descendants of Javan: Elishah and
Tarshish, the Kittim and the Dodanim.Septuagint and 1 Chron. 1.7 “Rodanim.”
From these the maritime nations branched out.
[These are the descendants of Japheth]Cf.
vv. 20 and 31. by their lands—each with its
language—their clans and their nations.
The descendants of Ham: Cush, Mizraim,
Put, and Canaan. The descendants of Cush:
Seba, Havilah, Sabtah, Raamah, and Sabteca. The descendants of Raamah:
Sheba and Dedan.
Cush also begot Nimrod, who was the first
man of might on earth. He was a mighty
hunter by the grace of the LORD; hence the
saying, “Like Nimrod a mighty hunter by the grace of the LORD.” The
mainstays of his kingdom were Babylon, Erech, Accad, and CalnehHeb. we-khalneh, better
vocalized we-khullanah “all of them
being.” in the land of Shinar.
From that land Asshur went forth and
built Nineveh, Rehoboth-ir, Calah, and
Resen between Nineveh and Calah, that is the great city.
And Mizraim begot the Ludim, the Anamim,
the Lehabim, the Naphtuhim, the
Pathrusim, the Casluhim, and the Caphtorim,I.e., the Cretans; moved up for the sake of clarity; cf. Amos
9.7. whence the Philistines came forth.
Canaan begot Sidon, his first-born, and
Heth; and the Jebusites, the Amorites,
the Girgashites, the Hivites, the
Arkites, the Sinites, the Arvadites, the
Zemarites, and the Hamathites. Afterward the clans of the Canaanites
spread out. (The [original] Canaanite
territory extended from Sidon as far as Gerar, near Gaza, and as far as
Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, and Zeboiim, near Lasha.) These are the descendants of Ham, according to their clans and
languages, by their lands and nations.
Sons were also born to Shem, ancestor of
all the descendants of Eber and older brother of Japheth. The descendants of Shem: Elam, Asshur, Arpachshad,
Lud, and Aram. The descendants of Aram:
Uz, Hul, Gether, and Mash. Arpachshad
begot Shelah, and Shelah begot Eber. Two
sons were born to Eber: the name of the first was Peleg, for in his days
the earth was divided;Heb.
niphlegah, play on “Peleg.” and
the name of his brother was Joktan.
Joktan begot Almodad, Sheleph,
Hazarmaveth, Jerah, Hadoram, Uzal,
Diklah, Obal, Abimael, Sheba, Ophir, Havilah, and Jobab; all these were the
descendants of Joktan. Their settlements
extended from Mesha as far as Sephar, the hill country to the east.
These are the descendants of Shem
according to their clans and languages, by their lands, according to
their nations.
These are the groupings of Noah’s
descendants, according to their origins, by their nations; and from these
the nations branched out over the earth after the Flood.
Everyone on earth had the same language and the same words. And as they migrated from the east, they came upon a valley in the land of Shinar and
settled there. They said to one another,
“Come, let us make bricks and burn them hard.”—Brick
served them as stone, and bitumen served them as mortar.—And they said, “Come, let us build us a city,
and a tower with its top in the sky, to make a name for ourselves; else
we shall be scattered all over the world.” The LORD came down to look at the city
and tower that man had built, and the LORD said, “If, as one people with one
language for all, this is how they have begun to act, then nothing that
they may propose to do will be out of their reach. Let us, then, go down and confound their speech
there, so that they shall not understand one another’s
speech.” Thus the LORD scattered them from there over the face of the
whole earth; and they stopped building the city. That is why it was called Babel,I.e., “Babylon.” because there the LORD confoundedHeb.
balal “confound,” play on
“Babel.” the speech of the whole earth; and from
there the LORD scattered them over the face of
the whole earth.
This is the line of Shem. Shem was 100
years old when he begot Arpachshad, two years
after the Flood. After the birth ofLit. “After he begot,” and so
throughout. Arpach-shad, Shem lived 500 years and begot sons
and daughters.
When Arpachshad had lived 35 years, he
begot Shelah. After the birth of Shelah,
Arpachshad lived 403 years and begot sons and daughters.
When Shelah had lived 30 years, he begot
Eber. After the birth of Eber, Shelah
lived 403 years and begot sons and daughters.
When Eber had lived 34 years, he begot
Peleg. After the birth of Peleg, Eber
lived 430 years and begot sons and daughters.
When Peleg had lived 30 years, he begot
Reu. After the birth of Reu, Peleg lived
209 years and begot sons and daughters.
When Reu had lived 32 years, he begot
Serug. After the birth of Serug, Reu
lived 207 years and begot sons and daughters.
When Serug had lived 30 years, he begot
Nahor. After the birth of Nahor, Serug
lived 200 years and begot sons and daughters.
When Nahor had lived 29 years, he begot
Terah. After the birth of Terah, Nahor
lived 119 years and begot sons and daughters.
When Terah had lived 70 years, he begot
Abram, Nahor, and Haran. Now this is the
line of Terah: Terah begot Abram, Nahor, and Haran; and Haran begot Lot.
Haran died in the lifetime of his father
Terah, in his native land, Ur of the Chaldeans. Abram and Nahor took to themselves wives, the name of
Abram’s wife being Sarai and that of Nahor’s wife Milcah, the
daughter of Haran, the father of Milcah and Iscah. Now Sarai was barren, she had no child.
Terah took his son Abram, his grandson
Lot the son of Haran, and his daughter-in-law Sarai, the wife of his son
Abram, and they set out together from Ur of the Chaldeans for the land of
Canaan; but when they had come as far as Haran, they settled there.
The days of Terah came to 205 years; and
Terah died in Haran.
LEKH LEKHA
The LORD said
to Abram, “Go forth from your native land and from your
father’s house to the land that I will show you.
I will make of you a great nation,
And I will bless you;
I will make your name great,
And you shall be a blessing.I.e., a
standard by which blessing is invoked; cf. v. 3 end.
I will bless those who bless you
And curse him that curses you;
And all the families of the earth
Shall bless themselves by you.”
Abram went forth as the LORD had commanded him, and Lot went with him.
Abram was seventy-five years old when he left Haran. Abram took his wife Sarai and his brother’s
son Lot, and all the wealth that they had amassed, and the persons that
they had acquired in Haran; and they set out for the land of Canaan. When
they arrived in the land of Canaan, Abram
passed through the land as far as the site of Shechem, at the terebinth
of Moreh. The Canaanites were then in the land.
The LORD
appeared to Abram and said, “I will assign this land to your
offspring.” And he built an altar there to the LORD who had appeared to him. From there he moved on to
the hill country east of Bethel and pitched his tent, with Bethel on the
west and Ai on the east; and he built there an altar to the LORD and invoked the LORD
by name. Then Abram journeyed by stages
toward the Negeb.
There was a famine in the land, and
Abram went down to Egypt to sojourn there, for the famine was severe in
the land. As he was about to enter Egypt,
he
said to his wife Sarai, “I knowOr
“You”; cf. the second person feminine form -ti in Judg.
5.7; Jer. 2.20; Mic. 4.13, etc. what a beautiful woman you are.
If the Egyptians see you, and think,
‘She is his wife,’ they will kill me and let you live.
Please say that you are my sister, that
it may go well with me because of you, and that I may remain alive thanks
to you.”
When Abram entered Egypt, the Egyptians
saw how very beautiful the woman was. Pharaoh’s courtiers saw her and praised her to Pharaoh, and the woman
was taken into Pharaoh’s palace. And because of her, it went well with Abram; he acquired sheep,
oxen, asses, male and female slaves, she-asses, and camels.
But the LORD
afflicted Pharaoh and his household with mighty plagues on account of
Sarai, the wife of Abram. Pharaoh sent
for Abram and said, “What is this you have done to me! Why did you
not tell me that she was your wife? Why
did you say, ‘She is my sister,’ so that I took her as my
wife? Now, here is your wife; take her and begone!” And Pharaoh put men in charge of him, and they
sent him off with his wife and all that he possessed.
From Egypt, Abram went up into the
Negeb, with his wife and all that he possessed, together with Lot.
Now Abram was very rich in cattle, silver, and
gold. And he proceeded by stages from the
Negeb as far as Bethel, to the place where his tent had been formerly,
between Bethel and Ai, the site of the
altar that he had built there at first; and there Abram invoked the LORD by name.
Lot, who went with Abram, also had flocks
and herds and tents, so that the land
could
not support them staying together; for their possessions were so great
that they could not remain together. And
there was quarreling between the herdsmen of Abram’s cattle and
those of Lot’s cattle.—The Canaanites and Perizzites were
then dwelling in the land.—Abram
said to Lot, “Let there be no strife between you and me, between my
herdsmen and yours, for we are kinsmen. Is
not the whole land before you? Let us separate:Lit. “Please separate from me.” if you
go north, I will go south; and if you go south, I will go north.”
Lot looked about him and saw how well
watered was the whole plain of the Jordan, all of it—this was
before the LORD had destroyed Sodom and
Gomorrah—all the way to Zoar, like the garden of the LORD, like the land of Egypt. So Lot chose for himself the whole plain of the
Jordan, and Lot journeyed eastward. Thus they parted from each other;
Abram remained in the land of Canaan,
while Lot settled in the cities of the Plain, pitching his tents near
Sodom. Now the inhabitants of Sodom were
very wicked sinners against the LORD.
And the LORD
said to Abram, after Lot had parted from him, “Raise your eyes and
look out from where you are, to the north and south, to the east and
west, for I give all the land that you
see to you and your offspring forever. I
will make your offspring as the dust of the earth, so that if one can
count the dust of the earth, then your offspring too can be counted.
Up, walk about the land, through its
length and its breadth, for I give it to you.” And Abram moved his tent, and came to dwell at the
terebinths of Mamre, which are in Hebron; and he built an altar there to
the LORD.
Now, when King Amraphel of Shinar, King
Arioch of Ellasar, King Chedorlaomer of Elam, and King Tidal of Goiim
made war on King Bera of Sodom, King
Birsha of Gomorrah, King Shinab of Admah, King Shemeber of Zeboiim, and
the king of Bela, which is Zoar, all the
latter joined forces at the Valley of Siddim, now the Dead Sea.Heb. “Salt Sea.” Twelve years they served Chedorlaomer, and in the
thirteenth year they rebelled. In the
fourteenth year Chedorlaomer and the kings who were with him came and
defeated the Rephaim at Ashteroth-karnaim, the Zuzim at Ham, the Emim at
Shaveh-kiriathaim, and the Horites in
their hill country of Seir as far as El-paran, which is by the
wilderness. On their way back they came to
En-mishpat, which is Kadesh, and subdued all the territory of the
Amalekites, and also the Amorites who dwelt in Hazazon-tamar. Then the king of Sodom, the king of Gomorrah, the
king of Admah, the king of Zeboiim, and the king of Bela, which is Zoar,
went forth and engaged them in battle in the Valley of Siddim: King Chedorlaomer of Elam, King Tidal of Goiim,
King Amraphel of Shinar, and King Arioch of Ellasar—four kings
against those five.
Now the Valley of Siddim was dotted with
bitumen pits; and the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah, in their flight, threw
themselves into them, while the rest escaped to the hill country.
[The invaders] seized all the wealth of
Sodom and Gomorrah and all their provisions, and went their way.
They also took Lot, the son of
Abram’s brother, and his possessions, and departed; for he had
settled in Sodom.
A fugitive brought the news to Abram the
Hebrew, who was dwelling at the terebinths of Mamre the Amorite, kinsman
of Eshkol and Aner, these being Abram’s allies. When Abram heard that his kinsman had been taken
captive, he mustered his retainers,Meaning
of Heb. h%anikh uncertain. born into his
household, numbering three hundred and eighteen, and went in pursuit as
far as Dan. At night, he and his servants deployed against
them and defeated them; and he pursued them as far as Hobah, which is
north of Damascus. He brought back all
the possessions; he also brought back his kinsman Lot and his
possessions, and the women and the rest of the people.
When he returned from defeating Chedor-laomer and the kings with him, the king of Sodom came out to meet him in
the Valley of Shaveh, which is the Valley of the King. And King Melchizedek of Salem brought out bread
and wine; he was a priest of God Most High.Heb. El ‘Elyon. He blessed him, saying,
“Blessed be Abram of God Most High,
Creator of heaven and earth.
And blessed be God Most High,
Who has delivered your foes into your hand.”
And [Abram] gave him a tenth of everything.
Then the king of Sodom said to Abram,
“Give me the persons, and take the possessions for yourself.”
But Abram said to the king of Sodom,
“I swearLit. “lift up my
hand.” to the LORD, God Most
High, Creator of heaven and earth: I will
not take so much as a thread or a sandal strap of what is yours; you
shall not say, ‘It is I who made Abram rich.’ For me, nothing but what my servants have used up;
as for the share of the men who went with me—Aner, Eshkol, and
Mamre—let them take their share.”
Some time later, the word of the LORD came to Abram in a vision. He said,
“Fear not, Abram,
I am a shield to you;
Your reward shall be very great.”
But Abram said, “O Lord GOD, what
can You give me, seeing that I shall die childless, Meaning of Heb. uncertain.and the one in charge of my household is Dammesek
Eliezer!”
Abram said further, “Since You have granted
me no offspring, my steward will be my heir.” The word of the LORD came
to him in reply, “That one shall not be your heir; none but your
very own issue shall be your heir.” He took him outside and said, “Look toward heaven and
count the stars, if you are able to count them.” And He added,
“So shall your offspring be.” And because he put his trust in the LORD, He reckoned it to his merit.
Then He said to him, “I am the LORD who brought you out from Ur of the Chaldeans
to assign this land to you as a possession.” And he said, “O Lord GOD, how shall I know
that I am to possess it?” He
answered, “Bring Me a three-year-old heifer, a three-year-old she-goat, a three-year-old ram, a turtledove, and a young bird.”
He brought Him all these and cut them in
two, placing each half opposite the other; but he did not cut up the
bird. Birds of prey came down upon the
carcasses, and Abram drove them away. As
the sun was about to set, a deep sleep fell upon Abram, and a great dark
dread descended upon him. And He said to
Abram, “Know well that your offspring shall be strangers in a land
not theirs, and they shall be enslaved and oppressed four hundred years;
but I will execute judgment on the nation
they shall serve, and in the end they shall go free with great wealth.
As for you,
You shall go to your fathers in peace;
You shall be buried at a ripe old age.
And they shall return here in the fourth
generation, for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet
complete.”
When the sun set and it was very dark,
there appeared a smoking oven, and a flaming torch which passed between
those pieces. On that day the LORD made a covenant with Abram, saying, “To
your offspring I assign this land, from the river of Egypt to the great
river, the river Euphrates: the Kenites,
the Kenizzites, the Kadmonites, the
Hittites, the Perizzites, the Rephaim, the Amorites, the Canaanites, the Girgashites, and the
Jebusites.”
Sarai, Abram’s wife, had borne
him no children. She had an Egyptian maidservant whose name was Hagar.
And Sarai said to Abram, “Look, the
LORD has kept me from bearing. Consort with my
maid; perhaps I shall have a sonLit.
“be built up,” play on ben
“son” and banah “build
up.” through her.” And Abram heeded Sarai’s
request. So Sarai,
Abram’s wife, took her maid, Hagar the Egyptian—after Abram
had dwelt in the land of Canaan ten years—and gave her to her
husband Abram as concubine. He cohabited
with Hagar and she conceived; and when she saw that she had conceived,
her mistress was lowered in her esteem. And Sarai said to Abram, “The wrong done me is your fault!
I myself put my maid in your bosom; now that she sees that she is
pregnant, I am lowered in her esteem. The LORD
decide between you and me!” Abram
said to Sarai, “Your maid is in your hands. Deal with her as you
think right.” Then Sarai treated her harshly, and she ran away from
her.
An angel of the LORD found her by a spring of water in the
wilderness, the spring on the road to Shur, and said, “Hagar, slave of Sarai, where have you come
from, and where are you going?” And she said, “I am running
away from my mistress Sarai.”
And the angel of the LORD said to her, “Go back to your mistress,
and submit to her harsh treatment.” And the angel of the LORD said to
her,
“I will greatly increase your offspring,
And they shall be too many to count.”
The angel of the LORD said to her further,
“Behold, you are with child
And shall bear a son;
You shall call him Ishmael,I.e.,
“God heeds.”
For the LORD has paid heed to your
suffering.
He shall be a wild ass of a man;
His hand against everyone,
And everyone’s hand against him;
He shall dwell alongside of all his kinsmen.”
And she called the LORD who spoke to her, “You Are
El-roi,”Apparently “God of
Seeing.” by which she meant, Meaning of Heb. uncertain.“Have
I not gone on seeing after He saw me!” Therefore the well was called
Beer-lahai-roi;Apparently “the Well
of the Living One Who sees me.” it is between Kadesh and
Bered.—Hagar bore a son to
Abram, and Abram gave the son that Hagar bore him the name Ishmael.
Abram was eighty-six years old when Hagar
bore Ishmael to Abram.
When Abram was ninety-nine years old,
the LORD appeared to Abram and said to him,
“I am El Shaddai.Traditionally
rendered “God Almighty.” Walk in My ways and be
blameless. I will establish My covenant
between Me and you, and I will make you exceedingly numerous.”
Abram threw himself on his face; and God
spoke to him further, “As for Me,
this is My covenant with you: You shall be the father of a multitude of
nations. And you shall no longer be called
Abram, but your name shall be Abraham,Understood as “father of a multitude.” for I make
you the father of a multitude of nations. I will make you exceedingly fertile, and make nations of you;
and kings shall come forth from you. I
will maintain My covenant between Me and you, and your offspring to come,
as an everlasting covenant throughout the ages, to be God to you and to
your offspring to come. I assign the land
you sojourn in to you and your offspring to come, all the land of Canaan,
as an everlasting holding. I will be their God.”
God further said to Abraham, “As
for you, you and your offspring to come throughout the ages shall keep My
covenant. Such shall be the covenant
between Me and you and your offspring to follow which you shall keep:
every male among you shall be circumcised. You shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin, and that shall
be the sign of the covenant between Me and you. And throughout the generations, every male among you shall be
circumcised at the age of eight days. As for the homeborn slave and the
one bought from an outsider who is not of your offspring, they must be circumcised, homeborn, and purchased
alike. Thus shall My covenant be marked in your flesh as an everlasting
pact. And if any male who is
uncircumcised fails to circumcise the flesh of his foreskin, that person
shall be cut off from his kin; he has broken My covenant.”
And God said to Abraham, “As for
your wife Sarai, you shall not call her Sarai, but her name shall be
Sarah.I.e., “princess.”
I will bless her; indeed, I will give you
a son by her. I will bless her so that she shall give rise to nations;
rulers of peoples shall issue from her.” Abraham threw himself on his face and laughed, as he said to
himself, “Can a child be born to a man a hundred years old, or can
Sarah bear a child at ninety?” And
Abraham said to God, “O that Ishmael might live by Your
favor!” God said,
“Nevertheless, Sarah your wife shall bear you a son, and you shall
name him Isaac;Heb.
Yis·h%aq, from s·ah%aq,
“laugh.” and I will maintain My covenant with him as
an everlasting covenant for his offspring to come. As for Ishmael, I have heeded you.Heb. shema‘tikha, play on
“Ishmael.” I hereby bless him. I will make him
fertile and exceedingly numerous. He shall be the father of twelve
chieftains, and I will make
of him a great nation. But My covenant I
will maintain with Isaac, whom Sarah shall bear to you at this season
next year.” And when He was done
speaking with him, God was gone from Abraham.
Then Abraham took his son Ishmael, and
all his homeborn slaves and all those he had bought, every male in
Abraham’s household, and he circumcised the flesh of their
foreskins on that very day, as God had spoken to him. Abraham was ninety-nine years old when he
circumcised the flesh of his foreskin, and his son Ishmael was thirteen years old when he was
circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin. Thus Abraham and his son Ishmael were circumcised on that very
day; and all his household, his homeborn
slaves and those that had been bought from outsiders, were circumcised
with him.
VA-YERA’
The LORD
appeared to him by the terebinths of Mamre; he was sitting at the
entrance of the tent as the day grew hot. Looking up, he
saw three men standing near him. As soon as he saw them, he ran from the
entrance of the tent to greet them and, bowing to the ground, he said, “My lords,Or “My Lord.” if it please you, do not
go on past your servant. Let a little
water be brought; bathe your feet and recline under the tree. And let me fetch a morsel of bread that you
mayrefresh yourselves; then go on—seeing that you have come your
servant’s way.” They replied, “Do as you have
said.”
Abraham hastened into the tent to Sarah,
and said, “Quick, three seahs of choice flour! Knead and make
cakes!” Then Abraham ran to the
herd, took a calf, tender and choice, and gave it to a servant-boy, who
hastened to prepare it. He took curds and
milk and the calf that had been prepared and set these before them; and
he waited on them under the tree as they ate.
They said to him, “Where is your
wife Sarah?” And he replied, “There, in the tent.”
Then one said, “I will return to
you next year,Cf. Gen. 17.21; 2 Kings
4.16–17. and your wife Sarah shall have a son!”
Sarah was listening at the entrance of the tent, which was behind him.
Now Abraham and Sarah were old, advanced
in years; Sarah had stopped having the periods of women. And Sarah laughed to herself, saying, “Now
that I am withered, am I to have enjoyment—with my husband so
old?” Then the LORD said to Abraham, “Why did Sarah laugh,
saying, ‘Shall I in truth bear a child, old as I am?’
Is anything too wondrous for the LORD? I will return to you at the same season next
year, and Sarah shall have a son.” Sarah lied, saying, “I did not laugh,” for she was
frightened. But He replied, “You did laugh.”
The men set out from there and looked
down toward Sodom, Abraham walking with them to see them off. Now the LORD had said,
“Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do, since Abraham is to become a great and populous
nation and all the nations of the earth are to bless themselves by him?
For I have singled him out, that he may
instruct his children and his posterity to keep the way of the LORD by doing what is just and right, in order that
the LORD may bring about for Abraham what He has
promised him.” Then the LORD said, “The outrage of Sodom and Gomorrah
is so great, and their sin so grave! I will
go down to see whether they have acted altogether according to the outcry
that has reached Me; if not, I will take note.”
The men went on from there to Sodom,
while Abraham remained standing before the LORD.
Abraham came forward and said,
“Will You sweep away the innocent along with the
guilty? What if there should be fifty
innocent within the city; will You then wipe out the place and not
forgive it for the sake of the innocent fifty who are in it? Far be it from You to do such a thing, to bring
death upon the innocent as well as the guilty, so that innocent and
guilty fare alike. Far be it from You! Shall not the Judge of all the
earth deal justly?” And the LORD answered, “If I find within the city
of Sodom fifty innocent ones, I will forgive the whole place for their
sake.” Abraham spoke up, saying,
“Here I venture to speak to my Lord, I who am but dust and ashes:
What if the fifty innocent should lack
five? Will You destroy the whole city for want of the five?” And He
answered, “I will not destroy if I find forty-five there.”
But he spoke to Him again, and said,
“What if forty should be found there?” And He answered,
“I will not do it, for the sake of the forty.” And he said, “Let not my Lord be angry if I
go on: What if thirty should be found there?” And He answered,
“I will not do it if I find thirty there.” And he said, “I venture again to speak to my
Lord: What if twenty should be found there?” And He answered,
“I will not destroy, for the sake of the twenty.” And he said, “Let not my Lord be angry if I
speak but this last time: What if ten should be found there?” And
He answered, “I will not destroy, for the sake of the
ten.”
When the LORD
had finished speaking to Abraham, He departed; and Abraham returned to
his place.
The two angels arrived in Sodom in the
evening, as Lot was sitting in the gate of Sodom. When Lot saw them, he
rose to greet them and, bowing low with his face to the ground,
he said, “Please, my lords, turn
aside to your servant’s house to spend the night, and bathe your
feet; then you may be on your way early.” But they said, “No,
we will spend the night in the square.” But he urged them strongly, so they turned his way and entered
his house. He prepared a feast for them and baked unleavened bread, and
they ate.
They had not yet lain down, when the
townspeople, the men of Sodom, young and old—all the people to the
last man—gathered about the house. And they shouted to Lot and said to him, “Where are the
men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us, that we may be
intimate with them.” So Lot went out
to them to the entrance, shut the door behind him, and said, “I beg you, my friends, do not
commit such a wrong. Look, I have two
daughters who have not known a man. Let me bring them out to you, and you
may do to them as you please; but do not do anything to these men, since
they have come under the shelter of my roof.” But they said, “Stand back! The
fellow,” they said, “came here as an alien, and already he
acts the ruler! Now we will deal worse with you than with them.”
And they pressed hard against the person of Lot, and moved forward to
break the door. But the men stretched out
their hands and pulled Lot into the house with them, and shut the door.
And the people who were at the entrance
of the house, young and old, they struck with blinding light, so that
they were helpless to find the entrance.
Then the men said to Lot, “Whom
else have you here? Sons-in-law, your sons and daughters, or anyone else
that you have in the city—bring them out of the place. For we are about to destroy this place; because
the outcry against them before the LORD has
become so great that the LORD has sent us to
destroy it.” So Lot went out and
spoke to his sons-in-law, who had married his daughters, and said,
“Up, get out of this place, for the LORD
is about to destroy the city.” But he seemed to his sons-in-law as
one who jests.
As dawn broke, the angels urged Lot on,
saying, “Up, take your wife and your two remaining daughters, lest
you be swept away because of the iniquity of the city.” Still he delayed. So the men seized his hand, and
the hands of his wife and his two daughters—in the LORD31’s mercy on him—and brought him
out and left him outside the city. When
they had brought them outside, one said, “Flee for your life! Do
not look behind you, nor stop anywhere in the Plain; flee to the hills,
lest you be swept away.” But Lot
said to them, “Oh no, my lord! You
have been so gracious to your servant, and have already shown me so much
kindness in order to save my life; but I cannot flee to the hills, lest
the disaster overtake me and I die. Look,
that town there is near enough to flee to; it is such a little place! Let
me flee there—it is such a little place—and let my life be
saved.” He replied, “Very
well, I will grant you this favor too, and I will not annihilate the town
of which you have spoken. Hurry, flee
there, for I cannot do anything until you arrive there.” Hence the
town came to be called Zoar.Connected with
mis·‘ar “a little place,” v.
20.
As the sun rose upon the earth and Lot
entered Zoar, the LORD rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah sulfurous fire
from the LORD out of heaven. He annihilated those cities and the entire Plain,
and all the inhabitants of the cities and the vegetation of the ground.
Lot’sLit. “His.” wife looked back,Lit. “behind him.” and she thereupon
turned into a pillar of salt.
Next morning, Abraham hurried to the
place where he had stood before the LORD,
and, looking down toward Sodom and
Gomorrah and all the land of the Plain, he saw the smoke of the land
rising like the smoke of a kiln.
Thus it was that, when God destroyed the
cities of the Plain and annihilated the cities where Lot dwelt, God was
mindful of Abraham and removed Lot from the midst of the upheaval.
Lot went up from Zoar and settled in the
hill country with his two daughters, for he was afraid to dwell in Zoar;
and he and his two daughters lived in a cave. And the older one said to the younger, “Our father is
old, and there is not a man on earth to consort with us in the way of all
the world. Come, let us make our father
drink wine, and let us lie with him, that we may maintain life through
our father.” That night they made
their father drink wine, and the older one went in and lay with her
father; he did not know when she lay down or when she rose. The next day the older one said to the younger,
“See, I lay with Father last night; let us make him drink wine
tonight also, and you go and lie with him, that we may maintain life
through our father.” That night
also they made their father drink wine, and the younger one went and lay
with him; he did not know when she lay down or when she rose.
Thus the two daughters of Lot came to be
with child by their father. The older one
bore a son and named him Moab;As though
me-’ab “from (my) father.”
he is the father of the Moabites of today. And the younger
also bore a son, and she called him Ben-ammi;As though “son of my (paternal)
kindred.” he is the father of the Ammonites of today.
Abraham journeyed from there to the
region of the Negeb and settled between Kadesh and Shur. While he was
sojourning in Gerar, Abraham said of Sarah
his wife, “She is my sister.” So King Abimelech of Gerar had
Sarah brought to him. But God came to
Abimelech in a dream by night and said to him, “You are to die
because of the woman that you have taken, for she is a married
woman.” Now Abimelech had not
approached her. He said, “O Lord, will You slay people even though
innocent? He himself said to me,
‘She is my sister!’ And she also said, ‘He is my
brother.’ When I did this, my heart was blameless and my hands were
clean.” And God said to him in the
dream, “I knew that you did this with a blameless heart, and so I
kept you from sinning against Me. That was why I did not let you touch
her. Therefore, restore the man’s
wife—since he is a prophet, he will intercede for you—to save
your life. If you fail to restore her, know that you shall die, you and
all that are yours.”
Early next morning, Abimelech called his
servants and told them all that had happened; and the men were greatly
frightened. Then Abimelech summoned
Abraham and said to him, “What have you done to us? What wrong have
I done that you should bring so great a guilt upon me and my kingdom? You
have done to me things that ought not to be done. What, then,” Abimelech demanded of Abraham, “was
your purpose in doing this thing?” “I thought,” said Abraham, “surely there is
no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife.
And besides, she is in truth my sister,
my father’s daughter though not my mother’s; and she became
my wife. So when God made me wander from
my father’s house, I said to her, ‘Let this be the kindness
that you shall do me: whatever place we come to, say there of me: He is
my brother.’”
Abimelech took sheep and oxen, and male
and female slaves, and gave them to Abraham; and he restored his wife
Sarah to him. And Abimelech said,
“Here, my land is before you; settle wherever you please.”
And to Sarah he said, “I herewith
give your brother a thousand pieces of silver; this will serve you as
vindicationLit. “a covering of the
eyes”; meaning of latter half of verse uncertain. before
all who are with you, and you are cleared before everyone.”
Abraham then prayed to God, and God
healed Abimelech and his wife and his slave girls, so that they bore
children; for the LORD had closed fast every womb of the household of
Abimelech because of Sarah, the wife of Abraham.
The LORD took
note of Sarah as He had promised, and the LORD
did for Sarah as He had spoken. Sarah
conceived and bore a son to Abraham in his old age, at the set time of
which God had spoken. Abraham gave his
newborn son, whom Sarah had borne him, the name of Isaac. And when his son Isaac was eight days old, Abraham
circumcised him, as God had commanded him. Now Abraham was a hundred years old when his son Isaac was born
to him. Sarah said, “God has brought
me laughter; everyone who hears will laugh withLit. “for.” me.” And she added,
“Who would have said to Abraham
That Sarah would suckle children!
Yet I have borne a son in his old age.”
The child grew up and was weaned, and
Abraham held a great feast on the day that Isaac was weaned.
Sarah saw the son whom Hagar the Egyptian
had borne to Abraham playing. She said to
Abraham, “Cast out that slave-woman and her son, for the son of
that slave shall not share in the inheritance with my son Isaac.”
The matter distressed Abraham greatly,
for it concerned a son of his. But God
said to Abraham, “Do not be distressed over the boy or your slave;
whatever Sarah tells you, do as she says, for it is through Isaac that
offspring shall be continuedLit.
“called.” for you. As for the son of the slave-woman, I will make a nation of him,
too, for he is your seed.”
Early next morning Abraham took some
bread and a skin of water, and gave them to Hagar. He placed them over
her shoulder, together with the child, and sent her away. And she
wandered about in the wilderness of Beer-sheba. When the water was gone from the skin, she left the child under
one of the bushes, and went and sat down
at a distance, a bowshot away; for she thought, “Let me not look on
as the child dies.” And sitting thus afar, she burst into
tears.
God heard the cry of the boy, and an
angel of God called to Hagar from heaven and said to her, “What
troubles you, Hagar? Fear not, for God has heeded the cry of the boy
where he is. Come, lift up the boy and
hold him by the hand, for I will make a great nation of him.”
Then God opened her eyes and she saw a
well of water. She went and filled the skin with water, and let the boy
drink. God was with the boy and he grew
up; he dwelt in the wilderness and became a bowman. He lived in the wilderness of Paran; and his
mother got a wife for him from the land of Egypt.
At that time Abimelech and Phicol, chief
of his troops, said to Abraham, “God is with you in everything that
you do. Therefore swear to me here by God
that you will not deal falsely with me or with my kith and kin, but will
deal with me and with the land in which you have sojourned as loyally as
I have dealt with you.” And Abraham
said, “I swear it.”
Then Abraham reproached Abimelech for
the well of water which the servants of Abimelech had seized.
But Abimelech said, “I do not know
who did this; you did not tell me, nor have I heard of it until
today.” Abraham took sheep and oxen
and gave them to Abimelech, and the two of them made a pact. Abraham then set seven ewes of the flock by
themselves, and Abimelech said to
Abraham, “What mean these seven ewes which you have set
apart?” He replied, “You are
to accept these seven ewes from me as proof that I dug this well.”
Hence that place was called
Beer-sheba,I.e., “well of
seven” or “well of oath.” for there the two of
them swore an oath. When they had
concluded the pact at Beer-sheba, Abimelech and Phicol, chief of his
troops, departed and returned to the land of the Philistines. [Abraham] planted a tamarisk at Beer-sheba, and
invoked there the name of the LORD, the
Everlasting God. And Abraham resided in
the land of the Philistines a long time.
Some time afterward, God put Abraham to
the test. He said to him, “Abraham,” and he answered,
“Here I am.” And He said,
“Take your son, your favored one, Isaac, whom you love, and go to
the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the
heights that I will point out to you.” So early next morning, Abraham saddled his ass and took with him
two of his servants and his son Isaac. He split the wood for the burnt
offering, and he set out for the place of which God had told him.
On the third day Abraham looked up and saw
the place from afar. Then Abraham said to
his servants, “You stay here with the ass. The boy and I will go up
there; we will worship and we will return to you.”
Abraham took the wood for the burnt
offering and put it on his son Isaac. He himself took the firestoneLit. “fire.” and the knife;
and the two walked off together. Then
Isaac said to his father Abraham, “Father!” And he answered,
“Yes, my son.” And he said, “Here are the firestone and
the wood; but where is the sheep for the burnt offering?”
And Abraham said, “God will see to
the sheep for His burnt offering, my son.” And the two of them
walked on together.
They arrived at the place of which God
had told him. Abraham built an altar there; he laid out the wood; he
bound his son Isaac; he laid him on the altar, on top of the wood.
And Abraham picked up the knife to slay
his son. Then an angel of the LORD called to him from heaven: “Abraham!
Abraham!” And he answered, “Here I am.” And he said, “Do not raise your hand against
the boy, or do anything to him. For now I know that you fear God, since
you have not withheld your son, your favored one, from Me.”
When Abraham looked up, his eye fell upon
aReading ’eh%ad
with many Heb. mss. and ancient versions; text
’ah%ar “after.” ram, caught
in the thicket by its horns. So Abraham went and took the ram and offered
it up as a burnt offering in place of his son. And Abraham named that site Adonai-yireh,I.e., “the Lord will see”; cf. v.
8. whence the present saying, “On the mount of the LORD there is vision.”Heb. Behar Adonai
yera’eh.
The angel of the LORD called to Abraham a second time from heaven,
and said, “By Myself I swear, the
LORD declares: Because you have done this and
have not withheld your son, your favored one, I will bestow My blessing upon you and make your descendants as
numerous as the stars of heaven and the sands on the seashore; and your
descendants shall seize the gates of their foes. All the nations of the earth shall bless themselves by your
descendants, because you have obeyed My command.” Abraham then returned to his servants, and they
departed together for Beer-sheba; and Abraham stayed in Beer-sheba.
Some time later, Abraham was told,
“Milcah too has borne children to your brother Nahor: Uz the first-born, and Buz his brother, and Kemuel
the father of Aram; and Chesed, Hazo,
Pildash, Jidlaph, and Bethuel”—Bethuel being the father of Rebekah. These eight Milcah bore to
Nahor, Abraham’s brother. And his
concubine, whose name was Reumah, also bore children: Tebah, Gaham,
Tahash, and Maacah.
H%AYYEI SARAH
Sarah’s lifetime—the span
of Sarah’s life—came to one hundred and twenty-seven years.
Sarah died in Kiriath-arba—now
Hebron—in the land of Canaan; and Abraham proceeded to mourn for
Sarah and to bewail her. Then Abraham rose
from beside his dead, and spoke to the Hittites, saying, “I am a resident alien among you; sell me a
burial site among you, that I may remove my dead for burial.”
And the Hittites replied to Abraham,
saying to him, “Hear us, my lord:
you are the elect of God among us. Bury your dead in the choicest of our
burial places; none of us will withhold his burial place from you for
burying your dead.” Thereupon
Abraham bowed low to the people of the land, the Hittites, and he said to them, “If it is your wish that
I remove my dead for burial, you must agree to intercede for me with
Ephron son of Zohar. Let him sell me the
cave of Machpelah that he owns, which is at the edge of his land. Let him
sell it to me, at the full price, for a burial site in your
midst.”
Ephron was present among the Hittites;
so Ephron the Hittite answered Abraham in the hearing of the Hittites,
all who entered the gate of his town,a saying, “No, my lord, hear me: I give you the field and I give
you the cave that is in it; I give it to you in the presence of my
people. Bury your dead.” Then
Abraham bowed low before the people of the land, and spoke to Ephron in the hearing of the people of the land,
saying, “If only you would hear me out! Let me pay the price of the
land; accept it from me, that I may bury my dead there.” And Ephron replied to Abraham, saying to him,
“My lord, do hear me! A piece of
land worth four hundred shekels of silver—what is that between you
and me? Go and bury your dead.” Abraham accepted Ephron’s terms. Abraham paid out to
Ephron the money that he had named in the hearing of the
Hittites—four hundred shekels of silver at the going
merchants’ rate.
So Ephron’s land in Machpelah,
near Mamre—the field with its cave and all the trees anywhere
within the confines of that field—passed to Abraham as his possession, in the presence of the Hittites,
of all who entered the gate of his town.I.e., all his fellow townsmen. And then Abraham buried his wife Sarah in the cave of the field
of Machpelah, facing Mamre—now Hebron—in the land of Canaan.
Thus the field with its cave passed from
the Hittites to Abraham, as a burial site.
Abraham was now old, advanced in years,
and the LORD had blessed Abraham in all things.
And Abraham said to the senior servant of
his household, who had charge of all that he owned, “Put your hand
under my thigh and I will make you swear
by the LORD, the God of heaven and the God of
the earth, that you will not take a wife for my son from the daughters of
the Canaanites among whom I dwell, but
will go to the land of my birth and get a wife for my son Isaac.”
And the servant said to him, “What
if the woman does not consent to follow me to this land, shall I then
take your son back to the land from which you came?” Abraham answered him, “On no account must you
take my son back there! The LORD, the God of heaven, who took me from my
father’s house and from my native land, who promised me on oath,
saying, ‘I will assign this land to your offspring’—He
will send His angel before you, and you will get a wife for my son from
there. And if the woman does not consent
to follow you, you shall then be clear of this oath to me; but do not
take my son back there.” So the servant put his hand under the thigh of his master Abraham and swore to him
as bidden.Lit. “about this
matter.”
Then the servant took ten of his
master’s camels and set out, taking with him all the bounty of his
master; and he made his way to Aram-naharaim, to the city of Nahor.
He made the camels kneel down by the well
outside the city, at evening time, the time when women come out to draw
water. And he said, “O LORD, God of my master Abraham, grant me good
fortune this day, and deal graciously with my master Abraham: Here I stand by the spring as the daughters of the
townsmen come out to draw water; let the
maiden to whom I say, ‘Please, lower your jar that I may
drink,’ and who replies, ‘Drink, and I will also water your
camels’—let her be the one whom You have decreed for Your
servant Isaac. Thereby shall I know that You have dealt graciously with
my master.”
He had scarcely finished speaking, when
Rebekah, who was born to Bethuel, the son of Milcah the wife of
Abraham’s brother Nahor, came out with her jar on her shoulder.
The maiden was very beautiful, a virgin
whom no man had known. She went down to the spring, filled her jar, and
came up. The servant ran toward her and
said, “Please, let me sip a little water from your jar.”
“Drink, my lord,” she said,
and she quickly lowered her jar upon her hand and let him drink.
When she had let him drink his fill, she
said, “I will also draw for your camels, until they finish
drinking.” Quickly emptying her jar
into the trough, she ran back to the well to draw, and she drew for all
his camels.
The man, meanwhile, stood gazing at her,
silently wondering whether the LORD had made his
errand successful or not. When the camels
had finished drinking, the man took a gold nose-ring weighing a
half-shekel,Heb.
beqa‘. and two gold bands for her arms,
ten shekels in weight. “Pray tell me,” he said, “whose
daughter are you? Is there room in your father’s house for us to
spend the night?” She replied,
“I am the daughter of Bethuel the son of Milcah, whom she bore to
Nahor.” And she went on,
“There is plenty of strawHeb.
teben, shredded straw, which in the East is mixed
with feed; cf. v. 32. and feed at home, and also room to spend
the night.” The man bowed low in homage to the LORD and said,
“Blessed be the LORD, the God of my master
Abraham, who has not withheld His steadfast faithfulness from my master.
For I have been guided on my errand by the LORD,
to the house of my master’s kinsmen.”
The maiden ran and told all this to her
mother’s household. Now Rebekah had
a brother whose name was Laban. Laban ran out to the man at the
spring—when he saw the nose-ring
and the bands on his sister’s arms, and when he heard his sister
Rebekah say, “Thus the man spoke to me.” He went up to the
man, who was still standing beside the camels at the spring. “Come in, O blessed of the LORD,” he said, “why do you remain
outside, when I have made ready the house and a place for the
camels?” So the man entered the
house, and the camels were unloaded. The camels were given straw and
feed, and water was brought to bathe his feet and the feet of the men
with him. But when food was set before
him, he said, “I will not eat until I have told my tale.” He
said, “Speak, then.”
“I am Abraham’s
servant,” he began. “The LORD has greatly blessed my master, and he has
become rich: He has given him sheep and cattle, silver and gold, male and
female slaves, camels and asses. And
Sarah, my master’s wife, bore my master a son in her old age, and
he has assigned to him everything he owns. Now my master made me swear, saying, ‘You shall not get a
wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanites in whose land I
dwell; but you shall go to my
father’s house, to my kindred, and get a wife for my son.’
And I said to my master, ‘What if
the woman does not follow me?’ He
replied to me, ‘The LORD, whose ways I
have followed, will send His angel with you and make your errand
successful; and you will get a wife for my son from my kindred, from my
father’s house. Thus only shall you
be freed from my adjuration: if, when you come to my kindred, they refuse
you—only then shall you be freed from my adjuration.’
“I came today to the spring, and I
said: O LORD, God of my master Abraham, if You
would indeed grant success to the errand on which I am engaged!
As I stand by the spring of water, let
the young woman who comes out to draw and to whom I say, ‘Please,
let me drink a little water from your jar,’ and who answers, ‘You may drink, and I will also draw for
your camels’—let her be the wife whom the LORD has decreed for my master’s son.’
I had scarcely finished praying in my
heart, when Rebekah came out with her jar on her shoulder, and went down
to the spring and drew. And I said to her, ‘Please give me a
drink.’ She quickly lowered her jar
and said, ‘Drink, and I will also water your camels.’ So I
drank, and she also watered the camels. I
inquired of her, ‘Whose daughter are you?’ And she said,
‘The daughter of Bethuel, son of Nahor, whom Milcah bore to
him.’ And I put the ring on her nose and the bands on her arms.
Then I bowed low in homage to the LORD and blessed the LORD,
the God of my master Abraham, who led me on the right way to get the
daughter of my master’s brother for his son. And now, if you mean to treat my master with true
kindness, tell me; and if not, tell me also, that I may turn right or
left.”
Then Laban and Bethuel answered,
“The matter was decreed by the LORD; we
cannot speak to you bad or good. Here is
Rebekah before you; take her and go, and let her be a wife to your
master’s son, as the LORD has
spoken.” When Abraham’s servant heard their words, he bowed low to
the ground before the LORD. The servant brought out objects of silver and gold, and
garments, and gave them to Rebekah; and he gave presents to her brother
and her mother. Then he and the men with him ate and drank, and they spent the night.
When they arose next morning, he said, “Give me leave to go to my
master.” But her brother and her mother said, “Let the maiden
remain with us Lit.
“days or ten.”some ten
days; then you may go.” He said to them, “Do not delay me, now that the LORD has made my errand successful. Give me leave
that I may go to my master.” And
they said, “Let us call the girl and ask for her reply.”
They called Rebekah and said to her,
“Will you go with this man?” And she said, “I
will.” So they sent off their
sister Rebekah and her nurse along with Abraham’s servant and his
men. And they blessed Rebekah and said to
her,
“O sister!
May you grow
Into thousands of myriads;
May your offspring seize
The gates of their foes.”
Then Rebekah and her maids arose,
mounted the camels, and followed the man. So the servant took Rebekah and
went his way.
Isaac had just come back from the
vicinity of Beer-lahai-roi, for he was settled in the region of the
Negeb. And Isaac went out walkingOthers “to meditate”; meaning of
Heb. uncertain. in the field toward evening and, looking up, he
saw camels approaching. Raising her eyes,
Rebekah saw Isaac. She alighted from the camel and said to the servant, “Who is that man walking in the
field toward us?” And the servant said, “That is my
master.” So she took her veil and covered herself. The servant told Isaac all the things that he had
done. Isaac then brought her into the
tent of his mother Sarah, and he took Rebekah as his wife. Isaac loved
her, and thus found comfort after his mother’s death.
Abraham took another wife, whose name
was Keturah. She bore him Zimran, Jokshan,
Medan, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah. Jokshan
begot Sheba and Dedan. The descendants of Dedan were the Asshurim, the
Letushim, and the Leummim. The descendants
of Midian were Ephah, Epher, Enoch,Or
“Hanoch.” Abida, and Eldaah. All these were
descendants of Keturah. Abraham willed all
that he owned to Isaac; but to
Abraham’s sons by concubines Abraham gave gifts while he was still
living, and he sent them away from his son Isaac eastward, to the land of
the East.
This was the total span of
Abraham’s life: one hundred and seventy-five years. And Abraham breathed his last, dying at a good ripe
age, old and contented; and he was gathered to his kin. His sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him in the cave
of Machpelah, in the field of Ephron son of Zohar the Hittite, facing
Mamre, the field that Abraham had bought
from the Hittites; there Abraham was buried, and Sarah his wife.
After the death of Abraham, God blessed
his son Isaac. And Isaac settled near Beer-lahai-roi.
This is the line of Ishmael,
Abraham’s son, whom Hagar the Egyptian, Sarah’s slave, bore
to Abraham. These are the names of the
sons of Ishmael, by their names, in the order of their birth: Nebaioth,
the first-born of Ishmael, Kedar, Adbeel, Mibsam, Mishma, Dumah, Massa, Hadad,
Tema, Jetur, Naphish, and Kedmah. These
are the sons of Ishmael and these are their names by their villages and
by their encampments: twelve chieftains of as many
tribes.—These were the years of the
life of Ishmael: one hundred and thirty-seven years; then he breathed his
last and died, and was gathered to his kin.—They dwelt from Havilah, by Shur, which is close to Egypt, all
the way to Asshur; they camped alongside all their kinsmen.
TOLEDOT
This is the story of Isaac, son of
Abraham. Abraham begot Isaac. Isaac was
forty years old when he took to wife Rebekah, daughter of Bethuel the
Aramean of Paddan-aram, sister of Laban the Aramean. Isaac pleaded with the LORD on behalf of his wife, because she was barren;
and the LORD responded to his plea, and his wife
Rebekah conceived. But the children
struggled in her womb, and she said, “If so, why do I
exist?”Meaning of Heb.
uncertain. She went to inquire of the LORD, and the LORD answered her,
“Two nations are in your womb,
Two separate peoples shall issue from your body;
One people shall be mightier than the other,
And the older shall serve the younger.”
When her time to give birth was at hand,
there were twins in her womb. The first
one emerged red, like a hairy mantle all over; so they named him
Esau.Synonym of “Seir,” play on
Heb. se‘ar “hair.”
Then his brother emerged, holding on to the heel of Esau; so
they named him Jacob.Play on Heb.
‘aqeb “heel.” Isaac was
sixty years old when they were born.
When the boys grew up, Esau became a
skillful hunter, a man of the outdoors; but Jacob was a mild man who
stayed in camp. Isaac favored Esau because Lit. “game was in his mouth.”he had a
taste for game; but Rebekah
favored Jacob.
Once when Jacob was cooking a
stew, Esau came in from the open, famished. And Esau said to Jacob, “Give
me some of that red stuff to gulp down, for I am
famished”—which is why he was named Edom.Play on Heb. ’adom “red.”
Jacob said, “First sell me your
birthright.” And Esau said,
“I am at the point of death, so of what use is my birthright to me?” But Jacob said, “Swear
to me first.” So he swore to him, and sold his birthright to Jacob.
Jacob then gave Esau bread and lentil
stew; he ate and drank, and he rose and went away. Thus did Esau spurn
the birthright.
There was a famine in the
land—aside from the previous famine that had occurred in the days
of Abraham—and Isaac went to Abimelech, king of the Philistines,
in Gerar. The LORD had appeared to him and said, “Do not go
down to Egypt; stay in the land which I point out to you. Reside in this land, and I will be with you and
bless you; I will assign all these lands to you and to your heirs,
fulfilling the oath that I swore to your father Abraham. I will make your heirs as numerous as the stars of
heaven, and assign to your heirs all these lands, so that all the nations
of the earth shall bless themselves by your heirs—inasmuch as Abraham obeyed Me and kept My charge:
My commandments, My laws, and My teachings.”
So Isaac stayed in Gerar. When the men of the place asked him about his wife,
he said, “She is my sister,” for he was afraid to say
“my wife,” thinking, “The men of the place might kill
me on account of Rebekah, for she is beautiful.” When some time had passed, Abimelech king of the
Philistines, looking out of the window, saw Isaac fondling his wife
Rebekah. Abimelech sent for Isaac and
said, “So she is your wife! Why then did you say: ‘She is my
sister?’” Isaac said to him, “Because I thought I might
lose my life on account of her.” Abimelech said, “What have you done to us! One of the
people might have lain with your wife, and you would have brought guilt
upon us.” Abimelech then charged
all the people, saying, “Anyone who molests this man or his wife
shall be put to death.”
Isaac sowed in that land and reaped a
hundredfold the same year. The LORD blessed him,
and the man grew richer and richer until
he was very wealthy: he acquired flocks
and herds, and a large household, so that the Philistines envied him.
And the Philistines stopped up all the
wells which his father’s servants had dug in the days of his father
Abraham, filling them with earth. And
Abimelech said to Isaac, “Go away from us, for you have become far
too big for us.”
So Isaac departed from there and
encamped in the wadi of Gerar, where he settled. Isaac dug anew the wells which had been dug in the days of his
father Abraham and which the Phil istines had stopped up after
Abraham’s death; and he gave them the same names that his father
had given them. But when Isaac’s
servants, digging in the wadi, found there a well of spring water,
the herdsmen of Gerar quarreled with
Isaac’s herdsmen, saying, “The water is ours.” He named
that well Esek,I.e.,
“contention.” because they contended with him.
And when they dug another well, they
disputed over that one also; so he named it Sitnah.I.e., “harassment.” He moved from there and dug yet another well, and
they did not quarrel over it; so he called it Rehoboth, saying,
“Now at last the LORD has granted us ample
spaceHeb. hirh%ib, connected with
“Rehoboth.” to increase in the land.”
From there he went up to Beer-sheba.
That night the LORD appeared to him and said, “I am the God
of your father Abraham. Fear not, for I am with you, and I will bless you
and increase your offspring for the sake of My servant Abraham.”
So he built an altar there and invoked
the LORD by name. Isaac pitched his tent there
and his servants started digging a well. And Abimelech came to him from Gerar, with Ahuzzath his
councilor and Phicol chief of his troops. Isaac said to them, “Why have you come to me, seeing that
you have been hostile to me and have driven me away from you?”
And they said, “We now see plainly
that the LORD has been with you, and we thought:
Let there be a sworn treaty between our two parties, between you and us.
Let us make a pact with you that you will
not do us harm, just as we have not molested you but have always dealt
kindly with you and sent you away in peace. From now on, be you blessed
of the LORD!” Then he made for them a feast, and they ate and drank.
Early in the morning, they exchanged
oaths. Isaac then bade them farewell, and they departed from him in
peace. That same day Isaac’s
servants came and told him about the well they had dug, and said to him,
“We have found water!” He
named it Shibah;As though
“oath.” therefore the name of the city is Beer-sheba
to this day.
When Esau was forty years old, he took
to wife Judith daughter of Beeri the Hittite, and Basemath daughter of
Elon the Hittite; and they were a source
of bitterness to Isaac and Rebekah.
When Isaac was old and his eyes were
too dim to see, he called his older son Esau and said to him, “My
son.” He answered, “Here I am.” And he said, “I am old now, and I do not know how soon I
may die. Take your gear, your quiver and
bow, and go out into the open and hunt me some game. Then prepare a dish for me such as I like, and
bring it to me to eat, so that I may give you my innermost blessing
before I die.”
Rebekah had been listening as Isaac spoke
to his son Esau. When Esau had gone out into the open to hunt game to
bring home, Rebekah said to her son Jacob,
“I overheard your father speaking to your brother Esau, saying,
‘Bring me some game and prepare a
dish for me to eat, that I may bless you, with the LORD’s approval, before I die.’
Now, my son, listen carefully as I
instruct you. Go to the flock and fetch me
two choice kids, and I will make of them a dish for your father, such as
he likes. Then take it to your father to
eat, in order that he may bless you before he dies.” Jacob answered his mother Rebekah, “But my
brother Esau is a hairy man and I am smooth-skinned. If my father touches me, I shall appear to him as
a trickster and bring upon myself a curse, not a blessing.”
But his mother said to him, “Your
curse, my son, be upon me! Just do as I say and go fetch them for
me.”
He got them and brought them to his
mother, and his mother prepared a dish such as his father liked.
Rebekah then took the best clothes of her
older son Esau, which were there in the house, and had her younger son
Jacob put them on; and she covered his
hands and the hairless part of his neck with the skins of the kids.
Then she put in the hands of her son
Jacob the dish and the bread that she had prepared.
He went to his father and said,
“Father.” And he said, “Yes, which of my sons are
you?” Jacob said to his father,
“I am Esau, your first-born; I have done as you told me. Pray sit
up and eat of my game, that you may give me your innermost
blessing.” Isaac said to his son,
“How did you succeed so quickly, my son?” And he said,
“Because the LORD your God granted me good
fortune.” Isaac said to Jacob,
“Come closer that I may feel you, my son—whether you are
really my son Esau or not.” So
Jacob drew close to his father Isaac, who felt him and wondered.
“The voice is the voice of Jacob, yet the hands are the hands of
Esau.” He did not recognize him,
because his hands were hairy like those of his brother Esau; and so he
blessed him.
He asked, “Are you really my son
Esau?” And when he said, “I am,” he said, “Serve me and let me eat of my
son’s game that I may give you my innermost blessing.” So he
served him and he ate, and he brought him wine and he drank. Then his father Isaac said to him, “Come
close and kiss me, my son”; and he
went up and kissed him. And he smelled his clothes and he blessed him,
saying, “Ah, the smell of my son is like the smell of the fields
that the LORD has blessed.
“May God give you
Of the dew of heaven and the fat of the earth,
Abundance of new grain and wine.
Let peoples serve you,
And nations bow to you;
Be master over your brothers,
And let your mother’s sons bow to you.
Cursed be they who curse you,
Blessed they who bless you.”
No sooner had Jacob left the presence of
his father Isaac—after Isaac had finished blessing Jacob—than
his brother Esau came back from his hunt. He too prepared a dish and brought it to his father. And he
said to his father, “Let my father sit up and eat of his
son’s game, so that you may give me your innermost blessing.”
His father Isaac said to him, “Who
are you?” And he said, “I am your son, Esau, your
first-born!” Isaac was seized with
very violent trembling. “Who was it then,” he demanded,
“that hunted game and brought it to me? Moreover, I ate of it
before you came, and I blessed him; now he must remain blessed!”
When Esau heard his father’s words,
he burst into wild and bitter sobbing, and said to his father,
“Bless me too, Father!” But
he answered, “Your brother came with guile and took away your
blessing.” [Esau] said, “Was
he, then, named Jacob that he might supplant meHeb. ‘aqab, connected with
“Jacob.” these two times? First he took away my
birthright and now he has taken away my blessing!” And he added,
“Have you not reserved a blessing for me?” Isaac answered, saying to Esau, “But I have
made him master over you: I have given him all his brothers for servants,
and sustained him with grain and wine. What, then, can I still do for
you, my son?” And Esau said to his
father, “Have you but one blessing, Father? Bless me too,
Father!” And Esau wept aloud. And
his father Isaac answered, saying to him,
“See, your abode shall Others “be away from the fat of the earth and
from.”enjoy the fat of the earth
And
the dew of heaven
above.
Yet by your sword you shall live,
And you shall serve your brother;
But when you grow restive,
You shall break his yoke from your neck.”
Now Esau harbored a grudge against Jacob
because of the blessing which his father had given him, and Esau said to
himself, “Let but the mourning period of my father come, and I will
kill my brother Jacob.” When the
words of her older son Esau were reported to Rebekah, she sent for her
younger son Jacob and said to him, “Your brother Esau is consoling
himself by planning to kill you. Now, my
son, listen to me. Flee at once to Haran, to my brother Laban. Stay with him a while, until your brother’s
fury subsides—until your
brother’s anger against you subsides—and he forgets what you
have done to him. Then I will fetch you from there. Let me not lose you
both in one day!”
Rebekah said to Isaac, “I am
disgusted with my life because of the Hittite women. If Jacob marries a
Hittite woman like these, from among the native women, what good will
life be to me?” *1So Isaac sent
for Jacob and blessed him. He instructed him, saying, “You shall
not take a wife from among the Canaanite women. Up, go to Paddan-aram, to the house of Bethuel, your
mother’s father, and take a wife there from among the daughters of
Laban, your mother’s brother, May El
ShaddaiSee note at 17.1. bless you,
make you fertile and numerous, so that you become an assembly of peoples.
May He grant the blessing of Abraham to
you and your offspring, that you may possess the land where you are
sojourning, which God assigned to Abraham.”
Then Isaac sent Jacob off, and he went to
Paddan-aram, to Laban the son of Bethuel the Aramean, the brother of
Rebekah, mother of Jacob and Esau.
When Esau saw that Isaac had blessed
Jacob and sent him off to Paddan-aram to take a wife from there, charging
him, as he blessed him, “You shall not take a wife from among the
Canaanite women,” and that Jacob had
obeyed his father and mother and gone to Paddan-aram, Esau realized that the Canaanite women displeased
his father Isaac. So Esau went to Ishmael
and took to wife, in addition to the wives he had, Mahalath the daughter
of Ishmael son of Abraham, sister of Nebaioth.
VA-YETSE’
Jacob left Beer-sheba, and set out for
Haran. He came upon a certain place and
stopped there for the night, for the sun had set. Taking one of the
stones of that place, he put it under his head and lay down in that
place. He had a dream; a stairwayOr “ramp”; others
“ladder.” was set on the ground and its top reached
to the sky, and angels of God were going up and down on it. And the LORD was standing
beside him and He said, “I am the LORD,
the God of your father Abraham and the God of Isaac: the ground on which
you are lying I will assign to you and to your offspring. Your descendants shall be as the dust of the
earth; you shall spread out to the west and to the east, to the north and
to the south. All the families of the earth shall bless themselves by you
and your descendants. Remember, I am with
you: I will protect you wherever you go and will bring you back to this
land. I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised
you.”
Jacob awoke from his sleep and said,
“Surely the LORD is present in this place,
and I did not know it!” Shaken, he
said, “How awesome is this place! This is none other than the abode
of God, and that is the gateway to heaven.” Early in the morning, Jacob took the stone that he had put
under his head and set it up as a pillar and poured oil on the top of it.
He named that site Bethel;I.e., “house of God.” but previously
the name of the city had been Luz.
Jacob then made a vow, saying, “If
God remains with me, if He protects me on this journey that I am making,
and gives me bread to eat and clothing to wear, and if I return safe to my father’s house—the LORD shall be my God. And this stone, which I have set up as a pillar, shall be
God’s abode; and of all that You give me, I will set aside a tithe
for You.”
Jacob Lit. “lifted up his feet.”resumed his journey and came to the land of the Easterners. There before his eyes was a well in the open. Three
flocks of sheep were lying there beside it, for the flocks were watered
from that well. The stone on the mouth of the well was large. When all the flocks were gathered there, the stone
would be rolled from the mouth of the well and the sheep watered; then
the stone would be put back in its place on the mouth of the well.
Jacob said to them, “My friends,
where are you from?” And they said, “We are from
Haran.” He said to them, “Do
you know Laban the son of Nahor?” And they said, “Yes, we
do.” He continued, “Is he
well?” They answered, “Yes, he is; and there is his daughter
Rachel, coming with the flock.” He
said, “It is still broad daylight, too early to round up the
animals; water the flock and take them to pasture.” But they said, “We cannot, until all the
flocks are rounded up; then the stone is rolled off the mouth of the well
and we water the sheep.”
While he was still speaking with them,
Rachel came with her father’s flock; for she was a shepherdess.
And when Jacob saw Rachel, the daughter
of his uncleLit. “his mother’s
brother.” Laban, and the flock of his uncle Laban, Jacob
went up and rolled the stone off the mouth of the well, and watered the
flock of his uncle Laban. Then Jacob
kissed Rachel, and broke into tears. Jacob told Rachel that he was her father’s kinsman, that
he was Rebekah’s son; and she ran and told her father. On hearing the news of his sister’s son
Jacob, Laban ran to greet him; he embraced him and kissed him, and took
him into his house. He told Laban all that had happened, and Laban said to him, “You are truly my
bone and flesh.”
When he had stayed with him a month’s time, Laban said to Jacob, “Just because you are a
kinsman, should you serve me for nothing? Tell me, what shall your wages
be?” Now Laban had two daughters;
the name of the older one was Leah, and the name of the younger was
Rachel. Leah had weak eyes; Rachel was
shapely and beautiful. Jacob loved
Rachel; so he answered, “I will serve you seven years for your
younger daughter Rachel.” Laban
said, “Better that I give her to you than that I should give her to
an outsider. Stay with me.” So
Jacob served seven years for Rachel and they seemed to him but a few days
because of his love for her.
Then Jacob said to Laban, “Give me
my wife, for my time is fulfilled, that I may cohabit with her.”
And Laban gathered all the people of the
place and made a feast. When evening
came, he took his daughter Leah and brought her to him; and he cohabited
with her.—Laban had given his
maidservant Zilpah to his daughter Leah as her maid.—When morning came, there was Leah! So he said to
Laban, “What is this you have done to me? I was in your service for
Rachel! Why did you deceive me?” Laban said, “It is not the practice in our place to marry
off the younger before the older. Wait
until the bridal week of this one is over and we will give you that one
too, provided you serve me another seven years.” Jacob did so; he waited out the bridal week of the
one, and then he gave him his daughter Rachel as wife.—Laban had given his maidservant Bilhah to his
daughter Rachel as her maid.—And
Jacob cohabited with Rachel also; indeed, he loved Rachel more than Leah.
And he served him another seven years.
The LORD saw
that Leah was unloved and he opened her womb; but Rachel was barren.
Leah conceived and bore a son, and named
him Reuben;Understood as “See a
son.” for she declared, “It means: ‘The LORD has seenHeb.
ra’ah, connected with the first part of
“Reuben.” my affliction’; it also means:
‘Now my husband will love me.’”Heb. ye’ehabani, connected with the last part of
“Reuben.” She
conceived again and bore a son, and declared, “This is because the
LORD heardHeb.
shama‘, connected with “Simeon.” that I was
unloved and has given me this one also”; so she named him Simeon.
Again she conceived and bore a son and
declared, “This time my husband will become attachedHeb. yillaweh, connected with “Levi.”
to me, for I have borne him three sons.” Therefore he was named
Levi. She conceived again and bore a son,
and declared, “This time I will praiseHeb. ’odeh, connected with “Judah.” the LORD.” Therefore she named him Judah. Then
she stopped bearing.
When Rachel saw that she had borne
Jacob no children, she became envious of her sister; and Rachel said to
Jacob, “Give me children, or I shall die.” Jacob was incensed at Rachel, and
said, “Can I take the place of God, who has denied you fruit of the
womb?” She said, “Here is my maid Bilhah. Consort with her, that she may
bear on my knees and that through her I too may have children.”
So she gave him her
maid Bilhah as concubine, and Jacob cohabited with her. Bilhah conceived and bore Jacob a son.
And Rachel said, “God has
vindicated me;Heb. dananni, connected with
“Dan.” indeed, He has heeded my plea and given me a
son.” Therefore she named him Dan. Rachel’s maid Bilhah
conceived again and bore Jacob a second son. And Rachel said, Heb. naphtule … naphtalti, connected
with “Naphtali.” Lit. “A contest of God
…”“A fateful contest I
waged with my sister;
yes, and I have prevailed.” So she named him Naphtali.
When Leah saw that she had stopped
bearing, she took her maid Zilpah and gave her to Jacob as concubine.
And when Leah’s maid Zilpah bore
Jacob a son, Leah said, “What
luck!”Kethib begad; the qere reads ba
gad “luck has come”; connected with
“Gad.” So she named him Gad. When Leah’s maid Zilpah bore Jacob a second son,
Leah declared, “What
fortune!”Heb. be’oshri,
connected with “Asher.” meaning, “Women will
deem me fortunate.” So she named him Asher.
Once, at the time of the wheat harvest,
Reuben came upon some mandrakes in the field and brought them to his
mother Leah. Rachel said to Leah, “Please give me some of your
son’s mandrakes.” But she
said to her, “Was it not enough for you to take away my husband,
that you would also take my son’s mandrakes?” Rachel replied,
“I promise, he shall lie with you tonight, in return for your
son’s mandrakes.” When Jacob
came home from the field in the evening, Leah went out to meet him and
said, “You are to sleep with me, for I have hired you with my
son’s mandrakes.” And he lay with her that night. God heeded Leah, and she conceived and bore him a
fifth son. And Leah said, “God has
given me my rewardHeb. sekhari, connected
with “Issachar.” for having given my maid to my
husband.” So she named him Issachar. When Leah conceived again and bore Jacob a sixth son,
Leah said, “God has given me a
choice gift;Heb. zebadani …
zebed. this time my husband will exalt me,Heb. yizbeleni; others “will dwell with
me.” for I have borne him six sons.” So she named
him Zebulun. Last, she bore him a
daughter, and named her Dinah.
Now God remembered Rachel; God heeded
her and opened her womb. She conceived
and bore a son, and said, “God has taken awayHeb. ‘asaph. my disgrace.” So she named him Joseph, which is to say,
“May the LORD addHeb. yoseph. another son for me.”
After Rachel had borne Joseph, Jacob
said to Laban, “Give me leave to go back to my own homeland.
Give me my wives and my children, for
whom I have served you, that I may go; for well you know what services I
have rendered you.” But Laban said
to him, “If you will indulge me,Lit.
“If I have found favor in your eyes.” I have learned
by divination that the LORD has blessed me on
your account.” And he continued,
“Name the wages due from me, and I will pay you.” But he said, “You know well how I have
served you and how your livestock has fared with me. For the little you had before I came has grown to
much, since the LORD has blessed you wherever I
turned. And now, when shall I make provision for my own household?”
He said, “What shall I pay
you?” And Jacob said, “Pay me nothing! If you will do this
thing for me, I will again pasture and keep your flocks: let me pass through your whole flock today,
removing from there every speckled and spotted animal—every dark-colored sheep and every spotted and speckled goat. Such shall be my
wages. In the future when you go over my
wages, let my honesty toward you testify for me: if there are among my
goats any that are not speckled or spotted or any sheep that are not
dark-colored, they got there by theft.” And Laban said, “Very well, let it be as you
say.”
But that same day he removed the
streaked and spotted he-goats and all the speckled and spotted
she-goats—every one that had white on it—and all the
dark-colored sheep, and left them in the charge of his sons. And he put a distance of three days’ journey
between himself and Jacob, while Jacob was pasturing the rest of
Laban’s flock.
Jacob then got fresh shoots of poplar,
and of almond and plane, and peeled white stripes in them, laying bare
the white of the shoots. The rods that he
had peeled he set up in front of the goatsLit. “flocks.” in the troughs, the water
receptacles, that the goats came to drink from. Their mating occurred
when they came to drink, and since the
goats mated by the rods, the goats brought forth streaked, speckled, and
spotted young. But Jacob dealt separately
with the sheep; he made these animals face the streaked or wholly
dark-colored animals in Laban’s flock. And so he produced special
flocks for himself, which he did not put with Laban’s flocks.
Moreover, when the sturdierOr “early-breeding.” animals
were mating, Jacob would place the rods in the troughs, in full view of
the animals, so that they mated by the rods; but with the feeblerOr
“late-breeding.” animals he would not place them
there. Thus the feeble onesm went to Laban and the sturdy to Jacob.
So the man grew exceedingly prosperous,
and came to own large flocks, maidservants and menservants, camels and
asses.
Now he heard the things that
Laban’s sons were saying: “Jacob has taken all that was our
father’s, and from that which was our father’s he has built
up all this wealth.” Jacob also saw
that Laban’s manner toward him was not as it had been in the past.
Then the LORD
said to Jacob, “Return to the land of your fathers where you were
born, and I will be with you.” Jacob
had Rachel and Leah called to the field, where his flock was, and said to them, “I see that your
father’s manner toward me is not as it has been in the past. But
the God of my father has been with me. As
you know, I have served your father with all my might; but your father has cheated me, changing my wages
time and again.Lit. “ten
times.” God, however, would not let him do me harm.
If he said thus, ‘The speckled shall
be your wages,’ then all the flocks would drop speckled young; and
if he said thus, ‘The streaked shall be your wages,’ then all
the flocks would drop streaked young. God
has taken away your father’s livestock and given it to me.
“Once, at the mating time of the
flocks, Lit. “I
raised my eyes and saw in a dream, behold.”I
had a dream in which I saw that
the he-goats mating with the
flock were streaked, speckled, and mottled. And in the dream an angel of God said to me,
‘Jacob!’ ‘Here,’ I answered. And he said, ‘Note well that all the
he-goats which are mating with the flock are streaked, speckled, and
mottled; for I have noted all that Laban has been doing to you.
I am the God of Beth-el, where you
anointed a pillar and where you made a vow to Me. Now, arise and leave
this land and return to your native land.’”
Then Rachel and Leah answered him,
saying, “Have we still a share in the inheritance of our
father’s house? Surely, he regards
us as outsiders, now that he has sold us and has used up our purchase
price. Truly, all the wealth that God has
taken away from our father belongs to us and to our children. Now then,
do just as God has told you.”
Thereupon Jacob put his children and
wives on camels; and he drove off all his
livestock and all the wealth that he had amassed, the livestock in his
possession that he had acquired in Paddan-aram, to go to his father Isaac
in the land of Canaan.
Meanwhile Laban had gone to shear his
sheep, and Rachel stole her father’s household
idols. Jacob Lit. “stole the mind of Laban the
Aramean”; similarly in v. 26.kept Laban the
Aramean in the dark, not telling him that he was fleeing, and fled with all that he had. Soon he was across
the Euphrates and heading toward the hill country of Gilead.
On the third day, Laban was told that
Jacob had fled. So he took his kinsmen
with him and pursued him a distance of seven days, catching up with him
in the hill country of Gilead. But God
appeared to Laban the Aramean in a dream by night and said to him,
“Beware of attempting anything with Jacob, good or bad.”
Laban overtook Jacob. Jacob had pitched
his tent on the Height, and Laban with his kinsmen encamped in the hill
country of Gilead. And Laban said to
Jacob, “What did you mean by keeping me in the dark and carrying
off my daughters like captives of the sword? Why did you flee in secrecy and mislead me and not tell me? I
would have sent you off with festive music, with timbrel and lyre.
You did not even let me kiss my sons and
daughters good-by! It was a foolish thing for you to do. I have it in my power to do you harm; but the God
of your father said to me last night, ‘Beware of attempting
anything with Jacob, good or bad.’ Very well, you had to leave because you were longing for your
father’s house; but why did you steal my gods?”
Jacob answered Laban, saying, “I
was afraid because I thought you would take your daughters from me by
force. But anyone with whom you find your
gods shall not remain alive! In the presence of our kinsmen, point out
what I have of yours and take it.” Jacob, of course, did not know
that Rachel had stolen them.
So Laban went into Jacob’s tent
and Leah’s tent and the tents of the two maidservants; but he did
not find them. Leaving Leah’s tent, he entered Rachel’s tent.
Rachel, meanwhile, had taken the idols
and placed them in the camel cushion and sat on them; and Laban rummaged
through the tent without finding them. For she said to her father, “Let not my lord take it
amiss that I cannot rise before you, for the period of women is upon
me.” Thus he searched, but could not find the household idols.
Now Jacob became incensed and took up
his grievance with Laban. Jacob spoke up and said to Laban, “What
is my crime, what is my guilt that you should pursue me? You rummaged through all my things; what have you
found of all your household objects? Set it here, before my kinsmen and
yours, and let them decide between us two.
“These twenty years I have spent
in your service, your ewes and she-goats never miscarried, nor did I
feast on rams from your flock. That which
was torn by beasts I never brought to you; I myself made good the loss;
you exacted it of me, whether snatched by day or snatched by night.
Often,Lit.
“I was.” scorching heat ravaged me by day and frost
by night; and sleep fled from my eyes. Of
the twenty years that I spent in your household, I served you fourteen
years for your two daughters, and six years for your flocks; and you
changed my wages time and again.Lit.
“ten times.” Had not
the God of my father, the God of Abraham and the FearMeaning of Heb. pah%ad uncertain. of Isaac, been
with me, you would have sent me away empty-handed. But God took notice
of my plight and the toil of my hands, and He gave judgment last
night.”
Then Laban spoke up and said to Jacob,
“The daughters are my daughters, the children are my children, and
the flocks are my flocks; all that you see is mine. Yet what can I do now
about my daughters or the children they have borne? Come, then, let us make a pact, you and I, that
there may be a witness between you and me.” Thereupon Jacob took a stone and set it up as a pillar.
And Jacob said to his kinsmen,
“Gather stones.” So they took stones and made a mound; and
they partook of a meal there by the mound. Laban named it Yegar-sahadutha,Aramaic for “the mound (or, stone-heap) of witness.”
but Jacob named it Gal-ed.Heb. for
“the mound (or, stone-heap) of witness,” reflecting the
name Gilead, v. 23. And Laban
declared, “This mound is a witness between you and me this
day.” That is why it was named Gal-ed; and [it was called] Mizpah, because he said, “May the
LORD watchHeb.
yiseph, associated with Mizpah. between you and me, when we are
out of sight of each other. If you
ill-treat my daughters or take other wives besides my
daughters—though no one else be about, remember, God Himself will
be witness between you and me.”
And Laban said to Jacob, “Here is
this mound and here the pillar which I have set up between you and me:
this mound shall be witness and this
pillar shall be witness that I am not to cross to you past this mound,
and that you are not to cross to me past this mound and this pillar, with
hostile intent. May the God of Abraham
and the god of Nahor”—their ancestral
deities—“judge between us.” And Jacob swore by the
FearMeaning of Heb. pah%ad
uncertain. of his father Isaac. Jacob then offered up a sacrifice on the Height, and invited
his kinsmen to partake of the meal. After the meal, they spent the night
on the Height.
Early in the morning, Laban kissed his
sons and daughters and bade them good-by; then Laban left on his journey
homeward. Jacob went on his way, and
angels of God encountered him. When he saw
them, Jacob said, “This is God’s camp.” So he named
that place Mahanaim.Connected with Heb.
mah%aneh, “camp.”
VA-YISHLAH%
Jacob sent messengers ahead to his
brother Esau in the land of Seir, the country of Edom,
and instructed them as follows, Or “Thus you shall say to
my lord Esau, ‘Thus says your servant
Jacob:…’”“Thus shall you
say, ‘To my lord Esau, thus says your servant
Jacob: I stayed with Laban and
remained
until now; I have acquired cattle, asses,
sheep, and male and female slaves; and I send this message to my lord in
the hope of gaining your favor.’” The messengers returned to Jacob, saying, “We came to your
brother Esau; he himself is coming to meet you, and there are four
hundred men with him.” Jacob was
greatly frightened; in his anxiety, he divided the people with him, and
the flocks and herds and camels, into two camps, thinking, “If Esau comes to the one camp and attacks it,
the other camp may yet escape.”
Then Jacob said, “O God of my
father Abraham and God of my father Isaac, O LORD, who said to me, ‘Return to your native
land and I will deal bountifully with you’! I am unworthy of all the kindness that You have so steadfastly
shown Your servant: with my staff alone I crossed this Jordan, and now I
have become two camps. Deliver me, I
pray, from the hand of my brother, from the hand of Esau; else, I fear,
he may come and strike me down, mothers and children alike. Yet You have said, ‘I will deal bountifully
with you and make your offspring as the sands of the sea, which are too
numerous to count.’”
After spending the night there, he
selected from what was at hand these presents for his brother Esau:
200 she-goats and 20 he-goats; 200 ewes
and 20 rams; 30 milch camels with their
colts; 40 cows and 10 bulls; 20 she-asses and 10 he-asses. These he put in the charge of his servants, drove
by drove, and he told his servants, “Go on ahead, and keep a
distance between droves.” He
instructed the one in front as follows, “When my brother Esau meets
you and asks you, ‘Whose man are you? Where are you going? And
whose [animals] are these ahead of you?’ you shall answer, ‘Your servant Jacob’s; they are a
gift sent to my lord Esau; and [Jacob] himself is right behind
us.’” He gave similar
instructions to the second one, and the third, and all the others who
followed the droves, namely, “Thus and so shall you say to Esau
when you reach him. And you shall add,
‘And your servant Jacob himself is right behind us.’”
For he reasoned, “If I propitiate him with presents in advance, and
then face him, perhaps he will show me favor.” And so the gift went on ahead, while he remained
in camp that night.
That same night he arose, and taking his
two wives, his two maidservants, and his eleven children, he crossed the
ford of the Jabbok. After taking them
across the stream, he
sent across all his possessions. Jacob was left alone. And a man wrestled with him until the break of
dawn. When he saw that he had not
prevailed against him, he wrenched Jacob’s hip at its socket, so
that the socket of his hip was strained as he wrestled with him.
Then he said, “Let me go, for dawn is breaking.” But he
answered, “I will not let you go, unless you bless me.”
Said the other, “What is your name?” He
replied, “Jacob.” Said he,
“Your name shall no longer be Jacob, but Israel, for you have
strivenHeb. saritha, connected with first
part of “Israel.” with Or “God (Elohim, connected with second part of
‘Israel’) and men.”beings divine
and human, and have prevailed.” Jacob asked, “Pray tell me your name.” But he said,
“You must not ask my name!” And he took leave of him there.
So Jacob named the place Peniel,Understood as “face of God.”
meaning, “I have seen a divine being face to face, yet my life has
been preserved.” The sun rose upon
him as he passed Penuel, limping on his hip. That is why the children of Israel to this day do not eat the
thigh muscle that is on the socket of the hip, since Jacob’s hip
socket was wrenched at the thigh muscle.
Looking up, Jacob saw Esau coming,
accompanied by four hundred men. He divided the children among Leah,
Rachel, and the two maids, putting the
maids and their children first, Leah and her children next, and Rachel
and Joseph last. He himself went on ahead
and bowed low to the ground seven times until he was near his brother.
Esau ran to greet him. He embraced him
and, falling on his neck, he kissed him; and they wept. Looking about, he saw the women and the children.
“Who,” he asked, “are these with you?” He
answered, “The children with whom God has favored your servant.” Then the maids, with their
children, came forward and bowed low; next
Leah, with her children, came forward and bowed low; and last, Joseph and
Rachel came forward and bowed low; And he
asked, “What do you mean by all this company which I have
met?” He answered, “To gain my lord’s favor.”
Esau said, “I have enough, my
brother; let what you have remain yours.” But Jacob said, “No, I pray you; if you would do me this
favor, accept from me this gift; for to see your face is like seeing the
face of God, and you have received me favorably. Please accept my present which has been brought to you, for God
has favored me and I have plenty.” And when he urged him, he
accepted.
And [Esau] said, “Let us start on
our journey, and I will proceed at your pace.” But he said to him, “My lord knows that the
children are frail and that the flocks and herds, which are nursing, are
a care to me; if they are driven hard a single day, all the flocks will
die. Let my lord go on ahead of his
servant, while I travel slowly, at the pace of the cattle before me and
at the pace of the children, until I come to my lord in Seir.”
Then Esau said, “Let me assign to
you some of the men who are with me.” But he said, “Oh no, my
lord is too kind to me!” So Esau
started back that day on his way to Seir. But Jacob journeyed on to Succoth, and built a house for
himself and made stalls for his cattle; that is why the place was called
Succoth.Meaning “stalls,”
“huts,” “booths.”
Jacob arrived safe in the city of
Shechem which is in the land of Canaan—having come thus from
Paddan-aram—and he encamped before the city. The parcel of land where he pitched his tent he
purchased from the children of Hamor, Shechem’s father, for a
hundred kesitahs.Heb. qesit·ah, a unit of
unknown value. He set up an
altar there, and called it El-elohe-yisrael.“El, God of Israel.”
Now Dinah, the daughter whom Leah had
borne to Jacob, went out to visit the daughters of the land. Shechem son of Hamor the Hivite, chief of the
country, saw her, and took her and lay with her by force. Being strongly drawn to Dinah daughter of Jacob,
and in love with the maiden, he spoke to the maiden tenderly. So Shechem said to his father Hamor, “Get me
this girl as a wife.”
Jacob heard that he had defiled his
daughter Dinah; but since his sons were in the field with his cattle,
Jacob kept silent until they came home. Then Shechem’s father Hamor came out to Jacob to speak to
him. Meanwhile Jacob’s sons, having
heard the news, came in from the field. The men were distressed and very
angry, because he had committed an outrage in Israel by lying with
Jacob’s daughter—a thing not to be done.
And Hamor spoke with them, saying,
“My son Shechem longs for your daughter. Please give her to him in
marriage. Intermarry with us: give your
daughters to us, and take our daughters for yourselves: You will dwell among us, and the land will be open
before you; settle, move about, and acquire holdings in it.”
Then Shechem said to her father and
brothers, “Do me this favor, and I will pay whatever you tell me.
Ask of me a bride-price ever so high, as
well as gifts, and I will pay what you tell me; only give me the maiden
for a wife.”
Jacob’s sons answered Shechem and
his father Hamor—speaking with guile because he had defiled their
sister Dinah—and said to them,
“We cannot do this thing, to give our sister to a man who is
uncircumcised, for that is a disgrace among us. Only on this condition will we agree with you; that you will
become like us in that every male among you is circumcised. Then we will give our daughters to you and take
your daughters to ourselves; and we will dwell among you and become as
one kindred. But if you will not listen
to us and become circumcised, we will take our daughter and
go.”
Their words pleased Hamor and
Hamor’s son Shechem. And the youth
lost no time in
doing the thing, for he wanted Jacob’s daughter. Now he was the
most respected in his father’s house. So Hamor
and his son Shechem went to the Lit. “gate.”public
place of their town and spoke to their fellow townsmen,
saying, “These people are our
friends; let them settle in the land and move about in it, for the land
is large enough for them; we will take their daughters to ourselves as
wives and give our daughters to them. But
only on this condition will the men agree with us to dwell among us and
be as one kindred: that all our males become circumcised
as they are circumcised. Their cattle
and substance and all their beasts will be ours, if we only agree to
their terms, so that they will settle among us.” All
I.e., all his fellow
townsmen.who went out of the gate of his
town heeded Hamor and his son Shechem, and all males, b-all those who went out of the gate of his
town,-b were circumcised.
On the third day, when they were in
pain, Simeon and Levi, two of Jacob’s sons, brothers of Dinah, took
each his sword, came upon the city unmolested, and slew all the males.
They put Hamor and his son Shechem to the
sword, took Dinah out of Shechem’s house, and went away. The other sons of Jacob came upon the slain and
plundered the town, because their sister had been defiled. They seized their flocks and herds and asses, all
that was inside the town and outside; all
their wealth, all their children, and their wives, all that was in the
houses, they took as captives and booty.
Jacob said to Simeon and Levi,
“You have brought trouble on me, making me odious among the
inhabitants of the land, the Canaanites and the Perizzites; my men are
few in number, so that if they unite against me and attack me, I and my
house will be destroyed.” But they
answered, “Should our sister be treated like a whore?”
God said to Jacob, “Arise, go up
to Bethel and remain there; and build an altar there to the God who
appeared to you when you were fleeing from your brother Esau.”
So Jacob said to his household and to all
who were with him, “Rid yourselves of the alien gods in your midst,
purify yourselves, and change your clothes. Come, let us go up to Bethel, and I will build an altar there to
the God who answered me when I was in distress and who has been with me
wherever I have gone.” They gave to
Jacob all the alien gods that they had, and the rings that were in their
ears, and Jacob buried them under the terebinth that was near Shechem.
As they set out, a terror from God fell on
the cities round about, so that they did not pursue the sons of
Jacob.
Thus Jacob came to Luz—that is,
Bethel—in the land of Canaan, he and all the people who were with
him. There he built an altar and named the
site El-bethel,“The God of
Bethel.” for it was there that God had revealed Himself to
him when he was fleeing from his brother.
Deborah, Rebekah’s nurse, died, and
was buried under the oak below Bethel; so it was named Allon-bacuth.Understood as “the oak of the
weeping.”
God appeared again to Jacob on his
arrival from Paddan-aram, and He blessed him. God said to him,
“You whose name is Jacob,
You shall be called Jacob no more,
But Israel shall be your name.”
Thus He named him Israel.
And God said to him,
“I am El Shaddai.Cf. 17.1.
Be fertile and increase;
A nation, yea an assembly of nations,
Shall descend from you.
Kings shall issue from your loins.
The land that I assigned to Abraham and
Isaac
I assign to you;
And to your offspring to come
Will I assign the land.”
God parted from him at the spot where He
had spoken to him; and Jacob set up a
pillar at the site where He had spoken to him, a pillar of stone, and he
offered a libation on it and poured oil upon it. Jacob gave the site, where God had spoken to him, the name of
Bethel.
They set out from Bethel; but when they
were still some distance short of Ephrath, Rachel was in childbirth, and
she had hard labor. When her labor was at
its hardest, the midwife said to her, “Have no fear, for it is
another boy for you.” But as she
breathed her last—for she was dying—she named him
Ben-oni;Understood as “son of my
suffering (or, strength).” but his father called him
Benjamin.I.e., “son of the right
hand,” or “son of the south.” Thus Rachel died. She was buried on the road to
Ephrath—now Bethlehem. Over her
grave Jacob set up a pillar; it is the pillar at Rachel’s grave to
this day. Israel journeyed on, and
pitched his tent beyond Migdal-eder.
While Israel stayed in that land, Reuben
went and lay with Bilhah, his father’s concubine; and Israel found
out.
Now the sons of Jacob were twelve in number. The sons of Leah: Reuben—Jacob’s
first-born—Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun. The sons of Rachel: Joseph and Benjamin.
The sons of Bilhah, Rachel’s maid:
Dan and Naphtali. And the sons of Zilpah,
Leah’s maid: Gad and Asher. These are the sons of Jacob who were
born to him in Paddan-aram.
And Jacob came to his father Isaac at
Mamre, at Kiriath-arba—now Hebron—where Abraham and Isaac had
sojourned. Isaac was a hundred and eighty
years old when he breathed his last and
died. HeLit. “Isaac.”
was gathered to his kin in ripe old age; and he was buried by his sons
Esau and Jacob.
This is the line of Esau—that is,
Edom.
Esau took his wives from among the
Canaanite women—Adah daughter of Elon the Hittite, and Oholibamah
daughter of Anah daughter of Zibeon the HiviteCf. v. 20, “Horite.”—and also Basemath daughter of Ishmael and sister of
Nebaioth. Adah bore to Esau Eliphaz;
Basemath bore Reuel; and Oholibamah bore
Jeush, Jalam, and Korah. Those were the sons of Esau, who were born to
him in the land of Canaan.
Esau took his wives, his sons and
daughters, and all the members of his household, his cattle and all his
livestock, and all the property that he had acquired in the land of
Canaan, and went to another land because of his brother Jacob. For their possessions were too many for them to
dwell together, and the land where they sojourned could not support them
because of their livestock. So Esau
settled in the hill country of Seir—Esau being Edom.
This, then, is the line of Esau, the
ancestor of the Edomites, in the hill country of Seir.
These are the names of Esau’s
sons: Eliphaz, the son of Esau’s wife Adah; Reuel, the son of
Esau’s wife Basemath. The sons of
Eliphaz were Teman, Omar, Zepho, Gatam, and Kenaz. Timna was a concubine of Esau’s son Eliphaz;
she bore Amalek to Eliphaz. Those were the descendants of Esau’s
wife Adah. And these were the sons of
Reuel: Nahath, Zerah, Shammah, and Mizzah. Those were the descendants of
Esau’s wife Basemath. And these
were the sons of Esau’s wife Oholibamah, daughter of Anah daughter
of Zibeon: she bore to Esau Jeush, Jalam, and Korah.
These are the clans of the children of
Esau. The descendants of Esau’s first-born Eliphaz: the clans
Teman, Omar, Zepho, Kenaz, Korah, Gatam,
and Amalek; these are the clans of Eliphaz in the land of Edom. Those are
the descendants of Adah. And these are
the descendants of Esau’s son Reuel: the clans Nahath, Zerah,
Shammah, and Mizzah; these are the clans of Reuel in the land of Edom.
Those are the descendants of Esau’s wife Basemath. And these are the descendants of Esau’s wife
Oholibamah: the clans Jeush, Jalam, and Korah; these are the clans of
Esau’s wife Oholibamah, the daughter of Anah. Those were the sons of Esau—that is,
Edom—and those are their clans.
These were the sons of Seir the Horite,
who were settled in the land: Lotan, Shobal, Zibeon, Anah, Dishon, Ezer, and Dishan. Those are the clans of
the Horites, the descendants of Seir, in the land of Edom.
The sons of Lotan were Hori and Hemam;
and Lotan’s sister was Timna. The
sons of Shobal were these: Alvan, Manahath, Ebal, Shepho, and Onam.
The sons of Zibeon were these: AiahHeb. “and Aiah.” and
Anah—that was the Anah who discovered the hot springsMeaning of Heb. yemim uncertain. in the
wilderness while pasturing the asses of his father Zibeon. The children of Anah were these: Dishon and
Anah’s daughter Oholibamah. The
sons of DishonHeb. Dishan; but cf. vv. 21,
25, 28, and 30, and 1 Chron. 1.41. were these: Hemdan, Eshban,
Ithran, and Cheran. The sons of Ezer were
these: Bilhan, Zaavan, and Akan. And the
sons of Dishan were these: Uz and Aran.
These are the clans of the Horites: the
clans Lotan, Shobal, Zibeon, Anah, Dishon, Ezer, and Dishan. Those are the clans of the Horites,
clan by clan, in the land of Seir.
These are the kings who reigned in the
land of Edom before any king reigned over the Israelites. Bela son of Beor reigned in Edom, and the name of
his city was Dinhabah. When Bela died,
Jobab son of Zerah, from Bozrah, succeeded him as king. When Jobab died, Husham of the land of the
Temanites succeeded him as king. When
Husham died, Hadad son of Bedad, who defeated the Midianites in the
country of Moab, succeeded him as king; the name of his city was Avith.
When Hadad died, Samlah of Masrekah
succeeded him as king. When Samlah died,
SaulOr “Shaul.” of
Rehoboth-on-the-river succeeded him as king. When Saul died, Baal-hanan son of Achbor succeeded him as king.
And when Baal-hanan son of Achbor died,
Hadar succeeded him as king; the name of his city was Pau, and his
wife’s name was Mehetabel daughter of Matred daughter of
Me-zahab.
These are the names of the clans of
Esau, each with its families and locality, name by name: the clans Timna,
Alvah, Jetheth, Oholibamah, Elah, Pinon,
Kenaz, Teman, Mibzar, Magdiel, and Iram. Those are the clans of
Edom—that is, of Esau, father of the Edomites—by their
settlements in the land which they hold.
VA-YESHEV
Now Jacob was settled in the land where
his father had sojourned, the land of Canaan. This, then, is the line of Jacob:
At seventeen years of age, Joseph tended the flocks with his brothers,
as a helper to the sons of his father’s wives Bilhah and Zilpah.
And Joseph brought bad reports of them to their father. Now Israel loved Joseph best of all his sons, for
he was the child of his old age; and he had made him an ornamented
tunic.Or “a coat of many
colors”; meaning of Heb. uncertain. And when his brothers saw that their father loved
him more than any of his brothers, they hated him so that they could not
speak a friendly word to him.
Once Joseph had a dream which he told to
his brothers; and they hated him even more. He said to them, “Hear this dream which I have dreamed:
There we were binding sheaves in the
field, when suddenly my sheaf stood up and remained upright; then your
sheaves gathered around and bowed low to my sheaf.” His brothers answered, “Do you mean to reign
over us? Do you mean to rule over us?” And they hated him even more
for his talk about his dreams.
He dreamed another dream and told it to
his brothers, saying, “Look, I have had another dream: And this
time, the sun, the moon, and eleven stars were bowing down to me.”
And when he told it to his father and
brothers, his father berated him. “What,” he said to him,
“is this dream you have dreamed? Are we to come, I and your mother
and your brothers, and bow low to you to the ground?” So his brothers were wrought up at him, and his
father kept the matter in mind.
One time, when his brothers had gone to
pasture their father’s flock at Shechem, Israel said to Joseph, “Your brothers are pasturing at
Shechem. Come, I will send you to them.” He answered, “I am
ready.” And he said to him,
“Go and see how your brothers are and how the flocks are faring,
and bring me back word.” So he sent him from the valley of
Hebron.
When he reached Shechem, a man came upon
him wandering in the fields. The man asked him, “What are you
looking for?” He answered, “I
am looking for my brothers. Could you tell me where they are
pasturing?” The man said,
“They have gone from here, for I heard them say: Let us go to
Dothan.” So Joseph followed his brothers and found them at
Dothan.
They saw him from afar, and before he
came close to them they conspired to kill him. They said to one another, “Here comes that dreamer!
Come now, let us kill him and throw him
into one of the pits; and we can say, ‘A savage beast devoured
him.’ We shall see what comes of his dreams!” But when Reuben heard it, he tried to save him
from them. He said, “Let us not take his life.” And Reuben went on, “Shed no blood! Cast him
into that pit out in the wilderness, but do not touch him
yourselves”—intending to save him from them and restore him
to his father. When Joseph came up to his
brothers, they stripped Joseph of his tunic, the ornamented tunic that he
was wearing, and took him and cast him
into the pit. The pit was empty; there was no water in it.
Then they sat down to a meal. Looking
up, they saw a caravan of Ishmaelites coming from Gilead, their camels
bearing gum, balm, and ladanum to be taken to Egypt. Then Judah said to his brothers, “What do we
gain by killing our brother and covering up his blood? Come, let us sell him to the Ishmaelites, but let
us not do away with him ourselves. After all, he is our brother, our own
flesh.” His brothers agreed. When
Midianite traders passed by, they pulled Joseph up out of the pit. They
sold Joseph for twenty pieces of silver to the Ishmaelites, who brought
Joseph to Egypt.
When Reuben returned to the pit and saw
that Joseph was not in the pit, he rent his clothes. Returning to his brothers, he said, “The boy
is gone! Now, what am I to do?” Then they took Joseph’s tunic, slaughtered a kid, and
dipped the tunic in the blood. They had
the ornamented tunic taken to their father, and they said, “We
found this. Please examine it; is it your son’s tunic or
not?” He recognized it, and said,
“My son’s tunic! A savage beast devoured him! Joseph was torn
by a beast!” Jacob rent his
clothes, put sackcloth on his loins, and observed mourning for his son
many days. All his sons and daughters
sought to comfort him; but he refused to be comforted, saying, “No,
I will go down mourning to my son in Sheol.” Thus his father
bewailed him.
The Midianites,Heb. “Medanites.” meanwhile, sold him
in Egypt to Potiphar, a courtier of Pharaoh and his chief steward.
38 About that time Judah left his brothers and camped near a certain
Adullamite whose name was Hirah. There
Judah saw the daughter of a certain Canaanite whose name was Shua, and he
married her and cohabited with her. She
conceived and bore a son, and he named him Er. She conceived again and bore a son, and named him Onan.
Once again she bore a son, and named him
Shelah; he was at Chezib when she bore him.
Judah got a wife for Er his first-born;
her name was Tamar. But Er, Judah’s
first-born, was displeasing to the LORD, and the
LORD took his life. Then Judah said to Onan, “Join with your brother’s
wife and do your duty by her as a brother-in-law,Cf. Deut. 25.5. and provide offspring for your
brother.” But Onan, knowing that the
seed would not count as his, let it go to wasteLit. “spoil on the ground.” whenever
he joined with his brother’s wife, so as not to provide offspring
for his brother. What he did was
displeasing to the LORD, and He took his life
also. Then Judah said to his
daughter-in-law Tamar, “Stay as a widow in your father’s
house until my son Shelah grows up”—for he thought, “He
too might die like his brothers.” So Tamar went to live in her
father’s house.
A long time afterward, Shua’s
daughter, the wife of Judah, died. When Lit. “he was comforted.”his period of mourning was over, Judah went
up to Timnah to his sheepshearers, together with his friend Hirah the
Adullamite. And Tamar was told,
“Your father-in-law is coming up to Timnah for the
sheepshearing.” So she took off her
widow’s garb, covered her face with a veil, and, wrapping herself
up, sat down at the entrance to Enaim,Cf.
Enam, Josh. 15.34. Others “in an open place” or “at
the crossroad.” which is on the road to Timnah; for she
saw that Shelah was grown up, yet she had not been given to him as wife.
When Judah saw her, he took her for a
harlot; for she had covered her face. So
he turned aside to her by the road and said, “Here, let me sleep
with you”—for he did not know that she was his
daughter-in-law. “What,” she asked, “will you pay for
sleeping with me?” He replied,
“I will send a kid from my flock.” But she said, “You
must leave a pledge until you have sent it.” And he said, “What pledge shall I give
you?” She replied, “Your seal and cord, and the staff which
you carry.” So he gave them to her and slept with her, and she
conceived by him. Then she went on her
way. She took off her veil and again put on her widow’s garb.
Judah sent the kid by his friend the
Adullamite, to redeem the pledge from the woman; but he could not find
her. He inquired of the people of that
town, “Where is the cult prostitute, the one at Enaim, by the
road?” But they said, “There has been no prostitute
here.” So he returned to Judah and
said, “I could not find her; moreover, the townspeople said: There
has been no prostitute here.” Judah
said, “Let her keep them, lest we become a laughingstock. I did
send her this kid, but you did not find her.”
About three months later, Judah was
told, “Your daughter-in-law Tamar has played the harlot; in fact,
she is with child by harlotry.” “Bring her out,” said
Judah, “and let her be burned.” As she was being brought out, she sent this message to her
father-in-law, “I am with child by the man to whom these
belong.” And she added, “Examine these: whose seal and cord
and staff are these?” Judah
recognized them, and said, “She is more in the right than I,
inasmuch as I did not give her to my son Shelah.” And he was not
intimate with her again.
When the time came for her to give
birth, there were twins in her womb! While she was in labor, one of them put out his hand, and the
midwife tied a crimson thread on that hand, to signify: This one came out
first. But just then he drew back his
hand, and out came his brother; and she said, “What a breachHeb. peres· you have made for
yourself!” So he was named Perez. Afterward his brother came out, on whose hand was the crimson
thread; he was named Zerah.I.e.,
“brightness,” perhaps alluding to the crimson
thread.
When Joseph was taken down to Egypt, a
certain Egyptian, Potiphar, a courtier of Pharaoh and his chief steward,
bought him from the Ishmaelites who had brought him there. The LORD was with Joseph,
and he was a successful man; and he stayed in the house of his Egyptian
master. And when his master saw that the
LORD was with him and that the LORD lent success to everything he undertook,
he took a liking to Joseph. He made him
his personal attendant and put him in charge of his household, placing in
his hands all that he owned. And from the
time that the Egyptian put him in charge of his household and of all that
he owned, the LORD blessed his house for
Joseph’s sake, so that the blessing of the LORD was upon everything that he owned, in the
house and outside. He left all that he had
in Joseph’s hands and, with him there, he paid attention to nothing
save the food that he ate. Now Joseph was well built and handsome.
After a time, his master’s wife
cast her eyes upon Joseph and said, “Lie with me.” But he refused. He said to his master’s wife,
“Look, with me here, my master gives no thought to anything in this
house, and all that he owns he has placed in my hands. He wields no more authority in this house than I,
and he has withheld nothing from me except yourself, since you are his
wife. How then could I do this most wicked thing, and sin before
God?” And much as she coaxed Joseph
day after day, he did not yield to her request to lie beside her, to be
with her.
One such day, he came into the house to
do his work. None of the household being there inside, she caught hold of him by his garment and said,
“Lie with me!” But he left his garment in her hand and got
away and fled outside. When she saw that
he had left it in her hand and had fled outside, she called out to her servants and said to them, “Look,
he had to bring us a Hebrew to dally with us! This one came to lie with
me; but I screamed loud. And when he
heard me screaming at the top of my voice, he left his garment with me
and got away and fled outside.” She
kept his garment beside her, until his master came home. Then she told him the same story, saying,
“The Hebrew slave whom you brought into our house came to me to
dally with me; but when I screamed at the
top of my voice, he left his garment with me and fled outside.”
When his master heard the story that his
wife told him, namely, “Thus and so your slave did to me,” he
was furious. So Joseph’s master had
him put in prison, where the king’s prisoners were confined. But
even while he was there in prison, the
LORD was with Joseph: He extended kindness to
him and disposed the chief jailer favorably toward him. The chief jailer put in Joseph’s charge all
the prisoners who were in that prison, and he was the one to carry out
everything that was done there. The chief
jailer did not supervise anything that was in Joseph’sLit. “his.” charge, because
the LORD was with him, and whatever he did the
LORD made successful.
Some
time later, the cupbearer and the baker of the king of Egypt gave offense
to their lord the king of Egypt. Pharaoh
was angry with his two courtiers, the chief cupbearer and the chief
baker, and put them in custody, in the
house of the chief steward, in the same prison house where Joseph was
confined. The chief steward assigned
Joseph to them, and he attended them.
When they had been in custody for some time, both of them—the cupbearer and the baker of the king of
Egypt, who were confined in the prison—dreamed in the same night,
each his own dream and each dream with its own meaning. When Joseph came to them in the morning, he saw
that they were distraught. He asked
Pharaoh’s courtiers, who were with him in custody in his
master’s house, saying, “Why do you appear downcast
today?” And they said to him,
“We had dreams, and there is no one to interpret them.” So
Joseph said to them, “Surely God can interpret! Tell me [your
dreams].”
Then the chief cupbearer told his dream
to Joseph. He said to him, “In my dream, there was a vine in front
of me. On the vine were three branches.
It had barely budded, when out came its blossoms and its clusters ripened
into grapes. Pharaoh’s cup was in
my hand, and I took the grapes, pressed them into Pharaoh’s cup,
and placed the cup in Pharaoh’s hand.” Joseph said to him, “This is its
interpretation: The three branches are three days. In three days Pharaoh will pardon youLit. “lift up your head.”
and restore you to your post; you will place Pharaoh’s cup in his
hand, as was your custom formerly when you were his cupbearer. But think of me when all is well with you again,
and do me the kindness of mentioning me to Pharaoh, so as to free me from
this place. For in truth, I was kidnapped
from the land of the Hebrews; nor have I done anything here that they
should have put me in the dungeon.”
When the chief baker saw how favorably
he had interpreted, he said to Joseph, “In my dream, similarly,
there were three openwork basketsOthers
“baskets with white bread” or “white baskets”;
meaning of Heb. h%ori uncertain. on my head. In the uppermost basket were all kinds of food for
Pharaoh that a baker prepares; and the birds were eating it out of the
basket above my head.” Joseph
answered, “This is its interpretation: The three baskets are three
days. In three days Pharaoh will lift off
your head and impale you upon a pole; and the birds will pick off your
flesh.”
On the third day—his
birthday—Pharaoh made a banquet for all his officials, and he
singled outLit. “lifted the head
of.” his chief cupbearer and his chief baker from among
his officials. He restored the chief
cupbearer to his cupbearing, and he placed the cup in Pharaoh’s
hand; but the chief baker he
impaled—just as Joseph had interpreted to them.
Yet the chief cupbearer did not think of
Joseph; he forgot him.
MIKKETS
After two years’ time, Pharaoh
dreamed that he was standing by the Nile, when out of the Nile there came up seven cows, handsome and
sturdy, and they grazed in the reed grass. But presently, seven other cows came up from the Nile close
behind them, ugly and gaunt, and stood beside the cows on the bank of the
Nile; and the ugly gaunt cows ate up the
seven handsome sturdy cows. And Pharaoh awoke.
He fell asleep and dreamed a second time:
Seven ears of grain, solid and healthy, grew on a single stalk.
But close behind them sprouted seven ears,
thin and scorched by the east wind. And
the thin ears swallowed up the seven solid and full ears. Then Pharaoh
awoke: it was a dream!
Next morning, his spirit was agitated,
and he sent for all the magicians of Egypt, and all its wise men; and
Pharaoh told them his dreams, but none could interpret them for
Pharaoh.
The chief cupbearer then spoke up and
said to Pharaoh, “I must make mention today of my offenses.
Once Pharaoh was angry with his servants,
and placed me in custody in the house of the chief steward, together with
the chief baker. We had dreams the same
night, he and I, each of us a dream with a meaning of its own. A Hebrew youth was there with us, a servant of the
chief steward; and when we told him our dreams, he interpreted them for
us, telling each of the meaning of his dream. And as he interpreted for us, so it came to pass: I was
restored to my post, and the other was impaled.”
Thereupon Pharaoh sent for Joseph, and
he was rushed from the dungeon. He had his hair cut and changed his
clothes, and he appeared before Pharaoh. And Pharaoh said to Joseph, “I have had a dream, but no
one can interpret it. Now I have heard it said of you that for you to
hear a dream is to tell its meaning.” Joseph answered Pharaoh, saying, “Not I! God will see to
Pharaoh’s welfare.”
Then Pharaoh said to Joseph, “In
my dream, I was standing on the bank of the Nile, when out of the Nile came up seven sturdy and well-formed cows
and grazed in the reed grass. Presently
there followed them seven other cows, scrawny, ill-formed, and emaciated—never had I seen their likes for ugliness in all the land of
Egypt! And the seven lean and ugly cows
ate up the first seven cows, the sturdy ones; but when they had consumed them, one could not tell that they
had consumed them, for they looked just as bad as before. And I awoke.
In my other dream, I saw seven ears of
grain, full and healthy, growing on a single stalk; but right behind them sprouted seven ears,
shriveled, thin, and scorched by the east wind. And the thin ears swallowed the seven healthy ears. I have told
my magicians, but none has an explanation for me.”
And Joseph said to Pharaoh,
“Pharaoh’s dreams are one and the same: God has told Pharaoh
what He is about to do. The seven healthy
cows are seven years, and the seven healthy ears are seven years; it is
the same dream. The seven lean and ugly
cows that followed are seven years, as are also the seven empty ears
scorched by the east wind; they are seven years of famine. It is just as I have told Pharaoh: God has
revealed to Pharaoh what He is about to do. Immediately ahead are seven years of great abundance in all the
land of Egypt. After them will come seven
years of famine, and all the abundance in the land of Egypt will be
forgotten. As the land is ravaged by famine, no trace of the abundance will be left in the land because of
the famine thereafter, for it will be very severe. As for Pharaoh having had the same dream twice, it
means that the matter has been determined by God, and that God will soon
carry it out.
“Accordingly, let Pharaoh find a
man of discernment and wisdom, and set him over the land of Egypt.
And let Pharaoh take steps to appoint
overseers over the land, and organizeOthers
“take a fifth part of”; meaning of Heb. uncertain.
the land of Egypt in the seven years of plenty. Let all the food of these good years that are coming be
gathered, and let the grain be collected under Pharaoh’s authority
as food to be stored in the cities. Let
that food be a reserve for the land for the seven years of famine which
will come upon the land of Egypt, so that the land may not perish in the
famine.”
The plan pleased Pharaoh and all his
courtiers. And Pharaoh said to his
courtiers, “Could we find another like him, a man in whom is the
spirit of God?” So Pharaoh said to
Joseph, “Since God has made all this known to you, there is none so
discerning and wise as you. You shall be
in charge of my court, and by your command shall all my people be
directed;Others “order
themselves” or “pay homage”; meaning of Heb. yishshaq
uncertain. only with respect to the throne shall I be superior
to you.” Pharaoh further said to
Joseph, “See, I put you in charge of all the land of Egypt.”
And removing his signet ring from his
hand, Pharaoh put it on Joseph’s hand; and he had him dressed in
robes of fine linen, and put a gold chain about his neck. He had him ride in the chariot of his
second-in-command, and they cried before him, “Abrek!”Others “Bow the knee,” as though
from Heb. barakh “to kneel”; perhaps from an Egyptian word
of unknown meaning. Thus he placed him over all the land of
Egypt.
Pharaoh said to Joseph, “I am
Pharaoh; yet without you, no one shall lift up hand or foot in all the
land of Egypt.” Pharaoh then gave
Joseph the name Zaphenath-paneah;Egyptian
for “God speaks; he lives,” or “creator of
life.” and he gave him for a wife Asenath daughter of
Poti-phera, priest of On. Thus Joseph emerged in charge of the land of
Egypt.—Joseph was thirty years old
when he entered the service of Pharaoh king of Egypt.—Leaving
Pharaoh’s presence, Joseph traveled through all the land of
Egypt.
During the seven years of plenty, the
land produced in abundance. And he
gathered all the
grain of Lit. “the
seven years that were in the land of Egypt.”the seven years that the land of Egypt was
enjoying, and
stored the grain in the cities; he put in each city the grain of the
fields around it. So Joseph collected
produce in very large quantity, like the sands of the sea, until he
ceased to measure it, for it could not be measured.
Before the years of famine came, Joseph
became the father of two sons, whom Asenath daughter of Poti-phera,
priest of On, bore to him. Joseph named
the first-born Manasseh, meaning, “God has made me forgetHeb. nashshani, connected with
“Manasseh” (Menashsheh). completely my hardship and
my parental home.” And the second
he named Ephraim, meaning, “God has made me fertileHeb. hiphrani, connected with
“Ephraim.” in the land of my affliction.”
The seven years of abundance that the
land of Egypt enjoyed came to an end, and
the seven years of famine set in, just as Joseph had foretold. There was
famine in all lands, but throughout the land of Egypt there was bread.
And when all the land of Egypt felt the
hunger, the people cried out to Pharaoh for bread; and Pharaoh said to
all the Egyptians, “Go to Joseph; whatever he tells you, you
shall do.”—Accordingly, when
the famine became severe in the land of Egypt, Joseph laid open all that
was within, and rationed out grain to the Egyptians. The famine, however,
spread over the whole world. So all the
world came to Joseph in Egypt to procure rations, for the famine had
become severe throughout the world.
When Jacob saw that there were food
rations to be had in Egypt, heLit.
“Jacob.” said to his sons, “Why do you keep
looking at one another? Now I hear,”
he went on, “that there are rations to be had in Egypt. Go down and
procure rations for us there, that we may live and not die.”
So ten of Joseph’s brothers went
down to get grain rations in Egypt; for
Jacob did not send Joseph’s brother Benjamin with his brothers,
since he feared that he might meet with disaster. Thus the sons of Israel were among those who came to procure
rations, for the famine extended to the land of Canaan.
Now Joseph was the vizier of the land; it
was he who dispensed rations to all the people of the land. And
Joseph’s brothers came and bowed low to him, with their faces to
the ground. When Joseph saw his brothers,
he recognized them; but he acted like a stranger toward them and spoke
harshly to them. He asked them, “Where do you come from?” And
they said, “From the land of Canaan, to procure food.”
For though Joseph recognized his brothers,
they did not recognize him. Recalling the
dreams that he had dreamed about them, Joseph said to them, “You
are spies, you have come to see the land in its nakedness.”
But they said to him, “No, my lord!
Truly, your servants have come to procure food. We are all of us sons of the same man; we are honest men; your
servants have never been spies!” And he said to them, “No, you have come to see the land
in its nakedness!” And they
replied, “We your servants were twelve brothers, sons of a certain
man in the land of Canaan; the youngest, however, is now with our father,
and one is no more.” But Joseph
said to them, “It is just as I have told you: You are spies!
By this you shall be put to the test:
unless your youngest brother comes here, by Pharaoh, you shall not depart
from this place! Let one of you go and
bring your brother, while the rest of you remain confined, that your
words may be put to the test whether there is truth in you. Else, by
Pharaoh, you are nothing but spies!” And he confined them in the guardhouse for three days.
On the third day Joseph said to them,
“Do this and you shall live, for I am a God-fearing man. If you are honest men, let one of you brothers be
held in your place of detention, while the rest of you go and take home
rations for your starving households; but
you must bring me your youngest brother, that your words may be verified
and that you may not die.” And they did accordingly. They said to one another, “Alas, we are
being punished on account of our brother, because we looked on at his
anguish, yet paid no heed as he pleaded with us. That is why this
distress has come upon us.” Then
Reuben spoke up and said to them, “Did I not tell you, ‘Do no
wrong to the boy’? But you paid no heed. Now comes the reckoning
for his blood.” They did not know
that Joseph understood, for there was an interpreter between him and
them. He turned away from them and wept.
But he came back to them and spoke to them; and he took Simeon from among
them and had him bound before their eyes. Then Joseph gave orders to fill their bags with grain, return
each one’s money to his sack, and give them provisions for the
journey; and this was done for them. So
they loaded their asses with the rations and departed from there.
As one of them was opening his sack to
give feed to his ass at the night encampment, he saw his money right
there at the mouth of his bag. And he
said to his brothers, “My money has been returned! It is here in my
bag!” Their hearts sank; and, trembling, they turned to one
another, saying, “What is this that God has done to us?”
When they came to their father Jacob in
the land of Canaan, they told him all that had befallen them, saying,
“The man who is lord of the land
spoke harshly to us and accused us of spying on the land. We said to him, ‘We are honest men; we have
never been spies! There were twelve of us
brothers, sons by the same father; but one is no more, and the youngest
is now with our father in the land of Canaan.’ But the man who is lord of the land said to us,
‘By this I shall know that you are honest men: leave one of your
brothers with me, and take something for your starving households and be
off. And bring your youngest brother to
me, that I may know that you are not spies but honest men. I will then
restore your brother to you, and you shall be free to move about in the
land.’”
As they were emptying their sacks,
there, in each one’s sack, was his money-bag! When they and their
father saw their money-bags, they were dismayed. Their father Jacob said to them, “It is always me that
you bereave: Joseph is no more and Simeon is no more, and now you would
take away Benjamin. These things always happen to me!” Then Reuben said to his father, “You may
kill my two sons if I do not bring him back to you. Put him in my care,
and I will return him to you.” But
he said, “My son must not go down with you, for his brother is dead
and he alone is left. If he meets with disaster on the journey you are
taking, you will send my white head down to Sheol in grief.”
But the famine in the land was severe.
And when they had eaten up the
rations which they had brought from Egypt, their father said to them,
“Go again and procure some food for us.” But Judah
said to him, “The man warned us, Lit. “Do not see my face.”‘Do not let me see your faces unless your brother is with you.’ If you will let our brother go with us, we will go
down and procure food for you; but if you
will not let him go, we will not go down, for the man said to us,
a-‘Do not let me see your faces-a unless your brother is with
you.’” And Israel said,
“Why did you serve me so ill as to tell the man that you had
another brother?” They replied,
“But the man kept asking about us and our family, saying, ‘Is
your father still living? Have you another brother?’ And we
answered him accordingly. How were we to know that he would say,
‘Bring your brother here’?”
Then Judah said to his father Israel,
“Send the boy in my care, and let us be on our way, that we may
live and not die—you and we and our children. I myself will be surety for him; you may hold me
responsible: if I do not bring him back to you and set him before you, I
shall stand guilty before you forever. For we could have been there and back twice if we had not
dawdled.”
Then their father Israel said to them,
“If it must be so, do this: take some of the choice products of the
land in your baggage, and carry them down as a gift for the
man—some balm and some honey, gum, ladanum, pistachio nuts, and
almonds. And take with you double the
money, carrying back with you the money that was replaced in the mouths
of your bags; perhaps it was a mistake. Take your brother too; and go back at once to the man.
And may El Shaddai dispose the man to
mercy toward you, that he may release to you your other brother, as well
as Benjamin. As for me, if I am to be bereaved, I shall be
bereaved.”
So the men took that gift, and they took
with them double the money, as well as Benjamin. They made their way down
to Egypt, where they presented themselves to Joseph. When Joseph saw Benjamin with them, he said to his
house steward, “Take the men into the house; slaughter and prepare
an animal, for the men will dine with me at noon.” The man did as Joseph said, and he brought the men
into Joseph’s house. But the men
were frightened at being brought into Joseph’s house. “It
must be,” they thought, “because of the money replaced in our
bags the first time that we have been brought inside, as a pretext to
attack us and seize us as slaves, with our pack animals.”
So they went up to Joseph’s house
steward and spoke to him at the entrance of the house. “If you please, my lord,” they said,
“we came down once before to procure food. But when we arrived at the night encampment and opened our
bags, there was each one’s money in the mouth of his bag, our money
in full.Lit. “by its
weight.” So we have brought it back with us. And we have brought down with us other money to
procure food. We do not know who put the money in our bags.”
He replied, “All is well with you;
do not be afraid. Your God, the God of your father, must have put
treasure in your bags for you. I got your payment.” And he brought
out Simeon to them.
Then the man brought the men into
Joseph’s house; he gave them water to bathe their feet, and he
provided feed for their asses. They laid
out their gifts to await Joseph’s arrival at noon, for they had
heard that they were to dine there.
When Joseph came home, they presented to
him the gifts that they had brought with them into the house, bowing low
before him to the ground. He greeted
them, and he said, “How is your aged father of whom you spoke? Is
he still in good health?” They
replied, “It is well with your servant our father; he is still in
good health.” And they bowed and made obeisance.
Looking about, he saw his brother
Benjamin, his mother’s son, and asked, “Is this your youngest
brother of whom you spoke to me?” And he went on, “May God be
gracious to you, my boy.” With
that, Joseph hurried out, for he was overcome with feeling toward his
brother and was on the verge of tears; he went into a room and wept
there. Then he washed his face,
reappeared, and—now in control of himself—gave the order,
“Serve the meal.” They served
him by himself, and them by themselves, and the Egyptians who ate with
him by themselves; for the Egyptians could not dine with the Hebrews,
since that would be abhorrent to the Egyptians. As they were seated by his direction, from the oldest in the
order of his seniority to the youngest in the order of his youth, the men
looked at one another in astonishment. Portions were served them from his table; but Benjamin’s
portion was severalLit.
“five.” times that of anyone else. And they drank
their fill with him.
Then he instructed his house steward as
follows, “Fill the men’s bags with food, as much as they can
carry, and put each one’s money in the mouth of his bag. Put my silver goblet in the mouth of the bag of the
youngest one, together with his money for the rations.” And he did
as Joseph told him.
With the first light of morning, the men
were sent off with their pack animals. They had just left the city and had not gone far, when Joseph
said to his steward, “Up, go after the men! And when you overtake
them, say to them, ‘Why did you repay good with evil? It is the very one from which my master drinks and
which he uses for divination. It was a wicked thing for you to
do!’”
He overtook them and spoke those words to
them. And they said to him, “Why
does my lord say such things? Far be it from your servants to do anything
of the kind! Here we brought back to you
from the land of Canaan the money that we found in the mouths of our
bags. How then could we have stolen any silver or gold from your
master’s house! Whichever of your
servants it is found with shall die; the rest of us, moreover, shall
become slaves to my lord.” He
replied, “Although what you are proposing is right, only the one
with whom it is found shall be my slave; but the rest of you shall go
free.”
So each one hastened to lower his bag to
the ground, and each one opened his bag. He searched, beginning with the oldest and ending with the
youngest; and the goblet turned up in
Benjamin’s bag. At this they rent
their clothes. Each reloaded his pack animal, and they returned to the
city.
When Judah and his brothers reentered
the house of Joseph, who was still there, they threw themselves on the
ground before him. Joseph said to them,
“What is this deed that you have done? Do you not know that a man
like me practices divination?” Judah replied, “What can we say to my lord? How can we
plead, how can we prove our innocence? God has uncovered the crime of
your servants. Here we are, then, slaves of my lord, the rest of us as
much as he in whose possession the goblet was found.” But he replied, “Far be it from me to act
thus! Only he in whose possession the goblet was found shall be my slave;
the rest of you go back in peace to your father.”
VA-YIGGASH
Then Judah went up to him and said,
“Please, my lord, let your servant appeal to my lord, and do not be
impatient with your servant, you who are the equal of Pharaoh. My lord asked his servants, ‘Have you a
father or another brother?’ We told
my lord, ‘We have an old father, and there is a child of his old
age, the youngest; his full brother is dead, so that he alone is left of
his mother, and his father dotes on him.’ Then you said to your servants, ‘Bring him down to me,
that I may set eyes on him.’ We
said to my lord, ‘The boy cannot leave his father; if he were to
leave him, his father would die.’ But you said to your servants, ‘Unless your youngest
brother comes down with you, do not let me see your faces.’
When we came back to your servant my
father, we reported my lord’s words to him.
“Later our father said, ‘Go
back and procure some food for us.’ We
answered, ‘We cannot go down; only if our youngest brother is with
us can we go down, for we may not Lit. “see the man’s face.”show our faces to the manunless our youngest brother
is with us.’ Your servant my father
said to us, ‘As you know, my wife bore me two sons. But one is gone from me, and I said: Alas, he was
torn by a beast! And I have not seen him since. If you take this one from me, too, and he meets with disaster,
you will send my white head down to Sheol in sorrow.’
“Now, if I come to your servant my
father and the boy is not with us—since his own life is so bound up
with his—when he sees that the boy
is not with us, he will die, and your servants will send the white head
of your servant our father down to Sheol in grief. Now your servant has pledged himself for the boy
to my father, saying, ‘If I do not bring him back to you, I shall
stand guilty before my father forever.’ Therefore, please let your servant remain as a slave to my lord
instead of the boy, and let the boy go back with his brothers. For how can I go back to my father unless the boy
is with me? Let me not be witness to the woe that would overtake my
father!”
Joseph could no longer control himself
before all his attendants, and he cried out, “Have everyone
withdraw from me!” So there was no one else about when Joseph made
himself known to his brothers. His sobs
were so loud that the Egyptians could hear, and so the news reached
Pharaoh’s palace.
Joseph said to his brothers, “I am
Joseph. Is my father still well?” But his brothers could not answer
him, so dumfounded were they on account of him.
Then Joseph said to his brothers,
“Come forward to me.” And when they came forward, he said,
“I am your brother Joseph, he whom you
sold into Egypt. Now, do not be
distressed or reproach yourselves because you sold me hither; it was to
save life that God sent me ahead of you. It is now two years that there has been famine in the land, and
there are still five years to come in which there shall be no yield from
tilling. God has sent me ahead of you to
ensure your survival on earth, and to save your lives in an extraordinary
deliverance. So, it was not you who sent
me here, but God; and He has made me a father to Pharaoh, lord of all his
household, and ruler over the whole land of Egypt.
“Now, hurry back to my father and
say to him: Thus says your son Joseph, ‘God has made me lord of all
Egypt; come down to me without delay. You
will dwell in the region of Goshen, where you will be near me—you
and your children and your grandchildren, your flocks and herds, and all
that is yours. There I will provide for
you—for there are yet five years of famine to come—that you
and your household and all that is yours may not suffer want.’
You can see for yourselves, and my
brother Benjamin for himself, that it is indeed I who am speaking to you.
And you must tell my father everything
about my high station in Egypt and all that you have seen; and bring my
father here with all speed.”
With that he embracedLit. “fell on.” his brother Benjamin
around the neck and wept, and Benjamin wept on his neck. He kissed all his brothers and wept upon them;
only then were his brothers able to talk to him.
The news reached Pharaoh’s palace:
“Joseph’s brothers have come.” Pharaoh and his
courtiers were pleased. And Pharaoh said
to Joseph, “Say to your brothers, ‘Do as follows: load up
your beasts and go at once to the land of Canaan. Take your father and your households and come to me; I will
give you the best of the land of Egypt and you shall live off the fat of
the land.’ And you are bidden [to
add], ‘Do as follows: take from the land of Egypt wagons for your
children and your wives, and bring your father here. And never mind your belongings, for the best of
all the land of Egypt shall be yours.’”
The sons of Israel did so; Joseph gave
them wagons as Pharaoh had commanded, and he supplied them with
provisions for the journey. To each of
them, moreover, he gave a change of clothing; but to Benjamin he gave
three hundred pieces of silver and severalLit. “five”; cf. 43.34. changes of clothing.
And to his father he sent the following:
ten he-asses laden with the best things of Egypt, and ten she-asses laden
with grain, bread, and provisions for his father on the journey.
As he sent his brothers off on their way,
he told them, “Do not be quarrelsome on the way.”
They went up from Egypt and came to
their father Jacob in the land of Canaan. And they told him, “Joseph is still alive; yes, he is
ruler over the whole land of Egypt.” His heart went numb, for he
did not believe them. But when they
recounted all that Joseph had said to them, and when he saw the wagons
that Joseph had sent to transport him, the spirit of their father Jacob
revived. “Enough!” said
Israel. “My son Joseph is still alive! I must go and see him before
I die.”
So Israel set out with all that was
his, and he came to Beer-sheba, where he offered sacrifices to the God of
his father Isaac. God called to Israel in
a vision by night: “Jacob! Jacob!” He answered,
“Here.” And He said, “I
am God, the God of your father. Fear not to go down to Egypt, for I will
make you there into
a great nation. I Myself will go down
with you to Egypt, and I Myself will also bring you back; and
Joseph’s hand shall close your eyes.”
So Jacob set out from Beer-sheba. The
sons of Israel put their father Jacob and their children and their wives
in the wagons that Pharaoh had sent to transport him; and they took along their livestock and the wealth
that they had amassed in the land of Canaan. Thus Jacob and all his
offspring with him came to Egypt: he
brought with him to Egypt his sons and grandsons, his daughters and
granddaughters—all his offspring.
These are the names of the Israelites,
Jacob and his descendants, who came to Egypt.
Jacob’s first-born Reuben; Reuben’s sons: Enoch,Or
“Hanoch.” Pallu, Hezron, and Carmi. Simeon’s sons: Jemuel, Jamin, Ohad, Jachin,
Zohar, and SaulOr
“Shaul.” the son of a Canaanite woman. Levi’s sons: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari.
Judah’s sons: Er, Onan, Shelah,
Perez, and Zerah—but Er and Onan had died in the land of Canaan;
and Perez’s sons were Hezron and Hamul. Issachar’s sons: Tola, Puvah, Iob, and Shimron.
Zebulun’s sons: Sered, Elon, and
Jahleel. Those were the sons whom Leah
bore to Jacob in Paddan-aram, in addition to his daughter Dinah. Persons
in all, male and female: 33.Including
Jacob.
Gad’s sons: Ziphion, Haggi, Shuni,
Ezbon, Eri, Arodi, and Areli. Asher’s sons: Imnah, Ishvah, Ishvi, and Beriah, and their
sister Serah. Beriah’s sons: Heber and Malchiel. These were the descendants of Zilpah, whom Laban
had given to his daughter Leah. These she bore to Jacob—16
persons.
The sons of Jacob’s wife Rachel
were Joseph and Benjamin. To Joseph were
born in the land of Egypt Manasseh and Ephraim, whom Asenath daughter of
Poti-phera priest of On bore to him. Benjamin’s sons: Bela, Becher, Ashbel, Gera, Naaman, Ehi,
Rosh, Muppim, Huppim, and Ard. These were
the descendants of Rachel who were born to Jacob—14 persons in
all.
Dan’s son:Heb. “sons.” Hushim. Naphtali’s sons: Jahzeel, Guni, Jezer, and
Shillem. These were the descendants of
Bilhah, whom Laban had given to his daughter Rachel. These she bore to
Jacob—7 persons in all.
All the persons belonging to Jacob who
came to EgyptNot including Joseph and
Joseph’s two sons. —his own issue, aside from the
wives of Jacob’s sons—all these persons numbered 66.
And Joseph’s sons who were born to
him in Egypt were two in number. Thus the total of Jacob’s
household who came to Egypt was seventy persons.Including Jacob and Joseph.
He had sent Judah ahead of him to
Joseph, to point the way before him to Goshen. So when they came to the
region of Goshen, Joseph orderedLit. “hitched.” his chariot
and went to Goshen to meet his father Israel; he presented himself to him
and, embracing him around the neck, he wept on his neck a good while.
Then Israel said to Joseph, “Now I
can die, having seen for myself that you are still alive.”
Then Joseph said to his brothers and to
his father’s household, “I will go up and tell the news to
Pharaoh, and say to him, ‘My brothers and my father’s
household, who were in the land of Canaan, have come to me. The men are shepherds; they have always been
breeders of livestock, and they have brought with them their flocks and
herds and all that is theirs.’ So
when Pharaoh summons you and asks, ‘What is your occupation?’
you shall answer, ‘Your servants
have been breeders of livestock from the start until now, both we and our
fathers’—so that you may stay in the region of Goshen. For
all shepherds are abhorrent to Egyptians.”
Then
Joseph came and reported to Pharaoh, saying, “My father and my
brothers, with their flocks and herds and all that is theirs, have come
from the land of Canaan and are now in the region of Goshen.”
And selecting a fewLit. “five.” of his brothers, he
presented them to Pharaoh. Pharaoh said to
his brothers, “What is your occupation?” They answered
Pharaoh, “We your servants are shepherds, as were also our fathers.
We have come,” they told Pharaoh,
“to sojourn in this land, for there is no pasture for your servants’ flocks, the famine being severe in the land of Canaan. Pray,
then, let your servants stay in the region of Goshen.” Then Pharaoh said to Joseph, “As regards your
father and your brothers who have come to you, the land of Egypt is open before you: settle your father and
your brothers in the best part of the land; let them stay in the region
of Goshen. And if you know any capable men among them, put them in charge
of my livestock.”
Joseph then brought his father Jacob and
presented him to Pharaoh; and Jacob greeted Pharaoh. Pharaoh asked Jacob, “How many are the years
of your life?” And Jacob answered
Pharaoh, “The years of my sojourn [on earth] are one hundred and
thirty. Few and hard have been the years of my life, nor do they come up
to the life spans of my fathers during their sojourns.” Then Jacob bade Pharaoh farewell, and left
Pharaoh’s presence.
So Joseph settled his father and his
brothers, giving them holdings in the choicest part of the land of Egypt,
in the region of Rameses, as Pharaoh had commanded. Joseph sustained his father, and his brothers, and
all his father’s household with bread, down to the little ones.
Now there was no bread in all the world,
for the famine was very severe; both the land of Egypt and the land of
Canaan languished because of the famine. Joseph gathered in all the money that was to be found in the
land of Egypt and in the land of Canaan, as payment for the rations that
were being procured, and Joseph brought the money into Pharaoh’s
palace. And when the money gave out in
the land of Egypt and in the land of Canaan, all the Egyptians came to
Joseph and said, “Give us bread, lest we die before your very eyes;
for the money is gone!” And Joseph
said, “Bring your livestock, and I will sell to you against your
livestock, if the money is gone.” So they brought their livestock to Joseph, and Joseph gave them
bread in exchange for the horses, for the stocks of sheep and cattle, and
the asses; thus he provided them with bread that year in exchange for all
their livestock. And when that year was
ended, they came to him the next year and said to him, “We cannot
hide from my lord that, with all the money and animal stocks consigned to
my lord, nothing is left at my lord’s disposal save our persons and
our farmland. Let us not perish before
your eyes, both we and our land. Take us and our land in exchange for
bread, and we with our land will be serfs to Pharaoh; provide the seed,
that we may live and not die, and that the land may not become a
waste.”
So Joseph gained possession of all the
farm land of Egypt for Pharaoh, every Egyptian having sold his field
because the famine was too much for them; thus the land passed over to
Pharaoh. And he removed the population
town by town,Meaning of Heb.
uncertain. from one end of Egypt’s border to the other.
Only the land of the priests he did not
take over, for the priests had an allotment from Pharaoh, and they lived
off the allotment which Pharaoh had made to them; therefore they did not
sell their land.
Then Joseph said to the people,
“Whereas I have this day acquired you and your land for Pharaoh,
here is seed for you to sow the land. And
when harvest comes, you shall give one-fifth to Pharaoh, and four-fifths
shall be yours as seed for the fields and as food for you and those in
your households, and as nourishment for your children.” And they said, “You have saved our lives! We
are grateful to my lord, and we shall be serfs to Pharaoh.”
And Joseph made it into a land law in
Egypt, which is still valid, that a fifth should be Pharaoh’s; only
the land of the priests did not become Pharaoh’s.
Thus Israel settled in the country of
Egypt, in the region of Goshen; they acquired holdings in it, and were
fertile and increased greatly.
VA-YEH%I
Jacob lived seventeen years in the land
of Egypt, so that the span of Jacob’s life came to one hundred and
forty-seven years. And when the time
approached for
Israel to die, he summoned his son Joseph and said to him, “Do me
this favor, place your hand under my thigh as a pledge of your steadfast
loyalty: please do not bury me in Egypt. When I lie down with my fathers, take me up from
Egypt and bury me in their burial-place.” He replied, “I will
do as you have spoken.” And he
said, “Swear to me.” And he swore to him. Then Israel bowed
at the head of the bed.
Some time afterward, Joseph was told,
“Your father is ill.” So he took with him his two sons,
Manasseh and Ephraim. When Jacob was told,
“Your son Joseph has come to see you,” Israel summoned his
strength and sat up in bed.
And Jacob said to Joseph, “El
Shaddai appeared to me at Luz in the land of Canaan, and He blessed me,
and said to me, ‘I will make you
fertile and numerous, making of you a community of peoples; and I will
assign this land to your offspring to come for an everlasting
possession.’ Now, your two sons, who
were born to you in the land of Egypt before I came to you in Egypt,
shall be mine; Ephraim and Manasseh shall be mine no less than Reuben and
Simeon. But progeny born to you after them
shall be yours; they shall be recorded insteadLit. “under the name.” of their
brothers in their inheritance. I [do this
because], when I was returning from Paddan, Rachel died, to my sorrow,
while I was journeying in the land of Canaan, when still some distance
short of Ephrath; and I buried her there on the road to
Ephrath”—now Bethlehem.
Noticing Joseph’s sons, Israel
asked, “Who are these?” And
Joseph said to his father, “They are my sons, whom God has given me
here.” “Bring them up to me,” he said, “that I
may bless them.” Now Israel’s
eyes were dim with age; he could not see. So [Joseph] brought them close
to him, and he kissed them and embraced them. And Israel said to Joseph, “I never expected to see you
again, and here God has let me see your children as well.”
Joseph then removed them from his knees,
and bowed low with his face to the ground. Joseph took the two of them, Ephraim with his right
hand—to Israel’s left—and Manasseh with his left
hand—to Israel’s right—and brought them close to him.
But Israel stretched out his right hand
and laid it on Ephraim’s head, though he was the younger, and his
left hand on Manasseh’s head—thus crossing his
hands—although Manasseh was the first-born. And he blessed Joseph, saying,
“The God in whose ways my fathers Abraham and Isaac walked,
The God who has been my shepherd from my birth to this day—
The Angel who has redeemed me from all
harm—
Bless the lads.
In them may my name be recalled,
And the names of my fathers Abraham and Isaac,
And may they be teeming multitudes upon the earth.”
When Joseph saw that his father was
placing his right hand on Ephraim’s head, he thought it wrong; so
he took hold of his father’s hand to move it from Ephraim’s
head to Manasseh’s. “Not so,
Father,” Joseph said to his father, “for the other is the
first-born; place your right hand on his head.” But his father objected, saying, “I know, my
son, I know. He too shall become a people, and he too shall be great. Yet
his younger brother shall be greater than he, and his offspring shall be
plentiful enough for nations.” So
he blessed them that day, saying, “By you shall Israel invoke
blessings, saying: God make you like Ephraim and Manasseh.” Thus he
put Ephraim before Manasseh.
Then Israel said to Joseph, “I am
about to die; but God will be with you and bring you back to the land of
your fathers. And now, I assign to you
one portionMeaning of Heb. shekhem
uncertain; others “mountain slope.” more than to
your brothers, which I wrested from the Amorites with my sword and
bow.”
And Jacob called his sons and said,
“Come together that I may tell you what is to befall you in days to
come.
Assemble and hearken, O sons of
Jacob;
Hearken to Israel your father:
Reuben, you are my first-born,
My might and first fruit of my vigor,
Exceeding in rank
And exceeding in honor.
Unstable as water, you shall excel no
longer;
For when you mounted your father’s bed,
You brought disgrace—my couch he mounted!
Simeon and Levi are a pair;
Their weapons are tools of lawlessness.
Let not my person be included in their
council,
Let not my being be counted in their assembly.
For when angry they slay men,
And when pleased they maim oxen.
Cursed be their anger so fierce,
And their wrath so relentless.
I will divide them in Jacob,
Scatter them in Israel.
You, O Judah, your brothers shall
praise;
Your hand shall be on the nape of your foes;
Your father’s sons shall bow low to you.
Judah is a lion’s whelp;
On prey, my son, have you grown.
He crouches, lies down like a lion,
Like Heb.
labi, another word for “lion.”the king of beasts—who dare rouse him?
The scepter shall not depart from
Judah,
Nor the ruler’s staff from between his feet;
So that tribute shall come to himShiloh,
understood as shai loh “tribute to him,”
following Midrash; cf. Isa. 18.7. Meaning of Heb. uncertain; lit.
“Until he comes to Shiloh.”
And the homage of peoples be his.
He tethers his ass to a vine,
His ass’s foal to a choice vine;
He washes his garment in wine,
His robe in blood of grapes.
Or “His eyes are dark from wine,His eyes are darker than wine; His teeth are whiter than
milk.
Zebulun shall dwell by the seashore;
He shall be a haven for ships,
And his flank shall rest on Sidon.
Issachar is a strong-boned ass,
Crouching among the sheepfolds.
When he saw how good was security,
And how pleasant was the country,
He bent his shoulder to the burden,
And became a toiling serf.
Dan shall govern his people,
As one of the tribes of Israel.
Dan shall be a serpent by the road,
A viper by the path,
That bites the horse’s heels
So that his rider is thrown backward.
I wait for Your deliverance, O LORD!
Gad shall be raided by raiders,
But he shall raid at their heels.
Asher’s bread shall be rich,
And he shall yield royal dainties.
Naphtali is a hind let loose,
Which yields lovely fawns.
Others “Joseph is a fruitful bough,Joseph is a wild ass, A wild ass by a spring
—Wild colts on a hillside.
Archers bitterly assailed him;
They shot at him and harried him.
Yet his bow stayed taut,
And his armsHeb. “the arms of his
hands.” were made firm
By the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob—
There, the Shepherd, the Rock of Israel—
The God of your father who helps
you,
And Shaddai who blesses you
With blessings of heaven above,
Blessings of the deep that couches below,
Blessings of the breast and womb.
Meaning of Heb. uncertain.The
blessings of your father Surpass the blessings of my ancestors,
To the utmost bounds of the eternal hills.
May they rest on the head of Joseph,
On the brow of the elect of his brothers.
Benjamin is a ravenous wolf;
In the morning he consumes the foe,Meaning
of Heb. uncertain; others “booty.”
And in the evening he divides the spoil.”
All these were the tribes of Israel,
twelve in number, and this is what their father said to them as he bade
them farewell, addressing to each a parting word appropriate to him.
Then he instructed them, saying to them,
“I am about to be gathered to my kin. Bury me with my fathers in
the cave which is in the field of Ephron the Hittite, the cave which is in the field of Machpelah,
facing Mamre, in the land of Canaan, the field that Abraham bought from
Ephron the Hittite for a burial site—there Abraham and his wife Sarah were buried; there Isaac and
his wife Rebekah were buried; and there I buried Leah—the field and the cave in it, bought from the
Hittites.” When Jacob finished his
instructions to his sons, he drew his feet into the bed and, breathing
his last, he was gathered to his people.
Joseph flung himself upon his
father’s face and wept over him and kissed him. Then Joseph ordered the physicians in his service
to embalm his father, and the physicians embalmed Israel. It required forty days, for such is the full period
of embalming. The Egyptians bewailed him seventy days; and when the wailing period was over, Joseph spoke
to Pharaoh’s court, saying, “Do me this favor, and lay this
appeal before Pharaoh: ‘My father
made me swear, saying, “I am about to die. Be sure to bury me in
the grave which I made ready for myself in the land of Canaan.”
Now, therefore, let me go up and bury my father; then I shall
return.’” And Pharaoh said,
“Go up and bury your father, as he made you promise on
oath.”
So Joseph went up to bury his father; and
with him went up all the officials of Pharaoh, the senior members of his
court, and all of Egypt’s dignitaries, together with all of Joseph’s household, his brothers, and
his father’s household; only their children, their flocks, and
their herds were left in the region of Goshen. Chariots, too, and horsemen went up with him; it was a very
large troop.
When they came to GorenOr “the threshing floor of.” ha-Atad,
which is beyond the Jordan, they held there a very great and solemn
lamentation; and he observed a mourning period of seven days for his
father. And when the Canaanite
inhabitants of the land saw the mourning at Goren ha-Atad, they said,
“This is a solemn mourning on the part of the Egyptians.”
That is why it was named Abel-mizraim,Interpreted as “the mourning of the Egyptians.”
which is beyond the Jordan. Thus his sons
did for him as he had instructed them. His sons carried him to the land of Canaan, and buried him in
the cave of the field of Machpelah, the field near Mamre, which Abraham
had bought for a burial site from Ephron the Hittite. After burying his father, Joseph returned to
Egypt, he and his brothers and all who had gone up with him to bury his
father.
When Joseph’s brothers saw that
their father was dead, they said, “What if Joseph still bears a
grudge against us and pays us back for all the wrong that we did
him!” So they sent this message to
Joseph, “Before his death your father left this instruction:
So shall you say to Joseph,
‘Forgive, I urge you, the offense and guilt of your brothers who
treated you so harshly.’ Therefore, please forgive the offense of
the servants of the God of your father.” And Joseph was in tears as
they spoke to him.
His brothers went to him themselves,
flung themselves before him, and said, “We are prepared to be your
slaves.” But Joseph said to them,
“Have no fear! Am I a substitute for God? Besides, although you intended me harm, God intended it for
good, so as to bring about the present result—the survival of many
people. And so, fear not. I will sustain
you and your children.” Thus he reassured them, speaking kindly to
them.
So Joseph and his father’s
household remained in Egypt. Joseph lived one hundred and ten years.
Joseph lived to see children of the third
generation of Ephraim; the children of Machir son of Manasseh were
likewise born upon Joseph’s knees. At length, Joseph said to his brothers, “I am about to
die. God will surely take notice of you and bring you up from this land
to the land that He promised on oath to Abraham, to Isaac, and to
Jacob.” So Joseph made the sons of
Israel swear, saying, “When God has taken notice of you, you shall
carry up my bones from here.”
Joseph died at the age of one hundred
and ten years; and he was embalmed and placed in a coffin in Egypt.