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  Discovery Box

Genesis 6:1--15:21

Context
God’s Grief over Humankind’s Wickedness

6:1 When humankind 1  began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born 2  to them, 3  6:2 the sons of God 4  saw that the daughters of humankind were beautiful. Thus they took wives for themselves from any they chose. 6:3 So the Lord said, “My spirit will not remain in 5  humankind indefinitely, 6  since 7  they 8  are mortal. 9  They 10  will remain for 120 more years.” 11 

6:4 The Nephilim 12  were on the earth in those days (and also after this) 13  when the sons of God were having sexual relations with 14  the daughters of humankind, who gave birth to their children. 15  They were the mighty heroes 16  of old, the famous men. 17 

6:5 But the Lord saw 18  that the wickedness of humankind had become great on the earth. Every inclination 19  of the thoughts 20  of their minds 21  was only evil 22  all the time. 23  6:6 The Lord regretted 24  that he had made humankind on the earth, and he was highly offended. 25  6:7 So the Lord said, “I will wipe humankind, whom I have created, from the face of the earth – everything from humankind to animals, 26  including creatures that move on the ground and birds of the air, for I regret that I have made them.”

6:8 But 27  Noah found favor 28  in the sight of 29  the Lord.

The Judgment of the Flood

6:9 This is the account of Noah. 30 

Noah was a godly man; he was blameless 31 

among his contemporaries. 32  He 33  walked with 34  God. 6:10 Noah had 35  three sons: Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

6:11 The earth was ruined 36  in the sight of 37  God; the earth was filled with violence. 38  6:12 God saw the earth, and indeed 39  it was ruined, 40  for all living creatures 41  on the earth were sinful. 42  6:13 So God said 43  to Noah, “I have decided that all living creatures must die, 44  for the earth is filled with violence because of them. Now I am about to destroy 45  them and the earth. 6:14 Make 46  for yourself an ark of cypress 47  wood. Make rooms in the ark, and cover 48  it with pitch inside and out. 6:15 This is how you should make it: The ark is to be 450 feet long, 75 feet wide, and 45 feet high. 49  6:16 Make a roof for the ark and finish it, leaving 18 inches 50  from the top. 51  Put a door in the side of the ark, and make lower, middle, and upper decks. 6:17 I am about to bring 52  floodwaters 53  on the earth to destroy 54  from under the sky all the living creatures that have the breath of life in them. 55  Everything that is on the earth will die, 6:18 but I will confirm 56  my covenant with you. You will enter 57  the ark – you, your sons, your wife, and your sons’ wives with you. 6:19 You must bring into the ark two of every kind of living creature from all flesh, 58  male and female, to keep them alive 59  with you. 6:20 Of the birds after their kinds, and of the cattle after their kinds, and of every creeping thing of the ground after its kind, two of every kind will come to you so you can keep them alive. 60  6:21 And you must take 61  for yourself every kind of food 62  that is eaten, 63  and gather it together. 64  It will be food for you and for them.

6:22 And Noah did all 65  that God commanded him – he did indeed. 66 

7:1 The Lord said to Noah, “Come into the ark, you and all your household, for I consider you godly among this generation. 67  7:2 You must take with you seven 68  of every kind of clean animal, 69  the male and its mate, 70  two of every kind of unclean animal, the male and its mate, 7:3 and also seven 71  of every kind of bird in the sky, male and female, 72  to preserve their offspring 73  on the face of the earth. 7:4 For in seven days 74  I will cause it to rain 75  on the earth for forty days and forty nights, and I will wipe from the face of the ground every living thing that I have made.”

7:5 And Noah did all 76  that the Lord commanded him.

7:6 Noah 77  was 600 years old when the floodwaters engulfed 78  the earth. 7:7 Noah entered the ark along with his sons, his wife, and his sons’ wives because 79  of the floodwaters. 7:8 Pairs 80  of clean animals, of unclean animals, of birds, and of everything that creeps along the ground, 7:9 male and female, came into the ark to Noah, 81  just as God had commanded him. 82  7:10 And after seven days the floodwaters engulfed the earth. 83 

7:11 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 84  burst open and the floodgates of the heavens 85  were opened. 7:12 And the rain fell 86  on the earth forty days and forty nights.

7:13 On that very day Noah entered the ark, accompanied by his sons Shem, Ham, and Japheth, along with his wife and his sons’ three wives. 87  7:14 They entered, 88  along with every living creature after its kind, every animal after its kind, every creeping thing that creeps on the earth after its kind, and every bird after its kind, everything with wings. 89  7:15 Pairs 90  of all creatures 91  that have the breath of life came into the ark to Noah. 7:16 Those that entered were male and female, 92  just as God commanded him. Then the Lord shut him in.

7:17 The flood engulfed the earth for forty days. As the waters increased, they lifted the ark and raised it above the earth. 7:18 The waters completely overwhelmed 93  the earth, and the ark floated 94  on the surface of the waters. 7:19 The waters completely inundated 95  the earth so that even 96  all the high mountains under the entire sky were covered. 7:20 The waters rose more than twenty feet 97  above the mountains. 98  7:21 And all living things 99  that moved on the earth died, including the birds, domestic animals, wild animals, all the creatures that swarm over the earth, and all humankind. 7:22 Everything on dry land that had the breath of life 100  in its nostrils died. 7:23 So the Lord 101  destroyed 102  every living thing that was on the surface of the ground, including people, animals, creatures that creep along the ground, and birds of the sky. 103  They were wiped off the earth. Only Noah and those who were with him in the ark survived. 104  7:24 The waters prevailed over 105  the earth for 150 days.

8:1 But God remembered 106  Noah and all the wild animals and domestic animals that were with him in the ark. God caused a wind to blow over 107  the earth and the waters receded. 8:2 The fountains of the deep and the floodgates of heaven were closed, 108  and the rain stopped falling from the sky. 8:3 The waters kept receding steadily 109  from the earth, so that they 110  had gone down 111  by the end of the 150 days. 8:4 On the seventeenth day of the seventh month, the ark came to rest on one of the mountains of Ararat. 112  8:5 The waters kept on receding 113  until the tenth month. On the first day of the tenth month, the tops of the mountains became visible. 114 

8:6 At the end of forty days, 115  Noah opened the window he had made in the ark 116  8:7 and sent out a raven; it kept flying 117  back and forth until the waters had dried up on the earth.

8:8 Then Noah 118  sent out a dove 119  to see if the waters had receded 120  from the surface of the ground. 8:9 The dove could not find a resting place for its feet because water still covered 121  the surface of the entire earth, and so it returned to Noah 122  in the ark. He stretched out his hand, took the dove, 123  and brought it back into the ark. 124  8:10 He waited seven more days and then sent out the dove again from the ark. 8:11 When 125  the dove returned to him in the evening, there was 126  a freshly plucked olive leaf in its beak! Noah knew that the waters had receded from the earth. 8:12 He waited another seven days and sent the dove out again, 127  but it did not return to him this time. 128 

8:13 In Noah’s six hundred and first year, 129  in the first day of the first month, the waters had dried up from the earth, and Noah removed the covering from the ark and saw that 130  the surface of the ground was dry. 8:14 And by the twenty-seventh day of the second month the earth 131  was dry.

8:15 Then God spoke to Noah and said, 8:16 “Come out of the ark, you, your wife, your sons, and your sons’ wives with you. 8:17 Bring out with you all the living creatures that are with you. Bring out 132  every living thing, including the birds, animals, and every creeping thing that creeps on the earth. Let them increase 133  and be fruitful and multiply on the earth!” 134 

8:18 Noah went out along with his sons, his wife, and his sons’ wives. 8:19 Every living creature, every creeping thing, every bird, and everything that moves on the earth went out of the ark in their groups.

8:20 Noah built an altar to the Lord. He then took some of every kind of clean animal and clean bird and offered burnt offerings on the altar. 135  8:21 And the Lord smelled the soothing aroma 136  and said 137  to himself, 138  “I will never again curse 139  the ground because of humankind, even though 140  the inclination of their minds 141  is evil from childhood on. 142  I will never again destroy everything that lives, as I have just done.

8:22 “While the earth continues to exist, 143 

planting time 144  and harvest,

cold and heat,

summer and winter,

and day and night will not cease.”

God’s Covenant with Humankind through Noah

9:1 Then God blessed Noah and his sons and said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth. 9:2 Every living creature of the earth and every bird of the sky will be terrified of you. 145  Everything that creeps on the ground and all the fish of the sea are under your authority. 146  9:3 You may eat any moving thing that lives. 147  As I gave you 148  the green plants, I now give 149  you everything.

9:4 But 150  you must not eat meat 151  with its life (that is, 152  its blood) in it. 153  9:5 For your lifeblood 154  I will surely exact punishment, 155  from 156  every living creature I will exact punishment. From each person 157  I will exact punishment for the life of the individual 158  since the man was his relative. 159 

9:6 “Whoever sheds human blood, 160 

by other humans 161 

must his blood be shed;

for in God’s image 162 

God 163  has made humankind.”

9:7 But as for you, 164  be fruitful and multiply; increase abundantly on the earth and multiply on it.”

9:8 God said to Noah and his sons, 165  9:9 “Look! I now confirm 166  my covenant with you and your descendants after you 167  9:10 and with every living creature that is with you, including the birds, the domestic animals, and every living creature of the earth with you, all those that came out of the ark with you – every living creature of the earth. 168  9:11 I confirm 169  my covenant with you: Never again will all living things 170  be wiped out 171  by the waters of a flood; 172  never again will a flood destroy the earth.”

9:12 And God said, “This is the guarantee 173  of the covenant I am making 174  with you 175  and every living creature with you, a covenant 176  for all subsequent 177  generations: 9:13 I will place 178  my rainbow 179  in the clouds, and it will become 180  a guarantee of the covenant between me and the earth. 9:14 Whenever 181  I bring clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds, 9:15 then I will remember my covenant with you 182  and with all living creatures of all kinds. 183  Never again will the waters become a flood and destroy 184  all living things. 185  9:16 When the rainbow is in the clouds, I will notice it and remember 186  the perpetual covenant between God and all living creatures of all kinds that are on the earth.”

9:17 So God said to Noah, “This is the guarantee of the covenant that I am confirming between me and all living things 187  that are on the earth.”

The Curse of Canaan

9:18 The sons of Noah who came out of the ark were Shem, Ham, and Japheth. (Now Ham was the father of Canaan.) 188  9:19 These were the sons of Noah, and from them the whole earth was populated. 189 

9:20 Noah, a man of the soil, 190  began to plant a vineyard. 191  9:21 When he drank some of the wine, he got drunk and uncovered himself 192  inside his tent. 9:22 Ham, the father of Canaan, 193  saw his father’s nakedness 194  and told his two brothers who were outside. 9:23 Shem and Japheth took the garment 195  and placed it on their shoulders. Then they walked in backwards and covered up their father’s nakedness. Their faces were turned 196  the other way so they did not see their father’s nakedness.

9:24 When Noah awoke from his drunken stupor 197  he learned 198  what his youngest son had done 199  to him. 9:25 So he said,

“Cursed 200  be Canaan! 201 

The lowest of slaves 202 

he will be to his brothers.”

9:26 He also said,

“Worthy of praise is 203  the Lord, the God of Shem!

May Canaan be the slave of Shem! 204 

9:27 May God enlarge Japheth’s territory and numbers! 205 

May he live 206  in the tents of Shem

and may Canaan be his slave!”

9:28 After the flood Noah lived 350 years. 9:29 The entire lifetime of Noah was 950 years, and then he died.

The Table of Nations

10:1 This is the account 207  of Noah’s sons Shem, Ham, and Japheth. Sons 208  were born 209  to them after the flood.

10:2 The sons of Japheth 210  were Gomer, 211  Magog, 212  Madai, 213  Javan, 214  Tubal, 215  Meshech, 216  and Tiras. 217  10:3 The sons of Gomer were 218  Askenaz, 219  Riphath, 220  and Togarmah. 221  10:4 The sons of Javan were Elishah, 222  Tarshish, 223  the Kittim, 224  and the Dodanim. 225  10:5 From these the coastlands of the nations were separated into their lands, every one according to its language, according to their families, by their nations.

10:6 The sons of Ham were Cush, 226  Mizraim, 227  Put, 228  and Canaan. 229  10:7 The sons of Cush were Seba, 230  Havilah, 231  Sabtah, 232  Raamah, 233  and Sabteca. 234  The sons of Raamah were Sheba 235  and Dedan. 236 

10:8 Cush was the father of 237  Nimrod; he began to be a valiant warrior on the earth. 10:9 He was a mighty hunter 238  before the Lord. 239  (That is why it is said, “Like Nimrod, a mighty hunter before the Lord.”) 10:10 The primary regions 240  of his kingdom were Babel, 241  Erech, 242  Akkad, 243  and Calneh 244  in the land of Shinar. 245  10:11 From that land he went 246  to Assyria, 247  where he built Nineveh, 248  Rehoboth-Ir, 249  Calah, 250  10:12 and Resen, which is between Nineveh and the great city Calah. 251 

10:13 Mizraim 252  was the father of 253  the Ludites, 254  Anamites, 255  Lehabites, 256  Naphtuhites, 257  10:14 Pathrusites, 258  Casluhites 259  (from whom the Philistines came), 260  and Caphtorites. 261 

10:15 Canaan was the father of 262  Sidon his firstborn, 263  Heth, 264  10:16 the Jebusites, 265  Amorites, 266  Girgashites, 267  10:17 Hivites, 268  Arkites, 269  Sinites, 270  10:18 Arvadites, 271  Zemarites, 272  and Hamathites. 273  Eventually the families of the Canaanites were scattered 10:19 and the borders of Canaan extended 274  from Sidon 275  all the way to 276  Gerar as far as Gaza, and all the way to 277  Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, and Zeboiim, as far as Lasha. 10:20 These are the sons of Ham, according to their families, according to their languages, by their lands, and by their nations.

10:21 And sons were also born 278  to Shem (the older brother of Japheth), 279  the father of all the sons of Eber.

10:22 The sons of Shem were Elam, 280  Asshur, 281  Arphaxad, 282  Lud, 283  and Aram. 284  10:23 The sons of Aram were Uz, Hul, Gether, and Mash. 285  10:24 Arphaxad was the father of 286  Shelah, 287  and Shelah was the father of Eber. 288  10:25 Two sons were born to Eber: One was named Peleg because in his days the earth was divided, 289  and his brother’s name was Joktan. 10:26 Joktan was the father of 290  Almodad, 291  Sheleph, 292  Hazarmaveth, 293  Jerah, 294  10:27 Hadoram, Uzal, 295  Diklah, 296  10:28 Obal, 297  Abimael, 298  Sheba, 299  10:29 Ophir, 300  Havilah, 301  and Jobab. All these were sons of Joktan. 10:30 Their dwelling place was from Mesha all the way to 302  Sephar in the eastern hills. 10:31 These are the sons of Shem according to their families, according to their languages, by their lands, and according to their nations.

10:32 These are the families of the sons of Noah, according to their genealogies, by their nations, and from these the nations spread 303  over the earth after the flood.

The Dispersion of the Nations at Babel

11:1 The whole earth 304  had a common language and a common vocabulary. 305  11:2 When the people 306  moved eastward, 307  they found a plain in Shinar 308  and settled there. 11:3 Then they said to one another, 309  “Come, let’s make bricks and bake them thoroughly.” 310  (They had brick instead of stone and tar 311  instead of mortar.) 312  11:4 Then they said, “Come, let’s build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens 313  so that 314  we may make a name for ourselves. Otherwise 315  we will be scattered 316  across the face of the entire earth.”

11:5 But the Lord came down to see the city and the tower that the people 317  had started 318  building. 11:6 And the Lord said, “If as one people all sharing a common language 319  they have begun to do this, then 320  nothing they plan to do will be beyond them. 321  11:7 Come, let’s go down and confuse 322  their language so they won’t be able to understand each other.” 323 

11:8 So the Lord scattered them from there across the face of the entire earth, and they stopped building 324  the city. 11:9 That is why its name was called 325  Babel 326  – because there the Lord confused the language of the entire world, and from there the Lord scattered them across the face of the entire earth.

The Genealogy of Shem

11:10 This is the account of Shem.

Shem was 100 old when he became the father of Arphaxad, two years after the flood. 11:11 And after becoming the father of Arphaxad, Shem lived 500 years and had other 327  sons and daughters.

11:12 When Arphaxad had lived 35 years, he became the father of Shelah. 11:13 And after he became the father of Shelah, Arphaxad lived 403 years and had other 328  sons and daughters. 329 

11:14 When Shelah had lived 30 years, he became the father of Eber. 11:15 And after he became the father of Eber, Shelah lived 403 years and had other 330  sons and daughters.

11:16 When Eber had lived 34 years, he became the father of Peleg. 11:17 And after he became the father of Peleg, Eber lived 430 years and had other sons and daughters.

11:18 When Peleg had lived 30 years, he became the father of Reu. 11:19 And after he became the father of Reu, Peleg lived 209 years and had other sons and daughters.

11:20 When Reu had lived 32 years, he became the father of Serug. 11:21 And after he became the father of Serug, Reu lived 207 years and had other sons and daughters.

11:22 When Serug had lived 30 years, he became the father of Nahor. 11:23 And after he became the father of Nahor, Serug lived 200 years and had other sons and daughters.

11:24 When Nahor had lived 29 years, he became the father of Terah. 11:25 And after he became the father of Terah, Nahor lived 119 years and had other sons and daughters.

11:26 When Terah had lived 70 years, he became the father of Abram, Nahor, and Haran.

The Record of Terah

11:27 This is the account of Terah.

Terah became the father of Abram, Nahor, and Haran. And Haran became the father of Lot. 11:28 Haran died in the land of his birth, in Ur of the Chaldeans, 331  while his father Terah was still alive. 332  11:29 And Abram and Nahor took wives for themselves. The name of Abram’s wife was Sarai, 333  and the name of Nahor’s wife was Milcah; 334  she was the daughter of Haran, the father of both Milcah and Iscah. 11:30 But Sarai was barren; she had no children.

11:31 Terah took his son Abram, his grandson Lot (the son of Haran), and his daughter-in-law Sarai, his son Abram’s wife, and with them he set out from Ur of the Chaldeans to go to Canaan. When they came to Haran, they settled there. 11:32 The lifetime 335  of Terah was 205 years, and he 336  died in Haran.

The Obedience of Abram

12:1 Now the Lord said 337  to Abram, 338 

“Go out 339  from your country, your relatives, and your father’s household

to the land that I will show you. 340 

12:2 Then I will make you 341  into a great nation, and I will bless you, 342 

and I will make your name great, 343 

so that you will exemplify divine blessing. 344 

12:3 I will bless those who bless you, 345 

but the one who treats you lightly 346  I must curse,

and all the families of the earth will bless one another 347  by your name.”

12:4 So Abram left, 348  just as the Lord had told him to do, 349  and Lot went with him. (Now 350  Abram was 75 years old 351  when he departed from Haran.) 12:5 And Abram took his wife Sarai, his nephew 352  Lot, and all the possessions they had accumulated and the people they had acquired 353  in Haran, and they left for 354  the land of Canaan. They entered the land of Canaan.

12:6 Abram traveled through the land as far as the oak tree 355  of Moreh 356  at Shechem. 357  (At that time the Canaanites were in the land.) 358  12:7 The Lord appeared to Abram and said, “To your descendants 359  I will give this land.” So Abram 360  built an altar there to the Lord, who had appeared to him.

12:8 Then he moved from there to the hill country east of Bethel 361  and pitched his tent, with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. There he built an altar to the Lord and worshiped the Lord. 362  12:9 Abram continually journeyed by stages 363  down to the Negev. 364 

The Promised Blessing Jeopardized

12:10 There was a famine in the land, so Abram went down to Egypt 365  to stay for a while 366  because the famine was severe. 367  12:11 As he approached 368  Egypt, he said to his wife Sarai, “Look, 369  I know that you are a beautiful woman. 370  12:12 When the Egyptians see you they will say, ‘This is his wife.’ Then they will kill me but will keep you alive. 371  12:13 So tell them 372  you are my sister 373  so that it may go well 374  for me because of you and my life will be spared 375  on account of you.”

12:14 When Abram entered Egypt, the Egyptians saw that the woman was very beautiful. 12:15 When Pharaoh’s officials saw her, they praised her to Pharaoh. So Abram’s wife 376  was taken 377  into the household of Pharaoh, 378  12:16 and he did treat Abram well 379  on account of her. Abram received 380  sheep and cattle, male donkeys, male servants, female servants, female donkeys, and camels.

12:17 But the Lord struck Pharaoh and his household with severe diseases 381  because of Sarai, Abram’s wife. 12:18 So Pharaoh summoned Abram and said, “What is this 382  you have done to me? Why didn’t you tell me that she was your wife? 12:19 Why did you say, ‘She is my sister,’ so that I took her 383  to be my wife? 384  Here is your wife! 385  Take her and go!” 386  12:20 Pharaoh gave his men orders about Abram, 387  and so they expelled him, along with his wife and all his possessions.

Abram’s Solution to the Strife

13:1 So Abram went up from Egypt into the Negev. 388  He took his wife and all his possessions with him, as well as Lot. 389  13:2 (Now Abram was very wealthy 390  in livestock, silver, and gold.) 391 

13:3 And he journeyed from place to place 392  from the Negev as far as Bethel. 393  He returned 394  to the place where he had pitched his tent 395  at the beginning, between Bethel and Ai. 13:4 This was the place where he had first built the altar, 396  and there Abram worshiped the Lord. 397 

13:5 Now Lot, who was traveling 398  with Abram, also had 399  flocks, herds, and tents. 13:6 But the land could 400  not support them while they were living side by side. 401  Because their possessions were so great, they were not able to live 402  alongside one another. 13:7 So there were quarrels 403  between Abram’s herdsmen and Lot’s herdsmen. 404  (Now the Canaanites and the Perizzites were living in the land at that time.) 405 

13:8 Abram said to Lot, “Let there be no quarreling between me and you, and between my herdsmen and your herdsmen, for we are close relatives. 406  13:9 Is not the whole land before you? Separate yourself now from me. If you go 407  to the left, then I’ll go to the right, but if you go to the right, then I’ll go to the left.”

13:10 Lot looked up and saw 408  the whole region 409  of the Jordan. He noticed 410  that all of it was well-watered (before the Lord obliterated 411  Sodom and Gomorrah) 412  like the garden of the Lord, like the land of Egypt, 413  all the way to Zoar. 13:11 Lot chose for himself the whole region of the Jordan and traveled 414  toward the east.

So the relatives separated from each other. 415  13:12 Abram settled in the land of Canaan, but Lot settled among the cities of the Jordan plain 416  and pitched his tents next to Sodom. 13:13 (Now 417  the people 418  of Sodom were extremely wicked rebels against the Lord.) 419 

13:14 After Lot had departed, the Lord said to Abram, 420  “Look 421  from the place where you stand to the north, south, east, and west. 13:15 I will give all the land that you see to you and your descendants 422  forever. 13:16 And I will make your descendants like the dust of the earth, so that if anyone is able to count the dust of the earth, then your descendants also can be counted. 423  13:17 Get up and 424  walk throughout 425  the land, 426  for I will give it to you.”

13:18 So Abram moved his tents and went to live 427  by the oaks 428  of Mamre in Hebron, and he built an altar to the Lord there.

The Blessing of Victory for God’s People

14:1 At that time 429  Amraphel king of Shinar, 430  Arioch king of Ellasar, Kedorlaomer king of Elam, and Tidal king of nations 431  14:2 went to war 432  against Bera king of Sodom, Birsha king of Gomorrah, Shinab king of Admah, Shemeber king of Zeboiim, and the king of Bela (that is, Zoar). 433  14:3 These last five kings 434  joined forces 435  in the Valley of Siddim (that is, the Salt Sea). 436  14:4 For twelve years 437  they had served Kedorlaomer, but in the thirteenth year 438  they rebelled. 439  14:5 In the fourteenth year, Kedorlaomer and the kings who were his allies came and defeated 440  the Rephaites in Ashteroth Karnaim, the Zuzites in Ham, the Emites in Shaveh Kiriathaim, 14:6 and the Horites in their hill country of Seir, as far as El Paran, which is near the desert. 441  14:7 Then they attacked En Mishpat (that is, Kadesh) again, 442  and they conquered all the territory of the Amalekites, as well as the Amorites who were living in Hazazon Tamar.

14:8 Then the king of Sodom, the king of Gomorrah, the king of Admah, the king of Zeboiim, and the king of Bela (that is, Zoar) went out and prepared for battle. In the Valley of Siddim they met 443  14:9 Kedorlaomer king of Elam, Tidal king of nations, 444  Amraphel king of Shinar, and Arioch king of Ellasar. Four kings fought against 445  five. 14:10 Now the Valley of Siddim was full of tar pits. 446  When the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah fled, they fell into them, 447  but some survivors 448  fled to the hills. 449  14:11 The four victorious kings 450  took all the possessions and food of Sodom and Gomorrah and left. 14:12 They also took Abram’s nephew 451  Lot and his possessions when 452  they left, for Lot 453  was living in Sodom. 454 

14:13 A fugitive 455  came and told Abram the Hebrew. 456  Now Abram was living by the oaks 457  of Mamre the Amorite, the brother 458  of Eshcol and Aner. (All these were allied by treaty 459  with Abram.) 460  14:14 When Abram heard that his nephew 461  had been taken captive, he mobilized 462  his 318 trained men who had been born in his household, and he pursued the invaders 463  as far as Dan. 464  14:15 Then, during the night, 465  Abram 466  divided his forces 467  against them and defeated them. He chased them as far as Hobah, which is north 468  of Damascus. 14:16 He retrieved all the stolen property. 469  He also brought back his nephew Lot and his possessions, as well as the women and the rest of 470  the people.

14:17 After Abram 471  returned from defeating Kedorlaomer and the kings who were with him, the king of Sodom went out to meet Abram 472  in the Valley of Shaveh (known as the King’s Valley). 473  14:18 Melchizedek king of Salem 474  brought out bread and wine. (Now he was the priest of the Most High God.) 475  14:19 He blessed Abram, saying,

“Blessed be Abram by 476  the Most High God,

Creator 477  of heaven and earth. 478 

14:20 Worthy of praise is 479  the Most High God,

who delivered 480  your enemies into your hand.”

Abram gave Melchizedek 481  a tenth of everything.

14:21 Then the king of Sodom said to Abram, “Give me the people and take the possessions for yourself.” 14:22 But Abram replied to the king of Sodom, “I raise my hand 482  to the Lord, the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth, and vow 483  14:23 that I will take nothing 484  belonging to you, not even a thread or the strap of a sandal. That way you can never say, ‘It is I 485  who made Abram rich.’ 14:24 I will take nothing 486  except compensation for what the young men have eaten. 487  As for the share of the men who went with me – Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre – let them take their share.”

The Cutting of the Covenant

15:1 After these things the word of the Lord came to Abram in a vision: “Fear not, Abram! I am your shield 488  and the one who will reward you in great abundance.” 489 

15:2 But Abram said, “O sovereign Lord, 490  what will you give me since 491  I continue to be 492  childless, and my heir 493  is 494  Eliezer of Damascus?” 495  15:3 Abram added, 496  “Since 497  you have not given me a descendant, then look, one born in my house will be my heir!” 498 

15:4 But look, 499  the word of the Lord came to him: “This man 500  will not be your heir, 501  but instead 502  a son 503  who comes from your own body will be 504  your heir.” 505  15:5 The Lord 506  took him outside and said, “Gaze into the sky and count the stars – if you are able to count them!” Then he said to him, “So will your descendants be.”

15:6 Abram believed 507  the Lord, and the Lord 508  considered his response of faith 509  as proof of genuine loyalty. 510 

15:7 The Lord said 511  to him, “I am the Lord 512  who brought you out from Ur of the Chaldeans 513  to give you this land to possess.” 15:8 But 514  Abram 515  said, “O sovereign Lord, 516  by what 517  can I know that I am to possess it?”

15:9 The Lord 518  said to him, “Take for me a heifer, a goat, and a ram, each three years old, along with a dove and a young pigeon.” 15:10 So Abram 519  took all these for him and then cut them in two 520  and placed each half opposite the other, 521  but he did not cut the birds in half. 15:11 When birds of prey came down on the carcasses, Abram drove them away.

15:12 When the sun went down, Abram fell sound asleep, 522  and great terror overwhelmed him. 523  15:13 Then the Lord said to Abram, “Know for certain 524  that your descendants will be strangers 525  in a foreign country. 526  They will be enslaved and oppressed 527  for four hundred years. 15:14 But I will execute judgment on the nation that they will serve. 528  Afterward they will come out with many possessions. 15:15 But as for you, 529  you will go to your ancestors 530  in peace and be buried at a good old age. 531  15:16 In the fourth generation 532  your descendants 533  will return here, for the sin of the Amorites has not yet reached its limit.” 534 

15:17 When the sun had gone down and it was dark, a smoking firepot with a flaming torch 535  passed between the animal parts. 536  15:18 That day the Lord made a covenant 537  with Abram: “To your descendants I give 538  this land, from the river of Egypt 539  to the great river, the Euphrates River – 15:19 the land 540  of the Kenites, Kenizzites, Kadmonites, 15:20 Hittites, Perizzites, Rephaites, 15:21 Amorites, Canaanites, Girgashites, and Jebusites.” 541 

Genesis 32:1--36:43

Context
Jacob Wrestles at Peniel

32:1 So Jacob went on his way and the angels of God 542  met him. 32:2 When Jacob saw them, he exclaimed, 543  “This is the camp of God!” So he named that place Mahanaim. 544 

32:3 Jacob sent messengers on ahead 545  to his brother Esau in the land of Seir, the region 546  of Edom. 32:4 He commanded them, “This is what you must say to my lord Esau: ‘This is what your servant 547  Jacob says: I have been staying with Laban until now. 32:5 I have oxen, donkeys, sheep, and male and female servants. I have sent 548  this message 549  to inform my lord, so that I may find favor in your sight.’”

32:6 The messengers returned to Jacob and said, “We went to your brother Esau. He is coming to meet you and has four hundred men with him.” 32:7 Jacob was very afraid and upset. So he divided the people who were with him into two camps, as well as the flocks, herds, and camels. 32:8 “If Esau attacks one camp,” 550  he thought, 551  “then the other camp will be able to escape.” 552 

32:9 Then Jacob prayed, 553  “O God of my father Abraham, God of my father Isaac, O Lord, you said 554  to me, ‘Return to your land and to your relatives and I will make you prosper.’ 555  32:10 I am not worthy of all the faithful love 556  you have shown 557  your servant. With only my walking stick 558  I crossed the Jordan, 559  but now I have become two camps. 32:11 Rescue me, 560  I pray, from the hand 561  of my brother Esau, 562  for I am afraid he will come 563  and attack me, as well as the mothers with their children. 564  32:12 But you 565  said, ‘I will certainly make you prosper 566  and will make 567  your descendants like the sand on the seashore, too numerous to count.’” 568 

32:13 Jacob 569  stayed there that night. Then he sent 570  as a gift 571  to his brother Esau 32:14 two hundred female goats and twenty male goats, two hundred ewes and twenty rams, 32:15 thirty female camels with their young, forty cows and ten bulls, and twenty female donkeys and ten male donkeys. 32:16 He entrusted them to 572  his servants, who divided them into herds. 573  He told his servants, “Pass over before me, and keep some distance between one herd and the next.” 32:17 He instructed the servant leading the first herd, 574  “When my brother Esau meets you and asks, ‘To whom do you belong? 575  Where are you going? Whose herds are you driving?’ 576  32:18 then you must say, 577  ‘They belong 578  to your servant Jacob. 579  They have been sent as a gift to my lord Esau. 580  In fact Jacob himself is behind us.’” 581 

32:19 He also gave these instructions to the second and third servants, as well as all those who were following the herds, saying, “You must say the same thing to Esau when you meet him. 582  32:20 You must also say, ‘In fact your servant Jacob is behind us.’” 583  Jacob thought, 584  “I will first appease him 585  by sending a gift ahead of me. 586  After that I will meet him. 587  Perhaps he will accept me.” 588  32:21 So the gifts were sent on ahead of him 589  while he spent that night in the camp. 590 

32:22 During the night Jacob quickly took 591  his two wives, his two female servants, and his eleven sons 592  and crossed the ford of the Jabbok. 593  32:23 He took them and sent them across the stream along with all his possessions. 594  32:24 So Jacob was left alone. Then a man 595  wrestled 596  with him until daybreak. 597  32:25 When the man 598  saw that he could not defeat Jacob, 599  he struck 600  the socket of his hip so the socket of Jacob’s hip was dislocated while he wrestled with him.

32:26 Then the man 601  said, “Let me go, for the dawn is breaking.” 602  “I will not let you go,” Jacob replied, 603  “unless you bless me.” 604  32:27 The man asked him, 605  “What is your name?” 606  He answered, “Jacob.” 32:28 “No longer will your name be Jacob,” the man told him, 607  “but Israel, 608  because you have fought 609  with God and with men and have prevailed.”

32:29 Then Jacob asked, “Please tell me your name.” 610  “Why 611  do you ask my name?” the man replied. 612  Then he blessed 613  Jacob 614  there. 32:30 So Jacob named the place Peniel, 615  explaining, 616  “Certainly 617  I have seen God face to face 618  and have survived.” 619 

32:31 The sun rose 620  over him as he crossed over Penuel, 621  but 622  he was limping because of his hip. 32:32 That is why to this day 623  the Israelites do not eat the sinew which is attached to the socket of the hip, because he struck 624  the socket of Jacob’s hip near the attached sinew.

Jacob Meets Esau

33:1 Jacob looked up 625  and saw that Esau was coming 626  along with four hundred men. So he divided the children among Leah, Rachel, and the two female servants. 33:2 He put the servants and their children in front, with Leah and her children behind them, and Rachel and Joseph behind them. 627  33:3 But Jacob 628  himself went on ahead of them, and he bowed toward the ground seven times as he approached 629  his brother. 33:4 But Esau ran to meet him, embraced him, hugged his neck, and kissed him. Then they both wept. 33:5 When Esau 630  looked up 631  and saw the women and the children, he asked, “Who are these people with you?” Jacob 632  replied, “The children whom God has graciously given 633  your servant.” 33:6 The female servants came forward with their children and bowed down. 634  33:7 Then Leah came forward with her children and they bowed down. Finally Joseph and Rachel came forward and bowed down.

33:8 Esau 635  then asked, “What did you intend 636  by sending all these herds to meet me?” 637  Jacob 638  replied, “To find favor in your sight, my lord.” 33:9 But Esau said, “I have plenty, my brother. Keep what belongs to you.” 33:10 “No, please take them,” Jacob said. 639  “If I have found favor in your sight, accept 640  my gift from my hand. Now that I have seen your face and you have accepted me, 641  it is as if I have seen the face of God. 642  33:11 Please take my present 643  that was brought to you, for God has been generous 644  to me and I have all I need.” 645  When Jacob urged him, he took it. 646 

33:12 Then Esau 647  said, “Let’s be on our way! 648  I will go in front of you.” 33:13 But Jacob 649  said to him, “My lord knows that the children are young, 650  and that I have to look after the sheep and cattle that are nursing their young. 651  If they are driven too hard for even a single day, all the animals will die. 33:14 Let my lord go on ahead of his servant. I will travel more slowly, at the pace of the herds and the children, 652  until I come to my lord at Seir.”

33:15 So Esau said, “Let me leave some of my men with you.” 653  “Why do that?” Jacob replied. 654  “My lord has already been kind enough to me.” 655 

33:16 So that same day Esau made his way back 656  to Seir. 33:17 But 657  Jacob traveled to Succoth 658  where he built himself a house and made shelters for his livestock. That is why the place was called 659  Succoth. 660 

33:18 After he left Paddan Aram, Jacob came safely to the city of Shechem in the land of Canaan, and he camped near 661  the city. 33:19 Then he purchased the portion of the field where he had pitched his tent; he bought it 662  from the sons of Hamor, Shechem’s father, for a hundred pieces of money. 663  33:20 There he set up an altar and called it “The God of Israel is God.” 664 

Dinah and the Shechemites

34:1 Now Dinah, Leah’s daughter whom she bore to Jacob, went to meet 665  the young women 666  of the land. 34:2 When Shechem son of Hamor the Hivite, who ruled that area, saw her, he grabbed her, forced himself on her, 667  and sexually assaulted her. 668  34:3 Then he became very attached 669  to Dinah, Jacob’s daughter. He fell in love with the young woman and spoke romantically to her. 670  34:4 Shechem said to his father Hamor, “Acquire this young girl as my wife.” 671  34:5 When 672  Jacob heard that Shechem 673  had violated his daughter Dinah, his sons were with the livestock in the field. So Jacob remained silent 674  until they came in.

34:6 Then Shechem’s father Hamor went to speak with Jacob about Dinah. 675  34:7 Now Jacob’s sons had come in from the field when they heard the news. 676  They 677  were offended 678  and very angry because Shechem 679  had disgraced Israel 680  by sexually assaulting 681  Jacob’s daughter, a crime that should not be committed. 682 

34:8 But Hamor made this appeal to them: “My son Shechem is in love with your daughter. 683  Please give her to him as his wife. 34:9 Intermarry with us. 684  Let us marry your daughters, and take our daughters as wives for yourselves. 685  34:10 You may live 686  among us, and the land will be open to you. 687  Live in it, travel freely in it, 688  and acquire property in it.”

34:11 Then Shechem said to Dinah’s 689  father and brothers, “Let me find favor in your sight, and whatever you require of me 690  I’ll give. 691  34:12 You can make the bride price and the gift I must bring very expensive, 692  and I’ll give 693  whatever you ask 694  of me. Just give me the young woman as my wife!”

34:13 Jacob’s sons answered Shechem and his father Hamor deceitfully when they spoke because Shechem 695  had violated their sister Dinah. 34:14 They said to them, “We cannot give 696  our sister to a man who is not circumcised, for it would be a disgrace 697  to us. 34:15 We will give you our consent on this one condition: You must become 698  like us by circumcising 699  all your males. 34:16 Then we will give 700  you our daughters to marry, 701  and we will take your daughters as wives for ourselves, and we will live among you and become one people. 34:17 But if you do not agree to our terms 702  by being circumcised, then we will take 703  our sister 704  and depart.”

34:18 Their offer pleased Hamor and his son Shechem. 705  34:19 The young man did not delay in doing what they asked 706  because he wanted Jacob’s daughter Dinah 707  badly. (Now he was more important 708  than anyone in his father’s household.) 709  34:20 So Hamor and his son Shechem went to the gate 710  of their city and spoke to the men of their city, 34:21 “These men are at peace with us. So let them live in the land and travel freely in it, for the land is wide enough 711  for them. We will take their daughters for wives, and we will give them our daughters to marry. 712  34:22 Only on this one condition will these men consent to live with us and become one people: They demand 713  that every male among us be circumcised just as they are circumcised. 34:23 If we do so, 714  won’t their livestock, their property, and all their animals become ours? So let’s consent to their demand, so they will live among us.”

34:24 All the men who assembled at the city gate 715  agreed with 716  Hamor and his son Shechem. Every male who assembled at the city gate 717  was circumcised. 34:25 In three days, when they were still in pain, two of Jacob’s sons, Simeon and Levi, Dinah’s brothers, each took his sword 718  and went to the unsuspecting city 719  and slaughtered every male. 34:26 They killed Hamor and his son Shechem with the sword, took Dinah from Shechem’s house, and left. 34:27 Jacob’s sons killed them 720  and looted the city because their sister had been violated. 721  34:28 They took their flocks, herds, and donkeys, as well as everything in the city and in the surrounding fields. 722  34:29 They captured as plunder 723  all their wealth, all their little ones, and their wives, including everything in the houses.

34:30 Then Jacob said to Simeon and Levi, “You have brought ruin 724  on me by making me a foul odor 725  among the inhabitants of the land – among the Canaanites and the Perizzites. I 726  am few in number; they will join forces against me and attack me, and both I and my family will be destroyed!” 34:31 But Simeon and Levi replied, 727  “Should he treat our sister like a common prostitute?”

The Return to Bethel

35:1 Then God said to Jacob, “Go up at once 728  to Bethel 729  and live there. Make an altar there to God, who appeared to you when you fled from your brother Esau.” 730  35:2 So Jacob told his household and all who were with him, “Get rid of the foreign gods you have among you. 731  Purify yourselves and change your clothes. 732  35:3 Let us go up at once 733  to Bethel. Then I will make 734  an altar there to God, who responded to me in my time of distress 735  and has been with me wherever I went.” 736 

35:4 So they gave Jacob all the foreign gods that were in their possession 737  and the rings that were in their ears. 738  Jacob buried them 739  under the oak 740  near Shechem 35:5 and they started on their journey. 741  The surrounding cities were afraid of God, 742  and they did not pursue the sons of Jacob.

35:6 Jacob and all those who were with him arrived at Luz (that is, Bethel) 743  in the land of Canaan. 744  35:7 He built an altar there and named the place El Bethel 745  because there God had revealed himself 746  to him when he was fleeing from his brother. 35:8 (Deborah, 747  Rebekah’s nurse, died and was buried under the oak below Bethel; thus it was named 748  Oak of Weeping.) 749 

35:9 God appeared to Jacob again after he returned from Paddan Aram and blessed him. 35:10 God said to him, “Your name is Jacob, but your name will no longer be called Jacob; Israel will be your name.” So God named him Israel. 750  35:11 Then God said to him, “I am the sovereign God. 751  Be fruitful and multiply! A nation – even a company of nations – will descend from you; kings will be among your descendants! 752  35:12 The land I gave 753  to Abraham and Isaac I will give to you. To your descendants 754  I will also give this land.” 35:13 Then God went up from the place 755  where he spoke with him. 35:14 So Jacob set up a sacred stone pillar in the place where God spoke with him. 756  He poured out a drink offering on it, and then he poured oil on it. 757  35:15 Jacob named the place 758  where God spoke with him Bethel. 759 

35:16 They traveled on from Bethel, and when Ephrath was still some distance away, 760  Rachel went into labor 761  – and her labor was hard. 35:17 When her labor was at its hardest, 762  the midwife said to her, “Don’t be afraid, for you are having another son.” 763  35:18 With her dying breath, 764  she named him Ben-Oni. 765  But his father called him Benjamin instead. 766  35:19 So Rachel died and was buried on the way to Ephrath (that is, Bethlehem). 767  35:20 Jacob set up a marker 768  over her grave; it is 769  the Marker of Rachel’s Grave to this day.

35:21 Then Israel traveled on and pitched his tent beyond Migdal Eder. 770  35:22 While Israel was living in that land, Reuben had sexual relations with 771  Bilhah, his father’s concubine, and Israel heard about it.

Jacob had twelve sons:

35:23 The sons of Leah were Reuben, Jacob’s firstborn, as well as Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun.

35:24 The sons of Rachel were Joseph and Benjamin.

35:25 The sons of Bilhah, Rachel’s servant, were Dan and Naphtali.

35:26 The sons of Zilpah, Leah’s servant, were Gad and Asher.

These were the sons of Jacob who were born to him in Paddan Aram.

35:27 So Jacob came back to his father Isaac in Mamre, 772  to Kiriath Arba 773  (that is, Hebron), where Abraham and Isaac had stayed. 774  35:28 Isaac lived to be 180 years old. 775  35:29 Then Isaac breathed his last and joined his ancestors. 776  He died an old man who had lived a full life. 777  His sons Esau and Jacob buried him.

The Descendants of Esau

36:1 What follows is the account of Esau (also known as Edom). 778 

36:2 Esau took his wives from the Canaanites: 779  Adah the daughter of Elon the Hittite, and Oholibamah the daughter of Anah and granddaughter 780  of Zibeon the Hivite, 36:3 in addition to Basemath the daughter of Ishmael and sister of Nebaioth.

36:4 Adah bore Eliphaz to Esau, Basemath bore Reuel, 36:5 and Oholibamah bore Jeush, Jalam, and Korah. These were the sons of Esau who were born to him in the land of Canaan.

36:6 Esau took his wives, his sons, his daughters, all the people in his household, his livestock, his animals, and all his possessions which he had acquired in the land of Canaan and went to a land some distance away from 781  Jacob his brother 36:7 because they had too many possessions to be able to stay together and the land where they had settled 782  was not able to support them because of their livestock. 36:8 So Esau (also known as Edom) lived in the hill country of Seir. 783 

36:9 This is the account of Esau, the father 784  of the Edomites, in the hill country of Seir.

36:10 These were the names of Esau’s sons:

Eliphaz, the son of Esau’s wife Adah, and Reuel, the son of Esau’s wife Basemath.

36:11 The sons of Eliphaz were:

Teman, Omar, Zepho, Gatam, and Kenaz.

36:12 Timna, a concubine of Esau’s son Eliphaz, bore Amalek to Eliphaz. These were the sons 785  of Esau’s wife Adah.

36:13 These were the sons of Reuel: Nahath, Zerah, Shammah, and Mizzah. These were the sons 786  of Esau’s wife Basemath.

36:14 These were the sons of Esau’s wife Oholibamah the daughter of Anah and granddaughter 787  of Zibeon: She bore Jeush, Jalam, and Korah to Esau.

36:15 These were the chiefs 788  among the descendants 789  of Esau, the sons of Eliphaz, Esau’s firstborn: chief Teman, chief Omar, chief Zepho, chief Kenaz, 36:16 chief Korah, 790  chief Gatam, chief Amalek. These were the chiefs descended from Eliphaz in the land of Edom; these were the sons 791  of Adah.

36:17 These were the sons of Esau’s son Reuel: chief Nahath, chief Zerah, chief Shammah, chief Mizzah. These were the chiefs descended from Reuel in the land of Edom; these were the sons 792  of Esau’s wife Basemath.

36:18 These were the sons of Esau’s wife Oholibamah: chief Jeush, chief Jalam, chief Korah. These were the chiefs descended from Esau’s wife Oholibamah, the daughter of Anah.

36:19 These were the sons of Esau (also known as Edom), and these were their chiefs.

36:20 These were the sons of Seir the Horite, 793  who were living in the land: Lotan, Shobal, Zibeon, Anah, 36:21 Dishon, Ezer, and Dishan. These were the chiefs of the Horites, the descendants 794  of Seir in the land of Edom.

36:22 The sons of Lotan were Hori and Homam; 795  Lotan’s sister was Timna.

36:23 These were the sons of Shobal: Alvan, Manahath, Ebal, Shepho, 796  and Onam.

36:24 These were the sons of Zibeon: Aiah and Anah (who discovered the hot springs 797  in the wilderness as he pastured the donkeys of his father Zibeon).

36:25 These were the children 798  of Anah: Dishon and Oholibamah, the daughter of Anah.

36:26 These were the sons of Dishon: 799  Hemdan, Eshban, Ithran, and Keran.

36:27 These were the sons of Ezer: Bilhan, Zaavan, and Akan.

36:28 These were the sons of Dishan: Uz and Aran.

36:29 These were the chiefs of the Horites: chief Lotan, chief Shobal, chief Zibeon, chief Anah, 36:30 chief Dishon, chief Ezer, chief Dishan. These were the chiefs of the Horites, according to their chief lists in the land of Seir.

36:31 These were the kings who reigned in the land of Edom before any king ruled over the Israelites: 800 

36:32 Bela the son of Beor reigned in Edom; the name of his city was Dinhabah.

36:33 When Bela died, Jobab the son of Zerah from Bozrah reigned in his place.

36:34 When Jobab died, Husham from the land of the Temanites reigned in his place.

36:35 When Husham died, Hadad the son of Bedad, who defeated the Midianites in the land of Moab, reigned in his place; the name of his city was Avith.

36:36 When Hadad died, Samlah from Masrekah reigned in his place.

36:37 When Samlah died, Shaul from Rehoboth by the River 801  reigned in his place.

36:38 When Shaul died, Baal-Hanan the son of Achbor reigned in his place.

36:39 When Baal-Hanan the son of Achbor died, Hadad 802  reigned in his place; the name of his city was Pau. 803  His wife’s name was Mehetabel, the daughter of Matred, the daughter of Me-Zahab.

36:40 These were the names of the chiefs of Esau, according to their families, according to their places, by their names: chief Timna, chief Alvah, chief Jetheth, 36:41 chief Oholibamah, chief Elah, chief Pinon, 36:42 chief Kenaz, chief Teman, chief Mibzar, 36:43 chief Magdiel, chief Iram. These were the chiefs of Edom, according to their settlements 804  in the land they possessed. This was Esau, the father of the Edomites.

2 Chronicles 35:22

Context
35:22 But Josiah did not turn back from him; 805  he disguised himself for battle. He did not take seriously 806  the words of Necho which he had received from God; he went to fight him in the Plain of Megiddo. 807 
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[6:1]  1 tn The Hebrew text has the article prefixed to the noun. Here the article indicates the generic use of the word אָדָם (’adam): “humankind.”

[6:1]  2 tn This disjunctive clause (conjunction + subject + verb) is circumstantial to the initial temporal clause. It could be rendered, “with daughters being born to them.” For another example of such a disjunctive clause following the construction וַיְהִיכִּי (vayÿhiki, “and it came to pass when”), see 2 Sam 7:1.

[6:1]  3 tn The pronominal suffix is third masculine plural, indicating that the antecedent “humankind” is collective.

[6:2]  4 sn The Hebrew phrase translated “sons of God” (בְנֵי־הָאֱלֹהִים, bÿne-haelohim) occurs only here (Gen 6:2, 4) and in Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7. There are three major interpretations of the phrase here. (1) In the Book of Job the phrase clearly refers to angelic beings. In Gen 6 the “sons of God” are distinct from “humankind,” suggesting they were not human. This is consistent with the use of the phrase in Job. Since the passage speaks of these beings cohabiting with women, they must have taken physical form or possessed the bodies of men. An early Jewish tradition preserved in 1 En. 6-7 elaborates on this angelic revolt and even names the ringleaders. (2) Not all scholars accept the angelic interpretation of the “sons of God,” however. Some argue that the “sons of God” were members of Seth’s line, traced back to God through Adam in Gen 5, while the “daughters of humankind” were descendants of Cain. But, as noted above, the text distinguishes the “sons of God” from humankind (which would include the Sethites as well as the Cainites) and suggests that the “daughters of humankind” are human women in general, not just Cainites. (3) Others identify the “sons of God” as powerful tyrants, perhaps demon-possessed, who viewed themselves as divine and, following the example of Lamech (see Gen 4:19), practiced polygamy. But usage of the phrase “sons of God” in Job militates against this view. For literature on the subject see G. J. Wenham, Genesis (WBC), 1:135.

[6:3]  5 tn The verb form יָדוֹן (yadon) only occurs here. Some derive it from the verbal root דִּין (din, “to judge”) and translate “strive” or “contend with” (so NIV), but in this case one expects the form to be יָדִין (yadin). The Old Greek has “remain with,” a rendering which may find support from an Arabic cognate (see C. Westermann, Genesis, 1:375). If one interprets the verb in this way, then it is possible to understand רוּחַ (ruakh) as a reference to the divine life-giving spirit or breath, rather than the Lord’s personal Spirit. E. A. Speiser argues that the term is cognate with an Akkadian word meaning “protect” or “shield.” In this case, the Lord’s Spirit will not always protect humankind, for the race will suddenly be destroyed (E. A. Speiser, “YDWN, Gen. 6:3,” JBL 75 [1956]: 126-29).

[6:3]  6 tn Or “forever.”

[6:3]  7 tn The form בְּשַׁגַּם (bÿshagam) appears to be a compound of the preposition בְּ (beth, “in”), the relative שֶׁ (she, “who” or “which”), and the particle גַּם (gam, “also, even”). It apparently means “because even” (see BDB 980 s.v. שֶׁ).

[6:3]  8 tn Heb “he”; the plural pronoun has been used in the translation since “man” earlier in the verse has been understood as a collective (“humankind”).

[6:3]  9 tn Heb “flesh.”

[6:3]  10 tn See the note on “they” earlier in this verse.

[6:3]  11 tn Heb “his days will be 120 years.” Some interpret this to mean that the age expectancy of people from this point on would be 120, but neither the subsequent narrative nor reality favors this. It is more likely that this refers to the time remaining between this announcement of judgment and the coming of the flood.

[6:4]  12 tn The Hebrew word נְפִילִים (nÿfilim) is simply transliterated here, because the meaning of the term is uncertain. According to the text, the Nephilim became mighty warriors and gained great fame in the antediluvian world. The text may imply they were the offspring of the sexual union of the “sons of God” and the “daughters of humankind” (v. 2), but it stops short of saying this in a direct manner. The Nephilim are mentioned in the OT only here and in Num 13:33, where it is stated that they were giants (thus KJV, TEV, NLT “giants” here). The narrator observes that the Anakites of Canaan were descendants of the Nephilim. Certainly these later Anakite Nephilim could not be descendants of the antediluvian Nephilim (see also the following note on the word “this”).

[6:4]  13 tn This observation is parenthetical, explaining that there were Nephilim even after the flood. If all humankind, with the exception of Noah and his family, died in the flood, it is difficult to understand how the postdiluvian Nephilim could be related to the antediluvian Nephilim or how the Anakites of Canaan could be their descendants (see Num 13:33). It is likely that the term Nephilim refers generally to “giants” (see HALOT 709 s.v. נְפִילִים) without implying any ethnic connection between the antediluvian and postdiluvian varieties.

[6:4]  14 tn Heb “were entering to,” referring euphemistically to sexual intercourse here. The Hebrew imperfect verbal form draws attention to the ongoing nature of such sexual unions during the time before the flood.

[6:4]  15 tn Heb “and they gave birth to them.” The masculine plural suffix “them” refers to the “sons of God,” to whom the “daughters of humankind” bore children. After the Qal form of the verb יָלָד (yalad, “to give birth”) the preposition לְ (lÿ, “to”) introduces the father of the child(ren). See Gen 16:1, 15; 17:19, 21; 21:2-3, 9; 22:23; 24:24, 47; 25:2, etc.

[6:4]  16 tn The parenthetical/explanatory clause uses the word הַגִּבֹּרִים (haggibborim) to describe these Nephilim. The word means “warriors; mighty men; heroes.” The appositional statement further explains that they were “men of renown.” The text refers to superhuman beings who held the world in their power and who lived on in ancient lore outside the Bible. See E. A. Speiser, Genesis (AB), 45-46; C. Westermann, Genesis, 1:379-80; and Anne D. Kilmer, “The Mesopotamian Counterparts of the Biblical Nephilim,” Perspectives on Language and Text, 39-43.

[6:4]  17 tn Heb “men of name” (i.e., famous men).

[6:5]  18 sn The Hebrew verb translated “saw” (רָאָה, raah), used here of God’s evaluation of humankind’s evil deeds, contrasts with God’s evaluation of creative work in Gen 1, when he observed that everything was good.

[6:5]  19 tn The noun יֵצֶר (yetser) is related to the verb יָצָר (yatsar, “to form, to fashion [with a design]”). Here it refers to human plans or intentions (see Gen 8:21; 1 Chr 28:9; 29:18). People had taken their God-given capacities and used them to devise evil. The word יֵצֶר (yetser) became a significant theological term in Rabbinic literature for what might be called the sin nature – the evil inclination (see also R. E. Murphy, “Yeser in the Qumran Literature,” Bib 39 [1958]: 334-44).

[6:5]  20 tn The related verb הָשָׁב (hashav) means “to think, to devise, to reckon.” The noun (here) refers to thoughts or considerations.

[6:5]  21 tn Heb “his heart” (referring to collective “humankind”). The Hebrew term לֵב (lev, “heart”) frequently refers to the seat of one’s thoughts (see BDB 524 s.v. לֵב). In contemporary English this is typically referred to as the “mind.”

[6:5]  22 sn Every inclination of the thoughts of their minds was only evil. There is hardly a stronger statement of the wickedness of the human race than this. Here is the result of falling into the “knowledge of good and evil”: Evil becomes dominant, and the good is ruined by the evil.

[6:5]  23 tn Heb “all the day.”

[6:6]  24 tn Or “was grieved”; “was sorry.” In the Niphal stem the verb נָחָם (nakham) can carry one of four semantic meanings, depending on the context: (1) “to experience emotional pain or weakness,” “to feel regret,” often concerning a past action (see Exod 13:17; Judg 21:6, 15; 1 Sam 15:11, 35; Job 42:6; Jer 31:19). In several of these texts כִּי (ki, “because”) introduces the cause of the emotional sorrow. (2) Another meaning is “to be comforted” or “to comfort oneself” (sometimes by taking vengeance). See Gen 24:67; 38:12; 2 Sam 13:39; Ps 77:3; Isa 1:24; Jer 31:15; Ezek 14:22; 31:16; 32:31. (This second category represents a polarization of category one.) (3) The meaning “to relent from” or “to repudiate” a course of action which is already underway is also possible (see Judg 2:18; 2 Sam 24:16 = 1 Chr 21:15; Pss 90:13; 106:45; Jer 8:6; 20:16; 42:10). (4) Finally, “to retract” (a statement) or “to relent or change one’s mind concerning,” “to deviate from” (a stated course of action) is possible (see Exod 32:12, 14; 1 Sam 15:29; Ps 110:4; Isa 57:6; Jer 4:28; 15:6; 18:8, 10; 26:3, 13, 19; Ezek 24:14; Joel 2:13-14; Am 7:3, 6; Jonah 3:9-10; 4:2; Zech 8:14). See R. B. Chisholm, “Does God ‘Change His Mind’?” BSac 152 (1995): 388. The first category applies here because the context speaks of God’s grief and emotional pain (see the following statement in v. 6) as a result of a past action (his making humankind). For a thorough study of the word נָחָם, see H. Van Dyke Parunak, “A Semantic Survey of NHM,” Bib 56 (1975): 512-32.

[6:6]  25 tn Heb “and he was grieved to his heart.” The verb עָצָב (’atsav) can carry one of three semantic senses, depending on the context: (1) “to be injured” (Ps 56:5; Eccl 10:9; 1 Chr 4:10); (2) “to experience emotional pain”; “to be depressed emotionally”; “to be worried” (2 Sam 19:2; Isa 54:6; Neh 8:10-11); (3) “to be embarrassed”; “to be offended” (to the point of anger at another or oneself); “to be insulted” (Gen 34:7; 45:5; 1 Sam 20:3, 34; 1 Kgs 1:6; Isa 63:10; Ps 78:40). This third category develops from the second by metonymy. In certain contexts emotional pain leads to embarrassment and/or anger. In this last use the subject sometimes directs his anger against the source of grief (see especially Gen 34:7). The third category fits best in Gen 6:6 because humankind’s sin does not merely wound God emotionally. On the contrary, it prompts him to strike out in judgment against the source of his distress (see v. 7). The verb וַיִּתְעַצֵּב (vayyitatsev), a Hitpael from עָצָב, alludes to the judgment oracles in Gen 3:16-19. Because Adam and Eve sinned, their life would be filled with pain; but sin in the human race also brought pain to God. The wording of v. 6 is ironic when compared to Gen 5:29. Lamech anticipated relief (נָחָם, nakham) from their work (מַעֲשֶׂה, maaseh) and their painful toil (עִצְּבֹן, ’itsÿvon), but now we read that God was sorry (נָחָם, nakham) that he had made (עָשָׂה, ’asah) humankind for it brought him great pain (עָצָב, ’atsav).

[6:7]  26 tn The text simply has “from man to beast, to creatures, and to birds of the air.” The use of the prepositions עַדמִן (min...ad) stresses the extent of the judgment in creation.

[6:8]  27 tn The disjunctive clause (conjunction + subject + verb) is contrastive here: God condemns the human race, but he is pleased with Noah.

[6:8]  28 tn The Hebrew expression “find favor [in the eyes of]” is an idiom meaning “to be an object of another’s favorable disposition or action,” “to be a recipient of another’s favor, kindness, mercy.” The favor/kindness is often earned, coming in response to an action or condition (see Gen 32:5; 39:4; Deut 24:1; 1 Sam 25:8; Prov 3:4; Ruth 2:10). This is the case in Gen 6:8, where v. 9 gives the basis (Noah’s righteous character) for the divine favor.

[6:8]  29 tn Heb “in the eyes of,” an anthropomorphic expression for God’s opinion or decision. The Lord saw that the whole human race was corrupt, but he looked in favor on Noah.

[6:9]  30 sn There is a vast body of scholarly literature about the flood story. The following studies are particularly helpful: A. Heidel, The Gilgamesh Epic and the Old Testament Parallels; M. Kessler, “Rhetorical Criticism of Genesis 7,” Rhetorical Criticism: Essays in Honor of James Muilenburg (PTMS), 1-17; I. M. Kikawada and A. Quinn, Before Abraham Was; A. R. Millard, “A New Babylonian ‘Genesis Story’,” TynBul 18 (1967): 3-18; G. J. Wenham, “The Coherence of the Flood Narrative,” VT 28 (1978): 336-48.

[6:9]  31 tn The Hebrew term תָּמִים (tamim, “blameless”) is used of men in Gen 17:1 (associated with the idiom “walk before,” which means “maintain a proper relationship with,” see 24:40); Deut 18:13 (where it means “blameless” in the sense of not guilty of the idolatrous practices listed before this; see Josh 24:14); Pss 18:23, 26 (“blameless” in the sense of not having violated God’s commands); 37:18 (in contrast to the wicked); 101:2, 6 (in contrast to proud, deceitful slanderers; see 15:2); Prov 2:21; 11:5 (in contrast to the wicked); 28:10; Job 12:4.

[6:9]  32 tn Heb “Noah was a godly man, blameless in his generations.” The singular “generation” can refer to one’s contemporaries, i.e., those living at a particular point in time. The plural “generations” can refer to successive generations in the past or the future. Here, where it is qualified by “his” (i.e., Noah’s), it refers to Noah’s contemporaries, comprised of the preceding generation (his father’s generation), those of Noah’s generation, and the next generation (those the same age as his children). In other words, “his generations” means the generations contemporary with him. See BDB 190 s.v. דוֹר.

[6:9]  33 tn Heb “Noah.” The proper name has been replaced with the pronoun in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[6:9]  34 tn The construction translated “walked with” is used in Gen 5:22, 24 (see the note on this phrase in 5:22) and in 1 Sam 25:15, where it refers to David’s and Nabal’s men “rubbing shoulders” in the fields. Based on the use in 1 Sam 25:15, the expression seems to mean “live in close proximity to,” which may, by metonymy, mean “maintain cordial relations with.”

[6:10]  35 tn Heb “fathered.”

[6:11]  36 tn Apart from Gen 6:11-12, the Niphal form of this verb occurs in Exod 8:20 HT (8:24 ET), where it describes the effect of the swarms of flies on the land of Egypt; Jer 13:7 and 18:4, where it is used of a “ruined” belt and “marred” clay pot, respectively; and Ezek 20:44, where it describes Judah’s morally “corrupt” actions. The sense “morally corrupt” fits well in Gen 6:11 because of the parallelism (note “the earth was filled with violence”). In this case “earth” would stand by metonymy for its sinful inhabitants. However, the translation “ruined” works just as well, if not better. In this case humankind’s sin is viewed has having an adverse effect upon the earth. Note that vv. 12b-13 make a distinction between the earth and the living creatures who live on it.

[6:11]  37 tn Heb “before.”

[6:11]  38 tn The Hebrew word translated “violence” refers elsewhere to a broad range of crimes, including unjust treatment (Gen 16:5; Amos 3:10), injurious legal testimony (Deut 19:16), deadly assault (Gen 49:5), murder (Judg 9:24), and rape (Jer 13:22).

[6:12]  39 tn Or “God saw how corrupt the earth was.”

[6:12]  40 tn The repetition in the text (see v. 11) emphasizes the point.

[6:12]  41 tn Heb “flesh.” Since moral corruption is in view here, most modern western interpreters understand the referent to be humankind. However, the phrase “all flesh” is used consistently of humankind and the animals in Gen 6-9 (6:17, 19; 7:15-16, 21; 8:17; 9:11, 15-17), suggesting that the author intends to picture all living creatures, humankind and animals, as guilty of moral failure. This would explain why the animals, not just humankind, are victims of the ensuing divine judgment. The OT sometimes views animals as morally culpable (Gen 9:5; Exod 21:28-29; Jonah 3:7-8). The OT also teaches that a person’s sin can contaminate others (people and animals) in the sinful person’s sphere (see the story of Achan, especially Josh 7:10). So the animals could be viewed here as morally contaminated because of their association with sinful humankind.

[6:12]  42 tn Heb “had corrupted its way.” The third masculine singular pronominal suffix on “way” refers to the collective “all flesh.” The construction “corrupt one’s way” occurs only here (though Ezek 16:47 uses the Hiphil in an intransitive sense with the preposition בְּ [bet, “in”] followed by “ways”). The Hiphil of שָׁחָת (shakhat) means “to ruin, to destroy, to corrupt,” often as here in a moral/ethical sense. The Hebrew term דֶּרֶךְ (derekh, “way”) here refers to behavior or moral character, a sense that it frequently carries (see BDB 203 s.v. דֶּרֶךְ 6.a).

[6:13]  43 sn On the divine style utilized here, see R. Lapointe, “The Divine Monologue as a Channel of Revelation,” CBQ 32 (1970): 161-81.

[6:13]  44 tn Heb “the end of all flesh is coming [or “has come”] before me.” (The verb form is either a perfect or a participle.) The phrase “end of all flesh” occurs only here. The term “end” refers here to the end of “life,” as v. 3 and the following context (which describes how God destroys all flesh) make clear. The statement “the end has come” occurs in Ezek 7:2, 6, where it is used of divine judgment. The phrase “come before” occurs in Exod 28:30, 35; 34:34; Lev 15:14; Num 27:17; 1 Sam 18:13, 16; 2 Sam 19:8; 20:8; 1 Kgs 1:23, 28, 32; Ezek 46:9; Pss 79:11 (groans come before God); 88:3 (a prayer comes before God); 100:2; 119:170 (prayer comes before God); Lam 1:22 (evil doing comes before God); Esth 1:19; 8:1; 9:25; 1 Chr 16:29. The expression often means “have an audience with” or “appear before.” But when used metaphorically, it can mean “get the attention of” or “prompt a response.” This is probably the sense in Gen 6:13. The necessity of ending the life of all flesh on earth is an issue that has gotten the attention of God. The term “end” may even be a metonymy for that which has prompted it – violence (see the following clause).

[6:13]  45 tn The participle, especially after הִנֵּה (hinneh) has an imminent future nuance. The Hiphil of שָׁחָת (shakhat) here has the sense “to destroy” (in judgment). Note the wordplay involving this verb in vv. 11-13: The earth is “ruined” because all flesh has acted in a morally “corrupt” manner. Consequently, God will “destroy” all flesh (the referent of the suffix “them”) along with the ruined earth. They had ruined themselves and the earth with violence, and now God would ruin them with judgment. For other cases where “earth” occurs as the object of the Hiphil of שָׁחָת, see 1 Sam 6:5; 1 Chr 20:1; Jer 36:29; 51:25.

[6:14]  46 sn The Hebrew verb is an imperative. A motif of this section is that Noah did as the Lord commanded him – he was obedient. That obedience had to come from faith in the word of the Lord. So the theme of obedience to God’s word is prominent in this prologue to the law.

[6:14]  47 tn A transliteration of the Hebrew term yields “gopher (גֹּפֶר, gofer) wood” (so KJV, NAB, NASB). While the exact nature of the wood involved is uncertain (cf. NLT “resinous wood”), many modern translations render the Hebrew term as “cypress” (so NEB, NIV, NRSV).

[6:14]  48 tn The Hebrew term כָּפָר (kafar, “to cover, to smear” [= to caulk]) appears here in the Qal stem with its primary, nonmetaphorical meaning. The Piel form כִּפֶּר (kipper), which has the metaphorical meaning “to atone, to expiate, to pacify,” is used in Levitical texts (see HALOT 493-94 s.v. כפר). Some authorities regard the form in v. 14 as a homonym of the much more common Levitical term (see BDB 498 s.v. כָּפָר).

[6:15]  49 tn Heb “300 cubits long, 50 cubits wide, and 30 cubits high.” The standard cubit in the OT is assumed by most authorities to be about 18 inches (45 cm) long.

[6:16]  50 tn Heb “a cubit.”

[6:16]  51 tn Heb “to a cubit you shall finish it from above.” The idea is that Noah was to leave an 18-inch opening from the top for a window for light.

[6:17]  52 tn The Hebrew construction uses the independent personal pronoun, followed by a suffixed form of הִנֵּה (hinneh, “look”) and the a participle used with an imminent future nuance: “As for me, look, I am going to bring.”

[6:17]  53 tn Heb “the flood, water.”

[6:17]  54 tn The verb שָׁחָת (shakhat, “to destroy”) is repeated yet again, only now in an infinitival form expressing the purpose of the flood.

[6:17]  55 tn The Hebrew construction here is different from the previous two; here it is רוּחַ חַיִּים (ruakh khayyim) rather than נֶפֶשׁ הַיָּה (nefesh khayyah) or נִשְׁמַת חַיִּים (nishmat khayyim). It refers to everything that breathes.

[6:18]  56 tn The Hebrew verb וַהֲקִמֹתִי (vahaqimoti) is the Hiphil perfect with a vav (ו) consecutive (picking up the future sense from the participles) from קוּם (qum, “to rise up”). This may refer to the confirmation or fulfillment of an earlier promise, but it is more likely that it anticipates the unconditional promise made to humankind following the flood (see Gen 9:9, 11, 17).

[6:18]  57 tn The perfect verb form with vav (ו) consecutive is best understood as specific future, continuing God’s description of what will happen (see vv. 17-18a).

[6:19]  58 tn Heb “from all life, from all flesh, two from all you must bring.” The disjunctive clause at the beginning of the verse (note the conjunction with prepositional phrase, followed by two more prepositional phrases in apposition and then the imperfect verb form) signals a change in mood from announcement (vv. 17-18) to instruction.

[6:19]  59 tn The Piel infinitive construct לְהַחֲיוֹת (lÿhakhayot, here translated as “to keep them alive”) shows the purpose of bringing the animals into the ark – saving life. The Piel of this verb means here “to preserve alive.”

[6:20]  60 tn Heb “to keep alive.”

[6:21]  61 tn The verb is a direct imperative: “And you, take for yourself.” The form stresses the immediate nature of the instruction; the pronoun underscores the directness.

[6:21]  62 tn Heb “from all food,” meaning “some of every kind of food.”

[6:21]  63 tn Or “will be eaten.”

[6:21]  64 tn Heb “and gather it to you.”

[6:22]  65 tn Heb “according to all.”

[6:22]  66 tn The last clause seems redundant: “and thus (כֵּן, ken) he did.” It underscores the obedience of Noah to all that God had said.

[7:1]  67 tn Heb “for you I see [as] godly before me in this generation.” The direct object (“you”) is placed first in the clause to give it prominence. The verb “to see” here signifies God’s evaluative discernment.

[7:2]  68 tn Or “seven pairs” (cf. NRSV).

[7:2]  69 sn For a study of the Levitical terminology of “clean” and “unclean,” see L. E. Toombs, IDB 1:643.

[7:2]  70 tn Heb “a male and his female” (also a second time at the end of this verse). The terms used here for male and female animals (אִישׁ, ’ish) and אִשָּׁה, ’ishah) normally refer to humans.

[7:3]  71 tn Or “seven pairs” (cf. NRSV).

[7:3]  72 tn Here (and in v. 9) the Hebrew text uses the normal generic terms for “male and female” (זָכָר וּנְקֵבָה, zakhar unÿqevah).

[7:3]  73 tn Heb “to keep alive offspring.”

[7:4]  74 tn Heb “for seven days yet,” meaning “after [or “in”] seven days.”

[7:4]  75 tn The Hiphil participle מַמְטִיר (mamtir, “cause to rain”) here expresses the certainty of the act in the imminent future.

[7:5]  76 tn Heb “according to all.”

[7:6]  77 tn Heb “Now Noah was.” The disjunctive clause (conjunction + subject + predicate nominative after implied “to be” verb) provides background information. The age of Noah receives prominence.

[7:6]  78 tn Heb “and the flood was water upon.” The disjunctive clause (conjunction + subject + verb) is circumstantial/temporal in relation to the preceding clause. The verb הָיָה (hayah) here carries the nuance “to come” (BDB 225 s.v. הָיָה). In this context the phrase “come upon” means “to engulf.”

[7:7]  79 tn The preposition מִן (min) is causal here, explaining why Noah and his family entered the ark.

[7:8]  80 tn Heb “two two” meaning “in twos.”

[7:9]  81 tn The Hebrew text of vv. 8-9a reads, “From the clean animal[s] and from the animal[s] which are not clean and from the bird[s] and everything that creeps on the ground, two two they came to Noah to the ark, male and female.”

[7:9]  82 tn Heb “Noah”; the pronoun has been used in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[7:10]  83 tn Heb “came upon.”

[7:11]  84 tn The Hebrew term תְּהוֹם (tÿhom, “deep”) refers to the watery deep, the salty ocean – especially the primeval ocean that surrounds and underlies the earth (see Gen 1:2).

[7:11]  85 sn On the prescientific view of the sky reflected here, see L. I. J. Stadelmann, The Hebrew Conception of the World (AnBib), 46.

[7:12]  86 tn Heb “was.”

[7:13]  87 tn Heb “On that very day Noah entered, and Shem and Ham and Japheth, the sons of Noah, and the wife of Noah, and the three wives of his sons with him into the ark.”

[7:14]  88 tn The verb “entered” is not in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[7:14]  89 tn Heb “every bird, every wing.”

[7:15]  90 tn Heb “two two” meaning “in twos.”

[7:15]  91 tn Heb “flesh.”

[7:16]  92 tn Heb “Those that went in, male and female from all flesh they went in.”

[7:18]  93 tn Heb “and the waters were great and multiplied exceedingly.” The first verb in the sequence is וַיִּגְבְּרוּ (vayyigbÿru, from גָּבַר, gavar), meaning “to become great, mighty.” The waters did not merely rise; they “prevailed” over the earth, overwhelming it.

[7:18]  94 tn Heb “went.”

[7:19]  95 tn Heb “and the waters were great exceedingly, exceedingly.” The repetition emphasizes the depth of the waters.

[7:19]  96 tn Heb “and.”

[7:20]  97 tn Heb “rose fifteen cubits.” Since a cubit is considered by most authorities to be about eighteen inches, this would make the depth 22.5 feet. This figure might give the modern reader a false impression of exactness, however, so in the translation the phrase “fifteen cubits” has been rendered “more than twenty feet.”

[7:20]  98 tn Heb “the waters prevailed fifteen cubits upward and they covered the mountains.” Obviously, a flood of twenty feet did not cover the mountains; the statement must mean the flood rose about twenty feet above the highest mountain.

[7:21]  99 tn Heb “flesh.”

[7:22]  100 tn Heb “everything which [has] the breath of the spirit of life in its nostrils from all which is in the dry land.”

[7:23]  101 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (the Lord) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[7:23]  102 tn Heb “wiped away” (cf. NRSV “blotted out”).

[7:23]  103 tn Heb “from man to animal to creeping thing and to the bird of the sky.”

[7:23]  104 tn The Hebrew verb שָׁאָר (shaar) means “to be left over; to survive” in the Niphal verb stem. It is the word used in later biblical texts for the remnant that escapes judgment. See G. F. Hasel, “Semantic Values of Derivatives of the Hebrew Root r,” AUSS 11 (1973): 152-69.

[7:24]  105 sn The Hebrew verb translated “prevailed over” suggests that the waters were stronger than the earth. The earth and everything in it were no match for the return of the chaotic deep.

[8:1]  106 tn The Hebrew word translated “remembered” often carries the sense of acting in accordance with what is remembered, i.e., fulfilling covenant promises (see B. S. Childs, Memory and Tradition in Israel [SBT], especially p. 34).

[8:1]  107 tn Heb “to pass over.”

[8:2]  108 tn Some (e.g., NIV) translate the preterite verb forms in this verse as past perfects (e.g., “had been closed”), for it seems likely that the sources of the water would have stopped before the waters receded.

[8:3]  109 tn The construction combines a Qal preterite from שׁוּב (shuv) with its infinitive absolute to indicate continuous action. The infinitive absolute from הָלָךְ (halakh) is included for emphasis: “the waters returned…going and returning.”

[8:3]  110 tn Heb “the waters.” The pronoun (“they”) has been employed in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[8:3]  111 tn The vav (ו) consecutive with the preterite here describes the consequence of the preceding action.

[8:4]  112 tn Heb “on the mountains of Ararat.” Obviously a boat (even one as large as the ark) cannot rest on multiple mountains. Perhaps (1) the preposition should be translated “among,” or (2) the plural “mountains” should be understood in the sense of “mountain range” (see E. A. Speiser, Genesis [AB], 53). A more probable option (3) is that the plural indicates an indefinite singular, translated “one of the mountains” (see GKC 400 §124.o).

[8:5]  113 tn Heb “the waters were going and lessening.” The perfect verb form הָיָה (hayah) is used as an auxiliary verb with the infinitive absolute חָסוֹר (khasor, “lessening”), while the infinitive absolute הָלוֹךְ (halokh) indicates continuous action.

[8:5]  114 tn Or “could be seen.”

[8:6]  115 tn The introductory verbal form וַיְהִי (vayÿhi), traditionally rendered “and it came to pass,” serves as a temporal indicator and has not been translated here.

[8:6]  116 tn Heb “opened the window in the ark which he had made.” The perfect tense (“had made”) refers to action preceding the opening of the window, and is therefore rendered as a past perfect. Since in English “had made” could refer to either the ark or the window, the order of the phrases was reversed in the translation to clarify that the window is the referent.

[8:7]  117 tn Heb “and it went out, going out and returning.” The Hebrew verb יָצָא (yatsa’), translated here “flying,” is modified by two infinitives absolute indicating that the raven went back and forth.

[8:8]  118 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Noah) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[8:8]  119 tn The Hebrew text adds “from him.” This has not been translated for stylistic reasons, because it is redundant in English.

[8:8]  120 tn The Hebrew verb קָלָל (qalal) normally means “to be light, to be slight”; it refers here to the waters receding.

[8:9]  121 tn The words “still covered” is supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[8:9]  122 tn Heb “him”; the referent (Noah) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[8:9]  123 tn Heb “it”; the referent (the dove) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[8:9]  124 tn Heb “and he brought it to himself to the ark.”

[8:11]  125 tn The clause introduced by vav (ו) consecutive is translated as a temporal clause subordinated to the following clause.

[8:11]  126 tn The deictic particle הִנֵּה (hinneh) draws attention to the olive leaf. It invites readers to enter into the story, as it were, and look at the olive leaf with their own eyes.

[8:12]  127 tn The word “again” is not in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[8:12]  128 tn Heb “it did not again return to him still.” For a study of this section of the flood narrative, see W. O. E. Oesterley, “The Dove with the Olive Leaf (Gen VIII 8–11),” ExpTim 18 (1906/07): 377-78.

[8:13]  129 tn Heb In the six hundred and first year.” Since this refers to the six hundred and first year of Noah’s life, the word “Noah’s” has been supplied in the translation for clarity.

[8:13]  130 tn Heb “and saw and look.” As in v. 11, the deictic particle הִנֵּה (hinneh) invites readers to enter into the story, as it were, and look at the dry ground with their own eyes.

[8:14]  131 tn In v. 13 the ground (הָאֲדָמָה, haadamah) is dry; now the earth (הָאָרֶץ, haarets) is dry.

[8:17]  132 tn The words “bring out” are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[8:17]  133 tn Following the Hiphil imperative, “bring out,” the three perfect verb forms with vav (ו) consecutive carry an imperatival nuance. For a discussion of the Hebrew construction here and the difficulty of translating it into English, see S. R. Driver, A Treatise on the Use of the Tenses in Hebrew, 124-25.

[8:17]  134 tn Heb “and let them swarm in the earth and be fruitful and multiply on the earth.”

[8:20]  135 sn Offered burnt offerings on the altar. F. D. Maurice includes a chapter on the sacrifice of Noah in The Doctrine of Sacrifice. The whole burnt offering, according to Leviticus 1, represented the worshiper’s complete surrender and dedication to the Lord. After the flood Noah could see that God was not only a God of wrath, but a God of redemption and restoration. The one who escaped the catastrophe could best express his gratitude and submission through sacrificial worship, acknowledging God as the sovereign of the universe.

[8:21]  136 tn The Lord “smelled” (וַיָּרַח, vayyarakh) a “soothing smell” (רֵיחַ הַנִּיהֹחַ, reakh hannihoakh). The object forms a cognate accusative with the verb. The language is anthropomorphic. The offering had a sweet aroma that pleased or soothed. The expression in Lev 1 signifies that God accepts the offering with pleasure, and in accepting the offering he accepts the worshiper.

[8:21]  137 tn Heb “and the Lord said.”

[8:21]  138 tn Heb “in his heart.”

[8:21]  139 tn Here the Hebrew word translated “curse” is קָלָל (qalal), used in the Piel verbal stem.

[8:21]  140 tn The Hebrew particle כִּי (ki) can be used in a concessive sense (see BDB 473 s.v. כִּי), which makes good sense in this context. Its normal causal sense (“for”) does not fit the context here very well.

[8:21]  141 tn Heb “the inclination of the heart of humankind.”

[8:21]  142 tn Heb “from his youth.”

[8:22]  143 tn Heb “yet all the days of the earth.” The idea is “[while there are] yet all the days of the earth,” meaning, “as long as the earth exists.”

[8:22]  144 tn Heb “seed,” which stands here by metonymy for the time when seed is planted.

[9:2]  145 tn Heb “and fear of you and dread of you will be upon every living creature of the earth and upon every bird of the sky.” The suffixes on the nouns “fear” and “dread” are objective genitives. The animals will fear humans from this time forward.

[9:2]  146 tn Heb “into your hand are given.” The “hand” signifies power. To say the animals have been given into the hands of humans means humans have been given authority over them.

[9:3]  147 tn Heb “every moving thing that lives for you will be for food.”

[9:3]  148 tn The words “I gave you” are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[9:3]  149 tn The perfect verb form describes the action that accompanies the declaration.

[9:4]  150 tn Heb “only.”

[9:4]  151 tn Or “flesh.”

[9:4]  152 tn Heb “its life, its blood.” The second word is in apposition to the first, explaining what is meant by “its life.” Since the blood is equated with life, meat that had the blood in it was not to be eaten.

[9:4]  153 tn The words “in it” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[9:5]  154 tn Again the text uses apposition to clarify what kind of blood is being discussed: “your blood, [that is] for your life.” See C. L. Dewar, “The Biblical Use of the Term ‘Blood,’” JTS 4 (1953): 204-8.

[9:5]  155 tn The word “punishment” is not in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation for clarification. The verb דָּרָשׁ (darash) means “to require, to seek, to ask for, to exact.” Here it means that God will exact punishment for the taking of a life. See R. Mawdsley, “Capital Punishment in Gen. 9:6,” CentBib 18 (1975): 20-25.

[9:5]  156 tn Heb “from the hand of,” which means “out of the hand of” or “out of the power of” and is nearly identical in sense to the preposition מִן (min) alone.

[9:5]  157 tn Heb “and from the hand of the man.” The article has a generic function, indicating the class, i.e., humankind.

[9:5]  158 tn Heb “of the man.”

[9:5]  159 tn Heb “from the hand of a man, his brother.” The point is that God will require the blood of someone who kills, since the person killed is a relative (“brother”) of the killer. The language reflects Noah’s situation (after the flood everyone would be part of Noah’s extended family), but also supports the concept of the brotherhood of humankind. According to the Genesis account the entire human race descended from Noah.

[9:6]  160 tn Heb “the blood of man.”

[9:6]  161 tn Heb “by man,” a generic term here for other human beings.

[9:6]  162 sn See the notes on the words “humankind” and “likeness” in Gen 1:26, as well as J. Barr, “The Image of God in the Book of Genesis – A Study of Terminology,” BJRL 51 (1968/69): 11-26.

[9:6]  163 tn Heb “he”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[9:7]  164 sn The disjunctive clause (conjunction + pronominal subject + verb) here indicates a strong contrast to what has preceded. Against the backdrop of the warnings about taking life, God now instructs the people to produce life, using terms reminiscent of the mandate given to Adam (Gen 1:28).

[9:8]  165 tn Heb “to Noah and to his sons with him, saying.”

[9:9]  166 tn Heb “I, look, I confirm.” The particle הִנְנִי (hinni) used with the participle מֵקִים (meqim) gives the sense of immediacy or imminence, as if to say, “Look! I am now confirming.”

[9:9]  167 tn The three pronominal suffixes (translated “you,” “your,” and “you”) are masculine plural. As v. 8 indicates, Noah and his sons are addressed.

[9:10]  168 tn The verbal repetition is apparently for emphasis.

[9:11]  169 tn The verb וַהֲקִמֹתִי (vahaqimoti) is a perfect with the vav (ו) consecutive and should be translated with the English present tense, just as the participle at the beginning of the speech was (v. 9). Another option is to translate both forms with the English future tense (“I will confirm”).

[9:11]  170 tn Heb “all flesh.”

[9:11]  171 tn Heb “cut off.”

[9:11]  172 tn Heb “and all flesh will not be cut off again by the waters of the flood.”

[9:12]  173 tn Heb “sign.”

[9:12]  174 sn On the making of covenants in Genesis, see W. F. Albright, “The Hebrew Expression for ‘Making a Covenant’ in Pre-Israelite Documents,” BASOR 121 (1951): 21-22.

[9:12]  175 tn Heb “between me and between you.”

[9:12]  176 tn The words “a covenant” are supplied in the translation for clarification.

[9:12]  177 tn The Hebrew term עוֹלָם (’olam) means “ever, forever, lasting, perpetual.” The covenant would extend to subsequent generations.

[9:13]  178 tn The translation assumes that the perfect verbal form is used rhetorically, emphasizing the certainty of the action. Other translation options include “I have placed” (present perfect; cf. NIV, NRSV) and “I place” (instantaneous perfect; cf. NEB).

[9:13]  179 sn The Hebrew word קֶשֶׁת (qeshet) normally refers to a warrior’s bow. Some understand this to mean that God the warrior hangs up his battle bow at the end of the flood, indicating he is now at peace with humankind, but others question the legitimacy of this proposal. See C. Westermann, Genesis, 1:473, and G. J. Wenham, Genesis (WBC), 1:196.

[9:13]  180 tn The perfect verbal form with vav (ו) consecutive here has the same aspectual function as the preceding perfect of certitude.

[9:14]  181 tn The temporal indicator (וְהָיָה, vÿhayah, conjunction + the perfect verb form), often translated “it will be,” anticipates a future development.

[9:15]  182 tn Heb “which [is] between me and between you.”

[9:15]  183 tn Heb “all flesh.”

[9:15]  184 tn Heb “to destroy.”

[9:15]  185 tn Heb “all flesh.”

[9:16]  186 tn The translation assumes that the infinitive לִזְכֹּר (lizkor, “to remember”) here expresses the result of seeing the rainbow. Another option is to understand it as indicating purpose, in which case it could be translated, “I will look at it so that I may remember.”

[9:17]  187 tn Heb “all flesh.”

[9:18]  188 sn The concluding disjunctive clause is parenthetical. It anticipates the following story, which explains that the Canaanites, Ham’s descendants through Canaan, were cursed because they shared the same moral abandonment that their ancestor displayed. See A. van Selms, “The Canaanites in the Book of Genesis,” OTS 12 (1958): 182-213.

[9:19]  189 tn Heb “was scattered.” The verb פָּצָה (patsah, “to scatter” [Niphal, “to be scattered”]) figures prominently in story of the dispersion of humankind in chap. 11.

[9:20]  190 sn The epithet a man of the soil indicates that Noah was a farmer.

[9:20]  191 tn Or “Noah, a man of the soil, was the first to plant a vineyard”; Heb “and Noah, a man of the ground, began and he planted a vineyard.”

[9:21]  192 tn The Hebrew verb גָּלָה (galah) in the Hitpael verbal stem (וַיִּתְגַּל, vayyitggal) means “to uncover oneself” or “to be uncovered.” Noah became overheated because of the wine and uncovered himself in the tent.

[9:22]  193 sn For the second time (see v. 18) the text informs the reader of the relationship between Ham and Canaan. Genesis 10 will explain that Canaan was the ancestor of the Canaanite tribes living in the promised land.

[9:22]  194 tn Some would translate “had sexual relations with,” arguing that Ham committed a homosexual act with his drunken father for which he was cursed. However, the expression “see nakedness” usually refers to observation of another’s nakedness, not a sexual act (see Gen 42:9, 12 where “nakedness” is used metaphorically to convey the idea of “weakness” or “vulnerability”; Deut 23:14 where “nakedness” refers to excrement; Isa 47:3; Ezek 16:37; Lam 1:8). The following verse (v. 23) clearly indicates that visual observation, not a homosexual act, is in view here. In Lev 20:17 the expression “see nakedness” does appear to be a euphemism for sexual intercourse, but the context there, unlike that of Gen 9:22, clearly indicates that in that passage sexual contact is in view. The expression “see nakedness” does not in itself suggest a sexual connotation. Some relate Gen 9:22 to Lev 18:6-11, 15-19, where the expression “uncover [another’s] nakedness” (the Piel form of גָּלָה, galah) refers euphemistically to sexual intercourse. However, Gen 9:22 does not say Ham “uncovered” the nakedness of his father. According to the text, Noah uncovered himself; Ham merely saw his father naked. The point of the text is that Ham had no respect for his father. Rather than covering his father up, he told his brothers. Noah then gave an oracle that Ham’s descendants, who would be characterized by the same moral abandonment, would be cursed. Leviticus 18 describes that greater evil of the Canaanites (see vv. 24-28).

[9:23]  195 tn The word translated “garment” has the Hebrew definite article on it. The article may simply indicate that the garment is definite and vivid in the mind of the narrator, but it could refer instead to Noah’s garment. Did Ham bring it out when he told his brothers?

[9:23]  196 tn Heb “their faces [were turned] back.”

[9:24]  197 tn Heb “his wine,” used here by metonymy for the drunken stupor it produced.

[9:24]  198 tn Heb “he knew.”

[9:24]  199 tn The Hebrew verb עָשָׂה (’asah, “to do”) carries too general a sense to draw the conclusion that Ham had to have done more than look on his father’s nakedness and tell his brothers.

[9:25]  200 sn For more on the curse, see H. C. Brichto, The Problem ofCursein the Hebrew Bible (JBLMS), and J. Scharbert, TDOT 1:405-18.

[9:25]  201 sn Cursed be Canaan. The curse is pronounced on Canaan, not Ham. Noah sees a problem in Ham’s character, and on the basis of that he delivers a prophecy about the future descendants who will live in slavery to such things and then be controlled by others. (For more on the idea of slavery in general, see E. M. Yamauchi, “Slaves of God,” BETS 9 [1966]: 31-49). In a similar way Jacob pronounced oracles about his sons based on their revealed character (see Gen 49).

[9:25]  202 tn Heb “a servant of servants” (עֶבֶד עֲבָדִים, ’evedavadim), an example of the superlative genitive. It means Canaan will become the most abject of slaves.

[9:26]  203 tn Heb “blessed be.”

[9:26]  204 tn Heb “a slave to him”; the referent (Shem) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[9:27]  205 tn Heb “may God enlarge Japheth.” The words “territory and numbers” are supplied in the translation for clarity.

[9:27]  206 tn In this context the prefixed verbal form is a jussive (note the distinct jussive forms both before and after this in vv. 26 and 27).

[10:1]  207 tn The title אֵלֶּה תּוֹלְדֹת (’elle tolÿdot, here translated as “This is the account”) here covers 10:111:9, which contains the so-called Table of Nations and the account of how the nations came to be dispersed.

[10:1]  208 sn Sons were born to them. A vertical genealogy such as this encompasses more than the names of sons. The list includes cities, tribes, and even nations. In a loose way, the names in the list have some derivation or connection to the three ancestors.

[10:1]  209 tn It appears that the Table of Nations is a composite of at least two ancient sources: Some sections begin with the phrase “the sons of” (בְּנֵי, bÿne) while other sections use “begot” (יָלָד, yalad). It may very well be that the “sons of” list was an old, “bare bones” list that was retained in the family records, while the “begot” sections were editorial inserts by the writer of Genesis, reflecting his special interests. See A. P. Ross, “The Table of Nations in Genesis 10 – Its Structure,” BSac 137 (1980): 340-53; idem, “The Table of Nations in Genesis 10 – Its Content,” BSac 138 (1981): 22-34.

[10:2]  210 sn The Greek form of the name Japheth, Iapetos, is used in Greek tradition for the ancestor of the Greeks.

[10:2]  211 sn Gomer was the ancestor of the Cimmerians. For a discussion of the Cimmerians see E. M. Yamauchi, Foes from the Northern Frontier (SBA), 49-61.

[10:2]  212 sn For a discussion of various proposals concerning the descendants of Magog see E. M. Yamauchi, Foes from the Northern Frontier (SBA), 22-24.

[10:2]  213 sn Madai was the ancestor of the Medes, who lived east of Assyria.

[10:2]  214 sn Javan was the father of the Hellenic race, the Ionians who lived in western Asia Minor.

[10:2]  215 sn Tubal was the ancestor of militaristic tribes that lived north of the Black Sea. For a discussion of ancient references to Tubal see E. M. Yamauchi, Foes from the Northern Frontier (SBA), 24-26.

[10:2]  216 sn Meshech was the ancestor of the people known in Assyrian records as the Musku. For a discussion of ancient references to them see E. M. Yamauchi, Foes from the Northern Frontier (SBA), 24-26.

[10:2]  217 sn Tiras was the ancestor of the Thracians, some of whom possibly became the Pelasgian pirates of the Aegean.

[10:3]  218 sn The descendants of Gomer were all northern tribes of the Upper Euphrates.

[10:3]  219 sn Askenaz was the ancestor of a northern branch of Indo-Germanic tribes, possibly Scythians. For discussion see E. M. Yamauchi, Foes from the Northern Frontier (SBA), 63.

[10:3]  220 sn The descendants of Riphath lived in a district north of the road from Haran to Carchemish.

[10:3]  221 sn Togarmah is also mentioned in Ezek 38:6, where it refers to Til-garimmu, the capital of Kammanu, which bordered Tabal in eastern Turkey. See E. M. Yamauchi, Foes from the Northern Frontier (SBA), 26, n. 28.

[10:4]  222 sn The descendants of Elishah populated Cyprus.

[10:4]  223 sn The descendants of Tarshish settled along the southern coast of what is modern Turkey. However, some identify the site Tarshish (see Jonah 1:3) with Sardinia or Spain.

[10:4]  224 sn The name Kittim is associated with Cyprus, as well as coastlands east of Rhodes. It is used in later texts to refer to the Romans.

[10:4]  225 tc Most of the MT mss read “Dodanim” here, but 1 Chr 1:7 has “Rodanim,” perhaps referring to the island of Rhodes. But the Qere reading in 1 Chr 1:7 suggests “Dodanim.” Dodona is one of the most ancient and revered spots in ancient Greece.

[10:6]  226 sn The descendants of Cush settled in Nubia (Ethiopia).

[10:6]  227 sn The descendants of Mizraim settled in Upper and Lower Egypt.

[10:6]  228 sn The descendants of Put settled in Libya.

[10:6]  229 sn The descendants of Canaan lived in the region of Phoenicia (Palestine).

[10:7]  230 sn The descendants of Seba settled in Upper Egypt along the Nile.

[10:7]  231 sn The Hebrew name Havilah apparently means “stretch of sand” (see HALOT 297 s.v. חֲוִילָה). Havilah’s descendants settled in eastern Arabia.

[10:7]  232 sn The descendants of Sabtah settled near the western shore of the Persian Gulf in ancient Hadhramaut.

[10:7]  233 sn The descendants of Raamah settled in southwest Arabia.

[10:7]  234 sn The descendants of Sabteca settled in Samudake, east toward the Persian Gulf.

[10:7]  235 sn Sheba became the name of a kingdom in southwest Arabia.

[10:7]  236 sn The name Dedan is associated with àUla in northern Arabia.

[10:8]  237 tn Heb “fathered.” Embedded within Cush’s genealogy is an account of Nimrod, a mighty warrior. There have been many attempts to identify him, but none are convincing.

[10:9]  238 tn The Hebrew word for “hunt” is צַיִד (tsayid), which is used on occasion for hunting men (1 Sam 24:12; Jer 16:16; Lam 3:15).

[10:9]  239 tn Another option is to take the divine name here, לִפְנֵי יִהוָה (lifne yÿhvah, “before the Lord [YHWH]”), as a means of expressing the superlative degree. In this case one may translate “Nimrod was the greatest hunter in the world.”

[10:10]  240 tn Heb “beginning.” E. A. Speiser, Genesis (AB), 67, suggests “mainstays,” citing Jer 49:35 as another text where the Hebrew noun is so used.

[10:10]  241 tn Or “Babylon.”

[10:10]  242 sn Erech (ancient Uruk, modern Warka), one of the most ancient civilizations, was located southeast of Babylon.

[10:10]  243 sn Akkad, or ancient Agade, was associated with Sargon and located north of Babylon.

[10:10]  244 tn No such place is known in Shinar (i.e., Babylonia). Therefore some have translated the Hebrew term כַלְנֵה (khalneh) as “all of them,” referring to the three previous names (cf. NRSV).

[10:10]  245 sn Shinar is another name for Babylonia.

[10:11]  246 tn The subject of the verb translated “went” is probably still Nimrod. However, it has also been interpreted that “Ashur went,” referring to a derivative power.

[10:11]  247 tn Heb “Asshur.”

[10:11]  248 sn Nineveh was an ancient Assyrian city situated on the Tigris River.

[10:11]  249 sn The name Rehoboth-Ir means “and broad streets of a city,” perhaps referring to a suburb of Nineveh.

[10:11]  250 sn Calah (modern Nimrud) was located twenty miles north of Nineveh.

[10:12]  251 tn Heb “and Resen between Nineveh and Calah; it [i.e., Calah] is the great city.”

[10:13]  252 sn Mizraim is the Hebrew name for Egypt (cf. NRSV).

[10:13]  253 tn Heb “fathered.”

[10:13]  254 sn The Ludites were African tribes west of the Nile Delta.

[10:13]  255 sn The Anamites lived in North Africa, west of Egypt, near Cyrene.

[10:13]  256 sn The Lehabites are identified with the Libyans.

[10:13]  257 sn The Naphtuhites lived in Lower Egypt (the Nile Delta region).

[10:14]  258 sn The Pathrusites are known in Egyptian as P-to-reshi; they resided in Upper Egypt.

[10:14]  259 sn The Casluhites lived in Crete and eventually settled east of the Egyptian Delta, between Egypt and Canaan.

[10:14]  260 tn Several commentators prefer to reverse the order of the words to put this clause after the next word, since the Philistines came from Crete (where the Caphtorites lived). But the table may suggest migration rather than lineage, and the Philistines, like the Israelites, came through the Nile Delta region of Egypt. For further discussion of the origin and migration of the Philistines, see D. M. Howard, “Philistines,” Peoples of the Old Testament World, 232.

[10:14]  261 sn The Caphtorites resided in Crete, but in Egyptian literature Caphtor refers to “the region beyond” the Mediterranean.

[10:15]  262 tn Heb “fathered.”

[10:15]  263 sn Sidon was the foremost city in Phoenicia; here Sidon may be the name of its founder.

[10:15]  264 tn Some see a reference to “Hittites” here (cf. NIV), but this seems unlikely. See the note on the phrase “sons of Heth” in Gen 23:3.

[10:16]  265 sn The Jebusites were the Canaanite inhabitants of ancient Jerusalem.

[10:16]  266 sn Here Amorites refers to smaller groups of Canaanite inhabitants of the mountainous regions of Palestine, rather than the large waves of Amurru, or western Semites, who migrated to the region.

[10:16]  267 sn The Girgashites are an otherwise unknown Canaanite tribe, though the name is possibly mentioned in Ugaritic texts (see G. J. Wenham, Genesis [WBC], 1:226).

[10:17]  268 sn The Hivites were Canaanite tribes of a Hurrian origin.

[10:17]  269 sn The Arkites lived in Arka, a city in Lebanon, north of Sidon.

[10:17]  270 sn The Sinites lived in Sin, another town in Lebanon.

[10:18]  271 sn The Arvadites lived in the city Arvad, located on an island near the mainland close to the river El Kebir.

[10:18]  272 sn The Zemarites lived in the town Sumur, north of Arka.

[10:18]  273 sn The Hamathites lived in Hamath on the Orontes River.

[10:19]  274 tn Heb “were.”

[10:19]  275 map For location see Map1 A1; JP3 F3; JP4 F3.

[10:19]  276 tn Heb “as you go.”

[10:19]  277 tn Heb “as you go.”

[10:21]  278 tn Heb “And to Shem was born.”

[10:21]  279 tn Or “whose older brother was Japheth.” Some translations render Japheth as the older brother, understanding the adjective הַגָּדוֹל (haggadol, “older”) as modifying Japheth. However, in Hebrew when a masculine singular definite attributive adjective follows the sequence masculine singular construct noun + proper name, the adjective invariably modifies the noun in construct, not the proper name. Such is the case here. See Deut 11:7; Judg 1:13; 2:7; 3:9; 9:5; 2 Kgs 15:35; 2 Chr 27:3; Neh 3:30; Jer 13:9; 36:10; Ezek 10:19; 11:1.

[10:22]  280 sn The Hebrew name Elam (עֵילָם, ’elam) means “highland.” The Elamites were a non-Semitic people who lived east of Babylon.

[10:22]  281 sn Asshur is the name for the Assyrians. Asshur was the region in which Nimrod expanded his power (see v. 11, where the name is also mentioned). When names appear in both sections of a genealogical list, it probably means that there were both Hamites and Shemites living in that region in antiquity, especially if the name is a place name.

[10:22]  282 sn The descendants of Arphaxad may have lived northeast of Nineveh.

[10:22]  283 sn Lud may have been the ancestor of the Ludbu, who lived near the Tigris River.

[10:22]  284 sn Aram became the collective name of the northern tribes living in the steppes of Mesopotamia and speaking Aramaic dialects.

[10:23]  285 tc The MT reads “Mash”; the LXX and 1 Chr 1:17 read “Meshech.”

[10:24]  286 tn Heb “fathered.”

[10:24]  287 tc The MT reads “Arphaxad fathered Shelah”; the LXX reads “Arphaxad fathered Cainan, and Cainan fathered Sala [= Shelah].” The LXX reading also appears to lie behind Luke 3:35-36.

[10:24]  288 sn Genesis 11 traces the line of Shem through Eber (עֵבֶר, ’ever ) to Abraham the “Hebrew” (עִבְרִי, ’ivri).

[10:25]  289 tn The expression “the earth was divided” may refer to dividing the land with canals, but more likely it anticipates the division of languages at Babel (Gen 11). The verb פָּלָג (palag, “separate, divide”) is used in Ps 55:9 for a division of languages.

[10:26]  290 tn Heb “fathered.”

[10:26]  291 sn The name Almodad combines the Arabic article al with modad (“friend”). Almodad was the ancestor of a South Arabian people.

[10:26]  292 sn The name Sheleph may be related to Shilph, a district of Yemen; Shalph is a Yemenite tribe.

[10:26]  293 sn The name Hazarmaveth should be equated with Hadramawt, located in Southern Arabia.

[10:26]  294 sn The name Jerah means “moon.”

[10:27]  295 sn Uzal was the name of the old capital of Yemen.

[10:27]  296 sn The name Diklah means “date-palm.”

[10:28]  297 sn Obal was a name used for several localities in Yemen.

[10:28]  298 sn The name Abimael is a genuine Sabean form which means “my father, truly, he is God.”

[10:28]  299 sn The descendants of Sheba lived in South Arabia, where the Joktanites were more powerful than the Hamites.

[10:29]  300 sn Ophir became the name of a territory in South Arabia. Many of the references to Ophir are connected with gold (e.g., 1 Kgs 9:28, 10:11, 22:48; 1 Chr 29:4; 2 Chr 8:18, 9:10; Job 22:24, 28:16; Ps 45:9; Isa 13:12).

[10:29]  301 sn Havilah is listed with Ham in v. 7.

[10:30]  302 tn Heb “as you go.”

[10:32]  303 tn Or “separated.”

[11:1]  304 sn The whole earth. Here “earth” is a metonymy of subject, referring to the people who lived in the earth. Genesis 11 begins with everyone speaking a common language, but chap. 10 has the nations arranged by languages. It is part of the narrative art of Genesis to give the explanation of the event after the narration of the event. On this passage see A. P. Ross, “The Dispersion of the Nations in Genesis 11:1-9,” BSac 138 (1981): 119-38.

[11:1]  305 tn Heb “one lip and one [set of] words.” The term “lip” is a metonymy of cause, putting the instrument for the intended effect. They had one language. The term “words” refers to the content of their speech. They had the same vocabulary.

[11:2]  306 tn Heb “they”; the referent (the people) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[11:2]  307 tn Or perhaps “from the east” (NRSV) or “in the east.”

[11:2]  308 tn Heb “in the land of Shinar.”

[11:3]  309 tn Heb “a man to his neighbor.” The Hebrew idiom may be translated “to each other” or “one to another.”

[11:3]  310 tn The speech contains two cohortatives of exhortation followed by their respective cognate accusatives: “let us brick bricks” (נִלְבְּנָה לְבֵנִים, nilbbÿnah lÿvenim) and “burn for burning” (נִשְׂרְפָה לִשְׂרֵפָה, nisrÿfah lisrefah). This stresses the intensity of the undertaking; it also reflects the Akkadian text which uses similar constructions (see E. A. Speiser, Genesis [AB], 75-76).

[11:3]  311 tn Or “bitumen” (cf. NEB, NRSV).

[11:3]  312 tn The disjunctive clause gives information parenthetical to the narrative.

[11:4]  313 tn A translation of “heavens” for שָׁמַיִם (shamayim) fits this context because the Babylonian ziggurats had temples at the top, suggesting they reached to the heavens, the dwelling place of the gods.

[11:4]  314 tn The form וְנַעֲשֶׂה (vÿnaaseh, from the verb עשׂה, “do, make”) could be either the imperfect or the cohortative with a vav (ו) conjunction (“and let us make…”). Coming after the previous cohortative, this form expresses purpose.

[11:4]  315 tn The Hebrew particle פֶּן (pen) expresses a negative purpose; it means “that we be not scattered.”

[11:4]  316 sn The Hebrew verb פָּוָץ (pavats, translated “scatter”) is a key term in this passage. The focal point of the account is the dispersion (“scattering”) of the nations rather than the Tower of Babel. But the passage also forms a polemic against Babylon, the pride of the east and a cosmopolitan center with a huge ziggurat. To the Hebrews it was a monument to the judgment of God on pride.

[11:5]  317 tn Heb “the sons of man.” The phrase is intended in this polemic to portray the builders as mere mortals, not the lesser deities that the Babylonians claimed built the city.

[11:5]  318 tn The Hebrew text simply has בָּנוּ (banu), but since v. 8 says they left off building the city, an ingressive idea (“had started building”) should be understood here.

[11:6]  319 tn Heb “and one lip to all of them.”

[11:6]  320 tn Heb “and now.” The foundational clause beginning with הֵן (hen) expresses the condition, and the second clause the result. It could be rendered “If this…then now.”

[11:6]  321 tn Heb “all that they purpose to do will not be withheld from them.”

[11:7]  322 tn The cohortatives mirror the cohortatives of the people. They build to ascend the heavens; God comes down to destroy their language. God speaks here to his angelic assembly. See the notes on the word “make” in 1:26 and “know” in 3:5, as well as Jub. 10:22-23, where an angel recounts this incident and says “And the Lord our God said to us…. And the Lord went down and we went down with him. And we saw the city and the tower which the sons of men built.” On the chiastic structure of the story, see G. J. Wenham, Genesis (WBC), 1:235.

[11:7]  323 tn Heb “they will not hear, a man the lip of his neighbor.”

[11:8]  324 tn The infinitive construct לִבְנֹת (livnot, “building”) here serves as the object of the verb “they ceased, stopped,” answering the question of what they stopped doing.

[11:9]  325 tn The verb has no expressed subject and so can be rendered as a passive in the translation.

[11:9]  326 sn Babel. Here is the climax of the account, a parody on the pride of Babylon. In the Babylonian literature the name bab-ili meant “the gate of God,” but in Hebrew it sounds like the word for “confusion,” and so retained that connotation. The name “Babel” (בָּבֶל, bavel) and the verb translated “confused” (בָּלַל, balal) form a paronomasia (sound play). For the many wordplays and other rhetorical devices in Genesis, see J. P. Fokkelman, Narrative Art in Genesis (SSN).

[11:11]  327 tn The word “other” is not in the Hebrew text, but is supplied for stylistic reasons.

[11:13]  328 tn The word “other” is not in the Hebrew text, but is supplied for stylistic reasons.

[11:13]  329 tc The reading of the MT is followed in vv. 11-12; the LXX reads, “And [= when] Arphaxad had lived thirty-five years, [and] he fathered [= became the father of] Cainan. And after he fathered [= became the father of] Cainan, Arphaxad lived four hundred and thirty years and fathered [= had] [other] sons and daughters, and [then] he died. And [= when] Cainan had lived one hundred and thirty years, [and] he fathered [= became the father of] Sala [= Shelah]. And after he fathered [= became the father of] Sala [= Shelah], Cainan lived three hundred and thirty years and fathered [= had] [other] sons and daughters, and [then] he died.” See also the note on “Shelah” in Gen 10:24; the LXX reading also appears to lie behind Luke 3:35-36.

[11:15]  330 tn Here and in vv. 16, 19, 21, 23, 25 the word “other” is not in the Hebrew text, but is supplied for stylistic reasons.

[11:28]  331 sn The phrase of the Chaldeans is a later editorial clarification for the readers, designating the location of Ur. From all evidence there would have been no Chaldeans in existence at this early date; they are known in the time of the neo-Babylonian empire in the first millennium b.c.

[11:28]  332 tn Heb “upon the face of Terah his father.”

[11:29]  333 sn The name Sarai (a variant spelling of “Sarah”) means “princess” (or “lady”). Sharratu was the name of the wife of the moon god Sin. The original name may reflect the culture out of which the patriarch was called, for the family did worship other gods in Mesopotamia.

[11:29]  334 sn The name Milcah means “Queen.” But more to the point here is the fact that Malkatu was a title for Ishtar, the daughter of the moon god. If the women were named after such titles (and there is no evidence that this was the motivation for naming the girls “Princess” or “Queen”), that would not necessarily imply anything about the faith of the two women themselves.

[11:32]  335 tn Heb “And the days of Terah were.”

[11:32]  336 tn Heb “Terah”; the pronoun has been substituted for the proper name in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[12:1]  337 sn The Lord called Abram while he was in Ur (see Gen 15:7; Acts 7:2); but the sequence here makes it look like it was after the family left to migrate to Canaan (11:31-32). Genesis records the call of Abram at this place in the narrative because it is the formal beginning of the account of Abram. The record of Terah was brought to its end before this beginning.

[12:1]  338 tn The call of Abram begins with an imperative לֶךְ־לְךָ (lekh-lÿkha, “go out”) followed by three cohortatives (v. 2a) indicating purpose or consequence (“that I may” or “then I will”). If Abram leaves, then God will do these three things. The second imperative (v. 2b, literally “and be a blessing”) is subordinated to the preceding cohortatives and indicates God’s ultimate purpose in calling and blessing Abram. On the syntactical structure of vv. 1-2 see R. B. Chisholm, “Evidence from Genesis,” A Case for Premillennialism, 37. For a similar sequence of volitive forms see Gen 45:18.

[12:1]  339 tn The initial command is the direct imperative (לֶךְ, lekh) from the verb הָלַךְ (halakh). It is followed by the lamed preposition with a pronominal suffix (לְךָ, lÿkha) emphasizing the subject of the imperative: “you leave.”

[12:1]  340 sn To the land that I will show you. The call of Abram illustrates the leading of the Lord. The command is to leave. The Lord’s word is very specific about what Abram is to leave (the three prepositional phrases narrow to his father’s household), but is not specific at all about where he is to go. God required faith, a point that Heb 11:8 notes.

[12:2]  341 tn The three first person verbs in v. 2a should be classified as cohortatives. The first two have pronominal suffixes, so the form itself does not indicate a cohortative. The third verb form is clearly cohortative.

[12:2]  342 sn I will bless you. The blessing of creation is now carried forward to the patriarch. In the garden God blessed Adam and Eve; in that blessing he gave them (1) a fruitful place, (2) endowed them with fertility to multiply, and (3) made them rulers over creation. That was all ruined at the fall. Now God begins to build his covenant people; in Gen 12-22 he promises to give Abram (1) a land flowing with milk and honey, (2) a great nation without number, and (3) kingship.

[12:2]  343 tn Or “I will make you famous.”

[12:2]  344 tn Heb “and be a blessing.” The verb form הְיֵה (hÿyeh) is the Qal imperative of the verb הָיָה (hayah). The vav (ו) with the imperative after the cohortatives indicates purpose or consequence. What does it mean for Abram to “be a blessing”? Will he be a channel or source of blessing for others, or a prime example of divine blessing? A similar statement occurs in Zech 8:13, where God assures his people, “You will be a blessing,” in contrast to the past when they “were a curse.” Certainly “curse” here does not refer to Israel being a source of a curse, but rather to the fact that they became a curse-word or byword among the nations, who regarded them as the epitome of an accursed people (see 2 Kgs 22:19; Jer 42:18; 44:8, 12, 22). Therefore the statement “be a blessing” seems to refer to Israel being transformed into a prime example of a blessed people, whose name will be used in blessing formulae, rather than in curses. If the statement “be a blessing” is understood in the same way in Gen 12:2, then it means that God would so bless Abram that other nations would hear of his fame and hold him up as a paradigm of divine blessing in their blessing formulae.

[12:3]  345 tn The Piel cohortative has as its object a Piel participle, masculine plural. Since the Lord binds himself to Abram by covenant, those who enrich Abram in any way share in the blessings.

[12:3]  346 tn In this part of God’s statement there are two significant changes that often go unnoticed. First, the parallel and contrasting participle מְקַלֶּלְךָ (mÿqallelkha) is now singular and not plural. All the versions and a few Masoretic mss read the plural. But if it had been plural, there would be no reason to change it to the singular and alter the parallelism. On the other hand, if it was indeed singular, it is easy to see why the versions would change it to match the first participle. The MT preserves the original reading: “the one who treats you lightly.” The point would be a contrast with the lavish way that God desires to bless many. The second change is in the vocabulary. The English usually says, “I will curse those who curse you.” But there are two different words for curse here. The first is קָלַל (qalal), which means “to be light” in the Qal, and in the Piel “to treat lightly, to treat with contempt, to curse.” The second verb is אָרַר (’arar), which means “to banish, to remove from the blessing.” The point is simple: Whoever treats Abram and the covenant with contempt as worthless God will banish from the blessing. It is important also to note that the verb is not a cohortative, but a simple imperfect. Since God is binding himself to Abram, this would then be an obligatory imperfect: “but the one who treats you with contempt I must curse.”

[12:3]  347 tn Theoretically the Niphal can be translated either as passive or reflexive/reciprocal. (The Niphal of “bless” is only used in formulations of the Abrahamic covenant. See Gen 12:2; 18:18; 28:14.) Traditionally the verb is taken as passive here, as if Abram were going to be a channel or source of blessing. But in later formulations of the Abrahamic covenant (see Gen 22:18; 26:4) the Hitpael replaces this Niphal form, suggesting a translation “will bless [i.e., “pronounce blessings on”] themselves [or “one another”].” The Hitpael of “bless” is used with a reflexive/reciprocal sense in Deut 29:18; Ps 72:17; Isa 65:16; Jer 4:2. Gen 12:2 predicts that Abram will be held up as a paradigm of divine blessing and that people will use his name in their blessing formulae. For examples of blessing formulae utilizing an individual as an example of blessing see Gen 48:20 and Ruth 4:11.

[12:4]  348 sn So Abram left. This is the report of Abram’s obedience to God’s command (see v. 1).

[12:4]  349 tn Heb “just as the Lord said to him.”

[12:4]  350 tn The disjunctive clause (note the pattern conjunction + subject + implied “to be” verb) is parenthetical, telling the age of Abram when he left Haran.

[12:4]  351 tn Heb “was the son of five years and seventy year[s].”

[12:5]  352 tn Heb “the son of his brother.”

[12:5]  353 tn For the semantic nuance “acquire [property]” for the verb עָשָׂה (’asah), see BDB 795 s.v. עָשָׂה.

[12:5]  354 tn Heb “went out to go.”

[12:6]  355 tn Or “terebinth.”

[12:6]  356 sn The Hebrew word Moreh (מוֹרֶה, moreh) means “teacher.” It may well be that the place of this great oak tree was a Canaanite shrine where instruction took place.

[12:6]  357 tn Heb “as far as the place of Shechem, as far as the oak of Moreh.”

[12:6]  358 tn The disjunctive clause gives important information parenthetical in nature – the promised land was occupied by Canaanites.

[12:7]  359 tn The same Hebrew term זֶרַע (zera’) may mean “seed” (for planting), “offspring” (occasionally of animals, but usually of people), or “descendants” depending on the context.

[12:7]  360 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Abram) has been supplied in the translation for clarification.

[12:8]  361 map For location see Map4 G4; Map5 C1; Map6 E3; Map7 D1; Map8 G3.

[12:8]  362 tn Heb “he called in the name of the Lord.” The expression refers to worshiping the Lord through prayer and sacrifice (see Gen 4:26; 13:4; 21:33; 26:25). See G. J. Wenham, Genesis (WBC), 1:116, 281.

[12:9]  363 tn The Hebrew verb נָסַע (nasa’) means “to journey”; more specifically it means to pull up the tent and move to another place. The construction here uses the preterite of this verb with its infinitive absolute to stress the activity of traveling. But it also adds the infinitive absolute of הָלַךְ (halakh) to stress that the traveling was continually going on. Thus “Abram journeyed, going and journeying” becomes “Abram continually journeyed by stages.”

[12:9]  364 tn Or “the South [country].”

[12:10]  365 sn Abram went down to Egypt. The Abrahamic narrative foreshadows some of the events in the life of the nation of Israel. This sojourn in Egypt is typological of Israel’s bondage there. In both stories there is a famine that forces the family to Egypt, death is a danger to the males while the females are preserved alive, great plagues bring about their departure, there is a summons to stand before Pharaoh, and there is a return to the land of Canaan with great wealth.

[12:10]  366 tn The Hebrew verb גּוּר (gur), traditionally rendered “to sojourn,” means “to stay for a while.” The “stranger” (traditionally “sojourner”) is one who is a temporary resident, a visitor, one who is passing through. Abram had no intention of settling down in Egypt or owning property. He was only there to wait out the famine.

[12:10]  367 tn Heb “heavy in the land.” The words “in the land,” which also occur at the beginning of the verse in the Hebrew text, have not been repeated here in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[12:11]  368 tn Heb “drew near to enter.”

[12:11]  369 tn The particle הִנֵּה (hinneh, “look”) is deictic here; it draws attention to the following fact.

[12:11]  370 tn Heb “a woman beautiful of appearance are you.”

[12:12]  371 tn The Piel of the verb חָיָה (khayah, “to live”) means “to keep alive, to preserve alive,” and in some places “to make alive.” See D. Marcus, “The Verb ‘to Live’ in Ugaritic,” JSS 17 (1972): 76-82.

[12:13]  372 tn Heb “say.”

[12:13]  373 sn Tell them you are my sister. Abram’s motives may not be as selfish as they appear. He is aware of the danger to the family. His method of dealing with it is deception with a half truth, for Sarai really was his sister – but the Egyptians would not know that. Abram presumably thought that there would be negotiations for a marriage by anyone interested (as Laban does later for his sister Rebekah), giving him time to react. But the plan backfires because Pharaoh does not take the time to negotiate. There is a good deal of literature on the wife-sister issue. See (among others) E. A. Speiser, “The Wife-Sister Motif in the Patriarchal Narratives,” Oriental and Biblical Studies, 62-81; C. J. Mullo-Weir, “The Alleged Hurrian Wife-Sister Motif in Genesis,” GOT 22 (1967-1970): 14-25.

[12:13]  374 tn The Hebrew verb translated “go well” can encompass a whole range of favorable treatment, but the following clause indicates it means here that Abram’s life will be spared.

[12:13]  375 tn Heb “and my life will live.”

[12:15]  376 tn Heb “and the woman.” The word also means “wife”; the Hebrew article can express the possessive pronoun (R. J. Williams, Hebrew Syntax, 19, §86). Here the proper name (Abram) has been used in the translation instead of a possessive pronoun (“his”) for clarity.

[12:15]  377 tn The Hebrew term וַתֻּקַּח (vattuqqakh, “was taken”) is a rare verbal form, an old Qal passive preterite from the verb “to take.” It is pointed as a Hophal would be by the Masoretes, but does not have a Hophal meaning.

[12:15]  378 tn The Hebrew text simply has “house of Pharaoh.” The word “house” refers to the household in general, more specifically to the royal harem.

[12:16]  379 sn He did treat Abram well. The construction of the parenthetical disjunctive clause, beginning with the conjunction on the prepositional phrase, draws attention to the irony of the story. Abram wanted Sarai to lie “so that it would go well” with him. Though he lost Sarai to Pharaoh, it did go well for him – he received a lavish bride price. See also G. W. Coats, “Despoiling the Egyptians,” VT 18 (1968): 450-57.

[12:16]  380 tn Heb “and there was to him.”

[12:17]  381 tn The cognate accusative adds emphasis to the verbal sentence: “he plagued with great plagues,” meaning the Lord inflicted numerous plagues, probably diseases (see Exod 15:26). The adjective “great” emphasizes that the plagues were severe and overwhelming.

[12:18]  382 tn The demonstrative pronoun translated “this” adds emphasis: “What in the world have you done to me?” (R. J. Williams, Hebrew Syntax, 24, §118).

[12:19]  383 tn The preterite with vav (ו) consecutive here expresses consequence.

[12:19]  384 tn Heb “to me for a wife.”

[12:19]  385 tn Heb “Look, your wife!”

[12:19]  386 tn Heb “take and go.”

[12:20]  387 tn Heb “him”; the referent (Abram) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[13:1]  388 tn Or “the South [country]” (also in v. 3).

[13:1]  389 tn Heb “And Abram went up from Egypt, he and his wife and all which was his, and Lot with him, to the Negev.”

[13:2]  390 tn Heb “heavy.”

[13:2]  391 tn This parenthetical clause, introduced by the vav (ו) disjunctive (translated “now”), provides information necessary to the point of the story.

[13:3]  392 tn Heb “on his journeys”; the verb and noun combination means to pick up the tents and move from camp to camp.

[13:3]  393 map For location see Map4 G4; Map5 C1; Map6 E3; Map7 D1; Map8 G3.

[13:3]  394 tn The words “he returned” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[13:3]  395 tn Heb “where his tent had been.”

[13:4]  396 tn Heb “to the place of the altar which he had made there in the beginning” (cf. Gen 12:7-8).

[13:4]  397 tn Heb “he called in the name of the Lord.” The expression refers to worshiping the Lord through prayer and sacrifice (see Gen 4:26; 12:8; 21:33; 26:25). See G. J. Wenham, Genesis (WBC), 1:116, 281.

[13:5]  398 tn Heb “was going.”

[13:5]  399 tn The Hebrew idiom is “to Lot…there was,” the preposition here expressing possession.

[13:6]  400 tn The potential nuance for the perfect tense is necessary here, and supported by the parallel clause that actually uses “to be able.”

[13:6]  401 tn The infinitive construct לָשֶׁבֶת (lashevet, from יָשַׁב, yashav) explains what it was that the land could not support: “the land could not support them to live side by side.” See further J. C. de Moor, “Lexical Remarks Concerning Yahad and Yahdaw,” VT 7 (1957): 350-55.

[13:6]  402 tn The same infinitive occurs here, serving as the object of the verb.

[13:7]  403 tn The Hebrew term רִיב (riv) means “strife, conflict, quarreling.” In later texts it has the meaning of “legal controversy, dispute.” See B. Gemser, “The rîb – or Controversy – Pattern in Hebrew Mentality,” Wisdom in Israel and in the Ancient Near East [VTSup], 120-37.

[13:7]  404 sn Since the quarreling was between the herdsmen, the dispute was no doubt over water and vegetation for the animals.

[13:7]  405 tn This parenthetical clause, introduced with the vav (ו) disjunctive (translated “now”), again provides critical information. It tells in part why the land cannot sustain these two bedouins, and it also hints of the danger of weakening the family by inner strife.

[13:8]  406 tn Heb “men, brothers [are] we.” Here “brothers” describes the closeness of the relationship, but could be misunderstood if taken literally, since Abram was Lot’s uncle.

[13:9]  407 tn The words “you go” have been supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons both times in this verse.

[13:10]  408 tn Heb “lifted up his eyes and saw.” The expression draws attention to the act of looking, indicating that Lot took a good look. It also calls attention to the importance of what was seen.

[13:10]  409 tn Or “plain”; Heb “circle.”

[13:10]  410 tn The words “he noticed” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[13:10]  411 sn Obliterated. The use of the term “destroy” (שַׁחֵת, shakhet) is reminiscent of the Noahic flood (Gen 6:13). Both at the flood and in Sodom the place was obliterated by catastrophe and only one family survived (see C. Westermann, Genesis, 2:178).

[13:10]  412 tn This short temporal clause (preposition + Piel infinitive construct + subjective genitive + direct object) is strategically placed in the middle of the lavish descriptions to sound an ominous note. The entire clause is parenthetical in nature. Most English translations place the clause at the end of v. 10 for stylistic reasons.

[13:10]  413 sn The narrative places emphasis on what Lot saw so that the reader can appreciate how it aroused his desire for the best land. It makes allusion to the garden of the Lord and to the land of Egypt for comparison. Just as the tree in the garden of Eden had awakened Eve’s desire, so the fertile valley attracted Lot. And just as certain memories of Egypt would cause the Israelites to want to turn back and abandon the trek to the promised land, so Lot headed for the good life.

[13:11]  414 tn Heb “Lot traveled.” The proper name has not been repeated in the translation at this point for stylistic reasons.

[13:11]  415 tn Heb “a man from upon his brother.”

[13:12]  416 tn Or “the cities of the plain”; Heb “[the cities of] the circle,” referring to the “circle” or oval area of the Jordan Valley.

[13:13]  417 tn Here is another significant parenthetical clause in the story, signaled by the vav (וו) disjunctive (translated “now”) on the noun at the beginning of the clause.

[13:13]  418 tn Heb “men.” However, this is generic in sense; it is unlikely that only the male residents of Sodom were sinners.

[13:13]  419 tn Heb “wicked and sinners against the Lord exceedingly.” The description of the sinfulness of the Sodomites is very emphatic. First, two nouns are used to form a hendiadys: “wicked and sinners” means “wicked sinners,” the first word becoming adjectival. The text is saying these were no ordinary sinners; they were wicked sinners, the type that cause pain for others. Then to this phrase is added “against the Lord,” stressing their violation of the laws of heaven and their culpability. Finally, to this is added מְאֹד (mÿod, “exceedingly,” translated here as “extremely”).

[13:14]  420 tn Heb “and the Lord said to Abram after Lot separated himself from with him.” The disjunctive clause at the beginning of the verse signals a new scene.

[13:14]  421 tn Heb “lift up your eyes and see.”

[13:15]  422 tn Heb “for all the land which you see to you I will give it and to your descendants.”

[13:16]  423 tn The translation “can be counted” (potential imperfect) is suggested by the use of יוּכַל (yukhal, “is able”) in the preceding clause.

[13:17]  424 tn The connective “and” is not present in the Hebrew text; it has been supplied for purposes of English style.

[13:17]  425 tn The Hitpael form הִתְהַלֵּךְ (hithallekh) means “to walk about”; it also can carry the ideas of moving about, traversing, going back and forth, or living in an area. It here has the connotation of traversing the land to survey it, to look it over.

[13:17]  426 tn Heb “the land to its length and to its breadth.” This phrase has not been included in the translation because it is somewhat redundant (see the note on the word “throughout” in this verse).

[13:18]  427 tn Heb “he came and lived.”

[13:18]  428 tn Or “terebinths.”

[14:1]  429 tn The sentence begins with the temporal indicator וַיְהִי (vayÿhi) followed by “in the days of.”

[14:1]  430 sn Shinar (also in v. 9) is the region of Babylonia.

[14:1]  431 tn Or “king of Goyim.” The Hebrew term גּוֹיִם (goyim) means “nations,” but a number of modern translations merely transliterate the Hebrew (cf. NEB “Goyim”; NIV, NRSV “Goiim”).

[14:2]  432 tn Heb “made war.”

[14:2]  433 sn On the geographical background of vv. 1-2 see J. P. Harland, “Sodom and Gomorrah,” The Biblical Archaeologist Reader, 1:41-75; and D. N. Freedman, “The Real Story of the Ebla Tablets, Ebla and the Cities of the Plain,” BA 41 (1978): 143-64.

[14:3]  434 tn Heb “all these,” referring only to the last five kings named. The referent has been specified as “these last five kings” in the translation for clarity.

[14:3]  435 tn The Hebrew verb used here means “to join together; to unite; to be allied.” It stresses close associations, especially of friendships, marriages, or treaties.

[14:3]  436 sn The Salt Sea is the older name for the Dead Sea.

[14:4]  437 tn The sentence simply begins with “twelve years”; it serves as an adverbial accusative giving the duration of their bondage.

[14:4]  438 tn This is another adverbial accusative of time.

[14:4]  439 sn The story serves as a foreshadowing of the plight of the kingdom of Israel later. Eastern powers came and forced the western kingdoms into submission. Each year, then, they would send tribute east – to keep them away. Here, in the thirteenth year, they refused to send the tribute (just as later Hezekiah rebelled against Assyria). And so in the fourteenth year the eastern powers came to put them down again. This account from Abram’s life taught future generations that God can give victory over such threats – that people did not have to live in servitude to tyrants from the east.

[14:5]  440 tn The Hebrew verb נָכָה (nakhah) means “to attack, to strike, to smite.” In this context it appears that the strike was successful, and so a translation of “defeated” is preferable.

[14:6]  441 sn The line of attack ran down the eastern side of the Jordan Valley into the desert, and then turned and came up the valley to the cities of the plain.

[14:7]  442 tn Heb “they returned and came to En Mishpat (that is, Kadesh).” The two verbs together form a verbal hendiadys, the first serving as the adverb: “they returned and came” means “they came again.” Most English translations do not treat this as a hendiadys, but translate “they turned back” or something similar. Since in the context, however, “came again to” does not simply refer to travel but an assault against the place, the present translation expresses this as “attacked…again.”

[14:8]  443 tn Heb “against.”

[14:9]  444 tn Or “Goyim.” See the note on the word “nations” in 14:1.

[14:9]  445 tn The Hebrew text has simply “against.” The word “fought” is supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[14:10]  446 tn Heb “Now the Valley of Siddim [was] pits, pits of tar.” This parenthetical disjunctive clause emphasizes the abundance of tar pits in the area through repetition of the noun “pits.”

[14:10]  447 tn Or “they were defeated there.” After a verb of motion the Hebrew particle שָׁם (sham) with the directional heh (שָׁמָּה, shammah) can mean “into it, therein” (BDB 1027 s.v. שָׁם).

[14:10]  448 tn Heb “the rest.”

[14:10]  449 sn The reference to the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah must mean the kings along with their armies. Most of them were defeated in the valley, but some of them escaped to the hills.

[14:11]  450 tn Heb “they”; the referent (the four victorious kings, see v. 9) has been supplied in the translation for clarity.

[14:12]  451 tn Heb “Lot the son of his brother.”

[14:12]  452 tn Heb “and.”

[14:12]  453 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Lot) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[14:12]  454 tn This disjunctive clause is circumstantial/causal, explaining that Lot was captured because he was living in Sodom at the time.

[14:13]  455 tn Heb “the fugitive.” The article carries a generic force or indicates that this fugitive is definite in the mind of the speaker.

[14:13]  456 sn E. A. Speiser (Genesis [AB], 103) suggests that part of this chapter came from an outside source since it refers to Abram the Hebrew. That is not impossible, given that the narrator likely utilized traditions and genealogies that had been collected and transmitted over the years. The meaning of the word “Hebrew” has proved elusive. It may be related to the verb “to cross over,” perhaps meaning “immigrant.” Or it might be derived from the name of Abram’s ancestor Eber (see Gen 11:14-16).

[14:13]  457 tn Or “terebinths.”

[14:13]  458 tn Or “a brother”; or “a relative”; or perhaps “an ally.”

[14:13]  459 tn Heb “possessors of a treaty with.” Since it is likely that the qualifying statement refers to all three (Mamre, Eshcol, and Aner) the words “all these” have been supplied in the translation to make this clear.

[14:13]  460 tn This parenthetical disjunctive clause explains how Abram came to be living in their territory, but it also explains why they must go to war with Abram.

[14:14]  461 tn Heb “his brother,” by extension, “relative.” Here and in v. 16 the more specific term “nephew” has been used in the translation for clarity. Lot was the son of Haran, Abram’s brother (Gen 11:27).

[14:14]  462 tn The verb וַיָּרֶק (vayyareq) is a rare form, probably related to the word רֵיק (req, “to be empty”). If so, it would be a very figurative use: “he emptied out” (or perhaps “unsheathed”) his men. The LXX has “mustered” (cf. NEB). E. A. Speiser (Genesis [AB], 103-4) suggests reading with the Samaritan Pentateuch a verb diq, cognate with Akkadian deku, “to mobilize” troops. If this view is accepted, one must assume that a confusion of the Hebrew letters ד (dalet) and ר (resh) led to the error in the traditional Hebrew text. These two letters are easily confused in all phases of ancient Hebrew script development. The present translation is based on this view.

[14:14]  463 tn The words “the invaders” have been supplied in the translation for clarification.

[14:14]  464 sn The use of the name Dan reflects a later perspective. The Danites did not migrate to this northern territory until centuries later (see Judg 18:29). Furthermore Dan was not even born until much later. By inserting this name a scribe has clarified the location of the region.

[14:15]  465 tn The Hebrew text simply has “night” as an adverbial accusative.

[14:15]  466 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Abram) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[14:15]  467 tn Heb “he divided himself…he and his servants.”

[14:15]  468 tn Heb “left.” Directions in ancient Israel were given in relation to the east rather than the north.

[14:16]  469 tn The word “stolen” is supplied in the translation for clarification.

[14:16]  470 tn The phrase “the rest of “ has been supplied in the translation for clarification.

[14:17]  471 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Abram) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[14:17]  472 tn Heb “him”; the referent (Abram) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[14:17]  473 sn The King’s Valley is possibly a reference to what came to be known later as the Kidron Valley.

[14:18]  474 sn Salem is traditionally identified as the Jebusite stronghold of old Jerusalem. Accordingly, there has been much speculation about its king. Though some have identified him with the preincarnate Christ or with Noah’s son Shem, it is far more likely that Melchizedek was a Canaanite royal priest whom God used to renew the promise of the blessing to Abram, perhaps because Abram considered Melchizedek his spiritual superior. But Melchizedek remains an enigma. In a book filled with genealogical records he appears on the scene without a genealogy and then disappears from the narrative. In Psalm 110 the Lord declares that the Davidic king is a royal priest after the pattern of Melchizedek.

[14:18]  475 tn The parenthetical disjunctive clause significantly identifies Melchizedek as a priest as well as a king.

[14:19]  476 tn The preposition לְ (lamed) introduces the agent after the passive participle.

[14:19]  477 tn Some translate “possessor of heaven and earth” (cf. NASB). But cognate evidence from Ugaritic indicates that there were two homonymic roots ָקנָה (qanah), one meaning “to create” (as in Gen 4:1) and the other “to obtain, to acquire, to possess.” While “possessor” would fit here, “creator” is the more likely due to the collocation with “heaven and earth.”

[14:19]  478 tn The terms translated “heaven” and “earth” are both objective genitives after the participle in construct.

[14:20]  479 tn Heb “blessed be.” For God to be “blessed” means that is praised. His reputation is enriched in the world as his name is praised.

[14:20]  480 sn Who delivered. The Hebrew verb מִגֵּן (miggen, “delivered”) foreshadows the statement by God to Abram in Gen 15:1, “I am your shield” (מָגֵן, magen). Melchizedek provided a theological interpretation of Abram’s military victory.

[14:20]  481 tn Heb “him”; the referent (Melchizedek) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[14:22]  482 tn Abram takes an oath, raising his hand as a solemn gesture. The translation understands the perfect tense as having an instantaneous nuance: “Here and now I raise my hand.”

[14:22]  483 tn The words “and vow” are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied in the translation for clarification.

[14:23]  484 tn The oath formula is elliptical, reading simply: “…if I take.” It is as if Abram says, “[May the Lord deal with me] if I take,” meaning, “I will surely not take.” The positive oath would add the negative adverb and be the reverse: “[God will deal with me] if I do not take,” meaning, “I certainly will.”

[14:23]  485 tn The Hebrew text adds the independent pronoun (“I”) to the verb form for emphasis.

[14:24]  486 tn The words “I will take nothing” have been supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[14:24]  487 tn Heb “except only what the young men have eaten.”

[15:1]  488 sn The noun “shield” recalls the words of Melchizedek in 14:20. If God is the shield, then God will deliver. Abram need not fear reprisals from those he has fought.

[15:1]  489 tn Heb “your reward [in] great abundance.” When the phrase הַרְבּה מְאֹדֵ (harbeh mÿod) follows a noun it invariably modifies the noun and carries the nuance “very great” or “in great abundance.” (See its use in Gen 41:49; Deut 3:5; Josh 22:8; 2 Sam 8:8; 12:2; 1 Kgs 4:29; 10:10-11; 2 Chr 14:13; 32:27; Jer 40:12.) Here the noun “reward” is in apposition to “shield” and refers by metonymy to God as the source of the reward. Some translate here “your reward will be very great” (cf. NASB, NRSV), taking the statement as an independent clause and understanding the Hiphil infinitive absolute as a substitute for a finite verb. However, the construction הַרְבּה מְאֹדֵ is never used this way elsewhere, where it either modifies a noun (see the texts listed above) or serves as an adverb in relation to a finite verb (see Josh 13:1; 1 Sam 26:21; 2 Sam 12:30; 2 Kgs 21:16; 1 Chr 20:2; Neh 2:2).

[15:2]  490 tn The Hebrew text has אֲדֹנָי יֱהוִה (’adonay yehvih, “Master, Lord”). Since the tetragrammaton (YHWH) usually is pointed with the vowels for the Hebrew word אֲדֹנָי (’adonay, “master”) to avoid pronouncing the divine name, that would lead in this place to a repetition of אֲדֹנָי. So the tetragrammaton is here pointed with the vowels for the word אֱלֹהִים (’elohim, “God”) instead. That would produce the reading of the Hebrew as “Master, God” in the Jewish textual tradition. But the presence of “Master” before the holy name is rather compelling evidence that the original would have been “Master, Lord,” which is rendered here “sovereign Lord.”

[15:2]  491 tn The vav (ו) disjunctive at the beginning of the clause is circumstantial, expressing the cause or reason.

[15:2]  492 tn Heb “I am going.”

[15:2]  493 tn Heb “the son of the acquisition of my house.”

[15:2]  494 tn The pronoun is anaphoric here, equivalent to the verb “to be” (R. J. Williams, Hebrew Syntax, 23, §115).

[15:2]  495 sn The sentence in the Hebrew text employs a very effective wordplay on the name Damascus: “The son of the acquisition (בֶּן־מֶשֶׁק, ben-mesheq) of my house is Eliezer of Damascus (דַּמֶּשֶׁק, dammesheq).” The words are not the same; they have different sibilants. But the sound play gives the impression that “in the nomen is the omen.” Eliezer the Damascene will be Abram’s heir if Abram dies childless because “Damascus” seems to mean that. See M. F. Unger, “Some Comments on the Text of Genesis 15:2-3,” JBL 72 (1953): 49-50; H. L. Ginsberg, “Abram’s ‘Damascene’ Steward,” BASOR 200 (1970): 31-32.

[15:3]  496 tn Heb “And Abram said.”

[15:3]  497 tn The construction uses הֵן (hen) to introduce the foundational clause (“since…”), and וְהִנֵּה (vÿhinneh) to introduce the main clause (“then look…”).

[15:3]  498 tn Heb “is inheriting me.”

[15:4]  499 tn The disjunctive draws attention to God’s response and the particle הִנֵּה (hinneh, translated “look”) mirrors Abram’s statement in v. 3 and highlights the fact that God responded to Abram.

[15:4]  500 tn The subject of the verb is the demonstrative pronoun, which can be translated “this one” or “this man.” That the Lord does not mention him by name is significant; often in ancient times the use of the name would bring legitimacy to inheritance and adoption cases.

[15:4]  501 tn Heb “inherit you.”

[15:4]  502 tn The Hebrew כִּי־אִם (ki-im) forms a very strong adversative.

[15:4]  503 tn Heb “he who”; the implied referent (Abram’s unborn son who will be his heir) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[15:4]  504 tn The pronoun could also be an emphatic subject: “whoever comes out of your body, he will inherit you.”

[15:4]  505 tn Heb “will inherit you.”

[15:5]  506 tn Heb “he”; the referent (the Lord) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[15:6]  507 tn The nonconsecutive vav (ו) is on a perfect verbal form. If the composer of the narrative had wanted to show simple sequence, he would have used the vav consecutive with the preterite. The perfect with vav conjunctive (where one expects the preterite with vav consecutive) in narrative contexts can have a variety of discourse functions, but here it probably serves to highlight Abram’s response to God’s promise. For a detailed discussion of the vav + perfect construction in Hebrew narrative, see R. Longacre, “Weqatal Forms in Biblical Hebrew Prose: A Discourse-modular Approach,” Biblical Hebrew and Discourse Linguistics, 50-98. The Hebrew verb אָמַן (’aman) means “to confirm, to support” in the Qal verbal stem. Its derivative nouns refer to something or someone that/who provides support, such as a “pillar,” “nurse,” or “guardian, trustee.” In the Niphal stem it comes to mean “to be faithful, to be reliable, to be dependable,” or “to be firm, to be sure.” In the Hiphil, the form used here, it takes on a declarative sense: “to consider something reliable [or “dependable”].” Abram regarded the God who made this promise as reliable and fully capable of making it a reality.

[15:6]  508 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (the Lord) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[15:6]  509 tn Heb “and he reckoned it to him.” The third feminine singular pronominal suffix refers back to Abram’s act of faith, mentioned in the preceding clause. On third feminine singular pronouns referring back to verbal ideas see GKC 440-41 §135.p. Some propose taking the suffix as proleptic, anticipating the following feminine noun (“righteousness”). In this case one might translate: “and he reckoned it to him – [namely] righteousness.” See O. P. Robertson, “Genesis 15:6: A New Covenant Exposition of an Old Covenant Text,” WTJ 42 (1980): 259-89.

[15:6]  510 tn Or “righteousness”; or “evidence of steadfast commitment.” The noun is an adverbial accusative. The verb translated “considered” (Heb “reckoned”) also appears with צְדָקָה (tsÿdaqah, “righteousness”) in Ps 106:31. Alluding to the events recorded in Numbers 25, the psalmist notes that Phinehas’ actions were “credited to him as righteousness for endless generations to come.” Reference is made to the unconditional, eternal covenant with which God rewarded Phinehas’ loyalty (Num 25:12-13). So צְדָקָה seems to carry by metonymy the meaning “loyal, rewardable behavior” here, a nuance that fits nicely in Genesis 15, where God responds to Abram’s faith by formally ratifying his promise to give Abram and his descendants the land. (See R. B. Chisholm, “Evidence from Genesis,” A Case for Premillennialism, 40.) In Phoenician and Old Aramaic inscriptions cognate nouns glossed as “correct, justifiable conduct” sometimes carry this same semantic nuance (DNWSI 2:962).

[15:7]  511 tn Heb “And he said.”

[15:7]  512 sn I am the Lord. The Lord initiates the covenant-making ceremony with a declaration of who he is and what he has done for Abram. The same form appears at the beginning of the covenant made at Sinai (see Exod 20:1).

[15:7]  513 sn The phrase of the Chaldeans is a later editorial clarification for the readers, designating the location of Ur. From all evidence there would have been no Chaldeans in existence at this early date; they are known in the time of the neo-Babylonian empire in the first millennium b.c.

[15:8]  514 tn Here the vav carries adversative force and is translated “but.”

[15:8]  515 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Abram) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[15:8]  516 tn See note on the phrase “sovereign Lord” in 15:2.

[15:8]  517 tn Or “how.”

[15:9]  518 tn Heb “He”; the referent (the Lord) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[15:10]  519 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Abram) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[15:10]  520 tn Heb “in the middle.”

[15:10]  521 tn Heb “to meet its neighbor.”

[15:12]  522 tn Heb “a deep sleep fell on Abram.”

[15:12]  523 tn Heb “and look, terror, a great darkness was falling on him.”

[15:13]  524 tn The Hebrew construction is emphatic, with the Qal infinitive absolute followed by the imperfect from יָדַע (yada’, “know”). The imperfect here has an obligatory or imperatival force.

[15:13]  525 tn The Hebrew word גֵּר (ger, “sojourner, stranger”) is related to the verb גּוּר (gur, “to sojourn, to stay for awhile”). Abram’s descendants will stay in a land as resident aliens without rights of citizenship.

[15:13]  526 tn Heb “in a land not theirs.”

[15:13]  527 tn Heb “and they will serve them and they will oppress them.” The verb עִנּוּ, (’innu, a Piel form from עָנָה, ’anah, “to afflict, to oppress, to treat harshly”), is used in Exod 1:11 to describe the oppression of the Israelites in Egypt.

[15:14]  528 tn The participle דָּן (dan, from דִּין, din) is used here for the future: “I am judging” = “I will surely judge.” The judgment in this case will be condemnation and punishment. The translation “execute judgment on” implies that the judgment will certainly be carried out.

[15:15]  529 tn The vav with the pronoun before the verb calls special attention to the subject in contrast to the preceding subject.

[15:15]  530 sn You will go to your ancestors. This is a euphemistic expression for death.

[15:15]  531 tn Heb “in a good old age.”

[15:16]  532 sn The term generation is being used here in its widest sense to refer to a full life span. When the chronological factors are considered and the genealogies tabulated, there are four hundred years of bondage. This suggests that in this context a generation is equivalent to one hundred years.

[15:16]  533 tn Heb “they”; the referent (“your descendants”) has been supplied in the translation for clarity.

[15:16]  534 tn Heb “is not yet complete.”

[15:17]  535 sn A smoking pot with a flaming torch. These same implements were used in Mesopotamian rituals designed to ward off evil (see E. A. Speiser, Genesis [AB], 113-14).

[15:17]  536 tn Heb “these pieces.”

[15:18]  537 tn Heb “cut a covenant.”

[15:18]  538 tn The perfect verbal form is understood as instantaneous (“I here and now give”). Another option is to understand it as rhetorical, indicating certitude (“I have given” meaning it is as good as done, i.e., “I will surely give”).

[15:18]  539 sn The river of Egypt is a wadi (a seasonal stream) on the northeastern border of Egypt, not to the River Nile.

[15:19]  540 tn The words “the land” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[15:21]  541 tn Each of the names in the list has the Hebrew definite article, which is used here generically for the class of people identified.

[32:1]  542 sn The phrase angels of God occurs only here and in Gen 28:12 in the OT. Jacob saw a vision of angels just before he left the promised land. Now he encounters angels as he prepares to return to it. The text does not give the details of the encounter, but Jacob’s response suggests it was amicable. This location was a spot where heaven made contact with earth, and where God made his presence known to the patriarch. See C. Houtman, “Jacob at Mahanaim: Some Remarks on Genesis XXXII 2-3,” VT 28 (1978): 37-44.

[32:2]  543 tn Heb “and Jacob said when he saw them.”

[32:2]  544 sn The name Mahanaim apparently means “two camps.” Perhaps the two camps were those of God and of Jacob.

[32:3]  545 tn Heb “before him.”

[32:3]  546 tn Heb “field.”

[32:4]  547 sn Your servant. The narrative recounts Jacob’s groveling in fear before Esau as he calls his brother his “lord,” as if to minimize what had been done twenty years ago.

[32:5]  548 tn Or “I am sending.” The form is a preterite with the vav consecutive; it could be rendered as an English present tense – as the Hebrew perfect/preterite allows – much like an epistolary aorist in Greek. The form assumes the temporal perspective of the one who reads the message.

[32:5]  549 tn The words “this message” are not in the Hebrew text, but have been supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[32:8]  550 tn Heb “If Esau comes to one camp and attacks it.”

[32:8]  551 tn Heb “and he said, ‘If Esau comes to one camp and attacks it.” The Hebrew verb אָמַר (’amar) here represents Jacob’s thought or reasoning, and is therefore translated “he thought.” The order of the introductory clause and the direct discourse has been rearranged in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[32:8]  552 tn Heb “the surviving camp will be for escape.” The word “escape” is a feminine noun. The term most often refers to refugees from war.

[32:9]  553 tn Heb “said.”

[32:9]  554 tn Heb “the one who said.”

[32:9]  555 tn Heb “I will cause good” or “I will treat well [or “favorably”].” The idea includes more than prosperity, though that is its essential meaning. Here the form is subordinated to the preceding imperative and indicates purpose or result. Jacob is reminding God of his promise in the hope that God will honor his word.

[32:10]  556 tn Heb “the loving deeds and faithfulness” (see 24:27, 49).

[32:10]  557 tn Heb “you have done with.”

[32:10]  558 tn Heb “for with my staff.” The Hebrew word מַקֵל (maqel), traditionally translated “staff,” has been rendered as “walking stick” because a “staff” in contemporary English refers typically to the support personnel in an organization.

[32:10]  559 tn Heb “this Jordan.”

[32:11]  560 tn The imperative has the force of a prayer here, not a command.

[32:11]  561 tn The “hand” here is a metonymy for “power.”

[32:11]  562 tn Heb “from the hand of my brother, from the hand of Esau.”

[32:11]  563 tn Heb “for I am afraid of him, lest he come.”

[32:11]  564 sn Heb “me, [the] mother upon [the] sons.” The first person pronoun “me” probably means here “me and mine,” as the following clause suggests.

[32:12]  565 tn Heb “But you, you said.” One of the occurrences of the pronoun “you” has been left untranslated for stylistic reasons.

[32:12]  566 tn Or “will certainly deal well with you.” The infinitive absolute appears before the imperfect, underscoring God’s promise to bless. The statement is more emphatic than in v. 9.

[32:12]  567 tn The form is the perfect tense with a vav (ו) consecutive, carrying the nuance of the preceding verb forward.

[32:12]  568 tn Heb “which cannot be counted because of abundance.” The imperfect verbal form indicates potential here.

[32:13]  569 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[32:13]  570 tn Heb “and he took from that which was going into his hand,” meaning that he took some of what belonged to him.

[32:13]  571 sn The Hebrew noun translated gift can in some contexts refer to the tribute paid by a subject to his lord. Such a nuance is possible here, because Jacob refers to Esau as his lord and to himself as Esau’s servant (v. 4).

[32:16]  572 tn Heb “and he put them in the hand of.”

[32:16]  573 tn Heb “a herd, a herd, by itself,” or “each herd by itself.” The distributive sense is expressed by repetition.

[32:17]  574 tn Heb “the first”; this has been specified as “the servant leading the first herd” in the translation for clarity.

[32:17]  575 tn Heb “to whom are you?”

[32:17]  576 tn Heb “and to whom are these before you?”

[32:18]  577 tn The form is the perfect tense with the vav (ו) consecutive; it has the nuance of an imperfect of instruction.

[32:18]  578 tn The words “they belong” have been supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[32:18]  579 tn Heb “to your servant, to Jacob.”

[32:18]  580 tn Heb “to my lord, to Esau.”

[32:18]  581 tn Heb “and look, also he [is] behind us.” The referent of the pronoun “he” (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[32:19]  582 tn Heb “And he commanded also the second, also the third, also all the ones going after the herds, saying: ‘According to this word you will speak when you find him.’”

[32:20]  583 tn Heb “and look, your servant Jacob [is] behind us.”

[32:20]  584 tn Heb “for he said.” The referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity. The Hebrew word מַקֵל (maqel), traditionally represents Jacob’s thought or reasoning, and is therefore translated “thought.”

[32:20]  585 tn Heb “I will appease his face.” The cohortative here expresses Jacob’s resolve. In the Book of Leviticus the Hebrew verb translated “appease” has the idea of removing anger due to sin or guilt, a nuance that fits this passage very well. Jacob wanted to buy Esau off with a gift of more than five hundred and fifty animals.

[32:20]  586 tn Heb “with a gift going before me.”

[32:20]  587 tn Heb “I will see his face.”

[32:20]  588 tn Heb “Perhaps he will lift up my face.” In this context the idiom refers to acceptance.

[32:21]  589 tn Heb “and the gift passed over upon his face.”

[32:21]  590 tn The disjunctive clause is circumstantial/temporal.

[32:22]  591 tn Heb “and he arose in that night and he took.” The first verb is adverbial, indicating that he carried out the crossing right away.

[32:22]  592 tn The Hebrew term used here is יֶלֶד (yeled) which typically describes male offspring. Some translations render the term “children” but this is a problem because by this time Jacob had twelve children in all, including one daughter, Dinah, born to Leah (Gen 30:21). Benjamin, his twelfth son and thirteenth child, was not born until later (Gen 35:16-19).

[32:22]  593 sn Hebrew narrative style often includes a summary statement of the whole passage followed by a more detailed report of the event. Here v. 22 is the summary statement, while v. 23 begins the detailed account.

[32:23]  594 tn Heb “and he sent across what he had.”

[32:24]  595 sn Reflecting Jacob’s perspective at the beginning of the encounter, the narrator calls the opponent simply “a man.” Not until later in the struggle does Jacob realize his true identity.

[32:24]  596 sn The verb translated “wrestled” (וַיֵּאָבֵק, vayyeaveq) sounds in Hebrew like the names “Jacob” (יַעֲקֹב, yaaqov) and “Jabbok” (יַבֹּק, yabboq). In this way the narrator links the setting, the main action, and the main participant together in the mind of the reader or hearer.

[32:24]  597 tn Heb “until the rising of the dawn.”

[32:25]  598 tn Heb “he”; the referent (the man) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[32:25]  599 tn Heb “him”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[32:25]  600 tn Or “injured”; traditionally “touched.” The Hebrew verb translated “struck” has the primary meanings “to touch; to reach; to strike.” It can, however, carry the connotation “to harm; to molest; to injure.” God’s “touch” cripples Jacob – it would be comparable to a devastating blow.

[32:26]  601 tn Heb “he”; the referent (the man) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[32:26]  602 tn Heb “dawn has arisen.”

[32:26]  603 tn Heb “and he said, ‘I will not let you go.’” The referent of the pronoun “he” (Jacob) has been specified for clarity, and the order of the introductory clause and the direct discourse has been rearranged in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[32:26]  604 sn Jacob wrestled with a man thinking him to be a mere man, and on that basis was equal to the task. But when it had gone on long enough, the night visitor touched Jacob and crippled him. Jacob’s request for a blessing can only mean that he now knew that his opponent was supernatural. Contrary to many allegorical interpretations of the passage that make fighting equivalent to prayer, this passage shows that Jacob stopped fighting, and then asked for a blessing.

[32:27]  605 tn Heb “and he said to him.” The referent of the pronoun “he” (the man who wrestled with Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[32:27]  606 sn What is your name? The question is rhetorical, since the Lord obviously knew Jacob’s identity. But since the Lord is going to change Jacob’s name, this question is designed to bring focus Jacob’s attention on all that his name had come to signify.

[32:28]  607 tn Heb “and he said.” The referent of the pronoun “he” (the man who wrestled with Jacob) has been specified for clarity, and the order of the introductory clause and the direct discourse has been rearranged in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[32:28]  608 sn The name Israel is a common construction, using a verb with a theophoric element (אֵל, ’el) that usually indicates the subject of the verb. Here it means “God fights.” This name will replace the name Jacob; it will be both a promise and a call for faith. In essence, the Lord was saying that Jacob would have victory and receive the promises because God would fight for him.

[32:28]  609 sn You have fought. The explanation of the name Israel includes a sound play. In Hebrew the verb translated “you have fought” (שָׂרִיתָ, sarita) sounds like the name “Israel” (יִשְׂרָאֵל, yisrael ), meaning “God fights” (although some interpret the meaning as “he fights [with] God”). The name would evoke the memory of the fight and what it meant. A. Dillmann says that ever after this the name would tell the Israelites that, when Jacob contended successfully with God, he won the battle with man (Genesis, 2:279). To be successful with God meant that he had to be crippled in his own self-sufficiency (A. P. Ross, “Jacob at the Jabboq, Israel at Peniel,” BSac 142 [1985]: 51-62).

[32:29]  610 sn Tell me your name. In primitive thought to know the name of a deity or supernatural being would enable one to use it for magical manipulation or power (A. S. Herbert, Genesis 12-50 [TBC], 108). For a thorough structural analysis of the passage discussing the plays on the names and the request of Jacob, see R. Barthes, “The Struggle with the Angel: Textual Analysis of Genesis 32:23-33,” Structural Analysis and Biblical Exegesis (PTMS), 21-33.

[32:29]  611 tn The question uses the enclitic pronoun “this” to emphasize the import of the question.

[32:29]  612 tn Heb “and he said, ‘Why is it that you ask my name?’” The referent of the pronoun “he” (the man who wrestled with Jacob) has been specified for clarity, and the order of the introductory clause and the direct discourse has been rearranged in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[32:29]  613 tn The verb here means that the Lord endowed Jacob with success; he would be successful in everything he did, including meeting Esau.

[32:29]  614 tn Heb “him”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[32:30]  615 sn The name Peniel means “face of God.” Since Jacob saw God face to face here, the name is appropriate.

[32:30]  616 tn The word “explaining” is supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[32:30]  617 tn Or “because.”

[32:30]  618 sn I have seen God face to face. See the note on the name “Peniel” earlier in the verse.

[32:30]  619 tn Heb “and my soul [= life] has been preserved.”

[32:31]  620 tn Heb “shone.”

[32:31]  621 sn The name is spelled Penuel here, apparently a variant spelling of Peniel (see v. 30).

[32:31]  622 tn The disjunctive clause draws attention to an important fact: He may have crossed the stream, but he was limping.

[32:32]  623 sn On the use of the expression to this day, see B. S. Childs, “A Study of the Formula ‘Until This Day’,” JBL 82 (1963): 279-92.

[32:32]  624 tn Or “because the socket of Jacob’s hip was struck.” Some translations render this as an impersonal passive. On the translation of the word “struck” see the note on this term in v. 25.

[33:1]  625 tn Heb “and Jacob lifted up his eyes.”

[33:1]  626 tn Or “and look, Esau was coming.” By the use of the particle הִנֵּה (hinneh, “look”), the narrator invites the reader to view the scene through Jacob’s eyes.

[33:2]  627 sn This kind of ranking according to favoritism no doubt fed the jealousy over Joseph that later becomes an important element in the narrative. It must have been painful to the family to see that they were expendable.

[33:3]  628 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:3]  629 tn Heb “until his drawing near unto his brother.” The construction uses the preposition with the infinitive construct to express a temporal clause.

[33:5]  630 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Esau) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:5]  631 tn Heb “lifted up his eyes.”

[33:5]  632 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:5]  633 tn The Hebrew verb means “to be gracious; to show favor”; here it carries the nuance “to give graciously.”

[33:6]  634 tn Heb “and the female servants drew near, they and their children and they bowed down.”

[33:8]  635 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Esau) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:8]  636 tn Heb “Who to you?”

[33:8]  637 tn Heb “all this camp which I met.”

[33:8]  638 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:10]  639 tn Heb “and Jacob said, ‘No, please.’” The words “take them” have been supplied in the translation for clarity, and the order of the introductory clause and the direct discourse rearranged for stylistic reasons.

[33:10]  640 tn The form is the perfect tense with a vav (ו) consecutive, expressing a contingent future nuance in the “then” section of the conditional sentence.

[33:10]  641 tn The verbal form is the preterite with a vav (ו) consecutive, indicating result here.

[33:10]  642 tn Heb “for therefore I have seen your face like seeing the face of God and you have accepted me.”

[33:11]  643 tn Heb “blessing.” It is as if Jacob is trying to repay what he stole from his brother twenty years earlier.

[33:11]  644 tn Or “gracious,” but in the specific sense of prosperity.

[33:11]  645 tn Heb “all.”

[33:11]  646 tn Heb “and he urged him and he took.” The referent of the first pronoun in the sequence (“he”) has been specified as “Jacob” in the translation for clarity.

[33:12]  647 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Esau) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:12]  648 tn Heb “let us travel and let us go.” The two cohortatives are used in combination with the sense, “let’s travel along, get going, be on our way.”

[33:13]  649 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:13]  650 tn Heb “weak.”

[33:13]  651 tn Heb “and the sheep and the cattle nursing [are] upon me.”

[33:14]  652 tn Heb “and I, I will move along according to my leisure at the foot of the property which is before me and at the foot of the children.”

[33:15]  653 tn The cohortative verbal form here indicates a polite offer of help.

[33:15]  654 tn Heb “and he said, ‘Why this?’” The referent of the pronoun “he” (Jacob) has been specified for clarity, and the order of the introductory clause and the direct discourse has been rearranged in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[33:15]  655 tn Heb “I am finding favor in the eyes of my lord.”

[33:16]  656 tn Heb “returned on his way.”

[33:17]  657 tn The disjunctive clause contrasts Jacob’s action with Esau’s.

[33:17]  658 sn But Jacob traveled to Succoth. There are several reasons why Jacob chose not to go to Mt. Seir after Esau. First, as he said, his herds and children probably could not keep up with the warriors. Second, he probably did not fully trust his brother. The current friendliness could change, and he could lose everything. And third, God did tell him to return to his land, not Seir. But Jacob is still not able to deal truthfully, probably because of fear of Esau.

[33:17]  659 tn Heb “why he called.” One could understand “Jacob” as the subject of the verb, but it is more likely that the subject is indefinite, in which case the verb is better translated as passive.

[33:17]  660 sn The name Succoth means “shelters,” an appropriate name in light of the shelters Jacob built there for his livestock.

[33:18]  661 tn Heb “in front of.”

[33:19]  662 tn The words “he bought it” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons. In the Hebrew text v. 19 is one long sentence.

[33:19]  663 tn The Hebrew word קְשִׂיטָה (qÿsitah) is generally understood to refer to a unit of money, but the value is unknown. (However, cf. REB, which renders the term as “sheep”).

[33:20]  664 tn Heb “God, the God of Israel.” Rather than translating the name, a number of modern translations merely transliterate it from the Hebrew as “El Elohe Israel” (cf. NIV, NRSV, REB). It is not entirely clear how the name should be interpreted grammatically. One option is to supply an equative verb, as in the translation: “The God of Israel [is] God.” Another interpretive option is “the God of Israel [is] strong [or “mighty”].” Buying the land and settling down for a while was a momentous step for the patriarch, so the commemorative naming of the altar is significant.

[34:1]  665 tn Heb “went out to see.” The verb “to see,” followed by the preposition בְּ (bÿ), here has the idea of “look over.” The young girl wanted to meet these women and see what they were like.

[34:1]  666 tn Heb “daughters.”

[34:2]  667 tn Heb “and he took her and lay with her.” The suffixed form following the verb appears to be the sign of the accusative instead of the preposition, but see BDB 1012 s.v. שָׁכַב.

[34:2]  668 tn The verb עָנָה (’anah) in the Piel stem can have various shades of meaning, depending on the context: “to defile; to mistreat; to violate; to rape; to shame; to afflict.” Here it means that Shechem violated or humiliated Dinah by raping her.

[34:3]  669 tn Heb “his soul stuck to [or “joined with”],” meaning Shechem became very attached to Dinah emotionally.

[34:3]  670 tn Heb “and he spoke to the heart of the young woman,” which apparently refers in this context to tender, romantic speech (Hos 2:14). Another option is to translate the expression “he reassured the young woman” (see Judg 19:3, 2 Sam 19:7; cf. NEB “comforted her”).

[34:4]  671 tn Heb “Take for me this young woman for a wife.”

[34:5]  672 tn The two disjunctive clauses in this verse (“Now Jacob heard…and his sons were”) are juxtaposed to indicate synchronic action.

[34:5]  673 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Shechem) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[34:5]  674 sn The expected response would be anger or rage; but Jacob remained silent. He appears too indifferent or confused to act decisively. When the leader does not act decisively, the younger zealots will, and often with disastrous results.

[34:6]  675 tn Heb “went out to Jacob to speak with him.” The words “about Dinah” are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied in the translation for clarity.

[34:7]  676 tn Heb “when they heard.” The words “the news” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[34:7]  677 tn Heb “the men.” This sounds as if a new group has been introduced into the narrative, so it has been translated as “they” to indicate that it refers to Jacob’s sons, mentioned in the first part of the verse.

[34:7]  678 tn The Hebrew verb עָצַב (’atsav) can carry one of three semantic nuances depending on the context: (1) “to be injured” (Ps 56:5; Eccl 10:9; 1 Chr 4:10); (2) “to experience emotional pain; to be depressed emotionally; to be worried” (2 Sam 19:2; Isa 54:6; Neh 8:10-11); (3) “to be embarrassed; to be insulted; to be offended” (to the point of anger at another or oneself; Gen 6:6; 45:5; 1 Sam 20:3, 34; 1 Kgs 1:6; Isa 63:10; Ps 78:40). This third category develops from the second by metonymy. In certain contexts emotional pain leads to embarrassment and/or anger. In this last use the subject sometimes directs his anger against the source of grief (see especially Gen 6:6). The third category fits best in Gen 34:7 because Jacob’s sons were not merely wounded emotionally. On the contrary, Shechem’s action prompted them to strike out in judgment against the source of their distress.

[34:7]  679 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Shechem) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[34:7]  680 tn Heb “a disgraceful thing he did against Israel.”

[34:7]  681 tn Heb “by lying with the daughter of Jacob.” The infinitive here explains the preceding verb, indicating exactly how he had disgraced Jacob. The expression “to lie with” is a euphemism for sexual relations, or in this case, sexual assault.

[34:7]  682 tn Heb “and so it should not be done.” The negated imperfect has an obligatory nuance here, but there is also a generalizing tone. The narrator emphasizes that this particular type of crime (sexual assault) is especially reprehensible.

[34:8]  683 tn Heb “Shechem my son, his soul is attached to your daughter.” The verb means “to love” in the sense of being emotionally attached to or drawn to someone. This is a slightly different way of saying what was reported earlier (v. 3). However, there is no mention here of the offense. Even though Hamor is speaking to Dinah’s brothers, he refers to her as their daughter (see v. 17).

[34:9]  684 tn Heb “form marriage alliances with us.”

[34:9]  685 tn Heb “Give your daughters to us, and take our daughters for yourselves.” In the translation the words “let…marry” and “as wives” are supplied for clarity.

[34:10]  686 tn The imperfect verbal form has a permissive nuance here.

[34:10]  687 tn Heb “before you.”

[34:10]  688 tn The verb seems to carry the basic meaning “travel about freely,” although the substantival participial form refers to a trader (see E. A. Speiser, “The Verb sh£r in Genesis and Early Hebrew Movements,” BASOR 164 [1961]: 23-28); cf. NIV, NRSV “trade in it.”

[34:11]  689 tn Heb “her”; the referent (Dinah) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[34:11]  690 tn Heb “whatever you say.”

[34:11]  691 tn Or “pay.”

[34:12]  692 tn Heb “Make very great upon me the bride price and gift.” The imperatives are used in a rhetorical manner. Shechem’s point is that he will pay the price, no matter how expensive it might be.

[34:12]  693 tn The cohortative expresses Shechem’s resolve to have Dinah as his wife.

[34:12]  694 tn Heb “say.”

[34:13]  695 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Shechem) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[34:14]  696 tn Heb “we are not able to do this thing, to give.” The second infinitive is in apposition to the first, explaining what they are not able to do.

[34:14]  697 tn The Hebrew word translated “disgrace” usually means “ridicule; taunt; reproach.” It can also refer to the reason the condition of shame or disgrace causes ridicule or a reproach.

[34:15]  698 tn Heb “if you are like us.”

[34:15]  699 tn The infinitive here explains how they would become like them.

[34:16]  700 tn The perfect verbal form with the vav (ו) consecutive introduces the apodosis of the conditional sentence.

[34:16]  701 tn The words “to marry” (and the words “as wives” in the following clause) are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied in the translation for clarity.

[34:17]  702 tn Heb “listen to us.”

[34:17]  703 tn The perfect verbal form with the vav (ו) consecutive introduces the apodosis of the conditional sentence.

[34:17]  704 tn Heb “daughter.” Jacob’s sons call Dinah their daughter, even though she was their sister (see v. 8). This has been translated as “sister” for clarity.

[34:18]  705 tn Heb “and their words were good in the eyes of Hamor and in the eyes of Shechem son of Hamor.”

[34:19]  706 tn Heb “doing the thing.”

[34:19]  707 tn Heb “Jacob’s daughter.” The proper name “Dinah” is supplied in the translation for clarity.

[34:19]  708 tn The Hebrew verb כָּבֵד (kaved), translated “was…important,” has the primary meaning “to be heavy,” but here carries a secondary sense of “to be important” (that is, “heavy” in honor or respect).

[34:19]  709 tn The parenthetical disjunctive clause explains why the community would respond to him (see vv. 20-24).

[34:20]  710 sn The gate. In an ancient Near Eastern city the gate complex was the location for conducting important public business.

[34:21]  711 tn Heb “wide on both hands,” that is, in both directions.

[34:21]  712 tn The words “to marry” are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied in the translation for clarity.

[34:22]  713 tn Heb “when every one of our males is circumcised.”

[34:23]  714 tn The words “If we do so” are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied in the translation for clarity and for stylistic reasons.

[34:24]  715 tn Heb “all those going out the gate of his city.”

[34:24]  716 tn Heb “listened to.”

[34:24]  717 tn Heb “all those going out the gate of his city.”

[34:25]  718 tn Heb “a man his sword.”

[34:25]  719 tn Heb “and they came upon the city, [which was] secure.” In this case “secure” means the city was caught unprepared and at peace, not expecting an attack.

[34:27]  720 tn Heb “came upon the slain.” Because of this statement the preceding phrase “Jacob’s sons” is frequently taken to mean the other sons of Jacob besides Simeon and Levi, but the text does not clearly affirm this.

[34:27]  721 tn Heb “because they violated their sister.” The plural verb is active in form, but with no expressed subject, it may be translated passive.

[34:28]  722 tn Heb “and what was in the city and what was in the field they took.”

[34:29]  723 tn Heb “they took captive and they plundered,” that is, “they captured as plunder.”

[34:30]  724 tn The traditional translation is “troubled me” (KJV, ASV), but the verb refers to personal or national disaster and suggests complete ruin (see Josh 7:25, Judg 11:35, Prov 11:17). The remainder of the verse describes the “trouble” Simeon and Levi had caused.

[34:30]  725 tn In the causative stem the Hebrew verb בָּאַשׁ (baash) means “to cause to stink, to have a foul smell.” In the contexts in which it is used it describes foul smells, stenches, or things that are odious. Jacob senses that the people in the land will find this act terribly repulsive. See P. R. Ackroyd, “The Hebrew Root באשׁ,” JTS 2 (1951): 31-36.

[34:30]  726 tn Jacob speaks in the first person as the head and representative of the entire family.

[34:31]  727 tn Heb “but they said.” The referent of “they” (Simeon and Levi) have been specified in the translation for clarity.

[35:1]  728 tn Heb “arise, go up.” The first imperative gives the command a sense of urgency.

[35:1]  729 map For location see Map4 G4; Map5 C1; Map6 E3; Map7 D1; Map8 G3.

[35:1]  730 sn God is calling on Jacob to fulfill his vow he made when he fled from…Esau (see Gen 28:20-22).

[35:2]  731 tn Heb “which are in your midst.”

[35:2]  732 sn The actions of removing false gods, becoming ritually clean, and changing garments would become necessary steps in Israel when approaching the Lord in worship.

[35:3]  733 tn Heb “let us arise and let us go up.” The first cohortative gives the statement a sense of urgency.

[35:3]  734 tn The cohortative with the prefixed conjunction here indicates purpose or consequence.

[35:3]  735 tn Heb “day of distress.” See Ps 20:1 which utilizes similar language.

[35:3]  736 tn Heb “in the way in which I went.” Jacob alludes here to God’s promise to be with him (see Gen 28:20).

[35:4]  737 tn Heb “in their hand.”

[35:4]  738 sn On the basis of a comparison with Gen 34 and Num 31, G. J. Wenham argues that the foreign gods and the rings could have been part of the plunder that came from the destruction of Shechem (Genesis [WBC], 2:324).

[35:4]  739 sn Jacob buried them. On the burial of the gods, see E. Nielson, “The Burial of the Foreign Gods,” ST 8 (1954/55): 102-22.

[35:4]  740 tn Or “terebinth.”

[35:5]  741 tn Heb “and they journeyed.”

[35:5]  742 tn Heb “and the fear of God was upon the cities which were round about them.” The expression “fear of God” apparently refers (1) to a fear of God (objective genitive; God is the object of their fear). (2) But it could mean “fear from God,” that is, fear which God placed in them (cf. NRSV “a terror from God”). Another option (3) is that the divine name is used as a superlative here, referring to “tremendous fear” (cf. NEB “were panic-stricken”; NASB “a great terror”).

[35:6]  743 map For location see Map4 G4; Map5 C1; Map6 E3; Map7 D1; Map8 G3.

[35:6]  744 tn Heb “and Jacob came to Luz which is in the land of Canaan – it is Bethel – he and all the people who were with him.”

[35:7]  745 sn The name El-Bethel means “God of Bethel.”

[35:7]  746 tn Heb “revealed themselves.” The verb נִגְלוּ (niglu), translated “revealed himself,” is plural, even though one expects the singular form with the plural of majesty. Perhaps אֱלֹהִים (’elohim) is here a numerical plural, referring both to God and the angelic beings that appeared to Jacob. See the note on the word “know” in Gen 3:5.

[35:8]  747 sn Deborah. This woman had been Rebekah’s nurse, but later attached herself to Jacob. She must have been about one hundred and eighty years old when she died.

[35:8]  748 tn “and he called its name.” There is no expressed subject, so the verb can be translated as passive.

[35:8]  749 tn Or “Allon Bacuth,” if one transliterates the Hebrew name (cf. NEB, NIV, NRSV). An oak tree was revered in the ancient world and often designated as a shrine or landmark. This one was named for the weeping (mourning) occasioned by the death of Deborah.

[35:10]  750 tn Heb “and he called his name Israel.” The referent of the pronoun “he” (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[35:11]  751 tn The name אֵל שַׁדַּי (’el shadday, “El Shaddai”) has often been translated “God Almighty,” primarily because Jerome translated it omnipotens (“all powerful”) in the Latin Vulgate. There has been much debate over the meaning of the name. For discussion see W. F. Albright, “The Names Shaddai and Abram,” JBL 54 (1935): 173-210; R. Gordis, “The Biblical Root sdy-sd,” JTS 41 (1940): 34-43; and especially T. N. D. Mettinger, In Search of God, 69-72. Shaddai/El Shaddai is the sovereign king of the world who grants, blesses, and judges. In the Book of Genesis he blesses the patriarchs with fertility and promises numerous descendants. Outside Genesis he both blesses/protects and takes away life/happiness. The patriarchs knew God primarily as El Shaddai (Exod 6:3). While the origin and meaning of this name are uncertain its significance is clear. The name is used in contexts where God appears as the source of fertility and life. For a fuller discussion see the note on “sovereign God” in Gen 17:1.

[35:11]  752 tn Heb “A nation and a company of nations will be from you and kings from your loins will come out.”

[35:12]  753 tn The Hebrew verb translated “gave” refers to the Abrahamic promise of the land. However, the actual possession of that land lay in the future. The decree of the Lord made it certain; but it has the sense “promised to give.”

[35:12]  754 tn Heb “and to your offspring after you.”

[35:13]  755 tn Heb “went up from upon him in the place.”

[35:14]  756 tn Heb “and Jacob set up a sacred pillar in the place where he spoke with him, a sacred pillar of stone” (see the notes on the term “sacred stone” in Gen 28:18). This passage stands parallel to Gen 28:18-19, where Jacob set up a sacred stone, poured oil on it, and called the place Bethel. Some commentators see these as two traditions referring to the same event, but it is more likely that Jacob reconsecrated the place in fulfillment of the vow he had made here earlier. In support of this is the fact that the present narrative alludes to and is built on the previous one.

[35:14]  757 tn The verb נָסַךְ (nasakh) means “to pour out, to make libations,” and the noun נֶסֶךְ (nesekh) is a “drink-offering,” usually of wine or of blood. The verb יָצַק (yatsaq) means “to pour out,” often of anointing oil, but of other elements as well.

[35:15]  758 sn Called the name of the place. In view of the previous naming of Bethel in Gen 28:19, here Jacob was confirming or affirming the name through an official ritual marking the fulfillment of the vow. This place now did become Bethel, the house of God.

[35:15]  759 tn The name Bethel means “house of God” in Hebrew.

[35:16]  760 tn Heb “and there was still a stretch of the land to go to Ephrath.”

[35:16]  761 tn Normally the verb would be translated “she gave birth,” but because that obviously had not happened yet, it is better to translate the verb as ingressive, “began to give birth” (cf. NIV) or “went into labor.”

[35:17]  762 tn The construction uses a Hiphil infinitive, which E. A. Speiser classifies as an elative Hiphil. The contrast is with the previous Piel: there “she had hard labor,” and here, “her labor was at its hardest.” Failure to see this, Speiser notes, has led to redundant translations and misunderstandings (Genesis [AB], 273).

[35:17]  763 sn Another son. The episode recalls and fulfills the prayer of Rachel at the birth of Joseph (Gen 30:24): “may he add” another son.

[35:18]  764 tn Heb “in the going out of her life, for she was dying.” Rachel named the child with her dying breath.

[35:18]  765 sn The name Ben-Oni means “son of my suffering.” It is ironic that Rachel’s words to Jacob in Gen 30:1, “Give me children or I’ll die,” take a different turn here, for it was having the child that brought about her death.

[35:18]  766 tn The disjunctive clause is contrastive.

[35:19]  767 sn This explanatory note links the earlier name Ephrath with the later name Bethlehem.

[35:20]  768 tn Heb “standing stone.”

[35:20]  769 tn Or perhaps “it is known as” (cf. NEB).

[35:21]  770 sn The location of Migdal Eder is not given. It appears to be somewhere between Bethlehem and Hebron. Various traditions have identified it as at the shepherds’ fields near Bethlehem (the Hebrew name Migdal Eder means “tower of the flock”; see Mic 4:8) or located it near Solomon’s pools.

[35:22]  771 tn Heb “and Reuben went and lay with.” The expression “lay with” is a euphemism for having sexual intercourse.

[35:27]  772 tn This is an adverbial accusative of location.

[35:27]  773 tn The name “Kiriath Arba” is in apposition to the preceding name, “Mamre.”

[35:27]  774 tn The Hebrew verb גּוּר (gur), traditionally rendered “to sojourn,” refers to temporary settlement without ownership rights.

[35:28]  775 tn Heb “And the days of Isaac were one hundred and eighty years.”

[35:29]  776 tn Heb “and Isaac expired and died and he was gathered to his people.” In the ancient Israelite view he joined his deceased ancestors in Sheol, the land of the dead.

[35:29]  777 tn Heb “old and full of years.”

[36:1]  778 sn Chapter 36 records what became of Esau. It will list both his actual descendants as well as the people he subsumed under his tribal leadership, people who were aboriginal Edomites. The chapter is long and complicated (see further J. R. Bartlett, “The Edomite King-List of Genesis 36:31-39 and 1 Chronicles 1:43-50,” JTS 16 [1965]: 301-14; and W. J. Horowitz, “Were There Twelve Horite Tribes?” CBQ 35 [1973]: 69-71). In the format of the Book of Genesis, the line of Esau is “tidied up” before the account of Jacob is traced (37:2). As such the arrangement makes a strong contrast with Jacob. As F. Delitzsch says, “secular greatness in general grows up far more rapidly than spiritual greatness” (New Commentary on Genesis, 2:238). In other words, the progress of the world far out distances the progress of the righteous who are waiting for the promise.

[36:2]  779 tn Heb “from the daughters of Canaan.”

[36:2]  780 tn Heb “daughter,” but see Gen 36:24-25.

[36:6]  781 tn Heb “from before.”

[36:7]  782 tn Heb “land of their settlements.”

[36:8]  783 tn Traditionally “Mount Seir,” but in this case the expression בְּהַר שֵׂעִיר (bÿhar seir) refers to the hill country or highlands of Seir.

[36:9]  784 sn The term father in genealogical records needs to be carefully defined. It can refer to a literal father, a grandfather, a political overlord, or a founder.

[36:12]  785 tn Or “grandsons” (NIV); “descendants” (NEB).

[36:13]  786 tn Or “grandsons” (NIV); “descendants” (NEB).

[36:14]  787 tn Heb “daughter,” but see Gen 36:24-25.

[36:15]  788 tn Or “clan leaders” (so also throughout this chapter).

[36:15]  789 tn Or “sons.”

[36:16]  790 tc The Samaritan Pentateuch omits the name “Korah” (see v. 11 and 1 Chr 1:36).

[36:16]  791 tn Or “grandsons” (NIV); “descendants” (NEB).

[36:17]  792 tn Or “grandsons” (NIV); “descendants” (NEB).

[36:20]  793 sn The same pattern of sons, grandsons, and chiefs is now listed for Seir the Horite. “Seir” is both the name of the place and the name of the ancestor of these tribes. The name “Horite” is probably not to be identified with “Hurrian.” The clan of Esau settled in this area, intermarried with these Horites and eventually dispossessed them, so that they all became known as Edomites (Deut 2:12 telescopes the whole development).

[36:21]  794 tn Or “sons.”

[36:22]  795 tn Heb “Hemam”; this is probably a variant spelling of “Homam” (1 Chr 1:39); cf. NRSV, NLT “Heman.”

[36:23]  796 tn This name is given as “Shephi” in 1 Chr 1:40.

[36:24]  797 tn The meaning of this Hebrew term is uncertain; Syriac reads “water” and Vulgate reads “hot water.”

[36:25]  798 tn Heb “sons,” but since a daughter is included in the list, the word must be translated “children.”

[36:26]  799 tn Heb “Dishan,” but this must be either a scribal error or variant spelling, since “Dishan” is mentioned in v. 28 (see also v. 21).

[36:31]  800 tn Or perhaps “before any Israelite king ruled over [them].”

[36:37]  801 tn Typically the Hebrew expression “the River” refers to the Euphrates River, but it is not certain whether that is the case here. Among the modern English versions which take this as a reference to the Euphrates are NASB, NCV, NRSV, CEV, NLT. Cf. NAB, TEV “Rehoboth-on-the-River.”

[36:39]  802 tc Most mss of the MT read “Hadar” here; “Hadad” is the reading found in some Hebrew mss, the Samaritan Pentateuch, and Syriac (cf. also 1 Chr 1:50).

[36:39]  803 tn The name of the city is given as “Pai” in 1 Chr 1:50.

[36:43]  804 tn Or perhaps “territories”; Heb “dwelling places.”

[35:22]  805 tn Heb “and Josiah did not turn his face from him.”

[35:22]  806 tn Heb “listen to.”

[35:22]  807 map For location see Map1 D4; Map2 C1; Map4 C2; Map5 F2; Map7 B1.



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