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Youngs
Literal Translation
King
James Version
The 1599
Geneva
Study Bible
American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
of the
Christian Church
8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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What We Believe
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Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
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Soli Deo Gloria: For the
Glory of God Alone
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Solo Christo: By Christ's
Work Alone are We Saved
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Sola Gratia: Salvation by
Grace Alone
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Sola Fide: Justification by
Faith Alone
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World Without End Ministry
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Mindanao, Philippines |
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"It is enough for good
people to do nothing, for evil people to succeed."
12 Little Things Every Filipino Can Do To Help Our Country
by Alexander L. Lacson
Keil & Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament
(Genesis 30)
Gen 30:1-8 -
Bilhah's Sons. - When Rachel thought of her own
barrenness, she became more and more envious of her sister, who was
blessed with sons. But instead of praying, either directly or through her
husband, as Rebekah had done, to Jehovah, who had promised His
favour to Jacob ( Gen_28:13.),
she said to Jacob, in passionate displeasure, “Get me children, or I
shall die;” to which he angrily replied, “Am I in God's stead
(i.e., equal to God, or God), who hath withheld from thee the fruit of
the womb?” i.e., Can I, a powerless man, give thee what the Almighty
God has withheld? Almighty like God Jacob certainly was not; but he also
wanted the power which he might have possessed, the power of prayer, in
firm reliance upon the promise of the Lord. Hence he could neither help
nor advise his beloved wife, but only assent to her proposal, that he
should beget children for her through her maid Bilhah (cf.
Gen_16:2),
through whom two sons were born to her. The first she named Dan,
i.e., judge, because God had judged her, i.e., procured her justice,
hearkened to her voice (prayer), and removed the reproach of
childlessness; the second Naphtali, i.e., my conflict, or my fought
one, for “fightings of God, she said, have I fought with my sister, and
also prevailed.”
אֱלֹהִים
נַפְתּוּלֵי are neither luctationes quam maximae,
nor “a conflict in the cause of God, because Rachel did not wish to leave
the founding of the nation of God to Leah alone” (Knobel), but
“fightings for God and His mercy” (Hengstenberg), or, what comes to the
same thing, “wrestlings of prayer she had wrestled with Leah; in reality,
however, with God Himself, who seemed to have restricted His mercy to Leah
alone” (Delitzsch). It is to be noticed, that Rachel speaks of
Elohim only, whereas Leah regarded her first four sons as the gift of
Jehovah. In this variation of the names, the attitude of the two
women, not only to one another, but also to the cause they served, is made
apparent. It makes no difference whether the historian has given us the
very words of the women on the birth of their children, or, what appears
more probable, since the name of God is not introduced into the names of
the children, merely his own view of the matter as related by him (Gen_29:31;
Gen_30:17,
Gen_30:22).
Leah, who had been forced upon Jacob against his inclination, and was put
by him in the background, was not only proved by the four sons, whom she
bore to him in the first years of her marriage, to be the wife provided
for Jacob by Elohim, the ruler of human destiny; but by the fact
that these four sons formed the real stem of the promised numerous seed,
she was proved still more to be the wife selected by Jehovah, in
realization of His promise, to be the tribe-mother of the greater part of
the covenant nation. But this required that Leah herself should be fitted
for it in heart and mind, that she should feel herself to be the handmaid
of Jehovah, and give glory to the covenant God for the blessing of
children, or see in her children actual proofs that Jehovah had
accepted her and would bring to her the affection of her husband. It was
different with Rachel, the favourite and therefore high-minded wife. Jacob
should give her, what God alone could give. The faithfulness and blessing
of the covenant God were still hidden from her. Hence she resorted to such
earthly means as procuring children through her maid, and regarded the
desired result as the answer of God, and a victory in her contest with her
sister. For such a state of mind the term Elohim, God the sovereign
ruler, was the only fitting expression.
Gen 30:9-13 -
Zilpah's Sons. - But Leah also was not content with the
divine blessing bestowed upon her by Jehovah. The means employed by
Rachel to retain the favour of her husband made her jealous; and jealousy
drove her to the employment of the same means. Jacob begat two sons by
Zilpah her maid. The one Leah named Gad, i.e., “good fortune,”
saying,
בְּגָד, “with good fortune,” according to the
Chethib, for which the Masoretic reading is
גָּד
בָּא,
“good fortune has come,” - not, however, from any ancient tradition, for
the Sept. reads
ἐν
τύχῃ,
but simply from a subjective and really unnecessary conjecture, since
בְּגָד
= “to my good fortune,” sc., a son is born, gives a very suitable meaning.
The second she named Asher, i.e., the happy one, or bringer of
happiness; for she said,
בְּאָשְׁרִי,
“to my happiness, for daughters call me happy,” i.e., as a mother with
children. The perfect
אִשְּׁרנִי
relates to “what she had now certainly reached” (Del.). Leah did
not think of God in connection with these two births. They were nothing
more than the successful and welcome result of the means she had employed.
Gen 30:14-21 -
The Other Children of Leah. - How thoroughly henceforth
the two wives were carried away by constant jealousy of the love and
attachment of their husband, is evident from the affair of the
love-apples, which Leah's son Reuben, who was then four years old, found
in the field and brought to his mother.
דּוּדָאִים,
μῆλα
μανδραγορῶν (lxx), the yellow apples of the
alraun (Mandragora vernalis), a mandrake very common in
Palestine. They are about the size of a nutmeg, with a strong and
agreeable odour, and were used by the ancients, as they still are by the
Arabs, as a means of promoting child-bearing. To Rachel's request that she
would give her some, Leah replied (Gen_30:15):
“Is it too little, that thou hast taken (drawn away from me) my
husband, to take also” (לָקַחַת
infin.), i.e., that thou wouldst also take, “my son's mandrakes?”
At length she parted with them, on condition that Rachel would let Jacob
sleep with her the next night. After relating how Leah conceived again,
and Rachel continued barren in spite of the mandrakes, the writer justly
observes (Gen_30:17),
“Elohim hearkened unto Leah,” to show that it was not from such
natural means as love-apples, but from God the author of life, that she
had received such fruitfulness. Leah saw in the birth of her fifth son a
divine reward for having given her maid to her husband - a recompense,
that is, for her self-denial; and she named him on that account
Issaschar,
ישָּׂשׂכָר,
a strange form, to be understood either according to the Chethib
שָׂכָר
יֵשׁ
“there is reward,” or according to the Keri
שָׁכָר
יָשָּׂא
“he bears (brings) reward.” At length she bore her sixth son, and named
him Zebulun, i.e., “dwelling;” for she hoped that now, after God
had endowed her with a good portion, her husband, to whom she had born six
sons, would dwell with her, i.e., become more warmly attached to her. The
name is from
זָבַל
to dwell, with acc. constr. “to inhabit,” formed with a play
upon the alliteration in the word
זָבַד
to present - two
ἅπαξ
λεγόμενα. In connection with these two births, Leah
mentions Elohim alone, the supernatural giver, and not Jehovah,
the covenant God, whose grace had been forced out of her heart by
jealousy. She afterwards bore a daughter, Dinah, who is mentioned
simply because of the account in Gen 34; for, according to
Gen_37:35 and
Gen_46:7,
Jacob had several daughters, though they were nowhere mentioned by name.
Gen 30:22-24 -
Birth of Joseph. - At length God gave Rachel also a
son, whom she named Joseph,
יֹוסֵף,
i.e., taking away (=
יאֹסֵף,
cf. 1Sa_15:6;
2Sa_6:1;
Psa_104:29)
and adding (from
יָסַף),
because his birth not only furnished an actual proof that God had
removed the reproach of her childlessness, but also excited the wish,
that Jehovah might add another son. The fulfilment of this
wish is recorded in Gen_35:16.
The double derivation of the name, and the exchange of Elohim for
Jehovah, may be explained, without the hypothesis of a double
source, on the simple ground, that Rachel first of all looked back at the
past, and, thinking of the earthly means that had been applied in vain for
the purpose of obtaining a child, regarded the son as a gift of God. At
the same time, the good fortune which had now come to her banished from
her heart her envy of her sister (Gen_30:1),
and aroused belief in that God, who, as she had no doubt heard from her
husband, had given Jacob such great promises; so that in giving the name,
probably at the circumcision, she remembered Jehovah and prayed for
another son from His covenant faithfulness.
After the birth of Joseph, Jacob asked Laban to send
him away, with the wives and children for whom he had served him ( Gen_30:25).
According to this, Joseph was born at the end of the 14 years of service
that had been agreed upon, or seven years after Jacob had taken Leah and
(a week later) Rachel as his wives (Gen_29:21-28).
Now if all the children, whose births are given in Gen 29:32-30:24, had
been born one after another during the period mentioned, not only would
Leah have had seven children in 7, or literally 6 1/4 years, but there
would have been a considerable interval also, during which Rachel's maid
and her own gave birth to children. But this would have been impossible;
and the text does not really state it. When we bear in mind that the
imperf. c.
ו
consec. expresses not only the order of time, but the order of
thought as well, it becomes apparent that in the history of the births,
the intention to arrange them according to the mothers prevails over the
chronological order, so that it by no means follows, that because the
passage, “when Rachel saw that she bare Jacob no children,” occurs after
Leah is said to have had four sons, therefore it was not till after the
birth of Leah's fourth child that Rachel became aware of her own
barrenness. There is nothing on the part of the grammar to prevent our
arranging the course of events thus. Leah's first four births followed as
rapidly as possible one after the other, so that four sons were born in
the first four years of the second period of Jacob's service. In the
meantime, not necessarily after the birth of Leah's fourth child, Rachel,
having discovered her own barrenness, had given her maid to Jacob; so that
not only may Dan have been born before Judah, but Naphtali also not
long after him. The rapidity and regularity with which Leah had born her
first four sons, would make her notice all the more quickly the cessation
that took place; and jealousy of Rachel, as well as the success of the
means she had adopted, would impel her to attempt in the same way to
increase the number of her children. Moreover, Leah herself may have
conceived again before the birth of her maid's second son, and may have
given birth to her last two sons in the sixth and seventh years of their
marriage. And contemporaneously with the birth of Leah's last son, or
immediately afterwards, Rachel may have given birth to Joseph. In this way
Jacob may easily have had eleven sons within seven years of his marriage.
But with regard to the birth of Dinah, the expression “afterwards” (Gen_30:21)
seems to indicate, that she was not born during Jacob's years of service,
but during the remaining six years of his stay with Laban.
Gen 30:25-33 -
New Contract of Service Between Jacob and Laban. - As
the second period of seven years terminated about the time of Joseph's
birth, Jacob requested Laban to let him return to his own place and
country, i.e., to Canaan. Laban, however, entreated him to remain, for he
had perceived that Jehovah, Jacob's God, had blessed him for his
sake; and told him to fix his wages for further service. The words, “if
I have found favour in thine eyes” ( Gen_30:27),
contain an aposiopesis, sc., then remain.
נִחַשְׁתִּי
“a heathen expression, like augurando cognovi” (Delitzsch).
עָלַי
שְׂכָֽרְךְ thy wages, which it will be binding upon
me to give. Jacob reminded him, on the other hand, what service he had
rendered him, how Jehovah's blessing had followed “at his foot,”
and asked when he should begin to provide for his own house. But when
Laban repeated the question, what should he give him, Jacob offered to
feed and keep his flock still, upon one condition, which was founded upon
the fact, that in the East the goats, as a rule, are black or dark-brown,
rarely white or spotted with white, and that the sheep for the most part
are white, very seldom black or speckled. Jacob required as wages, namely,
all the speckled, spotted, and black among the sheep, and all the
speckled, spotted, and white among the goats; and offered “even to-day”
to commence separating them, so that “to-morrow” Laban might
convince himself of the uprightness of his proceedings.
הָסֵר
(Gen_30:32)
cannot be imperative, because of the preceding
אֶעֱבֹר,
but must be infinitive: “I will go through the whole flock to-day to
remove from thence all...;” and
שְׂכָרִי
הָיָה
signifies “what is removed shall be my wages,” but not everything of an
abnormal colour that shall hereafter be found in the flock. This was no
doubt intended by Jacob, as the further course of the narrative shows, but
it is not involved in the words of
Gen_30:32. Either the writer has restricted
himself to the main fact, and omitted to mention that it was also agreed
at the same time that the separation should be repeated at certain regular
periods, and that all the sheep of an abnormal colour in Laban's flock
should also be set aside as part of Jacob's wages; or this point was
probably not mentioned at first, but taken for granted by both parties,
since Jacob took measures with that idea to his own advantage, and even
Laban, notwithstanding the frequent alteration of the contract with which
Jacob charged him (Gen_31:7-8,
and Gen_31:41),
does not appear to have disputed this right.
Gen 30:34-40 -
Laban cheerfully accepted the proposal, but did not
leave Jacob to make the selection. He undertook that himself, probably to
make more sure, and then gave those which were set apart as Jacob's wages
to his own sons to tend, since it was Jacob's duty to take care of Laban's
flock, and “set three days' journey betwixt himself and Jacob,”
i.e., between the flock to be tended by himself through his sons, and that
to be tended by Jacob, for the purpose of preventing any copulation
between the animals of the two flocks. Nevertheless he was overreached by
Jacob, who adopted a double method of increasing the wages agreed upon. In
the first place ( Gen_30:37-39),
he took fresh rods of storax, maple, and walnut-trees, all of which have a
dazzling white wood under their dark outside, and peeled white stripes
upon them,
הַלָּבָן
מַחְשׂף
(the verbal noun instead of the inf. abs.
חָשׂף),
“peeling the white naked in the rods.” These partially peeled, and
therefore mottled rods, he placed in the drinking-troughs (רְהָטִים
lit., gutters, from
רְהִט
= רוּץ
to run, is explained by
הַמַּיִם
שִׁקֲתֹות water-troughs), to which the flock came to
drink, in front of the animals, in order that, if copulation took place at
the drinking time, it might occur near the mottled sticks, and the young
be speckled and spotted in consequence.
וַיֵּחַמְנָה
a rare, antiquated form for
וַתֵּחַמְנָה
from
חָמַם, and
וַיֶּחֱמוּ
for
וַיִּחָמוּ imperf. Kal of
יָחַם
= חָמַם.
This artifice was founded upon a fact frequently noticed, particularly in
the case of sheep, that whatever fixes their attention in copulation is
marked upon the young (see the proofs in Bochart, Hieroz. 1,
618, and Friedreich zur Bibel 1, 37ff.). - Secondly (Gen_30:40),
Jacob separated the speckled animals thus obtained from those of a normal
colour, and caused the latter to feed so that the others would be
constantly in sight, in order that he might in this way obtain a constant
accession of mottled sheep. As soon as these had multiplied sufficiently,
he formed separate flocks (viz., of the speckled additions), “and put
them not unto Laban's cattle;” i.e., he kept them apart in order that
a still larger number of speckled ones might be procured, through Laban's
one-coloured flock having this mottled group constantly in view.
Gen 30:41-43 -
He did not adopt the trick with the rods, however, on
every occasion of copulation, for the sheep in those countries lamb twice
a year, but only at the copulation of the strong sheep ( הַמְקֻשָּׁרֹות
the bound ones, i.e., firm and compact), - Luther, “the spring
flock;”
לְיַחֲמֶנָּה inf. Pi. “to conceive it (the
young);” - but not “in the weakening of the sheep,” i.e., when they were
weak, and would produce weak lambs. The meaning is probably this: he only
adopted this plan at the summer copulation, not the autumn; for, in the
opinion of the ancients (Pliny, Columella), lambs that were
conceived in the spring and born in the autumn were stronger than those
born in the spring (cf. Bochart l.c. p. 582). Jacob did this,
possibly, less to spare Laban, than to avoid exciting suspicion, and so
leading to the discovery of his trick. - In
Gen_30:43 the
account closes with the remark, that the man increased exceedingly, and
became rich in cattle (רַבֹּות
צֹאן
many head of sheep and goats) and slaves, without expressing approbation
of Jacob's conduct, or describing his increasing wealth as a blessing from
God. The verdict is contained in what follows.
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