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Literal Translation
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The 1599
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American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
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8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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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 38)
Genesis 38 -
Judah's Marriage and Children
His Incest with Thamar - Genesis 38
The following sketch from the life of Judah is intended
to point out the origin of the three leading families of the future
princely tribe in Israel, and at the same time to show in what danger the
sons of Jacob would have been of forgetting the sacred vocation of their
race, through marriages with Canaanitish women, and of perishing in the
sin of Canaan, if the mercy of God had not interposed, and by leading
Joseph into Egypt prepared the way for the removal of the whole house of
Jacob into that land, and thus protected the family, just as it was
expanding into a nation, from the corrupting influence of the manners and
customs of Canaan. This being the intention of the narrative, it is no
episode or interpolation, but an integral part of the early history of
Israel, which is woven here into the history of Jacob, because the events
occurred subsequently to the sale of Joseph.
Gen 38:1-11 -
About this time, i.e., after the sale of Joseph, while
still feeding the flocks of Jacob along with his brethren ( Gen_37:26),
(Note: As the expression “at that time” does not
compel us to place Judah's marriage after the sale of Joseph, many have
followed Augustine (qusaet. 123), and placed it some years
earlier. But this assumption is rendered extremely improbable, if not
impossible, by the fact that Judah was not merely accidentally present
when Joseph was sold, but was evidently living with his brethren, and
had not yet set up an establishment of his own; whereas he had settled
at Adullam previous to his marriage, and seems to have lived there up to
the time of the birth of the twins by Thamar. Moreover, the 23 years
which intervened between the taking of Joseph into Egypt and the
migration of Jacob thither, furnish space enough for all the events
recorded in this chapter. If we suppose that Judah, who was 20 years old
when Joseph was sold, went to Adullam soon afterwards and married there,
is three sons might have been born four or five years after Joseph's
captivity. And if his eldest son was born about a year and a half after
the sale of Joseph, and he married him to Thamar when he was 15 years
old, and gave her to his second son a year after that, Onan's death
would occur at least five years before Jacob's removal to Egypt; time
enough, therefore, both for the generation and birth of the twin-sons of
Judah by Thamar, and for Judah's two journeys into Egypt with his
brethren to buy corn. (See
Gen_46:8.))
Judah separated from them, and went down (from Hebron,
Gen_37:14,
or the mountains) to Adullam, in the lowland (Jos_15:35),
into the neighbourhood of a man named Hirah. “He pitched (his tent,
Gen_26:25)
up to a man of Adullam,” i.e., in his neighbourhood, so as to enter
into friendly intercourse with him.
Gen_38:2-5
There Judah married the daughter of Shuah, a Canaanite,
and had three sons by her: Ger ( עֵר),
Onan, and Shelah. The name of the place is mentioned when the last is
born, viz., Chezib or Achzib (Jos_15:44;
Mic_1:14),
in the southern portion of the lowland of Judah, that the descendants of
Shelah might know the birth-place of their ancestor. This was unnecessary
in the case of the others, who died childless.
Gen_38:6-10
When Ger was grown up, according to ancient custom (cf.
Gen_21:21;
Gen_34:4)
his father gave him a wife, named Thamar, probably a Canaanite, of unknown
parentage. But Ger was soon put to death by Jehovah on account of
his wickedness. Judah then wished Onan, as the brother-in-law, to marry
the childless widow of his deceased brother, and raise up seed, i.e., a
family, for him. But as he knew that the first-born son would not be the
founder of his own family, but would perpetuate the family of the deceased
and receive his inheritance, he prevented conception when consummating the
marriage by spilling the semen.
אַרְצָה
שִׁחֵת,
“destroyed to the ground (i.e., let it fall upon the ground), so as not to
give seed to his brother” (נְתֹן
for תֵּת
only here and Num_20:21).
This act not only betrayed a want of affection to his brother, combined
with a despicable covetousness for his possession and inheritance, but was
also a sin against the divine institution of marriage and its object, and
was therefore punished by Jehovah with sudden death. The custom of
levirate marriage, which is first mentioned here, and is found in
different forms among Indians, Persians, and other nations of Asia and
Africa, was not founded upon a divine command, but upon an ancient
tradition, originating probably in Chaldea. It was not abolished, however,
by the Mosaic law (Deu_25:5.),
but only so far restricted as not to allow it to interfere with the
sanctity of marriage; and with this limitation it was enjoined as a duty
of affection to build up the brother's house, and to preserve his family
and name (see my Bibl. Archäologie, §108).
Gen_38:11
The sudden death of his two sons so soon after their
marriage with Thamar made Judah hesitate to give her the third as a
husband also, thinking, very likely, according to a superstition which we
find in Tobit 3:7ff., that either she herself, or marriage with her, had
been the cause of her husbands' deaths. He therefore sent her away to her
father's house, with the promise that he would give her his youngest son
as soon as he had grown up; though he never intended it seriously, “for
he thought lest ( פֶּן
אָמַר,
i.e., he was afraid that) he also might die like his brethren.”
Gen 38:12-30 -
But when Thamar, after waiting a long time, saw that
Shelah had grown up and yet was not given to her as a husband, she
determined to procure children from Judah himself, who had become a
widower in the meantime; and his going to Timnath to the sheep-shearing
afforded her a good opportunity. The time mentioned (“the days
multiplied,” i.e., a long time passed by) refers not to the statement
which follows, that Judah's wife died, but rather to the leading thought
of the verse, viz., Judah's going to the sheep-shearing.
וַיִּנָּחֶם:
he comforted himself, i.e., he ceased to mourn. Timnath is
not the border town of Dan and Judah between Beth-shemesh and Ekron in the
plain (Jos_15:10;
Jos_19:43),
but Timnah on the mountains of Judah (Jos_15:57,
cf. Rob. Pal. ii. 343, note), as the expression “went up”
shows. The sheep-shearing was a fête with shepherds, and was kept with
great feasting. Judah therefore took his friend Hirah with him; a fact
noticed in Gen_38:12
in relation to what follows.
Gen_38:13-14
As soon as Thamar heard of Judah's going to this feast,
she took off her widow's clothes, put on a veil, and sat down, disguised
as a harlot, by the gate of Enayim, where Judah would be sure to pass on
his return from Timnath. Enayim was no doubt the same as Enam
in the lowland of Judah ( Jos_15:34).
Gen_38:15-18
When Judah saw her here and took her for a harlot, he
made her an offer, and gave her his signet-ring, with the band ( פָּתִיל)
by which it was hung round his neck, and his staff, as a pledge of the
young buck-goat which he offered her. They were both objects of value, and
were regarded as ornaments in the East, as Herodotus (i. 195) has
shown with regard to the Babylonians (see my Bibl. Arch. 2, 48). He
then lay with her, and she became pregnant by him.
Gen_38:19-21
After this had occurred, Thamar laid aside her veil,
put on her widow's dress again, and returned home. When Judah, therefore,
sent the kid by his friend Hirah to the supposed harlot for the purpose of
redeeming his pledges, he could not find her, and was told, on inquiring
of the inhabitants of Enayim, that there was no
קְדֵשָׁה
there.
הַקְּדֵשָׁה: lit., “the consecrated,” i.e., the
hierodule, a woman sacred to Astarte, a goddess of the Canaanites, the
deification of the generative and productive principle of nature; one who
served this goddess by prostitution (vid.,
Deu_23:18).
This was no doubt regarded as the most respectable designation for public
prostitutes in Canaan.
Gen_38:22-23
When his friend returned with the kid and reported his
want of success, Judah resolved to leave his pledges with the girl, that
he might not expose himself to the ridicule of the people by any further
inquiries, since he had done his part towards keeping his promise. “Let
her take them (i.e., keep the signet-ring and staff) for herself,
that we may not become a (an object of) ridicule.” The pledges
were unquestionably of more value than a young he-goat.
Gen_38:24-26
About three months afterwards ( מִשְׁלשׁ
prob. for
מִשְּׁלשׁ
with the prefix )מ
Judah was informed that Thamar had played the harlot and was certainly (הִנֵּה)
with child. He immediately ordered, by virtue of his authority as head of
the tribe, that she should be brought out and burned. Thamar was regarded
as the affianced bride of Shelah, and was to be punished as a bride
convicted of a breach of chastity. But the Mosaic law enjoined stoning in
the case of those who were affianced and broke their promise, or of newly
married women who were found to have been dishonoured (Deu_22:20-21,
Deu_22:23-24);
and it was only in the case of the whoredom of a priest's daughter, or of
carnal intercourse with a mother or a daughter, that the punishment of
burning was enjoined (Lev_21:9
and Lev_20:14).
Judah's sentence, therefore, was more harsh than the subsequent law;
whether according to patriarchal custom, or on other grounds, cannot be
determined. When Thamar was brought out, she sent to Judah the things
which she had kept as a pledge, with this message: “By a man to whom
these belong am I with child: look carefully therefore to whom this
signet-ring, and band, and stick belong.” Judah recognised the things
as his own, and was obliged to confess, “She is more in the right than
I; for therefore (sc., that this might happen to me, or that it might
turn out so; on
כִּי־עָל־כֵּן
see Gen_18:5)
have I not given her to my son Shelah.” In passing sentence upon
Thamar, Judah had condemned himself. His son, however, did not consist
merely in his having given way to his lusts so afar as to lie with a
supposed public prostitute of Canaan, but still more in the fact, that by
breaking his promise to give her his son Shelah as her husband, he had
caused his daughter-in-law to practise this deception upon him, just
because in his heart he blamed her for the early and sudden deaths of his
elder sons, whereas the real cause of the deaths which had so grieved his
paternal heart was the wickedness of the sons themselves, the mainspring
of which was to be found in his own marriage with a Canaanite in violation
of the patriarchal call. And even if the sons of Jacob were not
unconditionally prohibited from marrying the daughters of Canaanites,
Judah's marriage at any rate had borne such fruit in his sons Ger and Onan,
as Jehovah the covenant God was compelled to reject. But if Judah,
instead of recognising the hand of the Lord in the sudden death of his
sons, traced the cause to Thamar, and determined to keep her as a
childless widow all her life long, not only in opposition to the
traditional custom, but also in opposition to the will of God as expressed
in His promises of a numerous increase of the seed of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob; Thamar had by no means acted rightly in the stratagem by which she
frustrated his plan, and sought to procure from Judah himself the seed of
which he was unjustly depriving her, though her act might be less criminal
than Judah's. For it is evident from the whole account, that she was not
driven to her sin by lust, but by the innate desire for children (ὅτι
δὲ
παιδοποΐ́ιας
χάριν,
καὶ
οὐ
φιληδονίας
τοῦτο
ὁ
Θάμαρ
ἐμηχανήσατο, - Theodoret); and for that
reason she was more in the right than Judah. Judah himself, however, not
only saw his guilt, but he confessed it also; and showed both by this
confession, and also by the fact that he had no further conjugal
intercourse with Thamar, an earnest endeavour to conquer the lusts of the
flesh, and to guard against the sin into which he had fallen. And because
he thus humbled himself, God gave him grace, and not only exalted him to
be the chief of the house of Israel, but blessed the children that were
begotten in sin.
Gen_38:27-28
Thamar brought forth twins; and a circumstance occurred
at the birth, which does occasionally happen when the children lie in an
abnormal position, and always impedes the delivery, and which was regarded
in this instance as so significant that the names of the children were
founded upon the fact. At the birth
וַיִּתֶּן־יָד
“there was a hand,” i.e., a hand came out (יִתֵּן
as in Job_37:10;
Pro_13:10),
round which the midwife tied a scarlet thread, to mark this as the
first-born.
Gen_38:29-30
“And it came to pass, when it (the child)
drew back its hand ( כְּמֵשִׁיב
for
מֵשִׁיב
כִּהְיֹות
as in Gen_40:10),
behold its brother came out. Then she (the midwife) said, What a
breach hast thou made for thy part? Upon thee the breach;” i.e., thou
bearest the blame of the breach.
פֶּרֶץ
signifies not rupturam perinoei, but breaking through by pressing
forward. From that he received the name of Perez (breach, breaker
through). Then the other one with the scarlet thread came into the world,
and was named Zerah (זֶרַח
exit, rising), because he sought to appear first, whereas in fact Perez
was the first-born, and is even placed before Zerah in the lists in
Gen_46:12;
Num_26:20.
Perez was the ancestor of the tribe-prince Nahshon (Num_2:3),
and of king David also (Rth_4:18.;
1Ch_2:5.).
Through him, therefore, Thamar has a place as one of the female ancestors
in the genealogy of Jesus Christ.
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