Page:A critical and exegetical commentary on Genesis (1910).djvu/337

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Significant subdivisions cannot be traced.—(3) [E] returns to the earlier Heb. reckoning by generations, its terminus ad quem being the measuring out of Gerizim, which, according to the Sam. Chronicle published by Neubauer, took place 13 years after the Conquest of Canaan. Thus we obtain 1207 + 1040 + 75 + 215 + 215 + 42 (desert wandering)[1] + 13 (measurement of Gerizim) = 2807 = 70 × 40 + 7.[2]—(4) The Book of Jubilees counts by Jubilee-periods of 49 years from the Creation to the Conquest of Palestine: 1309 + 567 + 75 + 459 (Exodus) + 40 (entrance to Canaan) = 2450 = 50 × 49.]


XI. 27-32.—The Genealogy of Teraḥ (P and J).

The vv. are of mixed authorship; and form, both in P and J, an introduction to the Patriarchal History. In P (27. 31. 32) genealogical framework encloses a notice of the migration of the Teraḥites from Ur-Kasdîm to Ḥarran, to which 124b. 5 may be the immediate sequel. The insertion from J (28-30) finds an equally suitable continuation in 121ff., and is very probably the conclusion of J's lost Shemite genealogy. The suppression of the preceding context of J is peculiarly tantalising because of the uncertainty of the tradition which makes Ur-Kasdîm the home of the ancestors of the Hebrews (see concluding note, p. 239)


On the analysis, cf. esp. Bu. Urg. 414 ff.—Vv.27 and 32 belong quite obviously to P; and 31, from its diffuse style and close resemblance to P's regular manner in recording the patriarchal migrations (125 3118 366 466: see Hupf. Qu. 19 f.), may be confidently assigned to the same source. 28a presents nothing distinctive of either document; but in 28b (Symbol missingHebrew characters) is peculiar to JE (see the footnote on the v.). 29 is J because presupposed in 2220ff.; and its continuation (30) brings as an additional criterion the word (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (cf. 2521 2931), which is never used by P.—The extract from J is supplementary to P, and it might be argued that at least 28a was necessary in the latter source to explain why Loṭ and not Haran went with Teraḥ. Bu. points out in answer (p. 420) that with still greater urgency we desiderate an explanation of the fact that Nāḥôr was left behind: if the one fact is left unexplained, so a fortiori might the other.

The formula (Symbol missingHebrew characters) does not occur again till 2512; and it is very widely held that in v.27 it stands as the heading of the section of P

  1. After Jos. 56 (G).
  2. The odd 7 years still remain perplexing (see p. 136). One cannot help surmising that the final 13 was originally intended to get rid of it, though the textual data do not enable us now to bring out a round number.