Joel Baden Profile picture
Sep 16, 2020 15 tweets 3 min read Read on X
#Genesis 27:41-45

Rebekah sends Jacob away

Esau hated Jacob because of the blessing - and why not? Jacob has been nothing but awful to him. The other place the word for “hated” here shows up in J? Joseph’s brothers hoping Joseph doesn’t hate them for what they did (Gen 50:15).
Which is to say, this isn’t really hate like “hold a grudge against,” as the JPS takes it, which implies some lack of charity on the part of the subject. At least in J, it’s used for righteous anger. As for Esau’s desire to kill Jacob, we don’t know if he’s just venting. Maybe.
I will say that the narrator is keeping things a little loose here: Esau makes the threat talking to himself, בלבו, “in his heart,” but someone somehow overhears it and tells Rebekah. Who and how is elided by the use of the passive, “Rebekah was told.” Lazy writing, methinks.
Now for the most fun source-critical part here. In the next section, 27:46-28:9, Isaac is blessing Jacob (again!) and sending him off to Paddan-Aram to get married. But here, in the passage we’re reading, I’m 100% certain that Isaac is already dead.
Three reasons, and one adjustment to the text: 1. Isaac won’t ever show up again in J. Though Rebekah has obviously set herself up as Jacob’s main parental advisor, it’s still notable that Jacob is totally unmentioned in this passage.
2. Rebekah says that Esau is “consoling himself” by planning to kill Jacob. That looks, canonically, like consoling himself over the loss of the blessing. But this word is used regularly for consolation at deaths:
Isaac for Sarah (24:67), Jacob for Joseph (37:35), Judah for his wife (38:12), and those are just from J. Plenty of others outside the Pentateuch (notably in the David story: 2 Sam 12:24, 13:39).
3. Rebekah says “let me not lose you both in one day” - and I don’t think she means Esau, who wouldn’t be lost at all except in some strained metaphorical sense. “You both” is Isaac and Jacob. Remember, Isaac’s blessing is from his deathbed. He should die right when he’s done.
So I suspect, with a pretty high degree of certainty, that J had Isaac die right there between Gen 27:40 and 41. He finishes blessing Esau, he dies, and Esau immediately expresses (silently yet audibly somehow) his intention to kill Jacob. And on to the end, all in one day.
And if I’m right, then we have to make one change to the text, but it’s a reasonable one anyway. Esau says he will kill Jacob, according to our text as it stands, “when the days of mourning for my father have come,” יקרב. This has never really made sense.
I understand how it’s usually taken: as soon as my father dies I’ll kill him. But two issues with that. First, why wait? To spare Isaac’s feelings? Isaac loved Esau more, and is furious at Jacob for the trick. And do Rebekah’s feelings count for nothing? It’s a bit off.
And second, periods of mourning aren’t times for action. They’re times when everyone is supposed to do nothing (Gen 50:10; Deut 34:8; 2 Sam 11:27, to pick but a few prominent examples). Esau wouldn’t plan a murder then - he’d be desecrating the death of his beloved father.
The solution is relatively easy: instead of reading יקרב “have come, approached,” we should read יעבר, “have passed,” just as we find in 2 Sam 11:27. It’s a small change, in terms of the Hebrew, but it makes much more narrative sense.
And, of course, it makes sense especially, if not only, when Isaac has actually just died. Esau can’t act on his wishes right now, even though he’s furious at the moment, because Isaac has just died and requires the mourning period.
What this means also is that Jacob is sent away from home during the mourning period for Isaac, which I think is pretty poignant, given that his last encounter with his father was one in which he tricked him, and pretended to be Esau.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Joel Baden

Joel Baden Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @JoelBaden

Jul 28, 2023
#זDeuteronomy 32:48-52

The beginning of Moses’s death

It’s gonna take a couple of chapters, but this is the beginning of the end. All the law-giving is over - time now for Moses to move toward his last act, which is to die as predicted.
That’s the situation canonically, but it’s also the situation in P, which is where we find ourselves here. The identification is easy: we’ve got explicit reference to Aaron’s death and burial on Mt Hor, which only P has narrated. (Among other indications.)
This P passage, unsurprisingly but nevertheless somewhat remarkably, picks up directly from the previous P verse - which was of course all the way back in Deut 1:3. “On day one of month eleven of year forty Moses said to Israel all the things.” “On that very day YHWH said…”
Read 4 tweets
Jul 27, 2023
#Deuteronomy 32:44-47

The end of D

Just as there are two introductions to the law, and two transitions from law to song, so too there are to conclusions to the song: 32:44, and 32:45-47. And with these words - “it is your life” - the D source comes to an end.
As a wrap-up, 32:46-47 are pretty good - picking up themes from throughout D, and finishing in high rhetorical style, with language that’s both familiar and even somewhat moving, if you think about it as Moses’s last words (which, for D, they are).
What might feel surprising is that D would end here, with Moses’s final words, rather than, you know, at the end of Deuteronomy, with Moses’s death. But it shouldn’t be surprising. D isn’t a biography; it’s not actually interested in the life of Moses. It’s mostly his speech.
Read 6 tweets
Jul 26, 2023
#Deuteronomy 32:1-43

The song of Israel’s future disobedience

The song of Deut 32 is in places a bit complicated in terms of language, but in its basic content is straightforward: it tells the story of how Israel spurned YHWH, and what will result from that. Just like D.
The song’s first task is to lay out YHWH’s faithfulness and Israel’s lack thereof. This is done with epithets and descriptive opposites: YHWH is the Rock: perfect while Israel is blemished, straight while Israel is twisted, righteous while Israel is crooked.
“Is this how you repay YHWH?” the song asks. This is the basic premise of D: YHWH has done all this on your behalf, from Egypt through the wilderness, and you owe him (but seem incapable of the requisite behavior).
Read 9 tweets
Jul 20, 2023
#Deuteronomy 31:24-30

Is there an echo in here?

This section contains the following elements: the writing of the Torah; the giving of it to the Levites; a job for the Levites; the announcement of the song that will witness against Israel; and the introduction to that song.
If that all feels, well, familiar, it’s because we’ve seen it all before, just earlier in this same chapter, in 31:9-13 and 16-22. It’s not verbatim, but it’s structurally basically identical. Which makes sense of what we have in D is a mix of two editions of the same work.
What I think no one has seen or suggested before is that D doesn’t just contain two editions of the introductory speeches preceding the laws of chapters 12-26, but also two editions of the material preceding the song of chapter 32.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 19, 2023
#Deuteronomy 31:16-22

A few predictions

It’s a pretty pessimistic outlook, to give all those laws, and all those speeches exhorting obedience, and to get to the end and say yeah, but I know it’s all for nothing because these Israelites can’t get their shit together.
YHWH is so certain of Israel’s future disobedience that he’s willing to put it in writing. These verses introduce the song of Deut 32, which describes Israel having rejected YHWH, in the past tense - as a fait accompli. That song, written down, is YHWH’s “I told you so.”
In the future, then, when Israel rebels against YHWH, this document, the song, can be held up against them. No one could say they weren’t warned - and perhaps more important, no one could say that YHWH was taken by surprise by what happened.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 18, 2023
#Deuteronomy 31:14-15, 23

Maybe the only time I’m doing verses not in consecutive order, but it’ll make sense (and make my life easier next time). In 31:14-15 we break from the D story into something different, even as the topic is the same. Can you spot the issue(s)?
First, YHWH here tells Moses he’s about to die. But Moses already knew that - even already told the Israelites that. Second, and perhaps most strikingly, we get the Tent of Meeting here for the first and only time in Deuteronomy. And this for sure ain’t P’s tent.
This is the tent that Moses and Joshua can go inside of, that YHWH shows up in a cloud outside of to chat with the folks inside - this is, in short, the tent of E, operating exactly as it has every single time it’s appeared, from Exod 33:7-11 on.
Read 10 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(