Genesis 19 – Lot’s Breeding QA Supplied

Lot’s Breeding

With Questions and Proposed Answers

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 19:30-38

 

30And Lot ascended from Zoar (Little). And he dwelt in the mountain. And two of his daughters are with him. For he feared to dwell in Zoar. And He dwelt in a cave─he and two of his daughters.

 

31And the firstborn said unto the little, “Our father is old. And a man is not in the land to come unto us according to the way of all the land. 32Go. We will make our father drink wine. And we have lain with him. And we have kept seed alive from our father.”

 

33And they made their father drink wine in that night. And the firstborn came. And she lay with her father. And he did not know when she lay and when she arose.

 

34And it was tomorrow. And the firstborn said unto the little, “Behold, I lay last night with my father. We will make him drink wine also tonight. And come. Lie with him. And we have kept seed alive from our father.”

 

35And they made their father drink wine also in that night. And the little arose. And she lay with him. And he did not know when she lay and when she arose.

 

36And the two daughters of Lot conceived from their father. 37And the firstborn bare a son. And she called his name Mo-Av (‘Moab’, meaning From-Father). He is the father of Moab unto today. 38And the little [feminine], also he, bare a son. And she called his name Ben-Ami (Son-of-my-People). He is the father of the sons of Amon unto today.

 

I. Lot’s Realization (verse 30)

Lot saw what happened to Sodom, Gomorrah Admah and Zeboim, and to his wife. He knew that the city of Zoar was no better. Yehovah had spared the city for his sake, but that did not mean that He would spare it forever. This was not a safe place to live. The mountains made more sense—the very mountains that the angel had mentioned in the first place. Lot and his daughters moved to those very desolate mountains. He and his two daughters lived in a cave.

 

Questions

1. Where is the land (in today’s countries) in which Lot settled? The country is called Jordan; it is on the other side of the Jordan River. (See a map of the Middle East to find this long, small country.)

 

2. Was Lot wise to move out of Zoar? He was wise. He didn’t need to live in a place that he knew Yehovah might destroy.

 

3. Was Lot a caveman? Yes, he was, since that is a man who lives in a cave!

 

II. The Plan (verses 31-32)

Lot’s older daughter saw where they lived. There were no men. Without men, they couldn’t have children. The older daughter desired to preserve the seed of her father. She didn’t desire their lineage to end.

 

She knew that her father was relaxed by wine—relaxed to a point that he would not remember what had taken place. She also knew that he would drink wine if they asked him to do so. After he was intoxicated, they would have sexual intercourse with him. They would try for pregnancy.

 

Questions

1. Was the plan of the daughters sinful? No. There was no commandment against incest at that time. There must be a command before there can be a violation. Sin is always a violation.

 

2. Was the plan of the daughters selfish? No. They cared about their father’s lineage. They knew they would have to do much work to raise food for a family, to clothe the children, and to do the very hard tasks that parents must do for the sake of children, and they would be doing all that without the help of men except for Lot.

 

3. Did they need to plot to get Lot drunk to do this, or would Lot have been willing without being drunk? They knew that their father would not have been willing to do this (even if there was no commandment), so they had to plot to accomplish this.

 

III. Genetic Preservation (verses 33-36)

The plan went fine, and their father didn’t know when they lay down or when they arose. The next day, the older sister told her sister that it was her turn. Again, everything went as planned.

 

Later, they both found that they were pregnant. Their plan had perfectly worked.

 

Questions

1. Did Yehovah approve of their plan? The two women became pregnant on the first try. Yehovah never spoke against the plan or its results. The Bible doesn’t state that Yehovah approved, and it doesn’t state that He didn’t approve. It only shows Yehovah’s participation indirectly: by giving them both conceptions on the first try. Yehovah also made certain that they all lived.

 

2. Is sexual intercourse between parents and their children allowed today? No. Yehovah commanded against it. It is called incest, and it has very bad consequences. Yehovah only commands against actions that will have very bad consequences.

 

Some girl children are raped by their own fathers. The girl children grow up thinking that they were somehow responsible for this, when they weren’t. Fathers who do this should be put to death. First, they are committing adultery; secondly, they are committing rape; and thirdly, they are committing incest. Children involved with incest will often possess wrong thinking about relationships, and will have a very difficult time with regular, good relationships. They also get the wrong impression about Yehovah in whose image they are made, and they see God as very bad.

 

Lot’s daughters thought that they had to do what they did to keep the race from their father from going extinct.

 

IV. Two Sons (verses 37-38)

The older sister had a son, and she named him From-The-Father (Moab). She had no intention of hiding the source of his birth. Her sister also had a son, and she named him similarly—Son-of-My-People (Benammi). His offspring became known as the Ammonites.

 

Questions

1. Were the daughters of Lot ashamed of what they did? No, they were not ashamed. They made it a matter of public record by setting the events in their sons’ names.

 

2. What book of the Bible is dedicated to a woman who is a descendent of Lot? It is the Book of Ruth. Ruth was a Moabitess; she is in the lineage of Yeshua (Jesus), the Messiah of Israel!

 

Genesis 26 – Wells, A Woman, A Vow

Map: River of Egypt

Wells, A Woman, A Vow

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 26:1-33

 

Genesis 26:1 And there was a famine in the land beside the first famine that was in the days of Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham). And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) went unto My-Father-The-King (Avimelech) king of the Palestinians—unto Sojourning (Gerar).

 

2And Yehovah appeared unto him. And He said, “Do not descend to Egypt. Abide in the land that I will say unto thee— 3sojourn in this land. And I was with thee. And I blessed thee. For I will give all these lands unto thee and unto thy seed. And I will stand the oath that I swore to Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham) thy father. 4And I will multiply thy seed as stars of the heavens. And I will give all these lands to thy seed. And all races of the land will bless-themselves via thy seed 5[on the] heel that Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham) hearkened-to my voice, and he guarded my guarding, my commandments, my statutes and my teachings.” 6And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) dwelt in Sojourning (Gerar).

 

7And the men of the place asked to his woman. And he said, “He is my sister,” for he feared to say “my woman” lest “the men of the place shall kill me concerning Multiple-Pouring because he is of beautiful appearance.”

 

8And he was because the days lengthened to him there. And My-Father-The-King (Avimelech) king of Palestinians leaned-out in-unto the window. And he saw. And behold, He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) is laugh-making Multiple-Pouring his woman. 9And My-Father-The-King (Avimelech) called to He-Will-Laugh (Isaac). And he said, “But behold, he is thy woman! And how said thou, ‘He is my sister’?” And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) said unto him, “Because I said, ‘Lest I will die concerning her.” 10And My-Father-The-King (Avimelech) said, “What is this thou did to us? As a little, one of the people laid with thy woman! And thou wilt bring transgression upon us!” 11And My-Father-The-King (Avimelech) commanded all the people, saying, “The toucher in this man and in his woman—dying he shall die!”

 

12And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) sowed in that land. And he found in that year a hundred of barley! And Yehovah blessed him. 13And the man ‘biggened.’ And he walked, walking and ‘bigging’ until he ‘biggened’ very-much. 14And an acquisition of a flock was to him, and an acquisition of a herd, and much slavery.

 

And Palestinians envied him. 15And all the wells that his father’s slaves dug in the days of Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham) his father—Palestinians stopped them and filled them dust. 16And My-Father-The-King (Avimelech) said unto He-Will-Laugh (Isaac), “Walk-thou from with us. For thou strengthened much more-than us! 17And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) walked from there. And he camped in Wadi of Sojourning (Gerar). And he dwelt there.

 

18And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) dwelt. And he dug wells of the water that they dug in the days of Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham) his father. And Palestinians stopped them after the death of Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham). And he called to them names as names that his father called to them. 19And He-Will-Laugh’s (Isaac’s) slaves dug in the wadi. And they found there a well of waters of lives. 20And the shepherds of Sojourning (Gerar) fought with He-Will-Laugh’s (Isaac’s) shepherds, saying, “The water is to us!” And he called the name of the well Contention because they Contended-themselves via him. 21And they dug another well. And they fought also concerning her. And he called her name Adversary {fem}. 22And he advanced from there. And he dug another well. And they didn’t fight concerning her. And he called her name Broadways. And he said, “For now Yehovah broadened to us. And we shall be fruitful in the land.”

 

23And he ascended Beersheba from there. 24And Yehovah appeared unto him in that night. And He said, “I am the Gods of Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham) thy father. Fear not. For I am with thee. And I will bless thee. And I will multiply thy seed for the sake of my slave Father-Of-A-Crowd (Avraham).” 25And he built an altar there. And he called via Name Yehovah. And he inclined his tent there. And He-Will-Laugh’s (Isaac’s) slaves excavated a well there.

 

26And My-Father-The-King (Avimelech) walked unto him from Sojourning (Gerar), and Gripper (Akhuzat) his neighbour and Mouth-Of-All (Phicol) prince of his host. 27And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) said unto them, “Why have ye come unto me? And ye, ye hated me! And ye sent me from with you!” 28And they said, “Seeing, we saw that Yehovah was with thee. And we said, ‘An Oath shall be, na, betweens us—between us and between thee. And we shall cut a covenant with thee 29if thou wilt do bad with us just-as we didn’t touch thee and just-as we did only good with thee! And we sent thee in peace! Thou art now Yehovah’s blessed!” 30And he made to them a drinking-party. And they ate and drank. 31And they early-rose in the morning. And they swore, a man to his brothers. And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) sent them. And they walked from with him in peace.

 

32And he was in that day. And He-Will-Laugh’s (Isaac’s) servants came. And they told to him concerning firebrands of the well that they dug. And they said to him, “We found water!” 33And he called her Oath. Therefore the name of the city is Well-of-Oath unto this day.

 

And Hairy is the son of 40 year. And he took a woman, Yehovah’s-Ruling daughter of My-Well the Hotty and Spices daughter of Oak the Hotty. 35And they were bitternesses of spirit to He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) and to Multiple-Pouring.

 

I. Rerun (verse 1)

This land occasionally had famine. (This is still true today because of uncertain rainfall.) Isaac went unto Avimelech as his father had done. Avimelech was king of the Palestinians (the same group that is in the news about the Land of Israel, and is trying to set up a Palestinian state).

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Isaac go to the same place where his father had had such a strange and almost devastating experience (to Gerar and to its king)?

 

2. Why did famines occur?

 

3. Does Yehovah cause famines to occur?

 

4. Was this the same Avimelech that Avraham had met?

 

5. Who are these Palestinians?

 

II. The Intervention (verses 2-6)

Yehovah appeared to Isaac. He told him to not descend to Egypt, but instead to abide where he was (in Gerar, the Palestinian kingdom). Isaac did as he was told (verse 6).

 

Yehovah then stated that He was with Isaac, and He blessed him.

 

Yehovah promised that He will give all these lands unto Isaac and unto his seed. He stated that He will ‘stand’ the oath that He swore to Avraham his father—He will cause it to be upheld and fulfilled.

 

He vowed more: that He will multiply Isaac’s seed as stars of the heavens. He will then give all these lands to Isaac’s seed.

 

Yehovah explained how all races of the land will respond: they will bless themselves via Isaac’s seed. Why? This is because Avraham:

 

  • hearkened to His voice
  • guarded His guarding
  • guarded His commandments
  • guarded His statutes
  • guarded His teachings.

Isaac did as he was told; he dwelt in Sojourning.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yehovah appear unto him (instead of just speaking to him)?

 

2. Why did Yehovah command Isaac to not descend to Egypt?

 

3. Why did Yehovah first say, “Abide in the land that I will say unto thee,” then after say, “sojourn in this land”?

 

4. Why is “And I was with thee” in the past tense?

 

5. What happens if God is with someone?

 

6. How can someone (who knows a little about the Bible) tell if a person has been blessed by Yehovah (in the same way that the Bible means by blessing)?

 

7. Yehovah said, “I will give all these lands unto thee and unto thy seed.” Identify the seed.

 

8. What does “stand the oath” mean?

 

9. What is the oath that Yehovah swore to Avraham?

 

10. If Yehovah multiplies Avraham’s seed as stars of the heavens, what will happen? (Keep in mind that there are billions of stars in some galaxies, and there are a huge number of galaxies. The planet can only hold and support a number of humans in the billions.)

 

11. Identify all these lands. The text that describes them is Genesis 15:18-21. Use the following maps to see what these lands include. I have given you clues for all, including when I could not find some. Then, once you have found as many as you can, draw a border around the area promised on Map 33.

 

The river of Egypt (Nile: Map 18)

 

The Euphrates River (Map 18)

 

Kenites (Map 33: also known as Midianites: find near the Red Sea)

 

Kenizzites (I couldn’t find them)

 

Kadmonites (I couldn’t find them)

 

Hittites (Map 18: you will find HITTITES. They lived between Carchemish, which is on the map, and the Orontes River area labeled in blue on the same map).

 

Perizzites (Map 18a: they lived around Mt. Carmel; you will find it by The Great Sea, known today as the Mediterranean Sea)

 

Rephaim (Map 21)

 

Amorites (Map 21)

 

Canaanites (Map 21)

 

Girgashites (I couldn’t find them; find Sea of Chinnereth on Map 18a, and look to the right, which is east. They may have lived there, but there is no label.)

 

Jebusites  (They lived in Jerusalem, also called Salem: Maps 18 and 21)

 

Map: River of Egypt

Copyright Access Foundation, Zaine Ridling, Ph.D., Editor

 

Map: Perizzites

Copyright Access Foundation, Zaine Ridling, Ph.D., Editor

 

Map: Rephaim

Copyright Access Foundation, Zaine Ridling, Ph.D., Editor

 

Map: Kenites

Copyright Access Foundation, Zaine Ridling, Ph.D., Editor

 

12. Why wouldn’t all locations in the Bible be present on Bible maps?

 

13. What can cause a civilization, a people and cities to be completely destroyed so that there is no trace left?

 

14. Verse 4 states, “All races of the land will bless themselves via thy seed…” What land is this?

 

15. How will all races of the land bless themselves via Isaac’s seed?

 

16. Verses 4 and 5 tell who is responsible for all races being able to bless themselves (besides Isaac’s and Avraham’s seed). Who is responsible for this great ability to bless themselves?

 

17. Was Gerar a safe place for Isaac to dwell?

 

III. Danger! (verse 7)

Isaac’s wife was beautiful. The men in Gerar asked ‘to’ her. Isaac did what his father had successfully done: he said, “He is my sister.” He feared to say that she was his woman. He stated that the men of the place will kill him for Rebekah.

 

Questions

 

1. Yehovah appeared (verse 2) and blessed Isaac. Isaac lied regarding his wife Rebecca (verse 7). Did Yehovah ignore Isaac’s lying right after Yehovah had promised him blessing and safety?

 

2. Why did Isaac say, “He is my sister,” when his sister is a woman?

 

3. Was Isaac certain that the men of the place would kill him?

 

IV. The Truth Comes Out (verses 8-11)

Isaac stayed there for a while. Avimelech leaned out of a window (the Hebrew wording is “in-unto” the window). And he saw Isaac making Rebekah laugh. He may have been tickling her—he was doing something that showed that he was more than a brother to her.

 

Avimelech called Isaac and confronted him: “He is thy woman!”  The king desired to know why Isaac had said that ‘he’ was his sister. Isaac replied, “Because I said, ‘Lest I will die concerning her.” Avimelech was upset: “What is this thou did to us? As a little, one of the people laid (had sexual intercourse) with thy woman! And thou wilt bring transgression upon us!”

 

Avimelech then commanded all the people with a threat: “The toucher in this man and in his woman—dying he shall die!”

 

Questions

 

1. What was “because the days lengthened to him there”?

 

2. Why did the king lean out ‘in-unto’ the window?

 

3. Why does the Hebrew language use such strange wording as “in-unto”?

 

4. What was so unusual about a brother tickling a sister?

 

5. Avimelech said, “What is this thou did to us?” Had Isaac done anything to them?

 

6. Was Avimelech that afraid of bringing transgression upon his people?

 

7. Why might Avimelech been afraid of transgression like this?

 

8. What does transgression mean?

 

9. How serious was Avimelech about keeping all his people from touching either Isaac or Isaac’s woman?

 

V. Isaac’s Prosperity (verses 12-14)

Isaac was temporarily safe. He planted in Gerar, the land of the Palestinians. He reaped one hundred times the amount of barley he planted—a huge harvest. Yehovah blessed him. He became very great. He moved the herds and flocks that he had to various pasture lands in the area, and they only increased. He also had a large number of slaves.

 

Questions

 

1. Does Yehovah always bless His favorites as He did Isaac (verses 12-14)?

 

2. Does Yehovah have favorites?

 

3. The text states that Yehovah blessed him. What is the purpose that Yehovah has for blessing someone?

 

4. What does ‘bigging’ mean?

 

5. Didn’t Isaac inherit all that his father Avraham had? Wasn’t Avraham very wealthy? Why did Isaac need to acquire more to become ‘big’?

 

6. Didn’t Isaac become big ‘on the backs of’ all the slaves who worked for him without pay? How could Isaac be a humble man when he owned humble slaves who had no chance for freedom?

 

 

 

VI. Envy (verses 14-17)

The Palestinians envied him. They tried to make life impossible for Isaac by stopping and filling in the wells that Avraham’s slaves had dug. Pressure finally reached Avimelech. He personally told Isaac to leave them. Isaac was now stronger than Avimelech’s people. Isaac was wise; he left.

 

There was a wadi (a valley formed by streams during the rainy season) in Gerar. He made camp there.

 

Questions

 

1. Did Isaac cause the envy of the Palestinians? Should he have been kinder to them, and show them the love of God? Should he have witnessed to them about Yehovah?

 

2. Why did the Palestinians plug up the wells (when water was so valuable, and they also could have used it)?

 

3. Why did Avimelech tell Isaac to leave the area (“Walk-thou from with us”)?

 

4. Should Isaac have stayed in the area (instead of leaving) because he had as much right to the land as the Palestinians (and even more because of Yehovah’s promise)?

 

5. Could Isaac have used passive resistance (refusing to obey commands from good authorities or from bad authorities) to protest the wrongs that the Palestinians were doing?

 

6. Were the Palestinians racists?

 

7. Should the modern Israelis leave and go settle somewhere else in order to seek peace with the Palestinians?

 

 

 

VII. Did They Dig! (verses 18-22)

Isaac began ‘redigging’ the wells of water that the slaves had dug for Avraham. He called the wells by the same names they previously had.

 

While digging in the wadi, Isaac’s servants found a well of the waters of lives.

 

The fighting now began. Palestinian herdsmen fought with Isaac’s herdsmen, claiming that the water was theirs. Isaac called the well Contention because they contended ‘via him,’ over the well.

 

Isaac’s men dug another well. The Palestinians also claimed that one. Isaac called her name Sitnah (Adversary), the feminine word for Satan.

 

Isaac and his men moved on to another location. They dug another well. The Palestinians didn’t pursue a fight. Isaac called the well Broadways. Isaac stated, “For now Yehovah broadened to us. And we shall be fruitful in the land.”

 

Questions

 

1. Why did they name wells?

 

2. What is a wadi?

 

3. Why did they dig in a wadi?

 

4. What are waters of lives?

 

5. Why did the Gerar shepherds fight with Isaac’s shepherds?

 

6. Did Isaac’s shepherds fight back?

 

7. Was fighting with the Gerar shepherds right?

 

8. Why would they name a well Adversary?

 

9. Why did the Gerar shepherds stop fighting?

 

10. Who was naming these wells?

 

11. What does “Yehovah broadened to us” mean?

 

12. What does “we shall be fruitful in the land” mean?

 

VIII. Another Appearance (verses 23-25)

Then Isaac ascended (went up) to Beersheva from there. Beersheva is located in a hot and dry part of the desert, but it has good wells of water.

 

Yehovah appeared to him that very night. He identified Himself as “the Gods of Avraham thy father.” He told him not to fear, again confirming that He is with Isaac. “I will bless thee. And I will multiply thy seed for the sake of my slave Avraham.” Isaac’s response was like that of Avraham: he built an altar there. He called via Name Yehovah.

 

Isaac inclined (put up) his tent there. His servants excavated a well in that location.

 

Questions

 

1. What did Yehovah look like when He appeared to Isaac?

 

2. What important five things did Yehovah tell or command Isaac?

 

3. Why did Yehovah start by identifying Himself?

 

4. Why did He next command him to not fear?

 

5. What does Yehovah being with him mean? What will happen or won’t happen to him?

 

6. What will occur if He blesses him?

 

7. What will occur if He multiplies his seed?

 

8. If Yehovah was with Isaac (verse 24), why did Isaac have so much trouble with the Palestinians?

 

9. Why will Yehovah do these things “for the sake of my slave Avraham” instead of for Isaac’s sake?

 

10. Why did Isaac call via (by means of) Name Yehovah after all the trouble, and not during the trouble?

 

11. What does “excavated a well” mean?

 

 

 

IX. The Guests (verses 26-31)

Avimelech walked unto Isaac with two companions: Akhuzat and Phicol. Phicol was the prince of Avimelech’s army!

 

Isaac was startled— “Why have ye come unto me?” “Ye hated me!” and “Ye sent me from [being] with you!”

 

They answered, “Seeing, we saw that Yehovah was with thee.” They continued, “An Oath shall be, na, ‘betweens’ us—between us and between thee.” (That really is the way they spoke.) “And we shall cut a covenant with thee if thou wilt do bad with us just-as we didn’t touch thee and just-as we did only good with thee! And we sent thee in peace! Thou art now Yehovah’s blessed!”

 

Consider the wisdom of Isaac: He made them a drinking-party! They ate and drank, and finally went to sleep. Then they rose early in the morning. That is when they vowed, a man to his brothers.

 

Isaac then sent them. They walked away from being with him in peace.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Avimelech, Akhuzat and Phicol come? Why did Phicol accompany Avimelech?

 

2. Isaac said, “And ye, ye hated me!” Did Avimelech and his people really hate Isaac?

 

3. Isaac seemed hurt when he said, And ye sent me from with you!  Did he have hurt feelings?

 

4. If the Palestinians saw that Yehovah was with Isaac, why did they send him away?

 

5. What does “We shall cut a covenant with thee if thou wilt do bad with us” mean?

 

6. Avimelech and his men continued by saying, “just-as we didn’t touch thee and just-as we did only good with thee!” Was that true?

 

7. If the above answer is that it wasn’t true, why didn’t Isaac argue with them and correct them?

 

8. Did the Palestinians send them away in peace?

 

9. Why did they say, “Thou art now Yehovah’s blessed!”?

 

10. Did Avimelech and his people fear Isaac?

 

11. What might have changed to cause the Palestinians to fear Isaac?

 

12. What might have happened if Isaac had refused to make this vow of peace?

 

13. How can the reader tell who the he is in “And he made them a drinking-party”?

 

14. Is a drinking party wrong before Yehovah?

 

15. Why did they wait until the morning to make vows to each other?

 

16. Did Isaac’s ways please Yehovah? Prove it.

 

 

 

X. A New Well (verses 32-33)

Isaac’s servants came on the very same day with good news. They told to him about firebrands of the well that they dug. And they said to him, “We found water!”

 

Isaac called the well by the name Oath. The name Beersheva means Well-of-Oath, and that is its name to this very day!

 

Questions

 

1. What does “firebrands of the well” mean?

 

2. The city had already been named Well-of-the-Oath in Avraham’s day. Why does the text record this as if it were the first time that it had been named this?

 

3. What day is “this day” in “Therefore the name of the city is Well-of-Oath unto this day”?

 

 

 

XI. A New Set of Wives (verses 34-35)

Esau was now 40 years old. He took a woman: ‘Yehovah’s-Ruling’. She is the daughter of a man named ‘My-Well’. They were Hittites (from the word for hot, and therefore they were Hotties). He took another woman (a second wife) whose name was ‘Spices’. She was the daughter of a man named Oak; again, they were Hittites.

 

These women were bitternesses of spirit to Isaac and to Rivka (Rebecca, Rebekah, Multiple-Pouring).

 

Questions

 

1. Was there a problem with Esau having a Hittite wife?

 

2. What does “they were bitternesses of spirit to Isaac and Rivka” mean?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 24 – The Romance

The Romance

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 24

 

Genesis 24:1 And Avraham (Father-Of-A-Crowd) is old. He came into days. And Yehovah blessed Avraham in all. 2And Avraham said unto his old slave of his house [unto his slave, an elder of his house], the ruler in all that is to him, “Put, na, thine hand under my thigh. 3And I will make-thee-swear via Yehovah Gods of the heavens and Gods of the land that thou wilt not take a woman to my son from the daughters of the Canaanites that I am dwelling in their midst! 4For thou shalt go unto my land and unto my kindred. And thou shalt take a woman to my son, to He-Will-Laugh (Isaac).”

 

5And the slave said unto him, “Perhaps the woman will not be willing to walk after me unto this land; returning, I will return thy son unto the land that thou didst exit from there?” 6And Avraham said unto him, “Guard to thee lest thou wilt return my son there! 7Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who took me from the house of my father, from the land of my kindred and Who spoke to me and Who swore to me to say, ‘I will give this land to thy seed,’ He will send His messenger to thy faces. And thou shalt take a woman to my son from there. 8And if the woman will not be willing to walk after thee, and thou shalt be innocent from this my vow. Only, thou shalt not return my son there!” 9And the slave put his hand under the thigh of Avraham his lords. And he vowed to him concerning this speaking.

 

10And the slave took ten camels from the camels of his lords. And he walked. And all the good of his lords is in his hand. And he arose. And he walked unto Syria Of-The-Two-Rivers, unto the city of Nahor.

 

11And he bowed the camels from outside to the city unto a well of the water at the time of evening, at the time of the exiting of the drawing-ones (feminine). 12And he said, “Yehovah Gods of my master Avraham, make-happen, na, to the faces of today. And do Grace with my lords Avraham. 13Behold, I am positioning upon the eye of the water. And daughters of the men of the city are exiting to draw water. 14And the youth (masculine) will be, that I will say unto her, ‘Incline, na, thy pitcher; and I have drunk!’ And she will say, ‘Drink! And I will water also thy camels!’—Thou hast reproved her for Thy slave, for He-Will-Laugh (Isaac). And I will know via her that Thou hast done Grace with my lords.” 15And he, he was before he finished to speak. And behold, Multiple-Pouring (Rebekah) is going-out, who was childed to They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) son of Queen (Milcah) woman of Snorer (Nakhor) brother of Avraham. And her pitcher is upon her shoulder. 16And the youth [masculine] is very good [feminine] of appearance—ripe. And a man did not know her. And she descended the eye. And she filled her pitcher. And she ascended.

 

17And the slave ran to meet her. And he said, “I will swallow me, na, a little water from thy pitcher.” 18And she said, “Drink, my lord!” And she hurried. And she descended, her pitcher upon her hand. And she watered him. 19And she finished to water him. And she said, “I will also draw for thy camels until if they finished to drink!” 20And she hurried. And she uncovered her jar unto the water-trough. And she ran again unto the well to draw. And she drew to all his camels. 21And the man, devastating-himself to her, is hushing to know, Did Yehovah prosper his way, if not?

 

22And it was just as the camels finished to drink. And the man took a gold nose ring, split from his shekel, and two bracelets upon her hands, ten of gold from their shekel. 23And he said, “Whose daughter art thou? Tell, na, to me. Is there a house of thy father, a place for us to lodge?” 24And she said unto him, “I am the daughter of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) son of Queen (Milcah), whom she childed to Snorer (Nahor).” 25And she said unto him, “Also straw, also much provender is with us, also a place to lodge!” 26And the man bowed. And he worshipped to Yehovah.

 

27And he said, “Blessed is Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham Who did not forsake His Grace and His Truth from with my lords. I am in the way—Yehovah guided me—the house of the brethren of my lord! 28And the youth ran. And she told to the house of her mother according to these words.

 

29And a brother is to Multiple-Pouring (Rebekah). And his name is White (Laban). And Laban ran unto the man outside, unto the eye. 30And he was when seeing the nose ring and the bracelets upon the hands of his sister and when his hearing the words of Multiple-Pouring (Rebekah) his sister to say, “So the man spoke unto me!” And he came unto the man. And behold he stood by the camels by the eye. 31And he said, “Come, blessed of Yehovah! Why wilt thou stand outside? And I, I turned the house and a place for camels!” 32And the man came to the house. And he opened the camels. And he gave straw and provender to the camels and water to wash his feet and the feet of the men who are with him.

 

33And he was put to his faces to eat. And he said, “I will not eat until if I spoke my words.” And he said, “Speak.” 34And he said, “I am the slave of Avraham. 35And Yehovah blessed my lords very much. And He made big. And He gave to him flock and herd and silver and gold and slaves and female-slaves and camels and asses. 36And Princess (Sarah) the woman of my lords childed a son to my lords after her old-age. And he gave to him all that is to him. 37And my lords made-me-swear to say, ‘Thou wilt not take a woman to my son from the daughters of the Canaanite whom I am living in his land, 38if not! Thou wilt walk unto the house of my father and unto my family, and thou wilt take a woman to my son.’ 39And I said unto my lords, ‘Perhaps the woman will not walk after me.’ 40And he said unto me, ‘Yehovah, Whom I have walked myself to His faces, will send His Messenger with thee. And He will prosper thy way. And thou shalt take a woman to my son from my family and from the house of my father. 41Then thou shalt be innocent from my oath when thou wilt come unto my family. And if they will not give to thee, and thou shalt be innocent from my oath.’ 42And I came today unto the eye. And I said, ‘Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham, if there is Thee, na, prospering my way that I am walking upon her,  43behold I am positioned by the eye of the water. And he will be, the virgin who exits to draw, and I will say unto her, “Water me, na, a little water from thy pitcher,” 44and she will say unto me, “Also thou, drink-thou, and I will also draw to thy camels,” he is the woman that Yehovah reproved for the son of my lords.’ 45I—before I will finish to speak unto my heart, and behold Multiple-Pouring exits. And her pitcher is upon her shoulder. And she descended to the eye. And she drew. And I said unto her, ‘Water me, na.’ 46And she hurried. And she made-descend her pitcher from upon her. And she said, ‘Drink! And also I will water thy camels!’ And I drank, and also she watered the camels. 47And I asked her. And I said, ‘Daughter of whom are thou?’ And she said, ‘Daughter of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) son of Snorer (Nahor) whom Queen (Milcah) childed to him.’ And I put the nose ring upon her nose and the bracelets upon her hands. 48And I bowed. And I worshipped to Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham who guided me in the way of Truth to take the daughter of the brother of my lords to his son. 49And now, if there is your doing Grace and Truth with my lords, tell to me. And if not, tell to me. And I will turn upon the right or upon the left.”

 

50And White answered, and They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel). And they said, “The speech exited from Yehovah. We will not be able to speak unto thee bad or good. 51Behold, Multiple-Pouring is to thy faces. Take and walk. And she will be a woman to the son of thy lords just as Yehovah spoke.” 52And it was just as the slave of Avraham heard their words. And he worshipped landward to Yehovah.

 

53And the slave sent-out vessels of silver and vessels of gold and clothing. And he gave to Multiple-Pouring. And he gave noteworthies to her brothers and to her mother. 54And they ate and drank—he and the men who are with him. And they lodged. And they arose in the morning. And he said, “Send me to my lords.” 55And her brother said, and her mother, “The youth will dwell with us days or ten; she will walk afterward.” 56And he said unto them, “Do not delay me. And Yehovah prospered my way. Send me. And I have walked to my lords.” 57And they said, “We will call to the youth [masc.], and we have asked her with her mouth.” 58And they called to Multiple-Pouring. And they said unto her, “Wilt thou walk with this man?” And she said, “I will walk.” 59And they sent Multiple-Pouring their sister and her wet-nurse and the slave of Avraham and his men. 60And they blessed Multiple-Pouring. And they said to her, “Thou art our sister. Be to thousands of myriads. And thy seed has possessed the gate of his haters!” 61And Multiple-Pouring arose, and her youths [fem.]. And they chariot-rode upon the camels. And they walked after the man. And the slave took Multiple-Pouring. And he walked.

 

62And He-Will-Laugh came from the coming of The-Well-To-The-Lives-Of-My-Seer. And he is dwelling in the land of the Negev (south). 63And He-Will-Laugh went-out to meditate in the field to the turnings of the evening. And he lifted his eyes. And he saw. And behold, camels are coming. 64And Multiple-Pouring lifted her eyes. And she saw He-Will-Laugh. And she fell from upon the camel. 65And she said unto the slave, “Who is the man that is to this who is walking in the field to meet us?” And the slave said, “He is my lords.” And she took the scarf. And she covered herself.

 

66And the slave scrolled all the things that he did to He-Will-Laugh. 67And He-Will-Laugh brought her the Tentward of Princess his mother. And he took Multiple-Pouring. And she was to him for a woman. And he loved her. And He-Will-Laugh was consoled after his mother.

 

I. The Vow (verses 1-4)

We now see Avraham as a very old man. He “came into days,” having many days to his lives.

 

Yehovah blessed Avraham in everything, without exception.

 

Avraham now will obtain a wife for Isaac his son. He had to find the right wife for his son, however. Being so old, he needed to delegate [to appoint another as representative with full responsibility] this task to someone who could do it.

 

He had an elder slave who was over his house, responsible for and ruling over everything that occurred. Avraham completely trusted this slave. He assigned him to take a woman (get a wife) for Isaac. There was only one stipulation [condition, detail that must be part of an agreement]: the women must not be from the daughters of the Canaanites, including the women among whom Avraham lived! This was so important to Avraham that he told his slave to vow via Yehovah Gods of the heavens and Gods of the land to not take a Canaanite woman for his son.

 

Avraham told his slave to go unto his land and unto his kindred, and take a woman to his son from there.

 

Questions

 

1. Isn’t sending a slave very risky, since the slave can easily run away?

 

2. Why didn’t Isaac find a wife for himself?

 

3. Did Isaac agree with his papa’s decision to get a wife for him?

 

4. What if the slave didn’t want to go?

 

5. Why was the thigh the location where the slave had to place his hand (verse 2) when making the vow?

 

6. What was wrong with a Canaanite woman?

 

7. Was Avraham racist against Canaanites?

 

8. Didn’t Yehovah love the Canaanites?

 

9. On the basis of the above answer, is it possible for a Canaanite to be saved?

 

10. What land is Avraham’s land (verse 4)?

 

11. Who are part of his kindred?

 

12. Why did the woman have to be from his own kindred?

 

II. The Release from the Vow (verses 5-9)

There was the possibility that a woman would not follow this slave to this land. He wanted to know if he should take Isaac back to the land from which Avraham originally came. Avraham’s reaction was swift and strong: “Guard to thee lest thou wilt return my son there!” Yehovah had taken Avraham from Chaldean (Iraqi) Ur, a great city that was also very idolatrous. Avraham knew that his son could never return there.

 

Yehovah took Avram from the house of his father. He took him from the land of his kindred. Yehovah spoke to him. He vowed to him to give this land to his seed!

 

Then Avraham guaranteed, “He will send His messenger to thy faces.” Avraham was a prophet, and he spoke infallibly (without the possibility of any error) regarding this.

 

Avraham’s slave must take a woman from Syria.

 

If the woman won’t be willing to come after him (to follow him), he will be innocent from breaking the vow.

 

Under no conditions is he to ever bring his son to that land.

 

The slave placed his hand under Avraham’s thigh and vowed concerning Avraham’s speech.

 

Questions

 

1. Why would a woman willingly follow a slave whom neither she nor her family knew?

 

2. What would have happened if Isaac had returned back to that land?

 

3. Would it have been wrong for Isaac to merely visit Syria to find a wife, with the condition that he would return to live in the land promised? (See verse 6.)

 

4. Why was the slave of Avraham able to go to the land of Syria without violating any command of God?

 

5. Why did Avraham call Yehovah ‘Yehovah Gods of the heavens’?

 

6. Was Avram upset when Yehovah took him from the house of his father, from the land of his kindred?

 

7. Verse 7 states, “I will give this land to thy seed.” Identify this seed:

 

8. Why didn’t Yehovah just give the land to Avraham since Avraham was already there?

 

9. What will the seed do with this land?

 

10. Who is the messenger in verse 7?

 

11. Could this slave just take a woman? Wouldn’t she scream that she is being kidnapped?

 

12. Would you like to have the assignment of finding a woman for a man who needs a wife?

 

III. Loading Up the Camels (verse 10)

Avraham’s slave had freedom and responsibility to obtain and use whatever might be useful belonging to Avraham for this assignment. He had been proven faithful. He took ten camels (and the text later tells that he took men along also, and plenty of gold). He went on his errand.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did he take ten camels?

 

2. How did he know where to go?

 

3. Why does the text mention that he walked before it mentions that he arose?

 

4. Did he converse (speak) with the other men (unmentioned yet in the text) who went?

 

5. Who were these other men?

 

IV. The Impossible Sign (verses 11-16)

Women came to the well at this time of day to draw water. He caused the camels to kneel down there.

 

He then prayed to Yehovah the Gods of his master. The first part of his request was that the event would happen on this day. He did not desire to wait days to find a woman for his master’s son.

 

His request was that Yehovah would do grace with his master Avraham.

 

He then described his situation to Yehovah— “Behold, I am positioning upon the eye of the water. And daughters of the men of the city are exiting to draw water.”

 

Next, he set up a scenario (a description of events) that he desired Yehovah to finish: “And the youth will be, that I will say unto her, ‘Incline, na, thy pitcher; and I have drunk!’ And she will say, ‘Drink! And I will water also thy camels!’” He will ask a youth (a young girl, but in the masculine gender!) to incline (to tip it) a pitcher full of water down so that he could drink.

 

Then he described what she will reply: “Drink! And I will water also thy camels!”

 

If she did these things, the slave concluded that Yehovah reproved her for Yehovah’s slave, Isaac! He also concluded that Yehovah did Grace with Isaac.

 

The unnamed servant did not even have enough time to finish his request when a youth came along with her pitcher on her shoulder. She was beautiful, and she had completed puberty. She was ripe—that is, she was fully ready to bear children. No man had known her—she had never had sexual intercourse.

 

She “descended the eye” (she went down to the place where drinking water is at the surface). She filled her large pitcher (had it been small, she would not have needed to carry it on her shoulder) and ascended (came up).

 

Questions

 

1. Why did he bow the camels?

 

2. What are “drawing ones”?

 

3. Why did they draw water at that time (in the evening)?

 

4. They exited from where?

 

5. Why is ‘Gods’ plural (more than one) instead of singular (just one: ‘God’)?

 

6. What does na mean?

 

7. Why did he pray to “Yehovah Gods of my mster Avraham” instead of praying to “Yehovah my Gods”?

 

8. What does “to the faces of today” mean?

 

9. What does Grace mean?

 

10. What does a person or God do when doing Grace?

 

11. What is an “eye of the water,” and why is it called an eye?

 

12. Why did the slave position himself upon the eye of the water? Did he get into the water?

 

13. Why is the word youth masculine instead of feminine, when he is looking for a girl?

 

14. What would be so strange about her being willing to water the camels?

 

15. Why would Yehovah reprove her for Isaac? What does that mean?

 

16. Why was Rebekah named Multiple Pouring?

 

17. Why does the Bible describe her as ripe?

 

18. What does “a man did not know her” mean?

 

V. The First Test (verses 17-21)

The slave ran to meet her. He did not greet her in any normal manner. His wording was different than what he proposed to God: “I will swallow me, na, a little water from thy pitcher.” She responded just as he had requested in his sign: “Drink, my lord!” She hurried, descended, got water, brought it up, and held the pitcher for this stranger while he drank! The text states that she watered him!

 

Then she said what no one would voluntarily say: “I will also draw for thy camels until if they finished to drink!” This is very tough work. It would make her late getting home. Yet, she did it as if she were gathering gold dust from the ground.

 

She drew water for all his camels while those men watched her work.

 

The man, the slave, was “devastating-himself to her”—he was overwhelming himself to know whether she was the right one or not. Yet, he was silent, hushing himself, desiring to know whether or not Yehovah prospered (made successful) his way or not!

 

Questions

 

1. Why didn’t the slave say, “May I have a little water from thy pitcher?” instead of what he said, “I will swallow me, na, a little water from thy pitcher”?

 

2. What was she doing when she watered him?

 

3. How much water did she give him?

 

4. Why did she volunteer to water the camels when there were men who could have done that hot and tiresome work?

 

5. What did she mean by until if they finished to drink”?

 

6. Why did she hurry?

 

7. What does she uncovered her jar tell about her jar?

 

8. What were the camels doing while she poured water for them?

 

9. Why did the slave/man remain silent while she did all this?

 

10. Did Yehovah prosper his way?

 

11. Why didn’t someone build a house by or over this watering hole so that the water would be available to that person without walking to it for great distances?

 

VI. Tokens and Identification (verses 22-26)

The camels finally finished and were satisfied. The slave then took a nose ring of gold and two gold bracelets, and he placed them on the youth.

 

The slave then asked a question that might normally be the first question: “Whose daughter art thou?” Before she could answer, He also added, “Tell, na, to me. Is there a house of thy father, a place for us to lodge?

 

She immediately answered, identifying her father (Bethuel), her grandmother (Milcah) and her grandfather (Nahor). She then told him that there was enough straw and provender (dry food for livestock or other domestic animals; fodder such as hay or oats), and room to lodge. When the slave heard this, he bowed. And he prostrated to Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What is a nose ring?

 

2. Why do folks wear nose rings?

 

3. What is a shekel?

 

4. What is a gold nose ring split from a shekel?

 

5. Who is his in “split from his shekel”?

 

6. Did the man put the nose ring on her nose?

 

7. How heavy were the gold bracelets?

 

8. How much would they be worth today?

 

9. Why did he give her these very valuable items when he still wasn’t certain that she was the right person for his master’s son?

 

10. Did this slave do right by giving this woman he had just met such valuable items?

 

11. Why did he ask, “Whose daughter art thou?” instead of a question like, “Who are your parents?”

 

12. Why did he ask, “Is there a house of thy father, a place for us to lodge?”  instead of a question like, “Does your father have a place for us to lodge”?

 

13. Why did she give more information about her family than what he asked?

 

14. Was her telling them that they had straw and much provender wise? Was she offering it to them for free without asking her family?

 

15. Was she wise to volunteer to them a place to lodge without asking her family?

 

16. Why did he worship Yehovah? Did he see success at this point?

 

VII. The Confession (verses 27-28)

The slave stated that Yehovah Gods of lord Avraham is blessed. He had not forsaken His Grace and His Truth by removing it from lord Avraham.

 

Avraham’s slave began recounting what he had observed: while he was in the way, Yehovah guided him to the house of his lord Avraham’s relatives!

 

Upon hearing this, the young girl ran. She quoted to her mother’s house what was said.

 

Questions

 

1. Was the slave praying in verse 27, or was he speaking to those around him?

 

2. What does bless mean in the Bible?

 

3. How can Yehovah be blessed?

 

4. What is Truth?

 

5. Does Yehovah ever forsake His Grace and His Truth?

 

6. Does Yehovah ever forsake His Grace and His Truth from being with a person?

 

7. What did he mean by “I am in the way”?

 

8. Why is “I am in the way—Yehovah guided me—the house of the brethren of my lord!” so broken in its wording?

 

9. Why did the youth run?

 

10. How did he know that Yehovah guided him?

 

11. Why didn’t she stay to talk longer with him? Shouldn’t she have worried that he might move on?

 

12. Shouldn’t she have felt funny running like that after he placed such valuable items on her?

 

13. Was she wise to talk to a stranger?

 

14. Normally, the Bible refers to the house of one’s father. Why did this text refer to the house of her mother?

 

VIII. The Brother (verses 29-32)

Rebekah had left the man by the well while she ran home! While she announced what had happened, her brother, named Laban (meaning White) listened carefully. He then ran to meet this man at the well. When he saw the nose ring in his sister’s nose and the bracelets upon his sister’s hands, and when he heard what she said, that is when he ran. He was impressed!

 

Avraham’s slave stood by the camels at the well, waiting for what would happen next. Laban said, “Come, blessed of Yehovah.” Laban was a religious man. (That does not mean that he was Godly.)

 

He then offered the slave and his men good hospitality: “Why wilt thou stand outside? And I, I turned the house and a place for camels!

 

The slave and the camel train went to the house. Laban ungirded his camels. And he gave straw and provender to the camels and water to wash the slave’s feet and the feet of the other men with him. He could serve too! A meal was prepared for the group.

 

Questions

 

1. Why would a child be named White?

 

2. What is the eye?

 

3. Who is he in “And he was when seeing the nose ring and the baracelets…”?

 

4. What impressed Laban so much that he ran to the men at the well?

 

5. Laban said, “Come, blessed of Yehovah!” Did he have the right to declare the man blessed by Yehovah?

 

6. Laban said, “And I, I turned the house and a place for camels!” What was he telling this man?

 

7. What does “opened the camels” mean?

 

8. Why was washing feet so important?

 

IX. Recounting the Events (verses 33-49)

Food was placed in front of the slave so that he could eat. He refused to eat until he told the purpose of his mission. Laban, not Rebekah’s father, was the spokesman for the family. Laban was young (because he ran to the well), and he was forward (meaning that he was direct, bold, presumptuous, as if he were a ranking member).

 

The slave started with his own identity in terms of Avraham: “I am the slave of Avraham.” His name is never given. He was there to represent Avraham, and that alone was the issue.

 

He knew that one’s ability to take care of a bride was of great importance in a potential marriage situation, so he named the Name of the God of his master and how much that God had blessed his master. “And Yehovah blessed my lords very much. And He made big. And He gave to him flock and herd and silver and gold and slaves and female-slaves and camels and asses.

 

He then told of the miracle birth without being religious: “And Princess (Sarah) the woman of my lords childed a son to my lords after her old-age.

 

He continued his build-up of the events: “And he gave to him all that is to him.” This son, then, would soon inherit everything that belonged to Avraham.

 

Avraham’s slave next described the vow and his mission. He was prohibited from taking a Canaanite wife for Avraham’s son. He was to go instead to Avraham’s father’s house and to his kindred. The slave told about his question, “Perhaps the woman will not walk after me—” and about Avraham’s reaction: “Yehovah, Whom I have walked myself to His faces, will send His Messenger with thee. And He will prosper thy way.” The slave laid out the conversation very accurately. He even told that he would be innocent from his oath if the family would not send the woman.

 

He next described how he came to the well, how he prayed, and what he described to Yehovah in his prayer. Rebekah perfectly responded to this quick prayer in every detail.

 

He told about his inquiry regarding Rebekah, and about his placing the nose ring upon her nose and the bracelets on her hands. And he concluded by saying, “And I bowed. And I worshipped to Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham who guided me in the way of Truth to take the daughter of the brother of my lords to his son.

 

Now came the most important issue to the slave of Avraham: “And now, if there is your doing Grace and Truth with my lords, tell to me.” He still didn’t know whether they would send her or whether she would go. So he said, “And if not, tell to me. And I will turn upon the right or upon the left.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “he was put to his faces to eat” mean?

 

2. Why was the slave unwilling to eat until he had spoken his words?

 

3. Why isn’t the slave’s name mentioned?

 

4. Isn’t “Yehovah blessed my lords very much” a religious statement?

 

5. Why did the slave give so many details?

 

6. Who is this Messenger in verse 40?

 

7. In verse 49, the slave says, “And now, if there is your doing Grace and Truth with my lords, tell to me.” What does doing Grace and Truth have to do with what they will be doing?

 

8. What does “And I will turn upon the right or upon the left” mean?

 

X. The Quick and Religious Response (verses 50-52)

Both Laban and Bethuel answered. From what they heard, their response was “The speech exited from Yehovah. We will not be able to speak unto thee bad or good.” Then they said, “Behold, Multiple-Pouring is to thy faces. Take and walk. And she will be a woman to the son of thy lords just as Yehovah spoke.” This was very good news to the slave. All sounded finalized. The slave again prostrated to the ground and worshipped Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “The speech exited from Yehovah” mean?

 

2. Explain what they meant by “We will not be able to speak unto thee bad or good”: 

 

3. They expressed, “Behold, Multiple-Pouring is to thy faces. Take and walk. And she will be a woman to the son of thy lords just as Yehovah spoke.” Is this the way they truly felt?

 

XI. The Joy and the Delay (verses 53-61)

The slave now gave more valuables Rebekah, her brothers and her mother. The slave and his men then partied with them. They spent the night.

 

The next morning, the slave told them to send him to his lords. Rebekah’s brother and mother said, “The youth will dwell with us days or ten; she will walk afterward.” This was not what the slave desired to hear. He said, “Do not delay me. And Yehovah prospered my way. Send me. And I have walked to my lords.

 

They had a strategy: “We will call to the youth [masc.], and we have asked her with her mouth.” They did so, asking her, “Wilt thou walk with this man?” She responded, “I will walk.” There was no reason to delay.

 

They sent Rebekah their sister, her wet-nurse, the slave and his men.

 

They then blessed Rebekah. “Thou art our sister. Thou art our sister. Be to thousands of myriads. And thy seed has possessed the gate of his haters!

 

Rebekah and her youths arose. They rode on the camels, following the man. The mission of the slave was nearly accomplished.

 

Questions

 

1. What three valuables are first mentioned, and why were they valuable?

 

2. What were the ‘noteworthies’ that the slave gave to Rebekah’s brothers and her mother?

 

3. Did the slave give anything to her father?

 

4. Did folks do a lot of partying with alcohol and food back then?

 

5. Doesn’t the Bible condemn drinking alcohol?

 

6. Why did they spend another night?

 

7. Why did the slave say, “Send me to my lords”?

 

8. How long is days or ten?

 

9. Why didn’t Rebekah’s papa speak up instead of her brother and her mother?

 

10. Why did they desire her to say for that length of time?

 

11. What was/were the reason/reasons the slave gave to not delay him?

 

12. When they called to the youth to give her answer, what were the brother and mother expecting?

 

13. What is a wet nurse?

 

14. Why would they send the wet nurse with her?

 

15. They said to Rebekah, “Be to thousands of myriads.” What must happen for that to occur?

 

16. What does “And thy seed has possessed the gate of his haters” mean and imply?

 

17. How many youths went with Rebekah?

 

18. Were the youths slaves?

 

19. Did the youths get to ride the camels?

 

XII. Isaac’s Dream Approaches (verses 62-65)

The scene switches to Isaac. He was coming from the way of the well that Hagar had named. He was in the very hot part of the land of Israel known as the Negev (south).

 

Isaac went to do some heavy thinking (meditating) at the time when the day turned to the evening. When he looked up, he could see the camels coming.

 

Rebekah also looked up, and she saw a man in the field. She came off the camel so quickly that the text describes that she fell off (landing on her feet, of course).

 

She said to the slave, “Who is the man that is to this who is walking in the field to meet us?” It was not dark yet. It was just approaching darkness. The slave responded, “He is my lords.” Rebekah understood this to be Isaac for whom she was brought.

 

Any man could look at her, but it was not proper in her culture for her future husband to see her. She had a scarf for this purpose, and she covered herself.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did he live in the south, a very hot place in Israel?

 

2. What good does meditating do?

 

3. What is transcendental meditation, and how does it differ from what Isaac did?

 

4. What are the turnings of the evening?

 

5. How did Isaac know that the camels were coming to him?

 

6. Why did she cover herself?

 

XIII. The Happy Beginning (verses 66-67)

While Rebekah and Isaac waited, the slave gave the whole story once again. Then Isaac took this veiled woman into his mother Sarah’s tent. There was no other event or ceremony, no exchange of vows.

 

She became his wife. He loved her. Isaac was consoled now after the death of his mother.

 

1. What does scrolled mean?

 

2. How old was Isaac when he married Rebekah?

 

3. How does Isaac’s taking Rebekah into his mother’s tent differ from a man taking a woman and living with her (without marriage) today, even when it is with the consent of the other members of the family?

 

4. Since Isaac was consoled by Rebekah after his mother’s death, was Isaac a ‘mama’s boy’?

 

5. The text states that he loved her. Did she love him?

 

Genesis 24 – The Romance QA Supplied

Map Identifying Syria

The Romance

With Questions and Proposed Answers

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 24

 

Genesis 24:1 And Avraham (Father-Of-A-Crowd) is old. He came into days. And Yehovah blessed Avraham in all. 2And Avraham said unto his old slave of his house [unto his slave, an elder of his house], the ruler in all that is to him, “Put, pray, thine hand under my thigh. 3And I will make-thee-swear via Yehovah Gods of the heavens and Gods of the land that thou wilt not take a woman to my son from the daughters of the Canaanites that I am dwelling in their midst! 4For thou shalt go unto my land and unto my kindred. And thou shalt take a woman to my son, to He-Will-Laugh.”

 

5And the slave said unto him, “Perhaps the woman will not be willing to walk after me unto this land; returning, I will return thy son unto the land that thou didst exit from there?” 6And Avraham said unto him, “Guard to thee lest thou wilt return my son there! 7Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who took me from the house of my father, from the land of my kindred and Who spoke to me and Who swore to me to say, ‘I will give this land to thy seed,’ He will send His messenger to thy faces. And thou shalt take a woman to my son from there. 8And if the woman will not be willing to walk after thee, and thou shalt be innocent from this my vow. Only, thou shalt not return my son there!” 9And the slave put his hand under the thigh of Avraham his lords. And he vowed to him concerning this speaking.

 

10And the slave took ten camels from the camels of his lords. And he walked. And all the good of his lords is in his hand. And he arose. And he walked unto Syria Of-The-Two-Rivers, unto the city of Nahor.

 

11And he bowed the camels from outside to the city unto a well of the water at the time of evening, at the time of the exiting of the drawing-ones (feminine). 12And he said, “Yehovah Gods of my master Avraham, make-happen, na, to the faces of today. And do Grace with my lords Avraham. 13Behold, I am positioning upon the eye of the water. And daughters of the men of the city are exiting to draw water. 14And the youth (masculine) will be, that I will say unto her, ‘Incline, na, thy pitcher; and I have drunk!’ And she will say, ‘Drink! And I will water also thy camels!’—Thou hast reproved her for Thy slave, for He-Will-Laugh (Isaac). And I will know via her that Thou hast done Grace with my lords.” 15And he, he was before he finished to speak. And behold, Multiple-Pouring (Rebekah) is going-out, who was childed to They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) son of Queen (Milcah) woman of Snorer (Nakhor) brother of Avraham. And her pitcher is upon her shoulder. 16And the youth [masculine] is very good [feminine] of appearance—ripe. And a man did not know her. And she descended the eye. And she filled her pitcher. And she ascended.

 

17And the slave ran to meet her. And he said, “I will swallow me, na, a little water from thy pitcher.” 18And she said, “Drink, my lord!” And she hurried. And she descended, her pitcher upon her hand. And she watered him. 19And she finished to water him. And she said, “I will also draw for thy camels until if they finished to drink!” 20And she hurried. And she uncovered her jar unto the water-trough. And she ran again unto the well to draw. And she drew to all his camels. 21And the man, devastating-himself to her, is hushing to know, Did Yehovah prosper his way, if not?

 

22And it was just as the camels finished to drink. And the man took a gold nose ring, split from his shekel, and two bracelets upon her hands, ten of gold from their shekel. 23And he said, “Whose daughter art thou? Tell, na, to me. Is there a house of thy father, a place for us to lodge?” 24And she said unto him, “I am the daughter of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) son of Queen (Milcah), whom she childed to Snorer (Nahor).” 25And she said unto him, “Also straw, also much provender is with us, also a place to lodge!” 26And the man bowed. And he worshipped to Yehovah.

 

27And he said, “Blessed is Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham Who did not forsake His Grace and His Truth from with my lords. I am in the way—Yehovah guided me—the house of the brethren of my lord! 28And the youth ran. And she told to the house of her mother according to these words.

 

29And a brother is to Multiple-Pouring. And his name is White. And White ran unto the man outside, unto the eye. 30And he was when seeing the nose ring and the bracelets upon the hands of his sister and when his hearing the words of Multiple-Pouring his sister to say, “So the man spoke unto me!” And he came unto the man. And behold he stood by the camels by the eye. 31And he said, “Come, blessed of Yehovah! Why wilt thou stand outside? And I, I turned the house and a place for camels!” 32And the man came to the house. And he opened the camels. And he gave straw and provender to the camels and water to wash his feet and the feet of the men who are with him.

 

33And he was put to his faces to eat. And he said, “I will not eat until if I spoke my words.” And he said, “Speak.” 34And he said, “I am the slave of Avraham. 35And Yehovah blessed my lords very much. And He made big. And He gave to him flock and herd and silver and gold and slaves and female-slaves and camels and asses. 36And Princess the woman of my lords childed a son to my lords after her old-age. And he gave to him all that is to him. 37And my lords made-me-swear to say, ‘Thou wilt not take a woman to my son from the daughters of the Canaanite whom I am living in his land, 38if not! Thou wilt walk unto the house of my father and unto my family, and thou wilt take a woman to my son.’ 39And I said unto my lords, ‘Perhaps the woman will not walk after me.’ 40And he said unto me, ‘Yehovah, Whom I have walked myself to His faces, will send His Messenger with thee. And He will prosper thy way. And thou shalt take a woman to my son from my family and from the house of my father. 41Then thou shalt be innocent from my oath when thou wilt come unto my family. And if they will not give to thee, and thou shalt be innocent from my oath.’ 42And I came today unto the eye. And I said, ‘Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham, if there is Thee, na, prospering my way that I am walking upon her,  43behold I am positioned by the eye of the water. And he will be, the virgin who exits to draw, and I will say unto her, “Water me, na, a little water from thy pitcher,” 44and she will say unto me, “Also thou, drink-thou, and I will also draw to thy camels,” he is the woman that Yehovah reproved for the son of my lords.’ 45I—before I will finish to speak unto my heart, and behold Multiple-Pouring exits. And her pitcher is upon her shoulder. And she descended to the eye. And she drew. And I said unto her, ‘Water me, na.’ 46And she hurried. And she made-descend her pitcher from upon her. And she said, ‘Drink! And also I will water thy camels!’ And I drank, and also she watered the camels. 47And I asked her. And I said, ‘Daughter of whom are thou?’ And she said, ‘Daughter of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One son of Snorer whom Queen childed to him.’ And I put the nose ring upon her nose and the bracelets upon her hands. 48And I bowed. And I worshipped to Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham who guided me in the way of Truth to take the daughter of the brother of my lords to his son. 49And now, if there is your doing Grace and Truth with my lords, tell to me. And if not, tell to me. And I will turn upon the right or upon the left.”

 

50And White answered, and They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One. And they said, “The speech exited from Yehovah. We will not be able to speak unto thee bad or good. 51Behold, Multiple-Pouring is to thy faces. Take and walk. And she will be a woman to the son of thy lords just as Yehovah spoke.” 52And it was just as the slave of Avraham heard their words. And he worshipped landward to Yehovah.

 

53And the slave sent-out vessels of silver and vessels of gold and clothing. And he gave to Multiple-Pouring. And he gave noteworthies to her brothers and to her mother. 54And they ate and drank—he and the men who are with him. And they lodged. And they arose in the morning. And he said, “Send me to my lords.” 55And her brother said, and her mother, “The youth will dwell with us days or ten; she will walk afterward.” 56And he said unto them, “Do not delay me. And Yehovah prospered my way. Send me. And I have walked to my lords.” 57And they said, “We will call to the youth [masc.], and we have asked her with her mouth.” 58And they called to Multiple-Pouring. And they said unto her, “Wilt thou walk with this man?” And she said, “I will walk.” 59And they sent Multiple-Pouring their sister and her wet-nurse and the slave of Avraham and his men. 60And they blessed Multiple-Pouring. And they said to her, “Thou art our sister. Be to thousands of myriads. And thy seed has possessed the gate of his haters!” 61And Multiple-Pouring arose, and her youths [fem.]. And they chariot-rode upon the camels. And they walked after the man. And the slave took Multiple-Pouring. And he walked.

 

62And He-Will-Laugh came from the coming of The-Well-To-The-Lives-Of-My-Seer. And he is dwelling in the land of the Negev. 63And He-Will-Laugh went-out to meditate in the field to the turnings of the evening. And he lifted his eyes. And he saw. And behold, camels are coming. 64And Multiple-Pouring lifted her eyes. And she saw He-Will-Laugh. And she fell from upon the camel. 65And she said unto the slave, “Who is the man that is to this who is walking in the field to meet us?” And the slave said, “He is my lords.” And she took the scarf. And she covered herself.

 

66And the slave scrolled all the things that he did to He-Will-Laugh. 67And He-Will-Laugh brought her the Tentward of Princess his mother. And he took Multiple-Pouring. And she was to him for a woman. And he loved her. And He-Will-Laugh was consoled after his mother.

 

I. The Vow (verses 1-4)

We now see Avraham as a very old man. He “came into days,” having many days to his lives.

 

Yehovah blessed Avraham in everything, without exception.

 

Avraham now will obtain a wife for Isaac his son. He had to find the right wife for his son, however. Being so old, he needed to delegate [to appoint another as representative with full responsibility] this task to someone who could do it.

 

He had an elder slave who was over his house, responsible for and ruling over everything that occurred. Avraham completely trusted this slave. He assigned him to take a woman (get a wife) for Isaac. There was only one stipulation [condition, detail that must be part of an agreement]: the woman must not be from the daughters of the Canaanites, including the women among whom Avraham lived! This was so important to Avraham that he told his slave to vow via Yehovah Gods of the heavens and Gods of the land to not take a Canaanite woman for his son.

 

Avraham told his slave to go unto his land and unto his kindred, and take a woman to his son from there.

 

Questions

 

1. Isn’t sending a slave very risky, since the slave can easily run away? It would be very risky unless faithfulness, love and true caring were between the slavemaster and the slave. This slave was closer than a brother to Avraham. Avraham loved this man, and he loved Avraham. There was no risk.

 

2. Why didn’t Isaac find a wife for himself? Yehovah determined to use the events in the Bible so that all careful readers could understand many things about Yehovah, about Avraham, about this slave, about Isaac, and about this woman. Yehovah also showed that arranged marriages can work extremely well.

 

The Bible doesn’t show Isaac as trying to find a wife for himself, but it does show that he greatly desired a wife (later). Finding a good wife in that wild land would not have been easy.

 

3. Did Isaac agree with his papa’s decision to get a wife for him? The reader can only discover that later. Answer this question after reading what happened.

 

4. What if the slave didn’t want to go? If the slave had not desired to go, that slave would have been another person and not the slave mentioned in the Bible! The one in the Bible was willing to take responsibility for his slavemaster’s house, and was therefore willing to do this.

 

5. Why was the thigh the location where the slave had to place his hand (verse 2) when making the vow? The hand almost always pictures the works a person does, since hands are the first tools of doing work.

 

When we use the word progeny, we are speaking of offspring, descendents, children are born from anyone. Carefully think about the next verse:

 

Exodus 1:5 And all the souls that came out of the thigh of Jacob were seventy souls.

 

Therefore, the thigh pictures progeny: descendents, offspring. If the slave placed his hand under Avraham’s thigh then vowed, he would be vowing that his works will be for the progeny of Avraham, and thus he was vowing to Avraham and to his progeny!

 

6. What was wrong with a Canaanite woman? The races (including the Canaanites) that lived in that land were idolatrous, violent, wild, immoral (sexually doing whatever they pleased), and just a very bad bunch of folks. Avraham already knew that Yehovah did not desire a Canaanite woman in the lineage of Messiah (the very lineage that Avraham would produce) with one important exception: Rahab the whore! (You can read about her now to find why Yehovah placed her in the lineage of Messiah.)

 

7. Was Avraham racist against Canaanites? Yehovah was! He grew to hate them because of the terrible and disgusting things they did in order to please their idols and their lusts!

 

The only racism that is permissible is that which Yehovah directly commands. He later commanded the Israelis to annihilate the Canaanites. Racism that isn’t commanded is racism against Yehovah! For His image is built into every male and female in every race. Everyone of you has the image of God built into you. That is why Yehovah hates sin! For His image is smeared whenever anyone sins! Anyone who hates you because of your race hates Yehovah. And if you hate anyone because of his or her race, you hate Yehovah. If Yehovah commands the Israelis to destroy a race, however, refusing to do that is hatred of their own (the Israelis’) race!

 

8. Didn’t Yehovah love the Canaanites? Yehovah hated them because of their terribly cruel and vile actions. They used to burn their own babies alive on a superheated statue of their gods! They used to have sexual intercourse with their cattle. Yehovah gave them much time and warnings; they didn’t hearken. He finally commanded that they be wiped out. (The Israelis didn’t do it, and the Israelis were instead nearly killed by the Canaanites and the other races that were just as bad.)

 

Yehovah hates all workers of iniquity (those who love to be guilty of sin, and who want others to join them in sinning).

 

9. On the basis of the above answer, is it possible for a Canaanite to be saved? Not only is it possible, but it occurred. A heroic woman named Rahab was saved along with her family. She feared Yehovah the Gods of Israel, and He responded by saving her from being killed with the inhabitants of Jericho. He also gave her everlasing life.

 

10. What land is Avraham’s land (verse 4)? His land at that time was Syria! While he wasn’t Syrian by race, he was Syrian by culture.

 

11. Who are part of his kindred? He claimed the Syrians as his kindred. He was from another people: the Arphaxadis (pronounced Ar-Pock-Shodees), but they never became big or important. The Syrians instead became the main group. They are still there, by Israel:

 

Map Identifying Syria

 

 Copyright Access Foundation, Zaine Ridling, Ph.D., Editor

 

(Find ‘Aram’ which is Syria at the top of this map.)

 

They are strong enemies of Israel at the present time. Their hatred for the Israelis has maintained violence in Israel with much bloodshed and death.

 

12. Why did the woman have to be from his own kindred? Of all the cultures in the area, the Syrian culture was the best culture to produce the People of Israel. Yehovah determined to use this culture for that purpose. Other cultures in the area had become very bad, loaded with terrible and violent idolatrous practices. Some cultures burned their babies alive to sacrifice to their gods!

 

II. The Release from the Vow (verses 5-9)

There was the possibility that a woman would not follow this slave to this land. He wanted to know if he should take Isaac back to the land from which Avraham originally came. Avraham’s reaction was swift and strong: “Guard to thee lest thou wilt return my son there!” Yehovah had taken Avraham from Chaldean (Iraqi) Ur, a great city that was also very idolatrous. Avraham knew that his son could never return there.

 

Yehovah took Avram from the house of his father. He took him from the land of his kindred. Yehovah spoke to him. He vowed to him to give this land to his seed!

 

Then Avraham guaranteed, “He will send His messenger to thy faces.” Avraham was a prophet, and he spoke infallibly (without the possibility of any error) regarding this.

 

Avraham’s slave must take a woman from Syria.

 

If the woman won’t be willing to come after him (to follow him), he will be innocent from breaking the vow.

 

Under no conditions is he to ever bring his son to that land.

 

The slave placed his hand under Avraham’s thigh and vowed concerning Avraham’s speech.

 

Questions

 

1. Why would a woman willingly follow a slave whom neither she nor her family knew? Women usually desired a husband. Life was much hard work. If a slave came to get her, the new husband would have help to do the work. She could tell much from the slave himself. If he loved his master, his master’s son would probably be a good husband.

 

Marriages were often arranged (parents found a husband/wife for their older children). These could be very good marriages. (They could also be terrible, but that didn’t happen as often as good arrangements.)

 

Very valuable items were sometimes given for the woman. Thus, the family seemed to be purchasing her. Yet, they were really investing in her (they would not tend to mistreat her after paying a very high price for her, since that would be wasting great valuables).

 

2. What would have happened if Isaac had returned back to that land? Yehovah had taken Avram out from there. Returning back to that land would have put its inhabitants, this slave and Isaac into great danger. Yehovah had already made a promise. Anyone set against Yehovah’s promise was set against Yehovah. That isn’t very smart.

 

Yehovah has a plan. That plan will take many centuries to fulfill. We are living right now at the early parts of human history. Far more years are ahead than have already been for humans. The ‘end of the world’ is many centuries away. Long before the end of this world, Yehovah’s plan will include all the people of Israel being born of God and Messiah Yeshua’s coming to reign over all the earth.

 

If the slave and Isaac had returned to the land from which Avram came, they would have been reversing Yehovah’s plan for Israel. They might have therefore been killed. Yehovah warned the slave through Avraham to not do this.

 

3. Would it have been wrong for Isaac to merely visit Syria to find a wife, with the condition that he would return to live in the land promised? (See verse 6.) Yes, it would have been wrong! Isaac must not return to that land.

 

Yehovah did not have plans to destroy or harm that land; Isaac’s wife would come from it. Jacob, Isaac’s son would later live in it—for a while. Yehovah determined to make a new race in another land: the race of Israel in the Land of Canaan. Even going to visit would have been wrong for Isaac, but not for this slave.

 

4. Why was the slave of Avraham able to go to the land of Syria without violating any command of God?

 

This slave belonged to Avraham, but was not taken from the other land in the same way Avraham was. Yehovah told Avraham to leave that land. Had Avraham returned, his future children and children’s children would have thought that returning was an option (a choice, a possibility). This way, they will know (if they read the text) that returning to live in Iraq or Syria is not right. While Jacob will live in Syria for a while to obtain a wife, he will then leave to come back to this land. He will go to live in Egypt, and he will die there. He will not be buried in Egypt, however; He will come back to the land promised to Avraham. Yehovah placed these texts in the Bible so that the Israelis can understand how important these things are to Him!

 

5. Why did Avraham call Yehovah ‘Yehovah Gods of the heavens’? This shows that He sees! He will send a messenger to the slaves faces (in front of the slave)! Therefore, the journey route that the slave takes will have another very important person ahead of the slave who will participate in this assignment!

 

6. Was Avram upset when Yehovah took him from the house of his father, from the land of his kindred? The text doesn’t show that he was upset. He was not young. This would upset a child, but it did not upset a grown adult who was a cowboy.

 

7. Verse 7 states, “I will give this land to thy seed.” Identify this seed:

 

Galatians 3:16 Now, the promises were made to Abraham and his seed. He doesn’t say, “and to seeds,” as of many, but, “and to thy seed,” as of one, who is Messiah!

 

Thus, the seed is Messiah Yeshua Himself. He will be the Owner of that Land later known as the Land of Israel, and known as the land of Canaan in this text.

 

8. Why didn’t Yehovah just give the land to Avraham since Avraham was already there? Yehovah’s promises are always for a time when the promises will not damage those to whom the promises are made. Avraham was a cowboy among other cowboys who depended on Him. He would have had to become a warlord, constantly fighting enemies for the land, and his offspring would have lost the land by sinning. (Yehovah did bring the Israelis into the land later, and they sinned and got thrown out.) Instead, Yehovah will give it to Avraham and Messiah Yeshua when the Israelis are ready to only do right!

 

9. What will the seed do with this land? The seed, who is Messiah Yeshua, will rule the entire planet from this land. He will be there and will be approachable. He will make the land very fruitful—producing excellent crops and fruits from all over the world. All cultures of the world will send representatives, and there will be singing from all cultures all day and night, singing the miraculous works of God. Jerusalem will be a tent city (with a few buildings) so that visitors can come and can enjoy the tents of Jacob and the beautiful scenery. Anyone who has questions about any text in the Bible will hear a perfect and clear answer from adults and from children. This is because of what the Seed will do with this land! Imagine living in a land where taking a bath or shower is swimming or standing under a waterfall, where going to bed is in a cozy tent where there are other very kind children, and where the view is looking out from the side of a tall mountain, where all animals are friendly, including lions, tigers and snakes, where there are trees and rocks to climb and clean, cold water to drink that comes straight out of rocks, where there are very good-tasting foods from all cultures of the world, where the stars at night are very bright and clear, where there are children from all over the world with their various forms of dressing, where you can ride gentle animals (horses, mules, asses, camels, etc.) at almost any time, where you can learn as if in school, but have new friends teach you and work with you… Imagine living in a land where you can meet a new friend, and stay in the tent with that friend without being in trouble or danger. That is what Messiah will do for that land.

 

10. Who is the messenger in verse 7? The word messenger is always the same as angel in the Bible. A messenger can be what we know as an angel, or it could be a person or even Yeshua Himself.

 

When I read a text, I always want to see whether a messenger is an angel, and person, or God Himself. I cannot tell at this point if the messenger is an angel or God, but I know it is one of those two.

 

11. Could this slave just take a woman? Wouldn’t she scream that she is being kidnapped? He won’t kidnap her; he will speak to her and to her family. They will arrange for her to go if she desires to go.

 

12. Would you like to have the assignment of finding a woman for a man who needs a wife? (Each student can answer this question.)

 

III. Loading Up the Camels (verse 10)

Avraham’s slave had freedom and responsibility to obtain and use whatever might be useful belonging to Avraham for this assignment. He had been proven faithful. He took ten camels (and the text later tells that he took men along also, and plenty of gold). He went on his errand.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did he take ten camels? He had to carry supplies. He also had to take enough goods and men to dissuade (convince another or others from doing something) bad guys from attacking. He also needed one camel for the woman!

 

2. How did he know where to go? Certain established trails led to different places. He knew the way to Syria, and this is the way he took. He didn’t know where to go beyond to the country of Syria.

 

3. Why does the text mention that he walked before it mentions that he arose? He walked the camels and the goods to a location to gather what he would need. He began to do his assignment right away.

 

4. Did he converse (speak) with the other men (unmentioned yet in the text) who went? The text doesn’t say. He told them enough so that they would prepare for the journey.

 

5. Who were these other men? They were either slaves, cowboys who would be beneficial (of good use) on the trip, or a combination of slaves and cowboys.

 

IV. The Impossible Sign (verses 11-16)

Women came to the well at this time of day to draw water. He caused the camels to kneel down there.

 

He then prayed to Yehovah the Gods of his master. The first part of his request was that the event would happen on this day. He did not desire to wait days to find a woman for his master’s son.

 

His request was that Yehovah would do grace with his master Avraham.

 

He then described his situation to Yehovah— “Behold, I am positioning upon the eye of the water. And daughters of the men of the city are exiting to draw water.”

 

Next, he set up a scenario (a description of events) that he desired Yehovah to finish: “And the youth will be, that I will say unto her, ‘Incline, na, thy pitcher; and I have drunk!’ And she will say, ‘Drink! And I will water also thy camels!’” He will ask a youth (a young girl, but in the masculine gender!) to incline (to tip it) a pitcher full of water down so that he could drink.

 

Then he described what she will reply: “Drink! And I will water also thy camels!”

 

If she did these things, the slave concluded that Yehovah reproved her for Yehovah’s slave, Isaac! He also concluded that Yehovah did Grace with Isaac.

 

The unnamed servant did not even have enough time to finish his request when a youth came along with her pitcher on her shoulder. She was beautiful, and she had completed puberty. She was ripe—that is, she was fully ready to bear children. No man had known her—she had never had sexual intercourse.

 

She “descended the eye” (she went down to the place where drinking water is at the surface). She filled her large pitcher (had it been small, she would not have needed to carry it on her shoulder) and ascended (came up).

 

Questions

 

1. Why did he bow the camels? The camels were loaded. This way, they could get the load off their feet (hooves) and rest for a while.

 

2. What are “drawing ones”? They are persons who come to draw water from the watering hole. These drawing ones are feminine in gender; they are women and girls.

 

Men usually didn’t come to draw water; they were busy with their occupations. Women came to draw, since keeping enough water was very important. They did not have pipes with water coming to their houses. They had to carry the water from the watering hole back to their houses. That could be several miles. The women also did the cooking, cleaning, washing, taking care of children, etc. without any electricity or running water. Women worked together; that made labor more enjoyable, and they could share tasks. Men also had to work very hard. Life was far more work than we usually have to do today in this country. There are many places where women still live and do work the way that they did it at this time in the Bible.

 

3. Why did they draw water at that time (in the evening)? Walking to the well in the summer sun was very uncomfortable. It was very hot. Drawing water in the evening was better, since it was cooler. They also needed the water for the next day, for the morning as well as throughout the day.

 

4. They exited from where? The women exited the city to come to the watering hole.

 

5. Why is ‘Gods’ plural (more than one) instead of singular (just one: ‘God’)? The Hebrew word Elohim means Gods, and refers to all the Gods there are. He is Gods over the land and Gods over the seas. He is Gods of the mountains and Gods of the heavens. He is Gods of crops and Gods of war. He is all the Gods. Thus, He is called Gods using the plural form.

 

6. What does na mean? The little Hebrew word na acts as a softener, removing any harsh sound of the statement being made.

 

Suppose that you said, “Come here!” Are you angry? Are you needing help? Are you ordering someone to do something? If the Hebrew word na is used, it means that the speaker is not demanding something, but is speaking with respect and gentleness. (Try using na with each other in this class.)

 

7. Why did he pray to “Yehovah Gods of my master Avraham” instead of praying to “Yehovah my Gods”? He was doing an errand on behalf of Avraham. Avraham told him that Yehovah would send His messenger before his faces. This was important to Avraham, and Avraham was important to Yehovah. Thus, he prayed to Yehovah Gods of Avraham, asking favor for Avraham, not for himself.

 

8. What does “to the faces of today” mean? That means while the faces (main parts) of today are present. (If they were behind, that would be yesterday or the day before, or any time in history. If they were in front, that would be in the future.)

 

9. What does Grace mean? Grace is a very strong burning eagerness toward or against a person that drives that person to take action. If someone is picking on your little sister or your older sister, and you feel very strong to help your sister, when you take action you are showing Grace.

 

10. What does a person or God do when doing Grace? The person can help with great desire, or the person can harm with great anger. In this case, the slave is asking Yehovah to help in a miraculous way for the sake of Avraham.

 

11. What is an “eye of the water,” and why is it called an eye? The eye of the water is a place on the ground where fresh water flows to the surface. It is called an eye because it ‘waters’ like someone’s eye. Your eye stays wet; it would be damaged if it became dry. Water is always supplied to it. That is the same for the water that enters this type of watering hole.

 

12. Why did the slave position himself upon the eye of the water? Did he get into the water? He didn’t get into the water, but was right by its edge. He positioned himself there because that is where the women would gather, and that is where the camels needed to be watered. They would not drink directly from the water, but water would be taken from the watering hole and placed into troughs (to keep the animals from polluting the water).

 

13. Why is the word youth masculine instead of feminine, when he is looking for a girl? Whenever a human is viewed as part of the entire human race, Biblical Hebrew will use the masculine form. The human race as a whole is masculine. It would be like referring to a girl as “this” or “that”: “That is the one who helped him.”

 

14. What would be so strange about her being willing to water the camels?

 

  • The pitcher was quite heavy. They didn’t have lightweight plastics in those days. The pitchers were very large, and made of pottery. Filling it and carrying it required much work.
  • The men were strangers. They were strong men, and could water their own animals. She didn’t have to volunteer.
  • Giving water to one man was enough trouble. Placing water into water troughs for ten camels—she would have to send her vessel down into the well and bring it up a number of times for each camel to do this. (The humps of camels are filled with fat, not water. They can drink quite a bit, though.)

15. Why would Yehovah reprove her for Isaac? What does that mean? To reprove is to strongly correct. It normally means to tell off, to harshly correct. In this case, however, it doesn’t mean that she was abused or treated very badly, but instead was treated with great strictness so that she would be well-trained for her position. That type of harsh training seems bad while it occurs, but it produces very good and often life-saving character in those who are trained.

 

16. Why was Rebekah named Multiple Pouring? The texts don’t say why her parents named her that way. She proved herself by multiple pourings, however!

 

17. Why does the Bible describe her as ripe? This way, readers can know that she wasn’t under the proper age for having children. She was in no danger of becoming pregnant too early if she became a man’s wife.

 

18. What does “a man did not know her” mean? When two have sexual intercourse, they intimately know each other in ways that can be very beneficial (if they are married) or in ways that can really hurt each other (if they are not). Yehovah commanded the Israelis to not be involved in fornication (sexual intercourse without either one being married). He knew that fornication can easily lead to death.

 

Rebekah did not know a man. Therefore, Isaac would be her first sexual partner. Yehovah greatly approved of her.

 

V. The First Test (verses 17-21)

The slave ran to meet her. He did not greet her in any normal manner. His wording was different than what he proposed to God: “I will swallow me, na, a little water from thy pitcher.” She responded just as he had requested in his sign: “Drink, my lord!” She hurried, descended, got water, brought it up, and held the pitcher for this stranger while he drank! The text states that she watered him!

 

Then she said what no one would voluntarily say: “I will also draw for thy camels until if they finished to drink!” This is very tough work. It would make her late getting home. Yet, she did it as if she were gathering gold dust from the ground.

 

She drew water for all his camels while those men watched her work.

 

The man, the slave, was “devastating-himself to her”—he was overwhelming himself to know whether she was the right one or not. Yet, he was silent, hushing himself, desiring to know whether or not Yehovah prospered (made successful) his way or not!

 

Questions

 

1. Why didn’t the slave say, “May I have a little water from thy pitcher?” instead of what he said, “I will swallow me, na, a little water from thy pitcher”? In our languages and cultures, we ask permission for things. In Hebrew and the Biblical cultures, saying what a person desires to do, then waiting for the person to show willingness or not is the proper way to respond to each other.

 

2. What was she doing when she watered him? She had no cup. Therefore, she poured water from her pitcher either into her own hand or into his. Either way, it was a very gentle scene. (Try this outside. Get a large pitcher, and pour into another student’s hand—not enough to get the other person wet, but enough to fill the hand so that the other student can drink.)

 

3. How much water did she give him? She poured more water into her or his hand until he finished drinking. He may have taken quite a bit of water.

 

4. Why did she volunteer to water the camels when there were men who could have done that hot and tiresome work? This is a great mystery. Did she have a love for camels? Did she recognize these men as special in some way? Did she just like to volunteer? The text doesn’t say why she volunteered. She did, however, and she showed herself of excellent character!

 

5. What did she mean by until if they finished to drink”? She would keep watering them until they stopped drinking even if they never finished. A large animal can drink quite a bit, and a camel is designed to take much water. (The humps are not for water storage; they are fat.)

 

6. Why did she hurry? It was as if she were eager to water them! The text doesn’t say why she hurried, but that also showed her willingness.

 

7. What does she uncovered her jar tell about her jar? Her jar had a lid. See if you can figure out what the jar’s shape was, since she obtained water from a fresh-water watering hole (rather than from a deep well).

 

8. What were the camels doing while she poured water for them? What would any animal do? The camels watched her. She was not one of their masters, but she was doing what they desired. They were smelling her, watching her, and learning who she was.

 

9. Why did the slave/man remain silent while she did all this? He didn’t want to interfere with her actions. Saying anything might cause her to stop. He remained silent to see if she was the one chosen by Yehovah.

 

10. Did Yehovah prosper his way? Read on to see. The slave didn’t decide yet, and readers should not either.

 

11. Why didn’t someone build a house by or over this watering hole so that the water would be available to that person without walking to it for great distances? Anyone who tried that would have to fight all who made use of that well. Folks who use open watering holes for drinking know better than to live by the water. Any human excrement (‘poop’, ‘doo-doo’, ‘crap’, etc.) or urine (‘pee’) that got into the water would poison all the water. That is why the camels did not drink directly from the water, but were given water in a watering trough. That way, they would not foul the water with their hooves or their mouths, and they would not urinate or defecate (release excrement) in or near the water. That water was life-giving; it was very important.

 

VI. Tokens and Identification (verses 22-26)

The camels finally finished and were satisfied. The slave then took a nose ring of gold and two gold bracelets, and he placed them on the youth.

 

The slave then asked a question that might normally be the first question: “Whose daughter art thou?” Before she could answer, He also added, “Tell, na, to me. Is there a house of thy father, a place for us to lodge?

 

She immediately answered, identifying her father (Bethuel), her grandmother (Milcah) and her grandfather (Nahor). She then told him that there was enough straw and provender (dry food for livestock or other domestic animals; fodder such as hay or oats), and room to lodge. When the slave heard this, he bowed. And he prostrated to Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What is a nose ring?

 

Nose Ring

 

2. Why do folks wear nose rings? This is part of many cultures. It is an item of jewelry in some places. It is sometimes a symbol of a group. Nose rings can be placed into pierced holes in the nose, or they can be held by pressure.

 

3. What is a shekel? It is a weight of gold. Some estimated that the shekel weighed about 1/32 of a pound, or half an ounce. Gold is measured using a different type of ounce: the Troy ounce. There are 12 Troy ounces to a pound. Gold is selling for $910 a Troy ounce. I did some math to figure how much the gold nose ring would be worth in gold today: $910 X ½ X 12/16 = about $340. Add the cost of making it into a beautiful nose ring, and it would be worth about $375.

 

4. What is a gold nose ring split from a shekel? That is a shekel (coin) of gold that is split and shaped into a nose ring.

 

5. Who is his in “split from his shekel”? It is perhaps the man’s (slave’s) shekel. I couldn’t tell from the text.

 

6. Did the man put the nose ring on her nose? The text states, “took … upon her hands” as if he placed all three items upon her hands. He may have placed the nose ring in her nose.

 

7. How heavy were the gold bracelets? They were “ten of gold from their shekel,” ten shekels each.

 

8. How much would they be worth today? Since gold today is worth about $910 a Troy ounce, the math will look like this for both bracelets together:

 

$910 X 20 X 12/16 = about $13,800. Add the cost of the workmanship to make the beautiful, matching bracelets and the value will be about $14,500.

 

9. Why did he give her these very valuable items when he still wasn’t certain that she was the right person for his master’s son?

 

  • She had proven herself willing to serve without being asked.
  • She had given water to all the camels.
  • She had been gracious to sojourners by giving water to a sojourner.
  • He wanted her to know that his master had wealth.
  • She had so far shown the symptoms of being the right woman for his master, though the slave still couldn’t be certain.

10. Did this slave do right by giving this woman he had just met such valuable items? He was crossing boundaries by doing this in any culture. She did not mind, and she did not protest. She did not even ask a question. While it was not common to place gold on a young lady unless a relationship had either been established or was about to be established, she was a relative of his master (see verse 27). Thus, his actions to her were not out of line.

 

11. Why did he ask, “Whose daughter art thou?” instead of a question like, “Who are your parents?” If her parents had died, the question, “Who are your parents” would have brought a very sad response from her, and would have brought sadness to her. “Whose daughter art thou?” is a far happier and kinder question, since it invites a happier response even if her father or mother had died. If her father or mother had died, she would have told her father’s and mother’s names, then the name of the man and woman who are now being her parents. Questions back then showed a great deal of sensitivity. They diligently tried to avoid awkward questions that led to embarrassment or sadness.

 

12. Why did he ask, “Is there a house of thy father, a place for us to lodge?”  instead of a question like, “Does your father have a place for us to lodge”? Again, if her father were dead, that would have been a very sad question. The “house of thy father” could just as easily refer to a grandfather’s house. A wise person will learn to ask questions that show great sensitivity.

 

13. Why did she give more information about her family than what he asked? She knew that he might know one of her relatives even if he didn’t know another. He might have heard of Milcah or Nahor even if he didn’t know Bethuel. Folks tended to know each other far more often then than they do today since all news and events about persons were very important. They had each other rather than television, radio and cd/dvd players.

 

14. Was her telling them that they had straw and much provender wise? Was she offering it to them for free without asking her family? She was doing right in her culture. These travelers may have been violent men, but she would have known that very early. She could tell by the way they behaved that they were not violent, but were from someone who had much wealth.

 

15. Was she wise to volunteer to them a place to lodge without asking her family? She was wise. She would not have been wise doing that in our cultures. When guests came, family members had much extra work to do. Since she was one of the participants in work, she had the right to volunteer to give them lodging. Her family also had means to take guests, and she knew that. These guests would be welcome. They came with news from far away, and they were generous. She knew that her family would not lose by opening their home to them.

 

16. Why did he worship Yehovah? Did he see success at this point? Verse 27 tells why he worshipped. Yehovah guided him to the house of the brethren of Avraham. That alone was very good news.

 

VII. The Confession (verses 27-28)

The slave stated that Yehovah Gods of lord Avraham is blessed. He had not forsaken His Grace and His Truth by removing it from lord Avraham.

 

Avraham’s slave began recounting what he had observed: while he was in the way, Yehovah guided him to the house of his lord Avraham’s relatives!

 

Upon hearing this, the young girl ran. She quoted to her mother’s house what was said.

 

Questions

 

1. Was the slave praying in verse 27, or was he speaking to those around him? He is speaking to those around him. If he were praying to Yehovah, he would have used the first-person pronouns thou, thy and thee, like this: “Blessed art Thou, Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham, Who did not forsake Thy Grace and Thy Truth from with my lords. I am in the way—Thou, Yehovah, guided me—the house of the brethren of my lord!”

 

2. What does bless mean in the Bible? The Hebrew word means to be ‘kneeled’. When blesses another in this way (there are other ways), the person being blessed will pictorally (in a picture) kneel in front of the one doing the blessing (like knights before a king). The person who blesses will then lay hands on the one being blessed and will speak, describing the blessing. In this case, who was being blessed?

 

3. How can Yehovah be blessed? Yehovah always is blessed when His creation does what He has designed and/or commanded it to do. When a person does what is right before Yehovah, that gives Him pleasure. It is as if that person laid hands on Yehovah and blessed Yehovah with that person’s works. This will be very important in the End Times during the Tribulation.

 

If any of you does what Yehovah has commanded you to do, and refuses to do what Yehovah has said it wrong, you are blessing Yehovah. He remembers.

 

There are two ways to bless another. One involves words: things said that are promises (of what the person will inherit, for example). Another way is just to do it (just give the person something of value, like an inheritance). They are both blessings in the way the Bible uses the word.

 

Every blessing that Yehovah gives to humans is always designed so that those humans can bless and benefit others.

 

4. What is Truth? It is always what is absolute (never changing, always the case) from a god’s perspective.

 

Different folks believe in many gods in this world. (Those gods don’t really exist, but those who believe in them think they do.) Whatever they claim that their gods see as always the case is what they will claim to be truth.

 

The same is true for Yehovah. Yehovah exists (if the Bible is true). He tells what is Truth. That is what is absolute from His perspective (His viewpoint). For example, from His viewpoint, using His Name for a false God is very bad. He is very angry when anyone does that.

 

Yeshua is the Truth (and is other things, too). Thus, Yeshua is absolute from Yehovah’s viewpoint. What Yeshua says, then, must also be Truth.

 

I ask this question: is lying always a sin according to Yehovah’s Truth? Lying to save innocent folks from the hands of guilty folks who will do them harm is righteous, not sin. Yehovah commanded the Israelis to not lie to each other. That was under the condition that the Israelis are all obeying the Teaching of Yehovah.

 

Any exception to the rule must be to benefit one who is innocent.

 

5. Does Yehovah ever forsake His Grace and His Truth? No. If He did, He would be forsaking Himself (Yeshua).

 

6. Does Yehovah ever forsake His Grace and His Truth from being with a person? He does withdraw and hide His Grace and His Truth from many. The People of Israel has not seen His Grace and His Truth in many cases because this people didn’t desire it. (This people will desire it later, and Yehovah will return it.) Israel (as a group) is blinded from seeing Truth and Grace because Israel as a group doesn’t desire it and doesn’t know that it would benefit. (Individual Israelis in a few cases have His Grace and Truth.)

 

7. What did he mean by “I am in the way”? This means that he is on the right path. He is travelling just as Avraham told him.

 

8. Why is “I am in the way—Yehovah guided me—the house of the brethren of my lord!” so broken in its wording? This slave was very excited. When a person who is excited tries to speak several thoughts at one time, disconnected sentence pieces can result. The Hebrew language portrayed this excitement.

 

9. Why did the youth run? She was very excited to find that this man was the slave of a very wealthy and gracious relative, and that he was so pleased to see her.

 

10. How did he know that Yehovah guided him? Many will claim to be guided by ‘the Lord.’ If you ask them for evidence, you will find that the evidence they will give will usually not be like the evidence this slave had.

 

His traveling to a foreign land, coming to a well he had never seen, meeting a girl who did what he asked Yehovah that she would do, and finding that she meets what Avraham said she must be are all things that at least showed that he was guided.

 

He still isn’t certain that his mission will be accomplished. He will not presume that it is finished until it is.

 

11. Why didn’t she stay to talk longer with him? Shouldn’t she have worried that he might move on? She is going quickly to her house to prepare for their lodging. She knew that they would not just travel on because of the very expensive gifts that they gave her. She figured that her home was their destination.

 

12. Shouldn’t she have felt funny running like that after he placed such valuable items on her? No. She was a very natural-reacting person.

 

13. Was she wise to talk to a stranger? She didn’t speak to just one stranger; she spoke to a camel caravan. He asked her for water. This could have been a trap. However, if they were minded to kidnap her, it would have been easy for them. Even today in Africa, camels are used for very rapid transportation and to grab folks. They are faster than horses.

 

We can’t tell from the text whether she was at the well alone (besides these men) or not. The times in which she lived were violent. Yet, she knew the culture of her area and the safety of the well. (Had others been kidnapped from her well, she would have only gone with others to it.)

 

What was wise in her time at her location would not necessarily be wise in another time or another location. She did what was wise, the Bible verifying her qualifications and actions.

 

14. Normally, the Bible refers to the house of one’s father. Why did this text refer to the house of her mother? I propose that this was a ‘girl’ issue. Her mother had helpers (perhaps slaves, perhaps other daughters). In any case, she was eager to report these things to those members of the house that were in her mother’s circle.

 

VIII. The Brother (verses 29-32)

Rebekah had left the man by the well while she ran home! While she announced what had happened, her brother, named Laban (meaning White) listened carefully. He then ran to meet this man at the well. When he saw the nose ring in his sister’s nose and the bracelets upon his sister’s hands, and when he heard what she said, that is when he ran. He was impressed!

 

Avraham’s slave stood by the camels at the well, waiting for what would happen next. Laban said, “Come, blessed of Yehovah.” Laban was a religious man. (That does not mean that he was Godly.)

 

He then offered the slave and his men good hospitality: “Why wilt thou stand outside? And I, I turned the house and a place for camels!

 

The slave and the camel train went to the house. Laban ungirded his camels. And he gave straw and provender to the camels and water to wash the slave’s feet and the feet of the other men with him. He could serve too! A meal was prepared for the group.

 

Questions

 

1. Why would a child be named White? Children were named by some event or some noticeable trait (something that can characterize or describe) in the child. This child may have had white hair. The fields of grain may have been white for harvest. Guessing why is usually not beneficial, but it can be enjoyable to try.

 

2. What is the eye? That refers to the place where the water gathers to the surface of the ground.

 

3. Who is he in “And he was when seeing the nose ring and the baracelets…”? He refers to the event about to be described. Translators preferred to write, “And it came to pass.” That makes it sound like a fairy tale: “Once upon a time…” The Hebrew words are much better: “He was” (‘The event was’).

 

4. What impressed Laban so much that he ran to the men at the well? When he saw the nose ring and the bracelets, he was very impressed. When he heard Rebekah’s words, he was also very impressed. (Laban will later prove to be a man who does what he does for his own wealth.)

 

5. Laban said, “Come, blessed of Yehovah!” Did he have the right to declare the man blessed by Yehovah? He had no right to do this.

 

Laban is like so many religious folks today who say things like “God bless you” when they like what someone else said or did. Those words are arrogant. Who has the right to declare that God will bless someone else (unless God told that person to say that)? Most who say that are thinking that they are saying something like this: “May God bless you.” That sounds better and not so arrogant, but folks who say that often just received something from that person. They don’t identify which God should do the blessing. It sounds so ‘spiritual’. It isn’t.

 

Laban said, “Come, blessed of (by) Yehovah.” Did he know that the slave was blessed by Yehovah? He didn’t. Using those words makes him (Laban) sound spiritual (religious). Be wary of anyone who wants to sound religious by using many religious words and terms. The Saints in the Bible never did that. They didn’t need to sound religious. They feared Yehovah.

 

6. Laban said, “And I, I turned the house and a place for camels!” What was he telling this man? He was telling the slave and his men that he (Laban) did all the work to prepare the house for them. (Now, why would he take credit for doing that?)

 

7. What does “opened the camels” mean? The camels carried burdens. They needed to be removed so that the camels could graze and freely roam in a corral.

 

8. Why was washing feet so important? Sand in the area landed and stayed wherever perspiration gathered, especially in areas near the dusty sand. Feet of those who walked became caked with gritty sand. It is very uncomfortable and can hurt. Washing feet rinsed the sand off so that a person can rest.

 

(Later, in the End Times, some persons who are walking to escape from enemies will come into camps of Saints. The travelers will be so tired that they won’t have the energy to wash their own feet. Saints and other good guys will wash their feet for them. Yehovah will remember that they did this service.)

 

IX. Recounting the Events (verses 33-49)

Food was placed in front of the slave so that he could eat. He refused to eat until he told the purpose of his mission. Laban, not Rebekah’s father, was the spokesman for the family. Laban was young (because he ran to the well), and he was forward (meaning that he was direct, bold, presumptuous, as if he were a ranking member).

 

The slave started with his own identity in terms of Avraham: “I am the slave of Avraham.” His name is never given. He was there to represent Avraham, and that alone was the issue.

 

He knew that one’s ability to take care of a bride was of great importance in a potential marriage situation, so he named the Name of the God of his master and how much that God had blessed his master. “And Yehovah blessed my lords very much. And He made big. And He gave to him flock and herd and silver and gold and slaves and female-slaves and camels and asses.

 

He then told of the miracle birth without being religious: “And Princess (Sarah) the woman of my lords childed a son to my lords after her old-age.

 

He continued his build-up of the events: “And he gave to him all that is to him.” This son, then, would soon inherit everything that belonged to Avraham.

 

Avraham’s slave next described the vow and his mission. He was prohibited from taking a Canaanite wife for Avraham’s son. He was to go instead to Avraham’s father’s house and to his kindred. The slave told about his question, “Perhaps the woman will not walk after me—” and about Avraham’s reaction: “Yehovah, Whom I have walked myself to His faces, will send His Messenger with thee. And He will prosper thy way.” The slave laid out the conversation very accurately. He even told that he would be innocent from his oath if the family would not send the woman.

 

He next described how he came to the well, how he prayed, and what he described to Yehovah in his prayer. Rebekah perfectly responded to this quick prayer in every detail.

 

He told about his inquiry regarding Rebekah, and about his placing the nose ring upon her nose and the bracelets on her hands. And he concluded by saying, “And I bowed. And I worshipped to Yehovah Gods of my lords Avraham who guided me in the way of Truth to take the daughter of the brother of my lords to his son.

 

Now came the most important issue to the slave of Avraham: “And now, if there is your doing Grace and Truth with my lords, tell to me.” He still didn’t know whether they would send her or whether she would go. So he said, “And if not, tell to me. And I will turn upon the right or upon the left.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “he was put to his faces to eat” mean? The food was put directly in front of the slave so that he would eat.

 

2. Why was the slave unwilling to eat until he had spoken his words? He did not know whether he would be still welcome after telling his mission. He was very anxious to know whether Yehovah had prospered him for the sake of his master, or not. He didn’t want to give them a wrong impression of his mission. Their hospitality was very kind, and he want them to know why he was there.

 

3. Why isn’t the slave’s name mentioned? This slave is too important as a type (as a picture of someone or something else). Though this event is a very happy event, others who are not Jewish during the Tribulation will experience this very kind of leading from Yehovah as they take Israeli children (with others) to Mount Zion to save them from destruction. That event will be the opposite—filled with terrors, but will be accompanied by great miracles of Yehovah.

 

It is as if this slave is so important, that his name is withheld from this text.

 

4. Isn’t “Yehovah blessed my lords very much” a religious statement? It isn’t; it is an observation and a statement of faith.

 

5. Why did the slave give so many details? Giving these details was the only way that those hearing would understand the slave’s mission.

 

6. Who is this Messenger in verse 40? This Messenger is either Yeshua or the Spirit of Yeshua/Yehovah. Yeshua is normally the Messenger of Yehovah (the ‘Angel Yehovah’) in the Bible.

 

7. In verse 49, the slave says, “And now, if there is your doing Grace and Truth with my lords, tell to me.” What does doing Grace and Truth have to do with what they will be doing? If Grace is a fervent, burning zeal that causes someone to take action, and if Truth is what is absolute before Yehovah, this family will be showing their very strong zeal for Avraham by sending their daughter to his son for a wife. They will be showing Truth by actually sending her, not just keeping the gifts and enjoying the company, and keeping Rebekah from going with them.

 

8. What does “And I will turn upon the right or upon the left” mean? That means that the slave and his men will turn left or right instead of continuing on the same path to try to get Rebekah for a wife. They will take some other trail.

 

X. The Quick and Religious Response (verses 50-52)

Both Laban and Bethuel answered. From what they heard, their response was “The speech exited from Yehovah. We will not be able to speak unto thee bad or good.” Then they said, “Behold, Multiple-Pouring is to thy faces. Take and walk. And she will be a woman to the son of thy lords just as Yehovah spoke.” This was very good news to the slave. All sounded finalized. The slave again prostrated to the ground and worshipped Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “The speech exited from Yehovah” mean? They are claiming that the speech and all its words are straight from Yehovah. That is the same as saying that it is prophecy.

 

2. Explain what they meant by “We will not be able to speak unto thee bad or good”:  They claimed that they could not argue against the speech of Yehovah, and agreeing with it wasn’t even what they could do. If God said it, they would have to comply. (I don’t think that this is what they truly thought. See how they have a different view later.)

 

3. They expressed, “Behold, Multiple-Pouring is to thy faces. Take and walk. And she will be a woman to the son of thy lords just as Yehovah spoke.” Is this the way they truly felt? They will give some resistence later.

 

XI. The Joy and the Delay (verses 53-61)

The slave now gave more valuables Rebekah, her brothers and her mother. The slave and his men then partied with them. They spent the night.

 

The next morning, the slave told them to send him to his lords. Rebekah’s brother and mother said, “The youth will dwell with us days or ten; she will walk afterward.” This was not what the slave desired to hear. He said, “Do not delay me. And Yehovah prospered my way. Send me. And I have walked to my lords.

 

They had a strategy: “We will call to the youth [masc.], and we have asked her with her mouth.” They did so, asking her, “Wilt thou walk with this man?” She responded, “I will walk.” There was no reason to delay.

 

They sent Rebekah their sister, her wet-nurse, the slave and his men.

 

They then blessed Rebekah. “Thou art our sister. Thou art our sister. Be to thousands of myriads. And thy seed has possessed the gate of his haters!

 

Rebekah and her youths arose. They rode on the camels, following the man. The mission of the slave was nearly accomplished.

 

Questions

 

1. What three valuables are first mentioned, and why were they valuable? Vessels of silver, vessels of gold and clothing are mentioned. Vessels were very important since contains for liquids (like wine, alcohol and water) and items were not easily obtainable. Each one had to be handmade. Beautiful vessels of silver and gold made by craftsmen were excellent gifts.

 

Clothing was also valuable—far more than readers today would understand. A woman’s dress easily could be worth thousands of dollars if the threads were fine. No machines were available to make thread. Thus, thread had to be hand-spun using something akin to a spinningwheel. The thread then was hand-woven. Many days of work went into one fine piece of cloth. Making a dress easily took years. Since men and women wore loose garments with a belt, those garments were very valuable. One garment would be worth the price of a new car today. An ordinary shirt would have been worth hundreds of dollars. Thus, giving clothing was like giving gold.

 

2. What were the ‘noteworthies’ that the slave gave to Rebekah’s brothers and her mother? The text doesn’t say. Thus, we don’t know.

 

3. Did the slave give anything to her father? The text doesn’t mention him at this point. That was his daughter. What could be given to him?

 

4. Did folks do a lot of partying with alcohol and food back then? They often celebrated. Life was hard, and they enjoyed eating and drinking.

 

5. Doesn’t the Bible condemn drinking alcohol? The Bible never condemns this. It condemns drunkenness. That is quite different. A person who becomes adicted to alcohol is a drunk (no matter how sober the person appears to be). That is a sin before Yehovah. Drunkenness leads to many other sinful actions because the person loses inhibition (the ability to not do wrong things).

 

Alcohol is considered a blessing in the Bible. Anything that is a blessing can become no longer a blessing if the person becomes addicted to it. Many different medications are beneficial to man. When anyone becomes addicted to a medication so that the person’s life becomes centered around getting that medication (often at any cost), that person has gone into witchcraft and sorcery. Those are forms of idolatry.

 

Alcohol is always bad for those who have tendencies to become addicted to it and for those whose behaviors change so that they do wrong.

 

These folks partied using plenty of alcohol. They didn’t do wrong, and they didn’t become wild and evil.

 

6. Why did they spend another night? The best time to travel was early in the morning. Starting a trip in the evening didn’t make sense. Camp was hard to set up.

 

7. Why did the slave say, “Send me to my lords”? Just leaving a place without being sent was culturally improper. A guest would ask a host to send the guest. If the host refused, of course, the guest could leave, but refusing would also be rude.

 

8. How long is days or ten? It is from a few days to ten days, and it can be extended to months.

 

9. Why didn’t Rebekah’s papa speak up instead of her brother and her mother? Her father didn’t seem to play much of a role in these events. The text doesn’t explain why.

 

10. Why did they desire her to say for that length of time? The text doesn’t give their reasons for this, either. Their guests would be ‘paying’ guests, they knew. Rebekah could continue with her part of the housework. These are guesses. It could be that her mother would greatly miss her.

 

11. What was/were the reason/reasons the slave gave to not delay him? The only reason he gave wasn’t a reason! He said, “Yehovah prospered my way.” He was reminding them that they had said, “The speech exited from Yehovah. We will not be able to speak unto thee bad or good.”

 

12. When they called to the youth to give her answer, what were the brother and mother expecting? They said, “…we have asked her with her mouth” (meaning that they desired to hear it straight from her mouth). My impression is that they felt she would not consent to go with this stranger—at least not right away. She must have surprised them with her reply.

 

13. What is a wet nurse? This is a woman who breastfeeds a baby that isn’t her own. She often does much more than that, caring for the baby and sometimes even helping to rear her. This was the case with Rebekah.

 

In order for a woman to become a wet nurse, she normally has to have been recently pregnant so that her breasts were still giving milk.

 

14. Why would they send the wet nurse with her? This woman had always known and tended her, working with her. She was a slave. Her life was dedicated to Rebekah, and they very likely loved each other very much.

 

15. They said to Rebekah, “Be to thousands of myriads.” What must happen for that to occur? She would have to become the beginning of a race!

 

A myriad is a very large number! It isn’t a specific number, but it represents a very large number. Millions of persons would be a myriad of persons.

 

16. What does “And thy seed has possessed the gate of his haters” mean and imply? It implies the following:

 

  • The seed is either the entire offspring or it is referring to a particular offspring. (Both are used in the Bible.)
  • The offspring will have wars. The offspring will win at least one war, and will take over a city (or a number of cities) of enemies. That city (or cities) will have a city gate, so the offspring will possess the gate of that city (or cities). Thus, the enemies will become slaves of the offspring.

17. How many youths went with Rebekah? The text says youths. This can mean two, and it can mean more than two.

 

18. Were the youths slaves? Yes, they were slaves.

 

19. Did the youths get to ride the camels? Yes, they did.

 

XII. Isaac’s Dream Approaches (verses 62-65)

The scene switches to Isaac. He was coming from the way of the well that Hagar had named. He was in the very hot part of the land of Israel known as the Negev (south).

 

Isaac went to do some heavy thinking (meditating) at the time when the day turned to the evening. When he looked up, he could see the camels coming.

 

Rebekah also looked up, and she saw a man in the field. She came off the camel so quickly that the text describes that she fell off (landing on her feet, of course).

 

She said to the slave, “Who is the man that is to this who is walking in the field to meet us?” It was not dark yet. It was just approaching darkness. The slave responded, “He is my lords.” Rebekah understood this to be Isaac for whom she was brought.

 

Any man could look at her, but it was not proper in her culture for her future husband to see her. She had a scarf for this purpose, and she covered herself.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did he live in the south, a very hot place in Israel? That was where the grass for the herds and flocks could be found.

 

2. What good does meditating do? This is a very good way for a person to think about life, relationships, creation, the Creator, wisdom, justice, sense, and many other thoughts that most folks ignore. A person who meditates wisely can become very wise.

 

3. What is transcendental meditation, and how does it differ from what Isaac did? Transcendental Meditation, according to its main teacher Maharishi, is supposed to be “a path to God.” The technique has been described as “spiritual” and not religious. It is supposed to be a coping strategy for life. It is derived from a religion, and is therefore a way to teach that religion. The word transcendental comes from a word meaning to transcend or to rise above (a location, a problem, a situation in life). The inventer saw it as a way to rise above problems in life.

 

Isaac did not practice that kind of meditating. He thought about many things. That is a good way to figure out how to solve problems and mysteries, and how to do activities in a better way. Religious meditation is a good way to get stuck in religion, a way to be distracted from fearing Yehovah and from doing what He sees as wise.

 

4. What are the turnings of the evening? They are when the air turns cooler, the breezes increase, when the light becomes far less bright, when the evening and night animals begin stirring, when certain plant flowers open, etc.

 

5. How did Isaac know that the camels were coming to him? The camels were headed his way toward the evening. If they were going to camp, they would have already camped. They had a destination, and they were coming his way. It was the only reasonable conclusion.

 

6. Why did she cover herself? That was part of her cultural tradition. That is the source of the tradition of the veil at weddings.

 

XIII. The Happy Beginning (verses 66-67)

While Rebekah and Isaac waited, the slave gave the whole story once again. Then Isaac took this veiled woman into his mother Sarah’s tent. There was no other event or ceremony, no exchange of vows.

 

She became his wife. He loved her. Isaac was consoled now after the death of his mother.

 

1. What does scrolled mean? It has the same meaning when used with computers today! It means to tell or show a story or an event from the beginning to the end.

 

2. How old was Isaac when he married Rebekah?

 

Genesis 25:20 And Isaac was forty years old when he took Rebekah to wife, the daughter of Bethuel the Syrian of Padanaram, the sister to Laban the Syrian.

 

3. How does Isaac’s taking Rebekah into his mother’s tent differ from a man taking a woman and living with her (without marriage) today, even when it is with the consent of the other members of the family? Living together unmarried has no commitment. Either can leave. There is no divorce. This is also known in the Bible as fornication (if neither one is married to someone else). The Bible views fornication as sin. It views marriage as right.

 

Isaac was committed to Rebekah, and she to him before they saw each other. Arranged marriages are that way. They are marriages before the two see each other.

 

4. Since Isaac was consoled by Rebekah after his mother’s death, was Isaac a ‘mama’s boy’? No. He thought on his own and was an independent worker.

 

5. The text states that he loved her. Did she love him? She did! The text doesn’t have to state this directly. Future texts will show this.

 

Christmas-What Really Happened?

Christmas:

What Really Happened?

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Genesis 39-41 From Prison to Glory

From Prison to Glory

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 39:21-Genesis 41:57

 

Genesis 39:21 And Yehovah was with He-Will-Gather [Joseph]. And He tilted grace unto him. And He gave His favour in the eyes of the prince of the house of the prison. 22And the prince of the house of the prison gave into He-Will-Gather’s [Joseph’s] hand all the prisoners that are in the house of the prison. And all that they did there, he, he was doing. 23There is not a prince of the house of the prison seeing all-anything in his hand in that Yehovah is with him. And what he does, Yehovah prospers.

 

Genesis 40:1 And he was after these things. The water-provider of the king of Egypt and the baker sinned to their lords, to the king of Egypt. 2And Pharaoh was furious concerning two of his eunuchs—concerning the prince of the water-providers and concerning the prince of the bakers. 3And he gave them unto the house of the prison via the guard of the house of the prince of the executioners, a place where He-Will-Gather [Joseph] is bound there. 4And the prince of the executioners appointed He-Will-Gather [Joseph] with them. And he ministered-to them. And they were days in the guard.

 

5And they dreamed a dream—both of them—a man his dream in one night, a man according-to the interpretation of his dream: the water-provider and the baker who are to the king of Egypt who are bound in the house of the prison.

 

6And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] came in unto them in the morning. And he saw them. And behold, they are upset. 7And he asked Pharaoh’s eunuchs who are with him in the guard of his lord’s house, saying, “Why are your faces bad today?” 8And they said unto him, “We have dreamed a dream. And no interpreter is of him.” And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] said unto them, “Are not interpretations to Elohim? Scroll-ye to me, na.” 9And the prince water-provider scrolled his dream to He-Will-Gather [Joseph]. And he said to him, “Via my dream—and behold a vine is to my faces. 10And in the vine are three intertwiners. And he is as budding. Her blossom elevated. Her clusters ripened grapes. 11And Pharaoh’s cup is in my hand. And I took the grapes. And I squeezed them unto Pharaoh’s cup. And I gave the cup upon the palm of Pharaoh.” 12And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] said to him, “This is his interpretation. Three of the tendrils—they are three days. 13In yet three days Pharaoh shall carry thy head. And he shall restore thee upon thy footing. And thou shalt give Pharaoh’s cup into his hand according-to the first justice when thou wast his water-provider. 14But rather thou remembered me with thee just as he shall-be-good to thee. And thou shalt do grace with me, na. And thou shalt remember me unto Pharaoh. And thou shalt bring me from this house. 15For, stolen, I was stolen from the land of the Hebrews. And also here, I have not done from a blemish that they put me into a pit.”

 

16And the prince of the bakers saw that the interpretation is good. And he said unto He-Will-Gather [Joseph], “Even I am in my dream. And behold three baskets of whiteness are upon my head. 17And in the uppermost basket is from every food of Pharaoh, the doing of a baker. And the bird ate them from the basket from upon my head.” 18And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] answered. And he said, “This is his interpretation. Three of the baskets—they are three days. 19In yet three days Pharaoh shall carry thy head from upon thee. And he shall hang thee upon a tree. And the bird shall eat thy flesh from off of thee!”

 

20And he was in the third day, a day of the childing of Pharaoh. And he made a drinking-party to all his slaves. And he carried the head of the prince of the water-providers and the head of the prince of the bakers in the midst of his slaves. 21And he restored the prince of the water-providers upon his water-providership. And he gave the cup upon the palm of Pharaoh. 22And he hanged the prince of the bakers just as He-Will-Gather [Joseph] interpreted to them.

 

23And the prince of the water-providers did not remember He-Will-Gather [Joseph]. And he forgot him.

 

Genesis 41:1 And he was at the end of two years of days. And Pharaoh dreamed. And behold, he stood upon the river. 2And behold, seven cows beautiful of the appearance and healthy-[ones] of flesh are ascending from the river. And they grazed in a marsh. 3And behold, seven other cows bad of appearance and thin-[ones] of flesh are ascending from the river after them. And they stood near the cows upon the lip of the river. 4And the bad-of-the-appearance and thin-[ones]-of-the-flesh cows ate the seven beautiful-[ones]-of-appearance and the healthy cows. And Pharaoh awoke.

 

5And he slept. And he dreamed a second time. And behold, seven healthy and good grain-heads are ascending in one stalk. 6And behold, seven thin and blighted-of-the-east grain-heads are springing after them. 7And the seven thin ears devoured seven of the healthy and full ears. And Pharaoh awoke. And behold a dream.

 

8And he was in the morning. And his spirit beat. And he sent. And he called all magicians of Egypt and all her wise men. And Pharaoh scrolled his dream to them. And there is no interpreter of them to Pharaoh.

 

9And prince of the waterers spoke with Pharaoh, saying, “I remind of my sins today. 10Pharaoh was furious concerning his slaves. And he gave me into guard, house of the prince of the executioners, me and prince of the bakers. 11And we dreamed a dream in one night, I and he. We dreamed each man according to the interpretation of his dream. 12And there with us is a youth, a Hebrew, slave to prince of the executioners. And we scrolled to him. And he interpreted our dreams to us. He interpreted a man according to his dream. 13And he was just as he interpreted to us—so he was. He restored me upon my foundation and he hanged him.”

 

14And Pharaoh sent. And he called Joseph. And they hurried him from the pit. And he shaved. And he changed his garments. And he came unto Pharaoh.

 

15And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, “I have dreamed a dream. And an interpreter is not with him. And I, I have heard concerning thee to say, thou wilt hear a dream to interpret him.” 16And Joseph answered Pharaoh, saying, “Without me! Elohim shall answer the peace of Pharaoh.” 17And Pharaoh spoke unto Joseph, “In my dream, behold, I am standing upon the lip of the river. 18And behold, seven healthy-of-flesh and beautiful-of-appearance cows ascend from the river. And they grazed in a marsh. 19And behold, seven other very skinny and bad-of-appearance and lean-of-flesh cows are ascending after them. I didn’t see as such in all the land of Egypt for badness! 20And the lean and the bad cows ate the first seven healthy cows. 21And they came into their midst. And it could not be known that they had come into their midst! And their appearance is bad just as at the beginning. And I awoke.

 

22“And I saw in my dream. And behold, seven ears are ascending in one stalk, full and good. 23And behold, seven ears—withered, emaciated, blasted with the east wind are springing up after them. 24And the emaciated ears devoured the seven good ears. And I said unto the magicians. And there is not a teller for me!”

 

25And Joseph said unto Pharaoh, “The dream of Pharaoh—it is one. Elohim has told Pharaoh what He is doing. 26The seven good cows—they are seven years. And the seven good ears—they are seven years. The dream—it is one. 27And the seven emaciated and bad of appearance cows that are ascending after them—they are seven years. And the seven empty ears blasted with the east wind shall be seven years of famine.

 

28 “This is the speech that I spoke unto Pharaoh. He shows unto Pharaoh what the Elohim is doing. 29Behold, seven years are coming, big fullness in all the land of Egypt. 30And seven years of famine shall arise after them. And all the fullness shall be forgotten in the land of Egypt. And the famine shall finish the land. 31And the fullness shall not be known in the land from the faces of that famine afterward. For he was very heavy! 32And concerning the doubling of the dream unto Pharaoh twice: for the speech is established from with the Elohim. And the Elohim is hastening to do him! 33And now Pharaoh shall see a man of understanding and of wisdom. And he has set him over the land of Egypt. 34Pharaoh shall do. And he has visited visitors over the land. And he shall one-fifth the land of Egypt in the seven years of the fullness. 35And they gathered all food of these coming good years. And he shall pile grain under the hand of Pharaoh, food in the cities. And they shall guard! 36And the food shall be for appointment to the land to seven years of the famine that shall be in the land of Egypt. And the land shall not be cut via famine.”

 

37And the speech was good in the eyes of Pharaoh and in the eyes of all his slaves. 38And Pharaoh said unto his slaves, “Will we find as this, a man whom a spirit of gods is in him?”

 

39And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, “After gods making thee know all this, there is no understanding and wisdom as thee! 40Thou, thou shalt be over my house. And all my people shall kiss upon thy mouth! Only the chair—I will be bigger than thee.”

 

41And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, “See! I gave thee over all the land of Egypt!” 42And Pharaoh removed his ring from upon his hand. And he gave her upon Joseph’s hand. And he dressed him, clothing of fine-linen. And he put a decking of the gold upon his neck. 43And he rode him via the second chariot that is to him. And they called to his faces, “I will kneel!” And he will be given him over all the land of Egypt.

 

44And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, “I am Pharaoh! And no man shall elevate his hand and his foot without thee in all the land of Egypt!” 45And Pharaoh called Joseph’s name Salvation of the Age [Zaphnath Paaneah]. And he gave to him Asnat daughter of Poti Pherah priest of On for a woman. And Joseph exited over the land of Egypt. 46And Joseph is a son of thirty year via his standing to the faces of Pharaoh, king of Egypt.

 

And Joseph exited from the faces of Pharaoh. And he crossed-over in all the land of Egypt.

 

47And the land made to fistfuls in seven of the years of the fullness. 48And he collected all food of seven years that were in the land of Egypt. And he gave food into cities. He gave food of a field of the city that is her surroundings into her midst. 49And Joseph piled grain as sand of the sea—very much—until he ceased to scroll. For there is no scrolling!

 

50And to Joseph: he childed two sons before the years of famine will come that Asnat, daughter of Poti Pherah priest of On, childed to him. 51And Joseph called the name of the firstborn Forgetter [Manasseh]. “For Elohim made-me-forget all my toil and all the house of my father.” 52And he called the name of the second Doubly Fruitful [Ephraim]. “For Elohim fruited me in the land of my humiliation.”

 

53And seven of the years of fullness that was in the land of Egypt were finished. 54And seven of the years of the famine began to come just as Joseph said. And the famine was in all the lands. And there was bread in all the land of Egypt.

 

55And all the land of Egypt was famished. And the people outcried unto Pharaoh to [for] bread. And Pharaoh said to all Egypt, “Go-ye unto Joseph! Ye shall do what he will say to you!” 56And the famine was over all faces of the land. And Joseph opened all that was in them. And he broke to Egypt. And the famine gripped in the land of Egypt. 57And all the land—they came—Egyptward unto Joseph to break, because the famine gripped in all the land.

 

 

I. Joseph’s Trustworthiness (verses 21-23)

 

Yehovah was with Joseph. Yehovah bent grace toward Joseph. Yehovah gave His favour in the eyes of the prince of the house of the prison. This resulted in the prince of the prison house giving all the prisoners in the prison into Joseph’s hand. Anything a prisoner did was because Joseph did it. No prince of the prison house concerned himself with seeing anything in the prison that Joseph did; Yehovah was with him. Yehovah prospered everything Joseph did.

 

 

Questions

 

 

1.   How many times does the text state that Yehovah was with Joseph?

 

2.   Why did Yehovah state this so many times?

 

3.   What does “He tilted grace unto him” mean?

 

4.   What does grace mean in the Bible?

 

5.   Explain what “He gave His favour in the eyes of the prince of the house of the prison” means:

 

6.   Why was grace and favour demonstrated by responsibilities? Would you like to be rewarded for doing well by being given responsibilities that include more work?

 

7.   Why did the prince of the prison house give other prisoners into Joseph’s hand?

 

8.   Why did Yehovah make sure that Joseph was over the other prisoners?

 

9.   What does “all that they did there, he, he was doing” mean?

 

10. How many princes of the prison house were there?

 

11. If the above is true, how could Joseph take the place of the princes of the prison house? Wouldn’t this be too much responsibility, giving him no sleep?

 

12. What does “there is not a prince… seeing all-anything in his hand” mean?

 

13. Did the text again state that Yehovah was with him?

 

14. How much of Joseph’s work did Yehovah prosper?

 

 

II. Double Demotions (Chapter 40, verses 1-4)

 

After Joseph gained this reputation and set of responsibilities, the following events occurred. Two eunuchs, the prince of the water providers of the king, and the prince of the bakers of the king sinned to their lords, the king of Egypt. Pharaoh was furious. He gave them to the prison house by means of the guard of the house of the prince of the executioners. This was where Joseph was interred (made a prisoner). The prince of the executioners appointed Joseph with them, and Joseph ministered to them. They were days under arrest.

 

Questions

 

1.   Did the water provider and the baker sin against God, according to Genesis 40:1?

 

2.   How angry was Pharaoh at these two eunuchs?

 

3.   What did they do?

 

4.   Who probably was the prince of the executioners?

 

5.   Who arrested these two eunuchs?

 

6.   The text states that Joseph was bound there. Was he tied up?

 

7.   Who assigned Joseph to these two eunuchs?

 

8.   If Potiphar is involved, what does that tell the reader about Potiphar’s view of Joseph after the accusations of Potiphar’s wife?

 

9.   In what ways did Joseph minister to them?

 

10. How long were they “in guard” (prisoners)?

 

 

III. Two Nightmares (verse 5)

 

The two arrested eunuchs, the prince of the bakers and the prince of the water providers, dreamed a dream, each one his own dream, in the same night. Each dream had an interpretation.

 

Questions

 

1.   How did they dream a dream according to the interpretation of each dream? What does that mean?

 

2.   How can one tell if a dream has an interpretation?

 

 

IV. The First Dream (verses 6-15)

 

Joseph came to see them in the morning, and he saw that they were upset. He asked them, “Why are your faces bad today?” They told him, “We have dreamed a dream. And no interpreter is of him.” Joseph’s response was, “Are not interpretations to Elohim? Scroll-ye to me, na.”

 

The first one to scroll his dream was the prince water-provider. He described a vine that was in front of him. Three intertwining (interwrapping) vines were in this vine. The vine was as if it were budding. Its blossom elevated (went up). The clusters ripened grapes. The prince water-provider had Pharaoh’s cup in his hand. He took the grapes and squeezed them unto Pharaoh’s cup. He then gave that cup upon Pharaoh’s palm of his hand.

 

Joseph replied with the interpretation. The three tendrils, the smaller vines that intertwined with the main vain are three days. Three days from the time this prince water-provider had his dream, Pharaoh would carry his head—that is, from the prison back to Pharaoh’s headquarters. Pharaoh will restore this prince to the same place he was before: upon his footing (his pedestal). He will then give Pharaoh’s cup into his hand as usual just as before.

 

Joseph then told this man to remember him to the same degree that good would occur with the prince water-provider. Joseph told him to grace with Joseph, and remember Joseph to Pharaoh. He also told him to bring him from this prison house. Joseph explained that he had been kidnapped from the land of the Hebrews, and that he had done nothing from even a blemish that deserved his being put into a pit.

 

Questions

 

1.   Did Joseph make a habit of visiting prisoners in the morning?

 

2.   What did Joseph mean by, “Why are your faces bad today?”

 

3.   Did these eunuchs expect a dream interpreter for their dreams?

 

4.   What did these eunuchs mean by, “there is no interpreter of him?”

 

5.   What did Joseph mean by “Are not interpretations to Elohim,” and how did the eunuchs take what he said?

 

6.   What does “Scroll-ye to me, na” mean?

 

7.   When the prince of the water provider began to give his dream, he started with “Via my dream…” What did he mean by that?

 

8.   What did he mean by, “behold a vine is to my faces”?

 

9.   What are the three ‘intertwiners’?

 

10. What did he mean by, “he is as budding”?

 

11. What occurred if her blossom elevated?

 

12. What was he making if he squeezed the grapes into Pharaoh’s cup?

 

13. How did Joseph know that the three tendrils (the vine extensions that are growing and wrapping around things) are three days?

 

14. How did Joseph know that Pharaoh would carry the prince water-provider’s head in three days, and what does this mean?

 

15. What does “And he shall restore thee upon thy footing” mean, and how did Joseph know that?

 

16. What does justice mean in verse 13?

 

17. What did Joseph mean by, “But rather thou remembered me with thee just as he shall-be-good to thee”?

 

18. What did Joseph mean by “And thou shalt do grace with me, na,” and what would be the result?

 

19. Was this the first time that Joseph told anyone that he had been stolen (kidnapped)?

 

20. What is this land of the Hebrews?

 

21. Who are these Hebrews?

 

22. What did Joseph mean by, “also here, I have not done from a blemish that they put me into a pit”?

 

 

V. The Second Dream (verses 16-19)

 

 The prince of the bakers saw that the interpretation is good—that is, that the news was very good. He said to Joseph, “Even I am in my dream. And behold three baskets of whiteness are upon my head. And in the uppermost basket is from every food of Pharaoh, the doing of a baker. And the bird ate them from the basket from upon my head.”

 

Joseph answered him, “This is his interpretation. Three of the baskets—they are three days. In yet three days Pharaoh shall carry thy head from upon thee. And he shall hang thee upon a tree. And the bird shall eat thy flesh from off of thee!”

 

Questions

 

1.   Was the prince of the bakers excited to tell his dream to Joseph?

 

2.   What are three baskets of whiteness?

 

3.   Were the baskets stacked, or where they next to each other on his head?

 

4.   What are the foods of Pharaoh (“from every food of Pharaoh”)?

 

5.   What bird eats bread from a basket?

 

6.   Is there a difference between “Pharaoh shall carry thy head” (verse 13) and “Pharaoh shall carry thy head from upon thee”?

 

7.   What did the prince baker do to deserve being hung?

 

8.   How did Joseph know that the bird eating bakery goods from the top basket represented a bird that would eat the man’s flesh from off of him?

 

 

VI. Pharaoh’s Birthday Fun (verses 20-22)

 

Three days later was Pharaoh’s birthday party. He made a drinking party to all his slaves. He “carried the head” of the prince of the water providers and the head of the prince of the bakers among his slaves. He restored the prince of the water providers to providing drink for himself. And the prince of the water providers gave the cup of Pharaoh upon (into) Pharaoh’s palm of his hand.

 

Pharaoh hanged the prince of the bakers just as Joseph interpreted to them.

 

Questions

 

1.   What does “a day of the childing of Pharaoh” mean?

 

2.   What is a drinking party?

 

3.   Is such a drinking party wrong in the eyes of Yehovah?

 

4.   Why did He make this party to slaves?

 

5.   What does “he carried the head of the prince of the water-providers and the head of the prince of the bakers in the midst of his slaves” mean?

 

6.   Did the prince of the bakers figure that Joseph had been wrong?

 

 

 

VII. Forget It (verse 23)

 

The prince of the water providers did not remember Joseph; he forgot him.

 

Questions

 

1.   Why does the text state both: “the prince of the water-providers did not remember Joseph,” and “he forgot him”?

 

2.   Why did he forget Joseph?

 

 

VIII. Dream 1 of Pharaoh (chapter 41, verses 1-4)

 

The next event occurred two years worth of days later. Pharaoh dreamed. He stood upon the river. He saw seven beautiful appearing, physically healthy cows ascending from the river. They grazed in a marsh.

 

He then saw seven bad-looking, physically thin cows ascending from the river after them. They stood near the others cows upon the lip of the river (the shore of the river). The bad-looking, physically thin cows ate the seven beautiful appearing, physically healthy cows. Pharaoh woke up.

 

Questions

 

1.   Why does the text refer to the time as “two years of days”?

 

2.   How does a dream work and interact with the dreamer in the Bible?

 

3.   What is the significance of Pharaoh standing upon (by) the river?

 

4.   Identify this river:

 

5.   Why would a river be an important part of a dream given specifically to Pharaoh?

 

6.   How can cows be viewed as beautiful of appearance?

 

7.   What does “healthy ones of flesh” tell the reader?

 

8.   Do cows normally graze in a marsh?

 

9.   What is a marsh?

 

10. Why are the bad-appearing and thin cows ascending from the river?

 

11. What is the lip of the river?

 

12. Do cows ever eat each other?

 

13. What do cows eating other cows show?

 

 

IX. Dream 2 for Pharaoh (verses 5-7)

 

Pharaoh slept. He dreamed a second time. This time, he saw seven healthy and good grain heads ascending in one stalk. Then seven thin grain heads blighted (diseased) from the east wind sprung up after them. The seven thin grain ears devoured seven of the healthy and full grain ears! Pharaoh woke up, and realized this had been a dream.

 

Questions

 

1.   What is a grain head?

 

2.   Do seven grain-heads normally come up in one stalk?

 

3.   Why, then, are there seven grain-heads in one stalk? What does this tell the reader?

 

4.   Did the seven thin and blighted grain-heads pop up in another plant?

 

5.   What does blighted mean?

 

6.   Where did this blight originate, according to this dream?

 

7.   What are grain ears?

 

8.   Do ears on grain normally devour other ears?

 

9.   What is the difference between a healthy ear and a full ear?

 

10. Why does the text say, “And behold a dream,” when it already told the reader that it was a dream in verse 5?

 

 

X. Pharaoh’s Frustration (verse 8)

 

This next event occurred in the morning. Pharaoh’s spirit beat! He sent. He called all the magicians and all the wise men of Egypt. Pharaoh scrolled his dream to them. There was no interpreter of Pharaoh’s dreams.

 

Questions

 

1.   What does his spirit beat mean?

 

2.   What was Pharaoh’s reaction to the dream? Was he pleased?

 

3.   What are magicians/magi in the Bible?

 

4.   What are wise men in the Bible?

 

5.   Why did he call the magicians and the wise men when the issue was regarding dreams?

 

6.   What does “scrolled his dream” mean?

 

7.   What does “there is no interpreter of them to Pharaoh” mean?

 

 

XI. Sudden Recall (verses 9-13)

 

The prince of the waterers spoke with Pharaoh, saying that he reminded Pharaoh of his sins today. He said that Pharaoh had been furious concerning his slaves and had given him into guard, the house of the prince of the executioners—both him and the prince of the bakers. He explained that both of them had dreamed a dream in one night, each man according to his dream’s interpretation. A Hebrew  slave youth belonging to the prince of the executioners had been with them. They scrolled their dreams to him, and he interpreted the dreams to them, each dream to each man. Exactly what this youth said occurred: Pharaoh restored the prince of the waterers, and he hanged the prince of the bakers.

 

Questions

 

1.   What does “I remind of my sins” mean?

 

2.   Why would this man remind Pharaoh of this sin? Wouldn’t he want Pharaoh to never remember it?

 

3.   What does “he gave me into guard” mean?

 

4.   What does “house of the prince of the executioners” mean?

 

5.   What does “and he was just as he interpreted to us—so he was” mean?

 

6.   What does “he restored me upon my foundation” mean?

 

 

XII. The Call (verse 14)

 

Pharaoh sent and called Joseph. They hurried him from the pit, the prison house. Joseph shaved and changed his clothes. He then came unto Pharaoh.

 

Questions

 

1.   What is a calling in the Bible?

 

2.   Did Joseph receive ‘a calling’ at this time in the Biblical sense of being called?

 

3.   Why did they hurry Joseph from the pit? What was the rush?

 

4.   Why did Joseph shave? Didn’t he also take a bath?

 

5.   Why did he change his garments?

 

6.   What does pharaoh mean?

 

7.   Did Joseph come to Pharaoh under guard?

 

 

XIII. Pharaoh Speaks (verses 15-21)

 

Pharaoh said to Joseph that he dreamed a dream, and there is no interpreter with him. He told Joseph that he heard concerning him—that he will hear a dream to interpret it. Joseph’s response was, “Without me, God shall answer the peace of Pharaoh.” Pharaoh spoke unto Joseph detailing his dream. In his dream he is standing upon the lip (shore) of the river. He described the seven physically healthy and beautiful-appearing cows ascending from the river and grazing in a marsh. Seven other very skinny and bad-looking lean-fleshed cows ascended after them. Pharaoh had never seen cows like this in Egypt, they were so bad-looking. The lean and bad cows ate the first seven healthy cows. Thus, the healthy cows came into the midst (insides) of the bad-looking cows, but the bad-looking cows didn’t change appearance after swallowing the healthy and good-looking cows; they appeared just as bad as at the beginning. Pharaoh awoke.

 

Questions

 

1.   What did Pharaoh mean by “an interpreter is not with him”?

 

2.   What did Joseph mean by “without me” when he answered Pharaoh, “Without me! Elohim shall answer the peace of Pharaoh”?

 

3.   Joseph stated, “Elohim shall answer the peace of Pharaoh.” What does this mean?

 

4.   Again, what is the lip of the river?

 

5.   What did Pharaoh mean by “they came into their midst” in verse 21?

 

6.   If he saw them come into their midst, why does he state, “and it could not be known that they had come into their midst”?

 

 

XIV. Pharaoh Continues (verses 22-24)

 

Pharaoh continued that he saw in his dream. Seven full and good grain ears are ascending in one stalk. Seven withered, and emaciated grain ears blasted from the east wind sprang up after them. The emaciated ears devoured the seven good ears. Pharaoh told this to the magicians, and no one told him what this meant.

 

Questions

 

1.   What does emaciated mean?

 

2.   What does blasted mean?

 

3.   The sentence, “And I said unto the magicians,” doesn’t seem complete. What does it mean?

 

4.   What does “there is not a teller for me” mean?

 

 

XV. The Interpretation (verses 25-27)

 

Joseph said to Pharaoh, “The dream of Pharaoh—it is one. Elohim has told Pharaoh what He is doing.” Pharaoh could now know the source of these events.

 

Joseph continued with the interpretation: “The seven good cows—they are seven years. And the seven good ears—they are seven years. The dream—it is one.” Pharaoh now understood that he actually had just one dream marked with one good period of seven years.

 

“And the seven emaciated and bad of appearance cows that are ascending after them—they are seven years. And the seven empty ears blasted with the east wind shall be seven years of famine.” Pharaoh could have peace to the extent of knowing what the dream meant.

 

 

Questions

 

 

1.   Who will be the cause of all these events, according to verse 25?

 

2.   Why would Elohim do these things?

 

3.   Why did Elohim give two dreams that He said are one dream?

 

 

XVI. The Reasoning (verses 28-36)

 

Joseph then told the events again, but in more detail: “This is the speech that I spoke unto Pharaoh. He shows unto Pharaoh what the Elohim is doing.”

 

Joseph explained that seven years are coming in which a “big fullness” of great crops and cattle growth will be in all the land of Egypt. Then seven years of famine will arise after them to the degree that all the fullness (the great crops) will be forgotten in the land of Egypt. The famine will finish the land. This will be a very heavy famine.

 

He explained the doubling of the dream, giving it twice: “the speech is established from with the Elohim,” and “the Elohim is hastening to do him,” referring to the event.

 

Joseph then did something very curious. He began instructing Pharaoh on what to do:

 

  • “Now Pharaoh shall see a man of understanding and of wisdom.”
  • Pharaoh “has set him over the land of Egypt.”
  • Pharaoh “has visited visitors over the land,” these ‘visitors’ being commanders who will keep a personal eye on what is occurring with authority to give orders, being responsible men.
  • Pharaoh must divide the land into five sections during the seven years “of the fullness.”
  • The visitors must gather all food of the coming good years.
  • The grain gathered must be piled (in silos) under Pharaoh’s hand, the food being stored in the cities.
  • The visitors must guard the food.
  • The gathered food will only be used for ‘appointment’ during the seven years of famine in the land of Egypt.

The land won’t be ‘cut’ by the famine if these things are done.

 

Questions

 

1.   If Joseph is speaking to Pharaoh, why does he act as if Pharaoh isn’t there?

 

2.   Who shows unto Pharaoh what the Elohim is doing?

 

3.   What is this big fullness?

 

4.   What does “the famine shall finish the land” mean?

 

5.   What does “for he was very heavy” mean, and why is it in the past tense?

 

6.   Why was the dream doubled, according to verse 32?

 

7.   Why did Joseph begin to tell Pharaoh what to do (verse 33)? Wouldn’t this anger Pharaoh?

 

8.   Why did Joseph say “And now Pharaoh shall see a man of understanding and of wisdom” instead of “And now Pharaoh shall find a man of understanding and of wisdom”?

 

9.   What is understanding in the Bible?

 

10. Why wound understanding be so important to solve this problem?

 

11. What is wisdom in the Bible?

 

12. Why did Joseph tell Pharaoh to set someone else over the land of Egypt? Wasn’t this a very bold thing to say to a king, implying that the king didn’t have either the wisdom or the understanding?

 

13. What shall Pharaoh do (the sentence reading, “Pharaoh shall do”)?

 

14. What are visitors in this text, and why does Biblical Hebrew use the word visitors?

 

15. What does “he has visited visitors over the land” mean?

 

16. What does “he shall one-fifth the land of Egypt” mean and involve?

 

17. The text states, “And they gathered all food of these coming good years.” Who gathered, and when did they gather?

 

18. If they gathered all the food of the coming good years, what would the Egyptians eat?

 

19. How will they pile the grain?

 

20. How could they pile all that grain under Pharaoh’s hand?

 

21. Why must the food be kept in the cities?

 

22. Who shall guard the grain?

 

23. What does “and the land shall not be cut via famine” mean?

 

 

XVII. The Responses (verses 37-38)

 

Joseph’s speech was good in the eyes of Pharaoh and all his slaves! Pharaoh’s reaction was quick: “Will we find as this, a man whom a spirit of gods is in him?”

 

Questions

 

1.   Why was the speech good in their eyes instead of in their ears?

 

2.   Why would Pharaoh’s slaves think that this speech was so good? Wouldn’t they be jealous of Joseph who is counseling their king?

 

3.   What decision did Pharaoh have to make at this time?

 

4.   What spirit did Pharaoh figure was in Joseph, and which gods gave their one spirit to Joseph, in Pharaoh’s mind?

 

5.   Did Joseph have the spirit of gods in him?

 

6.   If they had looked, would they have been able to find someone else in Egypt in whom is a spirit of gods for this task?

 

 

XVIII. The Logic (verses 39-40)

 

Pharaoh figured that there was no understanding and wisdom like Joseph, since Elohim had made him know all this. Pharaoh commanded that Joseph would be over Pharaoh’s house. All the people of Egypt would kiss upon Joseph’s mouth! Pharaoh only reserved one part for himself: the chair, and thus his own authority, as bigger than Joseph’s authority.

 

Questions

 

1.   What did Pharaoh see so that he concluded that no one had understanding and wisdom like Joseph?

 

2.   Was Pharaoh’s reasoning good?

 

3.   Why did Pharaoh put Joseph over his house? He hadn’t known Joseph for more than about two minutes! Why would he risk this to a slave/prisoner?

 

4.   What does “all my people shall kiss upon thy mouth” mean?

 

5.   To what chair did Pharaoh refer?

 

6.   What did Pharaoh mean by “Only the chair—I will be bigger than thee”?

 

 

XIX. New Rank (verses 41-43)

 

Pharaoh had more to say to Joseph: “See! I gave thee over all the land of Egypt!” Joseph was now in charge of the entire land. He wanted Joseph to see that he had done this. So, he removed his ring from his hand and gave the ring upon Joseph’s hand.

 

Pharaoh then dressed Joseph so that he would appear with the rank that he now had. He dressed him in fine linen, linen cloth made from very small threads so that it was very soft. He then decked his neck with gold.

 

Pharaoh had several chariots. The second chariot became the one Joseph would use. Slaves of Pharaoh would then call as Joseph came, “I will kneel!” so that everyone kneeled before Joseph. This had to occur over all the land of Egypt.

 

Questions

 

1.   What did Pharaoh mean by “I gave thee over all the land of Egypt”?

 

2.   How can a ring be upon someone’s hand?

 

3.   Who dressed whom?

 

4.   What is special about fine linen?

 

5.   What is a decking of gold?

 

6.   Why was it called a decking of the gold?

 

7.   Was this second chariot special?

 

8.   Why did they call, “I will kneel”?

 

9.   Who is he and who is him in, “he will be given him over all the land of Egypt”?

 

 

XX. Name and Freedom (verses 44-46)

 

Pharaoh said to Joseph, “I am Pharaoh! And no man shall elevate his hand and his foot without thee in all the land of Egypt!” Joseph now had complete authority over every person in Egypt (except Pharaoh).

 

He then gave Joseph a new name: Salvation of the Age.

 

Joseph needed a woman (wife), so Pharaoh chose Asnat who was the daughter of Poti Pherah, a priest of a god called On.

 

Joseph then began his duties, ‘exiting’ (going out) over the land of Egypt.

 

Joseph’s promotion from prison to his standing “to the faces of” (in front of) Pharaoh occurred when Joseph was thirty years old. He then left Pharaoh to cross over all the land of Egypt.

 

 

Questions

 

 

1.   Why did Pharaoh start by saying, “I am Pharaoh!”?

 

2.   What does “no man shall elevate his hand and his foot without thee in all the land of Egypt” mean?

 

3.   Pharaoh gave Joseph a new name. Did Joseph like his new name?

 

4.   Pharaoh gave Joseph the woman Asnat. Did Pharaoh ask Joseph if he wanted her? Did Pharaoh ask Asnat or Asnat’s father if she or he desired Asnat to be married to a slave who is a sheepherder, and therefore is an abomination to the Egyptians?

 

5.   What does “Joseph exited over the land of Egypt” mean?

 

6.   How old was Joseph when he first stood before Pharaoh?

 

 

XXI. Gathering (verses 47-49)

 

The land produced fistfuls of grain—a very large amount compared to a normal crop. Joseph collected all food during these seven years. He “gave” (placed) food into cities (into storage) during this time. He stored the food of the field surrounding a city in the middle of that city. Joseph piled the grain as if it were the sand of the sea; it was so much that he quit keeping records of the amounts. No one was able to keep records of the amounts.

 

Questions

 

1.   What is a fistful in this text?

 

2.   If he collected all food of seven years in the land of Egypt, what did the Egyptians eat?

 

3.   The text states, “he gave food into cities.” To whom did he give this food?

 

4.   What does “he gave food of a field of the city that is her surroundings into her midst” mean?

 

5.   What does scroll mean?

 

6.   What does “for there is no scrolling” mean?

 

7.   Who owned all this foodstuff that was put into storage?

 

 

XXII. Consolation (verses 50-52)

 

Joseph had two sons before the years of famine came. His wife was Asnat. She was the daughter of Poti Pherah (not related to Potiphar). Poti Pherah was a priest of a god named On. Joseph called the firstborn Forgetter (Manasseh) because Elohim had caused him to forget all his toil and even the house of his father. He called the second son Doubly Fruitful (Ephraim) because Elohim caused him to be fruitful in the land of his humiliation.

 

Questions

 

1.   Joseph called the name of the firstborn Forgetter. Joseph said, “For Elohim made-me-forget all my toil and all the house of my father.” What toil did he forget? Did he really forget all the house of his father? What does that mean?

 

2.   What does “Elohim fruited me in the land of my humiliation” mean?

 

 

XXIII. The Beginning of Famine (verses 53-54)

 

Seven years of very good crops and productivity in the land of Egypt finished. Seven years of famine began just as Joseph said. The famine was in all the lands. Yet, there was food in all the land of Egypt.

 

Questions

 

1.   The text states, “the famine was in all the lands.” Does this mean that the famine was over the entire planet?

 

2.   What is the distinction between bread and food in the Bible?

 

 

XXIV. Rationing (verses 55-57)

 

All the land of Egypt was now in need of food. The people shouted unto Pharaoh for food. Pharaoh’s response to all Egypt was to go to Joseph. They must do whatever he told them to do.

 

All parts of Egypt had the famine. Joseph opened the storage silos for the people, and he ‘broke’ grain to them (he measured out portions). The famine gripped in the land; it wouldn’t let go. All came toward Egypt unto Joseph to break (portion out) grain.

 

Questions

 

1.   What does “all the land of Egypt was famished” mean?

 

2.   What does “the people outcried unto Pharaoh to [for] bread” mean?

 

3.   Why did Pharaoh tell them to go to Joseph?

 

4.   What does “the famine was over all faces of the land” tell a careful reader?

 

5.   What did Joseph open (the text states, “Joseph opened all that was in them”)?

 

6.   Did the people come and take what they wanted?

 

7.   What does “he broke to Egypt” mean?

 

8.   The text states, “all the land—they came—Egyptward unto Joseph to break, because the famine gripped in all the land.” What is included in “all the land”?

 

9.   Did Joseph personally give food to every individual?