Chapter 9
Other Questions Concerning the Same Books: Namely Whether They Were Completely Finished by Ezra, and, Further, Whether the Marginal Notes Which Are Found in the Hebrew Texts Were Various Readings
How greatly the inquiry we have just made concerning the real writer of
the twelve books aids us in attaining a complete understanding of them,
may be easily gathered solely from the passages which we have adduced in
confirmation of our opinion, and which would be most obscure without it.
But besides the question of the writer, there are other points to notice
which common
superstition forbids the
multitude to apprehend. Of these the chief is, that Ezra (whom I will
take to be the author of the aforesaid books until some more likely
person be suggested) did not put the finishing touches to the narrative
contained therein, but merely collected the histories from various
writers, and sometimes simply set them down, leaving their examination
and arrangement to posterity.
The cause (if it were not
untimely death) which prevented him from completing his work in all its
portions, I cannot conjecture, but the fact remains most clear, although
we have lost the writings of the ancient Hebrew historians, and can only
judge from the few fragments which are still extant. For the history of
Hezekiah (2 Kings xviii:17), as written in the vision of Isaiah, is
related as it is found in the chronicles of the kings of Judah. We read
the same story, told with few exceptions, [N11], in the same words, in
the book of Isaiah which was contained in the chronicles of the kings of
Judah (2 Chron. xxxii:32). From this we must conclude that there were
various versions of this narrative of Isaiah's, unless, indeed, anyone
would dream that in this, too, there lurks a mystery. Further, the last
chapter of 2 Kings 27-30 is repeated in the last chapter of Jeremiah,
v.31-34.
Again, we find 2 Sam. vii. repeated in I Chron. xvii., but the expressions in the two passages are so curiously varied [N12], that we can very easily see that these two chapters were taken from two different versions of the history of Nathan.
Lastly, the genealogy of
the kings of Idumaea contained in Genesis xxxvi:31, is repeated in the
same words in 1 Chron. i., though we know that the author of the latter
work took his materials from other historians, not from the twelve books
we have ascribed to Ezra. We may therefore be sure that if we still
possessed the writings of the historians, the matter would be made
clear; however, as we have lost them, we can only examine the writings
still extant, and from their order and connection, their various
repetitions, and, lastly, the contradictions in dates which they
contain, judge of the rest.
These, then, or the chief of them, we will now go through. First, in the story of Judah and Tamar (Gen. xxxviii.) the historian thus begins: "And it came to pass at that time that Judah went down from his brethren." This time cannot refer to what immediately precedes [N13], but must necessarily refer to something else, for from the time when Joseph was sold into Egypt to the time when the patriarch Jacob, with all his family, set out thither, cannot be reckoned as more than twenty-two years, for Joseph, when he was sold by his brethren, was seventeen years old, and when he was summoned by Pharaoh from prison was thirty; if to this we add the seven years of plenty and two of famine, the total amounts to twenty-two years. Now, in so short a period, no one can suppose that so many things happened as are described; that Judah had three children, one after the other, from one wife, whom he married at the beginning of the period; that the eldest of these, when he was old enough, married Tamar, and that after he died his next brother succeeded to her; that, after all this, Judah, without knowing it, had intercourse with his daughter-in-law, and that she bore him twins, and, finally, that the eldest of these twins became a father within the aforesaid period. As all these events cannot have taken place within the period mentioned in Genesis, the reference must necessarily be to something treated of in another book: and Ezra in this instance simply related the story, and inserted it without examination among his other writings.
However, not only this
chapter but the whole narrative of Joseph and Jacob is collected and set
forth from various histories, inasmuch as it is quite inconsistent with
itself. For in Gen. xlvii. we are told that Jacob, when he came at
Joseph's bidding to salute Pharaoh, was 130 years old. If from this we
deduct the twenty-two years which he passed sorrowing for the absence of
Joseph and the seventeen years forming Joseph's age when he was sold,
and, lastly, the seven years for which Jacob served for Rachel, we find
that he was very advanced in life, namely, eighty four, when he took
Leah to wife, whereas Dinah was scarcely seven years old when she was
violated by Shechem, [N14]. Simeon and Levi were aged respectively
eleven and twelve when they spoiled the city and slew all the males
therein with the sword.
There is no need that I
should go through the whole Pentateuch. If anyone pays attention to the
way in which all the histories and precepts in these five books are set
down promiscuously and without order, with no regard for dates; and
further, how the same story is often repeated, sometimes in a different
version, he will easily, I say, discern that all the materials were
promiscuously collected and heaped together, in order that they might at
some subsequent time be more readily examined and reduced to order. Not
only these five books, but also the narratives contained in the
remaining seven, going down to the destruction of the city, are compiled
in the same way. For who does not see that in Judges ii:6 a new
historian is being quoted, who had also written of the deeds of Joshua,
and that his words are simply copied? For after our historian has stated
in the last chapter of the book of Joshua that Joshua died and was
buried, and has promised, in the first chapter of Judges, to relate what
happened after his death, in what way, if he wished to continue the
thread of his history, could he connect the statement here made about
Joshua with what had gone before?
So, too, 1 Sam. 17, 18, are
taken from another historian, who assigns a cause for David's first
frequenting Saul's court very different from that given in chap. xvi. of
the same book. For he did not think that David came to Saul in
consequence of the advice of Saul's servants, as is narrated in chap.
xvi., but that being sent by chance to the camp by his father on a
message to his brothers, he was for the first time remarked by Saul on
the occasion of his victory, over Goliath the Philistine, and was
retained at his court.
I suspect the same thing
has taken place in chap. xxvi. of the same book, for the historian there
seems to repeat the narrative given in chap. xxiv. according to another
man's version. But I pass over this, and go on to the computation of
dates.
In I Kings, chap. vi., it is said that Solomon built the Temple in the four hundred and eightieth year after the exodus from Egypt; but from the historians themselves we get a much longer period, for:
Moses governed the people in the desert . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Joshua, who lived 110 years, did not, according to Josephus and others' opinion rule more than . . . . . . . . . 26 Cusban Rishathaim held the people in subjection . . . . . . . . . 8 Othniel, son of Kenag, was judge for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 [N15] Eglon, King of Moab, governed the people . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Ehucl and Shamgar were judges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 Jachin, King of Canaan, held the people in subjection . . . . . . 20 The people was at peace subsequently for . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 It was under subjection to Median . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 It obtained freedom under Gideon for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 It fell under the rule of Abimelech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Tola, son of Puah, was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Jair was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 The people was in subjection to the Philistines and Ammonites . . 18 Jephthah was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Ibzan, the Bethlehemite, was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Elon, the Zabulonite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Abclon, the Pirathonite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 The people was again subject to the Philistines . . . . . . . . . 40 Samson was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 [N16] Eli was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 The people again fell into subjection to the Philistines, till they were delivered by Samuel . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 David reigned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Solomon reigned before he built the temple . . . . . . . . . . . 4
All these periods added together make a total of 580 years. But to these must be added the years during which the Hebrew republic flourished after the death of Joshua, until it was conquered by Cushan Rishathaim, which I take to be very numerous, for I cannot bring myself to believe that immediately after the death of Joshua all those who had witnessed his miracles died simultaneously, nor that their successors at one stroke bid farewell to their laws, and plunged from the highest virtue into the depth of wickedness and obstinacy.
Nor, lastly, that Cushan
Rishathaim subdued them on the instant; each one of these circumstances
requires almost a generation, and there is no doubt that Judges ii:7, 9,
10, comprehends a great many years which it passes over in silence. We
must also add the years during which Samuel was judge, the number of
which is not stated in Scripture, and also the years during which Saul
reigned, which are not clearly shown from his history. It is, indeed,
stated in 1 Sam. xiii:1, that he reigned two years, but the text in that
passage is mutilated, and the records of his reign lead us to suppose a
longer period. That the text is mutilated I suppose no one will doubt
who has ever advanced so far as the threshold of the Hebrew language,
for it runs as follows: "Saul was in his -- year, when he began to
reign, and he reigned two years over Israel." Who, I say, does not see
that the number of the years of Saul's age when he began to reign has
been omitted? That the record of the reign presupposes a greater number
of years is equally beyond doubt, for in the same book, chap. xxvii:7,
it is stated that David sojourned among the Philistines, to whom he had
fled on account of Saul, a year and four months; thus the rest of the
reign must have been comprised in a space of eight months, which I think
no one will credit. Josephus, at the end of the sixth book of his
antiquities, thus corrects the text: Saul reigned eighteen years while
Samuel was alive, and two years after his death. However, all the
narrative in chap. xiii. is in complete disagreement with what goes
before. At the end of chap. vii. it is narrated that the Philistines
were so crushed by the Hebrews that they did not venture, during
Samuel's life, to invade the borders of Israel; but in chap. xiii. we
are told that the Hebrews were invaded during the life of Samuel by the
Philistines, and reduced by them to such a state of wretchedness and
poverty that they were deprived not only of weapons with which to defend
themselves, but also of the means of making more. I should be at pains
enough if I were to try and harmonize all the narratives contained in
this first book of Samuel so that they should seem to be all written and
arranged by a single historian. But I return to my object. The years,
then, during which Saul reigned must be added to the above computation;
and, lastly, I have not counted the years of the Hebrew anarchy, for I
cannot from Scripture gather their number. I cannot, I say, be certain
as to the period occupied by the events related in Judges chap. xvii. on
till the end of the book.
It is thus abundantly
evident that we cannot arrive at a true computation of years from the
histories, and, further, that the histories are inconsistent themselves
on the subject. We are compelled to confess that these histories were
compiled from various writers without previous arrangement and
examination. Not less discrepancy is found between the dates given in
the Chronicles of the Kings of Judah, and those in the Chronicles of the
Kings of Israel; in the latter, it is stated that Jehoram, the son of
Ahab, began to reign in the second year of the reign of Jehoram, the son
of Jehoshaphat (2 Kings i:17), but in the former we read that Jehoram,
the son of Jehoshaphat, began to reign in the fifth year of Jehoram, the
son of Ahab (2 Kings viii:16). Anyone who compares the narratives in
Chronicles with the narratives in the books of Kings, will find many
similar discrepancies. These there is no need for me to examine here,
and still less am I called upon to treat of the commentaries of those
who endeavour to harmonize them. The Rabbis evidently let their fancy
run wild. Such commentators as I have, read, dream, invent, and as a
last resort, play fast and loose with the language. For instance, when
it is said in 2 Chronicles, that Ahab was forty-two years old when he
began to reign, they pretend that these years are computed from the
reign of Omri, not from the birth of Ahab. If this can be shown to be
the real meaning of the writer of the book of Chronicles, all I can say
is, that he did not know how to state a fact. The commentators make many
other assertions of this kind, which if true, would prove that the
ancient Hebrews were ignorant both of their own language, and of the way
to relate a plain narrative. I should in such case recognize no rule or
reason in interpreting Scripture, but it would be permissible to
hypothesize to one's heart's content.
If anyone thinks that I am speaking too generally, and without sufficient warrant, I would ask him to set himself to showing us some fixed plan in these histories which might be followed without blame by other writers of chronicles, and in his efforts at harmonizing and interpretation, so strictly to observe and explain the phrases and expressions, the order and the connections, that we may be able to imitate these also in our writings, [N17]. If he succeeds, I will at once give him my hand, and he shall be to me as great Apollo; for I confess that after long endeavours I have been unable to discover anything of the kind. I may add that I set down nothing here which I have not long reflected upon, and that, though I was imbued from my boyhood up with the ordinary opinions about the Scriptures, I have been unable to withstand the force of what I have urged.
However, there is no need
to detain the reader with this question, and drive him to attempt an
impossible task; I merely mentioned the fact in order to throw light on
my intention.
I now pass on to other
points concerning the treatment of these books. For we must remark, in
addition to what has been shown, that these books were not guarded by
posterity with such care that no faults crept in. The ancient scribes
draw attention to many doubtful readings, and some mutilated passages,
but not to all that exist: whether the faults are of sufficient
importance to greatly embarrass the reader I will not now discuss. I am
inclined to think that they are of minor moment to those, at any rate,
who read the Scriptures with enlightenment: and I can positively affirm
that I have not noticed any fault or various reading in doctrinal
passages sufficient to render them obscure or doubtful.
There are some people,
however, who will not admit that there is any corruption, even in other
passages, but maintain that by some unique exercise of providence God
has preserved from corruption every word in the Bible: they say that the
various readings are the symbols of profoundest mysteries, and that
mighty secrets lie hid in the twenty-eight hiatus which occur, nay, even
in the very form of the letters.
Whether they are actuated
by folly and anile devotion, or whether by arrogance and malice so that
they alone may be held to possess the secrets of God, I know not: this
much I do know, that I find in their writings nothing which has the air
of a Divine secret, but only childish lucubrations. I have read and
known certain Kabbalistic triflers, whose insanity provokes my unceasing
astonishment. That faults have crept in will, I think, be denied by no
sensible person who reads the passage about Saul, above quoted (1 Sam.
xiii:1) and also 2 Sam. vi:2: "And David arose and went with all the
people that were with him from Judah, to bring up from thence the ark of
God."
No one can fail to remark that the name of their destination, viz., Kirjath-jearim [N18], has been omitted: nor can we deny that 2 Sam. xiii:37, has been tampered with and mutilated. "And Absalom fled, and went to Talmai, the son of Ammihud, king of Geshur. And he mourned for his son every day. So Absalom fled, and went to Geshur, and was there three years." I know that I have remarked other passages of the same kind, but I cannot recall them at the moment.
That the marginal notes
which are found continually in the Hebrew Codices are doubtful readings
will, I think, be evident to everyone who has noticed that they often
arise from the great similarity, of some of the Hebrew letters, such for
instance, as the similarity between Kaph and Beth, Jod and Van, Daleth
and Reth, &c. For example, the text in 2 Sam. v:24, runs "in the time
when thou hearest," and similarly in Judges xxi:22, "And it shall be
when their fathers or their brothers come unto us often," the marginal
version is "come unto us to complain."
So also many various
readings have arisen from the use of the letters named mutes, which are
generally not sounded in pronunciation, and are taken promiscuously, one
for the other. For example, in Levit. xxv:29, it is written, "The house
shall be established which is not in the walled city," but the margin
has it, "which is in a walled city."
Though these matters are
self-evident, it is necessary, to answer the reasonings of certain
Pharisees, by which they endeavour to convince us that the marginal
notes serve to indicate some mystery, and were added or pointed out by
the writers of the sacred books. The first of these reasons, which, in
my, opinion, carries little weight, is taken from the practice of
reading the Scriptures aloud.
If, it is urged, these
notes were added to show various readings which could not be decided
upon by posterity, why has custom prevailed that the marginal readings
should always be retained? Why has the meaning which is preferred been
set down in the margin when it ought to have been incorporated in the
text, and not relegated to a side note?
The second reason is more
specious, and is taken from the nature of the case. It is admitted that
faults have crept into the sacred writings by chance and not by design;
but they say that in the five books the word for a girl is, with one
exception, written without the letter "he," contrary to all grammatical
rules, whereas in the margin it is written correctly according to the
universal rule of grammar. Can this have happened by mistake? Is it
possible to imagine a clerical error to have been committed every, time
the word occurs? Moreover, it would have been easy, to supply the
emendation. Hence, when these readings are not accidental or corrections
of manifest mistakes, it is supposed that they must have been set down
on purpose by the original writers, and have a meaning. However, it is
easy to answer such arguments; as to the question of custom having
prevailed in the reading of the marginal versions, I will not spare much
time for its consideration: I know not the promptings of
superstition, and perhaps
the practice may have arisen from the idea that both readings were
deemed equally good or tolerable, and therefore, lest either should be
neglected, one was appointed to be written, and the other to be read.
They feared to pronounce judgment in so weighty a matter lest they
should mistake the false for the true, and therefore they would give
preference to neither, as they must necessarily have done if they had
commanded one only to be both read and written. This would be especially
the case where the marginal readings were not written down in the sacred
books: or the custom may have originated because some things though
rightly written down were desired to be read otherwise according to the
marginal version, and therefore the general rule was made that the
marginal version should be followed in reading the Scriptures. The cause
which induced the scribes to expressly prescribe certain passages to be
read in the marginal version, I will now touch on, for not all the
marginal notes are various readings, but some mark expressions which
have passed out of common use, obsolete words and terms which current
decency did not allow to be read in a public assembly. The ancient
writers, without any evil intention, employed no courtly paraphrase, but
called things by their plain names. Afterwards, through the spread of
evil thoughts and luxury, words which could be used by the ancients
without offence, came to be considered obscene. There was no need for
this cause to change the text of Scripture. Still, as a concession to
the popular weakness, it became the custom to substitute more decent
terms for words denoting sexual intercourse, exereta, &c., and to read
them as they were given in the margin.
At any rate, whatever may
have been the origin of the practice of reading Scripture according to
the marginal version, it was not that the true interpretation is
contained therein. For besides that, the Rabbins in the Talmud often
differ from the Massoretes, and give other readings which they approve
of, as I will shortly show, certain things are found in the margin which
appear less warranted by the uses of the Hebrew language. For example,
in 2 Samuel xiv:22, we read, "In that the king hath fulfilled the
request of his servant," a construction plainly regular, and agreeing
with that in chap. xvi. But the margin has it "of thy servant," which
does not agree with the person of the verb. So, too, chap. xvi:25 of the
same book, we find, "As if one had inquired at the oracle of God," the
margin adding "someone" to stand as a nominative to the verb. But the
correction is not apparently warranted, for it is a common practice,
well known to grammarians in the Hebrew language, to use the third
person singular of the active verb impersonally.
The second argument
advanced by the Pharisees is easily answered from what has just been
said, namely, that the scribes besides the various readings called
attention to obsolete words. For there is no doubt that in Hebrew as in
other languages, changes of use made many words obsolete and antiquated,
and such were found by the later scribes in the sacred books and noted
by them with a view to the books being publicly read according to
custom. For this reason the word nahgar is always found marked because
its gender was originally common, and it had the same meaning as the
Latin juvenis (a young person). So also the Hebrew capital was anciently
called Jerusalem, not Jerusalaim. As to the pronouns himself and
herself, I think that the later scribes changed vau into jod (a very
frequent change in Hebrew) when they wished to express the feminine
gender, but that the ancients only distinguished the two genders by a
change of vowels. I may also remark that the irregular tenses of certain
verbs differ in the ancient and modern forms, it being formerly
considered a mark of elegance to employ certain letters agreeable to the
ear.
In a word, I could easily
multiply proofs of this kind if I were not afraid of abusing the
patience of the reader. Perhaps I shall be asked how I became acquainted
with the fact that all these expressions are obsolete. I reply that I
have found them in the most ancient Hebrew writers in the Bible itself,
and that they have not been imitated by subsequent authors, and thus
they are recognized as antiquated, though the language in which they
occur is dead. But perhaps someone may press the question why, if it be
true, as I say, that the marginal notes of the Bible generally mark
various readings, there are never more than two readings of a passage,
that in the text and that in the margin, instead of three or more; and
further, how the scribes can have hesitated between two readings, one of
which is evidently contrary to grammar, and the other a plain
correction.
The answer to these
questions also is easy: I will premise that it is almost certain that
there once were more various readings than those now recorded. For
instance, one finds many in the Talmud which the Massoretes have
neglected, and are so different one from the other that even the
superstitious editor of
the Bomberg Bible confesses that he cannot harmonize them. "We cannot
say anything," he writes, "except what we have said above, namely, that
the Talmud is generally in contradiction to the Massorete." So that we
are nor bound to hold that there never were more than two readings of
any passage, yet I am willing to admit, and indeed I believe that more
than two readings are never found: and for the following reasons:- (I.)
The cause of the differences of reading only admits of two, being
generally the similarity of certain letters, so that the question
resolved itself into which should be written Beth, or Kaf, Jod or Vau,
Daleth or Reth: cases which are constantly occurring, and frequently
yielding a fairly good meaning whichever alternative be adopted.
Sometimes, too, it is a question whether a syllable be long or short,
quantity being determined by the letters called mutes. Moreover, we
never asserted that all the marginal versions, without exception, marked
various readings; on the contrary, we have stated that many were due to
motives of decency or a desire to explain obsolete words. (II.) I am
inclined to attribute the fact that more than two readings are never
found to the paucity of exemplars, perhaps not more than two or three,
found by the scribes. In the treatise of the scribes, chap. vi., mention
is made of three only, pretended to have been found in the time of Ezra,
in order that the marginal versions might be attributed to him.
However that may be, if the
scribes only had three codices we may easily imagine that in a given
passage two of them would be in accord, for it would be extraordinary if
each one of the three gave a different reading of the same text.
The dearth of copies after
the time of Ezra will surprise no one who has read the 1st chapter of
Maccabees, or Josephus's "Antiquities," Bk. 12, chap. 5. Nay, it appears
wonderful considering the fierce and daily persecution, that even these
few should have been preserved. This will, I think, be plain to even a
cursory reader of the history of those times.
We have thus discovered the
reasons why there are never more than two readings of a passage in the
Bible, but this is a long way from supposing that we may therefore
conclude that the Bible was purposely written incorrectly in such
passages in order to signify some mystery. As to the second argument,
that some passages are so faultily written that they are at plain
variance with all grammar, and should have been corrected in the text
and not in the margin, I attach little weight to it, for I am not
concerned to say what religious motive the scribes may have had for
acting as they did: possibly they did so from candour, wishing to
transmit the few exemplars of the Bible which they had found exactly in
their original state, marking the differences they discovered in the
margin, not as doubtful readings, but as simple variants. I have myself
called them doubtful readings, because it would be generally impossible
to say which of the two versions is preferable.
Lastly, besides these
doubtful readings the scribes have (by leaving a hiatus in the middle of
a paragraph) marked several passages as mutilated. The Massoretes have
counted up such instances, and they amount to eight-and-twenty. I do not
know whether any mystery is thought to lurk in the number, at any rate
the Pharisees religiously preserve a certain amount of empty space.
One of such hiatus occurs
(to give an instance) in Gen. iv:8, where it is written, "And Cain said
to his brother .... and it came to pass while they were in the field,
&c.," a space being left in which we should expect to hear what it was
that Cain said.
Similarly there are (besides those points we have noticed) eight-and- twenty hiatus left by the scribes. Many of these would not be recognized as mutilated if it were not for the empty space left. But I have said enough on this subject.
[Note N11]: "With few exceptions." One of these exceptions is found in 2 Kings xviii:20, where we read, "Thou sayest (but they are but vain words), "the second person being used. In Isaiah xxxvi:5, we read "I say (but they are but vain words) I have counsel and strength for war," and in the twenty-second verse of the chapter in Kings it is written, "But if ye say," the plural number being used, whereas Isaiah gives the singular. The text in Isaiah does not contain the words found in 2 Kings xxxii:32. Thus there are several cases of various readings where it is impossible to distinguish the best.
[Note N12]: "The expressions in
the two passages are so varied." For instance we read in 2 Sam. vii:6,
"But I have walked in a tent and in a tabernacle." Whereas in 1 Chron.
xvii:5, "but have gone from tent to tent and from one tabernacle to
another." In 2 Sam. vii:10, we read, "to afflict them,"whereas in 1
Chron. vii:9, we find a different expression. I could point out other
differences still greater, but a single reading of the chapters in
question will suffice to make them manifest to all who are neither blind
nor devoid of sense.
[Note N13]: "This time cannot
refer to what immediately precedes." It is plain from the context that
this passage must allude to the time when Joseph was sold by his
brethren. But this is not all. We may draw the same conclusion from the
age of Judah, who was than twenty-two years old at most, taking as basis
of calculation his own history just narrated. It follows, indeed, from
the last verse of Gen. xxx., that Judah was born in the tenth of the
years of Jacob's servitude to Laban, and Joseph in the fourteenth. Now,
as we know that Joseph was seventeen years old when sold by his
brethren, Judah was then not more than twenty-one. Hence, those writers
who assert that Judah's long absence from his father's house took place
before Joseph was sold, only seek to delude themselves and to call in
question the Scriptural authority which they are anxious to protect.
[Note N14]: "Dinah was scarcely seven years old when she was violated by Schechem." The opinion held by some that Jacob wandered about eight or ten years between Mesopotamia and Bethel, savours of the ridiculous; if respect for Aben Ezra, allows me to say so. For it is clear that Jacob had two reasons for haste: first, the desire to see his old parents; secondly, and chiefly to perform, the vow made when he fled from his brother (Gen. xxviii:10 and xxxi:13, and xxxv:1). We read (Gen. xxxi:3), that God had commanded him to fulfill his vow, and promised him help for returning to his country. If these considerations seem conjectures rather than reasons, I will waive the point and admit that Jacob, more unfortunate than Ulysses, spent eight or ten years or even longer, in this short journey. At any rate it cannot be denied that Benjamin was born in the last year of this wandering, that is by the reckoning of the objectors, when Joseph was sixteen or seventeen years old, for Jacob left Laban seven years after Joseph's birth. Now from the seventeenth year of Joseph's age till the patriarch went into Egypt, not more than twenty-two years elapsed, as we have shown in this chapter. Consequently Benjamin, at the time of the journey to Egypt, was twenty-three or twenty- four at the most. He would therefore have been a grandfather in the flower of his age (Gen. xlvi:21, cf. Numb. xxvi:38, 40, and 1 Chron. viii;1), for it is certain that Bela, Benjamin's eldest son, had at that time, two sons, Addai and Naaman. This is just as absurd as the statement that Dinah was violated at the age of seven, not to mention other impossibilities which would result from the truth of the narrative. Thus we see that unskillful endeavours to solve difficulties, only raise fresh ones, and make confusion worse confounded.
[Note N15]: "Othniel, son of Kenag, was judge for forty years." Rabbi Levi Ben Gerson and others believe that these forty years which the Bible says were passed in freedom, should be counted from the death of Joshua, and consequently include the eight years during which the people were subject to Kushan Rishathaim, while the following eighteen years must be added on to the eighty years of Ehud's and Shamgar's judgeships. In this case it would be necessary to reckon the other years of subjection among those said by the Bible to have been passed in freedom. But the Bible expressly notes the number of years of subjection, and the number of years of freedom, and further declares (Judges ii:18) that the Hebrew state was prosperous during the whole time of the judges. Therefore it is evident that Levi Ben Gerson (certainly a very learned man), and those who follow him, correct rather than interpret the Scriptures. The same fault is committed by those who assert, that Scripture, by this general calculation of years, only intended to mark the period of the regular administration of the Hebrew state, leaving out the years of anarchy and subjection as periods of misfortune and interregnum. Scripture certainly passes over in silence periods of anarchy, but does not, as they dream, refuse to reckon them or wipe them out of the country's annals. It is clear that Ezra, in 1 Kings vi., wished to reckon absolutely all the years since the flight from Egypt. This is so plain, that no one versed in the Scriptures can doubt it. For, without going back to the precise words of the text, we may see that the genealogy of David given at the end of the book of Ruth, and I Chron. ii., scarcely accounts for so great a number of years. For Nahshon, who was prince of the tribe of Judah (Numb. vii;11), two years after the Exodus, died in the desert, and his son Salmon passed the Jordan with Joshua. Now this Salmon, according to the genealogy, was David's great-grandfather. Deducting, then, from the total of 480 years, four years for Solomon's reign, seventy for David's life, and forty for the time passed in the desert, we find that David was born 366 years after the passage of the Jordan. Hence we must believe that David's father, grandfather, great-grandfather, and great- great-grandfather begat children when they were ninety years old.
[Note N16]: "Samson was judge for twenty years." Samson was born after the Hebrews had fallen under the dominion of the Philistines.
[Note N17]: Otherwise, they
rather correct than explain Scripture.
[Note N18]: "Kirjath-jearim."
Kirjath-jearim is also called Baale of Judah. Hence Kimchi and others
think that the words Baale Judah, which I have translated "the people of
Judah," are the name of a town. But this is not so, for the word Baale
is in the plural. Moreover, comparing this text in Samuel with I Chron.
Xiii:5, we find that David did not rise up and go forth out of Baale,
but that he went thither. If the author of the book of Samuel had meant
to name the place whence David took the ark, he would, if he spoke
Hebrew correctly, have said, "David rose up, and set forth from Baale
Judah, and took the ark from thence."